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Beach Soccer World Championships

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Defunct beach soccer tournament for national teams
Football tournament
Beach Soccer World Championships
Organiser(s)BSWW
Founded1995
Abolished2004
RegionInternational
Teams12
Last champions Brazil (9th title)
Most championshipsBrazil Brazil (9 titles)

TheBeach Soccer World Championships was the premier internationalbeach soccer competition contested by men's national teams between 1995 and 2004. It was replaced by theFIFA Beach Soccer World Cup.[1]

The tournament took place annually inBrazil under the supervision ofBeach Soccer Worldwide (BSWW) and its predecessors, crowning the world champions of the sport.[2] Due to the sport's rapid growth,FIFA took an interest in it, and as the main tournament in world beach soccer, it joined hands with BSWW in 2005 to take over the organization of the competition, re-branding it as an official FIFA tournament.[3]

Brazil were the most successful team, winning nine of the ten tournaments.

History

[edit]
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The first Beach Soccer World Championship was held inBrazil, in 1995, organised by the precursors to the modern-day founders of the standardised rules,Beach Soccer Worldwide, held under the titleBeach Soccer World Championship. Eight teams were selected to take part, without going through a qualification process. HoweverBrazil, the hosts, dominated and easily won the cup without losing a game. The tournament was successful and BSWW announced that the competition would take place every year.

By 1997, more teams had already stated their interest in participating and therefore BSWW extended their selection to 10 teams for 1998. Brazil continued to dominate, despite this change. Immediately, BSWW extended to 12 teams for 1999, spreading their selection across five continents, introducing more new teams to the tournament.However, with all these changes it still took until the 2001 World Cup for Brazil to lose the title after winning the competition six years on the run since the establishment. It was Portugal who won the tournament, with Brazil finishing in a disappointing fourth place.

With this change of champions, more countries thought there was a chance for themselves to win the tournament and this sparked more interest worldwide. Not surprisingly, Brazil reclaimed their title in 2002, when BSWW reduced the number of contestants back to eight.The lastBeach Soccer World Championship to be organised purely by BSWW was in 2004 when twelve teams played, before being replaced by the FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup the next year.

Results

[edit]
See also:List of world cups in beach soccer
#YearLocation(s)FinalThird place play-offNo. of
teams
Goals
(match avg.)
ChampionsScoreRunners-upThird placeScoreFourth place
11995
Details
BrazilCopacabana Beach,Rio de Janeiro,Brazil

Brazil
8–1
United States

England
7–6
Italy
8149 (9.3)
21996
Details
BrazilCopacabana Beach,Rio de Janeiro,Brazil

Brazil
3–0
Uruguay

Italy
4–3
United States
8131 (8.2)
31997
Details
BrazilCopacabana Beach,Rio de Janeiro,Brazil

Brazil
5–2
Uruguay

United States
5–1
Argentina
8144 (9.0)
41998
Details
BrazilCopacabana Beach,Rio de Janeiro,Brazil

Brazil
9–2
France

Uruguay
6–3
Peru
10218 (9.1)
51999
Details
BrazilCopacabana Beach,Rio de Janeiro,Brazil

Brazil
5–2
Portugal

Uruguay
2–2 (a.e.t.)
(5–4p.)

Peru
12174 (8.7)
62000
Details
BrazilMarina da Glória,Rio de Janeiro,Brazil

Brazil
6–2
Peru

Spain
6–3
Japan
12172 (8.6)
72001
Details
BrazilCosta do Sauípe,Mata de São João,Brazil

Portugal
9–3
France

Argentina
4–2
Brazil
12144 (7.2)
82002
Details
BrazilVitória,Espírito Santo,Brazil;
Guarujá,São Paulo,Brazil

Brazil
6–5
Portugal

Uruguay
5–3
Thailand
8145 (9.1)
92003
Details
BrazilCopacabana Beach,Rio de Janeiro,Brazil

Brazil
8–2
Spain

Portugal
7–4
France
8150 (9.4)
102004
Details
BrazilCopacabana Beach,Rio de Janeiro,Brazil

Brazil
6–4
Spain

Portugal
5–1
Italy
12155 (7.8)

Teams reaching the top four

[edit]

Overall, half of the 24 nations who ever competed made a top four finish; only two won the title. Brazil were by far the most successful nation, winning nine titles of the possible ten. Portugal claimed the only crown Brazil did not win.

