1996 AFC Asian Cup explained

Year:1996
Other Titles:كأس آسيا 1996
Size:200px
Country:United Arab Emirates
Dates:4–21 December
Num Teams:12
Venues:3
Cities:3
Champion:KSA
Count:3
Second:UAE
Third:IRN
Fourth:KUW
Matches:26
Goals:80
Attendance:448000
Top Scorer: Ali Daei (8 goals)
Player: Khodadad Azizi
Goalkeeper: Mohamed Al-Deayea
Prevseason:1992
Nextseason:2000

The 1996 AFC Asian Cup was the 11th edition of the men's AFC Asian Cup, a quadrennial international football tournament organised by the Asian Football Confederation (AFC). The finals were held in the United Arab Emirates between 4 and 21 December 1996. Saudi Arabia defeated hosts United Arab Emirates in the final match in Abu Dhabi. As the runners-up, the United Arab Emirates represented the AFC in the 1997 FIFA Confederations Cup as the winners Saudi Arabia had qualified automatically as host.

Qualification

See main article: 1996 AFC Asian Cup qualification.

33 teams participated in a preliminary tournament. It was divided into 10 groups and the first-placed team of each group thus qualified.

The qualifying teams were:

Country Qualified asDate qualification was secured Previous appearances in tournament1, 2
29 April 1993 (1980, 1984, 1988, 1992)
8 November 1992 (1988, 1992)
2 February 1996 (1984, 1988, 1992)
4 February 1996 (1976, 1980, 1984, 1988, 1992)
6 March 1996 (Debut)
19 June 1996 (Debut)
20 June 1996 (1972, 1976, 1980, 1984, 1988)
21 June 1996 (1968, 1972, 1976, 1980, 1984, 1988, 1992)
9 July 1996 (1972, 1992)
19 July 1996 (1980, 1984, 1988)
11 August 1996 (1956, 1960, 1964, 1972, 1980, 1984, 1988)
13 August 1996 (1972, 1976)

Notes:

1 Bold indicates champion for that year

2 Italic indicates host

Tournament summary

The tournament began with host United Arab Emirates against South Korea in group A, where the Emiratis played in a 1–1 draw. Subsequently, Kuwait was surprisingly held to a draw by Indonesia, the lead even being taken by the Indonesians. However, the United Arab Emirates, Kuwait and South Korea eventually established their position, with South Korea finishing in third place due to losing to Kuwait and inferior goal difference and qualified only as one of two best third-placed teams, while the host comfortably seized first place, leaving Indonesia bottom after two consecutive defeats to South Korea and the UAE.

Group B easily saw Saudi Arabia, Iran and Iraq took three leading places in their group, with both teams managed to beat Thailand, which finished bottom with three defeats, and also each three of them suffered one defeat one to another. Iraq only finished third due to inferior goal difference, but qualified as the best third-place finisher.

Meanwhile, group C was more entertaining, with both three last finishers grabbed one win each only. Debutant Uzbekistan, on its just first ever competitive participation of a major tournament and was regarded low, stunned entire of Asia by beating China with two late goals to gain three points in the team's just first competitive match. Defending champions Japan however emerged as the only team to collect all three victories, while China recovered following the defeat to beat Syria. The Syrians grabbed its only win, a 2–1 win over Uzbekistan, but the team's poor performance, with two defeats to Japan and China, cost the team from reaching the quarter-finals. Uzbekistan finished last despite the win over China, and was eliminated as well.

The quarter-finals saw entire of East Asia slumped out. Defending champions Japan was crushed down by Kuwait, China lost after a seven-goal thriller with Saudi Arabia, while South Korea suffered a denting 2–6 loss to Iran, with Iran scored five goals in the second half. The host UAE continued its quest to win the trophy with a successful 1–0 win over Iraq thanked for the golden goal of Abdulrahman Ibrahim. The semi-finals became a West Asian affair and rematches of group A and B: Saudi Arabia took a successful revenge on Iran following the group stage, beating the Iranians on penalty, while the UAE killed Kuwaiti dream for the second time with another 1–0 win to set up final with Saudi Arabia. Iran eventually took third place after beating Kuwait on penalty, the match ended 1–1 draw.

The final between the UAE and Saudi Arabia happened to be boring than expected. The two teams played defensively and lacking enthusiastic attacks in front of 60,000 spectators. Eventually, penalty had to be brought out, where the UAE missed two while Saudi Arabia only missed one, thus Saudi Arabia was crowned for its third trophy in the country's fourth consecutive Asian Cup final.[1] Thanked for the win, Saudi Arabia gained automatic berth to qualify for the 2000 AFC Asian Cup held in Lebanon.

Venues

Abu DhabiAl Ain
Sheikh Zayed StadiumTahnoun bin Mohammed Stadium
Capacity: 60,000Capacity: 15,000
Dubai
Al-Maktoum Stadium
Capacity: 12,000

First round

All times are UAE time (UTC+4)

Group A

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Group B

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Group C

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Third-placed qualifiers

At the end of the first stage, a comparison was made between the third placed teams of each group. The two best third-placed teams advanced to the quarter-finals.Iraq (best third-place) and South Korea (second best third-place) qualified for the quarter-finals.

Knockout stage

All times are UAE time (UTC+4)

Quarter-finals

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Semi-finals

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Final

See main article: 1996 AFC Asian Cup Final.

GK17Muhsin Musabah
RB6Ismail Rashid Ismail
CB5Yousuf Hussain
CB12Hassan Mubarak
LB3Munther Abdullah
CM15Mohamed Ali
CM16
CM18
RF7
CF10Adnan Al-Talyani (c)
LF23
Substitutions:
MF 13
FW 11
FW 14
Manager:
Tomislav Ivić
GK1Mohamed Al-Deayea
RB2Mohammed Al-Jahani
CB3
CB4Abdullah Zubromawi
LB13
DM16Khamis Al-Owairan
RM10
CM8Khalid Al-Temawi
CM14Khaled Al-Muwallid
LM15Yousuf Al-Thunayan (c)
CF9
Substitutions:
CF 25
MF 12
FW 20
Manager:
Nelo Vingada

Statistics

Goalscorers

With eight goals, Iran's Ali Daei is the top scorer of the tournament. In total, 80 goals were scored by 47 different players, with one of them credited as an own goal.

8 goals

6 goals

4 goals

3 goals

2 goals

1 goal

1 own goal

Awards

Best player

Top scorer

Best goalkeeper

Fair play award

Team of the Tournament[2]

Marketing

Sponsorships

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: AFC Asian Cup Archive: When Saudi Arabia reigned supreme in 1996. 12 January 2017.
  2. Web site: كأس آسيا 1996.. عندما انتزع المنتخب السعودي اللقب من الإمارات صاحب الأرض . ar . Sport 360 . 8 December 2018 . 15 June 2020.
  3. Web site: 1994-07-21 . Drinks company cash boost for Asia . 2023-10-16 . South China Morning Post . en.
  4. Web site: 1995-01-16 . Why soccer struggles to kick tobacco . 2023-10-17 . South China Morning Post . en.