Clube Atlético Mineiro in international club football


The involvement of Clube Atlético Mineiro in international club football began in 1972, the year of its first appearance in an official competition at that level. Since then, the Brazilian club, based in Belo Horizonte, Minas Gerais, has participated in 23 continental and one intercontinental tournament. Atlético Mineiro has won four official titles at the international level: the Copa Libertadores in 2013; the inaugural edition of the Copa CONMEBOL in 1992, and again in 1997; and the Recopa Sudamericana in 2014. In addition, the club finished as runner-up of the Copa CONMEBOL in 1995, the Copa de Oro in 1993, and the Copa Master de CONMEBOL in 1996.
Prior to the existence of official continental football in South America, Atlético Mineiro had played against foreign clubs since 1929, and toured Europe in 1950. As Brazilian champion in 1971, the club qualified for the 1972 Copa Libertadores, its first continental tournament. Atlético Mineiro then debuted in the inaugural editions of the Copa CONMEBOL, in 1992, of the Copa de Oro, in 1993, and of the Copa Master de CONMEBOL, in 1996. Its first and only appearance in the Copa Mercosur was in the 2000 season, and its debut at the Copa Sudamericana was in 2003, the first time Brazilian clubs had participated. The club's first and only appearance in an intercontinental competition occurred in the 2013 edition of the FIFA Club World Cup, where it finished in third place.
The club's biggest-margin win at the international level is 6-0, achieved twice against Mineros in the 1995 Copa CONMEBOL, and against Cobreloa in the 2000 Copa Libertadores. Goalkeeper Victor is the player with the most appearances in international competitions for the club, with 41; forwards Guilherme and are Atlético's top goalscorers with 11 goals.

Background

Prior to the inception of official international competitions between football clubs, Atlético Mineiro was the first team in Minas Gerais to play against a foreign team defeating Portugal's Vitória de Setúbal in Belo Horizonte in 1929. Over the following decades, the club played friendlies against foreign sides, including national teams, and in 1950 went on its first European tour, during which it played ten games in five countries. Having taken place soon after the traumatic Maracanazo, the tour and Atlético's results, many of which were achieved in adverse weather, including snow, were seen by national sports media as a historic achievement for Brazilian football itself.
The first continental competition organised by CONMEBOL, the governing body of football in South America, was the 1960 Copa Libertadores. Before this official tournament, Chilean club Colo-Colo's President Robinson Alvarez had the idea for a South American Championship of Champions, which was eventually held in Santiago in 1948. In 1958, the new CONMEBOL president, José Ramos de Freitas, contacted South American football associations intending to introduce an annual competition for clubs on the continent. The following year, at a CONMEBOL congress in Caracas, the creation of a South American Champions Cup was decided, renamed as Copa Libertadores in honour of the heroes of South American liberation.
From 1959 to 1968 the champions and runners-up of the Taça Brasil were the Brazilian representatives in the Copa Libertadores; the national competition had been created with the purpose of selecting the country's entrants in the continental tournament. Brazilian clubs did not enter the 1966, 1969 or 1970 editions of the competition, and in 1971 the champion and runner-up of the Torneio Roberto Gomes Pedrosa filled Brazil's berths. From 1972 to 1989, the champions and runners-up of the Campeonato Brasileiro became the representatives; from 1990 to 1999, the champions of the Copa do Brasil, the national cup, occupied the second Brazilian berth. Copa Libertadores saw an increase in the number of participating teams in 2000, and since then the runners-up, and other best-placed teams in the Brasileiro, also qualify for the continental tournament.
Copa Libertadores was the only continental competition in South America until the creation of the Supercopa Libertadores in 1988, and the Recopa Sudamericana in 1989. The first was contested between past champions of the main continental tournament, while the second was played by the winners of the Libertadores and the Supercopa of the previous year. In 1992, Copa CONMEBOL was established, being a competition for the best-placed clubs in the national leagues that did not qualify for the Copa Libertadores. Other Copas were also created by the continental confederation in the 1990s, some of them with a single game, mainly contested between past winners of the previous competitions. Copa Mercosur and the Copa Merconorte replaced the Supercopa in 1998, and eventually absorbed Copa CONMEBOL in 2000. The two competitions were replaced by the Copa Sudamericana in 2002, which remains active as the second-most important tournament on the continent.
From 1960 to 2004, CONMEBOL and UEFA, the administrative body of European football, jointly organised the Intercontinental Cup, a competition between the winners of the Copa Libertadores and the European Cup. It was replaced in 2005 by the FIFA Club World Cup, a worldwide event contested between the winners of the continental competitions of all six continental confederations.

