Football at the Summer Olympics explained

Size:150
Code:FBL
Sport:football
Menevents:1
Womenevents:1
Otherlinks:Tournaments (men・women)
Current:1900 Summer Olympics

Association football has been included in every Summer Olympic Games as a men's competition sport, except 1896 (the inaugural Games) and 1932 (in an attempt to promote the new FIFA World Cup tournament). Women's football was added to the official program at the Atlanta 1996 Games.[1] [2]

In order to avoid competition with the World Cup, FIFA have restricted participation of elite players in the men's tournament in various ways: currently, squads for the men's tournament are required to be composed of players under 23 years of age, with three permitted exceptions.[3] [4] [5]

By comparison, the women's football tournament is a full senior-level international tournament, second in prestige only to the FIFA Women's World Cup.[6] [7] [8]

Another major difference between the men's and women's tournaments is that the men's tournament is not included in the FIFA International Match Calendar,[9] while the women's tournament is included.[10] [11] This in turn means that clubs are not required to release players for the men's tournament, but must release players for the women's event.[12] [13]

History

Pre-World Cup era

Beginnings

Football was not included in the program at the first modern Olympic Games in Athens in 1896, as international football was in its infancy at the time. However, sources claim that an unofficial football tournament was organised during the first competition, with participating teams including Athens and Smyrna (İzmir), then part of the Ottoman Empire. However, according to Bill Mallon's research, this is an error which has been perpetuated in multiple texts.[14]

Tournaments were played at the 1900 and 1904 games and the Intercalated Games of 1906, but these were contested by various clubs and scratch teams. Although the IOC considers the 1900 and 1904 tournaments to be official Olympic events, they are not recognised by FIFA, and neither recognises the Intercalated Games today. In 1900 the competition was won by the London amateurs of Upton Park FC, representing Great Britain. The 1904 tournament was won by Canada, represented by Galt FC.

British successes

In the London Games of 1908 a proper international tournament was organised by the Football Association, featuring just six teams. The number of teams rose to eleven in 1912, when the competition was organised by the Swedish Football Association. Many of these early matches were unbalanced, as evidenced by high scoring games; two players, Sophus Nielsen in 1908 and Gottfried Fuchs in 1912, each scored ten goals in a single match. All players were amateurs, in accordance with the Olympic rules, which meant that countries could not send their full senior national teams. The National Olympic Committee for Great Britain and Ireland asked the Football Association to send an English national amateur team. Some of the English members played with professional clubs, most notably Derby County's Ivan Sharpe, Bradford City F.C. Harold Walden and Chelsea's Vivian Woodward. England won the first two official tournaments convincingly, beating Denmark both times.

1920s and the rise of Uruguay

During the 1920 final against Belgium, the Czechoslovakia national football team walked off the field to protest the refereeing of John Lewis and the militarised mood within the stadium in Antwerp. This would be the final all-European football competition at the Olympic games, with Egypt, the United States, and Uruguay participating in 1924. With teams from new regions the quality of play increased, as did fan interest. Uruguay dominated the tournament, winning their four games by a combined score of 15-1: the final was a 3–0 victory over Switzerland. In 1928, football was the most popular event at the games and the final was an all-South American affair. Because no other major international tournament existed yet, Uruguay defeated Argentina 2–1 in what David Goldblatt says was "football's first world championship". After these tournaments, FIFA realized that the Olympic movement prevented nations from competing on an equal footing and, given that the Olympics only permitted amateurs to participate, did not represent the true strength of the international game. The popularity of international soccer gave FIFA the incentive to create an international tournament, and FIFA began organising the World Cup.

After the first World Cup

Tumultuous '30s

Following Jules Rimet's proposal in 1929 to initiate a professional World Championship of Football, the sport was dropped from the 1932 Los Angeles Games by FIFA in an attempt to promote the new tournament. Football returned to controversy at the 1936 Berlin Games. The German organisers were intent on the return of the game to the Olympic movement since it guaranteed income into the organisation's coffers. The Italian team intimidated a referee. Peru scored a contested victory over Austria in overtime, with a fan invasion of the field at the very end. The Austrian team asked for the result to be annulled, and the game repeated. FIFA agreed, but the Peruvian team refused and left the Olympics.[15] [16]

