2023 AFC Asian Cup

The 2023 AFC Asian Cup was the 18th edition of the AFC Asian Cup, the quadrennial international football tournament organised by the Asian Football Confederation (AFC). It involved 24 national teams after its expansion in 2019, with the host Qatar the defending champions.[3][4]

2023 AFC Asian Cup
AFC Asian Cup Qatar 2023
كأس آسيا 2023
Tournament details
Host countryQatar
Dates12 January – 10 February 2024
Teams24 (from 1 confederation)
Venue(s)9 (in 5 host cities)
Final positions
Champions Qatar (2nd title)
Runners-up Jordan
Third place Iran
Fourth place South Korea
Tournament statistics
Matches played51
Goals scored132 (2.59 per match)
Attendance1,507,790 (29,565 per match)
Top scorer(s)Qatar Akram Afif (8 goals)
Best player(s)Qatar Akram Afif[1]
Best goalkeeperQatar Meshaal Barsham[2]
Fair play award Qatar
2019
2027

On 17 October 2022, the AFC announced that the tournament would be held in Qatar, replacing the original host China.[5] Due to the high summer temperatures and Qatar's participation in the 2023 CONCACAF Gold Cup, the tournament was postponed to 12 January – 10 February 2024, while retaining the original name for both existing sponsorship and logistical purposes.[6][7]

Hosts and defending champions Qatar successfully retained their title, defeating Jordan 3–1 in the final.[8]

Host selection

China was acclaimed as the host country on 4 June 2019, as sole finishing bidder, days just prior to the 69th FIFA Congress in Paris, France.[9] The tournament was originally scheduled to be held from 16 June to 16 July 2023.[10] On 14 May 2022, the AFC announced that China would not host the tournament due to the COVID-19 pandemic and China's Zero-COVID policy.[11] Due to China's relinquishment of its hosting rights,[12][13] the AFC conducted a second round of bidding, with a deadline for submissions scheduled on 17 October 2022.[14] Four nations submitted bids: Australia, Indonesia, Qatar, and South Korea.[15] However, Australia subsequently withdrew in September 2022,[16] as did Indonesia on 15 October.[17] On 17 October, the AFC announced that Qatar had won the bid and would host the tournament.[5]

Venues

Five host cities were submitted in the 2023 bid, including seven stadiums previously prepared for the 2022 FIFA World Cup. On 5 April 2023, the AFC announced the eight stadiums across four host cities for the tournament.[18] On 21 August 2023, Lusail Stadium was added as a ninth venue.[19] All but one (Stadium 974) of the host stadiums from the 2022 FIFA World Cup were selected for the tournament, along with Jassim bin Hamad Stadium, which hosted matches during the 2011 edition, and Abdullah bin Khalifa Stadium, which had not hosted any international tournament previously.

Lusail Stadium hosted the opening match on 12 January.[19] Ahmad bin Ali Stadium in Al Rayyan and Al Thumama Stadium in Doha hosted the semi-final matches, with Lusail hosted the final held on 10 February.[19]

On 5 January 2024, the Main Media Centre for the coverage of the tournament was officially inaugurated in Msheireb Downtown Doha.[20]

CityStadiumCapacity
Al KhorAl Bayt Stadium68,895
LusailLusail Stadium88,966
Al RayyanAhmad bin Ali Stadium45,032
Education City Stadium44,667
Jassim bin Hamad Stadium15,000
Khalifa International Stadium45,857
DohaAbdullah bin Khalifa Stadium10,000
Al Thumama Stadium44,400
Al WakrahAl Janoub Stadium44,325

Teams

  Qualified for Asian Cup
  Failed to qualify
  Disqualified or withdrew
  Not an AFC member

The first two rounds of qualification also served as the Asian qualification for the 2022 World Cup. Qatar, the host of the World Cup, participated only in the second round to qualify for the 2023 Asian Cup (which they were later selected as hosts for after China withdrew its hosting rights).

Qualified teams

Of the 24 teams appearing, 20 teams were returning after appearing in the 2019 edition.

Tajikistan were the only debutant in the competition, while Hong Kong marked their return for the first time in 56 years. Indonesia and Malaysia both qualified for the first time since hosting the 2007 AFC Asian Cup.

