VM-turneringar:
1930 |
1934 |
1938 |
1950 |
1954 |
1958 |
1962 |
1966
1970 |
1974 |
1978 |
1982 |
1986 |
1990 |
1994 |
1998
Kval till VM:
1934 |
1938 |
1950 |
1954 |
1958 |
1962 |
1966
1970 |
1974 |
1978 |
1982 |
1986 |
1990 |
1994 |
1998
Maratontabell för VM-turneringar
Maratontabell för VM-turneringar och kvalspel
Mästarlagen 1930-1998
Supplement
Trivia
Ni kan ladda hem hele skiten som zip-fil.
I cannot assure that the data is 100% correct, so standard disclaimer applies. Particularly Brazillian and Iberoamerican names may differ sometimes from other sources, because in those countries names and surnames are handled differently than most Europeans are used to. Ditto for Arabian-speaking countries. Korean names are traditionally a nuisance to Europeans.
LEGAL NOTICE: The statistical information found in this archive is PUBLIC DOMAIN, OFFENTLIGA HANDLINGAR.
The data format is as follows:
(date) (hour) (city, stadium)
(result)
(attendance) (referees)
(line-ups with substitutions)
(goals in order of scoring)
(bookings & sent offs)
(additional notes)
Some explanatory remarks:
Date: in dd/mm/yy format, year is two digits.
Hour: local time when the match was scheduled to start (ie. for delayed matches see additional notes). European countries use generally GMT+1, with the exception of England and Spain (GMT). South American countries use GMT-5 or GMT-6, Mexico uses GMT-8 and USA uses GMT-5 to GMT-8 depending on place. Add/substract as needed to obtain the hour at which the match started in your country. You need to take DST into account as well, which makes converting older (pre-1960) times doubtful.
City, Stadium name: in local language if possible. However for Switzerland the versions generally accepted in English have been adopted.
Result: teams, result, half-result with additional data on extra-time (ie. the first result in parentheses is the one after 45 min, the second after 90 min, the third after 105 min). This could be simplified with the introduction of the golden goal rule. Also the result of penalty shootout if one occured (the British practice is to sum up goals from game and shootout when giving result, which is NOT encouraged).
Attendance: in many cases approximate. Various sources make different guesses, and reliable data just isn't available sometimes. Attendance has more than often been calculated on the basis of tickets sold, not by counting spectators.
The + sign before the number means "more than", - means "less than" and ~ means "around, approximately, more or less".
Referees: the first one is the main referee, the two following are linesmen. I have not included the technical referees who appeared at France '98, despite FIFA treating them as part of the traditional trio when presenting WC 98 stats on www.fifa.com.
Line ups: Captains are marked with (c). It was assumed that pre-war teams played 1-2-3-5, in the 50s this was changed to 1-3-2-5 (WM system), later to 1-2-4-4 (Brasil in 1962), 1-3-3-4, 1-4-3-3 and finally 1-4-4-2. Of course where there was evidence that a team used a different style that the one widely adopted at the time, this has been taken into account.
Goals: some sources may report the scorers differently, especially with respect to own goals. Minutes are +/- 1 due to the way some sources count them (ie. whether the first minute starts at kick-off or after 60 secs). The letters after minutes mean: p - penalty kick goal, f - free kick goal, h - header goal, o - own goal, c - corner goal. Penalties which were missed are also noted. "Out" in this context means also a crossbar or goalpost.
Bookings: list of names from both teams, separated by a / (slash). The list is ordered randomly and does not reflect actual booking order.
I've included a list of all scorers in a given tournament, ordered alphabetically by country codes and then by player names. Own goals are listed separately. Below that is found a summary.
The list of coaches includes team coaches, assistants, managers, directors, selection commission members and similar (except for 1994 and 1998, where only main team coaches are given). The first person on the list is always the main coach. Reserve players are listed alphabetically. Note that until 1962 (?) there was no fixed 22-men limit on squads.
Youngest and oldest includes: players (with goalkeepers), goalkeepers, scorers, champions (from 1st team), finalists (from 1st-2nd team), medalists (from 1st-4th team), coaches (the main coaches, not the helping persons listed after them above) and referees. Due to problems with determining the dates of birth in the more exotic countries some data may be inexact or approximate.
Brazil 4 (West) Germany 3 Italy 3 Argentina 2 Uruguay 2 England 1 France 1
MEDALJLIGAN Guld Silver Brons De målrikaste VM-matcherna 1. Brasilien 4 2 2 Österrike-Schweiz 1954 7-5 2. Tyskland 3 3 2 Ungern-El Salvador 1982 10-1 3. Italien 3 2 1 Ungern-Västtyskland 1954 8-3 4. Argentina 2 2 0 Brasilien-Polen 1938 6-5 5. Uruguay 2 0 0 Frankrike-Paraguay 1958 7-3 6. Frankrike 1 0 2 Frankrike-Västtyskl 1958 6-3 7. England 1 0 0 Ungern-Sydkorea 1954 9-0 8. Holland 0 2 0 Ungern-Zaire 1974 9-0 8. Tjeckoslovakien 0 2 0 Västtyskland-Turkiet 1954 7-2 8. Ungern 0 2 0 Argentina-Mexico 1930 6-3 11. Sverige 0 1 2 Sverige-Cuba 1938 8-0 12. Polen 0 0 1 Uruguay-Bolivia 1950 8-0 12. Chile 0 0 1 Italien-USA 1934 7-1 12. Portugal 0 0 1 Brasilien-Sverige 1950 7-1 12. Österrike 0 0 1 Portugal-Nordkorea 1966 5-3 12. Kroatien 0 0 1 17. Jugoslavien 0 0 ½ 17. USA 0 0 ½
winners finalists semifinals quarterfinals
Brazil 4 6 9 13
(West) Germany 3 6 9 13
Italy 3 5 7 9
Argentina 2 4 4 7
Uruguay 2 2 4 5
France 1 1 4 5
England 1 1 2 8
Netherlands 2 3 4
Czechoslovakia 2 2 4
Hungary 2 2 5
Sweden 1 4 6
Yugoslavia 2 7
Austria 2 4
Poland 2 3
Soviet Union 1 5
Spain 1 4
Chile 1 2
Belgium 1 1
Bulgaria 1 1
Croatia 1 1
Portugal 1 1
USA 1 1
Switzerland 3
Mexico 2
Peru 2
Romania 2
Bolivia 1
Cameroon 1
Cuba 1
Denmark 1
East Germany 1
Ireland 1
Northern Ireland 1
North Korea 1
Paraguay 1
Wales 1
16 32 64 128
[NB: for 1930 and 1950, runners-up in the first round groups have been
counted as quarterfinalists; in 1982 runners-up in the second
group stage were also included; for 1950 that implies Bolivia
are counted as quarterfinalists in spite of losing their only
match 0-8]