2016 Cyprus Women's Cup Explained

Tourney Name:Cyprus Women's Cup
Year:2016
Dates:2–9 March
Num Teams:8
Confederations:1
Venues:3
Cities:3
Count:1
Matches:16
Goals:35
Top Scorer: Nina Burger
Lucie Voňková
(3 goals)
Prevseason:2015
Nextseason:2017

The 2016 Cyprus Women's Cup was the ninth edition of the Cyprus Women's Cup, an invitational women's football tournament held annually in Cyprus. After being initially canceled due to schedule conflicts with both UEFA and AFC qualification for the 2016 Summer Olympics and the 2016 SheBelieves Cup leaving many of the prior year's participants, including reigning champions England, unable to attend,[1] the tournament was rescheduled with the Football Association of Finland as tournament organizers and a scaled-down field of eight national teams.[2]

Austria defeated Poland in a final between two first-time participants in the Cyprus Cup.

Format

The tournament consisted of a group stage held over three match days followed by a single day of classification matches to determine the final standings.

For the group stage, the eight teams were split into two groups of four teams. Each group played a round-robin tournament with each team playing one match against each other team in its group.

The classification day then had four matches: a first place match between the group winners, a third place match between the runners-up, a fifth place match between the third-placed teams, and a seventh place match between the bottom teams.

Tie-breaking criteria

For the group stage of this tournament, where two or more teams in a group tied on an equal number of points, the finishing positions will be determined by the following tie-breaking criteria in the following order:[3]

  1. number of points obtained in the matches among the teams in question
  2. goal difference in all the group matches
  3. number of goals scored in all the group matches
  4. drawing of lots

Venues

StadiumCityCapacity
GSZ Stadium13,032
5,800
Anagennisi Stadium4,500

Teams

For the first time in Cyprus Cup history, all participants were from UEFA. Austria, Hungary, Poland, and Wales all made their first appearance in the tournament. Also for the first time, Finland was named "host nation" as the Football Association of Finland organized the tournament.[4] Prior co-organisers the Netherlands were instead hosting the 2016 UEFA Women's Olympic Qualifying Tournament, England instead competed in the 2016 SheBelieves Cup, and Scotland were controversially kept away by their performance director Brian McClair, who preferred to play a single friendly against Spain in Falkirk.[5]

Squads

See main article: 2016 Cyprus Women's Cup squads.

Group stage

Group A

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Group B

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Knockout stage

Final

Final standings

RankTeam
4
5
6
7
8

Goalscorers

3 goals
2 goals
1 goal

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Tournament cancellation hits Scotland women's Euro 2017 preparations . . 9 December 2015 . heraldscotland.com . The Herald . 15 April 2016.
  2. Web site: Cyprus Cup To Go Ahead? . . 30 December 2015 . shekicks.net . 15 April 2016.
  3. http://media.wix.com/ugd/202a9b_d64776be4fa945cbb3fe4b9714139092.pdf Regulations
  4. Web site: Cyprus Women's Cup 2016 . 15 April 2016.
  5. News: Campbell. Alan. Alan Campbell on women's football: Staying at home a missed opportunity for Scots. 19 March 2016. The Herald (Glasgow). 13 March 2016.