History

Early appearances (1972–1981)

Atlético Mineiro's first participated in the Copa Libertadores in 1972, having qualified as champion of the inaugural Campeonato Brasileiro in 1971. In the first stage, Atlético was drawn in Group 3, along with Paraguayan clubs Olimpia and Cerro Porteño, and fellow Brazilian club São Paulo, runner-up of the Brasileiro. Atlético failed to advance to the second stage, after drawing four games and losing one to Cerro Porteño. A match against Olimpia in Paraguay was abandoned in the 84th minute at 2-2, because Atlético had five players sent off; the points were awarded to the Paraguayan club. According to Atlético left-back Oldair, Olimpia played a violent game, and at one point Atlético's players decided to reciprocate. They were subsequently attacked and beaten by local police.
Atlético did not participate in the Copa Libertadores again until 1978, when it qualified after finishing as runner-up to São Paulo in the 1977 Brasileirão. The Brazilian clubs were again drawn into Group 3, this time with Chilean clubs as opposition: Unión Española and Palestino. Atlético qualified for the second stage undefeated, with four wins and two ties. In the semi-finals, then played as a group stage with three teams, the club faced Boca Juniors and River Plate from Argentina. Atlético won only one match, against River, and Boca advanced to the competition finals, which it went on to win.
, in Goiânia, was the venue of a one-game playoff match between Atlético Mineiro and Flamengo in the 1981 Copa Libertadores.|alt=Lateral section of an oval shaped stadium, with empty blue and white seatings below floodlights, viewed from the pitch; the sky is blue and cloudless.
After a two-year absence from the Copa Libertadores, Atlético qualified for the 1981 edition as runner-up of the 1980 Campeonato Brasileiro, which it had lost to Flamengo. The refereeing in the finals had been controversial, as Atlético forward Reinaldo was sent off with a straight red card after scoring a brace. Brazil's representatives were once again drawn into Group 3, together with Olimpia and Cerro Porteño, whom Atlético faced for a second time in a group stage of the Libertadores. The two encounters between the Brazilian clubs ended 2-2, and both won two and drew two matches against the Paraguayans, meaning Atlético and Flamengo were tied on points. According to the competition's rules, a one-game playoff in a neutral stadium had to be played between the clubs to decide which one would advance to the semifinals.
The playoff match was played at Serra Dourada Stadium, in Goiânia, a venue selected by Flamengo. Atlético elected the referee, José Roberto Wright who, until the match, was considered the best in the country. At the 33rd minute of the match, Atlético forward and star player Reinaldo received a straight red card from the referee after fouling Flamengo's Zico, in what was described by the press as a "normal" foul and "without much violence". After the foul, Atlético player Éder was sent off for complaining, and the game was stopped. A turmoil started, and Atlético players Palhinha and Chicão were also sent off for insulting the referee. Left with seven players, Atlético's goalkeeper João Leite claimed he was injured when the match was restarted, but Wright did not stop the game. Atlético defender Osmar then held the ball with his hands, preventing the restart, and was also sent off. The match ended as a goalless draw at the 37-minute mark because Atlético had fewer than seven players on the field. The result meant qualification for Flamengo, as it had the best goal difference in the group stage.After the match, Atlético unsuccessfully appealed to a CONMEBOL court for its annulment. According to Wright, Reinaldo's foul was indeed "normal", but he was sent off because of a previous verbal warning. He also stated that Éder, Palhinha and Chicão continued to be undisciplined and that he had to send Éder off to not lose control of the match. The episode and referee Wright's performance were described by Brazilian and South American media at the time as "shameful", "deplorable" and "disgraceful". Flamengo advanced to the semi-finals and went on to win the competition.
SeasonCompetition[|Round]OppositionHomeAway
1972Copa LibertadoresGS São Paulo2–20–04th
1972Copa LibertadoresGS Cerro Porteño1–10–14th
1972Copa LibertadoresGS Olimpia0–02–24th
1978Copa LibertadoresGS Unión Española5–11–11st
1978Copa LibertadoresGS São Paulo1–12–11st
1978Copa LibertadoresGS Palestino2–05–41st
1978Copa LibertadoresSF Boca Juniors1–21–33rd
1978Copa LibertadoresSF River Plate1–00–13rd
1981Copa LibertadoresGS Flamengo2–22–22nd
1981Copa LibertadoresGS Olimpia1–00–02nd
1981Copa LibertadoresGS Cerro Porteño2–21–22nd
1981Copa Libertadores Flamengo0–0
1981Copa Libertadores------