Four nations from the previous edition failed to qualify (North Korea, Turkmenistan, Yemen, and the Philippines). India was the only SAFF representative in this edition, while it was the first time that five teams from the AFF managed to reach the finals (Australia, Indonesia, Malaysia, Thailand, and Vietnam). Only two teams from WAFF failed to qualify for this tournament (Yemen and Kuwait). Iran meanwhile extended their qualification record; this was their fifteenth straight appearance in the tournament, having qualified for every edition since 1968.

TeamMethod of
qualification
Date of
qualification
Finals
appearance
Last
appearance
Previous best
performance
 ChinaOriginal hosts and second round Group A runners-up4 June 2019[a]13th2019Runners-up (1984, 2004)
 JapanSecond round Group F winners28 May 202110th2019Winners (1992, 2000, 2004, 2011)
 SyriaSecond round Group A winners7 June 20217th2019Group stage (1980, 1984, 1988, 1996, 2011, 2019)
 QatarHosts and Second round Group E winners7 June 202111th2019Winners (2019)
 South KoreaSecond round Group H winners9 June 202115th2019Winners (1956, 1960)
 AustraliaSecond round Group B winners11 June 20215th2019Winners (2015)
 IranSecond round Group C winners15 June 202115th2019Winners (1968, 1972, 1976)
 Saudi ArabiaSecond round Group D winners15 June 202111th2019Winners (1984, 1988, 1996)
 United Arab EmiratesSecond round Group G winners15 June 202111th2019Runners-up (1996)
 IraqSecond round Group C runners-up15 June 202110th2019Winners (2007)
 OmanSecond round Group E runners-up15 June 20215th2019Round of 16 (2019)
 VietnamSecond round Group G runners-up15 June 20215th2019Fourth place (1956,[b] 1960[b])
 LebanonSecond round Group H runners-up15 June 20213rd2019Group stage (2000, 2019)
 PalestineThird round Group B winners14 June 20223rd2019Group stage (2015, 2019)
 UzbekistanThird round Group C winners14 June 20228th2019Fourth place (2011)
 ThailandThird round Group C runners-up14 June 20228th2019Third place (1972)
 IndiaThird round Group D winners14 June 20225th2019Runners-up (1964)
 Hong KongThird round Group D runners-up14 June 20224th1968Third place (1956)
 TajikistanThird round Group F winners14 June 20221stDebutNone
 KyrgyzstanThird round Group F runners-up14 June 20222nd2019Round of 16 (2019)
 BahrainThird round Group E winners14 June 20227th2019Fourth place (2004)
 MalaysiaThird round Group E runners-up14 June 20224th2007Group stage (1976, 1980, 2007)
 JordanThird round Group A winners14 June 20225th2019Quarter-finals (2004, 2011)
 IndonesiaThird round Group A runners-up14 June 20225th2007Group stage (1996, 2000, 2004, 2007)

Draw

The draw was held at the Katara Opera House in Doha on 11 May 2023.[21]

From the April 2023 FIFA World Rankings[22]
Pot 1Pot 2Pot 3Pot 4
 Qatar (61) (hosts)
 Japan (20)
 Iran (24)
 South Korea (27)
 Australia (29)
 Saudi Arabia (54)
 Iraq (67)
 United Arab Emirates (72)
 Oman (73)
 Uzbekistan (74)
 China (81)
 Jordan (84)
 Bahrain (85)
 Syria (90)
 Palestine (93)
 Vietnam (95)
 Kyrgyzstan (96)
 Lebanon (99)
 India (101)
 Tajikistan (109)
 Thailand (114)
 Malaysia (138)
 Hong Kong (147)
 Indonesia (149)

Draw result

Teams were drawn into Groups A to F. For the first time in AFC Asian Cup history, the teams from lowest pots were drawn first but not assigned to the positions of their groups, following by number orders of the group stage, as in previous editions. Pot 1 teams were assigned to the first positions of their groups, while next the positions of all other teams were drawn separately from Pot 4 to 2 (for the purposes of determining the match schedules in each group).

The groups were confirmed following the draw:

Group A
PosTeam
A1  Qatar
A2  China
A3  Tajikistan
A4  Lebanon
Group B
PosTeam
B1  Australia
B2  Uzbekistan
B3  Syria
B4  India
Group C
PosTeam
C1  Iran
C2  United Arab Emirates
C3  Hong Kong
C4  Palestine
Group D
PosTeam
D1  Japan
D2  Indonesia
D3  Iraq
D4  Vietnam
Group E
PosTeam
E1  South Korea
E2  Malaysia
E3  Jordan
E4  Bahrain
Group F
PosTeam
F1  Saudi Arabia
F2  Thailand
F3  Kyrgyzstan
F4  Oman

Squads

Each team was required to registered a squad with a minimum of 18 players and a maximum of 23 players, at least three of whom had to be goalkeepers.[23] In December 2023, the maximum was increased to 26 players.[24]

Officiating

On 14 September 2023, the AFC announced the list of 33 referees, 37 assistant referees, two stand-by referees and eight stand-by assistant referees for the tournament, including two female referees and three female assistant referees. Video Assistant Referee (VAR) was used for the entire tournament following its implementation from the quarter-final stage onwards in the 2019 edition.[25][26] The Semi-Automated Offside Technology (SAOT) system, which utilized twelve specialized cameras and artificial intelligence, was also implemented at all 51 matches. This marked the first time that SAOT was in place at an AFC competition and made the AFC the first confederation to apply the system at the continental men's national team level.[27]

Referees
Assistant referees
  • Ashley Beecham
  • Anton Shchetinin
  • Zhang Cheng
  • Zhou Fei
  • Alireza Ildorom
  • Saeid Ghasemi
  • Ahmed Al-Baghdadi
  • Watheq Al-Swaiedi
  • Makoto Bozono
  • Jun Mihara
  • Takumi Takagi
  • Naomi Teshirogi
  • Mohammad Al-Kalaf
  • Ahmad Al-Roalle
  • Ahmad Abbas
  • Abdulhadi Al-Anezi
  • Mohd Arif Shamil Bin Abd Rasid
  • Mohamad Zairul Bin Khalil Tan
  • Abu Bakar Al-Amri
  • Rashid Al-Ghaithi
  • Saoud Al-Maqaleh
  • Taleb Al-Marri
  • Zaid Al-Shammari
  • Yasir Al-Sultan
  • Abdul Hannan Bin Abdul Hasim
  • Ronnie Koh Min Kiat
  • Kim Kyoung-min
  • Park Sang-jun
  • Yoon Jae-yeol
  • Ali Ahmad
  • Mohamad Kazzaz
  • Tanate Chuchuen
  • Rawut Nakarit
  • Mohamed Al-Hammadi
  • Hasan Al-Mahri
  • Timur Gaynullin
  • Andrey Tsapenko
Stand-by referees
Stand-by assistant referees
  • Cao Yi
  • Cheung Yim Yau
  • Ismail Al-Hafi
  • Saad Al-Fadhli
  • Abdulrahman Hussein
  • Mohammed Al-Abakry
  • John Chia Eng Wah
  • Farkhad Abdullaev

Opening ceremony

The opening ceremony, named "The Lost Chapter of Kelileh o Demneh" took place at Lusail Stadium, before the opening game between Qatar and Lebanon on 12 January 2024.[28][29]

Group stage

Result of teams participating in the 2023 AFC Asian Cup

Tiebreakers

Teams were ranked according to points (3 points for a win, 1 point for a draw, 0 points for a loss), and if tied on points, the following tiebreaking criteria were applied, in the order given, to determine the rankings:[23]

  1. Points in head-to-head matches among tied teams;
  2. Goal difference in head-to-head matches among tied teams;
  3. Goals scored in head-to-head matches among tied teams;
  4. If more than two teams were tied, and after applying all head-to-head criteria above, a subset of teams were still tied, all head-to-head criteria above were reapplied exclusively to this subset of teams;
  5. Goal difference in all group matches;
  6. Goals scored in all group matches;
  7. Penalty shoot-out if only two teams were tied and they played each other in the last round of the group;
  8. Disciplinary points (yellow card = 1 point, red card as a result of two yellow cards = 3 points, direct red card = 3 points, yellow card followed by direct red card = 4 points);
  9. Drawing of lots.

Group A

PosTeamPldWDLGFGAGDPtsQualification
1  Qatar (H)330050+59Advance to knockout stage
2  Tajikistan31112204
3  China302101−12
4  Lebanon301215−41
Source: AFC
(H) Hosts
Qatar  3–0  Lebanon
  • Afif 45', 90+6'
  • Ali 56'
Report
Attendance: 82,490
China  0–0  Tajikistan
Report
Attendance: 4,001
Referee: Mohammed Al Hoish (Saudi Arabia)

Lebanon  0–0  China
Report
Attendance: 14,137
Tajikistan  0–1  Qatar
Report
Attendance: 57,460
Referee: Hiroyuki Kimura (Japan)

