Football at the 1964 Summer Olympics explained

Country:Japan
Dates:11–23 October 1964
Num Teams:14
Confederations:5
Venues:8
Cities:4
Champion Other: (2nd title)
Matches:29
Goals:123
Prevseason:1960
Nextseason:1968

The football competition at the 1964 Summer Olympics started on 11 October and ended on 23 October. Only one event, the men's tournament, was contested. The tournament features 14 men's national teams from six continental confederations. The 14 teams are drawn into two groups of four and two groups of three and each group plays a round-robin tournament. At the end of the group stage, the top two teams advanced to the knockout stage, beginning with the quarter-finals and culminating with the gold medal match at the Olympic Stadium on 23 October 1964. There was also three consolation matches played by losing quarter-finalists. The winner of these matches placed fifth in the tournament.[1]

Qualification

See also: Football at the 1964 Summer Olympics – Men's qualification. Regional qualifying tournaments were held. During the CONMEBOL Pre-Olympic Tournament among South American national teams, a riot in Lima during the decisive PeruArgentina match, after Peru's equalizing goal in the last minutes was disallowed by the referee, resulted in 328 deaths, which was considered the worst football disaster in history.[2] Due to the riot, further CONMEBOL matches were not played that year, except for a playoff between Brazil and Peru (won by Brazil), and Argentina qualified instead of Peru.

16 teams qualified, and were divided into four groups:

The two best teams of each group competed in the quarter-finals.

Ultimately, the tournament was played two teams short:

Venues

Tokyo
Prince Chichibu Football Field (1)National Olympic Stadium (2)Komazawa Olympic Park Stadium (3)
Capacity: 17,569Capacity: 71,556Capacity: 20,780
Saitama
Ōmiya Football Field (4)
Capacity: 14,392
Yokohama
Mitsuzawa Football Field (5)
Capacity: 10,102

Medalists

GoldSilverBronze
Ferenc Bene
Tibor Csernai
János Farkas
József Gelei
Kálmán Ihász
Sándor Katona
Imre Komora
Ferenc Nógrádi
Dezső Novák
Árpád Orbán
Károly Palotai
Antal Szentmihályi
Gusztáv Szepesi
Zoltán Varga
Jan Brumovský
Ludovít Cvetler
Ján Geleta
František Knebort
Karel Knesl
Karel Lichtnégl
Vojtech Masný
Štefan Matlák
Ivan Mráz
Karel Nepomucký
Zdeněk Pičman

Anton Švajlen
Anton Urban
František Valošek
Josef Vojta
Vladimír Weiss
Gerd Backhaus
Wolfgang Barthels
Bernd Bauchspieß
Gerhard Körner
Otto Fräßdorf
Henning Frenzel
Dieter Engelhardt
Herbert Pankau
Manfred Geisler
Jürgen Heinsch
Klaus Lisiewicz
Jürgen Nöldner
Peter Rock

Hermann Stöcker
Werner Unger
Klaus Urbanczyk
Eberhard Vogel
Manfred Walter
Horst Weigang

Note: Only players from the East Germany represented the joint Olympic team of United Team of Germany.

Squads

See main article: Football at the 1964 Summer Olympics – Men's team squads.

First round

Group A

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Group B

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Group C

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Group D

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Quarter-finals

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Semi-finals

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First consolation round

Played by losing quarter-finalists.

Goalscorers

With 12 goals, Ferenc Bene of Hungary is the top scorer in the tournament. In total, 123 goals were scored by 56 different players, with only one of them credited as own goal.

12 goals
8 goals
6 goals
5 goals
4 goals
3 goals
2 goals
1 goal
Own goal

References

  1. Web site: Football at the 1964 Tokyo Summer Games . https://web.archive.org/web/20200417072532/https://www.sports-reference.com/olympics/summer/1964/FTB/ . dead . 17 April 2020 . Sports Reference . 16 October 2018.
  2. Web site: Edwards . Piers . Lima 1964: The world's worst stadium disaster . bbc.co.uk . 23 May 2014 . 25 May 2014.

External links

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