2003 Beach Soccer World Championships Explained

Other Titles:IX Beach Soccer World Championships 2003
IX Campeonato Mundial de Beach Soccer
Country:Brazil
Dates:16–23 February
Num Teams:8
Confederations:4
Venues:1
Cities:1
Count:8
Matches:16
Goals:150
Attendance:74700
Top Scorer: Neném (15 goals)
Player: Amarelle
Goalkeeper: Robertinho
Prevseason:2002
Nextseason:2004

The 2003 Beach Soccer World Championships was the ninth edition of the Beach Soccer World Championships, the most prestigious competition in international beach soccer contested by men's national teams until 2005, when the competition was then replaced by the second iteration of a world cup in beach soccer, the better known FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup.[1] It was organized by Brazilian sports agency Koch Tavares in cooperation with and under the supervision of Beach Soccer Worldwide (BSWW), the sports governing body.[2]

For the first time since 2000, the tournament returned to its native venue at Copacabana Beach in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. The main sponsor was McDonald's.[2]

The tournament saw Brazil win their eighth title by beating first time finalists Spain.

Organisation

As like in the previous year, a record low of eight nations competed in two groups of four teams in a round robin format. The top two teams in each group after all the matches of the group stage had been played progressed into the semi-finals, in which the championship proceeded as a knock-out tournament therein until a winner was crowned, with an additional match to decide third place.

Teams

Qualification

European teams gained qualification by finishing in the top three spots of the 2002 Euro Beach Soccer League. North and South American qualification was based on performances over recent times in a series of events involving teams from the Americas. The other entries received wild-card invites.[3]

Africa and Oceania were unrepresented.

Entrants

This remains the only year in all nineteen editions when no new nations made their debut at a world cup.Asian Zone (1):

European Zone (4):

North American Zone (1):

South American Zone (1):

Hosts:

Group stage

Matches are listed as local time in Rio de Janeiro, (UTC-3)

Group A

TeamQualification
13300266+209Advance to knockout stage
232011913+66
331021119–83
43003826–180
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Group B

TeamQualification
132012014+66Advance to knockout stage
232011410+46
332019906
430034140

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Knockout stage

February 21 was allocated as a rest day.

Semi-finals

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Final

Awards

width=300Top scorer
Neném
15 goals
Best player
Amarelle
Best goalkeeper
Robertinho
Rookie of the year
Eloy Barreiro

Top goalscorers

15 goals
10 goals
9 goals
8 goals
6 goals
5 goals
4 goals
3 goals
2 goals
15 others scored 1 goal each

Sources

Notes and References

  1. Web site: FIFA launches first ever FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup . https://web.archive.org/web/20161220074850/http://www.fifa.com/media/news/y=2005/m=2/news=fifa-launches-first-ever-fifa-beach-soccer-world-cup-96141.html . dead . 20 December 2016 . FIFA.com . 16 November 2020 . 1 February 2005 .
  2. Web site: Rio volta a sediar Mundial, em fevereiro, na Praia de Copacabana . beachsoccerbrasil.com.br . 30 January 2003 . 8 May 2016 . pt . dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20030512031227/http://www.beachsoccerbrasil.com.br/camp_mundial/2003/reportagem.asp?cod=148 . May 12, 2003 .
  3. Web site: IX Campeonato Mundial de Beach Soccer, 16 a 23 de fevereiro/2003, Praia de Copacabana/RJ . beachsoccerbrasil.com.br . 8 May 2016 . pt . dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20030618154017/http://www.beachsoccerbrasil.com.br/camp_mundial/2003/index.asp%23 . 18 June 2003 .