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1995 Beach Soccer World Championships
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| other_titles | I Mundial de futebol de areia |
| image | 1995 Beach Soccer World Championships logo.svg |
| size | 200px |
| caption | Official logo |
| country | Brazil |
| dates | January 24–29 |
| num_teams | 8 |
| confederations | 3 |
| venues | 1 |
| cities | 1 |
| champion_other | |
| count | 1 |
| second_other | |
| third_other | |
| fourth_other | |
| matches | 16 |
| goals | 149 |
| top_scorer | BRA Zico |
| ITA Altobelli | |
| (12 goals) | |
| player | BRA Zico |
| BRA Júnior | |
| goalkeeper | BRA Paulo Sérgio |
| nextseason | 1996 |
ITA Altobelli (12 goals) BRA Júnior The 1995 Beach Soccer World Championships was the first edition of the Beach Soccer World Championships, the most prestigious competition in international beach soccer contested by men's national teams until 2005, when the competition was then replaced by the second iteration of a world cup in beach soccer, the better known FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup. It was organised by Brazilian sports agency Koch Tavares (one of the founding partners of Beach Soccer Worldwide).
The tournament took place at Copacabana Beach in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. The hosts and heavy favourites{{cite news
The tournament was immediately deemed a success, leading to the instant scheduling of a second World Cup the following year.{{cite news
The event was notable for featuring many high-profile ex-association footballers, fuelling its popularity, including the likes of the Brazilians Zico, Júnior and Cláudio Adão, Italian 1982 World Cup winners Alessandro Altobelli and Claudio Gentile, Franco Causio, England's Gary Stevens and Luther Blissett, and brothers René and Willy van de Kerkhof of the Netherlands' 1978 World Cup runners-up squad.
Background
In 1994, Koch Tavares organised the first international beach soccer competition in Brazil, the Mundialito de beach soccer, a small 4-team event, in view of understanding how commercially successful beach soccer could be in the region. It featured Brazil, Argentina, Italy and the United States and was dubbed an "unofficial World Cup". The Mundialito was deemed a huge success, which gave Koch Tavares the incentive to organise a fully-fledged international competition.{{cite news
Organisation
Format
The following format was decided upon by the organisers for the maiden edition of the championships: the eight participating nations competed in two groups of four teams in a round robin format. The top two teams progressed straight to the semi-finals from which point on the championship was played as a knock-out tournament until a winner was crowned with an additional match to determine third place.
Miscellaneous
The launch of the tournament took place from 12:30 onwards on January 18 at the Rio Internacional Hotel which involved the press and guests attending to see the opening presentation of the World Championships as well as explanations of the rules of the newly founded sport and the tournament's schedule.{{cite news
The presence of Zico as part of the Brazilian squad, who made over 70 appearances for the Brazilian national association football team, gained considerable attention in the local press prior to the start of the championship.{{cite news
Following the launch, official training for the World Championships began the next day on January 19 on pitches external to the beach arena, in front of Copacabana Palace, concluding with training sessions inside the arena on January 23.{{cite news
The draw to split the eight teams into Groups A and B was conducted on January 21 at the Rio Internacional Hotel. Brazil and Argentina were allocated as heads of the two respective groups, with the other six teams then drawn to accompany them.(Note that other articles dated before the 21st claim the draw was to take place at the beach soccer arena on Copacabana beach, http://memoria.bn.br/DocReader/112518_06/23541http://memoria.bn.br/DocReader/112518_06/23518 however this article referenced, dated after the draw, suggests an unexplained decision to change location of the draw in the meantime, and that it happened at the Rio Internacional Hotel.){{cite news
The Championships were part of the 1st Olympic Summer Festival (Festival Olímpico de Verão), taking place in the Copacabana beach arena with a capacity of 12,000. Entry to all games was free of charge for fans.
In total, US$1 million (1.6 million in 2017) was invested into the organisation of the tournament, including payment for the players who participated.
Teams
There was no qualification process for the first Beach Soccer World Championships; nations were simply invited to play. However, such invites were not random – specific nations were summoned.
Koch Tavares, the tournament organisers, decided that as the first World Cup of beach soccer, since the sport is a derivative of association football, it would be fitting for the six winners of the FIFA World Cup of football throughout history (as of 1995) to field a team in Rio (being hosts Brazil, Argentina, Italy, Uruguay, England and Germany) and as such the aforementioned nations were invited to play, all of which accepted the opportunity.
To make up the numbers, the Netherlands and the United States, despite having never won a FIFA World Cup title, were also invited as "guests".
