FIFA Confederations Cup records and statistics

This is a list of records and statistics of the FIFA Confederations Cup.

Debut of national teams

Each successive Confederations Cup had at least one team appearing for the first time.

YearDebuting teamsSuccessor teams
TeamsNo.Cum.
1992  Argentina,  Ivory Coast,  Saudi Arabia,  United States44
1995  Denmark,  Japan,  Mexico,  Nigeria48
1997  Australia,  Brazil,  Czech Republic,  South Africa,  United Arab Emirates,  Uruguay614
1999  Bolivia,  Egypt,  Germany,  New Zealand418
2001  Cameroon,  Canada,  South Korea,  France422
2003  Colombia,  Turkey224
2005  Greece,  Tunisia226
2009  Iraq,  Italy,  Spain329
2013  Tahiti130
2017  Chile,  Portugal,  Russia333

Overall team records

In this ranking 3 points are awarded for a win, 1 for a draw and 0 for a loss. As per statistical convention in football, matches decided in extra time are counted as wins and losses, while matches decided by penalty shoot-outs are counted as draws. Teams are ranked by total points, then by goal difference, then by goals scored.[1]

As of 2017 FIFA Confederations Cup
RankTeamPartMWDLGFGAGDPoints
1  Brazil73323557828+5074
2  Mexico727116104443+139
3  France210901245+1927
4  Germany3138232922+726
5  Spain210712268+1822
6  United States4156182020019
7  Argentina3105322214+818
8  Australia4165381725−818
9  Japan5165291925−617
10  Uruguay2105142213+916
11  Cameroon311425711−414
12  Portugal1532093+611
13  Italy283231315−211
14  Saudi Arabia4123181331−1810
15  Nigeria26222117+48
16  Denmark1321051+47
17  Czech Republic15212107+37
18  Turkey152128807
19  Chile1513143+16
20  Colombia152035506
21  South Korea1320136−36
22  South Africa27124912−35
23  Egypt26123817−95
24  Russia131023303
25  Tunisia1310235−23
26  United Arab Emirates1310228−63
27  Bolivia1302123−12
28  Iraq1302101−12
29  Greece1301204−41
30  Canada1301205−51
31  New Zealand4120111332−291
32  Ivory Coast1200229−70
33  Tahiti13003124−230

Medal table

RankNationGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1  Brazil4105
2  France2002
3  Argentina1203
4  Germany1012
 Mexico1012
6  Denmark1001
7  United States0123
8  Australia0112
 Spain0112
10  Cameroon0101
 Chile0101
 Japan0101
 Saudi Arabia0101
14  Czech Republic0011
 Italy0011
 Portugal0011
 Turkey0011
Totals (17 entries)10101030

Comprehensive team results by tournament

Legend
  • 1st – Champions
  • 2nd – Runners-up
  • 3rd – Third place
  • 4th – Fourth place
  • GS – Group stage
  •  ••  — Qualified / Invited, but declined to take part
  •  •  — Did not qualify
  •  ×  — Did not enter / Withdrew from continental championship / Confederation did not take part
  •    — Hosts

For each tournament, the number of teams in each finals tournament (in brackets) is shown.

Team1992

(4)
1995

(6)
1997

(8)
1999

(8)
2001


(8)
2003

(8)
2005

(8)
2009

(8)
2013

(8)
2017

(8)
Total
 Australia[note 1]××2nd3rdGSGS4
 Iraq××GS1
 JapanGS2ndGSGSGS5
 Saudi Arabia2ndGSGS4th4
 South KoreaGS1
 United Arab EmiratesGS1
 CameroonGS2ndGS3
 Ivory Coast4th1
 EgyptGSGS2
 Nigeria4th××GS2
 South Africa×GS4th2
 TunisiaGS1
 Canada×GS1
 Mexico3rdGS1stGS4thGS4th7
 United States3rd3rdGS2nd4
 Argentina1st2nd×2nd3
 Brazil1st2nd4thGS1st1st1st7
 BoliviaGS1
 Chile2nd1
 Colombia4th1
 Uruguay4th4th2
 New Zealand××GSGSGSGS4
 Tahiti××GS1
 Czech Republic×3rd1
 Denmark×1st1
 Franceו•1st1st2
 Germanyו•GS••3rd1st3
 Greece×GS1
 Italyו•GS3rd2
 Portugal×3rd1
 Russia×GS1
 Spainו•3rd2nd2
 Turkey×3rd1
Notes

