Four Nations Tournament in Brazil (women's football)
Four Nations Tournament in Brazil (women's football) | |
Association | CBF |
First edition | 2009 |
Teams | 4th |
Game mode | League system + placement games or semi-finals and finals |
Title holder | Chile (1st title) |
Record winner | Brazil (7 wins) |
Record player | Marta 26 games |
Record scorer | Marta 28 goals |
Venues |
The four-nation tournament in Brazil is an invitation tournament for national teams in women's football that took place in December from 2009 to 2016 . Initially, the tournament in São Paulo was organized as the “ Torneio Internacional Cidade de São Paulo ”, then in 2013 for the first time in Brasília as the “ Torneio Internacional de Brasília ”. The games took place in the Estádio do Pacaembu and Estádio Mané Garrincha . After there was no event in 2017 and 2018, there was another tournament with four teams at the end of August / beginning of September 2019 in the new format as "Torneio Internacional Feminino de Seleções". The record winner is host Brazil with seven titles. But Brazil was the only team to always take part, Chile and Mexico make four appearances. So far, no reigning world champion has participated in the tournament and no teams from Africa and Oceania either. In 2010, 2013 and 2014 only two teams from the top 10 of the FIFA world rankings - Brazil, Canada and the USA - participated, otherwise only Brazil as the only top 10 team.
As early as 1996, Brazil held a tournament for four women's teams in Campinas in which Russia , Ukraine and the USA took part.
mode
From 2009 to 2016, each team initially played against each of the three other teams. Unlike in most such tournaments, the group first and second played in the final for the tournament victory and the group third against the fourth for third place. If there was no winner in the finals, there was no overtime and no penalty shoot-out , but the placement after the first few games was decisive for the final placement. In the event of a tie, the goal difference decided. In 2019 there were only two semi-finals, the winners of which played for 1st place and the losers for third place, with a draw after 90 minutes with a penalty shoot-out.
As FIFA regards the games as friendly games , e.g. B. for the calculation of the FIFA world rankings up to six players can be substituted.
The tournaments at a glance
year | Venue | final | Game for third place | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
winner | Result 1 | 2nd place | 3rd place | Result 1 | 4th Place | ||
2009 details |
São Paulo |
Brazil |
5: 2 |
Mexico |
China |
2-0 |
Chile |
2010 details |
São Paulo |
Canada * |
2: 2 (0: 0) |
Brazil * |
Netherlands |
2: 1 |
Mexico |
2011 details |
São Paulo |
Brazil * |
2: 1 |
Denmark |
Italy |
3: 2 |
Chile |
2012 details |
São Paulo |
Brazil * |
2: 2 (2: 1) |
Denmark |
Mexico |
2-0 |
Portugal |
2013 details |
Brasília |
Brazil * |
5-0 |
Chile |
Canada * |
1-0 |
Scotland |
2014 details |
Brasília |
Brazil * |
0: 0 (3: 2) |
USA * |
China |
0: 0 (6: 0) |
Argentina |
2015 details |
natal |
Brazil * |
3: 1 |
Canada |
Mexico |
2: 1 |
Trinidad & Tobago |
2016 details |
Manaus |
Brazil * |
5: 3 |
Italy |
Russia |
1-0 |
Costa Rica |
2019 details |
São Paulo |
Chile |
0: 0 5: 4 i. E. |
Brazil * |
Costa Rica |
3: 1 |
Argentina |
Note: Teams marked with "*" were reigning continental champions at the time of the tournament.
Leaderboards
|
|
year | Players | Gates |
---|---|---|
2009 | Marta | 7th |
2010 | Marta | 6th |
2011 | Erika | 4th |
2012 |
Fabiana Baiana Sofia Huerta Johanna Rasmussen Line Røddik Hansen |
2 |
2013 |
Debinha Marta |
3 |
2014 | Carli Lloyd | 5 |
2015 | Marta | 7th |
2016 | Bia Zaneratto | 5 |
2019 | Priscila chinchilla | 2 |
References and footnotes
- ↑ : Brazil Cup 1996 (Women) (Campinas) . In: rsssf.com
- ↑ a b c Tournament winner due to the better results in the group games
- ↑ Third due to the better results in the group games
- ↑ a b Not participated so far.