Homeless World Cup

Homeless World Cup

The Homeless World Cup logo
Founded 2001
Region World
Number of teams 70+
Current champions  Mexico (2nd title)
Most successful team(s)  Mexico
 Scotland
 Brazil
 Italy
 Chile (2 titles each)
Website http://www.homelessworldcup.org/

The Homeless World Cup is an annual football tournament organized by the Homeless World Cup organization, a social organization which advocates the end of homelessness through the sport of association football (or soccer). The organization puts together an annual football tournament where teams of homeless people from each country compete. The fourteenth edition of the Homeless World Cup will take place in 2016. The defending champions are Mexico, who won in Glasgow in 2016.

History

Players huddle during the Homeless World Cup 2007 in Copenhagen

The Homeless World Cup organization was co-founded by Mel Young and Harald Schmied in 2001 to advocate for a global solution to homelessness. The first annual football tournament for homeless people took place in 2003 in Graz, Austria. Host cities since then have included Gothenburg, Edinburgh, Copenhagen, Cape Town, Melbourne, Milan, Rio de Janeiro, Paris, Mexico City, Poznań, Santiago and Amsterdam.

The international headquarters of the Homeless World Cup is in Edinburgh, Scotland.

National partners

The Homeless World Cup organization operates through a network of more than 70 national partners around the world, supporting football programs and social enterprise development.[1]

List of national partners

Annual tournament

Rules

Player eligibility

Players must meet all of the following criteria:

Also, must be any of the following:

Participants

A maximum of 4 players per team on the court:

Tournament details

The winning team gets 3 points. The losing team gets zero points. If a match ends in a draw, it is decided by sudden-death penalty shootout and the winning team gets two points and the losing team gets one point. Games are 14 minutes long, in two seven-minute halves. The field measures 22m long x 16m wide.

Results

Year Host Winners Score Runners-up Third place Score Fourth place Number of teams
2003
Details
Graz,
 Austria

Austria
2–1
England

Netherlands
11–5
Brazil
2004
Details
Gothenburg,
 Sweden

Italy
4–0
Austria

Poland
7–4
Scotland
2005
Details
Edinburgh,
 Scotland

Italy
9–3
Poland

Ukraine
11–5
Scotland
2006
Details
Cape Town,
 South Africa

Russia
1–0
Kazakhstan

Poland
3–1
Mexico
26
2007
Details
Copenhagen,
 Denmark

Scotland
9–3
Poland

Liberia
11–5
Denmark
2008
Details
Melbourne,
 Australia

Afghanistan
5–4
Russia

Ghana
6–4
Scotland
56 [2]
2009
Details
Milan,
 Italy

Ukraine
5–4
Portugal

Brazil
3–2
Nigeria
48 [3]
2010
Details
Rio de Janeiro,
 Brazil

Brazil
6–0
Chile

Mexico
4–4
(1–0p)

Portugal
2011
Details
Paris,
 France

Scotland
4–3
Mexico

Brazil
7–1
Kenya
2012
Details
Mexico City,
 Mexico

Chile
8–5
Mexico

Brazil
6–2
Indonesia
48
2013
Details
Poznań,
 Poland

Brazil
3–3
(1–0p)

Mexico

Russia
6–6
(1–0p)

Chile
2014
Details
Santiago,
 Chile

Chile
5–2
Bosnia and Herzegovina

Poland
6–6
(1–0p)

Brazil
42 [4]
2015
Details
Amsterdam,
 Netherlands

Mexico
5–2
Ukraine

Portugal
2–2
(1–0p)

Brazil
48 [5]
2016
Details
Glasgow,
 Scotland

Mexico
6–1
Brazil

Russia
3–1
Chile
46 [6]

Teams reaching the top four

Team Titles Runners-up Third place Fourth place Top 4
finishes
Top 3
finishes
Top 2
finishes
 Mexico 2 (2015, 2016) 3 (2011, 2012, 2013) 1 (2010) 1 (2006) 765
 Chile 2 (2012, 2014) 1 (2010) 0 2 (2013, 2016) 533
 Brazil 2 (2010, 2013) 1 (2016) 3 (2009, 2011, 2012) 3 (2003, 2014, 2015) 963
 Scotland 2 (2007, 2011) 0 0 3 (2004, 2005, 2008) 522
 Italy 2 (2004, 2005) 0 0 0 222
 Russia 1 (2006) 1 (2008) 2 (2013, 2016) 0 442
 Austria 1 (2003) 1 (2004) 0 0 222
 Ukraine 1 (2009) 1 (2015) 1 (2005) 0 332
 Afghanistan 1 (2008) 0 0 0 111
 Poland 0 2 (2005, 2007) 3 (2004, 2006, 2014) 0 552
 Portugal 0 1 (2009) 1 (2015) 1 (2010) 321
 Bosnia and Herzegovina 0 1 (2014) 0 0 111
 England 0 1 (2003) 0 0 111
 Kazakhstan 0 1 (2006) 0 0 111
 Ghana 0 0 1 (2008) 0 110
 Liberia 0 0 1 (2007) 0 110
 Netherlands 0 0 1 (2003) 0 110
 Denmark 0 0 0 1 (2007) 100
 Indonesia 0 0 0 1 (2012) 100
 Kenya 0 0 0 1 (2011) 100
 Nigeria 0 0 0 1 (2009) 100

Media coverage

Several TV documentaries have been made tracking the participation of teams from homelessness to participating at the annual event.

In 2011, a 90-minute documentary called Hors-Jeu: Carton rouge contre l’exclusion was broadcast by Canal+ and focused on the Paris 2011 Homeless World Cup and Homeless World Cup itself and five national partners: Japan, Argentina, Palestine, France and Kenya. It was aired in France on the 9th of October 2011. The documentary was directed by Jérôme Mignard and Thomas Risch.[7]

The 2006 Homeless World Cup was the subject of a documentary entitled Kicking It.[8][9] directed by Susan Koch and Jeff Werner focusing on the experiences of seven homeless people at the Homeless World Cup football (soccer) game in South Africa. Featured in the documentary, narrated by actor Colin Farrell were residents of Afghanistan; Kenya; Dublin, Ireland; Charlotte, U.S.; Madrid, Spain and St. Petersburg in Russia. The film premiered in January, 2008 at the Sundance Film Festival, distributed by Liberation Entertainment, Netflix and ESPN.

References

  1. http://www.homelessworldcup.org/groups
  2. "Melbourne 2008 Homeless World Cup" (Website). homelessworldcup.org. 21 October 2008. Retrieved 21 October 2008.
  3. "The Milan 2009 Homeless World Cup" (Website). homelessworldcup.org. 21 October 2009. Retrieved 21 October 2009.
  4. "Bosnian player Alen Hodžić's war-torn road to Chile" (Website). homelessworldcup.org. 21 October 2014. Retrieved 21 October 2014.
  5. "Amsterdam 2015" (Website). homelessworldcup.org. 1 September 2015. Retrieved 1 September 2015.
  6. "Glasgow 2016" (Website). homelessworldcup.org. 16 July 2016. Retrieved 16 July 2016.
  7. http://vimeo.com/30225550
  8. "Kicking It" documentary official website
  9. Palmer, Nancy Doyle (2008-06-01). "Spotlight: Susan Koch". Washingtonian. Retrieved 2009-02-27.
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