FIFA
World Cup, what is?|
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| Largest margin of victory, final tournament | 9:
Hungary - South Korea 9-0, World Cup 1954 Yugoslavia - Zaire 9-0, World Cup 1974 Hungary - El Salvador 10-1, World Cup 1982 |
| Largest margin of victory, qualifying match | 31: Australia - American Samoa 31-0, World Cup 2002 |
| Most goals combined | 12: Austria- Switzerland 7-5, World Cup 1954 |
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| First goal | Lucien Laurent ( FRA), France - Mexico, World Cup 1930 |
| Fastest goal from kickoff | 11
sec.: Hakan Şükür (TUR), Turkey - South Korea, World
Cup 2002 |
| Fastest goal by a substitute | 16
sec.: Ebbe Sand (DEN), Denmark - Nigeria, World Cup 1998 |
| Most goals |
15: Ronaldo (BRA) |
| Youngest goalscore | 17
years and
239 days: Pelé ( BRA), Brazil - Wales, World Cup 1958
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| Oldest goalscorer | 42 years and 39 days: Roger Milla (CAM), Cameroon - Russia, World Cup 1994 |
| Most goals in one tournament | 13:
Just Fontaine (FRA), World Cup 1958 |
| Most goals in one match | 5:
Oleg Salenko, Cameroon - Russia, World Cup 1994 |
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| 15 |
Ronaldo (BRA) |
| 14 |
Gerd Müller (GER) |
| 13 |
Just Fontaine (FRA) |
| 2 |
Pelé ( BRA) |
| 11 |
Jürgen Klinsmann (GER), Sándor Kocsis (HUN) |
| 10 |
Gabriel Batistuta (ARG), Teófilo
Cubillas (CUB), Gary Lineker (ENG), Grzegorz Lato (POL), Helmut Rahn (GER), Miroslav Klose (GER) |
| 9 |
Ademir (BRA), Leonidas (BRA), Rivaldo (BRA), Roberto
Baggio (ITA), Paolo Rossi (ITA), Vavá (BRA), Eusébio (POR), Jairzinho (BRA), Karl-Heinz Rummenigge (GER), Uwe Seeler (GER), Christian Vieri (ITA) |
| 8 |
Guillermo Stábile (ARG), Diego Maradona (ARG), Omar Oscar Míguez (URU), Rudi Völler (GER) |
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| Most World Cup tournament appearances | 5: Antonio Carbajal (MEX, 1950-1966) and Lothar Matthäus (GER, 1982-1998) |
| Most World Cup final tournament match appearances | 25, Lothar Matthäus (GER), 1982-1998. |
| Most World Cup final tournament minutes played | 2.220 minutes, Paolo Maldini (ITA), 1990-2002. |
| Most World Cup final match appearances | 3, Cafu (BRA), 1994-2002). |
| Youngest player, final match | Pelé
(BRA), 17 years and 249 days, World Cup 1958 |
| Youngest player, final tournament | Norman Whiteside (N-IR), 17 years and 42 days, Northern Ireland -Yugoslavia, World Cup 1982 |
| Youngest player, qualifying match | Souleymane Mamam (TOG), 13 years, 310 days, Togo - Zambia, May 6, 2001, World Cup 2002 |
| Oldest player, final match | Dino Zoff (ITA), 40 years and 133 days, World Cup 1982 |
| Oldest player, final tournament | Roger
Milla (CAM), 42 years and 39 days, Cameroon - Russia, World Cup
1994 |
| Oldest player, qualifying match | MacDonald
Taylor (VIR), 46 years 180 days, 18 February
2004, U.S. Virgin Islands - St. Kitts and Nevis, World Cup 2006 |
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| Attendance | 174.000: Uruguay - Brazil, 16 July 1950, Maracana Stadium, Rio De Janeiro, Brazil, World Cup 1950 |
| Fastest Caution | 1
minute: Sergei Gorlukovich (RUS), Sweden - Russia, World Cup
1994;
Giampiero Marini
(ITA), Italy - Poland, World Cup 1982
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| Most Cautions | 6: Cafu (BRA) |
| Fastest Expulsion | 56
sec.: José Batista (URU), Scotland - Uruguay, World Cup
1986 |
| Most cautions and expulsions in one match |
4
red cards and 8 yellow cards: Valentin Ivanov (RUS), Portugal -
Netherlands, World Cup
2006 |
| Most matches coached | 25, Helmut Schön (GER), 1966-1978 |
| The FIFA World Cup (often called the Football
World Cup, Soccer World Cup or simply the World Cup)
is the most important men's competition in international football. The
world's most representative team sport event, the World Cup is
contested by the men's national football teams of Federation
Internationale de Football Association (FIFA) (the sport's largest
governing body) member nations. The championship has been awarded every
four years since the first tournament in 1930 (except in 1942 and 1946
due to World War II). However, it is more of an ongoing event as the
qualifying rounds of the competition take place over the three years
preceding the final rounds. In 1991, FIFA added a separate Women's
World Cup.
The men's final
tournament phase (often called the "Finals") involves 32 national teams
competing over a four-week period in a previously nominated host
nation, with The 1932 Summer Olympics, held in Los Angeles, did not plan to include football as part of the programme due to the low popularity of football in the United States. FIFA and the IOC also disagreed over the status of amateur players, and so football was dropped from the Games. FIFA president Jules Rimet thus set about organizing the inaugural World Cup tournament to be held in Uruguay in 1930. The national associations of selected nations were invited to send a team, but the choice of Uruguay as a venue for the competition meant a long and costly trip across the Atlantic Ocean for European sides. Indeed, no European country pledged to send a team until two months before the start of the competition. Rimet eventually persuaded teams from Belgium, France, Romania, and Yugoslavia to make the trip. In total 13 nations took part — seven from South America, four from Europe and two from North America. The first two World Cup matches took place simultaneously, and were won by France and the USA, who beat Mexico 4-1 and Belgium 3-0, respectively. The first goal in World Cup history was scored by Lucien Laurent of France. Four days later, the first World Cup hat-trick was achieved by Bert Patenaude of the USA in the Americans' 3-0 win against Paraguay. In the final, Uruguay defeated Argentina 4-2 in front of a crowd of 93,000 people in Montevideo, and became the first nation to win a World Cup. |
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