Brazil were also the only nation to finish in the final four of every championship.

NationTitlesRunners-upThird placeFourth placeTotal top 4
 Brazil9 (1995,1996,1997,1998,1999,2000,2002,2003,2004)1 (2001)10
 Portugal1 (2001)2 (1999,2002)2 (2003,2004)5
 Uruguay2 (1996,1997)3 (1998,1999,2002)5
 Spain2 (2003,2004)1 (2000)3
 France2 (1998,2001)1 (2003)3
 United States1 (1995)1 (1997)1 (1996)3
 Peru1 (2000)2 (1998,1999)3
 Italy1 (1996)2 (1995,2004)3
 Argentina1 (2001)1 (1997)2
 England1 (1995)1
 Japan1 (2000)1
 Thailand1 (2002)1
Note: Brazil hosted all tournaments.

By confederation

[edit]
Total times teams played by confederation
AsiaAfricaNorth AmericaSouth AmericaOceaniaEuropeTotal
Teams61113604498
Top 850103003580
Top 42032001540
Top 2001120720
1st00090110
2nd00130610
3rd00140510
4th20140310

Tournament appearances

[edit]
Main article:National team appearances in the FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup

24 countries participated over the ten competitions, however nearly half (11) only appeared at one edition. Three participated in all World Championships:Brazil,Italy andUruguay. European teams dominated in unique appearances by continent, since half of all countries were from Europe. Oceania were the only region never to be represented at least once.

Only eight of the 24 countries have failed to reappear at a FIFA controlled World Cup. Peru (5) appeared in the most competitions without yet participating in a FIFA World Cup.

Apps.CountryFirstLastBest result
10 Brazil19952004Champions
 Italy19952004Third place
 Uruguay19952004Runners-up
9 United States19952004Runners-up
8 Argentina19952004Third place
 France19972004Runners-up
 Portugal19972004Champions
7 Spain19982004Runners-up
5 Peru19982004Runners-up
4 Germany19952004Round 1
 Japan19972003Fourth place
2 Canada19961999QFs
 Venezuela20002001QFs
1 England1995Third place
 Netherlands1995Round 1
 Denmark1996Round 1
 Russia1996Round 1
 Chile1998Round 1
 Malaysia1999Round 1
 South Africa1999Round 1
 Turkey2001Round 1
 Thailand2002Fourth place
 Belgium2004Round 1
  Switzerland2004QFs

Overall team records

[edit]

In this ranking3 points are awarded for a win in normal time, 2 points for a win in extra time or penalty shoot-out and 0 for a loss. Teams are ranked by total points, then by goal difference, then by goals scored. Only the points for the first 10 World Championships that occurred between 1995 and 2004 are counted here.[citation needed]

RankTeamPartPldWW+LGFGAGDPts
1 Brazil10504802422123+299144
2 Portugal83523111177119+5871
3 Uruguay103916419155155056
4 United States93315018112138−2645
5 Spain72714112109108+144
6 Italy103612123128183−5538
7 France82911117115154−3935
8 Peru521110108178+333
9 Argentina8301002082122−4030
10 Japan41431104078−3811
11 England152032031−116
12 Canada262042237−156
13 Thailand151131321−85
14 Venezuela251041416−23
15 Russia13102710−33
16 Denmark131021016−63
17 Chile141031422−83
18  Switzerland13102917−83
19 Germany491082256−343
20 Turkey1200215−40
21 Malaysia12002413−90
22 South Africa12002214−120
23 Belgium12002518−130
24 Netherlands13003730−230

Awards

[edit]

The following documents the winners of the awards presented at the conclusion of the tournament. Three awards were consistently bestowed at each event.

