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OFC Beach Soccer Nations Cup

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OFC Beach Soccer Nations Cup
Founded2006; 18 years ago (2006)
RegionOceania (OFC)
Number of teams5
Current champions Tahiti (2nd title)
Most successful team(s) Solomon Islands
(4 titles)
WebsiteOFC
2019 OFC Beach Soccer Nations Cup

The OFC Beach Soccer Nations Cup is the main international championship for beach soccer in Oceania, mirroring that of the OFC Nations Cup organised by the OFC in association football. The tournament was called the OFC Beach Soccer Championship before the name was changed in 2019, and was also known as the FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup qualifiers for OFC. The championship was established in 2006 after FIFA made requirements for all confederations to begin holding a qualification tournament to determine the best national team(s) in the region and hence those who would go on to represent their continent in the World Cup.

Oceania was awarded just one spot at the finals under FIFA's new changes to the organisation of the World Cup and hence only the winners of the championship proceed to the succeeding World Cup finals. Before 2006, there was no consistent method of qualification or number of spots at the World Cup for Oceanian nations, with countries often simply being invited to play in the finals, without competing for a regional crown beforehand.

The Solomon Islands are the most successful nation having dominated the championships, winning four of the five that have taken place. However, Tahiti have emerged as a global force in more recent years.

Now that the World Cup takes place every two years, so does the championship which started with the qualifiers for the 2011 World Cup.

Results

For all tournaments, the winners qualified for the FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup.

Year Location Final Third place match
Champions Score Runners-up Third Place Score Fourth Place
OFC Beach Soccer Championship
2006
details
French Polynesia Tema'e, Tahiti
Solomon Islands
6–2
Vanuatu

Tahiti
12–4
Cook Islands
2007
details
New Zealand Auckland, New Zealand
Solomon Islands
5–3
Vanuatu

New Zealand
5–3
Tahiti
2008 Not held[a]
2009
details
French Polynesia Tema'e, Tahiti
Solomon Islands
1–0
Vanuatu

Tahiti
6–3
Fiji
2011
details
French Polynesia Papeete, Tahiti
Tahiti
4–3
Solomon Islands

Fiji
2013
details
New Caledonia Nouméa, New Caledonia[b]
Solomon Islands
[round-robin]
New Caledonia

Vanuatu
2015 Not held[c]
2017 Not held[d]
OFC Beach Soccer Nations Cup
2019
details
French Polynesia Papeete, Tahiti
Tahiti
4–3
Solomon Islands

New Caledonia
8–7
Vanuatu
2021
details
French Polynesia Papeete, Tahiti[1]
Notes:
a. ^ The OFC was unable to organise the 2008 championship in time, due to a late calendar change bringing the 2008 World Cup forward from November to July. Hence, on the back of their two previous titles, the Solomon Islands were hand-picked by the OFC to be the confederation's representative at the World Cup.[2]
b. ^ The 2013 edition was originally set to take place in Papeete, Tahiti. However, despite being defending champions, Tahiti were unable to compete due to a pre-arranged tour of Europe to play against higher level opposition in preparation as host nation of the upcoming World Cup. Hence the competition was relocated to New Caledonia.[3]
c. ^ The 2015 edition was originally set to take place in Papeete, Tahiti.[4] Due to undisclosed circumstances, the tournament was cancelled. Tahiti were hand-picked by the OFC to be the confederation's representative at the World Cup.[5]
d. ^ The 2017 edition was originally set to take place in February.[4] Due to undisclosed circumstances, the tournament was cancelled. Tahiti were hand-picked by the OFC to be the confederation's representative at the World Cup.[6]
Round-robin ^ Indicates this edition was played as a round-robin tournament. There was no final or third place match.

Performance

Successful nations

Team Titles Runners-up Third place
 Solomon Islands 4 (2006, 2007, 2009, 2013) 2 (2011, 2019)
 Tahiti 2 (2011*, 2019*) 2 (2006*, 2009*)
 Vanuatu 3 (2006, 2007, 2009) 1 (2013)
 New Caledonia 1 (2013*) 1 (2019)
 Fiji 1 (2011)
 New Zealand 1 (2007*)

* = Hosts

All-time table

As of 2019

Pos Team App Pld W W+ WP L GF GA GD Pts
1  Solomon Islands 6 22 17 0 0 5 112 63 +49 51
2  Tahiti 5 20 12 0 0 8 131 79 +52 36
3  Vanuatu 5 19 9 2 0 8 117 90 +27 31
4  New Caledonia 2 7 2 1 0 4 32 46 –14 8
5  New Zealand 1 4 1 0 0 3 21 26 –5 3
6  Fiji 2 6 0 0 0 6 23 47 –24 0
7  Cook Islands 1 4 0 0 0 4 6 49 –43 0
8  Tonga 1 4 0 0 0 4 6 55 –49 0

Key: Appearances App / Won in normal time W = 3 points / Won in extra-time W+ = 2 points / Won on penalty shoot-out WP = 1 point / Lost L = 0 points

Appearances & performance timeline

The following is a performance timeline of the teams who have appeared in the OFC Beach Soccer Championship and how many appearances they each have made.

Legend
Timeline
Year
Team
2006
French Polynesia
(4)
2007
New Zealand
(4)
2009
French Polynesia
(4)
2011
French Polynesia
(3)
2013
New Caledonia
(3)
2019
French Polynesia
(5)
Apps
6
 Cook Islands 4th × × × × × 1
 Fiji × × 4th 3rd × × 2
 New Caledonia × × × × 2nd 3rd 2
 New Zealand × 3rd × × × × 1
 Solomon Islands 1st 1st 1st 2nd 1st 2nd 6
 Tahiti 3rd 4th 3rd 1st •• 1st 5
 Tonga × × × × × 5th 1
 Vanuatu 2nd 2nd 2nd •• 3rd 4th 5

Performance of qualifiers at the World Cup

The following is a performance timeline of the OFC teams who have gone on to appear in the World Cup, having successfully qualified from the above events.[†]

Legend
Timeline
Year
Team
Brazil
2006
Brazil
2007
France
2008
United Arab Emirates
2009
Italy
2011
French Polynesia
2013
Portugal
2015
The Bahamas
2017
Paraguay
2019
Russia
2021
Total
 Solomon Islands R1 R1 R1 R1 R1 5
 Tahiti R1 4th 2nd 2nd R1 5
Total no. of unique qualifiers 2
†. ^ Note that in 2008, 2015 and 2017, no team "qualified" for the World Cup as such because the OFC qualifiers were not held; the OFC hand-picked a team to represent the confederation.

References

  1. ^ "OFC tournaments update". Oceania Football Confederation. 28 July 2020.
  2. ^ oceaniafootball (31 July 2009). "OFC Beach Soccer Championship" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 20 August 2011. Retrieved 19 May 2011.
  3. ^ "Sport: Oceania Beach Soccer qualifier moved to New Caledonia". RNZ International. 6 August 2013.
  4. ^ a b "OFC Executive Committee decisions". oceaniafootball.com. 2014-04-23. Archived from the original on 2016-09-13. Retrieved 2016-04-17.
  5. ^ "Teams". FIFA.com. 2015.
  6. ^ "Competition calendar outlined". Oceania Football Confederation. December 10, 2015. Archived from the original on September 24, 2016.