Qatar  1–0  China
Report
Attendance: 42,104
Referee: Abdullah Jamali (Kuwait)
Tajikistan  2–1  Lebanon
Report

Group B

PosTeamPldWDLGFGAGDPtsQualification
1  Australia321041+37Advance to knockout stage
2  Uzbekistan312041+35
3  Syria31111104
4  India300306−60
Source: AFC
Australia  2–0  India
Report
Uzbekistan  0–0  Syria
Report

Syria  0–1  Australia
Report
Attendance: 10,097
Referee: Adel Al-Naqbi (United Arab Emirates)
India  0–3  Uzbekistan
Report
Attendance: 38,491
Referee: Fu Ming (China)

Australia  1–1  Uzbekistan
Report
Attendance: 15,290
Referee: Yusuke Araki (Japan)
Syria  1–0  India
Report
Attendance: 42,787

Group C

PosTeamPldWDLGFGAGDPtsQualification
1  Iran330072+59Advance to knockout stage
2  United Arab Emirates311154+14
3  Palestine31115504
4  Hong Kong300317−60
Source: AFC
United Arab Emirates  3–1  Hong Kong
Report
Iran  4–1  Palestine
Report

Palestine  1–1  United Arab Emirates
Nasser 50' (o.g.)ReportAdil 23'
Attendance: 41,986
Referee: Ahmad Al-Ali (Kuwait)
Hong Kong  0–1  Iran
Report
Attendance: 36,412
Referee: Hanna Hattab (Syria)

Iran  2–1  United Arab Emirates
Report
Attendance: 34,259
Referee: Ilgiz Tantashev (Uzbekistan)
Hong Kong  0–3  Palestine
Report

Group D

PosTeamPldWDLGFGAGDPtsQualification
1  Iraq330084+49Advance to knockout stage
2  Japan320185+36
3  Indonesia310236−33
4  Vietnam300348−40
Source: AFC
Japan  4–2  Vietnam
Report
Attendance: 17,385
Indonesia  1–3  Iraq
Report
Attendance: 16,532
Referee: Ilgiz Tantashev (Uzbekistan)

Iraq  2–1  Japan
Report
Attendance: 38,663
Referee: Khalid Al-Turais (Saudi Arabia)
Vietnam  0–1  Indonesia
Report
Attendance: 7,253
Referee: Sadullo Gulmurodi (Tajikistan)

Japan  3–1  Indonesia
ReportWalsh 90+1'
Attendance: 26,453
Iraq  3–2  Vietnam
Report

Group E

PosTeamPldWDLGFGAGDPtsQualification
1  Bahrain32013306Advance to knockout stage
2  South Korea312086+25
3  Jordan311163+34
4  Malaysia301238−51
Source: AFC
South Korea  3–1  Bahrain
Report
Attendance: 8,388
Referee: Ma Ning (China)
Malaysia  0–4  Jordan
Report



Jordan  2–2  South Korea
Report
Attendance: 36,627
Referee: Salman Falahi (Qatar)
Bahrain  1–0  Malaysia
Report

South Korea  3–3  Malaysia
Report
Attendance: 30,117
Referee: Khalid Al-Turais (Saudi Arabia)
Jordan  0–1  Bahrain
ReportHelal 34'
Attendance: 39,650
Referee: Omar Al-Ali (United Arab Emirates)

Group F

PosTeamPldWDLGFGAGDPtsQualification
1  Saudi Arabia321041+37Advance to knockout stage
2  Thailand312020+25
3  Oman302123−12
4  Kyrgyzstan301215−41
Source: AFC
Thailand  2–0  Kyrgyzstan
Report
Saudi Arabia  2–1  Oman
Report

Oman  0–0  Thailand
Report
Kyrgyzstan  0–2  Saudi Arabia
Report
Attendance: 39,557
Referee: Jumpei Iida (Japan)

Saudi Arabia  0–0  Thailand
Report
Kyrgyzstan  1–1  Oman
Report
Attendance: 6,231
Referee: Ahmad Al-Ali (Kuwait)

Ranking of third-placed teams

The four best third-placed teams from the six groups advanced to the knockout stage along with the six group winners and six runners-up.

PosGrpTeamPldWDLGFGAGDPtsQualification
1E  Jordan311163+34Advance to knockout stage
2C  Palestine31115504
3B  Syria31111104
4D  Indonesia310236−33
5F  Oman302123−12
6A  China302101−12
Source: AFC
Rules for classification: 1) Points; 2) Goal difference; 3) Goals scored; 4) Disciplinary points; 5) Drawing of lots.[30]

Knockout stage

In the knockout stage, extra time and a penalty shoot-out were used to decide the winner if necessary.