Results of host nations

YearHost NationFinish
1992  Saudi ArabiaRunners-up
1995  Saudi ArabiaGroup Stage
1997  Saudi ArabiaGroup Stage
1999  MexicoChampions
2001  South KoreaGroup Stage
 JapanRunners-up
2003  FranceChampions
2005  GermanyThird Place
2009  South AfricaFourth Place
2013  BrazilChampions
2017  RussiaGroup Stage

Results of defending champions

YearDefending championsFinish
1995  ArgentinaRunners-up
1997  DenmarkDid not qualify
1999  BrazilRunners-up
2001  MexicoGroup stage
2003  FranceChampions
2005  FranceDid not qualify
2009  BrazilChampions
2013  BrazilChampions
2017  BrazilDid not qualify

Results by confederation

   — Hosts are from this confederation.

AFC (Asia)

1992

(4)
1995

(6)
1997

(8)
1999

(8)
2001


(8)
2003

(8)
2005

(8)
2009

(8)
2013

(8)
2017

(8)
Total
Teams122121111113
Top 410011000003
Top 210001000002
1st0
2nd 2
3rd0
4th 1

CAF (Africa)

1992

(4)
1995

(6)
1997

(8)
1999

(8)
2001


(8)
2003

(8)
2005

(8)
2009

(8)
2013

(8)
2017

(8)
Total
Teams111111121111
Top 411000101004
Top 200000100001
1st0
2nd 1
3rd0
4th 3

CONCACAF (North, Central America and the Caribbean)

1992

(4)
1995

(6)
1997

(8)
1999

(8)
2001


(8)
2003

(8)
2005

(8)
2009

(8)
2013

(8)
2017

(8)
Total
Teams111221111112
Top 411020011017
Top 200010001002
1st 1
2nd 1
3rd 3
4th 2

CONMEBOL (South America)

1992

(4)
1995

(6)
1997

(8)
1999

(8)
2001


(8)
2003

(8)
2005

(8)
2009

(8)
2013

(8)
2017

(8)
Total
Teams112212212115
Top 4112111212113
Top 211110021119
1st 5
2nd 4
3rd0
4th 4

OFC (Oceania)

1992

(4)
1995

(6)
1997

(8)
1999

(8)
2001


(8)
2003

(8)
2005

(8)
2009

(8)
2013

(8)
2017

(8)
Total
Teams00111111118
Top 400101000002
Top 200100000001
1st0
2nd 1
3rd 1
4th0

UEFA (Europe)

1992

(4)
1995

(6)
1997

(8)
1999

(8)
2001


(8)
2003

(8)
2005

(8)
2009

(8)
2013

(8)
2017

(8)
Total
Teams011112222315
Top 4011012112211
Top 201001100115
1st 4
2nd 1
3rd 6
4th0

