Tourney Name: | South American Under-20 Beach Soccer Championship |
Year: | 2017 |
Size: | 260px |
Country: | Uruguay |
Dates: | 3–10 December |
Num Teams: | 10 |
Confederations: | 1 |
Venues: | 1 |
Cities: | 1 |
Count: | 1 |
Matches: | 27 |
Goals: | 230 |
Top Scorer: | Carlos Benítez (20 goals) |
Player: | Axel Rutterschmidt |
Goalkeeper: | Nicolás Santillan |
Nextseason: | 2019 |
The 2017 CONMEBOL South American Under-20 Beach Soccer Championship was the first edition of the South American Under-20 Beach Soccer Championship (known natively in Spanish as the Sudamericano Sub-20 Futbol Playa), an international youth beach soccer tournament for South American national teams of men under the age of 20.
The championship was organised by CONMEBOL, the governing body for football in South America, in cooperation with the local organisers, the Uruguayan Football Federation (AUF).[1] Confirmed in December 2015,[2] the event took place between 3 and 10 December in Montevideo, Uruguay.
Brazil won the inaugural championship, beating Argentina on penalties in the final to become under-20 South American champions.[3]
Under 20s teams representing all 10 members of CONMEBOL took part.
Each team submitted a squad consisting of 12 players,[4] of individuals no older than 20 years.
One venue was used to host all matches in the capital city of Montevideo, on Pocitos Beach, in the district of Pocitos.[5]
width=180 | Montevideo | |
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Estadio Arenas del Plata | ||
Capacity: 2,500[6] , | ||
(as seen in 2012) |
The draw to split the ten teams into two groups of five took place on November 1 at 19:00 UYT (UTC–3) in Montevideo, Uruguay at the headquarters of the Uruguayan Football Association.[7]
Initially, two teams were automatically assigned to the groups:[8]
The remaining eight teams were split into four pots of two, shown in the below table.[8]
The teams were seeded based on how many points they gained in the last U-20 tournament, the Liga Sudamericana; those with the most points were placed in Pot 1 as the highest seeds, down to the lowest seeds in Pot 4 who collected the fewest points.[8] From each pot, one team was drawn into Group A and the other team was drawn into Group B.
width=110 | Pot 1 | width=110 | Pot 2 | width=110 | Pot 3 | width=110 | Pot 4 | |
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valign=top | valign=top | valign=top | valign=top |
The match schedule was revealed on 1 November, after the completion of the draw.[7]
All times are local, UYT (UTC–3).
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The teams finishing in third, fourth and fifth place in the groups were knocked out of title-winning contention, receding to play in consolation matches to determine 5th through 10th place in the final standings.[7]
The group winners and runners-up progressed to the knockout stage to continue to compete for the title.[7]
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width=300 | Top scorer |
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Carlos Benítez | |
20 goals | |
Best player | |
Axel Rutterschmidt | |
Best goalkeeper | |
Nicolás Santillan | |
Fair play award | |
Players with 5 or more goals
width=40 | Rank | width=150 | Team | width=150 | Result |
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1 | Champions | ||||
2 | Runners-up | ||||
3 | Third place | ||||
4 | |||||
5 | |||||
6 | |||||
7 | |||||
8 | |||||
9 | |||||
10 |