2011 IFAF World Championship explained

Tourney Name:IFAF World Championship
Year:2011
Datefrom:July 8
Dateto:July 16
Host:Austria
Nations:8
Third:Japan
Mvp: Nate Kmic
Preceded By:2007
Succeeded By:2015

The 2011 IFAF World Championship was the fourth instance of the IFAF World Championship, an international American football tournament. It began on July 8, 2011 with the final games commencing on July 16. It was hosted by Austria, with games taking place in three cities: Vienna, Innsbruck[1] and Graz; Vienna hosted the medal games.[2]

Austria won the bid to host the games. There were a record number of attendees at the 2009 IFAF Congress, the meeting which decided the host nation.[3] The format was changed for 2011: for the first time, eight qualifying teams were divided into two groups, with the group winners competing for the Championship. Four teams automatically qualified: Austria (as host nation), the United States (as the defending World Champions), and Germany and France (for reaching the final in the 2010 EFAF European Championship. Four other teams were accepted through qualifiers in the four regions of the International Federation of American Football: Asia, Europe, Oceania and Pan-America.[2]

The United States and Canada won Group A and Group B, respectively, and played each other in the Gold Medal match on July 16, 2011. In front of the largest crowd to ever watch a World Championship game (20,000), the United States beat Canada, 50–7.

Qualifying

List of qualified teams

The following 8 teams qualified for the final tournament.

EFAF (3)
PAFAF (3)
AFAF (1)
OFAF (1)

Venues

Below is a list of the venues which hosted games during the 2011 IFAF World Championship. Each preliminary round group was hosted in a single arena in Innsbruck (Group A) and Graz (Group B). The knockout phase and Finals took place at Ernst-Happel-Stadion in Vienna.

Preliminary roundKnockout stage
width=20%Innsbruckwidth=20%Grazwidth=20%Vienna
Tivoli-Neu
Capacity: 17,400
UPC-Arena
Capacity: 15,400
Ernst-Happel-Stadion
Capacity: 53,008

Rosters

United States

Matches

Group 1

width=175 Teamwidth=20 abbr="Played" Pldwidth=20 abbr="Won" Wwidth=20 abbr="Lost" Lwidth=20 abbr="Goals for" PFwidth=20 abbr="Goals against" PA
33012614
3219432
3125290
30320156

Group 2

width=175 Teamwidth=20 abbr="Played" Pldwidth=20 abbr="Won" Wwidth=20 abbr="Lost" Lwidth=20 abbr="Goals for" PFwidth=20 abbr="Goals against" PA
33011251
3218647
3124496
3033684

Gold medal match

The United States routed Canada 50–7 in the gold medal game of the 2011 IFAF Senior World Championship. The 20,000 fans in attendance at Ernst Happel Stadium in Vienna, Austria, set a record for an IFAF Championship game. The game was never close, with Team USA leading 37–7 at halftime. Team USA dominated the rushing game, outgaining Canada 247-48, with four different players scoring touchdowns on the ground. While Henry Harris led the way for the Americans on the ground, with 114 yards on 15 carries and a TD, RB Nate Kmic was the only American to score two touchdowns on the day. Team USA quarterback Cody Hawkins was 13 of 21 for 161 yards and 2 TD passes. The U.S. defense recorded four sacks, and Jordan Lake caught two interceptions. One bright spot for team Canada was Shamawd Chambers, whose 7 receptions for 74 yards bested the Americans.

Individual Statistics

Passing

Player Att Comp YDS TD INT
1 96 58 881 6 5
2 97 64 805 6 4
3 88 60 784 5 1
4 98 57 575 5 1
5 80 48 559 3 1
6 72 49 556 3 1
7 Kiernan Dorney 83 40 465 3 3
8 72 31 377 1 4
9 42 22 368 2 2
10 38 23 363 3 2

Receiving

Player No. YDS TD Long
1 14 253 2 50
2 6 236 1 53
3 13 226 1 76
4 13 189 1 52
5 13 174 2 47
6 9 173 2 54
7 9 157 1 38
8 12 152 1 44
9 10 139 2 71
10 5 134 2 76

All-tournament teams

[5]

Head Coach of the tournament: Mel Tjeerdsma
MVP of the tournament: Nate Kmic #1 RB

First team selections

width=70Positionwidth=20 Countrywidth=20 No.width=200 Name
OL70Santiago Maltos
OL77Dane Wardenburg
OL75Nick Rossi
OL61Matt Norman
OL66Zachary Pollari
RB33Matt Walter
RB28Henry Harris
RB/WR1Nate Kmic
WR84Shamawd Chambers
WR11Naoki Maeda
QB7Cody Hawkins
K19Jose Carlos Maltos
DL91Charles Bay
DL99Daniel Calvin
DL90Adriano Belli
LB44Zach Watkins
LB54Anthony Maggiacomo
LB56Manuel Padilla
LB23Osayi Osunde
DB20Sammy Okpro
DB12DeWayne Lewis
DB27Jeff Franklin
DB21Koki Kato

Second team selections

width=70Positionwidth=20 Countrywidth=20 No.width=200 Name
OL79Valentin Gruber
OL65Josh Koeppel
OL50Nick Wieland
OL67Alex Alvarez
OL64Sascha Sauer
RB22Dimitri Kiernan
RB23Jonathan Barrera
RB/WR84Niklas Römer
WR1Jakob Dieplinger
WR18Jeremy Rabot
QB3Michael Faulds
K15Daisuke Aoki
DL45Giovanni Nanguy
DL43Yasuo Wakisaka
DL98Tyler Roach
LB43Terrence Jackson
LB5Jorge Valdez
LB13Jasson Scott
LB58Florian Hueter
DB22Stefan Virgil
DB21Troy Adams
DB7Leonard Greene
DB3Arnaud Vidaller

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Test gegen Augustana markiert WM-Start . German . Test against Augustana marked World Cup Start . AFBOE . 2010-05-27 . AFBOE . 1 June 2010 . https://web.archive.org/web/20100602031953/http://afboe.at/nc/aktuell/news/article/test-gegen-augustana-markiert-wm-startschuss/ . 2010-06-02 . dead .
  2. Web site: Austria to Host 2011 IFAF Senior World Championship. IFAF. 2009-07-05. IFAF. 18 January 2015. https://web.archive.org/web/20121116200722/http://www.ifaf.info/articles/view/157. 2012-11-16. dead.
  3. Web site: Record Number of Attendees at 2009 IFAF Congress. IFAF. 2009-07-10. IFAF. 18 January 2015. https://web.archive.org/web/20110726171607/http://www.ifaf.org/articles/view/160/L2FydGljbGVzL2NvdW50cnkvNTUvcGFnZToy/country:55. 2011-07-26. dead.
  4. http://search.japantimes.co.jp/cgi-bin/sf20110227a1.html Japan to play at WC
  5. http://www.ifaf.org/articles/view/796/Lw IFAF Names World Championship All-Tournament Team