General statistics by tournament

YearHostsChampionsWinning coachTop scorer(s) (goals)Best player award[2][3]
1992  Saudi Arabia  Argentina Alfio Basile Gabriel Batistuta (2)
Bruce Murray (2)
Fernando Redondo
1995  Saudi Arabia  Denmark Richard Møller Nielsen Luis García (3) Brian Laudrup
1997  Saudi Arabia  Brazil Mário Zagallo Romário (7) Denílson
1999  Mexico  Mexico Manuel Lapuente Ronaldinho (6)
Cuauhtémoc Blanco (6)
Marzouk Al-Otaibi (6)
Ronaldinho
2001  South Korea
 Japan
 France Roger Lemerre Shaun Murphy (2)
Eric Carrière (2)
Robert Pires (2)
Patrick Vieira (2)
Sylvain Wiltord (2)
Takayuki Suzuki (2)
Hwang Sun-hong (2)
Robert Pires
2003  France  France Jacques Santini Thierry Henry (4) Thierry Henry
2005  Germany  Brazil Carlos Alberto Parreira Adriano (5) Adriano
2009  South Africa  Brazil Dunga Luís Fabiano (5) Kaká
2013  Brazil  Brazil Luiz Felipe Scolari Fred (5)
Fernando Torres (5)
Neymar
2017  Russia  Germany Joachim Löw Leon Goretzka (3)
Lars Stindl (3)
Timo Werner (3)
Julian Draxler

Team tournament position

Most finishes in the top three
5,  Brazil (1997, 1999, 2005, 2009, 2013)
Most finishes in the top four
6,  Brazil (1997, 1999, 2001, 2005, 2009, 2013)
Most Confederations Cup appearances
7,  Brazil (1997, 1999, 2001, 2003, 2005, 2009, 2013);  Mexico (1995, 1997, 1999, 2001, 2005, 2013, 2017)

Consecutive

Most consecutive championships
3,  Brazil (2005–2013)
Most consecutive finishes in the top two
3,  Brazil (2005–2013)
Most consecutive finishes in the top four
3,  Brazil (1997–2001), (2005-2013)
Most consecutive finals tournaments
7,  Brazil (1997–2013)
Most consecutive championships by a confederation
3, CONMEBOL (2005–2013)

Gaps

Longest gap between successive titles
8 years,  Brazil (1997–2005)
Longest gap between successive appearances in the top two
10 years,  Argentina (1995–2005)
Longest gap between successive appearances in the top four
16 years,  Uruguay (1997–2013)
Longest gap between successive appearances in the Finals
18 years,  Nigeria (1995–2013)

Host team

Best finish by host team
Champion,  Mexico (1999),  France (2003),  Brazil (2013)
Worst finish by host team
Group Stage,  Saudi Arabia (1995, 1997),  South Korea (2001),  Russia (2017)

Defending champion

Best finish by defending champion
Champion,  France (2003),  Brazil (2009, 2013)

Debuting teams

Best finish by a debuting team
Champion,  Argentina (1992),  Denmark (1995),  Brazil (1997),  France (2001)

Other

Most finishes in the top two without ever being champion
1,  Saudi Arabia (1992),  Australia (1997),  Japan (2001),  Cameroon (2003),  United States (2009),  Spain (2013),  Chile (2017)
Most finishes in the top four without ever being champion
3,  United States (1992, 1999, 2009)
Most appearances in Finals without ever being champion
5,  Japan (1995, 2001, 2003, 2005, 2013)
Most finishes in the top four without ever finishing in the top two
2,  Uruguay (1997, 2013)
Most appearances in Finals without ever finishing in the top two
4,  New Zealand (1999, 2003, 2009, 2017)
Most appearances in Finals without ever finishing in the top four
4,  New Zealand (1999, 2003, 2009, 2017)