Africa, Asia and Oceania were unrepresented. European Zone (4):
North American Zone (1):
South American Zone (2):
Hosts:
- (South America)
Group stage
Group A
| Pos | Team | Pld | W | W+ | L | GF | GA | GD | Pts | Qualification |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 3 | 3 | 0 | 0 | 31 | 8 | +23 | 9 | Advance to knockout stage | |
| 2 | 3 | 2 | 0 | 1 | 15 | 15 | 0 | 6 | ||
| 3 | 3 | 1 | 0 | 2 | 18 | 18 | 0 | 3 | ||
| 4 | 3 | 0 | 0 | 3 | 7 | 30 | –23 | 0 |
date = January 24, 1995 | team1 = | score = 7–6 | team2 = | goals1 = | goals2 = | stadium = Copacabana beach}} date = January 24, 1995 | team1 = | score = 16–2 | team2 = | goals1 = | goals2 = | stadium = Copacabana beach}}
date = January 25, 1995 | team1 = | score = 6–1 | team2 = | goals1 = | goals2 = | stadium = Copacabana beach}} date = January 25, 1995 | team1 = | score = 7–4 | team2 = | goals1 = | goals2 = | stadium = Copacabana beach}}
date = January 26, 1995 | team1 = | score = 8–4 | team2 = | goals1 = | goals2 = | stadium = Copacabana beach}} date = January 26, 1995 | team1 = | score = 8–2 | team2 = | goals1 = | goals2 = | stadium = Copacabana beach}}
Group B
| Pos | Team | Pld | W | W+ | L | GF | GA | GD | Pts | Qualification |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 3 | 3 | 0 | 0 | 11 | 4 | +7 | 9 | Advance to knockout stage | |
| 2 | 3 | 1 | 0 | 2 | 11 | 12 | –1 | 3 | ||
| 3 | 3 | 1 | 0 | 2 | 8 | 12 | –4 | 3 | ||
| 4 | 3 | 1 | 0 | 2 | 4 | 6 | –2 | 3 |
Note:
- Argentina, England and Germany were tied on 3 points each and one win against each other and the same goal difference (0) in their head-to-head records.
- The nations were then ranked based on goals scored in the matches between the three in the head-to-head results (ENG 9, GER 7, ARG 3). date = January 24, 1995 | team1 = | score = 5–1 | team2 = | goals1 = | goals2 = | stadium = Copacabana beach}} date = January 24, 1995 | team1 = | score = 3–2 | team2 = | goals1 = | goals2 = | stadium = Copacabana beach}}
date = January 25, 1995 | team1 = | score = 7–6 | team2 = | goals1 = | goals2 = | stadium = Copacabana beach}} date = January 25, 1995 | team1 = | score = 3–1 | team2 = | goals1 = | goals2 = | stadium = Copacabana beach}}
date = January 26, 1995 | team1 = | score = 1–0 | team2 = | goals1 = | goals2 = | stadium = Copacabana beach}} date = January 26, 1995 | team1 = | score = 3–2 | team2 = | goals1 = | goals2 = | stadium = Copacabana beach}}
Knockout stage
January 27 was allocated as a rest day.
Semi-finals
date = January 28, 1995 | team1 = | score = 4–3 | team2 = | goals1 = | goals2 = | stadium = Copacabana beach}}
date = January 28, 1995 | team1 = | score = 13–2 | team2 = | goals1 = | goals2 = | stadium = Copacabana beach}}
Third place play-off
time = 09:00 UTC-2| date = January 29, 1995 | team1 = | score = 7–6 | report = http://memoria.bn.br/docreader/112518_06/23705 | team2 = | goals1 = Osman Blissett Cunningham Stevens | goals2 = Causio Altobelli Soldá | referee = Edmundo Lima Filho | stadium = Copacabana beach}}
Final
date = January 29, 1995 | time = 10:00 UTC-2| team1 = | score = 8–1 | report = http://memoria.bn.br/docreader/112518_06/23705 | team2 = | goals1 = Neném Zico Renan Edinho Júnior Negão | goals2 = Thompson | stadium = Copacabana beach | referee = José Roberto Wright | attendance = 12,000 |}}
Winners
Awards
| Top scorers | Best players | Best goalkeeper |
|---|---|---|
| BRA Zico | ITA Alessandro Altobelli | |
| 12 goals | ||
| BRA Júnior | BRA Zico | |
| BRA Paulo Sérgio |
Final standings
Group stage
References
References
- (1 February 2005). "FIFA launches first ever FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup". FIFA.com.
- (1 February 1998). "Beach Soccer". kochtavares.com.br.
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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