2005 FIFA Confederations Cup

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The 2005 FIFA Confederations Cup football tournament was the seventh FIFA Confederations Cup. It was held in Germany between 15 June and 29 June 2005, as a prelude to the 2006 FIFA World Cup. The tournament was won by 2002 FIFA World Cup winners Brazil, who defeated Argentina 4–1 in the final at the Waldstadion in Frankfurt. The final was a rematch of the Copa América final also won by Brazil. It was Brazil's second win at the Confederations Cup.

2005 FIFA Confederations Cup
Konföderationen-Pokal 2005
Tournament details
Host countryGermany
Dates15–29 June
Teams8 (from 6 confederations)
Venue(s)5 (in 5 host cities)
Final positions
Champions Brazil (2nd title)
Runners-up Argentina
Third place Germany
Fourth place Mexico
Tournament statistics
Matches played16
Goals scored56 (3.5 per match)
Attendance603,106 (37,694 per match)
Top scorer(s)Brazil Adriano (5 goals)
Best player(s)Brazil Adriano
Fair play award Greece
2003
2009

Qualified teams

2005 FIFA Confederations Cup participating teams
TeamConfederationQualification methodDate qualification securedParticipation no.
 GermanyUEFAHosts7 July 20002nd
 BrazilCONMEBOL2002 FIFA World Cup winners30 June 20025th
 MexicoCONCACAF2003 CONCACAF Gold Cup winners27 July 20035th
 TunisiaCAF2004 African Cup of Nations winners14 February 20041st
 GreeceUEFAUEFA Euro 2004 winners4 July 20041st
 ArgentinaCONMEBOL2004 Copa América runners-up[a]21 July 20043rd
 JapanAFC2004 AFC Asian Cup winners7 August 20044th
 AustraliaOFC2004 OFC Nations Cup winners12 October 20043rd

Venues

Frankfurt
Commerzbank-Arena
(Waldstadion)
50°4′6.86″N 8°38′43.65″E / 50.0685722°N 8.6454583°E / 50.0685722; 8.6454583 (Commerzbank Arena)
Capacity: 48,132
Cologne
RheinEnergieStadion
(FIFA World Cup Stadium, Cologne)
50°56′0.59″N 6°52′29.99″E / 50.9334972°N 6.8749972°E / 50.9334972; 6.8749972 (RheinEnergie Stadion)
Capacity: 46,120
HanoverLeipzigNuremberg
AWD-Arena
(FIFA World Cup Stadium, Hanover)
ZentralstadionFrankenstadion
52°21′36.24″N 9°43′52.31″E / 52.3600667°N 9.7311972°E / 52.3600667; 9.7311972 (AWD-Arena)51°20′44.86″N 12°20′53.59″E / 51.3457944°N 12.3482194°E / 51.3457944; 12.3482194 (Zentralstadion)49°25′34″N 11°7′33″E / 49.42611°N 11.12583°E / 49.42611; 11.12583 (EasyCredit-Stadion)
Capacity: 44,652Capacity: 44,200Capacity: 41,926

Originally, Kaiserslautern's Fritz-Walter-Stadion was also intended as a venue. However, on 27 May 2004, city authorities withdrew from the bidding process, citing added costs to complete the stadium on time as the reason for the withdrawal.[2]

All five venues were reused for the 2006 FIFA World Cup.

Match ball

The official match ball for the 2005 FIFA Confederations Cup was the Adidas Pelias 2.

