Chile–Peru football rivalry
| Other names | Clásico del Pacífico (Spanish) Derby of the Pacific |
|---|---|
| Location | CONMEBOL (South America) |
| Teams | Chile Peru |
| First meeting | Peru 1–0 Chile 1935 South American Championship (Lima, Peru; January 26, 1935) |
| Latest meeting | Peru 0–0 Chile 2026 FIFA World Cup qualification (Lima, Peru; November 2024) |
| Next meeting | TBD |
| Statistics | |
| Meetings total | 87 |
| Most wins | Chile (46) |
| Most player appearances | Roberto Palacios (15) |
| Top scorer | Eduardo Vargas (7) |
| Largest victory | Peru 6–0 Chile (Lima, Peru; April 19, 1995) |
The Chile–Peru football rivalry is a long-standing association football rivalry between the national football teams of Peru and Chile and their respective aficionados. Both teams compete in FIFA's South American Football Confederation (CONMEBOL). Matches between the two nations are keenly contested and their games have a reputation for fierceness in and off the field of play, fueled by political disputes.
Sports media outlets have listed this rivalry, which is also known in Spanish as the Clásico del Pacífico (Pacific Derby), among the most competitive in association football. The derby's name refers to the Pacific Ocean, as both countries are neighbors in South America's Pacific coast, and the winner "earns bragging rights as the best team" in this side of the continent. According to sports historian Richard Henshaw, Chile and Peru traditionally compete with each other over the rank of fourth-best national team in South America (after Argentina, Brazil, and Uruguay, which are located in the continent's Atlantic side).
Although American journalists link the rivalry as a direct consequence of the War of the Pacific, Chilean historian Sebastián Salinas argues that the football rivalry between Chile and Peru is more recent, dating specifically to the centenary commemorations of the war in the 1970s. According to Salinas, the dictatorships of Augusto Pinochet in Chile and Francisco Morales Bermúdez in Peru promoted a nationalist animosity to these games to divert public attention. Moreover, the rise of football hooliganism, from the Argentine barra brava sports culture that influenced Chile and Peru in the 1980s, further intensified the rivalry.
Chile and Peru have played against each other 87 times in friendlies and tournament matches. Peru defeated Chile 1–0 in their first-ever encounter at the 1935 South American Championship held in Lima. Chile holds the records for most victories (45 wins) and top scorer (Eduardo Vargas, 7 goals). Peru holds the record for the largest victory margin (6–0), acquired in a friendly match played in 1995. Since 1953, both countries have sporadically contested the friendly Copa del Pacífico (Pacific Cup), which is a trophy awarded to the side with the best record after a two-legged home and away match.