Misplaced Pages

Asian Football Confederation: Difference between revisions

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
Browse history interactively← Previous editNext edit →Content deleted Content addedVisualWikitext
Revision as of 18:50, 9 September 2005 editNick C (talk | contribs)Extended confirmed users, Rollbackers9,205 edits World Cup Qualifiers← Previous edit Revision as of 18:56, 9 September 2005 edit undoNick C (talk | contribs)Extended confirmed users, Rollbackers9,205 edits World Cup QualifiersNext edit →
Line 21: Line 21:
*] - ] *] - ]
*] - None *] - None
*] - ], ] *] - ], South Korea
*] - ], ] *] - South Korea, ]
*] - ], ] *] - ], South Korea
*] - ], ], ], ] *] - South Korea, Saudi Arabia, ], Iran
*] - (] and ] qualified as hosts). ], ] *] - (Japan and South Korea qualified as hosts). Saudi Arabia, ]
*] - ], ], ], ], more TBD *] - Saudi Arabia, South Korea, Japan, Iran, more TBD


TOTAL TOTAL

Revision as of 18:56, 9 September 2005

File:Asian Football Confederation.gif
Asian Football Confederation Logo

The Asian Football Confederation (AFC) is the governing body of football in Asia. It runs the Asian Cup, a competition for the national football teams of Asia held every four years, as well as the Asian World Cup Qualifying Tournament.

The AFC also runs three levels of annual international club competitions. The most prestigious (and oldest of the current AFC club competitions) is the AFC Champions League tournament, based on the UEFA Champions League, formed in 2002/03 with the amalgamation of the Asian Champions Cup and the Asian Cup Winners Cup. (An Asian Super Cup competition between the winners of these two major tournaments ended with the birth of the AFC Champions League.) The other competitions branched of this in 2004 when the 'Vision Asia' blueprint for development was launched. This led to the top fourteen AFC nations, the 'mature nations', sending their best teams to the AFC Champions League. The next 14 nations, the 'developing nations' qualify to send their teams to the AFC Cup. The rest of the AFC-affiliated countries, the 'emerging nations' send their teams to the AFC President's Cup. The teams which qualify from each country are usually the champions and the cup winners . Currently there is no promotion and relegation between the different levels of nations.

The Asian Ladies Football Confederation is a sub-group of the AFC who manage women's football in Asia. The group was founded in April 1968 in a meeting involving Taiwan, Hong Kong, Malaysia and Singapore. In 1986 the ALFC was merged into the AFC . The Asian Ladies Football Confederation helped organise the AFC Women's Championship, first held in 1975, as well as the AFC's women's under-19 and the women's under-17 championships.

From January 1 2006 Australia will become the 46th member of the AFC.

World Cup Qualifiers

TOTAL

  • South Korea - 7
  • Saudi Arabia - 4
  • Iran, Japan - 3
  • Dutch East Indies (Indonesia), North Korea, Iraq, PR China, UAE - 1

Competitions

National competition

Club competition

External links


Stub icon

This association football article is a stub. You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it.

National football associations of Asia (AFC)
West Asia (WAFF)
Central Asia (CAFA)
South Asia (SAFF)
East Asia (EAFF)
Southeast Asia (AFF)
Defunct
denote full Member Association is not a FIFA member
National men's football teams of Asia (AFC)
AFC Asian Cup
West Asia (WAFF)
Central Asia (CAFA)
South Asia (SAFF)
East Asia (EAFF)
Southeast Asia (AFF)
Defunct
Former
International association football
World (FIFA)
Asia (AFC)
Africa (CAF)
North America (CONCACAF)
South America (CONMEBOL)
Oceania (OFC)
Europe (UEFA)
Inter-Continental
Non-FIFA
See also
Geography
Codes
Player/Club of the Century
Women's football
Categories: