2007 CPISRA Football 7-a-side World Championships

The 2007 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 Brazil from 5 November to 18 November 2007.

2007 CPISRA Football 7-a-side World Championships
Tournament details
Host countryBrazil Brazil
Dates5 – 18 November 2007
Teams16
Final positions
ChampionsRussia Russia
Runners-upIran Iran
Third placeUkraine Ukraine
Fourth placeBrazil Brazil
Tournament statistics
Matches played44
Goals scored274 (6.23 per match)
Top scorer(s)Brazil Luciano Rocha (8)

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 Beijing 2008 Paralympic Games.

Participating teams and officials edit

Qualifying edit

The following teams are qualified for the tournament:

Means of qualification Date Venue Berths Qualified
Host nation 1   Brazil
African Region 1   South Africa
2007 ParaPan American Games 13 August – 19 August 2007   Rio de Janeiro, Brazil 3   Argentina
  Canada
  United States
2006 FESPIC Games 25 November – 1 December 2006   Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia 3   China
  Iran
  Japan
2006 European Championships 21 – 28 July 2006   Dublin, Ireland 7   Netherlands
  England &   Wales
  Ireland
  Spain
  Russia
  Scotland
  Ukraine
Oceania Region 1   Australia
Total 16

The draw edit

During the draw, the teams were divided into pots because of rankings. Here, the following groups:[1][2]

Group A Group B Group C Group D
Pot 1   Iran   Brazil   Ukraine   Russia
Pot 2   Netherlands   Australia   Ireland   Argentina
Pot 3   Spain   England &   Wales   Canada   China
Pot 4   United States   South Africa   Japan   Scotland

Venues edit

The venues to be used for the World Championships were located in Deodoro, Rio de Janeiro.

Deodoro, Rio de Janeiro
Deodoro Sports Complex
Capacity: unknown
 

Format edit

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 eight. the two lower ranked teams plays for the positions nine to 16. 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.

  • C5: Athletes with difficulties when walking and running, but not in standing or when kicking the ball.
  • C6: Athletes with control and co-ordination problems of their upper limbs, especially when running.
  • C7: Athletes with hemiplegia.
  • C8: Athletes with minimal disability; must meet eligibility criteria and have an impairment that has impact on the sport of football.

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 edit

The first round, or group stage, have seen the sixteen teams divided into four groups of four teams. In any every match a maximum of 10 goals scored were counted. This is indicated with an asterisk (*).[1][3][4][5][6]

Group A edit

Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Qualified for
1   Iran 3 3 0 0 7 2 +5 9 Team play for the position 1 - 8
2   Netherlands 3 2 0 1 6 2 +4 6
3   United States 3 1 0 2 4 6 −2 3 Team play for the position 9 - 16
4   Spain 3 0 0 3 0 7 −7 0
Iran  2–0  Spain
Deodoro Sports Complex, Field 1
Netherlands  3–0  United States
Deodoro Sports Complex, Field 1
Iran  3–1  United States
Marthell Vazquez  
Deodoro Sports Complex, Field 1
Netherlands  2–0  Spain
Deodoro Sports Complex, Field 1
Iran  2–1  Netherlands
Deodoro Sports Complex, Field 1
Spain  0–3  United States
Derek Arneaud  
Josh McKinney  
Shaun Schetka  
Deodoro Sports Complex, Field 1

Group B edit

Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Qualified for
1   Brazil 3 3 0 0 23 3 +20 9 Team play for the position 1 - 8
2   England &   Wales 3 2 0 1 10 5 +5 6
3   Australia 3 1 0 2 4 8 −4 3 Team play for the position 9 - 16
4   South Africa 3 0 0 3 0 21 −21 0
Brazil  5–3  England &   Wales
Deodoro Sports Complex, Field 1
Australia  4–0  South Africa
Deodoro Sports Complex, Field 1
Brazil  10–0  South Africa
Deodoro Sports Complex, Field 1
Australia  0–3  England &   Wales
Deodoro Sports Complex, Field 1
Brazil  5–0  Australia
Deodoro Sports Complex, Field 1
England   & Wales  4–0  South Africa
Deodoro Sports Complex, Field 1

Group C edit

Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Qualified for
1   Ukraine 3 3 0 0 18 0 +18 9 Team play for the position 1 - 8
2   Ireland 3 2 0 1 13 5 +8 6
3   Canada 3 1 0 2 2 9 −7 3 Team play for the position 9 - 16
4   Japan 3 0 0 3 1 19 −18 0
Ukraine  7–0  Canada
Deodoro Sports Complex, Field 1
Ireland  10–1  Japan
Deodoro Sports Complex, Field 1
Ukraine  8–0  Japan
Deodoro Sports Complex, Field 1
Ireland  2–0  Canada
Deodoro Sports Complex, Field 1
Ukraine  4–0  Ireland
Deodoro Sports Complex, Field 1
Canada  2–0  Japan
Deodoro Sports Complex, Field 1

Group D edit

Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Qualified for
1   Russia 2 2 0 0 11 0 +11 6 Team play for the position 1 - 8
2   Scotland 2 1 0 1 2 7 −5 3
3   Argentina 2 0 0 2 1 7 −6 0 Team play for the position 9 - 16
4   China 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Russia    China
Deodoro Sports Complex, Field 1
Argentina  1–2  Scotland
Deodoro Sports Complex, Field 1
Russia  6–0  Scotland
Deodoro Sports Complex, Field 1
Argentina    China
Deodoro Sports Complex, Field 1
Russia  5–0  Argentina
Deodoro Sports Complex, Field 1
China    Scotland
Deodoro Sports Complex, Field 1

Knockout stage edit

Quarter-finals edit

Position 9-16

United States  2–1  China
Marthell Vazquez  
Shaun Schetka  
Deodoro Sports Complex, Field 1