Soviet Bloc dominance amid amateurism controversy

As professionalism spread around the world, the gap in quality between the World Cup and the Olympics widened. The countries that benefited most were the Soviet Bloc countries of Eastern Europe, where top athletes were state-sponsored while retaining their status as amateurs. As a result, young Western amateurs had to face seasoned and veteran Soviet Bloc teams, which put them at a significant disadvantage. All Olympic football tournaments from 1948 to 1980 were dominated by the Soviet Union and its satellites.[17] Between 1948 and 1980, 23 out of 28 Olympic medals were won by Eastern Europe, with only Sweden (gold in 1948 and bronze in 1952), Denmark (bronze in 1948 and silver in 1960) and Japan (bronze in 1968) breaking their dominance. The next two tournaments saw some changes due to FIFA's changing of the call-up rules, with only Yugoslavia (bronze in 1984) and the Soviet Union (gold in 1988) winning medals for the Eastern Bloc.

Changes and developments

For the 1984 Los Angeles Games, the IOC decided to admit professional players, however, FIFA still did not want the Olympics to rival the World Cup.

A compromise was struck that allowed teams from countries outside of UEFA and CONMEBOL to field their strongest sides, while restricting UEFA and CONMEBOL (the strongest confederations whose teams had played all finals and won every single World Cup title) countries to players who had not played in a World Cup.

The 1984 rules were maintained also for the 1988 edition, but with an additional rider: any European and South American footballers who had previously played less than 90 minutes in one single match of the World Cup, were eligible.[18]

1992–present: Age restrictions introduced

Since 1992, male competitors have been required to be under 23 years old, and since 1996, a maximum of three over-23-year-old players have been allowed per squad. African countries have taken particular advantage of this, with Nigeria and Cameroon winning in 1996 and 2000 respectively.

Because of the unusual format and the separation from the main national teams that play the World Cup and top continental tournaments, historically strong men's national teams have unimpressive Olympic records. Uruguay, who won the two tournaments prior to the World Cup's creation, only qualified again in 2012, after an 84-year absence. Argentina won silver twice (1928 and 1996) before the 2004 tournament, but its appearance in Athens 2004, in which it won the first gold medal, was only their seventh overall. Brazil's silver medals in the 1984, 1988 and 2012 editions were the best they had achieved until 2016's gold. Italy has only won the Olympic title once, in 1936, although along with the two bronzes, the team has the highest number of appearances in the tournament, with 15, the last in 2008. France won the Olympic title in 1984, but only qualified twice ever since. A team from Germany won the gold medal only once, in 1976 (East Germany), and the reunified team did not make an Olympic appearance until 2016, when they won silver. Spain has won gold as hosts in 1992, and followed it with two silver medals (in 2000 and 2020, having also won a third in 1920), along with a few failures to qualify.

British non-involvement

See main article: Great Britain men's Olympic football team and Great Britain women's Olympic football team. Football in the United Kingdom has no single governing body, and there are separate teams for the UK's four Home Nations: England, Northern Ireland, Scotland and Wales. Further to this, only the English Football Association (FA) is affiliated to the British Olympic Association (BOA), and the FA entered "Great Britain" teams to the football tournaments until 1972.

In 1974, the FA abolished the distinction between "amateur" and "professional" football, and ceased to enter the Olympics. Even though FIFA has allowed professionals at the Olympics since 1984, the FA did not re-enter, as the Home Nations were concerned that a united British Olympic team would set a precedent that might cause FIFA to question their separate status in other FIFA competitions, and even their status on or the existence of the International Football Association Board.[19] [20]

When London was selected to host the 2012 Games, there was pressure on the English FA to exercise the host nation's automatic right to field a team.[21] In 2009 the plan agreed by the FA with the Welsh FA, Scottish FA and Irish FA was only to field English players;[22] however the BOA overruled this,[23] and ultimately there were Welsh players in the men's squad and Scots players in the women's squad.[24] After the 2012 games, the FA decided that no team would be entered in subsequent men's tournaments, but was open to fielding a women's team again. The distinction recognised the importance and status of Olympic football in the women's international game.[25]

For the 2020 tournament, FIFA stated that the women's UK team (not applied to the men's UK team) may enter the Olympics after the four FAs agreed, depending on the performance of women's English team in 2019 FIFA Women's World Cup (which serves as the European qualification for the Olympics). This brought women's football under the BOA jurisdiction in line with the long-standing qualification rules in Field hockey and Rugby sevens, although the home nation's sevens teams were subsumed into a standing Great Britain team in 2022[26] [27]

Venues

See main article: List of Olympic venues in football.