Matches played/goals scored

All-time

Most matches played
33,  Brazil
Fewest matches played
2,  Ivory Coast
Most wins
23,  Brazil
Most losses
11,  New Zealand
Most draws
6,  Mexico
Most matches played without a win or a draw
3,  Tahiti
Most matches played without a win
12,  New Zealand
Most matches played until first win
4,  Egypt,  South Africa
Most matches played until first draw
9,  United States,  Uruguay
Most matches played until first loss
9,  Brazil
Most goals scored
78,  Brazil
Most hat-tricks scored
3,  Brazil,  Spain
Most goals conceded
33,  Mexico
Most hat-tricks conceded
4,  Tahiti
Fewest goals scored
0,  Canada,  Greece,  Iraq
Fewest goals conceded
1,  Denmark,  Iraq
Most matches played always without scoring a goal
3,  Canada,  Greece,  Iraq
Most matches played always conceding a goal
5,  Turkey
Highest goal difference
+50,  Brazil
Lowest goal difference
–23,  Tahiti
Highest average of goals scored per match
2.60,  Spain
Lowest average of goals scored per match
0.00,  Canada,  Greece,  Iraq
Highest average of goals conceded per match
8.00,  Tahiti
Lowest average of goals conceded per match
0.33,  Denmark,  Iraq (1 goal in 3 matches)
Most meetings between two teams
4 times,  Brazil vs  Mexico (1997, 1999, 2005, 2013);  Brazil vs  United States (1999, 2003, 2009 (twice))
Most tournaments unbeaten
3,  Brazil (1997, 2009, 2013)
Most tournaments eliminated without having lost a match
2,  Mexico (1995, 2005[a])
Most tournaments eliminated without having won a match
4,  New Zealand (1999, 2003, 2009, 2017)
Most played with tournament champion
6,  Mexico (1995, 1997, 2001, 2005, 2013, 2017)

In one tournament

Most wins
5,  France (2003, out of 5),  Brazil (2009, out of 5; 2013, out of 5)
Fewest wins, champions (since 1995)
3,  Brazil (2005, out of 5)
Most matches not won, champions
2,  Brazil (2005, out of 5)
Most wins by non-champion
4,  Brazil (1999, out of 5),  Spain (2009, out of 5)
Most matches not won
4,  Saudi Arabia (1999, out of 5),  Brazil (2001, out of 5),  South Africa (2009, out of 5),  Chile (2017, out of 5)
Most losses
3,  New Zealand (1999, out of 3; 2003, out of 3; 2017, out of 3),  Saudi Arabia (1999, out of 5),  Mexico (2001, out of 3),  Colombia (2003, out of 5),  Australia (2005, out of 3),  South Africa (2009, out of 5),  United States (2009, out of 5),  Japan (2013, out of 3),  Tahiti (2013, out of 3)
Most losses, champions
1,  France (2001),  Brazil (2005)
All matches won without extra time, replays, penalty shootouts or playoffs
 Argentina, 1992 (2 matches);  Brazil, 2009 (5 matches);  Brazil, 2013 (5 matches)
Most goals scored
18,  Brazil (1999)
Fewest goals conceded
1,  Argentina (1992),  Denmark (1995),  Nigeria (1995),  Japan (2001),  Cameroon (2003),  Iraq (2009)
Most goals conceded
24,  Tahiti (2013)
Highest goal difference
+12,  Brazil (1997, 1999)
Highest goal difference, champions
+12,  Brazil (1997)
Lowest goal difference
-23,  Tahiti (2013)
Lowest goal difference, champions
+4,  Denmark (1995)
Highest average of goals scored per match
3.60,  Brazil (1999)
Most goals scored, champions
14,  Brazil (1997, 2009, 2013)
Most goals scored, hosts
15,  Germany (2005)
Fewest goals scored, champions
5,  Denmark (1995)
Fewest goals scored, hosts
0,  Saudi Arabia (1995)
Fewest goals conceded, champions
1,  Argentina (1992),  Denmark (1995)
Fewest goals conceded, hosts
1,  Japan (2001)
Most goals conceded, champions
6,  Mexico (1999),  Brazil (2005)
Most goals conceded, hosts
11,  Germany (2005)
Lowest average of goals scored per match, champions
1.67,  Denmark (1995)
Most wins against Confederations Cup champions
[b] 2,  France, 2001;  Australia, 2001

