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Football at the 2016 Summer Olympics
Tournament details
Host countryBrazil
Dates3–20 August 2016
Teams16 (men) + 12 (women) (from 6 confederations)
Venue(s)7 (in 6 host cities)
Final positions
ChampionsBrazil (men)
Germany (women)
Runners-upGermany (men)
Sweden (women)
Third placeNigeria (men)
Canada (women)
Fourth placeHonduras (men)
Brazil (women)
2020
Football at the
2016 Summer Olympics
Qualification
menwomen
Tournament
menwomen
Squads
menwomen

The association football tournament at the 2016 Summer Olympics was held from 3 to 20 August in Brazil.[1]

In addition to the Olympic host city of Rio de Janeiro, matches were played in Belo Horizonte, Brasília, Salvador, São Paulo, and Manaus. All six cities hosted matches during the 2014 World Cup, with the Estádio Olímpico João Havelange in Rio the only Olympic venue not to have been a World Cup venue.[2][3]

Associations affiliated with FIFA might send teams to participate in the tournament. Men's teams were restricted to under-23 players (born on or after 1 January 1993) with a maximum of three overage players allowed, while there were no age restrictions on women's teams.[4] The Games made use of about 400 footballs.[5]

  • 2Venues
  • 3Qualification
  • 4Men's competition
    • 4.1Group stage
  • 5Women's competition
    • 5.1Group stage
  • 6Medal summary

Competition schedule[edit]

The match schedule of the men's and women's tournament was unveiled on 10 November 2015.[6][7]

GSGroup stageQFQuarterfinalsSFSemifinalsB3rd place play-offFFinal
Date
Wed 3Thu 4Fri 5Sat 6Sun 7Mon 8Tue 9Wed 10Thu 11Fri 12Sat 13Sun 14Mon 15Tue 16Wed 17Thu 18Fri 19Sat 20
MenGSGSGSQFSFBF
WomenGSGSGSQFSFBF
Football

Venues[edit]

Rio de Janeiro hosted preliminary matches at the Estádio Olímpico João Havelange and the women's and men's final at the Maracanã Stadium on 19 and 20 August. Apart from Rio de Janeiro the five other cities were: São Paulo, Belo Horizonte, Brasília, Salvador, and Manaus, which were all host cities during the 2014 FIFA World Cup.[2] The final choice of venues was announced by FIFA on 16 March 2015.[3]

Rio de JaneiroBrasíliaSão Paulo
MaracanãEstádio OlímpicoEstádio Mané GarrinchaArena Corinthians
Capacity: 74,738[8][a]Capacity: 60,000[b]Capacity: 69,349[8][a]Capacity: 48,234[8][c]
Belo Horizonte
Mineirão
Capacity: 58,170[8][a]
Salvador
Itaipava Arena
Capacity: 51,900[8][c]
Manaus
Arena da Amazônia
Capacity: 40,549[8][c]
  1. ^ abcRenovated for the 2014 World Cup
  2. ^Renovated for the 2016 Olympics
  3. ^ abcNew stadium for the 2014 World Cup

Training venues[edit]

Event stadiumTraining venue #1Training venue #2Training venue #3Training venue #4
MaracanãCFZ StadiumVasco Barra Football ClubJuliano Moreira Sports ComplexN/A
Estádio Nacional Mané GarrinchaCave StadiumMinas Brasília Tennis ClubYacht Club of BrasíliaCruzeiro Stadium
MineirãoToca da Raposa 1Toca da Raposa 2Cidade do GaloAmérica F.C. Training Center
Itaipava Arena Fonte NovaParque Santiago StadiumPituaçu StadiumBarradão StadiumE.C. Bahia Training Center
Arena CorinthiansSão Paulo F.C. Training CenterS.E. Palmeiras Training CenterC.A. Juventus StadiumNacional A.C. Stadium

Qualification[edit]

Men's qualification[edit]

In addition to host nation Brazil, 15 men's national teams qualified from six separate continental confederations. FIFA ratified the distribution of spots at the Executive Committee meeting in March 2014.[9]

