2005 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup explained

Other Titles:Copa do Mundo de Futebol de Areia da FIFA Rio de Janeiro 2005
Country:Brazil
City:Rio de Janeiro
Dates:8–15 May
Num Teams:12
Confederations:6
Venues:1
Cities:1
Count:1
Matches:20
Goals:164
Attendance:110500
Top Scorer: Madjer (12 goals)
Player: Madjer
Prevseason:2004
Nextseason:2006

The 2005 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup was the first edition of the FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup, an international beach soccer competition contest by men's national teams and organized by FIFA. Overall, it was the 11th edition of a world cup in beach soccer since its establishment with the first Beach Soccer World Championships in 1995. It took place in at Copacabana Beach in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, between 8 and 15 May.

France defeated Portugal 1–0 in a penalty shootout, following a 3–3 draw after extra-time, to win their first title.

Organisation

The 12 teams present at the finals in Brazil were split into four groups of three teams. Each team played the other two 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.

Teams

Qualification

European teams gained qualification by finishing in the top three spots of the 2004 Euro Beach Soccer League. The final spot was contested between the next four best teams in a small knockout tournament a few days before the World Cup began which saw Spain win. South American and North American qualification was gained by finishing in the top spots of the 2005 CONCACAF and CONMEBOL Beach Soccer Championship. The other nations received invites.

This was the first edition of the World Cup in which every continent had a representative.

Entrants

Asian zone:

African zone:

European zone:

North, Central American and Caribbean zone:

Oceanian zone:

South American zone:

Host nation:

Notes:

  1. Teams making their debut.

Players

See main article: 2005 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup squads.

Group stage

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

Group A

width=165Teamwidth=20Pldwidth=20Wwidth=20W+width=20Lwidth=20GFwidth=20GAwidth=20GDwidth=20Pts
2200133+106
21015503
2002313−100

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Group B

width=165Teamwidth=20Pldwidth=20Wwidth=20W+width=20Lwidth=20GFwidth=20GAwidth=20GDwidth=20Pts
2200133+106
210136−33
2002512−70

------------

Group C

width=165Teamwidth=20Pldwidth=20Wwidth=20W+width=20Lwidth=20GFwidth=20GAwidth=20GDwidth=20Pts
2200127+56
2101126+63
2002415−110

------------

Group D

width=165Teamwidth=20Pldwidth=20Wwidth=20W+width=20Lwidth=20GFwidth=20GAwidth=20GDwidth=20Pts
2200133+106
210159−43
200228−60

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Knockout stage

Quarter-finals

----------------

Semi-finals

--------

Third place play-off

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Final

Awards

width=33% colspan="2"Golden Ballwidth=33% colspan="2"Silver Ballwidth=33% colspan="2"Bronze Ball
Madjer Nenem Amarelle
Golden ShoeSilver ShoeBronze Shoe
Madjer Nenem Mendy
12 goals9 goals8 goals
FIFA Fair Play Award

Top scorers

12 goals
9 goals
8 goals
6 goals
5 goals
4 goals
3 goals
2 goals
2 goals (cont.)
25 others scored 1 goal each
  • Own goal
  • Final standings

    width=30Positionwidth=165Team
    1
    2
    3
    4
    5
    6
    7
    8
    9
    10
    11
    12

    External links