Streaks

Most consecutive wins
12,  Brazil, from 3–2 Germany (2005) to 3–0 Spain (2013)
Most consecutive matches without a loss
13,  Brazil, from 2–2 Japan (2005) to 3–0 Spain (2013)
Most consecutive losses
8,  New Zealand, from 1–2 United States (1999) to 0–2 South Africa (2009)
Most consecutive matches without a win
12,  New Zealand, from 1–2 United States (1999) to 0–4 Portugal (2017)
Most consecutive matches without a draw
12,  Brazil, from 3–2 Germany (2005) to 3–0 Spain (2013)
Most consecutive matches scoring at least one goal
13,  Brazil, from 2–2 Japan (2005) to 3–0 Spain (2013)
Most consecutive matches scoring at least two goals
6,  Brazil, from 2–2 Japan (2005) to 3–0 Italy (2009), from 3–2 United States (2009) to 3–0 Spain (2013),  Germany, from 4–3 Australia (2005) to 3–2 Australia (2017)
Most consecutive matches scoring at least three goals
5,  Brazil, from 3–2 Germany (2005) to 3–0 Italy (2009)
Most consecutive matches without scoring a goal
5,  New Zealand, from 0–5 France (2003) to 0–0 Russia (2017)
Most consecutive matches without conceding a goal (clean sheets)
5,  Brazil, from 2–0 Czech Republic (1997) to 2–0 New Zealand (1999),  Cameroon, from 2–0 Canada (2001) to 1–0 Colombia (2003)
Most consecutive matches conceding at least one goal
8,  New Zealand, from 1–2 United States (1999) to 0–2 South Africa (2009)
Most consecutive matches conceding at least two goals
8,  New Zealand, from 1–2 United States (1999) to 0–2 South Africa (2009)
Most consecutive matches conceding at least three goals
4,  New Zealand, from 0–3 Japan (2003) to 0–5 Spain (2009)

Penalty shootouts

Most shootouts, team, all-time
3,  Mexico
Most shootouts, team, tournament
2,  Mexico, 1995;  Italy, 2013
Most shootouts, all teams, tournament
2, 1995, 2013
Most wins, team, all-time
1,  Denmark,  Mexico,  Argentina,  Spain,  Italy,  Chile
Most losses, team, all-time
2,  Mexico
Most shootouts with 100% record (all won)
1,  Denmark,  Argentina,  Spain,  Chile
Most shootouts with 0% record (all lost)
1,  Nigeria,  Uruguay,  Portugal
Most successful kicks, shootout, one team
7 (out of 7),  Spain, vs Italy, 2013
Most successful kicks, shootout, both teams
13 (out of 14),  Spain (7) vs  Italy (6), 2013
Most successful kicks, team, all-time
12 (out of 15),  Mexico
Most successful kicks, team, tournament
9,  Italy, 2013 (in 2 shootouts)
Most successful kicks, all teams, tournament
18, 2013 (in 2 shootouts)
Most successful kicks, player
2, Claudio Suárez (  Mexico, 1995); Alberto Aquilani (  Italy, 2013)
Most kicks taken, shootout, both teams
14,  Spain (7) vs  Italy (7), 2013
Most kicks taken, team, all-time
15,  Mexico (in 3 shootouts)
Most kicks taken, team, tournament
11,  Italy, 2013 (in 2 shootouts)
Most kicks taken, all teams, tournament
23, 2013 (in 2 shootouts)
Most kicks missed, shootout, one team
3,  Uruguay, vs Italy, 2013;  Portugal, vs Chile, 2017
Most kicks missed, shootout, both teams
4,  Uruguay (3) vs  Italy (1), 2013
Most kicks missed, team, all-time
3,  Mexico (in 2 shootouts);  Uruguay (in 1 shootout);  Portugal (in 1 shootout)
Most kicks missed, team, tournament
3,  Uruguay, 2013 (in 1 shootout);  Portugal, 2017 (in 1 shootout)
Most kicks missed, all teams, tournament
5, 2013 (in 2 shootouts)
Fewest successful kicks, shootout, one team
0,  Portugal, vs Chile, 2017
Fewest successful kicks, shootout, both teams
3,  Portugal (0) vs  Chile (3), 2013
Most saves, all-time
3, Gianluigi Buffon (  Italy, 2013); Claudio Bravo (  Chile, 2017)
Most saves, tournament
3, Gianluigi Buffon (  Italy, 2013); Claudio Bravo (  Chile, 2017)
Most saves, shootout
3, Gianluigi Buffon (  Italy), vs Uruguay, 2013; Claudio Bravo (  Chile), vs Portugal, 2017

