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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 Qualification  





2 Stadiums  





3 Squads  





4 Tournament summary  





5 First round  



5.1  Group A  





5.2  Group B  





5.3  Group C  





5.4  Third-placed qualifiers  







6 Knockout stage  



6.1  Quarter-finals  





6.2  Semi-finals  





6.3  Third place play-off  





6.4  Final  







7 Statistics  



7.1  Goalscorers  





7.2  Awards  







8 References  





9 External links  














2000 AFC Asian Cup






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2000 AFC Asian Cup
  • كأس آسيا 2000
  • Coupe d'Asie des nations 2000
  • Tournament details
    Host countryLebanon
    Dates12–29 October
    Teams12
    Venue(s)3 (in 3 host cities)
    Final positions
    Champions Japan (2nd title)
    Runners-up Saudi Arabia
    Third place South Korea
    Fourth place China
    Tournament statistics
    Matches played26
    Goals scored77 (2.96 per match)
    Attendance276,488 (10,634 per match)
    Top scorer(s)South Korea Lee Dong-Gook (6 goals)
    Best player(s)Japan Hiroshi Nanami
    Best goalkeeperChina Jiang Jin
    Fair play award Saudi Arabia

    1996

    2004

    The 2000 AFC Asian Cup was the 12th edition of the men's AFC Asian Cup, a quadrennial international football tournament organised by the Asian Football Confederation (AFC). The finals were held in Lebanon between 12 and 29 October 2000. Japan defeated defending champion Saudi Arabia in the final match in Beirut.

    Qualification[edit]

    42 teams participated in a preliminary tournament. It was divided into 10 groups and the first-placed team of each group thus qualified. A total of 84 games were held, starting with the Oman versus Kyrgyzstan game on 3 August 1999.

    The 12 qualifying teams were:

    Country Qualified as Date qualification was secured Previous appearances in tournament1, 2
     Lebanon Hosts 20 December 1996 0 (Debut)
     Saudi Arabia 1996 AFC Asian Cup winners 21 December 1996 4 (1984, 1988, 1992, 1996)
     Iraq Qualifying round Group 1 winners 7 August 1999 3 (1972, 1976, 1996)
     Indonesia Qualifying round Group 7 winners 20 November 1999 1 (1996)
     Uzbekistan Qualifying round Group 3 winners 26 November 1999 1 (1996)
     China Qualifying round Group 9 winners 29 January 2000 6 (1976, 1980, 1984, 1988, 1992, 1996)
     Kuwait Qualifying round Group 5 winners 18 February 2000 6 (1972, 1976, 1980, 1984, 1988, 1996)
     Japan Qualifying round Group 10 winners 20 February 2000 3 (1988, 1992, 1996)
     Qatar Qualifying round Group 4 winners 8 April 2000 4 (1980, 1984, 1988, 1992)
     South Korea Qualifying round Group 6 winners 9 April 2000 8 (1956, 1960, 1964, 1972, 1980, 1984, 1988, 1996)
     Thailand Qualifying round Group 8 winners 9 April 2000 3 (1972, 1992, 1996)
     Iran Qualifying round Group 2 winners 11 April 2000 8 (1968, 1972, 1976, 1980, 1984, 1988, 1992, 1996)

    Notes:

    1 Bold indicates champion for that year
    2 Italic indicates host

    Stadiums[edit]

    Sidon
    Tripoli
    Beirut Sidon Tripoli
    Sports City Stadium Saida Municipal Stadium International Olympic Stadium
    Capacity: 47,799 Capacity: 22,600 Capacity: 22,400

    Squads[edit]

    Tournament summary[edit]

    Lebanon participated in the country's first ever football competition in the history as host, but began disappointingly, losing 0–4 to mighty Iran. Lebanon sought to reinvigorate the team against Iraq and Thailand, but all ended up in just draws, and Lebanon finished bottom in the group, the first host nation since Qatar 1988 to not progress from the group stage. Iran and Iraq managed to survive in the group A with seven and four points respectively, and Thailand took the third, but did not progress due to inferior points, having won no match in their group. Group B saw South Korea failed to achieve a top two finish, falling behind group winner China and Kuwait, but qualified as the best third place team, with the team's only win was against Indonesia. Indonesia was the only team to not score a single goal in the tournament, being beaten by South Korea and China, and a goalless draw with Kuwait. Group C witnessed Uzbekistan to become the worst-performed team in the tournament, being heavily beaten 1–8 by Japan and 0–5 by defending champions Saudi Arabia. The Japanese scrambled to top the group with a famous 4–1 win over the Saudis, though Saudi Arabia would go on to progress together after an unpromising group stage performance. Qatar, another participant in the group, finished in third and progressed thanked for one point ahead of Thailand, having drawn in all three matches.