Bracket

 
Round of 16Quarter-finalsSemi-finalsFinal
 
              
 
28 January – Al Rayyan (ABAS)
 
 
 Tajikistan (p)1 (5)
 
2 February – Al Rayyan (ABAS)
 
 United Arab Emirates1 (3)
 
 Tajikistan0
 
29 January – Al Rayyan (KIS)
 
 Jordan1
 
 Iraq2
 
6 February – Al Rayyan (ABAS)
 
 Jordan3
 
 Jordan2
 
28 January – Al Rayyan (JBHS)
 
 South Korea0
 
 Australia4
 
2 February – Al Wakrah
 
 Indonesia0
 
 Australia1
 
30 January – Al Rayyan (ECS)
 
 South Korea (a.e.t.)2
 
 Saudi Arabia1 (2)
 
10 February – Lusail
 
 South Korea (p)1 (4)
 
 Jordan 1
 
31 January – Doha (ABKS)
 
 Qatar3
 
 Iran (p) 1 (5)
 
3 February – Al Rayyan (ECS)
 
 Syria1 (3)
 
 Iran2
 
31 January – Doha (ATS)
 
 Japan1
 
 Bahrain1
 
7 February – Doha (ATS)
 
 Japan3
 
 Iran2
 
29 January – Al Khor
 
 Qatar3
 
 Qatar2
 
3 February – Al Khor
 
 Palestine1
 
 Qatar (p)1 (3)
 
30 January – Al Wakrah
 
 Uzbekistan1 (2)
 
 Uzbekistan2
 
 
 Thailand1
 

All times are local, AST (UTC+3).

Round of 16


Tajikistan  1–1 (a.e.t.)  United Arab Emirates
Report
Penalties
5–3
Attendance: 33,584
Referee: Yusuke Araki (Japan)

Iraq  2–3  Jordan
Report

Qatar  2–1  Palestine
Report
Attendance: 63,753
Referee: Ma Ning (China)

Uzbekistan  2–1  Thailand
Report


Bahrain  1–3  Japan
Report
Attendance: 31,832
Referee: Ahmad Al-Ali (Kuwait)

Quarter-finals

Tajikistan  0–1  Jordan
Report
Attendance: 35,530
Referee: Fu Ming (China)

Australia  1–2 (a.e.t.)  South Korea
Report
Attendance: 39,632
Referee: Ahmed Al-Kaf (Oman)

Iran  2–1  Japan
Report
Attendance: 35,640
Referee: Ma Ning (China)

Semi-finals


Iran  2–3  Qatar
Report
Attendance: 40,342
Referee: Ahmad Al-Ali (Kuwait)

Final

Jordan  1–3  Qatar
Report
Attendance: 86,492
Referee: Ma Ning (China)[31]

Statistics

Goalscorers

There were 132 goals scored in 51 matches, for an average of 2.59 goals per match.

8 goals

6 goals

4 goals

3 goals

2 goals

1 goal

1 own goal

Source: AFC

Discipline

A player was automatically suspended for the next match for the following offences:[23]

  • Receiving a red card (red card suspensions could be extended for serious offences)
  • Receiving two yellow cards in two matches
  • After reaching the semi-finals, all yellow cards and red cards received are reset. This means that even if a player receives a yellow card in the semi-finals, any previous cards won't count, allowing them to participate in the final

The following suspensions occurred during the tournament:

Player(s)/Official(s)Offence(s)Suspension(s)
Hazza AliPositive doping sample after Group E match vs South Korea (matchday 1; 15 January 2024)[a]Group E vs Jordan (matchday 3; 25 January 2024)[33]
Amadoni Kamolov in Group A vs Qatar (matchday 2; 17 January 2024)Group A vs Lebanon (matchday 3; 22 January 2024)
Round of 16 vs United Arab Emirates (28 January 2024)
Quarter-final vs Jordan (2 February 2024)
Pedro Miguel in Group A vs Lebanon (matchday 1; 12 January 2024)
in Group A vs Tajikistan (matchday 2; 17 January 2024)
Group A vs China (matchday 3; 22 January 2024)
Khalifa Al Hammadi in Group C vs Palestine (matchday 2; 18 January 2024)Group C vs Iran (matchday 3; 23 January 2024)
Paulo Bento (manager)   in Group C vs Palestine (matchday 2; 18 January 2024)[32]
Lê Phạm Thành Long   in Group D vs Indonesia (matchday 2; 19 January 2024)Group D vs Iraq (matchday 3; 24 January 2024)
Theerathon Bunmathan in Group F vs Kyrgyzstan (matchday 1; 16 January 2024)
in Group F vs Oman (matchday 2; 21 January 2024)
Group F vs Saudi Arabia (matchday 3; 25 January 2024)
Ayzar Akmatov
Kimi Merk
in Group F vs Saudi Arabia (matchday 2; 21 January 2024)Group F vs Oman (matchday 3; 25 January 2024)
Kassem El Zein in Group A vs Tajikistan (matchday 3; 22 January 2024)Suspension to be served outside the tournament
Hossein Kanaanizadegan in Group C vs Palestine (matchday 1; 14 January 2024)
in Group C vs UAE (matchday 3; 23 January 2024)
Round of 16 vs Syria (31 January 2024)
Khuất Văn Khang   in Group D vs Iraq (matchday 3; 24 January 2024)Suspension to be served outside the tournament
Aymen Hussein   in Round of 16 vs Jordan (29 January 2024)
Hamza Al-Dardour in Round of 16 vs Iraq (29 January 2024)Quarter-final vs Tajikistan (2 February 2024)
Nizar Al-Rashdan in Group E vs Malaysia (matchday 1; 15 January 2024)
in Round of 16 vs Iraq (29 January 2024)
Abdukodir Khusanov in Group B vs Syria (matchday 1; 13 January 2024)
in Round of 16 vs Thailand (30 January 2024)
Quarter-final vs Qatar (3 February 2024)
Mehdi Taremi   in Round of 16 vs Syria (31 January 2024)Quarter-final vs Japan (3 February 2024)
Salem Al-Ajalin
Ali Olwan
in Group E vs Bahrain (matchday 3; 25 January 2024)
in Quarter-final vs Tajikistan (2 February 2024)
Semi-final vs South Korea (6 February 2024)
Kim Min-jae in Group E vs Bahrain (matchday 1; 15 January 2024)
in Quarter-final vs Australia (2 February 2024)
Semi-final vs Jordan (6 February 2024)
Aiden O'Neill in Quarter-final vs South Korea (2 February 2024)Suspension to be served outside the tournament
Khalid Muneer in Group A vs China (matchday 3; 22 January 2024)
in Quarter-final vs Uzbekistan (3 February 2024)
Semi-final vs Iran (7 February 2024)
Shojae Khalilzadeh in Semi-final vs Qatar (7 February 2024)Suspension served outside the tournament

Awards

Most Valuable Player
Top Goalscorer
Best Goalkeeper
Fair Play Award
Team of the Tournament[34]
GoalkeeperDefendersMidfieldersForwards
Meshaal Barsham Abdallah Nasib
Ali Al-Bulaihi
Lucas Mendes
Mehdi Ghayedi
Craig Goodwin
Hassan Al-Haydos
Lee Kang-in
Akram Afif
Aymen Hussein
Yazan Al-Naimat

Tournament rankings

Ranking criteria
For teams eliminated in the same knockout round, the following criteria are applied, in the order given, to determine the final rankings:[35]
  1. Goal difference in round eliminated;
  2. Goals scored in round eliminated;
  3. If teams eliminated in the semi-finals or quarter-finals are tied, the above criteria are reapplied for the previous knockout round, with this process repeated once more should two semi-finalists remain tied;
  4. Points in group stage;
  5. Goal difference in group stage;
  6. Goals scored in group stage;
  7. Disciplinary points.

For teams eliminated in the group stage, the following criteria are applied, in the order given, to determine the final rankings:[35]

  1. Position in group;
  2. Points;
  3. Goal difference;
  4. Goals scored;
  5. Disciplinary points.
Pos.TeamGPldWDLPtsGFGAGD
1  QatarA761019145+9
2  JordanE741213138+5
Eliminated in the semi-finals
3  IranC641113127+5
4  South KoreaE623191110+1
Eliminated in the quarter-finals
5  UzbekistanB5230973+4
6  AustraliaB53111093+6
7  JapanD53029128+4
8  TajikistanA5122534−1
Eliminated in the round of 16
9  Saudi ArabiaF4220852+3
10  United Arab EmiratesC4121565+1
11  SyriaB41215220
12  IraqD43019107+3
13  ThailandF4121532+1
14  PalestineC4112467−1
15  BahrainE4202646−2
16  IndonesiaD41033310−7
Eliminated in the group stage
17  OmanF3021223−1
18  ChinaA3021201−1
19  LebanonA3012115−4
20  KyrgyzstanF3012115−4
21  MalaysiaE3012138−5
22  VietnamD3003048−4
23  Hong KongC3003017−6
24  IndiaB3003006−6