Goalscoring

Individual

Most goals scored in Finals competition
9, Cuauhtémoc Blanco (  Mexico, 1997, 1999), Ronaldinho (  Brazil, 1999, 2005)
Top goal scorer in single tournament
7, Romário of  Brazil in 1997
Most goals scored in a Finals match
4, on four occasions, as follows:
Cuauhtémoc Blanco (  Mexico, 5–1 vs  Saudi Arabia, 1999)
Marzouk Al-Otaibi (  Saudi Arabia, 5–1 vs  Egypt, 1999)
Fernando Torres (  Spain, 10–0 vs  Tahiti, 2013)
Abel Hernández (  Uruguay, 8–0 vs  Tahiti, 2013)
Most goals scored in a final
3, on two occasions, as follows:
Ronaldo (  Brazil, 6–0 vs  Australia, 1997)
Romário (  Brazil, 6–0 vs  Australia, 1997)
Most matches with at least one goal
7, Ronaldinho (  Brazil, 1999–2005)
Most consecutive matches with at least one goal
4, Ronaldinho (  Brazil, 1999)
Most matches with at least two goals
2, Gabriel Batistuta (  Argentina, 1992 & 1995); Vladimír Šmicer (  Czech Republic, 1997); Romário (  Brazil, 1997); Cuauhtémoc Blanco (  Mexico, 1997 & 1999); Marzouk Al-Otaibi (  Saudi Arabia, 1999); Alex (  Brazil, 1999); John Aloisi (  Australia, 2005); Luís Fabiano (  Brazil, 2009); Fernando Torres (  Spain, 2009 & 2013); Fred (  Brazil, 2013)
Most consecutive matches with at least two goals
2, Marzouk Al-Otaibi (  Saudi Arabia, 1999); John Aloisi (  Australia, 2005)
Most hat-tricks
2, Fernando Torres (  Spain, 2009 & 2013)
Fastest hat-trick
11 minutes, Fernando Torres (  Spain vs  New Zealand, 2009)
Most goals scored by a substitute in a Finals match
2, on five occasions, as follows:
Alex (  Brazil vs  Germany, 1999)
Giuseppe Rossi (  Italy vs  United States, 2009)
Daniel Güiza (  Spain vs  South Africa, 2009)
Katlego Mphela (  South Africa vs  Spain, 2009)
Luis Suárez (  Uruguay vs  Tahiti, 2013)
First goalscorer
Fahad Al-Bishi (  Saudi Arabia), vs United States, 15 October 1992
Youngest goalscorer
19 years and 10 days, Marcelo Zalayeta (  Uruguay vs  Czech Republic, 1997)
Youngest hat-trick scorer
19 years and 132 days, Ronaldinho (  Brazil vs  Saudi Arabia, 1999)
Youngest goalscorer, final
21 years and 94 days, Ronaldo (  Brazil vs  Australia, 1997)
Oldest goalscorer
38 years and 129 days, Lothar Matthäus (  Germany vs  New Zealand, 1999)
Oldest hat-trick scorer
32 years and 137 days, David Villa (  Spain vs  Tahiti, 2013)
Oldest goalscorer, final
31 years, 326 days, Romário (  Brazil vs  Australia, 1997)
Most penalties scored (excluding penalty shoot-outs)
3, Michael Ballack (  Germany, three in 2005)
Fastest goal
75 seconds, Abel Hernández (  Uruguay vs  Tahiti, 2013)
Fastest penalty kick converted
8th minute, Michael Laudrup (  Denmark vs  Argentina, 1995)
Fastest goal by a substitute
1 minute, Mike Hanke (  Germany vs  Tunisia, 2005); Giuseppe Rossi (  Italy vs  United States, 2009)
Fastest goal in a final
91 seconds, Fred (  Brazil vs  Spain, 2013)
Latest goal from kickoff
110th minute, Luciano Figueroa (  Argentina vs  Mexico, 2005)
Latest goal from kickoff in a final
97th minute, Thierry Henry (  France vs  Cameroon 2003)
Latest goal from kickoff, with no goals scored in between
104th minute, Carlos Salcido (  Mexico vs  Argentina, 2005)

