2000 FIFA Club World Championship explained

Tourney Name:FIFA Club World Championship
Year:2000
Other Titles:Campeonato Mundial de Clubes da FIFA
Brasil 2000
Country:Brazil
Dates:5–14 January
Confederations:6
Num Teams:8
Venues:2
Cities:2
Champion Other: Corinthians
Count:1
Second Other: Vasco da Gama
Third Other: Necaxa
Fourth Other: Real Madrid
Matches:14
Goals:43
Attendance:514000
Player:Edílson (Corinthians)
Goalkeeper:Dida (Corinthians)
Nextseason:2001

The 2000 FIFA Club World Championship was the inaugural FIFA Club World Cup, the world club championship for men's club association football teams. It took place in Brazil from 5 to 14 January 2000. FIFA as football's international governing body selected Brazil as the host nation on 8 June 1999 as the bid was found to be the strongest among four candidates.[1] The draw was made at the Copacabana Palace in Rio de Janeiro on 14 October 1999.[2] All matches were played in either Rio de Janeiro's Estádio do Maracanã or São Paulo's Estádio do Morumbi.

Eight teams, two from South America, two from Europe and one each from North America, Africa, Asia and Oceania entered the tournament. The first Club World Cup match took place in São Paulo and saw Spanish club Real Madrid beat Saudi Arabian side Al-Nassr 3–1; Real Madrid's Nicolas Anelka scored the first goal in Club World Cup history in the 21st minute. Later the same day, Corinthians goalkeeper Dida kept the first clean sheet in the tournament as his team beat Moroccan side Raja Casablanca 2–0.

Corinthians and Vasco da Gama each won their respective groups to qualify for the final. In front of a crowd of 73,000, the final finished as a 0–0 draw after extra time. The title was decided by a penalty shoot-out which Corinthians won 4–3.[3] As winners, Corinthians received $6 million in prize money, while Vasco da Gama received $5 million. Necaxa beat Real Madrid in the match for third place to claim $4 million. Real Madrid received $3 million, and the other remaining teams were awarded $2.5 million.[4]

Host bids

Initially, there were nine candidates to host the competition: China, Brazil, Mexico, Paraguay, Saudi Arabia, Tahiti, Turkey, the United States and Uruguay; of the nine, only Saudi Arabia, Mexico, Brazil and Uruguay confirmed their interest to FIFA.[5] On 7 June 1999, the FIFA Emergency Committee appointed Brazil as hosts of the competition during their meeting in Cairo, Egypt.[6]

Qualified teams

The clubs that played in the tournament were:

TeamConfederationQualification
CorinthiansCONMEBOL (host)Winners of the 1998 Campeonato Brasileiro
Al-NassrAFCWinners of the 1998 Asian Super Cup
Manchester UnitedUEFAWinners of the 1998–99 UEFA Champions League
NecaxaCONCACAFWinners of the 1999 CONCACAF Champions' Cup
Raja CasablancaCAFWinners of the 1999 CAF Champions League
Real MadridUEFAWinners of the 1998 Intercontinental Cup
South MelbourneOFCWinners of the 1999 Oceania Club Championship
Vasco da GamaCONMEBOLWinners of the 1998 Copa Libertadores

Venues

São PauloRio de Janeiro
MorumbiMaracanã
Capacity: 80,000Capacity: 103,022

Squads

For a list of the squads at the 2000 FIFA Club World Championship, see 2000 FIFA Club World Championship squads.

Match officials

Eight referees were appointed from the six continental confederations, each along with an accompanying assistant referee.[7]

ConfederationReferee(s)Assistant(s)
AFC Saad Mane Sergei Ufimtsev
CAF Falla N'Doye Ali Tomusangue
CONCACAF William Mattus Haseeb Mohammed
CONMEBOL Horacio Elizondo
Óscar Ruiz
Miguel Giacomuzzi
Fernando Cresci
OFC Derek Rugg Lavetala Siuamoa
UEFA Stefano Braschi
Dick Jol
Jens Larsen
Jacek Pociegiel

Format

Matches were played in São Paulo and Rio de Janeiro. The teams were organised in two groups of four teams, with the top team in each group going through to the final and the two second-placed teams contesting a match for third place.

Group stage

Group A

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Group B

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Knockout stage

Final

See main article: 2000 FIFA Club World Championship Final.

Goalscorers

RankPlayerTeamGoals
1 Nicolas Anelka Real Madrid3
Romário Vasco da Gama
3 Fahad Al-Bishi Al-Nassr2
Agustín Delgado Necaxa
Edílson Corinthians
Edmundo Vasco da Gama
Quinton Fortune Manchester United
Cristian Montecinos Necaxa
Raúl Real Madrid
10 Youssef Achami Raja Casablanca1
Álex Aguinaga Necaxa
Fuad Amin Al-Nassr
John Anastasiadis South Melbourne
Ahmed Bahja Al-Nassr
Nicky Butt Manchester United
Salvador Cabrera Necaxa
Talal El Karkouri Raja Casablanca
Bouchaib El Moubarki Raja Casablanca
Felipe Vasco da Gama
Geremi Real Madrid
Fernando Hierro Real Madrid
Fábio Luciano Corinthians
Luizão Corinthians
Fernando Morientes Real Madrid
Mustapha Moustaoudia Raja Casablanca
Odvan Vasco da Gama
Ricardinho Corinthians
Freddy Rincón Corinthians
Moussa Saïb Al-Nassr
Sávio Real Madrid
Dwight Yorke Manchester United

1 own goal

Awards

See also: FIFA Club World Cup awards.