Due to the number of large stadia required for the Olympic tournament, venues in distant cities – often more than 200km (100miles) away from the main host – are typically used for the football tournament. In an extreme example, two early-round venues for the 1984 Games were on the East Coast of the United States, well over 2000miles from the host city of Los Angeles. The next Games held in the United States, the 1996 Games, were unique in that no matches were held in the host city of Atlanta; the nearest venue and the site of the finals was 65miles away on the University of Georgia campus in Athens. Counting the 2016 and 2020 Summer Olympics, there are 127 venues that have hosted Olympic football, the most of any sport.

Edition of the Olympic Games City Stadium
Athens 1896No official football tournament
Paris 1900ParisVincennes Velodrome
St. Louis 1904St. LouisFrancis Field
London 1908LondonWhite City Stadium
Stockholm 1912StockholmStockholm Olympic Stadium
Råsunda Stadium
Tranebergs Idrottsplats
Antwerp 1920AntwerpOlympic Stadium
Stadion Broodstraat
BrusselsStade de l'Union St. Gilloise
GhentStade d'A.A. La Gantoise
Paris 1924ParisStade Olympique, Colombes
Stade Bergeyre
Stade de Paris, Saint-Ouen
Stade Pershing, Vincennes
Amsterdam 1928AmsterdamOlympisch Stadion
Harry Elte Stadium
Los Angeles 1932No football tournament
Berlin 1936BerlinOlympiastadion
Poststadion, Tiergarten
Mommsenstadion, Charlottenburg
Hertha-BSC-Platz
London 1948LondonEmpire Stadium, Wembley
White Hart Lane, Tottenham
Selhurst Park, Crystal Palace
Craven Cottage, Fulham
Griffin Park, Brentford
Arsenal Stadium, Highbury
Lynn Road, Ilford
Green Pond Road, Walthamstow
Champion Hill, Dulwich
BrightonGoldstone Ground
PortsmouthFratton Park
Helsinki 1952HelsinkiOlympiastadion
Töölö Football Grounds
TurkuKupittaa Stadium
TampereRatina Stadium
LahtiKisapuisto
KotkaKotka Stadium
Melbourne 1956MelbourneMelbourne Cricket Ground
Olympic Park Stadium
Rome 1960RomeFlaminio Stadium
FlorenceStadio Comunale
GrossetoStadio Comunale
LivornoStadio Ardenza
PescaraStadio Adriatico
L'AquilaStadio Comunale
NaplesStadio Fuorigrotta
Tokyo 1964TokyoNational Olympic Stadium
Prince Chichibu Memorial Field
Komazawa Stadium
ŌmiyaOmiya Soccer Stadium
YokohamaMitsuzawa Football Stadium
Mexico City 1968Mexico CityAzteca Stadium
PueblaEstadio Cuauhtémoc
GuadalajaraEstadio Jalisco
LeónEstadio León
Munich 1972MunichOlympiastadion
AugsburgRosenaustadion
IngolstadtESV-Stadion
RegensburgJahn Stadium
NurembergStädtisches Stadium
PassauDrei Flüsse Stadion
Montreal 1976MontrealOlympic Stadium
SherbrookeMunicipal Stadium
TorontoVarsity Stadium
OttawaLansdowne Stadium
Moscow 1980MoscowGrand Central Lenin Stadium
Dynamo Stadium
LeningradKirov Stadium
KyivRepublican Stadium
MinskDinamo Stadium
Los Angeles 1984Pasadena, CaliforniaRose Bowl
BostonHarvard Stadium
Annapolis, MarylandNavy–Marine Corps Memorial Stadium
Stanford, CaliforniaStanford Stadium
Seoul 1988SeoulOlympic Stadium
Dongdaemun Stadium
BusanBusan Stadium
DaeguDaegu Stadium
DaejeonDaejeon Stadium
GwangjuGwangju Stadium
Barcelona 1992BarcelonaCamp Nou
Estadi de Sarrià
SabadellEstadi de la Nova Creu Alta
ZaragozaEstadio La Romareda
ValenciaEstadio Luis Casanova
Atlanta 1996Athens, GeorgiaSanford Stadium
Orlando, FloridaCitrus Bowl
Birmingham, AlabamaLegion Field
Miami, FloridaMiami Orange Bowl
Washington, D.C.Robert F. Kennedy Memorial Stadium
Sydney 2000SydneyOlympic Stadium
Sydney Football Stadium
BrisbaneBrisbane Cricket Ground
AdelaideHindmarsh Stadium
CanberraBruce Stadium
MelbourneMelbourne Cricket Ground
Athens 2004MarousiOlympic Stadium
PiraeusKaraiskakis Stadium
PatrasPampeloponnisiako Stadium
VolosPanthessaliko Stadium
ThessalonikiKaftanzoglio Stadium
HeraklionPankritio Stadium
Beijing 2008BeijingNational Stadium
Workers' Stadium
TianjinTianjin Olympic Center Stadium
ShanghaiShanghai Stadium
QinhuangdaoQinhuangdao Olympic Sports Center Stadium
ShenyangShenyang Olympic Sports Center Stadium
London 2012LondonWembley Stadium
GlasgowHampden Park
CardiffMillennium Stadium
CoventryCity of Coventry Stadium
ManchesterOld Trafford
Newcastle upon TyneSt James' Park
Rio 2016Rio de JaneiroMaracanã
João Havelange Olympic Stadium
São PauloArena Corinthians
BrasíliaEstádio Nacional Mané Garrincha
SalvadorArena Fonte Nova
Belo HorizonteEstádio Mineirão
ManausArena da Amazônia
Tokyo 2020
TokyoTokyo Stadium
YokohamaInternational Stadium Yokohama
KashimaKashima Soccer Stadium
SaitamaSaitama Stadium 2002
RifuMiyagi Stadium
SapporoSapporo Dome
Paris 2024
MarseilleStade Vélodrome
Décines-Charpieu
(Lyon area)
Groupama Stadium
ParisParc des Princes
BordeauxMatmut Atlantique
NantesStade de la Beaujoire
NiceAllianz Riviera
Saint-ÉtienneStade Geoffroy-Guichard

