The following are the association football events of the year 1998 throughout the world.
Events
- 1998 FIFA World Cup – France wins 3–0 over Brazil in Saint-Denis, France, winning their first cup. More than one million delirious fans jammed the Champs-Élysées, dancing through the night.
- UEFA Champions League: Real Madrid won 1–0 in the final against Juventus. This was Real Madrid's seventh European Cup title.
- Copa Libertadores 1998: Won by Vasco da Gama after defeating Barcelona SC on an aggregate score of 4–1.
- UEFA Cup Winners' Cup: Chelsea beat VfB Stuttgart 1–0 in the final, winning the Cup for the second time.
- UEFA Cup: Inter Milan won 3–0 in the final against Lazio. This was Inter's third UEFA Cup title.
- UEFA Super Cup: Chelsea beat Real Madrid 1–0, winning the cup for the first time.
- England:
- FA Premier League Champions: Arsenal.
- February 17 – Manchester City fires manager Frank Clark and appoints Joe Royle as his successor.
- May 16 – Arsenal beats Newcastle United 2–0 to win the FA Cup, achieving The Double.
- August 16 – PSV wins the Johan Cruyff Shield, the annual opening of the new season in the Eredivisie, by a 2–0 win over Ajax in the Amsterdam Arena.
- September 17 – Heerenveen makes a winning European debut after defeating Poland's Amica Wronki (3–1) in the first round of the UEFA Cup Winners' Cup.
- October 8 – Manager Artur Jorge resigns at Dutch club Vitesse and is succeeded by Herbert Neumann.
- October 10 – Frank Rijkaard makes his debut as the manager of the Netherlands national team, as the successor of Guus Hiddink, with a 2–0 friendly win over Peru in Eindhoven. One player makes his debut as well: striker Jeffrey Talan from Heerenveen.
- December 1 – Real Madrid wins the Intercontinental Cup in Tokyo by defeating Brazil's Vasco da Gama: 2–1. The winning goal for the Spaniards is scored by Raúl in the 83rd minute.
- December 7 – Dutch club Sparta Rotterdam fires manager Hans van der Zee. He is replaced by Jan Everse on December 24.
Winner national club championships
Asia
Iran – Esteghlal FC
Japan – Kashima Antlers
Qatar – Al-Ittihad
South Korea - Suwon Bluewings
Thailand - Sinthana F.C.
Europe
- Croatia – Croatia Zagreb
England – Arsenal
France – Lens
Germany – 1. FC Kaiserslautern
Hungary – Újpest
Italy – Juventus
Netherlands
Poland – ŁKS Łódź
Portugal – Porto
Scotland – Celtic
Spain – Barcelona
Sweden – AIK
Turkey – Galatasaray
- FR Yugoslavia – Obilić
North America
South America
Argentina
- Clausura – Vélez Sársfield
- Apertura – Boca Juniors
Bolivia – Blooming
Brazil – Corinthians
Chile – Colo-Colo
Ecuador – LDU Quito
Paraguay – Olimpia Asunción
Peru – Universitario de Deportes
International tournaments
- African Cup of Nations in Burkina Faso (February 7 – 28 1998)
- Baltic Cup (April 21 – June 25, 1998)
- FIFA World Cup in France (June 10 – July 12, 1998)
National team results
Europe
South America
- The men's national senior squad didn't play any matches in 1998
Births
- January 2 – Timothy Fosu-Mensah, Dutch footballer
- January 3 – Patrick Cutrone, Italian footballer[1]
- January 4 – Joel Kalonji, Belgian footballer[2]
- January 5 – Carles Aleñá, Spanish footballer
- January 6 – Ben Pollock, American soccer player[3]
- January 8 – Manuel Locatelli, Italian footballer
- January 10 – Mohamed Abukar, Somali footballer[4]
- January 11 – Salih Özcan, German midfielder
- January 16 – Odsonne Édouard, French footballer
- January 17 – Conner Blöte, Dutch footballer[5]
- January 20 – Tiziano Andrei, Italian footballer[6]
- January 21 – Borna Sosa, Croatian youth international
- January 27 – Cezar Trandafirescu, Romanian professional footballer[7]
- January 29 – Theo Maia, Brazilian professional footballer[8]
- January 31 – Lukas Prayitno, Indonesian professional footballer[9]
- February 3 – Blás Riveros, Paraguayan footballer
- February 5 – Jorge Luis Ortiz, Mexican professional footballer[10]
- February 10 – Aitor Buñuel, Spanish footballer
- February 17 – Todd Cantwell, English footballer
- February 23 – Jan-Kristian Thurner, Austrian footballer[11]
- February 28 – Maksim Sklyarov, Russian former footballer[12]
- March 10
- Alessio Garofalo, Italian footballer[13]
- Matías Zaracho, Argentinian footballer
- March 13 – Oh Jang-won, South Korean footballer[14]