Means of qualificationDates1Venue1BerthsQualified
Host country2 October 2009Denmark1Brazil
2015 South American Youth Championship[10]14 January – 7 February 2015Uruguay1Argentina
2015 UEFA European Under-21 Championship[11]17–30 June 2015Czech Republic4Denmark
Germany
Portugal
Sweden
2015 Pacific Games[12]3–17 July 2015Papua New Guinea1Fiji2
2015 CONCACAF Olympic Qualifying Championship[13]1–13 October 2015United States2Honduras
Mexico
2015 Africa U-23 Cup of Nations[14]28 November – 12 December 2015Senegal3Algeria
Nigeria
South Africa
2016 AFC U-23 Championship[15]12–30 January 2016Qatar3Iraq
Japan
South Korea
2016 CONCACAF–CONMEBOL play-off25–29 March 2016Various (home and away)31Colombia
Total16
  • ^1 Dates and venues are those of final tournaments (or final round of qualification tournaments), various qualification stages may precede matches at these specific venues.
  • ^2 Nations making their Olympic tournament debut
  • ^3 One match each in Colombia and United States in a two-legged tie.

Women's qualification[edit]

In addition to host nation Brazil, 11 women's national teams qualified from six separate continental confederations. FIFA ratified the distribution of spots at the Executive Committee meeting in March 2014.[9] Most continents use specific Olympic qualifying tournaments to allocate their spots, but two use slightly different procedures.

CONMEBOL used the Copa América to determine its Olympic entrant. Because the Olympic host, Brazil, won the Copa América, the runner-up (Colombia) qualified for the Olympics.

UEFA generally uses the World Cup to determine its Olympic entrants. The top 3 finishers at the World Cup, excluding England, qualified. When multiple European teams were eliminated in the same round and this results in a tie for an Olympic qualifying spot, an Olympic Qualifying Tournament was used to break the tie. For these Games, Germany and France both reached at least the quarterfinals and thus obtained qualification spots (England also did so, but was ineligible for Olympic play). The next best finish for European teams was a four-way tie among the Netherlands, Norway, Sweden, and Switzerland, which each lost in the round of 16. Those four teams competed in a separate tournament to break that tie, won by Sweden.

Means of qualificationDates4Venue4BerthsQualified
Host country2 October 2009Denmark1Brazil
2014 Copa América[16]11–28 September 2014Ecuador1Colombia
2015 FIFA World Cup[17]
(for UEFA eligible teams)5
6 June – 5 July 2015Canada2France
Germany
2015 CAF Olympic Qualifying Tournament[14]2–18 October 2015Various (home and away)2South Africa
Zimbabwe6
2016 OFC Olympic Qualifying Tournament[12]23 January 2016Papua New Guinea1New Zealand
2016 CONCACAF Olympic Qualifying Championship[18]10–21 February 2016United States2Canada
United States
2016 AFC Olympic Qualifying Tournament[19]29 February – 9 March 2016Japan[20]2Australia
China PR
2016 UEFA Olympic Qualifying Tournament[21]2–9 March 2016Netherlands1Sweden
Total12
  • ^4 Dates and venues are those of final tournaments (or final round of qualification tournaments), various qualification stages may precede matches at these specific venues.
  • ^5England finished in the top three among UEFA teams in the World Cup, however England is not an IOC member and talks for them to compete as Great Britain broke down.
  • ^6 Nations making their Olympic tournament debut

Men's competition[edit]

2016 Summer Olympic Games livery near Estádio Nacional Mané Garrincha, Brasília, venue for several men's and women's competitions.

The competition consisted of two stages; a group stage followed by a knockout stage.

Group stage[edit]

Teams were divided into four groups of four countries, playing each team in their group once. Three points were awarded for a victory, one for a draw. The top two teams per group qualified for the quarterfinals.

Group A[edit]

PosTeam
[ ]
PldWDLGFGAGDPtsQualification
1Brazil(H)312040+45Quarter-finals
2Denmark311114−34
3Iraq30301103
4South Africa302112−12
Source: Rio2016 & FIFA
Rules for classification: Tiebreakers
(H) Host.

Group B[edit]

PosTeamPldWDLGFGAGDPtsQualification
1Nigeria32016606Quarter-finals
2Colombia312064+25
3Japan31117704
4Sweden301224−21
Source: Rio2016 & FIFA
Rules for classification: Tiebreakers

Group C[edit]

PosTeamPldWDLGFGAGDPtsQualification
1South Korea3210123+97Quarter-finals
2Germany3120155+105
3Mexico311174+34
4Fiji3003123−220
Source: Rio2016 & FIFA
Rules for classification: Tiebreakers

Group D[edit]

PosTeamPldWDLGFGAGDPtsQualification
1Portugal321052+37Quarter-finals
2Honduras31115504
3Argentina311134−14
4Algeria301246−21
Source: Rio2016 & FIFA
Rules for classification: Tiebreakers