Events

Event 96 32 Years
Men's eventXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX28
Women's eventXXXXXXXX8
Total 0 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 0 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2

Competition format

Since the 1988 Seoul games when events began to be held before the Opening Ceremony, football was the only sport to start before the ceremony (except in 1996) until archery began the day of in 2012. Since 2000, football starts two days before the games official start.

For both the men's and women's tournaments, the competition consists of a round-robin group stage followed by a knockout stage. Teams are placed into groups of 4 teams, with each team playing each other team in its group once. Teams earn 3 points for a win, 1 point for a draw, and 0 points for a loss. The top two teams in each group (as well as the top two third-place finishers, in the women's tournament) advance to the knockout rounds. The knockout rounds are a single-elimination tournament consisting of quarterfinals, semifinals, and the gold and bronze medal matches.

Matches consist of two halves of 45 minutes each. Since 2004, during the knockout rounds, if the match is tied after 90 minutes, two 15-minute halves of extra time are played (extra time is skipped in favour of immediate penalty kicks in the bronze medal match if it is played on the same day in the same stadium as the gold medal match). If the score remains tied, penalty kicks, which is 5 rounds, plus extra rounds if tied, are used to determine the winner.[28]

The qualifying tournament, like that for the World Cup, is organised along continental lines. Most continental confederations organise a special Under-23 qualifying tournament, although the European qualifiers are drawn from the finalists of the UEFA Under-21 Championship. Teams participating in the preliminary and final competitions must be composed of U-23 players, with up to three players who are at least 23. For Paris 2024, U-23 players were born after 1 January 2001.[29]

For the 2024 Games, the number of places allocated to each continent is:

Team variants

Men

National U23 team

Women

Men's tournament

Men's Olympic football tournament
Organiser:IOC
FIFA
Founded:1900[31]
Region:International
Number Of Teams:16 (finals)
(from 6 confederations)
Current Champions:
(2nd title)
Most Successful Team:

(3 titles each)
Current:2024 Summer Olympics

Participating nations

Numbers refer to the final placing of each team at the respective Games. Host nation is shown in bold.