First titles and finals (1992–1998)

Atlético only returned to official international football in 1992, taking part in the inaugural edition of the Copa CONMEBOL, a new competition organised by the continental confederation; the club earned a berth in the competition by finishing third in the 1991 Campeonato Brasileiro Série A. Copa CONMEBOL was contested among 16 teams, which played two-legged knockout ties. In the first round, Atlético eliminated fellow Brazilian side Fluminense with an aggregate score of 6-3, after a 2-1 away loss and a 5-1 home victory. The team then faced Colombia's Atlético Junior in the quarter-finals, advancing with a 5-2 aggregate score. Ecuadorian side El Nacional was the opponent in the semi-finals, in which Atlético lost the first leg at Quito by 1-0 and won the second at home by 2-0 to advance. Olimpia, a team which Atlético had already faced in two Copa Libertadores tournaments, was the club's opposition in the finals. After a 2-0 home win with a brace by Negrini at the Mineirão, and a 1-0 away defeat at the Defensores del Chaco, Atlético won its first official international trophy. Aílton, an Atlético forward, scored six goals in the competition and was its top goalscorer.
As the 1992 Copa CONMEBOL winner, Atlético Mineiro qualified for the following year's edition of the competition, and for the 1993 edition of the Copa de Oro, a new tournament organised by CONMEBOL, contested between the winners of all the continental competitions of the previous year: Copa Libertadores, Copa CONMEBOL, Supercopa Libertadores, and Copa Master de Supercopa. In the Copa de Oro, Atlético faced its biggest rivals Cruzeiro in the semi-final, played as a single match at the Mineirão, the home stadium for both clubs, in front of a crowd of both teams' fans. The game ended 0-0, and Atlético advanced to its second continental finals after winning a penalty shootout by 5-4. The team faced the Boca Juniors in the finals, and finished as runner-up after drawing the first leg 0-0 at the Mineirão, and losing the second 1-0 at La Bombonera. In the Copa CONMEBOL, Atlético again eliminated Fluminense in the first round, and defeated Peru's Sipesa in the quarter-finals with an aggregate score of 2-1. Atlético club was eliminated in the semi-finals by Botafogo, the eventual winner of the tournament, after winning the first leg 3-1 at home, but losing the second 3-0..|alt=Corner of a stadium with empty maroon and white seating sections, viewed from the pitch, from which it is separated by a fence; the sky is blue and cloudless.Absent from continental football for one season, Atlético Mineiro returned to the Copa CONMEBOL in the 1995 edition, qualifying after finishing fourth in the 1994 Brasileiro. The team eliminated Brazil's Guarani in the first stage with an aggregate score of 2-1, before defeating Venezuelan club Mineros de Guayana, with a club record home and aggregate win scores. In the semi-finals, Atlético faced Colombia's América de Cali, and advanced after winning a penalty shootout by 4-3, following a 4-3 away defeat, and a 1-0 home win. In its second Copa CONMEBOL final, Atlético faced Argentine side Rosario Central, and secured a significant advantage in the series with a 4-0 win at the Mineirão. However, in the second leg of the finals played in the Gigante de Arroyito, Atlético suffered a shocking 4-0 defeat, with a goal scored by Rosario at the 87th minute. The title was decided on penalties, with a 4-3 score favouring Central. In the following year, Atlético took part in the Copa Master de CONMEBOL, a single-edition competition contested in Cuiabá between the past winners of the Copa CONMEBOL: Atlético, Botafogo, São Paulo, and Rosario Central. Only a few months after the previous year's defeat, Atlético faced Central again, this time winning 10-9 on penalties after a 0-0 draw. Atlético lost to São Paulo 3-0 in the final match, played at the Verdão.
After finishing third in the 1996 Campeonato Brasileiro Série A, Atlético Mineiro qualified for the 1997 Copa CONMEBOL. Their opponent in the first stage was Série A runner-up Portuguesa, which had eliminated Atlético in the semi-finals of the national championship. This time, Atlético eliminated Portuguesa with a 4-1 aggregate score. In the quarter-finals, the team faced and eliminated América de Cali for a second time in its history. The opposition in the semi-finals was Peru's Universitario, defeated by Atlético with a 6-0 aggregate score. Atlético then faced an Argentine team in a continental final for the third time. With title holders Lanús as the opponent, Atlético took the lead in the series with a 4-1 away win at La Fortaleza in Lanús. After the match, Atlético players and staff were trapped against the fence surrounding the pitch and attacked by Lanús players and supporters. Among the players and staff injured in the confrontation, Atlético head coach Emerson Leão had to undergo surgery after being hit in the face. The second leg was played at the Mineirão, and this time the team's advantage was secured with a 1-1 draw, and Atlético won its second international title undefeated. Atlético forward Valdir was the top scorer of the competition with seven goals.
with seven goals.|upright=0.8|alt=A man with tanned light skin, brown eyes, short dark hair and a black Van Dyke, wearing a white shirt with a black-lined collar.
As champion of the 1997 edition, the club qualified for the 1998 Copa CONMEBOL. Atlético eliminated Paraguayan side Cerro Corá on penalties in the first round, and Bolivia's Jorge Wilstermann in the quarterfinals with a 4-1 aggregate score. In the semi-finals, Atlético faced Rosario Central for a third time in continental football, and was eliminated after a 1-1 draw at the Gigante de Arroyito and a 1-0 defeat at home. It was the last time the club participated in the Copa CONMEBOL, as the competition's final edition was played in 1999, and Atlético did not qualify.
SeasonCompetitionRoundOppositionHomeAwayRef.
1992Copa CONMEBOLR16 Fluminense5–11–26–3
1992Copa CONMEBOLQF Junior3–02–25–2
1992Copa CONMEBOLSF El Nacional2–00–12–1
1992Copa CONMEBOLF Olimpia2–00–12–1
1993Copa de OroSF Cruzeiro0–0
1993Copa de OroF Boca Juniors0–00–10–1
1993Copa CONMEBOLR16 Fluminense2–00–22–2
1993Copa CONMEBOLQF Sipesa1–01–12–1
1993Copa CONMEBOLSF Botafogo3–10–33–4
1995Copa CONMEBOLR1 Guarani1–11–02–1
1995Copa CONMEBOLQF Mineros6–04–010–0
1995Copa CONMEBOLSF América1–03–44–4
1995Copa CONMEBOLF Rosario Central4–00–44–4
1996Copa Master de CONMEBOLSF Rosario Central0–0
1996Copa Master de CONMEBOLF São Paulo0–3
1997Copa CONMEBOLR16 Portuguesa0–04–14–1
1997Copa CONMEBOLQF América2–11–13–2
1997Copa CONMEBOLSF Universitario4–02–06–0
1997Copa CONMEBOLF Lanús1–14–15–2
1998Copa CONMEBOLR16 Cerro Corá2–20–02–2
1998Copa CONMEBOLQF Jorge Wilstermann3–11–04–1
1998Copa CONMEBOLSF Rosario Central0–11–11–2