Team

Biggest margin of victory
10,  Spain (10) vs  Tahiti (0), 2013
Most goals scored in a match, one team
10,  Spain, vs  Tahiti, 2013
Most goals scored in a match, both teams
10,  Brazil (8) vs  Saudi Arabia (2), 1999
 Spain (10) vs  Tahiti (0), 2013
Largest deficit overcome in a win
2 goals,  Brazil, 2009 (coming from 0–2 down to win 3–2 vs  United States)
 Italy, 2013 (coming from 0–2 down to win 4–3 vs  Japan)
Largest deficit overcome in a draw
2 goals,  Egypt, 1999 (coming from 0–2 down to draw 2–2 vs  Mexico)
Most goals scored in extra time, both teams
2,  Mexico (1) vs  Argentina (1), 2005
Most goals scored in a final, one team
6,  Brazil, vs  Australia, 1997
Most goals scored in a final, both teams
7,  Mexico (4) vs  Brazil (3), 1999
Fewest goals scored in a final, both teams
1,  Japan (0) vs  France (1), 2001
 Cameroon (0) vs  France (1), 2003
 Chile (0) vs  Germany (1), 2017
Biggest margin of victory in a final
6,  Brazil (6) vs  Australia (0), 1997
Largest deficit overcome in a win in a final
2 goals,  Brazil, 2009 (coming from 0–2 down to win 3–2 vs  United States)
Most individual goalscorers for one team, one match
5,  Brazil vs  Saudi Arabia, 1999 (João Carlos, Ronaldinho, Zé Roberto, Alex, Rôni)
 France vs  South Korea, 2001 (Steve Marlet, Patrick Vieira, Nicolas Anelka, Youri Djorkaeff, Sylvain Wiltord)
 France vs  New Zealand, 2003 (Olivier Kapo, Thierry Henry, Djibril Cissé, Ludovic Giuly, Robert Pires)
Most individual goalscorers for one team, one tournament
8,  France, 2001 (Steve Marlet, Patrick Vieira, Nicolas Anelka, Youri Djorkaeff, Sylvain Wiltord, Eric Carrière, Robert Pires, Marcel Desailly)
 Germany, 2005 (Kevin Kurányi, Per Mertesacker, Michael Ballack, Lukas Podolski, Bastian Schweinsteiger, Mike Hanke, Gerald Asamoah, Robert Huth)
 Brazil, 2009 (Kaká, Luís Fabiano, Juan, Felipe Melo, Robinho, Maicon, Dani Alves, Lúcio)
 Italy, 2013 (Andrea Pirlo, Mario Balotelli, Daniele De Rossi, Sebastian Giovinco, Emanuele Giaccherini, Giorgio Chiellini, Davide Astori, Alessandro Diamanti)
 Portugal, 2017 (Ricardo Quaresma, Cédric, Cristiano Ronaldo, Bernardo Silva, André Silva, Nani, Pepe, Adrien Silva)

Own goals

Mohamed Obaid Al-Zahiri (  United Arab Emirates), vs Czech Republic, 1997
Andrea Dossena (  Italy), vs Brazil, 2009
Nicolas Vallar (  Tahiti), vs Nigeria, 2013
Jonathan Tehau (  Tahiti), vs Nigeria, 2013
Atsuto Uchida (  Japan), vs Italy, 2013
Michael Boxall (  New Zealand), vs Russia, 2017
Luís Neto (  Portugal), vs Mexico, 2017

Top scoring teams by tournament

Teams listed in bold won the tournament.

