Tourney Name: | CPISRA Pan-American Soccer Championship |
Year: | 1999 |
Champion Other: | Argentina |
Second Other: | United States |
Third Other: | Brazil |
Fourth Other: | Chile |
Prevseason: | 1995 Buenos Aires |
Nextseason: | 2002 Santiago |
The 1999 CPISRA Pan-American Soccer Championship was an American championship for men's national 7-a-side association football teams. CPISRA stands for Cerebral Palsy International Sports & Recreation Association. Athletes with a physical disability competed.
Football 7-a-side was played with modified FIFA rules. Among the modifications were that there were seven players, no offside, a smaller playing field, and permission for one-handed throw-ins. Matches consisted of two thirty-minute halves, with a fifteen-minute half-time break. The championships was a qualifying event for the tournament Soccer World Cup at the 2001 CPISRA World Games.
width=45% | Means of qualification | width=10% | Berths | width=45% | Qualified |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Host nation | align=center | 0 | unknown | ||
Americas Region | align=center | 4 | Argentina Brazil Chile United States | ||
Total | 4 |
The individual teams contact following football gamblers on to:
The venues to be used for the World Championships were located in Buenos Aires.
Buenos Aires | ||
---|---|---|
Stadium: unknown | ||
Capacity: unknown | ||
The group stage was a competition between the 4 teams in one group, where engaged in a round-robin tournament within itself.
Classification
Athletes with a physical disability competed. The athlete's disability was caused by a non-progressive brain damage that affects motor control, such as cerebral palsy, traumatic brain injury or stroke. Athletes must be ambulant.
Players were classified by level of disability.
Teams must field at least one class C5 or C6 player at all times. No more than two players of class C8 are permitted to play at the same time.
In the group stage have seen the teams in a one group of four teams.
Rank | Team | |
---|---|---|
Argentina | ||
United States | ||
Brazil | ||
4. | Chile |