Match officials

ConfederationRefereeAssistants
AFCShamsul Maidin (Singapore)Prachya Permpanich (Thailand)
Bengech Allaberdyev (Turkmenistan)
CAFMourad Daami (Tunisia)Taoufik Adjengui (Tunisia)
Ali Tomusange (Uganda)
CONCACAFPeter Prendergast (Jamaica)Anthony Garwood (Jamaica)
Joseph Taylor (Trinidad and Tobago)
CONMEBOLCarlos Chandía (Chile)Cristian Julio (Chile)
Mario Vargas (Chile)
Carlos Amarilla (Paraguay)Amelio Andino (Paraguay)
Manuel Bernal (Paraguay)
OFCMatthew Breeze (Australia)Matthew Cream (Australia)
Jim Ouliaris (Australia)
UEFAHerbert Fandel (Germany)Carsten Kadach (Germany)
Volker Wezel (Germany)
Roberto Rosetti (Italy)Alessandro Griselli (Italy)
Cristiano Copelli (Italy)
Ľuboš Micheľ (Slovakia)Roman Slyško (Slovakia)
Martin Balko (Slovakia)

Squads

Group stage

Group A

PosTeamPldWDLGFGAGDPtsQualification
1  Germany (H)321095+47Advance to knockout stage
2  Argentina321085+37
3  Tunisia310235−23
4  Australia3003510−50
Source: [citation needed]
(H) Hosts
Argentina  2–1  Tunisia
Report
Attendance: 28,033
Germany  4–3  Australia
Report
Attendance: 46,466

Tunisia  0–3  Germany
Report
Australia  2–4  Argentina
Report
Attendance: 25,618

Australia  0–2  Tunisia
Report
Attendance: 23,952
Referee: Carlos Chandía (Chile)
Argentina  2–2  Germany
Report
Attendance: 42,088

Group B

PosTeamPldWDLGFGAGDPtsQualification
1  Mexico321031+27Advance to knockout stage
2  Brazil311153+24
3  Japan31114404
4  Greece301204−41
Source: [citation needed]
Japan  1–2  Mexico
Report
Attendance: 24,036
Brazil  3–0  Greece
Report
Attendance: 42,507

Greece  0–1  Japan
Report
Attendance: 34,314
Mexico  1–0  Brazil
Report
Attendance: 43,677

Greece  0–0  Mexico
Report
Attendance: 31,285
Japan  2–2  Brazil
Report
Attendance: 44,922

Knockout stage

 
Semi-finalsFinal
 
      
 
25 June – Nuremberg
 
 
 Germany2
 
29 June – Frankfurt
 
 Brazil3
 
 Brazil4
 
26 June – Hanover
 
 Argentina1
 
 Mexico1 (5)
 
 
 Argentina (p)1 (6)
 
Third place
 
 
29 June – Leipzig
 
 
 Germany (a.e.t.)4
 
 
 Mexico3

Semi-finals

Germany  2–3  Brazil
Podolski 23'
Ballack 45+3' (pen.)
ReportAdriano 21', 76'
Ronaldinho 43' (pen.)
Attendance: 42,187
Referee: Carlos Chandía (Chile)

Third place play-off

Germany  4–3 (a.e.t.)  Mexico
Podolski 37'
Schweinsteiger 41'
Huth 79'
Ballack 97'
ReportFonseca 40'
Borgetti 58', 85'
Attendance: 43,335

Final

Brazil  4–1  Argentina
Adriano 11', 63'
Kaká 16'
Ronaldinho 47'
ReportAimar 65'
Attendance: 45,591

Awards

Golden BallGolden Shoe
Riquelme Adriano
Silver BallSilver Shoe
Adriano Michael Ballack
Bronze BallBronze Shoe
Ronaldinho John Aloisi
FIFA Fair Play Trophy
 Greece

Source: FIFA[3]

Statistics

Goalscorers

Adriano received the Golden Shoe award for scoring five goals.[4] In total, 56 goals were scored by 29 players, with none credited as own goals.[5]

5 goals
4 goals
3 goals
2 goals
1 goal

Tournament ranking

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.

PosGrpTeamPldWDLGFGAGDPtsFinal result
1B  Brazil5311126+610Champions
2A  Argentina5221101008Runners-up
3A  Germany (H)53111511+410Third place
4B  Mexico522176+18Fourth place
5B  Japan31114404Eliminated in
group stage
6A  Tunisia310235−23
7B  Greece301204−41
8A  Australia3003510−50
Source: FIFA[6]
(H) Hosts

Notes

References