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1991 FIFA Women's World Cup qualification

1991 FIFA Women's World Cup qualification

FieldValue
tourney_name1991 FIFA Women's World Cup Qualification
dates9 September 1989 - 14 July 1991
num_teams48
confederations6
matches111
goals445
nextseason[1995](1995-fifa-women-s-world-cup-qualification)

The 1991 FIFA Women's World Cup qualification process saw 48 teams from the six FIFA confederations compete for the 12 places in the 1991 FIFA Women's World Cup finals. The places were divided as follows:

  • Africa - represented by CAF: 1 berth
  • Asia - AFC: 3 (one of those was eventual host China, who did not qualify automatically)
  • Europe - UEFA: 5
  • North, Central America & the Caribbean - CONCACAF: 1
  • Oceania - OFC: 1
  • South America - CONMEBOL: 1

All of the confederations used their regional championship tournament to determine qualification. Hosts China PR also entered the qualifying process.

The qualification process spanned nearly two years, beginning with the first match on 9 September 1989 and the qualification concluded on 14 July 1991. A total of 445 goals were scored in the 111 qualifying matches (an average of 4.01 per match).

Four teams withdrew during the qualification without playing a match: Congo, Senegal, Zambia, and Zimbabwe, all of which are African teams.

Qualified teams

Not a FIFA member}}

Qualification process

ConfederationTeams startedTeams eliminatedTeams qualifiedQualifying start dateQualifying end dateTotal4836129 September 198914 July 1991
[AFC](1991-afc-women-s-championship)926326 May 19918 June 1991
[CAF](1991-african-women-s-championship)87116 February 199130 June 1991
[CONCACAF](1991-concacaf-women-s-championship)716118 April 199128 April 1991
[CONMEBOL](1991-sudamericano-femenino)32128 April 19915 May 1991
[OFC](1991-ofc-women-s-championship)32117 May 199125 May 1991
[UEFA](1991-uefa-women-s-championship)181359 September 198914 July 1991
  • 1 8 nations started, but Martinique were not eligible for World Cup qualification, because they are only members of CONCACAF and not FIFA.
  • 2 China was selected as host after it qualified to the tournament

Confederation qualification processes

Africa (CAF)

Main article: 1991 African Women's Championship

(8 teams competing for 1 berth)

::Qualified:

The only African team to qualify to the World Cup was the winner of the 1991 African Women's Championship, Nigeria.

The eight teams were paired together into two knockout ties. The winners of these ties advanced to the second round, who used the same format as the first round. The final round is a two-leg final between the two winners of the second round. The winner, Nigeria qualified to the World Cup and won the tournament by defeating Cameroon 6–0 on aggregate.

Final Round |}

Asia (AFC)

Main article: 1991 AFC Women's Championship

(9 teams competing for 3 berths)

::Qualified: – –

The 1991 AFC Women's Championship, consisting of nine teams, served as the AFC's qualifying tournament.

The first round was composed of two groups, one of four teams and the other of five. The top two teams of the groups advanced to the semi-finals. In the semi-finals, the winners advanced to the final and the losers played the third-place match. The winner, China; runners-up, Japan; and third place, Chinese Taipei, qualified to the World Cup.

Knockout stage |||1||0 |||0 (5)||0 (4) |||5||0 |||0 (5)||0 (4) China PR, Japan, and Chinese Taipei qualified for the World Cup.

Europe (UEFA)

Main article: UEFA Women's Euro 1991

(18 teams competing for 5 berths)

::Qualified: – – – –

The first official edition of the UEFA Women's Championship served also as UEFA's qualifying tournament for the World Cup. Out of the 18 teams participating in the tournament, the qualifiers were the four semi-finalists—Denmark, Germany, Italy, and Norway—and the best quarter-final loser, Sweden, who lost their two-leg quarter-final clash against Italy on a single away goal.

The UEFA Women's Championship had held its own qualifying campaign. It began in September 1989, and ended with a final four–style tournament in Denmark, held in July 1991, only four months before the World Cup.

Germany won the tournament by beating Norway 3–1 in extra time.

Second round |}

  • 3 Italy won based on the away goals rule and qualified; Sweden qualified for being the best quarter-final loser.

Knockout stage |||0 (8)||0 (7) |||3||0 |||1||3 (a.e.t.) |||2 (a.e.t.)||1

Denmark, Germany, Italy, Norway, and Sweden qualified for the World Cup.

North, Central America & the Caribbean (CONCACAF)

Main article: 1991 CONCACAF Women's Championship

(7 teams competing for 1 berth) 5

::Qualified:

The 1991 CONCACAF's Women's Championship, despite being an unofficial competition, determined the CONCACAF's single qualifier for the World Cup – the winner, the United States. The tournament took place in Port-au-Prince, Haiti in April 1991 and consisted of 8 teams.

Knockout Stage |||6||0 |||10||0 |||5||0 |||4||2

  • 5Martinique were not members of FIFA

United States qualified for the World Cup.

Oceania (OFC)

Main article: 1991 OFC Women's Championship

(3 teams competing for 1 berth)

::Qualified:

Only three teams participated in the tournament which took place in Sydney, Australia in May 1991: Australia, New Zealand and Papua New Guinea. The teams played in a round-robin tournament in which each team played 2 matches against each opponent, with the first placed team qualifying.

The competition was eventually decided through goal-difference, as the matches between Australia and New Zealand ended with one win to each side, and both teams won all matches against Papua New Guinea.

Final standings

South America (CONMEBOL)

Main article: 1991 Sudamericano Femenino

(3 teams competing for 1 berth)

::Qualified:

The first edition of the Sudamericano Femenino (Women's South American Championship), held in April–May 1991 determined CONMEBOL's qualifier. The host of the tournament Brazil won the tournament and with it the right to represent South America in the World Cup.

Final standings

PosTeamPldWDLGFGAGDPts
12200122+10**4**
2210126−4**2**
3200217−6**0**

Brazil qualified for the World Cup.

Info: Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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