2009 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup explained

Tourney Name:FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup
Year:2009
Other Titles:كأس العالم لكرة القدم الشاطئية 2009
Country:United Arab Emirates
City:Dubai
Dates:16–22 November
Num Teams:16
Confederations:6
Venues:2[1]
Cities:1
Matches:32
Goals:284
Attendance:97500
Top Scorer: Dejan Stankovic
(16 goals)
Player: Dejan Stankovic
Goalkeeper: Mao
Fair Play:
Prevseason:2008
Nextseason:2011
Count:4

The 2009 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup was the fifth edition of the FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup, governed by FIFA.[2] Overall, this was the 15th edition of a world cup in beach soccer since the establishment of the Beach Soccer World Championships which ran from 1995 to 2004 but was not governed by FIFA.[3] [4] It took place in Dubai, the United Arab Emirates between 16 November and 22 November 2009. It was the second tournament to take place outside Brazil, first to be played in Asia, and the last tournament to take place on an annual basis.[1]

The winners of the tournament were Brazil, who won their fourth consecutive FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup title and their thirteenth title overall.

Qualifying rounds

African Zone

See main article: 2009 CAF Beach Soccer Championship. The qualifiers to determine the two African nations who would play in the World Cup took place in Durban, South Africa for the fourth year running between 1 July and 5 July. Nine nations took part in the competition, which eventually saw Nigeria claim their second title, qualifying for the first time since 2007, with the Ivory Coast finishing in second place, qualifying for the first time.

Asian Zone

See main article: 2009 AFC Beach Soccer Championship. The Asian qualifiers were held in Dubai, the United Arab Emirates, from 7 to 11 November. With only seven teams attending the qualifiers, the United Arab Emirates stepped in as the eighth side to even the two groups in the group stage. Japan qualified for the fourth time after beating Bahrain in the final of the championship, who qualified for their second World Cup.

European Zone

See main article: 2009 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup qualification (UEFA). UEFA held the second European tournament dedicated to World Cup qualification in Castellón, Spain, between, 7 June and 14 June. Hosts Spain won the championship, with Russia finishing second. Switzerland beat Portugal in the third place play off, but regardless of the result, both teams qualified to the World Cup, along with the finalists. Italy beat France in the fifth place play off to qualify as the fifth European nation.

North, Central American and Caribbean Zone

See main article: 2009 CONCACAF Beach Soccer Championship. The North, Central America and the Caribbean Zone qualifiers took place between 17 June and 21 June, after being postponed in May due to the 2009 swine flu pandemic, in Puerto Vallarta, Mexico, for the second year running. El Salvador and Costa Rica were the two finalists, meaning they both qualified for the World Cup; El Salvador for the second time and Costa Rica for the first. El Salvador defeated Costa Rica in the final to win their first title.

Oceanian Zone

See main article: 2009 OFC Beach Soccer Championship. The qualifiers to decide the one nation from Oceania that would be competing in the World Cup took place in Moorea, Tahiti, between 27 July and 31 July. Despite Vanuatu winning the group stage, they lost in the final to the Solomon Islands, who claimed their third title and qualification for a fourth year in a row.

South American Zone

See main article: 2009 CONMEBOL Beach Soccer Championship. The South American qualifiers took place between 11 March and 15 March, in the Uruguayan capital, Montevideo. Brazil and hosts Uruguay were the two finalists, meaning they both qualified for the World Cup. Brazil defeated Uruguay in the final to win the title. Argentina and Ecuador were knocked out in the semi-finals and played each other in the third place play off. Argentina beat Ecuador to claim the third berth at the World Cup.

Host

United Arab Emirates qualified automatically as the hosts.

Teams

These are the teams that qualified for the World Cup:

Asian zone:

African zone:

European zone:

North, Central American and Caribbean zone:

Oceanian zone:

South American zone:

Players

[5]

Venues

Two venues were used in the city of Dubai, United Arab Emirates at Jumeirah Beach during the World Cup with matches split between them as follows.[6]

width=200Dubai (1)
width=200Dubai (2)
Jumeirah Beach (Main Pitch)Jumeirah Beach (Pitch 2)
Capacity: 5,700Capacity: 1,200

Groups

The 16 teams present at the finals in Brazil were split into 4 groups of 4 teams. Each team played the other 3 teams in its group in a round-robin format, with the top two teams advancing to the quarter finals. The quarter finals, semi finals and the final itself was played in the form of a knockout tournament.

All matches are listed as local time in Dubai, (UTC+4)

Group A

TeamPldWW+LGFGAGDPts
3201128+46
3201148+66
3102121203
3102919-103


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Group B

TeamPldWW+LGFGAGDPts
3210159+68
32012114+76
31021518-33
30031121-100

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Group C

TeamPldWW+LGFGAGDPts
3201115+66
311176+15
3111116+55
3003214-120


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Group D

TeamPldWW+LGFGAGDPts
3300238+159
32011511+46
310216213
30039230

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Knockout stage

Quarter finals


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Semi-finals


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Third-place play-off


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Final

See main article: 2009 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup Final.

Winners

width=2502009 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup
Champions

Fourth title

Awards

Golden BallSilver BallBronze Ball
Dejan Stankovic Madjer Benjamin
Golden ShoeSilver ShoeBronze Shoe
Dejan Stankovic Madjer Buru
16 goals13 goals8 goals
Golden Glove
Mao
FIFA Fair Play Award

Final standings

width=30Positionwidth=200Team
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Beach Soccer World Cup – Overview . Rec.Sport.Soccer Statistics Foundation . 9 January 2009 . 2009-01-20. https://web.archive.org/web/20090205084926/http://rsssf.com/tablesb/beachwk.html. 5 February 2009 . live.
  2. Web site: FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup 2009 . Rec.Sport.Soccer Statistics Foundation . 6 March 2008 . 2009-01-20. https://web.archive.org/web/20090205174406/http://rsssf.com/tablesf/fifabeach09.html. 5 February 2009 . live.
  3. Web site: FIFA.com – Tournaments . FIFA . 2008-12-12 . https://web.archive.org/web/20090122220407/http://www.fifa.com/tournaments/archive/tournament%3D500/index.html . 22 January 2009 . dead .
  4. Web site: FIFA.com – History . https://web.archive.org/web/20071130222845/http://www.fifa.com/beachsoccerworldcup/destination/history/ . dead . 30 November 2007 . FIFA . 2008-12-12.
  5. Web site: FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup Dubai 2009 List of Players . https://web.archive.org/web/20161116230026/http://www.fifadata.com/document/FBS/2009/pdf/FBS_2009_SquadLists.pdf . 16 November 2016 . dead.
  6. https://web.archive.org/web/20110409151537/http://www.fifa.com/mm/document/afdeveloping/technicaldevp/01/15/65/28/reportstatisticsfbswc09inhalt-web.pdf FIFA.com
  7. Web site: FIFA . Regulations FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup Dubai 2009 . 2009-11-18.