UEFA
NationYears
6 2 11 5 4
10 1
3 bgcolor=gold1 15 5 4 5
10 17 3 5 2 5
14 1
9 9 2 9 bgcolor=gold1 WD Split into Slovakia and Czech Republic 5
2 2 10 3 5 2 6 13 8 9
[32] WD 3 3 bgcolor=gold1 2 WD Merged into West Germany (FRG) 4
17 1
4 9 14 9 4
2 5 4 5 9 5 17 9 7 5 bgcolor=gold1 5 13 2 14
[33] 7 5 5 4 9 5 5 3 2 9 10
bgcolor=gold1 bgcolor=gold1 bgcolor=gold1 11 5 4 17 5 8 5 10
13 17 15 3
5 13 9 bgcolor=gold1WD 3 bgcolor=gold1 bgcolor=gold12 16 9
7 17 2
Competed with Asia (qualified 2 times)15 1
8 5 6 3 bgcolor=gold1 5 9 4 DSQ 4 4 5 12 5 3 5 15
16 1
17 1
12 11 9 9 9 9 6
3 3 3 4 9 9 17 7 8
9 7 3 14 10 5
17 4 9 10 bgcolor=gold1 2 2 7
5 4 14 6 4
14 17 5 11 4
10 1
Part of Yugoslavia / Serbia and Montenegro 12 1
Part of Yugoslavia 16 Split into 2 nations 1
13 1
9 bgcolor=gold1 3 3 3 WD bgcolor=gold1 Split into 15 nations, with Russia as successor 6
2 17 5 6 12 10 bgcolor=gold1 6 2 14 2 bgcolor=gold1 12
4 11 6 3 9 bgcolor=gold1 3 6 6 15 10
2 9 13 3
17 9 9 5 5 WD 14 6
9 1
9 17 9 2 2 2 bgcolor=gold1 6 4 3 10 Split into 5, later 6 nations 11
CONMEBOL
NationYears
2 7 10 WD 8 2 1 1 11 10 7 10
5 6 9 13 13 4 2 2 3 7 3 2 1 bgcolor=gold1 14
17 17 7 3 4
10 11 11 14 6 5
7 2 6 3
5 11 2
bgcolor=gold1 bgcolor=gold1 WD 9 3
12 1
CONCACAF
NationYears
1 13 6 3
16 13 8 3
11 7 2
12 1
15 1
8 10 16 3
10 16 7 4 14 5
9 11 11 4 7 9 10 7 10 bgcolor=gold1 9 3 12
14 Split into 2 nations 1
2[34] 312 9 9 11 17 5 14 WD 9 12 9 10 4 9 8 15
CAF
NationYears
8 14 2
11 bgcolor=gold1 8 3
8 8 4 9 11 9 WD 12 4 WD 8 12 8 8 4 13
12 1
7 12 16 WD WD 3 8 9 6
11 16 2
6 7 2
5 14 2
13 WD 8 12 15 16 10 11 3 8
14 WD 13 15 bgcolor=gold1 8 2 3 7
6 1
11 13 16 3
15 1
15 13 14 12 4
WD 15 5 2
AFC
NationYears
17 1
Competed with Oceania (qualified 6 times) 11 12 2
9 11 WD 14 13 4
16 1
11 17 4 13 4
5 1
12 12 7 WD 3
5 14 9 4 12 10 6
5 6 Competed with Europe (qualified 1 time) 2
5 9 8 3 9 6 13 15 4 10 4 5 12
6 16 12 3
10 WD 1
9 1
WD 8 1
15 8 2
16 15 15 3
5 14 11 11 11 9 6 10 3 5 5 11
14 1
9 16 2
15 1
13 1
OFC
NationYears
5 7 4 13 15 7 AFC (qualified 2 times) 6
16 1
14 16 6 11 4
Total nations3 2 5 11 14 22 17 16 18 25 11 16 14 16 16 13 16 16 16 16 16 16 16 16 16 16 16 16

Results

See main article: Men's Olympic football tournament records and statistics.

Rules:
Keys
Ed.YearHostsGold medal matchBronze medal matchNum.
teams
width=120px Gold medalistswidth=Scorewidth=120px Silver medalistswidth=120px Bronze medalistswidth= Scorewidth=120px Fourth place
1
2 Canada
3 London
4
5 Antwerp
6
7
1932
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
Notes

Performances by countries

Below are the 41 nations that have reached at least the semi-finals in the Summer Olympics finals.