Knockout stage[edit]

Quarter-finalsSemi-finalsGold medal match
13 August — São Paulo
Brazil2
17 August — Rio de Janeiro
Colombia0
Brazil6
13 August — Belo Horizonte
Honduras0
South Korea0
20 August — Rio de Janeiro
Honduras1
Brazil (p)1 (5)
13 August — Salvador
Germany1 (4)
Nigeria2
17 August — São Paulo
Denmark0
Nigeria0
13 August — Brasília
Germany2Bronze medal match
Portugal0
20 August — Belo Horizonte
Germany4
Honduras2
Nigeria3

Women's competition[edit]

The competition consisted of two stages; a group stage followed by a knockout stage.

Group stage[edit]

Teams were divided into three groups of four countries, playing each team in their group once. Three points were awarded for a victory, one for a draw. The top two teams per group and best two third-placed teams qualified for the quarterfinals.

Group E[edit]

PosTeam
[ ]
PldWDLGFGAGDPtsQualification
1Brazil(H)321081+77Quarter-finals
2China PR311123−14
3Sweden311125−34
4South Africa301203−31
Source: Rio2016 & FIFA
Rules for classification: Tiebreakers
(H) Host.

Group F[edit]

PosTeamPldWDLGFGAGDPtsQualification
1Canada330072+59Quarter-finals
2Germany311195+44
3Australia311185+34
4Zimbabwe3003315−120
Source: Rio2016 & FIFA
Rules for classification: Tiebreakers

Group G[edit]

PosTeamPldWDLGFGAGDPtsQualification
1United States321052+37Quarter-finals
2France320171+66
3New Zealand310215−43
4Colombia301227−51
Source: Rio2016 & FIFA
Rules for classification: Tiebreakers

Knockout stage[edit]

Quarter-finalsSemi-finalsGold medal match
12 August — Belo Horizonte
Brazil (p) 0 (7)
16 August — Rio de Janeiro (Mar.)
Australia0 (6)
Brazil0 (3)
12 August — Brasília
Sweden (p)0 (4)
United States1 (3)
19 August — Rio de Janeiro (Mar.)
Sweden (p)1 (4)
Sweden1
12 August — São Paulo
Germany2
Canada1
16 August — Belo Horizonte
France0
Canada0
12 August — Salvador
Germany2Bronze medal match
China PR0
19 August — São Paulo
Germany1
Brazil1
Canada2

Medal summary[edit]

Medal table[edit]

Key * Host nation (Brazil)

RankNationGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1Germany1102
2Brazil*1001
3Sweden0101
4Canada0011
Nigeria0011
Totals (5 nations)2226

Medalists[edit]

EventGoldSilverBronze
Men
details
Brazil(BRA)
Weverton
Zeca
Rodrigo Caio
Marquinhos
Renato Augusto
Douglas Santos
Luan
Rafinha
Gabriel
Neymar
Gabriel Jesus
Walace
William
Luan Garcia
Rodrigo Dourado
Thiago Maia
Felipe Anderson
Uilson
Germany(GER)
Timo Horn
Jeremy Toljan
Lukas Klostermann
Matthias Ginter
Niklas Süle
Sven Bender
Max Meyer
Lars Bender
Davie Selke
Leon Goretzka
Julian Brandt
Jannik Huth
Philipp Max
Robert Bauer
Max Christiansen
Grischa Prömel
Serge Gnabry
Nils Petersen
Eric Oelschlägel
Nigeria(NGR)
Daniel Akpeyi
Muenfuh Sincere
Kingsley Madu
Shehu Abdullahi
Saturday Erimuya
William Troost-Ekong
Aminu Umar
Oghenekaro Etebo
Imoh Ezekiel
John Obi Mikel
Junior Ajayi
Popoola Saliu
Umar Sadiq
Azubuike Okechukwu
Ndifreke Udo
Stanley Amuzie
Usman Mohammed
Emmanuel Daniel
Women
details
Germany(GER)
Almuth Schult
Josephine Henning
Saskia Bartusiak
Leonie Maier
Annike Krahn
Simone Laudehr
Melanie Behringer
Lena Goeßling
Alexandra Popp
Dzsenifer Marozsán
Anja Mittag
Tabea Kemme
Sara Däbritz
Babett Peter
Mandy Islacker
Melanie Leupolz
Isabel Kerschowski
Laura Benkarth
Svenja Huth
Sweden(SWE)
Jonna Andersson
Emilia Appelqvist
Kosovare Asllani
Emma Berglund
Stina Blackstenius
Hilda Carlén
Lisa Dahlkvist
Magdalena Ericsson
Nilla Fischer
Pauline Hammarlund
Sofia Jakobsson
Hedvig Lindahl
Fridolina Rolfö
Elin Rubensson
Jessica Samuelsson
Lotta Schelin
Caroline Seger
Linda Sembrant
Olivia Schough
Canada(CAN)
Stephanie Labbé
Allysha Chapman
Kadeisha Buchanan
Shelina Zadorsky
Rebecca Quinn
Deanne Rose
Rhian Wilkinson
Diana Matheson
Josée Bélanger
Ashley Lawrence
Desiree Scott
Christine Sinclair
Sophie Schmidt
Melissa Tancredi
Nichelle Prince
Janine Beckie
Jessie Fleming
Sabrina D'Angelo