Sudamericana years (2000–2011)

Atlético did not take part in any continental competitions in 1999, but as Série A runner-up in that year the club qualified for the 2000 Copa Libertadores and the 2000 Copa Mercosur. The latter was a new continental competition introduced in 1998, which eventually replaced both the Copa CONMEBOL and the Supercopa Libertadores for clubs in Brazil, Argentina, Paraguay, and Uruguay. In its return to the Copa Libertadores after nineteen years, Atlético was drawn in Group 8, with Bolivian Club Bolívar, Uruguayan side Bella Vista, and Chile's Cobreloa. Atlético's form in the group stage was erratic, but enough to ensure qualification for the next stage in second place. The team won its three home matches, which included a joint-record 6-0 victory against Cobreloa, and lost the three away ones, also with a joint-record, a 4-0 defeat against Bolívar. In the round of 16, the team faced Brazilian side Atlético Paranaense, which it eliminated by a score of 5-3 in a penalty shootout, after winning 1-0 at home and losing 2-1 away. The team's opponent in the quarter-finals was Corinthians, winner of the previous year's Série A finals over Atlético. After drawing 1-1 at the Mineirão, Atlético was defeated 2-1 in São Paulo and eliminated.
In the Copa Mercosur, Atlético was drawn into Group E, with fellow Brazilian club Vasco da Gama, Uruguay's Peñarol and San Lorenzo from Argentina. The team qualified for the quarter-finals as first in the group, winning four games, drawing one with Peñarol, and losing only one to eventual champions Vasco. In the quarter-finals, Atlético eliminated Boca Juniors, winning 2-0 at the Mineirão, and drawing 2-2 at La Bombonera. The opposition in the semi-finals was Palmeiras, winner of the 1999 Copa Libertadores and runner-up of the 1999 Mercosur. Atlético lost both legs, by 4-1 in São Paulo and 2-0 at home, and was eliminated.
.|alt=A football match taking place in a packed stadium with an athletics track, viewed from a stand behind one of the goals; it's night and the ground is floodlit.
Atlético Mineiro did not qualify for any continental competitions in 2001 or 2002, a season in which Brazil did not have representatives in the first edition of Copa Sudamericana, the new cup which replaced Copa Mercosur and Copa Merconorte. The club qualified for the 2003 Copa Sudamericana, taking part in a single round-robin preliminary group stage for Brazilian clubs, with Fluminense and Corinthians. Atlético defeated the latter 2-0 in São Paulo, but lost to the former 2-0 at home, and did not qualify for the second preliminary stage. The club became a regular participant in the Copa Sudamericana in the 2000s, but failed to advance from the Brazilian preliminary round in most tournaments. In 2004, Atlético fell to Goiás with a 4-2 away loss and a 1-1 home draw. Going through a bad period in its history, which included relegation in 2005, the club was absent from continental football for three years between 2005 and 2007.
Following its return to the Série A in 2007, the team finished eighth in the league and earned a spot in the following year's Copa Sudamericana, but was eliminated in the first stage, after losing 8-3 on aggregate against Botafogo. In the 2009 edition, Atlético again fell to Goiás in the first stage, this time on penalties. After finishing in seventh place in the 2009 Série A, Atlético qualified for the 2010 Copa Sudamericana, and advanced from the second preliminary stage by eliminating Grêmio Prudente after drawing 0-0 and winning 1-0. Atlético then faced Colombian side Santa Fe in the round of 16, winning the first leg by 2-0 and losing the second 1-0 to advance. Palmeiras was the opponent in the quarter-finals, and Atlético was eliminated with a 1-1 draw at home and a 2-0 defeat at São Paulo. The club also took part in the 2011 Copa Sudamericana, again falling to Botafogo in the preliminary stage with two losses.
SeasonCompetitionRoundOppositionHomeAwayRef.
2000Copa LibertadoresGS Bolívar1–00–42nd
2000Copa LibertadoresGS Bella Vista2–10–12nd
2000Copa LibertadoresGS Cobreloa6–00–12nd
2000Copa LibertadoresR16 Atlético Paranaense1–01-22–2
2000Copa LibertadoresQF Corinthians1–11–22–3
2000Copa MercosurGS Peñarol2–12–21st
2000Copa MercosurGS Vasco da Gama2–00–21st
2000Copa MercosurGS San Lorenzo3–24–31st
2000Copa MercosurQF Boca Juniors2–02–24–2
2000Copa MercosurSF Palmeiras0–21–41–6
2003Copa SudamericanaPR Corinthians2–02nd
2003Copa SudamericanaPR Fluminense0–22nd
2004Copa SudamericanaPR Goiás1–12–43–5
2008Copa SudamericanaR1 Botafogo2–51–33–8
2009Copa SudamericanaR1 Goiás1–11–12–2
2010Copa SudamericanaR2 Grêmio Prudente1–00–01–0
2010Copa SudamericanaR16 Santa Fe2–00–12–1
2010Copa SudamericanaQF Palmeiras1–10–21–3
2011Copa SudamericanaR2 Botafogo1–20–11–3