TeamGold medalsSilver medalsBronze medalsFourth placeMedals
bgcolor=goldbgcolor=gold3 (1952, 1964, 1968)1 (1972)1 (1960)5
3 (1900, 1908, 1912)1 (1948)3
bgcolor=goldbgcolor=gold2 (2016, 2020)3 (1984, 1988, 2012)2 (1996, 2008)1 (1976)7
bgcolor=goldbgcolor=gold2 (1992, 2024)3 (1920, 2000, 2020)5
bgcolor=goldbgcolor=gold2 (2004, 2008)2 (1928, 1996)4
bgcolor=goldbgcolor=gold2 (1956, 1988)3 (1972, 1976, 1980)5
bgcolor=goldbgcolor=gold2 (1924, 1928)2
bgcolor=goldbgcolor=gold1 (1960)3 (1948, 1952, 1956)1 (1984)1 (1980)5
bgcolor=goldbgcolor=gold1 (1972)2 (1976, 1992)1 (1936)3
bgcolor=goldbgcolor=gold1 (1984)2 (1900, 2024)3
bgcolor=goldbgcolor=gold1 (1976)1 (1980)1 (1972)3
bgcolor=goldbgcolor=gold1 (1996)1 (2008)1 (2016)3
bgcolor=goldbgcolor=gold1 (1980)1 (1964)2
bgcolor=goldbgcolor=gold1 (1936)2 (1928, 2004)4 (1920, 1960, 1984, 1988)3
bgcolor=goldbgcolor=gold1 (1948)2 (1924, 1952)1 (1908)3
bgcolor=goldbgcolor=gold1 (2012)1 (2020)1 (1968)2
bgcolor=goldbgcolor=gold1 (1920)1 (1900)1 (2008)2
bgcolor=goldbgcolor=gold1 (1904)1
bgcolor=goldbgcolor=gold1 (2000)1
bgcolor=silverbgcolor=silver3 (1908, 1912, 1960)1 (1948)4
bgcolor=silverbgcolor=silver1 (1904)1 (1904)1 (2000)2
bgcolor=silverbgcolor=silver1 (1968)1 (1956)2
bgcolor=silverbgcolor=silver1 (2016)1 (1952)1
bgcolor=silverbgcolor=silver1 (1924)1
bgcolor=silverbgcolor=silver1 (1936)1
bgcolor=silverbgcolor=silver1 (2004)1
3 (1908, 1912, 1920)1 (1924)3
1 (1968)2 (2012, 2020)1
1 (1936)1
1 (1964)1
1 (1988)1
1 (1992)1
1 (2000)1
1 (2012)1
1 (2024)1
3 (1928, 1964, 2024)0
1 (1912)0
1 (1956)0
1 (1992)0
1 (1996)0
1 (2004)0
1 (2016)0

Women's tournament

Women's Olympic football tournament
Organiser:IOC
FIFA
Founded:1996
Region:International
Number Of Teams:12 (finals)
(from 6 confederations)
Current Champions:
(5th title)
Most Successful Team:
(5 titles)
Current:2024 Summer Olympics

The women's tournament is contested between the full senior national teams, with no restrictions. One place is reserved for the host country. Of the remaining teams, as in World Cup contests, a specific number of places are reserved for teams from each continental region; the European (UEFA) teams until 2020 are chosen from the most successful European teams in the previous year's World Cup; the UEFA Women's Nations League which its finals is held in the same year as the Olympics was used from 2024, while the other continental regions host their own qualifying tournaments in the build-up to the Olympics.

The first women's tournament was at the 1996 Atlanta Games. The United States won the gold medal. defeated the U.S. in 2000 by a golden goal that was highly controversial and seemed like a handball, but was allowed to stand.[40] The finals of the next two tournaments, in 2004 and 2008, also went to extra time, with the U.S. defeating both times. In 2012 the U.S. won their fourth gold medal defeating Japan 2–1 in the final. In 2016 Germany won its first gold, defeating in the final Sweden, who upset in the succession the U.S. and hosts Brazil. In 2020, Canada won gold on penalties over Sweden, having previously also beaten Brazil and the U.S.

Allocation of places for each continent in the 2024 Games was:

Participating nations

Numbers refer to the final placing of each team at the respective Games. Host nation is shown in bold.

UEFA
Nation Years
8 1
4 6 6 3
5 3 3 3 bgcolor=gold1 3 6
5 7 2
10 1
5 1
3 bgcolor=gold1 7 3
4 1
6 6 4 6 7 2 2 7
CONMEBOL
Nation Years
111
4 4 2 2 6 4 6 2 8
11 1
11 11 8 3
CONCACAF
Nation Years
8 3 3 bgcolor=gold1 7 5
8 1
bgcolor=gold1 2 bgcolor=gold1 bgcolor=gold1 bgcolor=gold1 5 3 bgcolor=gold1 8
CAF
Nation Years
12 1
8 6 11 11 4
10 10 2
9 12 2
12 1
AFC
Nation Years
OFC (2) 7 4 9 3
2 5 9 5 8 10 6
7 7 4 2 8 5 6
9 9 2
OFC
Nation Years
7 5 AFC (qualified 3 times) 2
10 8 9 12 10 5
Total nations 8 8 10 12 12 12 12 12

Results

See main article: Women's Olympic football tournament records and statistics.

