OneFootball
Emily Wilson·21 August 2024
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Emily Wilson·21 August 2024
A few Copa Libertadores Round of 16 matchups concluded on Tuesday with six sides playing out their second-leg fixtures.
Here is what went down.
Scorers: Battaglia 65âČ
A late Rodrigo Battaglia goal saw Atlético Mineiro scrape past San Lorenzo and earn a gritty win in the round-of-16.
It was a rocking atmosphere inside the MRV, but the product on the pitch was far more cagey than the thousands of Atlético Mineiro that filled the terraces, though the deadlock was nearly broken in the dying minutes of the opening half when Ivån Leguizamón rang a rasping long-range shot off of the crossbar.
San Lorenzo began to ramp up the pressure in the second-half, creating a flurry of chances, but the visitors from Argentina continually fluffed their lines in front of goal.
Leandro Romagnoliâs side were punished for their lack of ruthlessness just past the hour mark when Rodrigo Battaglia popped up from defense to head home the opener on the night, and more importantly give AtlĂ©tico Mineiro the lead on aggregate.
Scorers: Bacca 45+1âČ ; Cepeda 43âČ, FalcĂłn 74âČ
Colo-Colo replicated their first-leg effort, easing past Junior in Barranquilla to book their spot in the quarter-finals.
While the hosts dominated the ball in the opening interval, it was Colo-Colo who broke the deadlock thanks to a rocket of a strike from Lucas Cepeda.
Cepedaâs long-range effort may have given Colo-Colo some comfort in the tie, but that comfort only lasted a few minutes as veteran striker Carlos Bacca bagged for the hosts in first-half stoppage time to reignite the clash.
While Junior pushed to pull level on aggregate, their chances of a fight-back were crushed in the final 15 minutes thanks to a Maximiliano FalcĂłn strike that reclaimed Colo-Coloâs two-goal lead.
To make matters worse, Rafael PĂ©rez was sent off in the dying minutes, putting an end to Juniorâs tournament in poor fashion.
Scorers: Silva 14âČ, Arias 28âČ (P); Nunes 76âČ
The beloved MaracanĂŁ was home to another dramatic showing as Fluminense beat GrĂȘmio on penalties in this all-Brazilian affair (3-3 on aggregate).
The hosts and holders had to rise to the occasion under pressure after losing the first leg 2-1. Thankfully, they had Thiago Silva to rely on again. Sixteen years after his last goal for his boyhood club, the captain scored a thumping header over the penalty spot to draw things level.
An unlucky call against GrĂȘmio then put the visitors in the back seat minutes later as a controversial handball saw Jhon Arias double things from the penalty spot.
With just two shots after 45 minutes, but neither on target, the visitors changed their approach and swung possession in their favour. Reinaldo Manoel da Silva and Gustavo Nunes had opportunities saved while Martin Braithwaite struggled to have an impact.
With roughly 20 minutes to go, however, their persistence prevailed. Goalkeeper FĂĄbio committed a howler as he punched the ball into his net but was saved by VAR as Jemerson was fractionally offside.
GrĂȘmio fumed, and Fluminense were relieved, but only for a few minutes. A second mistake from the goalkeeper put the ball on a platter for Nunes and he bundled home to equalise 3-3 on aggregate.
The match then went to spot-kicks where the MaracanĂŁ erupted after Fluminense prevailed 4-2 with Arias scoring the winning penalty.