Asociación Mundial de Futsal explained

World Futsal Association — AMF
Abbrev:AMF
Logosize:300px
Sport: Futsal
Headquarters:Asunción, Paraguay
President:Rolando Alarcón Ríos
Secretary:Wilfrido Coffi
Key Staff:Jaime Arroyave
Kurt Hardvet
Namdev Shirgonkar
Abdel Morkhtar
Antonio Cifuentes
Replaced:1 December 2002 as AMF
Prevfounded:25 July 1971 as FIFUSA
Url:www.amfutsal.com.py

The World Futsal Association (AMF) is the governing body of futsal (football of salon [''futsalon''], in Spanish fútbol sala [''<small>microfutbol</small>'']) for both fully and non-independent states or regions, headquartered in Asuncion, Paraguay. It was founded on 25 July 1971 as the International Futsal Federation (FIFUSA) in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil; on 1 December 2002, the organization was replaced, changed its name to Spanish version Asociación Mundial de Futsal (AMF).[1]

Names

  1. FIFUSA (1971–2002)
  2. AMF (2003–present)

History

See also Futsal HistoryFutsal started in Montevideo, Uruguay in 1930 when Juan Carlos Ceriani created a version of indoor football for recreation in YMCAs. In 1965, the South American Futsal Confederation was formed, consisting of Uruguay, Paraguay, Peru, Argentina and Brazil.

The sport began to spread across South America, and its popularity ensured that a governing body was formed under the name of FIFUSA (Federación Internacional de Fútbol de Salón) in 1971, comprising Argentina, Bolivia, Brazil, Paraguay, Peru, Portugal and Uruguay, along with the World Championships. The first FIFUSA World Championships were held in São Paulo, with hosts Brazil crowned champions ahead of Paraguay and Uruguay. Even more countries participated in the second World Championships held in Madrid in 1985.

Due to a dispute between FIFA and FIFUSA over the name of fútbol, FIFUSA registered the word futsal in 1985 (Madrid, Spain). In the 1990s, FIFA wanted to promote and spread its own version of indoor football, different from the original one played in the South American countries, but didn't manage to find an agreement with FIFUSA at the Rio de Janeiro Congress in 1989. In 2000, there was an attempt to repair the situation in Guatemala, while FIFA was celebrating in this country holding its fourth World Championship of Fútsal.

In 2002, FIFUSA was reorganised into World Futsal AssociationAMF.[2] [3]

Organization

ConfederationContinent
Confédération Africaine de Futsal (CAFUSA)Africa
Confederation of Asian Futsal (CAFS)Asia
Futsal European Federation (FEF)Europe
Confederation of North, Central American and Caribbean Futsal (CONCACFUTSAL)North America, Central America and Caribbean
Oceania Futsal Confederation (OFC)Oceania
Confederación Panamericana de Futsal (CPFS/PANAFUTSAL)Americas
Confederación Sudamericana de Futsal (CSFS)South America

AMF competitions

The AMF and its respective confederations organize futsal tournaments around the world. The AMF Futsal World Cup, which was first staged in 1982, is held every four years.

A women's world cup was first staged in 2008. In 2017 the Brazil women's team became the first non-host nation to win the world championship.[4]

Current title holders

CompetitionYearChampionsTitleRunners-upNext edition
National teams (Men's)
AMF Futsal World Cup20234th2027
National teams (Women's)
AMF Futsal Women's World Cup20221st2025

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: AMF Sets Up Committee to Study Laws of the Game. 9 July 2003. Futsal Online.
  2. Web site: Futsal History. 2 November 2013. Confederation of Asian Futsal. 16 February 2018. 5 August 2019. https://web.archive.org/web/20190805093554/http://www.cafs.asia/index.php/news_detail/index/35. dead.
  3. Web site: Futsal – Past, Present & Future. 9 April 2015. Futsal.SE. https://web.archive.org/web/20180219091004/http://futsal.se/2015/04/futsal-past-present-future/. 19 February 2018. dead.
  4. Web site: Brazil triumphs in the 2017 AMF Futsal Women's World Cup; USA comes seventh. 27 November 2017. VAVEL.