Keys
Ed.YearHostsGold medal matchBronze medal matchNum.
teams
width=120px Gold medalistswidth=Scorewidth=120px Silver medalistswidth=120px Bronze medalistswidth= Scorewidth=120px Fourth place

Performances by countries

Below are the ten nations that have reached at least the semi-finals in the Summer Olympics finals.

TeamGold medalsSilver medalsBronze medalsFourth placeMedals
bgcolor=goldbgcolor=gold5 (1996, 2004, 2008, 2012, 2024)1 (2000)1 (2020)7
bgcolor=goldbgcolor=gold1 (2016)4 (2000, 2004, 2008, 2024)5
bgcolor=goldbgcolor=gold1 (2020)2 (2012, 2016)3
bgcolor=goldbgcolor=gold1 (2000)1 (1996)2
bgcolor=silverbgcolor=silver3 (2004, 2008, 2024)3 (1996, 2000, 2016)3
bgcolor=silverbgcolor=silver2 (2016, 2020)1 (2004)2
bgcolor=silverbgcolor=silver1 (2012)1 (2008)1
bgcolor=silverbgcolor=silver1 (1996)1
1 (2020)0
1 (2012)0
1 (2024)0

Overall medal table

See also

Works cited

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Tokyo 2020 Football - Olympic Results by Discipline. 20 August 2021. 3 July 2021. https://web.archive.org/web/20210703153525/https://olympics.com/tokyo-2020/en/sports/football/. dead.
  2. Web site: August 8, 2024 . Team sports: how can your Team Qualify for the Paris 2024 Olympics? . August 8, 2024 . Olympics.com.
  3. Web site: Hartman . Ike . July 23, 2021 . Why Olympic Men's Soccer Has An Age Limit . 2024-03-23 . The18.
  4. Web site: Hanley . Liam . July 9, 2021 . Explaining The New Age-Limit Rules For Olympic Men's Soccer . 2024-03-23 . The18.
  5. Web site: Anderson . Jason . Olympic men's soccer bracket: Standings, schedule and what to know . 2024-08-09 . USA TODAY . en-US.
  6. News: Goff . Steven . 2021-07-19 . What to know about soccer at the Tokyo Olympics . 2024-03-23 . Washington Post . en.
  7. Creditor . Avi . The USWNT and Sweden: A Frequent Tale on the Tournament Stage . Sports Illustrated . 15 February 2022 . en-us.
  8. Web site: Cons . Roddy . 2024-07-25 . Why is there no age restriction in the women’s Olympic soccer tournament? . 2024-08-09 . AS USA . en-us.
  9. Web site: Men's International Match Calendar 2023–2030 . FIFA.com . April 2023 . July 24, 2024.
  10. Web site: Women's International Match Calendar 2024–2025 . FIFA.com . January 2024 . July 24, 2024.
  11. Web site: Women's International Match Calendar 2026–2029 . FIFA.com . May 2024 . July 24, 2024.
  12. Web site: 2024 Olympics: What to know about USA men's, women's soccer . Sam . Borden . ESPN.com . July 23, 2024 . July 24, 2024.
  13. News: Twomey . Liam . Why clubs are denying players a place at Olympic Games - and why it is allowed . 2024-08-09 . The New York Times . en-US . 0362-4331.
  14. Book: Mallon, Bill . Widlund, Ture . The 1896 Olympic Games. Results for All Competitors in All Events, with Commentary . Jefferson . McFarland . 1998 . 0-7864-0379-9 . 118 . registration .
  15. Web site: The forgotten story of ... football, farce and fascism at the 1936 Olympics . The Guardian . Paul . Doyle . 24 November 2011. 17 December 2016. https://web.archive.org/web/20141209235152/http://www.theguardian.com/sport/blog/2011/nov/24/forgotten-story-football-1936-olympics. 9 December 2014. live.
  16. Web site: Controversia – Berlín 36. Un mito derrumbado (The Berlin '36 Controversy. A myth debunked.) . Larepublica.com.pe . 15 February 2009 . es. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20090322030051/http://www.larepublica.com.pe/content/view/238377. 22 March 2009.
  17. Web site: Australian Online Soccer Museum . 3 November 2006 . dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20051103005233/http://www.ozfootball.net/museum/ronlord.html . 3 November 2005.
  18. Web site: Football Tournament of the Olympic Games - Overview. 15 October 2021. RSSSF.
  19. Web site: The Scottish Football Association . 12 August 2008 . https://web.archive.org/web/20080809121330/http://www.scottishfa.co.uk/news.cfm?newsid=4029 . 9 August 2008 . dead.