    The quarter-finals saw Iran lost 1–2 to South Korea by a golden goal of Lee Dong-gook, and the same happened in Saudi Arabia's victory over Kuwait, also by a golden goal of Nawaf Al-Temyat. China and Japan easily passed through their Arab rivals Qatar and Iraq, with 3–1 and 4–1 wins respectively, to set up an entirely East Asian affair in the semi-finals, with Saudi Arabia being the only non-East Asian team to be here.

    The first semi-finals saw Saudi Arabia sealed the victory over the South Koreans, with two goals by Talal Al-Meshal at 76' and 80' meant Lee Dong-gook's late equalizer was too little, too late. Japan beat China in a thriller in Beirut, 3–2, to once again face the Saudis in the final. In the third place match, South Korea won bronze with a 1–0 win over China.

    The final in Beirut was filled with majority of Saudi supporters, and was seen as the rematch of the 1992 final and earlier group stage encounter. Hamzah Idris had a chance to take the Saudis ahead of Japan at 10', but he missed the opportunity. Eventually, the missing penalty was what the Saudis regretted the most, because Shigeyoshi Mochizuki, who had accidentally given the Saudis the failed opportunity on the penalty earlier, became the hero of Japan with a goal in 30'. Saudi attempt proved to be fruitless, and Japan won the game by just one goal margin, to conquer its second Asian trophy, repeating Japan's victory over Saudi Arabia eight years ago. Subsequently, Japan, the winner, automatically qualified for the 2004 AFC Asian Cup.

    First round[edit]

    All times are Lebanon summer time (UTC+3).

    Group A[edit]

    Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Qualification
    1  Iran 3 2 1 0 6 1 +5 7 Advance to knockout stage
    2  Iraq 3 1 1 1 4 3 +1 4
    3  Thailand 3 0 2 1 2 4 −2 2
    4  Lebanon (H) 3 0 2 1 3 7 −4 2
    Source: RSSSF
    (H) Hosts
    15:00
    Iraq 2–0 Thailand
    Chathir 27'
    Mahmoud 60'
    Report

    Attendance: 2,500

    Referee: Toru Kamikawa (Japan)

    20:45
    Lebanon 0–4 Iran
    Report Bagheri 19'
    Estili 75', 87'
    Daei 90+1'

    Attendance: 52,418

    Referee: Lu Jun (China)


    17:00
    Iran 1–1 Thailand
    Daei 73' Report Sakesan 12'

    Attendance: 10,000

    Referee: Saad Kamil Al-Fadhli (Kuwait)

    19:45
    Lebanon 2–2 Iraq
    Chahrour 28'
    Hojeij 76'
    Report Jeayer 5', 22'

    Attendance: 30,000

    Referee: Kim Young-Joo (South Korea)


    19:30
    Iran 1–0 Iraq
    Daei 77' Report

    Attendance: 8,582

    Referee: Omer Al-Mehannah (Saudi Arabia)

    19:30
    Lebanon 1–1 Thailand
    Fernandes 83' Report Sakesan 58'

    Attendance: 50,000

    Referee: Lu Jun (China)

    Group B[edit]

    Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Qualification
    1  China 3 1 2 0 6 2 +4 5 Advance to knockout stage
    2  Kuwait 3 1 2 0 1 0 +1 5
    3  South Korea 3 1 1 1 5 3 +2 4
    4  Indonesia 3 0 1 2 0 7 −7 1
    Source: RSSSF
    17:00
    South Korea 2–2 China
    Lee Young-pyo 30'
    Noh Jung-yoon 58'
    Report Su Maozhen 36'
    Fan Zhiyi 66' (pen.)

