2011 CPISRA Football 7-a-side World Championships explained

Tourney Name:CPISRA Football 7-a-side World Championships
Year:2011
Size:200px
Country: Netherlands
Dates:17 June – 1 July 2011
Num Teams:16
Venues:4
Cities:3
Champion Other: Russia
Second Other: Iran
Third Other: Ukraine
Fourth Other: Brazil
Matches:48
Goals:318
Top Scorer: Michael Barker (11)
Brian Vivot (11)
Prevseason:2009 Arnheim
Nextseason:2013 Sant Cugat del Vallès

The 2011 CPISRA Football 7-a-side World Championships was the world 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. The Championship took place in the Netherlands from 17 June to 1 July 2011.

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 London 2012 Paralympic Games.[1]

Participating teams and officials

Qualifying

The following teams are qualified for the tournament:

width=25%Means of qualificationwidth=20%Datewidth=25%Venuewidth=5%Berthswidth=25%Qualified
Host nation align=center 1 Netherlands
23 October – 1 November 2009 Arnhem, Netherlands 6 Argentina
Brazil
Iran
Ireland
Russia
Ukraine
2010 American Cup
The next teams that were not yet qualified
17 – 27 October 2010 Buenos Aires, Argentina 2 Canada
United States
2010 Asian Para Games
The next teams that were not yet qualified
12 – 19 December 2010 Guangzhou, China 2 Japan
South Korea
2010 European Championships
The next teams that were not yet qualified
17 – 28 August 2010 Glasgow, Scotland 4 England
Finland
Spain
Scotland
Oceania Region 1 Australia
Total 16

The draw

During the draw, the teams were divided into pots because of rankings. Here, the following groups:[2]

width=5%width=20%Group Awidth=20%Group Bwidth=20%Group Cwidth=20%Group D
Pot 1 Brazil (4.) Ukraine (3.) Russia (1.) Iran (2.)
Pot 2 Netherlands (5.) Scotland (6.) Argentina (7.) United States (8.)
Pot 3 Australia (11.) Canada (12.) England (10.) Ireland (9.)
Pot 4 Spain (14.) Finland (15.) South Korea (16.) Japan (13.)

Squads

The individual teams contact following football gamblers on to:

Group A

Brazil Netherlands Australia Spain
1 Marcos dos Santos Ferreira
3 José Augusto Siqueira
4 Dihego Rezende Rodrigues
5 José Carlos Monteiro Guimarᾶes
6 Mateus Francisco Tostes Calvo
7 Fábio da Silva Bordignon
8 Rael de Medeiros Coelho
9 Renato da Rocha Lima
10 Wanderson Silva de Oliveira
11 Jan Francisco Brito da Costa
12 Moisés Tamiozzo da Silva
16 Jean Adriano Rodrigues
1 Rudi van Breemen
4 Myron Gebbink
5 Lars Conijn
6 Peter Kooij
7 Dennis Straatman
8 Pawel Statema
9 John Swinkels
10 Stephan Lokhoff
11 Iljas Visker
14 Daan Dikken
15 Joey Mense
16 Bart Adelaars
17 Abel Walraven
18 Gerard Arends
19 Quincy de Beukelaer
22 Stefan Boersma
1 Sam Larkins
2 Ben Roche
3 Jack Williams
4 Scott Kennedy
6 Christopher Pyne
7 David Barber
8 Brett Fairhall
9 Ben Atkins
10 Thomas Goodman
11 Beau Menzies
12 Jamie Paulsen
13 Jared Eiby
1 Omar Alvarez Serrano
2 Jonatan Corporales Rodríguez
3 Raúl Carrillo Arjona
4 Ramón Del Pino Bernardó
5 Carlos Antón Valor
6 Roberto Ortiz Lora
7 Sergio Clemente Muñoz
8 Carlos Rodríguez Grande
9 Emilio Manuel Ribeiro Sequeira
10 Raúl Pacheco Pérez
11 Abel Urbina Sánchez
12 Leandro Pérez Ferreira
Coach: Paulo Fernando Rodrigues da CruzCoach: Marcel GeestmanCoach: Paul BrownCoach: Emilio Pereira Pérez