- March 14 – Joaquim Soumahin, Italian footballer[15]
- March 16 – Nico Rodewald, German footballer[16]
- March 17 – Justin Neumann, German footballer[17]
- March 28
- John Håkansson, Swedish footballer[18]
- Sandi Lovric, Austrian footballer
- March 29 – Cemal Amet, Austrian footballer[19]
- March 30 – Christopher Godet, Bahamian footballer[20]
- March 31
- Lucian Oprea, Romanian soccer player
- Hristiyan Iliev, Bulgarian soccer player
- April 10
- Jacob Brown, Scottish footballer
- Dominik Sollfrank, German footballer[21]
- April 13 – Emmanuel Adariku, Nigerian professional footballer[22]
- April 21 – Victor Paraíba, Brazilian footballer[23]
- April 24 – Elisabet Vang, Faroese footballer[24]
- April 28 – Daniel Sadushi, Albanian footballer[25]
- May 7
- Alessandro Fratangelo, Italian footballer[26]
- Dani Olmo, Spanish footballer
- May 8 – Johannes Eggestein, German footballer
- May 11 – Fran Villalba, Spanish footballer
- May 21 – Felipe Egídio, Brazilian footballer[27]
- May 22 – Gastón Gorrostorrazo, Uruguayan footballer[28]
- May 23
- Ross Cunningham, Scottish footballer
- Luca De La Torre, American footballer
- Berat Özdemir, Turkish footballer
- June 1 – Branimir Kalaica, Croatian footballer
- June 22 – Javairô Dilrosun, Dutch footballer
- June 28 – Óscar Rodríguez Arnaiz, Spanish footballer
- June 30
- Serbay Can, Turkish professional footballer[29]
- Tom Davies, English footballer
- Houssem Aouar, French footballer
- July 6 – Hanna Lundell, Swedish footballer[30]
- July 8 – Yann Karamoh, French footballer
- July 25 – Ryan Laplace, French footballer[31]
- July 29 – Maximilian Schuster, German footballer[32]
- August 16 – Max Grundmann, German footballer[33]
- September 1 – Emily Condon, Australian footballer
- September 2 – Lee Winroth, Swedish footballer[34]
- September 7 – Roger Ramos, Portuguese footballer[35]
- September 16 – Noah Feil, German footballer[36]
- September 18 – Christian Pulisic, American soccer player
- September 19 – Jacob Bruun Larsen, Danish footballer
- September 26 – Tarik Džindo, Bosnian professional footballer[37]
- October 21 – Benjamin Cull, English former professional footballer (died 2023)[38]
- October 27 – Dayot Upamecano, French footballer
- November 1 – Pascal Pannier, German footballer[39]
- November 12 – Jules Koundé, French footballer
- November 24 – Muhammad Rafli, Indonesian footballer
- November 27 – Katarína Košlabová, Slovak footballer[40]
- November 30 – Kenedy Có, Guinea-Bissauan professional footballer[41]
- December 9 – Tamar Dolidze, Georgian footballer[42]
- December 17 – Martin Ødegaard, Norwegian footballer
- December 18
- Calvin Stengs, Dutch footballer
- Manuel Trías, Venezuelan footballer[43]
- December 20 – Kylian Mbappé, French footballer
- December 24 – Alexis Mac Allister, Argentine footballer
- December 25 – Hanna Simonsson, Swedish footballer[44]
- December 29 – Victor Osimhen, Nigerian footballer
Deaths
May
- May 2 – Justin Fashanu (38), English footballer and the first professional footballer to come out as gay
June
- June 4 – Miguel Montuori (65), Argentinian-Chilean footballer
- June 13 – Fernand Sastre (74), French footballer
July
- July 13 – Pierre Garonnaire (82), French footballer
August
- August 6 – Henk Bosveld (57), Dutch footballer
September
- September 2 – Jackie Blanchflower (65), Northern Irish footballer
- September 23 – Héctor Vilches, Uruguayan defender, winner of the 1950 World Cup. (88)
References
![](http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/thumb/4/4a/Commons-logo.svg/30px-Commons-logo.svg.png)
Wikimedia Commons has media related to 1998 in association football.
🔥 Top keywords: Main PageSpecial:SearchPage 3Wikipedia:Featured picturesHouse of the DragonUEFA Euro 2024Bryson DeChambeauJuneteenthInside Out 2Eid al-AdhaCleopatraDeaths in 2024Merrily We Roll Along (musical)Jonathan GroffJude Bellingham.xxx77th Tony AwardsBridgertonGary PlauchéKylian MbappéDaniel RadcliffeUEFA European Championship2024 ICC Men's T20 World CupUnit 731The Boys (TV series)Rory McIlroyN'Golo KantéUEFA Euro 2020YouTubeRomelu LukakuOpinion polling for the 2024 United Kingdom general electionThe Boys season 4Romania national football teamNicola CoughlanStereophonic (play)Gene WilderErin DarkeAntoine GriezmannProject 2025