Football World Championship Under 19 at the 2015 CPISRA World Games explained

Tourney Name:IFCPF CP Football World Championships Under 19 at the 2015 CPISRA World Games
Country:England
Dates:10 – 16 August 2016
Num Teams:7
Venues:1
Cities:1
Champion Other: Russia
Second Other: Brazil
Third Other: England
Fourth Other: Scotland
Matches:15
Goals:99
Top Scorer: Hudson Hyure Do Carmo Januario (7)
Dale Smith (7)
Nextseason:2018 Sant Cugat del Vallès

The Football World Championship Under 19 at the 2015 CPISRA World Games was the world championship for men's national 7-a-side association football under 19 teams. IFCPF stands for International Federation of Cerebral Palsy Football. Athletes with a physical disability competed. The Championship took place in the England from 10 to 16  August 2015. Football CP Football was played with modified FIFA rules. Among the modifications were that there were seven players, no offside, a smaller playing field, and permission for one-handed throw-ins. Matches consisted of two thirty-minute halves, with a fifteen-minute half-time break.

Participating teams and officials

Qualifying

Continental Berths Qualified
Host nation align=center 1 England U19
America 1 Brazil U19
Asia 1 Japan U19
Europe 3 Netherlands U19
Russia U19
Scotland U19
Pacific 1 Australia U19
Total 7

The draw

During the draw, the teams were divided into pots because of rankings.[1] Here, the following groups:

width=5%width=20%Group Awidth=20%Group B
Pot 1 Russia U19 (2.) Brazil U19 (3.)
Pot 2 Scotland U19 (9.) Netherlands U19 (4.)
Pot 3 Australia U19 (14.) Japan U19 (16.)
no Pot England U19 (7.)

Squads

Group A

Russia U19 Scotland U19 Australia U19
3 Danila Belov
6 Nikolai Maksimov
7 Pavel Proshin
8 Aslan Tibilov
9 Tahir Boboev
10 Alexei Borkin
12 Guram Chkareuli (GK)
13 Soslan Dzugkoev
14 Sergei Materukhin
15 Alexandr Lipin (c)
17 Maksim Mikheev
18 Soslan Gazdanov

Coach: Avtandil Baramidze

4 Lewis McIntyre (c)
5 Ross Paterson
6 Ian Paton
7 Declan Docherty
8 Robert Miller
9 Kyle Hannin
10 Jamie Mitchell
11 Barry Halloran (GK)
12 Cameron Connor
13 Jason Macleary
14 Darren Aitken
15 Darren Bowman

Coach: Gary MacDonald

2 Robert Christie
3 Gordon Allan
6 Jack Starkey
7 Taylor Harvey
8 Nicholas Prescott
9 Harrison Dowdell
10 Matthew Hearne
11 Shaun McCann
12 Zachary Jones
13 Nelson Gray
15 Hayden Bognar
16 Ryan Kinner (c)
19 Christian Tsangas (GK)
Coach: Goran Stajic

Group B

Brazil U19 Netherlands U19 Japan U19 England U19
1 Diego Amado Fabricio (GK)
2 Bruno Rodrigues Da Silva (MF)
3 Bruno Pratis Da Silva (MF)
4 Weslley De Souza Mendes (FW)
5 Hudson Hyure Do Carmo Januario (MF)
6 Igor Romero Da Rocha (MF)
7 Diego Delgado Da Silva (c) (DF)
8 Joao Victor Batista Cortes (DF)
9 Gabriel Da Silva Araujo (MF)
10 Alesson De Oliveira Silva (FW)
12 Pedro Henrique Seabra Vaz (GK)
13 Matheus Henrique Rosa Xilaves (DF)

Coach: Rodrigo Terra Cardoso

1 Stefan Boersma (c) (GK)
2 Roy Flier (DF)
3 Martijn Loeffen (DF)
4 Jeroen Duin (DF)
5 Nathan Janssen (MF)
6 Teddy Witjes (MF)
7 Krist Stoelwinder (MF)
8 Gerard Bambacht (MF)
9 Job Draaijers (FW)
10 Harm Pannerman (MF)
11 Malik De La Cruz Victoria (MF)
12 Danny Van Amerongen (FW)
14 Martijn Langras (DF)

Coach: Rene Jurrius

1 Itta Ninomiya (GK)
7 Yuki Taniguci (MF)
8 Motoma Murachi (DF)
9 Temma Inoue (MF)
10 Tatsuhiro Ura (c) (DF)
11 Yasushi Narumi (MF)
12 Masaya Morita (DF)
14 Tomoya Fukushima (DF)
16 Yoshihiro Fukuda (DF)
18 Kazuma Hanaki (MF)

Coach: Jin Yukio

1 Giles Moore (GK)
2 Harry Baker (c) (DF)
3 Will Boucher (DF)
4 Bailey Fleming (DF) / (MF)
5 Joel Athey (DF) / (MF)
6 Dale Smith (MF)
7 Connor Rawlins (MF)
8 Jordan Twiss (MF)
9 Hayden Kroll (MF)/(MF)
10 Oliver Nugent (MF) / (FW)
11 Reiss Blackwell (MF)
12 William Ling (FW)
13 Reagan Macmillan (GK)
14 Reece Macmillan (MF) / (FW)
Coach: Lynton Lynch

Venues

The venues to be used for the World Championships were located in Nottingham.

Nottingham
Highfields Playing Fields
Capacity: unknown
height=250px width=250px

Format

The first round, or group stage, was a competition between the 16 teams divided among four groups of four, where each group engaged in a round-robin tournament within itself. The two highest ranked teams in each group advanced to the knockout stage for the position one to sixteen. the two lower ranked teams plays for the positions 17 to 32. Teams were awarded three points for a win and one for a draw. When comparing teams in a group over-all result came before head-to-head.

In the knockout stage there were three rounds (quarter-finals, semi-finals, and the final). The winners plays for the higher positions, the losers for the lower positions. For any match in the knockout stage, a draw after 60 minutes of regulation time was followed by two 10 minute periods of extra time to determine a winner. If the teams were still tied, a penalty shoot-out was held to determine a winner.

Classification
Athletes with a physical disability competed. The athlete's disability was caused by a non-progressive brain damage that affects motor control, such as cerebral palsy, traumatic brain injury or stroke. Athletes must be ambulant.

Players were classified by level of disability.

Teams must field at least one class C5 or C6 player at all times. No more than two players of class C8 are permitted to play at the same time.

Group stage

The first round, or group stage, have seen the sixteen teams divided into four groups of four teams.

Group A

Group B

Knockout stage

Semi-finals

Position 5-7

Position 1-4----

Finals

Position 5-7

Position 3-4

Final

Statistics

Goalscorers

7 goals
6 goals
5 goals
4 goals
3 goals
2 goals
1 goal
own goal

Ranking

RankTeam
Russia U19
Brazil U19
England U19
4. Scotland U19
5. Netherlands U19
6. Australia U19
7. Japan U19

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Ranking from the July, 26, 2015 . 2015-06-26 . 2016-06-26 . en . bot: unknown . https://web.archive.org/web/20150726005409/http://www.ifcpf.com/ranking . 2015-07-26 .