Australia  8–1  Japan
Deodoro Sports Complex, Field 1

Canada  7–1  South Africa
Deodoro Sports Complex, Field 1

Argentina  6–0  Spain
Deodoro Sports Complex, Field 1

Position 1-8

Iran  6–0  Scotland
Deodoro Sports Complex, Field 1

Brazil  5–0  Ireland
Deodoro Sports Complex, Field 1

Ukraine  4–0  England &   Wales
Deodoro Sports Complex, Field 1

Russia  4–0  Netherlands
Deodoro Sports Complex, Field 1

Semi-finals edit

Position 12-16

United States  2–1  Australia
Marthell Vazquez  
Marthell Vazquez  
Deodoro Sports Complex, Field 1

Canada  0–3  Argentina
Deodoro Sports Complex, Field 1

Position 9-12

South Africa  5–0  Spain
Deodoro Sports Complex, Field 1

China    Japan
Deodoro Sports Complex, Field 1

Position 5-8

Scotland II  3–22  Ireland
Deodoro Sports Complex, Field 1

England   & Wales  1–3  Netherlands
Deodoro Sports Complex, Field 1

Position 1-4

Iran  5–4  Brazil
Deodoro Sports Complex, Field 1

Ukraine II  4–52  Russia
Deodoro Sports Complex, Field 1

Finals edit

Position 15-16

China  1–1  Spain
Deodoro Sports Complex, Field 1

Position 13-14

Japan  2–0  South Africa
Deodoro Sports Complex, Field 1

Position 11-12

Australia  5–2  Canada
Deodoro Sports Complex, Field 1

Position 9-10

United States  0–1  Argentina
Deodoro Sports Complex, Field 1

Position 7-8

Ireland  2–3  England &   Wales
Deodoro Sports Complex, Field 1

Position 5-6

Scotland  0–3  Netherlands
Deodoro Sports Complex, Field 1

Position 3-4

Brazil  0–2  Ukraine
Deodoro Sports Complex, Field 1

Final

Iran  1–2  Russia
Deodoro Sports Complex, Field 1

Statistics edit

Goalscorers edit

8 goals
  •   Luciano Rocha
7 goals
  •   Taras Dutko
6 goals
  •   David Cantoni
  •   Abdolreza Karimizadeh
  •   Wayne Ward

5 Goals

  •   Jose Carlos Guimaraes
4 goals
  •   Finbarr O'riordan
  •   Denys Ponomaryov
  •   Ivan Shkvarlo
  •   Sefik Smajlovic
  •   Marthell Vazquez
3 goals
  •   David Barber
  •   Pavel Borisov
  •   Fabiano Bruzzi
  •   Mamuka Dzimistarishvili
  •   Luke Evans
  •   Sebastian Garcia
  •   Andrey Kuvaev
  •   Stephan Lokhoff
  •   Wanderson Oliveira
  •   Flavio Pereira
  •   Christopher Pyne
  •   Christo Titus
2 goals
  •   Moslem Akibari
  •   Michael Barker
  •   Matthew Brown
  •   Paul Dollard
  •   Olexiy Hetun
  •   Volodymyr Kabanov
  •   Houshang Khosravani
  •   Stanislav Kolykhalov
  •   Thozamile Lurane
  •   Leandro Marinho
  •   Gary Messett
  •   Atashafrouz Rasoul
  •   Jean Rodrigues
  •   Marcos Salazar
  •   Shaun Schetka
  •   Alexey Tchesmine
  •   Vitaliy Trushev
  •   Fang Wan
  •   Xu Zhu
1 goal
  •   Taylor Andrew
  •   Bahman Ansari
  •   Derek Arneaud
  •   Pedro Gonçalves
  •   Dustin Hodgson
  •   Renato Lima
  •   Andrey Lovetchnikov
  •   Josh Mckinney
  •   Mariano Morana
  •   Claudio Morinigo
  •   Malito Nxumalo
  •   Alan O'hara
  •   Graeme Paterson
  •   Jonathan Paterson
  •   Todd Phillips
  •   Ivan Potekhin
  •   Fox Richard
  •   Johannes Swinkels
  •   Andriy Tsukanov
  •   Sergiy Vakulenko
  •   Hendrikus Van Kempen
  •   Guojun Xu, Guojun
  •   Lang Yunlong
  •   Ryuta Yoshino

Ranking edit

Rank Team
    Russia
    Iran
    Ukraine
4.   Brazil
5.   Netherlands
6.   Scotland
7.   England &   Wales
8.   Ireland
9.   Argentina
10.   United States
11.   Australia
12.   Canada
13.   Japan
14.   South Africa
15.   China
  Spain

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b "2007 CPISRA Football 7-a-side World Championships". 2016-10-13. Archived from the original on 2007-12-19. Retrieved 2007-12-19.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
  2. ^ "UEFA backs Cerebral Palsy finals". trn.infra.uefa.org. 2016-10-13. Archived from the original on 2016-10-20. Retrieved 2007-10-27.
  3. ^ "U.S. Paralympic Team Heads to Rio de Janeiro for 2007 CPISRA World Championships". US Soccer. Retrieved 30 October 2007.
  4. ^ "Vazquez Named 2007 CPISRA World Championships MVP". US Soccer. Retrieved 19 November 2007.
  5. ^ "Cerebral Palsy International Sports and Recreation Association, Newsletter 22" (PDF). Cerebral Palsy International Sports and Recreation Association (CPISRA). Retrieved 1 March 2007.
  6. ^ "Cerebral Palsy International Sports and Recreation Association, Newsletter 24" (PDF). Cerebral Palsy International Sports and Recreation Association (CPISRA). Retrieved 1 December 2007.

External links edit