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Football at the 2012 Summer Olympics – Men's tournament
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| tourney_name | Men's Olympic Football Tournament |
| year | 2012 |
| image | Olympic rings without rims.svg |
| size | 150px |
| country | United Kingdom |
| dates | 26 July – 11 August |
| num_teams | 16 |
| confederations | 6 |
| venues | 6 |
| cities | 6 |
| champion_other | |
| count | 1 |
| second_other | |
| third_other | |
| fourth_other | |
| matches | 32 |
| goals | 76 |
| attendance | |
| top_scorer | BRA Leandro Damião |
| (6 goals) | |
| prevseason | 2008 |
| nextseason | 2016 |
(6 goals)
The men's football tournament at the 2012 Summer Olympics was held in London and five other cities in Great Britain from 26 July to 11 August. Associations affiliated with FIFA were invited to enter their men's U-23 teams in regional qualifying competitions, from which 15 teams, plus the hosts Great Britain, reached the final tournament. Men's teams were allowed to augment their squads with three players over the age of 23. It was the first men's Olympic football tournament to feature a team representing Great Britain since the 1960 Summer Olympics in Rome. The competition also marked Uruguay's men's football team's first Olympic appearance since 1928, when it won its second consecutive gold medal.
The gold medal was won by Mexico who defeated Brazil 2–1 in the final.
Schedule
The match schedule of the men's tournament.
| 26 Thu | 27 Fri | 28 Sat | 29 Sun | 30 Mon | 31 Tue | 1 Wed | 2 Thu | 3 Fri | 4 Sat | 5 Sun | 6 Mon | 7 Tue | 8 Wed | 9 Thu | 10 Fri | 11 Sat | ||||||||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| G |
Qualification
Each National Olympic Committee may enter one men's team in the football tournament. The 2004 and 2008 Olympic gold-medallists Argentina failed to qualify, after finishing third in the South American qualifying tournament.

| Means of qualification | Date of completion | Venue | Berths | Qualified | Total | 16 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Host nation | 2005 | — | 1 | |||
| 2011 UEFA European Under-21 Football Championship | 25 June 2011 | 3 | ||||
| AFC Preliminary Competition | 29 March 2012 | Various | ||||
| (home and away format) | 3 | |||||
| 2011 CAF U-23 Championship | 10 December 2011 | 3 | ||||
| CONCACAF Preliminary Competition | 2 April 2012 | 2 | ||||
| 2011 South American Youth Championship | 12 February 2011 | 2 | ||||
| OFC Preliminary Competition | 25 March 2012 | 1 | ||||
| AFC–CAF play-off | 23 April 2012 | GBR Great Britain | 1 |
- Locations are those of final tournaments, various qualification stages may precede matches at these specific venues.
Venues
Six venues were used during the tournament, including Wembley Stadium in London, which hosted the final.
| London | Manchester | Cardiff | {{Location map+ | United Kingdom | float=center | width=350 | places= | Newcastle | Glasgow | Coventry |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Wembley Stadium | Old Trafford | Millennium Stadium | ||||||||
| Capacity: 90,000 | Capacity: 75,643 | Capacity: 74,500 | ||||||||
| [[File:Wembley1.jpg | 186x186px]] | [[File:Brazil Belarus kickoff.JPG | 186x186px]] | [[File:Millennium Stadium GBR-NZL.jpg | 186x186px]] | |||||
| St James' Park | Hampden Park | City of Coventry Stadium | ||||||||
| Capacity: 52,354 | Capacity: 51,866 | Capacity: 32,609 | ||||||||
| [[File:St James Park.jpg | 186x186px]] | [[File:2012 Olympic Football - Honduras v Morocco.jpg | 186x186px]] | [[File:Coventry Derby October 2021 - 2.jpg | 190x190px]] |
Squads
Main article: Football at the 2012 Summer Olympics – Men's team squads
For the men's tournament, each nation submitted a squad of 18 players, 15 of whom had to be born on or after 1 January 1989, and three of whom could be overage players. A minimum of two goalkeepers (plus one optional alternate goalkeeper) had to be included in the squad.
