2011 CPISRA Football 7-a-side World Championships

2011 CPISRA Football 7-a-side World Championships

2011 CPISRA Football 7-a-side World Championships official logo
Tournament details
Host country Netherlands
Dates 17 June – 1 July
Teams 16
Venue(s) 4 (in 3 host cities)
Final positions
Champions  Russia
Runners-up  Iran
Third place  Ukraine
Fourth place  Brazil
Tournament statistics
Matches played 48

The 2011 CPISRA Football 7-a-side World Championships was the world championship for men's national 7-a-side association football teams. CPISRA stands for Cerebral Palsy International Sports & Recreation Association. Athletes with a physical disability competed. The Championship took place in the Netherlands from 17 June to 1 July 2011.

Football 7-a-side 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. The Championships was a qualifying event for the London 2012 Paralympic Games.[1]

Venues

The venues to be used for the World Championships were located in Assen (club Achilles ’94), Emmen (clubs SC Angelslo and FC Emmen) and Hoogeveen (club VV De Weide).[2]

Assen Emmen Emmen Hoogeveen
Sportpark Marsdijk[2][3] Univé Stadion
(FC Emmen)[4]
Sportpark Meerdijk Noord
(SC Angelslo)[5]
Sportpark Schutlanden[6]
Capacity: 5,000 Capacity: 8,600

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.

Squads

[7]

 Argentina  Australia  Brazil  Canada

Nahuelquin Gustavo
Morana Mariano
Ferreira Carlos
Jaime Ezequiel
Vivot Brian
Fernandez Maximiliano
Medina Ariel
Rodriguez Gaston
Rodriguez Gabriel
Lugrin Rodrigo
Fernandez Matias
Salazar Marcos

Sam Larkings
Jared Eiby
Christopher Pyne
Scott Kennedy
Beau Menzies
Benn Roche
David Barber
Brett Fairhall
Ben Atkins
Thomas Goodman
Jack Williams
Jamie Paulsen

Dihego Rezende Rodrigues
Fábio da Silva Bordignon
Jan Francisco Brito da Costa
Jean Adriano Rodrigues
José Augusto Siqueira
José Carlos Monteiro Guimarães
Marcos dos Santos Ferreira
Mateus Francisco Tostes Calvo
Moisés Tamiozzo da Silva
Rael de Medeiros Coelho
Renato da Rocha Lima
Wanderson Silva de Oliveira

Cameron Kleimer
John Phillips
Todd Phillips
Christopher Duehrsen
Scott Van den Boogard
Sefik Smojlovic
Dustin Hodgson
James Jordon
Eric Fleming
Vito Proietti
Matthew Brown
Zack Murdock

 England  Finland  Ireland  Iran

Jordan Raynes
Matthew Dimbylow
Martin Sinclair
Alistair Heselton
Emyle Rudder
Joshua Beacham
George Fletcher
Matthew Ellis
Michael Barker
Graham Leclerc
Karl Townshend
Billy Thompson

Jaakko Seppälä
Joona Kuitunen
Wiljami Laurila
Jussi Tuominen
Mikael Jukarainen
Janne Helander
Johannes Siikonen
Pyry Nopsanen
Samuel Taipale
Joni Berg

Brian McGillivary
Aidan Brennan
Paul Dollard
Luke Evans
Finbar O'Riordan
Mark Jones
Gary Messett
Daragh Snell
Kieran Devlin
Darren Kavanagh
Joseph Markey
Chris Irwin

Akbari Moslem
Sohrabibagherabadi Behnam
Nikoee Majd Mehran
Gholamhosseinpour Booshehri Ehsan
Heidari Morteza
Atashafrouz Rasoul
Ansari Bahman
Heidari Mehr Habibollah
Bakhshi Jasem
Mehri Farzad
Hassani Baghi Sadegh
Rastegarimobin Hashem

 Japan  Netherlands  Ukraine  Russia

Tatsuya Ihara
Yasuhiro Yamaguchi
Koji Watarai
Nobuyuki Suzuki
Yuji Yamada
Rikiya Sakai
Taisei Taniguchi
Jun Okada
Tsukasa Kawano
Keisuke Kawabe
Takayuki Iwasa

Rudi van Breemen
Myron Gebbink
Lars Conijn
Peter Kooij
Dennis Straatman
Pawel Statema
John Swinkels
Stephan Lokhoff
Iljas Visker
Daan Dikken
Joey Mense
Bart Adelaars
Abel Walraven
Gerard Arends
Quincy de Beukelaer
Stefan Boersma