Libertadores winner and regular (2013–)

After an unsuccessful season in the national league in 2011, where it did not qualify for the following season's continental tournaments, Atlético finished as runner-up in the 2012 Campeonato Brasileiro, qualifying for the Copa Libertadores for the first time in twelve years. The team entered the competition in the second stage, and was drawn into Group 3, together with Argentine club Arsenal de Sarandí, Bolivia's The Strongest, and São Paulo once again. With a squad composed of Ronaldinho, Jô, Diego Tardelli, Bernard and a returning Gilberto Silva, Atlético dominated the group, winning its first five matches. São Paulo inflicted the team's only loss in the last match, but Atlético had already secured the best performance of the competition's group stage, which meant the second legs in further rounds would be played at home. São Paulo, as the worst runner-up of the group stage, was also the team's opponent in the round of 16. Atlético won the first leg, played at the Morumbi, after a 2-1 comeback; in the second leg, played at the Estádio Independência, the team won 4-1 with a hat-trick by Jô to advance.
|alt=A pitch level perspective of a floodlit oval stadium, filled with people wearing black and white clothes and raising their arms; smoke from flares fills the air, and a section of the playing field and a goal can be seen.
Mexico's Club Tijuana was the opponent in the quarter-finals, and the first leg, contested in Tijuana, ended 2-2 with an equaliser goal by Atlético's Luan in injury time. In the second leg, Tijuana opened the scoring but Atlético evened the score in the first half with a goal by the team's captain, Réver. An iconic moment for the club occurred when a penalty kick was awarded to Tijuana in injury time. If Duvier Riascos' shot had scored, it would have meant elimination, but it was saved by Atlético's goalkeeper Victor with his foot. The save, according to sports commentators and supporters, represented the "kicking out" of the club's historic "jinx". In the semi-finals, Atlético faced Argentine champion Newell's Old Boys, and lost the first leg 2-0 in Rosario. In the second leg, after an interruption at 1–0 because of a failure in the Independência's floodlights, Atlético made the score 2-0 six minutes into injury time to equalise the series. The team advanced after winning 3-2 on penalties.
In the finals, Atlético faced Olimpia for the second time in a continental decision, and the Paraguayan club won the first leg, played at the Defensores del Chaco, by 2-0. The competition's rules demanded a stadium with at least a capacity of 40,000 for the finals, and the second leg was played at the Mineirão. A Jô goal in the beginning of the second half, and a header by Leonardo Silva at the 87th minute, equalised the aggregate, and the match ended with the same score after extra-time. The title was decided by a penalty shootout, which Atlético Mineiro won 4-3 to claim its first Copa Libertadores trophy. Jô was the top goalscorer in the competition with seven goals, and Victor was selected as the tournament's best goalkeeper. The team's victory also ensured awards for Atlético players at a continental level: Ronaldinho was named South American Footballer of the Year and selected for the continent's ideal team of 2013, along with Bernard, Réver, Marcos Rocha and Jô.
in the 2014 Copa Libertadores|left|alt=Two football teams and a refereeing team lining up in a football stadium pitch. The leftmost team wears black and white striped shirts, black shorts and white socks, while the other wears white shorts, red socks and gray jackets. The refereeing trio wears yellow shirts and black socks. People with cameras can be seen in the foreground. A stand below lit floodlights is seen in the background, packed with people in red clothes holding red and white banners and paper pieces.
As winner of South America's main continental tournament, Atlético won the right to play in the 2013 FIFA Club World Cup in Morocco, its first official intercontinental competition. However, it was unsuccessful, as Atlético fell in the semi-finals to host club Raja Casablanca in a 3-1 loss. After the unexpected defeat, the team faced the Chinese club, and Asian champion, Guangzhou Evergrande in the third place match, which it won 3-2 with an injury time goal. The Copa Libertadores victory also ensured the club a berth in the 2014 edition of the competition. In that season, Atlético was drawn in Group 4, together with Paraguay's Nacional, Venezuela's Zamora, and Santa Fe. The team finished the group in first place, with three wins and three draws, and advanced to the knockout stages, where it faced Colombian club Atlético Nacional. Atlético Mineiro lost the first leg 1-0 in Medellín and scored 1-0 in the second leg at home, but a goal in the 87th minute by Atlético Nacional meant elimination. Atlético also took part in the 2014 Recopa Sudamericana its first appearance in the competition, contested between the champions of the Libertadores and the Sudamericana. The club again faced Lanús in a continental final, and won the first leg 1-0 in Argentina. Despite scoring first in the second leg at the Mineirão, Atlético suffered a comeback, and the aggregate score was 3-3 after 90 minutes. In extra-time, two own goals by Lanús players gave Atlético the title, with an aggregate score of 5-3.
Atlético qualified for the 2015 Copa Libertadores after winning the 2014 Copa do Brasil over rivals Cruzeiro. Unlike in previous years, the team struggled in the group stage, where it was drawn in Group 1 with Chilean side Colo-Colo, Mexico's Atlas, and Santa Fe again. Atlético qualified for the following stage in second place, and was eliminated in the round of 16 by Brazilian club Internacional, with a 2-2 draw in the first leg in Belo Horizonte and a 3-1 loss in Porto Alegre. The club qualified for the 2016 Copa Libertadores, after finishing as runner-up in the 2015 Campeonato Brasileiro Série A. Through its position in a new Copa Libertadores ranking introduced by CONMEBOL, Atlético was seeded in Pot 1 for the 2016 edition, and joined in Group 5 by Colo-Colo, Peruvian champions Melgar, and Ecuador's Independiente del Valle. After advancing as first in its group, the team eliminated Argentina's Racing in the round of 16, with a goalless draw at El Cilindro, and a 2-1 victory at home. Atlético fell to São Paulo in the quarter-finals on away goals, after losing 1-0 at the Morumbi, and winning 2-1 at the Independência. In November 2016, the club qualified for the 2017 Copa Libertadores, its fifth consecutive appearance in the competition.

