2000 Beach Soccer World Championships Explained

Other Titles:VI Beach Soccer World Championships 2000
Size:150px
Country:Brazil
Dates:13–20 February
Num Teams:12
Confederations:4
Venues:1
Cities:1
Count:6
Matches:20
Goals:172
Top Scorer: Júnior (13 goals)
Goalkeeper: Eichi Kato
Prevseason:1999
Nextseason:2001

The 2000 Beach Soccer World Championships was the sixth 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.[1] It was organised by Brazilian sports agency Koch Tavares (one of the founding partners of Beach Soccer Worldwide).

The tournament continued to take place in Rio de Janeiro, however for the first time the venue moved away from the sport's birthplace of Copacabana Beach, being staged around ten miles north at the Marina da Glória.

Defending champions Brazil won their sixth consecutive title, after defeating first time finalists Peru 6–2 in the concluding match of the tournament.[2] Spain and Japan both finished inside the top four for the first time, the latter becoming the first Asian nation to do so at a World Championships.

Organisation

With the increase in the number of participating number teams in the previous year, the organisation remained the same at this World Championships, continuing with twelve nations who were split into four groups of three playing each other in a round robin format. The top two teams progressed to the quarter-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.

Teams

The top finishing European nations in the 1999 Euro Beach Soccer League achieved qualification,[3] along with the top finishers from South America in the 1999/2000 Americas' League.[4] The other nations received invites.

Africa and Oceania were unrepresented.

Asian Zone (1):

European Zone (5):

North American Zone (1):

South American Zone (4):

Hosts:

Notes:

1. Teams making their debut

Group stage

Matches are listed as local time in Rio de Janeiro, (BRST / UTC-2)

Group A

TeamQualification
12200227+156Advance to knockout stage
22101914–53
32002717–100

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Group B

TeamQualification
1211076+15Advance to knockout stage
2210186+23
3200269–30

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Group C

TeamQualification
1220082+66Advance to knockout stage
2210141+33
32002211–90

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Group D

TeamQualification
121018803Advance to knockout stage
22101109+13
3201189–12

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Knockout stage

February 18 was allocated as a rest day.

Quarter finals

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Semi-finals

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Final

Awards

width=300Top scorer
Júnior
13 goals
Best player
Júnior
Best goalkeeper
Eichi Kato

Sources

Notes and References

  1. Web site: FIFA launches first ever FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup . https://web.archive.org/web/20161220074850/http://www.fifa.com/media/news/y=2005/m=2/news=fifa-launches-first-ever-fifa-beach-soccer-world-cup-96141.html . dead . 20 December 2016 . FIFA.com . 16 November 2020 . 1 February 2005 .
  2. Web site: Brasil conquista o hexacampeonato no Beach Soccer . dgabc.com.br . 7 June 2017 . 20 February 2000 . Portuguese .
  3. Web site: BSWW – What . beachsoccer.com . 7 June 2017 . 2001 . dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20010409044447/http://www.beachsoccer.com/what.htm . 9 April 2001 .
  4. Web site: Brasil sofre, mas vence Uruguai no futebol de areia . uol.com.br . 7 June 2017 . 11 December 1999 . Portuguese .