World Blind Football Championships

The World Blind Football Championships, formerly the Football-5-a-Side World Championships, were played for the first time in 1998.[1][2][3][4][5][6][7][8][9][10][11]

Men's results

Blind (B1)

Year Venue Winners Score Runners-up Third place Score Fourth place Number of teams
1998
Details

Paulínia
 Brazil 1–0  Argentina  Spain 2–0  Colombia 6
2000
Details

Jerez
 Brazil 3–0  Argentina  Spain 4–0  Greece 8
2002
Details

Rio de Janeiro
 Argentina 4–2  Spain  Brazil 2–0  Colombia 9
2006
Details

Buenos Aires
 Argentina 1–0  Brazil  Paraguay 2–1  Spain 8
2010
Details

Hereford
 Brazil 2–0  Spain  China 1–0  England 10
2014
Details

Tokyo
 Brazil 1–0  Argentina  Spain 0–0
(2–0 p)
 China 12
2018
Details[12]

Madrid
 Brazil 2–0  Argentina  China 2–1  Russia 16
2023
Details

Birmingham
 Argentina 0–0
(2–1 p)
 China  Brazil 7–1  Colombia 16

Partially sighted (B2/B3)

Year Venue Winners Score Runners-up Third place Score Fourth place Number of teams
1998
Details

Paulínia
 Belarus 3–2  Spain  Italy 9–2  Argentina 6
2002
Details

Varese
 Belarus 14–2  Russia  Spain 3–2  Brazil 12
2004
Details

Manchester
 Belarus
2008
Details

Buenos Aires
 Ukraine
2013
Details

Sendai
 Russia 1–0 (a.e.t.)  Ukraine  England 14–0  Japan 4
2015
Details

Seoul
 Ukraine 3–1  Spain  Italy 2–1  Japan 5
2017
Details

Cagliari
 Ukraine 3–0  England  Russia 2–2
(2–1 p)
 Spain 8
2019
Details

Antalya
 Ukraine 6–2  England  Russia 2–2
(3–2 p)
 Turkey 7
2023
Details

Birmingham
 Ukraine 4–3 (a.e.t.)  England  Spain 9–0  Japan 7

Women's results

B1/B2/B3 (together)

Year Venue Winners Score Runners-up Third place Score Fourth place Number of teams
2017
Details[13]

Vienna
 Japan 1–0 IBSA select (Composed of players from Belgium, France, Germany and Austria)  England/ Greece select 0–0
(1–0 in penalties)
 Russia/ Canada select 4
2020
Enugu
Cancelled due to COVID-19 pandemic[14]
2023
Details[15]

Birmingham
 Argentina 2–1  Japan  Sweden 0–0
(1–0 p)
 India 8

    See also

    References

    This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.