Marketing

Logo and slogan

The official logo and TV opening of the tournament were launched during the final draw on 11 May 2023. The logo featured a silhouette of the AFC Asian Cup trophy, with the trophy lines inspired from feathers of a falcon and petals of the lotus flower. The top of the logo was colored in Qatar's national color, maroon, while the logo's tail featured an Arabic nuqta.[36]

The tournament's slogan, "Hayya Asia", translating to "Let's go Asia!", was revealed on 5 October 2023 in an event to mark 100 days until the tournament.[37]

Match ball

The official match ball, the VORTEXAC23 made by Kelme, was unveiled on 10 August 2023. The ball's design "incorporates Qatar’s maroon colours, echoing the nation’s identity, and mirrors the championship’s emblem at its centre". Technical assessments rigorously tested the ball's performance, ensuring its durability, quality, and readiness.[38]

On 20 December 2023, the official match ball of the final, the VORTEXAC23+, was revealed. The ball built on the design of the VORTEXAC23 and used a predominantly gold and maroon colour scheme "to reflect the prestige of competing for the AFC Asian Cup title".[39]

Official song

The official song of the tournament, "Hadaf" by Humood AlKhudher and Fahad Al Hajjaji, was released on 1 January 2024.[40][41]

Mascots

On 2 December 2023, the tournament's official mascots were unveiled at Barahat Msheireb, Doha, through an anime-inspired animation produced by Katara Studios. The mascots were a family of five jerboas named Saboog, Tmbki, Freha, Zkriti and Traeneh, who were also the mascots of the 2011 edition when Qatar last hosted the tournament. The mascots were created by Qatari artist Ahmed Al Maadheed, with the animation directed by Fahad Al Kuwari and the song performed by Qatari artist Dana Al Meer and singer/composer Tarek Al Arabi Tourgane. Four of the five mascots were named after locations in Qatar, while Saboog was derived from the term used to refer to a jerboa in Qatar. The mascots were each created with different characteristics, akin to the different roles players undertake during a football match, and made to resemble a traditional household in Qatar.[42][43]

Official video game

On 11 January 2024, Konami released a short trailer of the 2023 AFC Asian Cup game mode, and announced that it would be added to the latest release of its football video game series, eFootball 2024, in the upcoming updates. This mode features fully licensed tournament teams, licensed trophy and visuals.[44]

eSports tournament

On 8 December 2023, the AFC announced that it would unveil the inaugural edition of AFC eAsian Cup, which was held from 1 to 5 February 2024. This eSports tournament was played on Konami's football video game - eFootball 2024. It marked the confederation's first foray into the world of eSports. Taking place at the Virtuocity eSports Arena in Doha, the event featured participants from twenty AFC member associations, who were competing in the Asian Cup.[45][46][47]

On 6 February 2024, Indonesia won the first ever AFC eAsian Cup, winning 2–0 against Japan in the final.[48]

Ticket sales

The first batch of tickets for the tournament, with more than 150,000 tickets, were sold out in just a week, since sales began on 10 October 2023.[49] Another 90,000 tickets of the second batch were sold within the first 24 hours of being released on 19 November 2023. Fans from Qatar, Saudi Arabia, the Philippines, Indonesia and India bought the majority of tickets offered. In addition to the opening match between Qatar and Lebanon, the match between Saudi Arabia and Oman also led ticket sales.[50]

Prices for match tickets started from as low as QAR 25 (approximately US$6.8) to enable greater access for the millions of fans.[51]

On 20 November 2023, the Local Organising Committee (LOC) of the tournament announced that it would donate revenue from ticket sales to support emergency relief for Palestine, amidst the ongoing Israel–Hamas war.[52][53]

On 10 January 2024, the LOC announced that nearly one million tickets had been sold for the tournament.[54]

Ahead of the semi-final clash between Qatar and Iran, the Iranian federation complained of only 4 percent of the seats having been allocated to Iranian supporters, even though AFC regulations stated 8 percent needed to be allocated.[55]

