2003 South American Women's Football Championship Explained

Tourney Name:South American Women's Football Championship
Year:2003
Other Titles:Campeonato Sudamericano de Fútbol Femenino de 2003
Dates:9–27 April
Country:Peru (Group A and final round)
Country2:Ecuador (Group B)
Country3:Argentina (Group C)
Num Teams:10
Confederations:1
Venues:3
Cities:3
Count:4
Matches:15
Goals:70
Top Scorer: Marisol Medina (7 goals)
Prevseason:1998
Nextseason:2006

The 2003 South American Women's Football Championship (Campeonato Sudamericano de Fútbol Femenino 2003) was the fourth staging of the South American Women's Football Championship and determined the CONMEBOL's qualifiers for the 2003 FIFA Women's World Cup. The tournament was held between 9 and 27 April.

Originally, the competition was scheduled to take place from April 5 to April 16, 2002 in Córdoba, Argentina. Later, it was moved to Peru, January/February 2003, with Lima and Chincha as venues, only for group A and the final round. Argentina retained the hosting rights for group C while Ecuador was appointed as host of the group B.

Brazil won the tournament for the fourth time in a row, after finishing first in the final round. Also, they qualified for the FIFA Women's World Cup along with Argentina, the runners-up.

Venues

Three venues (located in three different countries) were used for the tournament:

CountryStadiumCityCapacity
Estadio Padre Ernesto MartearenaSalta20,408
Estadio Federativo Reina del CisneLoja14,935
Estadio Monumental "U"Lima80,093

Officials

The following referees and assistant referees were named for the tournament:

CountryRefereeAssistant
ArgentinaFlorencia RomanoAlejandra Cercato
Sabrina Lois
BoliviaCándida Colque
María Teresa Alvarado
Aracely Castro
BrazilSuell Tortura
Silvia Oliveira Carvalho
Marlei Silva
ColombiaMaría GarcíaAdriana Correa
EcuadorRosa Canales
PeruRiabel TrujilloAna Pérez
UruguayPatricia da SilvaLaura Geymonat
VenezuelaMarisela ContrerasMaritza Rodríguez

Results

In contrast to previous tournaments, this edition's format had a first round with three regional groups, where the first-placed teams joined Brazil (who got a bye to the second round after winning the previous edition) for a final tournament in Peru.

The final tournament was set up in a round-robin format, where each team played one match against each of the other teams within the group. The top two teams in the group qualified for the 2003 FIFA Women's World Cup in the United States, and the first-placed team won the tournament.

Three points were awarded for a win, one point for a draw, and zero points for a loss.

Tie-breaking criteriaTeams were ranked on the following criteria:
  • 1. Greater number of points in all group matches
  • 2. Goal difference in all group matches
  • 3. Greater number of goals scored in all group matches
  • 4. Head-to-head results
  • 5. Drawing of lots by the CONMEBOL Organising Committee

    First round

    Group A

    width=165 Teamwidth=25 width=25 width=25 width=25 width=25 width=25 width=25 width=25
    220052+36
    210184+43
    200229–70
    --------

    Group B

    width=165 Teamwidth=25 width=25 width=25 width=25 width=25 width=25 width=25 width=25
    211091+84
    211031+24
    2002010–100
    --------

    Group C

    width=165 Teamwidth=25 width=25 width=25 width=25 width=25 width=25 width=25 width=25
    2200110+116
    210134–13
    2002111–100
    --------

    Final round

    width=165 Teamwidth=25 width=25 width=25 width=25 width=25 width=25 width=25 width=25
    3300182+169
    31116604
    3102315–123
    301215–41

    ----

    ----

    Brazil won the tournament and qualified for the 2003 FIFA Women's World Cup along with runners-up Argentina.

    Statistics

    Goalscorers

    7 goals
    6 goals
    5 goals
    4 goals
    3 goals
    2 goals
    1 goal

    Final ranking

    width=25 width=165 Teamwidth=25 width=25 width=25 width=25 width=25 width=25 width=25 width=25
    13300182+169
    25311176+1110
    352121216–47
    4521267–17
    Eliminated in the first round
    5211031+24
    6210184+43
    7210134–13
    8200229–70
    92002111–100
    102002010–100

    External links