Group B

Ukraine Scotland Canada Finland
1 Kostyantyn Symashko
2 Vitaliy Trushev
3 Serhiy Vakulenko
4 Taras Dutko
5 Anatolii Shevchyk
6 Ivan Shkvarlo
7 Andriy Tsukanov
8 Denys Ponomaryov
9 Mykola Mikhovych
10 Oleksiy Hetun
11 Volodymyr Antonyuk
12 Ihor Kosenko
1 Craig Connell
2 Blair Glynn
3 Laurie McGinley
4 Scott Troup
5 Graeme Paterson
6 Jamie Tervit
7 Mark Robertson
8 James Richmond
9 Anton Clarke
10 Jonathan Paterson
11 Thomas Brown
1 Cameron Kleimer
2 Geoff Wakefield
3 John Phillips
4 Christopher Duehrsen
5 Christopher Fawcett
6 James Akinclose
7 Dustin Hodgson
8 Brendon McAdam
9 Ross MacDonald
10 Vito Proietti
11 Matthew Brown
12 Jeremy Baird
1 Jaakko Seppälä
2 Joona Kuitunen
3 Wiljami Laurila
7 Jussi Tuominen
8 Mikael Jukarainen
9 Janne Helander
10 Johannes Siikonen
14 Pyry Nopsanen
15 Samuel Taipale
16 Joni Berg
Coach: Sergiy OvcharenkoCoach: Stuart SharpCoach: Drew FergusonCoach: Samuel Siikonen

Group C

Russia Argentina England South Korea
3 Aslanbek Sapiev
6 Aleksey Tumakov
7 Alexey Chesmin
8 Ivan Potekhin
9 Eduard Ramonov
10 Andrey Kuvaev
12 Alexander Lekov
13 Lasha Murvanadze
15 Vyacheslav Larionov
16 Vladislav Raretsky
17 Zaurbek Pagaev
18 Aleksandr Kuligin
1 Gustavo Nahuelquin
2 Mariano Morana
3 Carlos Ferreira
4 Ezequiel Jaime
5 Brian Vivot
6 Maximiliano Fernandez
7 Ariel Medina
8 Gaston Eduardo Rodriguez
9 Angel Gabriel Rodriquez
10 Rodrigo Lugrin
11 Matias Fernandez
13 Marcos Salazar
1 Jordan Raynes
2 Matthew Dimbylow
3 Martin Sinclair
4 Alistair Heselton
5 Emyle Rudder
6 Joshua Beacham
7 George Fletcher
8 Matthew Ellis
9 Michael Barker
10 Graham Leclerc
11 Karl Townshend
12 Billy Thompson
1 Hyeseong Son
2 Hyungsoo Kim
3 Junho Jang
4 Jongtae Kim
5 Haecheol Park
6 Jaesik Moon
7 Seungmok Park
8 Phillip Jung
9 Seungnam Kang
10 Kyeongkuk Gu
11 Sangpil Cho
12 Hyoungjun Lee
Coach: Avtandil BaramidzeCoach: Osvaldo HernandezCoach: Lyndon LynchCoach: Jaeyong Kim

Group D

Iran United States Ireland Japan
1 Moslem Akbari
2 Behnam Sohrabibagherabadi
3 Mehran Majd Nikoee
4 Ehsan Gholamhosseinpour Booshehri
5 Heidari Morteza
6 Rasoul Atashafrouz
7 Bahman Ansari
8 Heidari Habibollah Mehr
9 Jasem Bakhshi
10 Mehri Farzad
11 Sadegh Hassani Baghi
12 Hashem Rastegarimobin
1 Keith Johnson
2 Nick Creasey
3 Jason Slemons
4 Chad Jones
5 Bryce Boarman
6 Chris Ahrens
7 Adam Ballou
8 Tom Latsch
9 Josh McKinney
10 Marthell Vazquez
11 Tyler Bennett
12 Charlie Howard
1 Brian McGillivary
2 Finbar O'Riordan
3 Paul Dollard
4 Luke Evans
5 Joseph Markey
6 Mark Jones
7 Gary Messett
8 Eric O'Flaherty
9 Jason Moran
10 Daragh Snell
11 Aaron Tiers
12 Simon Le Strange
1 Henry Naoyoshi Kagayama
2 Hideyuki Yanagi
3 Kenji Hashimoto
4 Yuji Yamada
5 Taisei Taniguchi
6 Ryuta Yoshino
7 Kazuhiro Kubo
8 Kodai Nakaoka
9 Tetsuya Toda
10 Tsukasa Kawano
12 Takayuki Iwasa
Coach: Hossein SalehCoach: Jay HoffmanCoach: Daragh SheridanCoach: Yukio Jin