YearTop goalscorer(s)GlsBest player(s)Best goalkeeperRef.
1995ItalyAlessandro Altobelli
BrazilZico
12BrazilJúnior
BrazilZico
BrazilPaulo Sérgio[1]
1996ItalyAlessandro Altobelli14BrazilEdinhoBrazilPaulo Sérgio[2]
1997BrazilJúnior
UruguayVenancio Ramos
11BrazilJúniorBrazilPaulo Sérgio[3]
1998BrazilJúnior14BrazilJúniorBrazilPaulo Sérgio[4]
1999BrazilJúnior
UruguayGustavo Matosas
10BrazilJorginhoPortugal Pedro Crespo[5]
2000BrazilJúnior13BrazilJúniorJapan Eichi Kato[6]
2001PortugalAlan10PortugalHernâniFrancePascal Olmeta[7]
2002PortugalMadjer
BrazilNeném
Uruguay Nico
9BrazilNenémThailandVilard Normcharoen[8]
2003BrazilNeném15SpainAmarelleBrazil Robertinho[9]
2004PortugalMadjer12BrazilJorginhoSpain Roberto Valeiro[10]

Top goalscorers

[edit]

From the data available,[Note] the below table shows thetop 20 goalscorers of the World Championships.

RankPlayerTeamGoals
1JúniorBrazil71
2NenémBrazil55
3Júnior NegãoBrazil54
4MadjerPortugal52
5JorginhoBrazil43
6AlanPortugal37
7Venancio RamosUruguay34
8AmarelleSpain32
9Alessandro AltobelliItaly30
BenjaminBrazil
11Cláudio AdãoBrazil28
12EdinhoBrazil25
JuninhoBrazil
14ZicoBrazil23
15HernâniPortugal22
MagalBrazil
17Gabriel SilveraUruguay20
18Gustavo MatosasUruguay18
19Zak IbsenUnited States17
NicoUruguay
Jorge OlaecheaPeru
Carlos RussoArgentina
Sources:
1995–2001 (combined scorers),2003Archived 2018-11-09 at theWayback Machine,2004,2005,2006,2007,2008,2009,2011,2013,2015,2017,2019
Notes:^
  • Note that the sources from 1995–2002 only list the players with the most goals from all those tournaments combined; players must have scored at least 10 goals overall to make the list; players with less goals are not listed. This means for players who subsequently scored enough goals to make the above all-time table, if they played between 1995–2002 and scored less than 10 goals, they would not have made the source lists and therefore any goals they did score during that time are a) unknown and b) missing from the above table (if they did score any).
  • Note that there are some discrepancies between FIFA's match reports and FIFA's top scorers lists for the same tournament.
  • During the early years of beach soccer, goals scored in a penalty shootout were often combined with goals scored during regulation time when the match score was documented – note that it is also possible such goals may have been counted in a player's goal tally in the sources.

Attendance figures

[edit]

Note that attendance records are not available between 1995 and 2002.

YearLocationStadium capacityMatchesTotal gateLowest gateHighest gateAverage gateAttendance %
2003BrazilRio de Janeiro,Brazil6,0001674,7002,0006,0004,66978%
2004BrazilRio de Janeiro,Brazil10,0002081,90050010,0004,09541%
Key:
  • † – overall percentage matches were attended from the total possible maximum attendance figure if all matches were at full capacity: total gate / (stadium capacity x matches played)

References

[edit]
  1. ^DUBAI 2009: FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup.Bleacher Report. 25 November 2009.
  2. ^FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup 2017 Statistical Kit – post event edition. FIFA. 14 August 2017.
  3. ^"FIFA launches first ever FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup". fifa.com. 1 February 2005. Archived fromthe original on May 30, 2016. Retrieved28 April 2016.

External links

[edit]
Beach Soccer World Championships (1995–2004, all hosted by Brazil)
Tournaments
Tournaments
Finals
Squads
Internationalbeach soccer
Asia
Africa
North America
Central America
and Caribbean
South America
Oceania
Europe
Games
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