Coach

Foreign coach won

None

Most champion

All won one each

Won tournament both as player and as coach

Dunga,  Brazil (1997 as player, 2009 as coach)

Discipline

Fastest sending off
24th minute, Mark Viduka,  Australia vs  Brazil, 1997
Latest sending off
112th minute, Raúl Jiménez,  Mexico vs  Portugal, 2017
Most sendings off (tournament)
6 (in 16 matches), 1999
Most sendings off (all-time, team)
5,  Egypt,  United States

Awards

Golden Ball

The Golden Ball was awarded to the best player of the tournament. A Silver Ball and Bronze Ball were also awarded to the second and third best players of the tournament, respectively.

TournamentGolden BallSilver BallBronze Ball
1992 Saudi Arabia Fernando Redondo
1995 Saudi Arabia Brian Laudrup
1997 Saudi Arabia Denílson Romário Vladimír Šmicer
1999 Mexico Ronaldinho Cuauhtémoc Blanco Marzouk Al-Otaibi
2001 South Korea/Japan Robert Pires Patrick Vieira Hidetoshi Nakata
2003 France Thierry Henry Tuncay Marc-Vivien Foé
2005 Germany Adriano Riquelme Ronaldinho
2009 South Africa Kaká Luís Fabiano Clint Dempsey
2013 Brazil Neymar Andrés Iniesta Paulinho
2017 Russia Julian Draxler Alexis Sánchez Leon Goretzka

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Golden Boot

The Golden Boot was awarded to the top scorer of the tournament. If more than one players were equal by same goals, the players were selected based by the most assists during the tournament.

TournamentGolden BootGoals
1992 Saudi Arabia Gabriel Batistuta2
1995 Saudi Arabia Luis García3
1997 Saudi Arabia Romário7
1999 Mexico Ronaldinho6
2001 South Korea/Japan Robert Pires2
2003 France Thierry Henry4
2005 Germany Adriano5
2009 South Africa Luís Fabiano5
2013 Brazil Fernando Torres5
2017 Russia Timo Werner3

Golden Glove

The Golden Glove was awarded to the best goalkeeper of the tournament.

TournamentGolden Glove
2005 Germany Oswaldo Sánchez
2009 South Africa Tim Howard
2013 Brazil Júlio César
2017 Russia Claudio Bravo

FIFA Fair Play Trophy

FIFA Fair Play Trophy was given to the team (or teams) who had the best fair play record during the tournament with the criteria set by FIFA Fair Play Committee.

TournamentFIFA Fair Play Award
1997 Saudi Arabia  South Africa
1999 Mexico  Brazil
 New Zealand
2001 South Korea/Japan  Japan
2003 France  Japan
2005 Germany  Greece
2009 South Africa  Brazil
2013 Brazil  Spain
2017 Russia  Germany

Man of the Match Award

The Man of the Match award was awarded to the most valuable player of every match in the tournament. It was first awarded in the 2009 edition, in South Africa.

  • Neymar won four Man of the Match awards, which is a record in the tournament's history. He received all of them in the 2013 edition.

Attendance

Year & hostTotal attendance# matchesAvg attendance
1992169,500442,375
1995165,000820,625
1997333,5001620,844
1999970,0001660,625
2001557,1911634,824
2003491,7001630,731
2005603,1061637,694
2009584,8941636,556
2013804,6591650,291
2017628,3041639,269
  • Green background shading indicates attendance records.

See also

References

Footnotes

External links