Venues

The venues to be used for the World Championships were located in Assen, Emmen and Hoogeveen.[3]

width=40% colspan=2Emmenwidth=20% rowspan=4width=20%Assenwidth=20%Hoogeveen
Univé Stadion
(FC Emmen)
Sportpark Meerdijk Noord
(SC Angelslo)
Sportpark Marsdijk
(Achilles 1894)[4]
Sportveld Weide
(club VV De Weide)
Capacity: 8,600Capacity: unknownCapacity: 5,000Capacity: unknown

Format

The first round, or group stage, was a competition between the 16 teams divided among four groups of four, where each group engaged in a round-robin tournament within itself. The two highest ranked teams in each group advanced to the knockout stage for the position one to eight. the two lower ranked teams plays for the positions nine to 16. Teams were awarded three points for a win and one for a draw. When comparing teams in a group over-all result came before head-to-head.

In the knockout stage there were three rounds (quarter-finals, semi-finals, and the final). The winners plays for the higher positions, the losers for the lower positions. For any match in the knockout stage, a draw after 60 minutes of regulation time was followed by two 10 minute periods of extra time to determine a winner. If the teams were still tied, a penalty shoot-out was held to determine a winner.

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.

Group stage

The first round, or group stage, have seen the sixteen teams divided into four groups of four teams.[5] In every match a maximum of 10 goals scored were counted. This is indicated with an asterisk (*)

Group D

Knockout stage

Quarter-finals

Position 9-16------------

Position 1-8------------

Semi-finals

Position 13-16----

Position 9-12----

Position 5-8----

Position 1-4----

Finals

Position 15-16

Position 13-14

Position 11-12

Position 9-10

Position 7-8

Position 5-6

Position 3-4

Final

Statistics

Goalscorers

11 goals
9 goals
8 goals
7 goals
6 goals
5 goals
4 goals
3 goals
2 goals
1 goal
own goals

Ranking

RankTeam
Russia
Iran
Ukraine
4. Brazil
5.
6. Scotland
7. Argentina
8. United States
9. Ireland
10. England
11. Australia
12. Canada
13. Japan
14. Spain
15. Finland
16. South Korea

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. https://www.paralympic.org/sites/default/files/document/120208130008523_2011_02_Ft-7-A-Side_London_2012_PG_Qualification_Criteria_Final_Update.pdf Football 7-a-Side Qualification Criteria - FT
  2. Web site: 2011 CPISRA Football 7-a-side World Championships, Website. https://web.archive.org/web/20120522223604/http://www.wkcp.nl/ENG/home.html. dead. 2012-05-22. 2016-10-13. en. 2012-03-22. Web site: UEFA backs Cerebral Palsy finals. www.trn.infra.uefa.org. 2016-10-13. en. 2007-10-27. https://web.archive.org/web/20161020040144/http://www.trn.infra.uefa.org/socialresponsibility/charity/news/newsid=607982.html. 2016-10-20. dead.
  3. http://www.cpisra.org/files/news/CPISRA_Draw_F7A_World_Championships_2011.pdf Draw for the CPISRA football 7-a-side world championships 2011
  4. Web site: CPISRA Football 7-a-side World Championships, Venues . https://web.archive.org/web/20120527031327/http://www.wkcp.nl/ENG/venues.html. dead. 2012-05-27 . KNVB . 22 June 2011.
  5. Web site: 2011 CPISRA Football 7-a-side World Championships, Matches and Results . https://web.archive.org/web/20120815174417/http://www.wkcp.nl/ENG/Matches_Results_.html. dead. 2012-08-15 . KNVB . 2017-02-26.