Kostyantyn Symashko
Vitaliy Trushev
Serhiy Vakulenko
Taras Dutko
Anatolii Shevchyk
Ivan Shkvarlo
Andriy Tsukanov
Denys Ponomaryov
Mykola Mikhovych
Oleksandr Devlysh
Volodymyr Antonyuk
Ihor Kosenko

Oleg Smirnov
Andrey Lozhechnikov
Pavel Borisov
Alexey Tumakov
Alexey Chesmin
Ivan Potekhin
Mamuka Dzimistarishvili
Georgy Nadzharyan
Stanislav Kolykhalov
Alexander Lekov
Lasha Nurvanadze
Viacheslav Larionov

 Scotland  Spain  USA  South Korea

Craig Connell
Kieran Martin
Chris Nelson
Scott Troup
Jamie Tervit
Graeme Paterson
Mark Robertson
Connor Hay
Jonathan Paterson
Laurie McGinley
Riley McKenna
Keith Gardner

Omar Alvarez Serrano
Jonatan Corporales Rodríguez
Raúl Carrillo Arjona
Ramón Del Pino Bernardo
Carlos Antón Valor
Roberto Ortiz Lora
Sergio Clemente Muñoz
Carlos Rodríguez Grande
Emilio Manuel Ribeiro Sequeira
Raúl Pacheco Pérez
Abel Urbina Sánchez
Leandro Pérez Ferreira

Keith Johnson
Nick Creasey
Jason Slemons
Chad Jones
Adam Ballou
Chris Ahrens
Bryce Boarman
Tom Latsch
Josh McKinney
Marthell Vazquez
Moises Morales
Tyler Penn

Son Hyeseong
Kim Hyungsoo
Jang Junho
Kim Jongtae
Park Haecheol
Moon Jaesik
Park Seungmok
Jung Phillip
Kang Seungnam
Gu Kyeongkuk
Cho Sangpil
Lee Hyoungjun

Group stage

The first round, or group stage, have seen the sixteen teams divided into four groups of four teams.[8] In any every match a maximum of 10 goals scored were counted. This is indicated with an asterisk (*).[9]

Group A

Team Pld W D L PF PA PD Pts.
 Brazil 3 2 1 0 21 1 +20 7
 Netherlands 3 2 1 0 13 1 +12 7
 Australia 3 1 0 2 4 19 15 3
 Spain 3 0 0 3 2 19 17 0
17 June 2011
Netherlands Netherlands 1 – 1  Brazil FC Emmen, Emmen Report
18 June 2011
Australia Australia 4 – 2  Spain SC Angelslo, Emmen Report
20 June 2011
Brazil Brazil 10 – 0  Australia VV De Weide, Hoogeveen Report
Netherlands Netherlands 5 – 0  Spain VV De Weide, Hoogeveen Report
22 June 2011
Spain Spain 0 – 10  Brazil VV De Weide, Hoogeveen Report
Netherlands Netherlands 7 – 0  Australia Achilles 1894, Assen Report

Group B

Team Pld W D L PF PA PD Pts.
 Ukraine 3 3 0 0 19 2 +17 9
 Scotland 3 2 0 1 14 6 +8 6
 Canada 3 1 0 2 7 9 2 3
 Finland 3 0 0 3 2 25 23 0
18 June 2011
Ukraine Ukraine 5 – 0  Scotland SC Angelslo, Emmen Report
Canada Canada 6 – 0  Finland SC Angelslo, Emmen Report
20 June 2011
Scotland Scotland 10 – 0  Finland VV De Weide, Hoogeveen Report
Ukraine Ukraine 5 – 0  Canada VV De Weide, Hoogeveen Report
22 June 2011
Scotland Scotland 4 – 1  Canada VV De Weide, Hoogeveen Report
Finland Finland 2 – 9  Ukraine Achilles 1894, Assen Report

Group C

Team Pld W D L PF PA PD Pts.
 Russia 3 3 0 0 12 1 +11 9
 Argentina 3 2 0 1 14* 7 +7 6
 England 3 1 0 2 12* 6 +6 3
 South Korea 3 0 0 3 0 24 24* 0
19 June 2011
Russia Russia 3 – 0  England Achilles 1894, Assen Report
Argentina Argentina 11 – 0  South Korea Achilles 1894, Assen Report
21 June 2011
Russia Russia 5 – 1  Argentina SC Angelslo, Emmen Report
England England 12 – 0  South Korea SC Angelslo, Emmen Report
23 June 2011
South Korea South Korea 0 – 4  Russia Achilles 1894, Assen Report
England England 2 – 3  Argentina VV De Weide, Hoogeveen Report

Group D

Team Pld W D L PF PA PD Pts.
 Iran 3 3 0 0 15 3 +12 9
 United States 3 2 0 1 9 9 0 6
 Ireland 3 1 0 2 11 7 +4 3
 Japan 3 0 0 3 1 17 16 0
19 June 2011
Iran Iran 3 – 1  Ireland Achilles 1894, Assen Report
United States United States 4 – 0  Japan Achilles 1894, Assen Report
21 June 2011
Iran Iran 7 – 2  United States SC Angelslo, Emmen Report
Ireland Republic of Ireland 8 – 1  Japan SC Angelslo, Emmen Report
23 June 2011
Japan Japan 0 – 5  Iran Achilles 1894, Assen Report
Ireland Republic of Ireland 2 – 3  United States VV De Weide, Hoogeveen Report

2nd Round

25 June 2011
12:00
Australia Australia 9 – 1  Finland
Report
VV De Weide, Hoogeveen

25 June 2011
14:30
Canada Canada 3 – 2  Spain
Report
VV De Weide, Hoogeveen

25 June 2011
17:00
Brazil Brazil 4 – 1  Scotland
Report
VV De Weide, Hoogeveen

25 June 2011
19:30
Ukraine Ukraine 3 – 1  Netherlands
Report
VV De Weide, Hoogeveen

26 June 2011
12:00
England England 6 – 0  Japan
Report
SC angelslo, Emmen

26 June 2011
14:30
Ireland Republic of Ireland 12 – 1  South Korea
Report
SC angelslo, Emmen

26 June 2011
17:00
Iran Iran 8 – 0  Argentina
Report
SC angelslo, Emmen

26 June 2011
19:30
Russia Russia 10 – 1  United States
Report
SC angelslo, Emmen

3rd Round

28 June 2011
12:00
Finland Finland 0 – 2  Japan
Report
Achilles 1894, Assen

28 June 2011
14:30
Australia Australia 0 – 10  England
Report
Achilles 1894, Assen

28 June 2011
17:00
Ukraine Ukraine 2 – 4  Iran
Report
Achilles 1894, Assen

28 June 2011
19:30
Netherlands Netherlands 4 – 2  Argentina
Report
Achilles 1894, Assen

29 June 2011
12:00
Spain Spain 8 – 1  South Korea
Report
VV De Weide, Hoogeveen

29 June 2011
14:30
Canada Canada 0 – 6  Ireland
Report
VV De Weide, Hoogeveen

29 June 2011
17:00
Scotland Scotland 3 – 2  United States
Report
VV De Weide, Hoogeveen

29 June 2011
19:30
Brazil Brazil 0 – 4  Russia
Report
VV De Weide, Hoogeveen

Final Round

Position 15-16

30 June 2011
12:00
Finland Finland 1 – 0  South Korea
Report
Achilles 1894, Assen

Position 13-14

30 June 2011
14:30
Japan Japan 4 – 3  Spain
Report
Achilles 1894, Assen

Position 11-12

30 June 2011
17:00
Australia Australia 2 – 0  Canada
Report
Achilles 1894, Assen

Position 9-10

30 June 2011
19:30
England England 0 – 5  Ireland
Report
Achilles 1894, Assen

Position 7-8

1 July 2011
12:00
Argentina Argentina 7 – 2  United States
Report

Position 5-6

1 July 2011
14:30
Netherlands Netherlands 3 – 1  Scotland
Report

Position 3-4

1 July 2011
17:00
Ukraine Ukraine 8 – 3  Brazil
Report

Final

1 July 2011
19:30
Iran Iran 1-6  Russia
Report

See also

References

  1. Football 7-a-Side Qualification Criteria - FT, International Paralympic Committee (IPC), February 2011
  2. 2.0 2.1 Draw for the CPISRA football 7-a-side world championships 2011, Cerebral Palsy International Sports & Recreation Association (CPISRA), 2011
  3. De Marsdijk - Assen, eurovoetbal.nl
  4. Voetbal is ons leven, rotary.nl
  5. Emmen, CPISRA Football 7-a-side World Championships website
  6. Club Info De Weide, genemuiden3.nl, 2010
  7. Teams, 2011 CPISRA Football 7-a-side World Championships website
  8. Schedule, CPISRA Football 7-a-side World Championships website
  9. "Overview results and standings". Cerebral Palsy International Sports & Recreation Association. Retrieved 22 June 2011.

External links