Prize money

Total prize money pool for the tournament was US$14,800,000, the same as it was in the 2019 edition. The champions received US$5 million, the runners-up received US$3 million, and the losing semi-finalists received US$1 million each. All 24 participating teams also received US$200,000 for their participation in the tournament.[56][57]

Sponsorship

Official Global Partners
Official Global Supporters
Official Regional Partner
Official Hospitality Provider
  • MATCH Hospitality (Asia)[69]

Official Video and Data Distribution Partner

Broadcasting rights

The broadcasters around the world that acquired the rights to the tournament included:

TerritoryBroadcaster(s)Ref.
 ArmeniaTV Start[71]
 AustraliaParamount+,[a] Network 10[b][72]
 AustriaSportdigital[73]
 AzerbaijanTV Start[71]
 BangladeshT Sports[74]
 BelarusTV Start[71]
 BelgiumTriller TV[75]
 BhutanFootball Sports Development Limited[76]
 Bosnia and HerzegovinaSport Klub[77]
 BrazilESPN[78]
 BulgariaDiema Sport[77]
BalkansSport Klub[79]
 CambodiaHang Meas[75][80]
 CanadaParamount+[81]
  CaribbeanESPN[78]
 ChinaIQIYI Sports, Migu, CCTV[75][82]
 CroatiaSport Klub[77]
 East TimorMNC Media[83]
 EstoniaTV Start[71]
 FinlandC More Sport[84]
 FranceTriller TV[75]
 GeorgiaSilk Sport[75]
 GermanySportdigital[73]
 GuamParamount+[85]
 Hong KongHOY TV[86]
 IndiaSports18,[a] DD Sports,[c] JioCinema[75]
 IndonesiaMNC Media[83]
In-flight/In-shipSport 24[87]
 IraqAlrabiaa[88]
 IrelandTriller TV[75]
 IsraelSport 5[75]
 ItalyOneFootball[75]
 Ivory CoastRTI[75]
 JapanDAZN,[a] TV Asahi[d][89][90]
 KazakhstanSport+[75][91]
 KenyaAzam Sports[75]
 KyrgyzstanKTRK[75]
 LaosKJSMWorld[80]
  Latin AmericaESPN[75][78]
 LatviaTV Start[71]
 LiechtensteinSportdigital[73]
 LithuaniaTV Start[71]
 LuxembourgSportdigital[73]
 MacauM Plus Live[92]
 MalawiAzam Sports[75]
 MalaysiaAstro SuperSport,[a] RTM[e][75][93]
 MaldivesPSM[94]
  MENAbeIN Sports[95][96]
 MoldovaTV Start[71]
 MongoliaPremier Sports[97]
 MontenegroSport Klub[77]
 MyanmarCanal+[98]
   NepalFootball Sports Development Limited[76]
 NetherlandsTriller TV[75]
 North MacedoniaSport Klub[77]
Northern Mariana IslandsParamount+[85]
  Pacific IslandsYouTube (free)[75]
 PortugalSport TV[75]
 Puerto RicoParamount+, CBS Sports[81]
Papua New GuineaMedia Nusantara Citra,RCTI[99]
 QatarAl Kass[75]
 RomaniaAntena[100]
 RussiaTV Start[71]
 San MarinoOneFootball[75]
 Saudi ArabiaShahid, SSC[101][102]
 SerbiaSport Klub[77]
 SingaporeMediacorp[75]
 SloveniaSport Klub[77]
 South KoreaCoupang, tvN SPORTS[103][104]
 Sri LankaFootball Sports Development Limited[76]
  Sub-Saharan AfricaStarTimes[75]
 SwedenC More Sport[84]
  SwitzerlandSportdigital[73]
 TaiwanELTA[105]
 TajikistanTV Varzish, TV Football[75]
 TanzaniaAzam Sports[75]
 ThailandPPTV, T Sports 7[106][107]
 TurkeyD-Smart[108]
 TurkmenistanTurkmenistan Sport[75]
 UgandaAzam Sports[75]
 UkraineSport1[75]
 United Arab EmiratesAbu Dhabi Media[109]
 United KingdomTriller TV[75]
 United StatesParamount+, CBS Sports[81]
United States Virgin IslandsParamount+
 UzbekistanMTRK[75]
 VietnamFPT, VTV[110][111]
Vatican CityOneFootball[112]
 ZimbabweAzam Sports[75]

See also

Notes

References

External links