    Attendance: 1,000

    Referee: Omer Al-Mehannah (Saudi Arabia)

    19:45
    Kuwait 0–0 Indonesia
    Report

    Attendance: 2,000

    Referee: Tajaddin Fares (Syria)


    17:00
    China 4–0 Indonesia
    Li Ming 2'
    Shen Si 7' (pen.)
    Yang Chen 10'
    Qi Hong 90'
    Report

    Attendance: 2,000

    Referee: Nabil Ayad (Lebanon)

    19:45
    South Korea 0–1 Kuwait
    Report Al-Huwaidi 43'

    Attendance: 5,000

    Referee: Brian Hall (United States)


    19:30
    China 0–0 Kuwait
    Report

    Attendance: 5,000

    Referee: Shamsul Maidin (Singapore)

    19:30
    South Korea 3–0 Indonesia
    Lee Dong-gook 30', 76', 90+1' Report

    Attendance: 500

    Referee: Toru Kamikawa (Japan)

    Group C[edit]

    Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Qualification
    1  Japan 3 2 1 0 13 3 +10 7 Advance to knockout stage
    2  Saudi Arabia 3 1 1 1 6 4 +2 4
    3  Qatar 3 0 3 0 2 2 0 3
    4  Uzbekistan 3 0 1 2 2 14 −12 1
    Source: RSSSF
    17:00
    Saudi Arabia 1–4 Japan
    Morioka 90+1' (o.g.) Report Yanagisawa 26'
    Takahara 39'
    Nanami 54'
    Ono 90'

    Attendance: 5,000

    Referee: Ali Bujsaim (United Arab Emirates)

    19:45
    Qatar 1–1 Uzbekistan
    Gholam 61' Report Qosimov 73'

    Attendance: 5,000

    Referee: Mohd Nazri Abdullah (Malaysia)


    17:00
    Japan 8–1 Uzbekistan
    Morishima 7'
    Nishizawa 14', 25', 49'
    Takahara 18', 20', 57'
    Kitajima 79'
    Report Lushan 29'

    Attendance: 2,000

    Referee: Shamsul Maidin (Singapore)

    19:45
    Saudi Arabia 0–0 Qatar
    Report

    Attendance: 5,000

    Referee: Tajaddin Fares (Syria)


    19:30
    Saudi Arabia 5–0 Uzbekistan
    Al-Otaibi 18'
    Al-Shalhoub 35', 78', 86'
    Al-Temyat 88'
    Report

    Attendance: 2,000

    Referee: Kim Young-Joo (South Korea)

    19:30
    Japan 1–1 Qatar
    Nishizawa 61' Report Al-Obaidly 22'

    Attendance: 2,000

    Referee: Nabil Ayad (Lebanon)

    Third-placed qualifiers[edit]

    At the end of the first stage, a comparison was made between the third placed teams of each group. The two best third-placed teams advanced to the quarter-finals.

    Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Qualification
    1  South Korea 3 1 1 1 5 3 +2 4 Advance to knockout stage
    2  Qatar 3 0 3 0 2 2 0 3
    3  Thailand 3 0 2 1 2 4 −2 2
    Source: RSSSF

    South Korea and Qatar, the two best third-placed teams, qualified for the quarter-finals.

    Knockout stage[edit]

    All times are Lebanon summer time (UTC+3)

    Extra times were played under the golden goal rule.

     

    Quarter-finalsSemi-finalsFinal

     

              

     

    23 October – Sidon

     

     

     China3

     

    26 October – Beirut

     

     Qatar1

     

     China2

     

    24 October – Beirut

     

     Japan3

     

     Japan4

     

    29 October – Beirut

     

     Iraq1

     

     Japan1

     

    23 October – Tripoli

     

     Saudi Arabia0

     

     Iran1

     

    26 October – Beirut

     

     South Korea (a.e.t.)2

     

     South Korea1

     

    24 October – Beirut

     

     Saudi Arabia2 Third place

     

     Kuwait2

     

    29 October – Beirut

     

     Saudi Arabia (a.e.t.)3

     

     China0

     

     

     South Korea1

     

    Quarter-finals[edit]

    16:45
    Iran 1–2 (a.e.t.) South Korea
    Bagheri 71' Report Kim Sang-sik 90'
    Lee Dong-gook gold-colored soccer ball 99'

    Attendance: 5,000

    Referee: Ali Bujsaim (United Arab Emirates)


    19:45
    China 3–1 Qatar
    Li Ming 9'
    Qi Hong 38'
    Yang Chen 54'
    Report Al-Enazi 65'

    Attendance: 3,000

    Referee: Mohd Nazri Abdullah (Malaysia)