  20. http://www.newsletter.co.uk/sport/YOUR-VIEWS-Olympic-football-threat.4327759{{Dead link|date=September 2019 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}
  21. News: Brown pays tribute to GB success . BBC News . 24 August 2008 . 2 May 2010.
  22. Web site: Nations pave way for 2012 GB team . . 29 May 2009 . 29 May 2009 . https://web.archive.org/web/20090531083536/http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport1/hi/olympic_games/8072981.stm . 31 May 2009 . live.
  23. News: London 2012 Olympics: Gareth Bale and non-English players have no 'legal right' to play for Team GB . https://archive.today/20120912035553/http://www.telegraph.co.uk/sport/othersports/olympics/8404386/London-2012-Olympics-Gareth-Bale-and-non-English-players-have-legal-right-to-play-for-Team-GB.html . dead . 12 September 2012 . . 24 March 2011. 28 April 2011.
  24. News: Idessane . Kheredine . London 2012: No Scotland or N Ireland in Olympic football squad . 26 August 2020 . BBC Sport . 29 June 2012.
  25. News: Kelso . Paul . British Olympic Association chief executive Andy Hunt criticises Football Association for lack of support . Daily Telegraph. 15 August 2012 . London . 14 August 2012. https://web.archive.org/web/20120815080415/http://www.telegraph.co.uk/sport/olympics/9476068/British-Olympic-Association-chief-executive-Andy-Hunt-criticises-Football-Association-for-lack-of-support.html. 15 August 2012. live.
  26. Web site: Organising Committee takes important decisions on FIFA Women's World Cup . https://web.archive.org/web/20181001184011/https://www.fifa.com/womensworldcup/news/y=2018/m=10/news=organising-committee-takes-important-decisions-on-fifa-women-s-world-cup.html . dead . 1 October 2018 . FIFA.com . 1 October 2018. 20 December 2018.
  27. Web site: Tokyo 2020 Olympics: Home nations agree to GB women's football team . BBC Sport . 1 October 2018. 20 December 2018. https://web.archive.org/web/20181128035143/https://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/football/45712449. 28 November 2018. live.
  28. Web site: Regulations for the Olympic Football Tournaments . 1 August 2016 . https://web.archive.org/web/20160820102830/http://resources.fifa.com/mm/document/tournament/competition/02/54/40/46/oftsregulationsrio2016-e_neutral.pdf . 20 August 2016 . dead.
  29. Web site: REGULATIONS for the Olympic Football Tournaments. https://web.archive.org/web/20150906113402/http://www.concacaf.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/08/FIFA-Regulations-for-the-Olympic-Football-Tournament-Games-of-the-XXXI-Olympiad-Rio-de-Janeiro-2016.pdf. 6 September 2015. dead.
  30. https://memoriasdelfutbol.com/futbol-juegos-olimpicos-historia-2/ Fútbol en los Juegos Olímpicos
  31. The 1900 and 1904 tournaments are not recognized by FIFA. The competition has been held regularly, except 1932. Since 1992, only the U23 national teams are allowed to participate.
  32. The East German team represented the United Team of Germany in 1964, winning the bronze medal.
  33. [Germany#East and West Germany|When Germany was divided]
  34. The United States had two teams at the 1904 Games, taking the silver and bronze medals.
  35. Web site: Games of the I. Olympiad . . 3 February 2022 . 14 July 2022 . 11 July 2022 . https://web.archive.org/web/20220711203902/https://www.rsssf.org/tableso/ol1896f.html . live .
  36. Web site: Olympic Football: 1896 Demonstration Match between Denmark and Greece . Top End Sports . 14 July 2022 .
  37. https://www.afa.com.ar/es/posts/el-futbol-masculino-en-los-juegos-olimpicos El Fútbol Masculino en los Juegos Olímpicos
  38. https://as.com/juegos_olimpicos/2021/07/20/noticias/1626796241_067088.html Historia del fútbol en los Juegos Olímpicos: medallero, palmarés y ganadores
  39. https://www.rsssf.org/tabless/sam-olym-qual.html Pre-Olímpico - South-American Olympic Qualifying Tournament
  40. News: Lewis . Samantha . Julie Foudy remembers USWNT's Sydney 2000 Gold Medal match: 'I can't even watch that game again' . 31 August 2021 . ESPN . September 28, 2020.