The following awards were given at the conclusion of the tournament.[8]

Adidas Golden BallAdidas Silver BallAdidas Bronze Ball
Edílson
(Corinthians)
Edmundo
(Vasco da Gama)
Romário
(Vasco da Gama)
Adidas Golden ShoeAdidas Bronze Shoe
Nicolas Anelka (Real Madrid)
Romário (Vasco da Gama)
Agustín Delgado (Necaxa)
Edílson (Corinthians)
Edmundo (Vasco da Gama)
3 goals, 0 assists2 goals, 1 assist
FIFA Fair Play Award
Al-Nassr

Additionally, FIFA named an all-star team consisting of eleven starters and seven substitutes.[8]

FIFA All-Star Team
GoalkeepersDefendersMidfieldersForwards
Dida (Corinthians)
Substitutes
Helton (Vasco da Gama) José Milián (Necaxa)

Aftermath and legacy

Following the inaugural Club World Cup, FIFA pledged further editions of the tournament. The first of these was slated for Spain in 2001, with an expected 12 participants.[9] [10] By March of that year, group draws had even taken place. However, the second edition of the tournament was called off due to a range of factors involving partners and sponsorships, with the collapse of International Sport and Leisure, FIFA's marketing partner at the time, being the most significant.[11] The event was then rescheduled for 2003, but it didn't come to fruition either. It wasn't until 2004 that FIFA was able to officially announce the second edition of the tournament.[12]

From the 2005 edition onwards, the competition has been held continuously but under a new format, featuring single-elimination tournament instead of a group stage plus final, and with a shorter duration, addressing scheduling concerns for national federations and continental confederations. While the two subsequent editions, 2005 and 2006, included only the six continental champions, from the 2007 edition onwards, the number of participants increased to seven – the seventh spot was typically reserved for the national champion of the host country. However, to prevent the recurrence of two clubs from the same country, as happened in 2000, FIFA introduced a mechanism: if the continental champion hailed from the host country, the national champion of that country would forfeit its spot, which would then go to the highest-ranked team from another country in the continental competition.[13]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Brasil recebe o primeiro mundial de clubes. 8 June 1999. Folha de S.Paulo. 7 June 2022. pt-br.
  2. News: Draw for the FIFA Club World Championship Brazil 2000 . https://web.archive.org/web/20140826181351/http://www.fifa.com/tournaments/archive/clubworldcup/brazil2000/news/newsid=71333/index.html . dead . 26 August 2014 . FIFA.com . Fédération Internationale de Football Association . 14 October 1999 . 26 August 2014.
  3. Web site: Corinthians crowned world champions. 15 January 2000. BBC Sport. 6 May 2021.
  4. News: 28 million dollars in prize money on offer. https://web.archive.org/web/20140826193319/http://www.fifa.com/tournaments/archive/clubworldcup/brazil2000/news/newsid=71817/index.html. dead. 26 August 2014. FIFA.com . Fédération Internationale de Football Association . 3 January 2000 . 26 August 2014.
  5. News: Bose . Mihir . Mihir Bose . England spurned chance to host key world event . . S1 . Sport . 44,815 . 17 July 1999 . 28 December 2022.
  6. News: Rangel . Sérgio . Brasil recebe o 1º Mundial de clubes . Brazil hosts the 1st Club World Cup . . 8 June 1999 . 28 December 2022 . pt.
  7. Web site: Officials . https://web.archive.org/web/20140712134918/http://www.fifa.com/mm/document/footballdevelopment/technicalsupport/02/25/81/21/115816-statistics-fifaclubworldchampionshipbrazil2000%5fneutral.pdf . dead . 12 July 2014 . 33 . FIFA . 28 April 2015 .
  8. Web site: Statistics: FIFA Club World Championship Brazil 2000 . . PDF . 2000 . 12 February 2021 . https://web.archive.org/web/20211014151203/https://digitalhub.fifa.com/m/5fc18e27b768671f/original/p1pyn7zf6crhatkpgkwc-pdf.pdf . 14 October 2021 . live .
  9. Web site: Stokkermans . Karel . 31 December 2005 . 2001 FIFA Club World Cup . 6 March 2013 . Rec.Sport.Soccer Statistics Foundation.
  10. Web site: 7 March 2001 . Galaxy to face Real, African and Asian teams . 6 March 2013 . USA Today.
  11. News: 18 May 2001 . FIFA decides to postpone 2001 Club World Championship to 2003 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20131109023834/http://de.fifa.com/tournaments/archive/tournament%3D107/edition%3D4735/releases/newsid%3D91574.html . 9 November 2013 . 4 January 2021 . FIFA.
  12. Web site: 5 April 2005 . Logo revealed for top club competition . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20140506181840/http://www.fifa.com/tournaments/archive/clubworldcup/japan2005/news/newsid=96919/index.html . 6 May 2014 . 6 March 2013 . FIFA.
  13. Web site: Organising Committee strengthens FIFA Club World Cup format . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20071001145244/http://www.fifa.com/clubworldcup/news/newsid%3D570740.html . 1 October 2007 . 14 August 2007.