1984 Summer Olympics / Football
Football at the 1984 Summer Olympics |
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information | |
venue | Annapolis , Boston , Stanford , Pasadena |
Competition venue | Navy-Marine Corps Memorial Stadium , Harvard Stadium , Stanford Stadium , Rose Bowl Stadium |
Teams | 16 |
Nations | 16 |
Athletes | 246 (246 ) |
date | July 29 - August 11, 1984 |
decisions | 1 |
← Moscow 1980 |
At the XXIII. At the 1984 Olympic Games in Los Angeles , a soccer competition was held. For the first time professional players were allowed to take part in these games. The prerequisite was that none of these players had participated in a previous soccer World Cup . An exception was made for Africa and Asia.
For the first time in the history of the Olympic soccer tournament, there were no games in the actual Olympic Stadium in Los Angeles, but in Harvard Stadium in Boston, the Navy-Marine Corps Memorial Stadium in Annapolis, Stanford Stadium in Stanford and the Rose Bowl Stadium in Pasadena.
When France won the title, a Western European team became Olympic champion for the first time since 1948 and, with Brazil, a South American team was able to reach the final again since 1928. It was also the first and so far only time that a country has become European and Olympic champions in one year.
The more than 1.4 million viewers at the 32 games meant a record for an Olympic football tournament up to the 2012 tournament in London. The tournament is also considered to be the international birth of La Ola , two years before the 1986 World Cup in Mexico.
qualification
There were four qualification groups in Europe. The winners of qualification groups 1-3 qualified directly for the Olympic Games. The six teams were initially divided into two sub-groups, the two group winners determined the participants in the first and second legs. The Soviet Union, the GDR, Yugoslavia and France qualified. Then there was the defending champion Czechoslovakia.
Due to the Olympic boycott of the Eastern Bloc states, the GDR, the ČSSR and the USSR decided not to participate. The unqualified teams of the FRG, Norway and Italy were invited in their place.
In South America, initially two groups with 3 teams each were played, the two best groups moved into the last group, where the two best teams qualified again. Participants were: Brazil and Chile. Argentina withdrew their team before qualifying began.
In North America, the three best teams were initially determined in three rounds, and the two participants were determined in a group in two-way legs. Canada and Costa Rica qualified.
The entire African qualification was played in cup mode. Here Egypt, Morocco and Cameroon prevailed.
In Asia there were initially five qualifying groups, the two group best qualified for the final tournament in Singapore. There they played in two groups of 5 teams, the two group winners qualified directly for the Olympic Games, the two runners-up played a play-off game. Qatar and Saudi Arabia qualified as group winners. Iraq defeated South Korea 1-0 and also qualified for the final tournament in the USA.
5 from Europe |
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France | Yugoslavia | |
2 from South America | Brazil | Chile | |
3 from Africa | Egypt | Cameroon | Morocco |
3 from Asia | Iraq | Qatar | Saudi Arabia |
3 from North America | Costa Rica | Canada | United States (hosts) |
West German squad
Trainer: Erich Ribbeck
position | player | birthday | Age | society |
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1 | Bernd Franke | Feb 12, 1948 | 36 | Eintracht Braunschweig |
2 | Manfred Bockenfeld | Jul 23, 1960 | 24 | Fortuna Dusseldorf |
3 | Roland Dickgießer | Nov 9, 1960 | 23 | SV Waldhof Mannheim |
4th | Dieter Bast | Aug 28, 1951 | 32 | Bayer 04 Leverkusen |
5 | Bernd Wehmeyer | Jun 6, 1952 | 32 | Hamburger SV |
6th | Guido Buchwald | Jan. 24, 1961 | 23 | VfB Stuttgart |
7th | Jürgen Groh | Jul 17, 1956 | 28 | Hamburger SV |
8th | Rudi Bommer | Aug 19, 1957 | 26th | Fortuna Dusseldorf |
9 | Dieter Schatzschneider | Apr 26, 1958 | 26th | Hamburger SV |
10 | Andreas Brehme | Nov 9, 1960 | 23 | 1. FC Kaiserslautern |
11 | Frank Mill | Jul 23, 1958 | 26th | Borussia Monchengladbach |
12 | Walter Junghans | Oct 26, 1958 | 25th | FC Schalke 04 |
13 | Alfred Schön | Jan. 13, 1962 | 22nd | SV Waldhof Mannheim |
14th | Peter Lux | Oct. 4, 1962 | 21st | Eintracht Braunschweig |
15th | Uwe Rahn | May 21, 1962 | 22nd | Borussia Monchengladbach |
16 | Christian Schreier | Feb. 4, 1959 | 25th | VfL Bochum |
17th | Dieter Schlindwein | Feb 7, 1961 | 23 | SV Waldhof Mannheim |
Olympic tournament
Olympic football tournament 1984 | |
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Number of nations | 16 |
Olympic champion | France (1st title) |
venue |
Annapolis , Cambridge , Palo Alto , Pasadena |
Opening game | July 29, 1984 |
Endgame | August 11, 1984 |
Games | 32 |
Gates | 84 (⌀: 2.63 per game) |
spectator | 1,425,181 (⌀: 44,537 per game) |
Top scorer |
Borislav Cvetković Stjepan Deverić Daniel Xuereb (5 goals each)
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yellow cards | 72 (⌀: 2.25 per game) |
Red cards | 12 (⌀: 0.38 per game) |
Group stage
Group 1
Group 2
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Group 3
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The Olympic selection of the DFB was able to qualify due to the Olympic boycott of the Eastern Bloc countries. The team coached by Erich Ribbeck included players like Andreas Brehme , Uwe Rahn , Bernd Franke (goal), Guido Buchwald , Rudi Bommer , Frank Mill , Dieter Bast , Dieter Schatzschneider , Bernd Wehmeyer and Peter Lux . In the first game against Morocco, a victory was achieved through goals from Rahn and Brehme. They lost the game against Brazil 1-0 with a goal from Augilmar Oliveira. In the 6-0 victory over Saudi Arabia, Schreier (twice), Bommer (twice), Rahn and Mill met.
Group 4
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Hosts USA were eliminated due to a less goal scored against the Egyptians. In the last game, the USA took the lead in the 7th minute, but Emad Soliman was able to equalize the Egyptians, who thus qualify for the quarter-finals.
Quarter finals
August 5, 1984 in Palo Alto | |||
Italy | - | Chile | 1: 0 a.d. |
August 5, 1984 in Pasadena | |||
France | - | Egypt | 2: 0 (1: 0) |
August 6, 1984 in Palo Alto | |||
Brazil | - | Canada | 1: 1 n.V. (1: 1, 0: 0), 4: 2 i. E. |
August 6, 1984 in Pasadena | |||
Yugoslavia | - | BR Germany | 5: 2 (2: 2) |
Germany clearly lost the quarter-final match against Yugoslavia 2: 5. Cvetković (three times), Radanović and Gračan scored for Yugoslavia and Bommer and Rahn for Germany.
Semifinals
August 8, 1984 in Palo Alto | |||
Italy | - | Brazil | 1: 2 a.d. (1: 1, 0: 0) |
August 8, 1984 in Pasadena | |||
France | - | Yugoslavia | 4: 2 n.V. (2: 2, 2: 0) |
Bronze game
August 10, 1984 in Pasadena | |||
Italy | - | Yugoslavia | 1: 2 (1: 0) |
final
France | Brazil | ||||||
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Albert Rust - Philippe Jeannol , Michel Bibard , Jean-Louis Zanon , William Ayache - Guy Lacombe , Dominique Bijotat , Jean-Philippe Rohr - Jean-Claude Lemoult , François Brisson (79th Patrice Garande ), Daniel Xuereb (87th Patrick Cubaynes ) Trainer: Henri Michel |
Gilmar - Ronaldo Silva , Pinga , Mauro Galvão , André Luís Ferreira - Carlos Dunga , Ademir , Tonho , (58th Milton Cruz ) - Silvinho , Gilmar Popoca , João Leiehart Neto (58th Chicão ) Trainer: Jair Picerni |
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1-0 François Brisson (55th) 2-0 Daniel Xuereb (60th) |
Medal ranks
rank | Medalist |
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Gold france |
William Ayache , Michel Bensoussan (TW), Michel Bibard , Dominique Bijotat , François Brisson , Patrick Cubaynes , Patrice Garande , Philippe Jeannol , Guy Lacombe , Jean-Claude Lemoult , Jean-Philippe Rohr , Albert Rust (TW), Didier Sénac , Jean -Christophe Thouvenel , José Touré , Daniel Xuereb , Jean-Louis Zanon Trainer: Henri Michel |
Silver brazil |
Ademir , Milton Cruz , Luiz Henrique Dias (TW), André Luís Ferreira , Mauro Galvão , Tonho , Gilmar (TW), João Leiehart Neto , Gilmar Popoca , Silvinho , Pinga , David Cortez Silva , Paulo Santos , Ronaldo Silva , Carlos Dunga , Chicão , Luiz Carlos Winck Coach: Jair Picerni |
Bronze Yugoslavia |
Mirsad Baljić , Mehmet Baždarević , Vlado Čapiljić , Borislav Cvetković , Stjepan Deverić , Milko Đurovski , Marko Elsner , Nenad Gračan , Tomislav Ivković (TW), srečko katanec , Branko Miljuš , Mitar Mrkela , Jovica Nikolic , Ivan Pudar (TW), ljubomir radanović , Admir Smajić , Dragan Stojković Coach: Ivan Toplak |
Best goal scorers
rank | player | Gates |
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1 | Borislav Cvetković | 5 |
Stjepan Deveric | 5 | |
Daniel Xuereb | 5 | |
4th | Gilmar Popoca | 4th |
5 | Rudi Bommer | 3 |
Jovica Nikolić | 3 | |
Dale Mitchell | 3 | |
François Brisson | 3 | |
9 | Uwe Rahn | 2 |
Christian Schreier | 2 | |
... | ||
17th | Andreas Brehme | 1 |
Manfred Bockenfeld | 1 | |
Frank Mill | 1 |