Flamengo beat 10-man Athletico-PR for third Copa Liberatdores title

Flamengo players lift the Copa Libertadores trophy after beating Athletic-PR in the final.
Flamengo players lift the Copa Libertadores trophy after beating Athletic-PR in the final.
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Flamengo marched unbeaten to a third Copa Libertadores title after topping Athletico-PR 1-0 in the all-Brazilian final on Saturday.

Gabriel Barbosa starred in the final yet again by producing the only goal in a half-full Metropolitano Stadium in Ecuador.

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Flamengo also won in 1981 and 2019, the latter with two goals by Barbosa in the 2-1 final victory against Argentina's River Plate.

"It was just as special as my first goal in a final," Barbosa said after the match.

Barbosa, considered to have a slim chance of playing for Brazil in the World Cup, also netted the Rio de Janeiro club's only goal in the final last year in the loss to Brazilian rival Palmeiras.

Barbosa's latest goal was hatched in the 43rd minute when Athletico defender Pedro Henrique was booked for a second time after a harsh tackle. The incident gave more room for Flamengo to attack, and the goal came in the last seconds of the first half.

Everton Ribeiro made a low cross from the right and Barbosa just had to push the ball into an empty net.

En route to the final, Flamengo knocked out Colombia's Tolima, Brazil's Corinthians and Argentina's Velez Sarsfield, winning all of its matches.

Flamengo striker Pedro, who is expected to be in Brazil's World Cup squad, was the Copa's leading goal-scorer with 12 in 13 matches.

Flamengo coach Dorival Jr. said Barbosa was key for the title in different fashion, playing on the flanks to feed Pedro.

"He was decisive in one title as the top goal scorer and now as a team player," said Dorival Jr., who took over in July after Portuguese coach Paulo Sousa was fired. "Gabriel worked for us even more than he did in 2019."

Flamengo, with former Chelsea and Brazil centre-back David Luiz anchoring their defence, enjoyed 73% of possession and created 15 chances, although only four on target, as they won South America's equivalent of Europe's Champions League.

Athletico, chasing their first Copa Libertadores title, couldn't deliver a perfect sendoff for coach Luiz Felipe Scolari. The former World Cup-winning manager said in the buildup he's stepping down at age 73. He previously won the Copa with boyhood club Gremio in 1995 and with Palmeiras in 1999.

Local authorities in Ecuador struggled to sell all 60,000 tickets for the final. Guayaquil is about 6,000 kilometres (4,000 miles) from Rio and Curitiba.