    16:45
    Japan 4–1 Iraq
    Nanami 8', 29'
    Takahara 11'
    Myojin 62'
    Report Obeid 4'

    Attendance: 2,000

    Referee: Tajaddin Fares (Syria)


    19:45
    Kuwait 2–3 (a.e.t.) Saudi Arabia
    Bashar Abdullah 62'
    Al-Huwaidi 68'
    Report Al-Temyat 45+1' gold-colored soccer ball 109'
    Al-Meshal 72'

    Attendance: 5,000

    Referee: Brian Hall (United States)

    Semi-finals[edit]

    16:45
    South Korea 1–2 Saudi Arabia
    Lee Dong-gook 90+1' Report Al-Meshal 76', 80'

    Attendance: 7,000

    Referee: Saad Kamil Al-Fadhli (Kuwait)


    19:45
    China 2–3 Japan
    Qi Hong 30'
    Yang Chen 48'
    Report Fan Zhiyi 21' (o.g.)
    Nishizawa 53'
    Myojin 61'

    Attendance: 5,000

    Referee: Shamsul Maidin (Singapore)

    Third place play-off[edit]

    17:00
    South Korea 1–0 China
    Lee Dong-gook 76' Report

    Attendance: 20,000

    Referee: Nabil Ayad (Lebanon)

    Final[edit]

    19:45
    Japan 1–0 Saudi Arabia
    Mochizuki 30' Report

    Attendance: 47,400

    Referee: Ali Bujsaim (United Arab Emirates)

    Statistics[edit]

    Goalscorers[edit]

    With six goals, Lee Dong-Gook is the top scorer in the tournament. In total, 77 goals were scored by 43 different players, with two of them credited as own goals.

    6 goals

    5 goals

  • Japan Naohiro Takahara
  • 3 goals

  • China Yang Chen
  • Iran Ali Daei
  • Japan Hiroshi Nanami
  • Saudi Arabia Talal Al-Meshal
  • Saudi Arabia Mohammad Al-Shalhoub
  • Saudi Arabia Nawaf Al-Temyat
  • 2 goals

  • Iran Karim Bagheri
  • Iran Hamid Estili
  • Iraq Sabah Jeayer
  • Japan Tomokazu Myojin
  • Kuwait Jasem Al-Huwaidi
  • Thailand Sakesan Pituratana
  • 1 goal

  • China Shen Si
  • China Su Maozhen
  • Iraq Qahtan Chathir
  • Iraq Abbas Obeid
  • Iraq Haidar Mahmoud
  • Japan Hideaki Kitajima
  • Japan Shigeyoshi Mochizuki
  • Japan Hiroaki Morishima
  • Japan Shinji Ono
  • Japan Atsushi Yanagisawa
  • South Korea Kim Sang-sik
  • South Korea Lee Young-pyo
  • South Korea Noh Jung-yoon
  • Kuwait Bashar Abdullah
  • Lebanon Abbas Chahrour
  • Lebanon Luís Fernandes
  • Lebanon Moussa Hojeij
  • Qatar Mohammed Salem Al-Enazi
  • Qatar Abdulnasser Al-Obaidly
  • Qatar Mohammed Gholam
  • Saudi Arabia Marzouk Al-Otaibi
  • Uzbekistan Sergey Lushan
  • Uzbekistan Mirjalol Qosimov
  • Own goal

    Awards[edit]

    Most Valuable Player

    Top scorer

    Best Defender

    Best Goalkeeper

    Fair Play Award

    Team of the Tournament[1][2]

    Goalkeepers Defenders Midfielders Forwards

    China Jiang Jin

    South Korea Hong Myung-bo
    Saudi Arabia Mohammed Al-Khilaiwi
    Kuwait Jamal Mubarak

    Japan Hiroshi Nanami
    Saudi Arabia Nawaf Al-Temyat
    Iraq Abbas Obeid
    Iran Karim Bagheri
    Japan Shunsuke Nakamura

    South Korea Lee Dong-gook
    Japan Naohiro Takahara

    References[edit]

    1. ^ [아시안컵] 이동국,홍명보 베스트11선정 (in Korean). JoongAng Ilbo. 25 February 2002. Retrieved 12 February 2020.
  • ^ アジアカップ2000・レバノン大会 (in Japanese). WorldCup's world. Retrieved 15 June 2020.
  • External links[edit]


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