1996 Beach Soccer World Championship

1996 Beach Soccer World Championship
Tournament details
Host country Brazil
Dates January 30 – February 4
Teams 8 (from 3 confederations)
Venue(s) 1 (in 1 host city)
Final positions
Champions  Brazil (2nd title)
Runners-up  Uruguay
Third place  Italy
Fourth place  United States
Tournament statistics
Matches played 16
Goals scored 132 (8.25 per match)
Top scorer(s) Italy Altobelli (14 goals)
Best player Brazil Edinho
Best goalkeeper Brazil Paulo Sérgio

The 1996 Beach Soccer World Championship was the second edition of the Beach Soccer World Championships, the most prestigious competition in international beach soccer contested by men's national teams. It was organised by Brazilian sports agency Koch Tavares (one of the founding partners of Beach Soccer Worldwide), with the championships ultimately coming under the control of FIFA in 2005 and subsequently rebranded as the better known FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup.

The tournament again took place at Copacabana Beach in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, as it did during the maiden edition a year earlier.

Brazil successfully defended their title by beating Uruguay 3–0 in what was the lowest scoring final to date, to win their second World Championship. The Uruguayans remained the only side not to score in a World Cup final until Tahiti also failed to do so in 2017.

This edition is one of only two World Cups after the first (the other being 2003) when no matches went beyond regulation time.

Organisation

The organisation remained the same as the format established for the maiden event in the previous year; the eight participating nations competed in two groups of four teams in a round robin format. The top two teams progressed straight to the semi-finals from which point on the championship was played as a knock-out tournament until a winner was crowned with an additional match to determine third place.

The capacity of the arena used for this edition of the World Championships remained the same as in 1995, at 12,000 seats available for spectators.[1]

Teams

Africa, Asia and Oceania were unrepresented.

European Zone (3):

North American Zone (2):

South American Zone (2):

Hosts:

Notes:

1. Teams making their debut

Group stage

Group A

Pos Team Pld W W+ L GF GA GD Pts Qualification
1  Brazil 3300245+199Advance to knockout stage
2  Uruguay 31021213–13
3  Denmark 31021016–63
4  Canada 31021224–123


January 30, 1996
Uruguay  56  Canada
   

January 30, 1996
Brazil  71  Denmark
   

January 31, 1996
Uruguay  53  Denmark
   

January 31, 1996
Brazil  132  Canada
   

February 1, 1996
Denmark  64  Canada
   

February 1, 1996
Brazil  42  Uruguay
   

Group B

Pos Team Pld W W+ L GF GA GD Pts Qualification
1  United States 3300149+59Advance to knockout stage
2  Italy 3201149+56
3  Russia 3102810–23
4  Argentina 3003513–80


January 30, 1996
United States  42  Argentina
   

January 30, 1996
Italy  51  Russia
   

January 31, 1996
Russia  41  Argentina
   

January 31, 1996
United States  64  Italy
   

February 1, 1996
Italy  52  Argentina
   

February 1, 1996
United States  43  Russia
   

Knockout stage

Semi-finals

February 3, 1996
Uruguay  70  United States
   

February 3, 1996
Brazil  124  Italy
   

Third place play-off

February 4, 1996
Italy  43  United States
   

Final

February 4, 1996
10:00 UTC-2
Brazil  30  Uruguay
Zico
Magal
Neném
Report  
Copacabana beach
Referee: Jose Roberto Wright

Winners

 1996 Beach Soccer World Championship
Champions 

Brazil
Second title

Awards

Top scorer
Italy Alessandro Altobelli
14 goals2
Best player
Brazil Edinho
Best goalkeeper
Brazil Paulo Sérgio
Other sources suggest 13 goals

Final standings

Pos Grp Team Pld W W+ L GF GA GD Pts Final result
1 A  Brazil 5 5 0 0 39 9 +30 15 Champions
2 A  Uruguay 5 2 0 3 19 16 +3 6 Runners-up
3 B  Italy 5 3 0 2 22 24 2 9 Third place
4 B  United States 5 3 0 2 17 20 3 9 Fourth place
5 B  Russia 3 1 0 2 8 10 2 3 Eliminated in the
group stage
6 A  Denmark 3 1 0 2 10 16 6 3
7 A  Canada 3 1 0 2 12 24 12 3
8 B  Argentina 3 0 0 3 5 13 8 0
Source:

Sources

  1. "Beach Soccer". kochtavares.com.br. 1 February 1998. Retrieved 15 June 2017.
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