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^'Circular no. 1383 - Olympic Football Tournaments Rio 2016 - Men's and Women's Tournaments'(PDF). FIFA.com. 1 October 2013. Retrieved 2 October 2013.
  2. ^ ab'Manaus enters race to host Rio 2016 Olympic Games football matches'. Rio 2016 official website. 12 February 2015. Archived from the original on 13 February 2015.
  3. ^ ab'Olympic Football Tournaments to be played in six cities and seven stadiums'. FIFA.com. 16 March 2015.
  4. ^'Regulations for the Olympic Football Tournaments 2016'(PDF). FIFA.com.
  5. ^'8,400 shuttlecocks, 250 golf carts, 54 boats.. the mind-blowing numbers behind the Rio 2016 Games'. Archived from the original on 7 July 2016.
  6. ^'Match schedule for Rio 2016 unveiled'. FIFA.com. 10 November 2015.
  7. ^'Match Schedule Olympic Football Tournaments Rio 2016'(PDF). FIFA.com.
  8. ^ abcdef'2014 FIFA World Cup Brazil Venues'. FIFA.com. 18 January 2012. Retrieved 12 June 2014.
  9. ^ ab'FIFA ratifies the distribution of seats corresponding to each confederation'. CONMEBOL.com. 4 April 2014. Retrieved 5 November 2014.
  10. ^'Reglamento – Campeonato Sudamericano Sub-20 Juventud de América 2015'(PDF). CONMEBOL.com.
  11. ^'Regulations of the UEFA European Under-21 Championship, 2013–15 competition'(PDF). UEFA.
  12. ^ ab'OFC Insider Issue 6'. Oceania Football Confederation. 11 March 2015. p. 8.
  13. ^'United States Named Host for CONCACAF Men's Olympic Qualifying Championship 2015'. CONCACAF.com. 12 February 2015. Archived from the original on 14 February 2015. Retrieved 13 February 2015.
  14. ^ ab'CAF Full Calendar'. CAFonline.com. 28 February 2015. Archived from the original on 14 February 2015. Retrieved 28 February 2015.
  15. ^'Regulations AFC U-23 Championship 2016'(PDF). AFC.
  16. ^'Reglamento – Copa América Femenina 2014'(PDF) (in Spanish). CONMEBOL.
  17. ^'Germany and Norway drawn together'. UEFA.com. 6 December 2014.
  18. ^'2016 CONCACAF Women's Olympic Qualifying Championship Will be Played in Dallas and Houston'. US Soccer. 12 August 2015.
  19. ^'Groups drawn for First Round of Rio 2016 Women's Qualifiers'. Asian Football Confederation. 4 December 2014. Retrieved 4 December 2014.
  20. ^'Football - Women's AFC Olympic Qualifying Tournament'. Australian Olympic Committee. Retrieved 28 July 2015.
  21. ^'European contenders impress in Canada'. UEFA.com. 18 June 2015.

External links[edit]

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Association football at the 2016 Summer Olympics.
  • 'Football at the 2016 Summer Olympics (Rio2016.com)'. Archived from the original on 26 August 2016. Retrieved 3 August 2016.CS1 maint: BOT: original-url status unknown (link)
  • Football at the 2016 Summer Olympics at SR/Olympics
  • Men's Olympic Football Tournament, Rio 2016, FIFA.com
  • Women's Olympic Football Tournament, Rio 2016, FIFA.com
Retrieved from 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Football_at_the_2016_Summer_Olympics&oldid=898445150'