Date | R | Home vs Away | - |
---|---|---|---|
07/31 00:00 | 1 | Colombia Women vs Brazil Women | 0-1 |
07/30 00:00 | 50 | [2] Argentina Women vs Paraguay Women [2] | 3-1 |
07/27 00:00 | 2 | [1] Brazil Women vs Paraguay Women [2] | 2-0 |
07/26 00:00 | 2 | [1] Colombia Women vs Argentina Women [2] | 1-0 |
07/25 00:00 | 31 | [3] Chile Women vs Venezuela Women [3] | 5-3 |
07/22 00:00 | 5 | [1] Brazil Women vs Peru Women [5] | 6-0 |
07/22 00:00 | 5 | [3] Venezuela Women vs Argentina Women [2] | 0-1 |
07/21 00:00 | 5 | [1] Colombia Women vs Chile Women [2] | 4-0 |
07/21 00:00 | 5 | [4] Ecuador Women vs Paraguay Women [3] | 1-2 |
07/19 00:00 | 4 | [4] Peru Women vs Uruguay Women [5] | 0-6 |
07/18 21:00 | 4 | [3] Venezuela Women vs Brazil Women [1] | 0-4 |
07/18 00:00 | 4 | [4] Ecuador Women vs Colombia Women [2] | 1-2 |
The Copa América Femenina (Copa América Feminina in Portuguese), previously the Campeonato Sudamericano de Fútbol Femenino (Campeonato Sul-Americano de Futebol Feminino), usually shortened to Sudamericano Femenino (Sul-Americano Feminino), is the main competition in women's association football for national teams that are affiliated with CONMEBOL. It is the women's version of the Copa América.
It was first held in 1991. In the first two editions of the tournament, only one team (the champions) qualified for the FIFA Women's World Cup. In the third edition, the champions qualified automatically, while the runners-up faced a team from the CONCACAF region in a play-off match to earn a spot in the World Cup. In the fourth, fifth and sixth editions, two automatic spots were given to the top two teams for the 2003, 2007 and 2011 World Cups respectively.
In December 2020, CONMEBOL announced the tournament would be held every two years instead of every four years, starting in 2022, with the exception of 2025.
There are also Under-20 and Under-17 versions of this tournament.