Records

Team and players

;Key
WWinner
RURunner-up

By season

SeasonCompetitionPWDLGFGAGDRound
1972Copa Libertadores604256−1GS
1978Copa Libertadores105231914+5SF
1981Copa Libertadores725086+2GS
1992Copa CONMEBOL8413157+8W
1993Copa CONMEBOL6312770SF
1993Copa de Oro302101−1RU
1995Copa CONMEBOL8512209+11RU
1996Copa Master de CONMEBOL201103−3RU
1997Copa CONMEBOL8530185+13W
1998Copa CONMEBOL623175+2SF
2000Copa Libertadores104151312+1QF
2000Copa Mercosur95231812+6SF
2003Copa Sudamericana2101220PR
2004Copa Sudamericana201135−2PR
2008Copa Sudamericana200238−5R1
2009Copa Sudamericana2020220R1
2010Copa Sudamericana6222440QF
2011Copa Sudamericana200213−2R2
2013Copa Libertadores149232918+11W
2013FIFA Club World Cup210145−1SF
2014Copa Libertadores834197+2
2014Recopa Sudamericana220053+2W
2015Copa Libertadores831489−1R16
2016Copa Libertadores10622167+9QF

By competition

By country

Finals

Atlético Mineiro goals always listed first.
YearCompetitionOpposing TeamScoreVenue
1992Copa CONMEBOL Olimpia2–0 Mineirão, Belo Horizonte
1992Copa CONMEBOL Olimpia0–1 Defensores del Chaco, Asunción
1993Copa de Oro Boca Juniors0–0 Mineirão, Belo Horizonte
1993Copa de Oro Boca Juniors0–1 La Bombonera, Buenos Aires
1995Copa CONMEBOL Rosario Central4–0 Mineirão, Belo Horizonte
1995Copa CONMEBOL Rosario Central0–4 Gigante de Arroyito, Rosario
1996Copa Master de CONMEBOL São Paulo0–3 Verdão, Cuiabá
1997Copa CONMEBOL Lanús4–1 La Fortaleza, Lanús
1997Copa CONMEBOL Lanús1–1 Mineirão, Belo Horizonte
2013Copa Libertadores Olimpia0–2 Defensores del Chaco, Asunción
2013Copa Libertadores Olimpia2–0 Mineirão, Belo Horizonte
2014Recopa Sudamericana Lanús1–0 La Fortaleza, Lanús
2014Recopa Sudamericana Lanús4–3 Mineirão, Belo Horizonte