Match officials
On 19 April 2012, FIFA released the list of match referees that would officiate at the Olympics.
| Confederation | Referee | Assistants |
|---|---|---|
| AFC | Ravshan Irmatov (Uzbekistan) | Abdukhamidullo Rasulov (Uzbekistan) |
| Bakhadyr Kochkarov (Kyrgyzstan) | ||
| Yuichi Nishimura (Japan) | Toru Sagara (Japan) | |
| Toshiyuki Nagi (Japan) | ||
| Ben Williams (Australia) | Matthew Cream (Australia) | |
| Hakan Anaz (Australia) | ||
| CAF | Bakary Gassama (Gambia) | Jason Damoo (Seychelles) |
| Angesom Ogbamariam (Eritrea) | ||
| Slim Jedidi (Tunisia) | Bechir Hassani (Tunisia) | |
| Sherif Hassan (Egypt) | ||
| CONCACAF | Roberto García (Mexico) | José Luis Camargo (Mexico) |
| Alberto Morín (Mexico) | ||
| Mark Geiger (United States) | Mark Hurd (United States) | |
| Joe Fletcher (Canada) | ||
| CONMEBOL | Raúl Orosco (Bolivia) | Efraín Castro (Bolivia) |
| Arol Valda (Bolivia) | ||
| Wilmar Roldán (Colombia) | Humberto Clavijo (Colombia) | |
| Eduardo Díaz (Colombia) | ||
| Juan Soto (Venezuela) | Jorge Urrego (Venezuela) | |
| Carlos López (Venezuela) | ||
| OFC | Peter O'Leary (New Zealand) | Jan-Hendrik Hintz (New Zealand) |
| Ravinesh Kumar (Fiji) | ||
| UEFA | Felix Brych (Germany) | Stefan Lupp (Germany) |
| Mark Borsch (Germany) | ||
| Mark Clattenburg (Great Britain) | Stephen Child (Great Britain) | |
| Simon Beck (Great Britain) | ||
| Pavel Královec (Czech Republic) | Martin Wilczek (Czech Republic) | |
| Antonín Kordula (Czech Republic) | ||
| Svein Oddvar Moen (Norway) | Kim Haglund (Norway) | |
| Frank Andas (Norway) | ||
| Gianluca Rocchi (Italy) | Elenito Di Liberatore (Italy) | |
| Gianluca Cariolato (Italy) |
Draw
The draw for the tournament took place on 24 April 2012. Great Britain, Mexico, Brazil and Spain were seeded for the draw and placed into groups A–D, respectively. The remaining teams were drawn from four pots with teams from the same region kept apart.
| Pot 1 | Pot 2 | Pot 3 | Pot 4 |
|---|
Group stage
The competing countries were divided into four groups of four teams, denoted as groups A, B, C and D. Teams in each group will play one another in a round-robin basis, with the top two teams of each group advancing to the quarter-finals.
All times are local, British Summer Time (UTC+1).
Group A
Main article: Football at the 2012 Summer Olympics – Men's tournament – Group A
Group B
Main article: Football at the 2012 Summer Olympics – Men's tournament – Group B
Group C
Main article: Football at the 2012 Summer Olympics – Men's tournament – Group C
Group D
Main article: Football at the 2012 Summer Olympics – Men's tournament – Group D
Knockout stage
Main article: Football at the 2012 Summer Olympics – Men's tournament – Knockout stage
In the knockout stage, if a match was level at the end of normal playing time, extra time was played (two periods of fifteen minutes each) and followed, if necessary, by a penalty shoot-out to determine the winner.
Bracket
Quarter-finals
Semi-finals
Bronze medal match
Gold medal match
Main article: Football at the 2012 Summer Olympics – Men's tournament – Final
Statistics
Goalscorers
With six goals, Leandro Damião of Brazil was the top scorer in the tournament. In total, 76 goals were scored by 49 different players, none of them credited as own goals.
;6 goals
- BRA Leandro Damião
;5 goals
- SEN Moussa Konaté
;4 goals
- MEX Oribe Peralta
;3 goals
- BRA Neymar
- EGY Mohamed Salah
- HON Jerry Bengtson
- JPN Yūki Ōtsu
- MEX Giovani dos Santos
;2 goals
- EGY Mohamed Aboutrika
- GBR Daniel Sturridge
- JPN Kensuke Nagai
- KOR Park Chu-young
- UAE Ismail Matar
;1 goal
- BLR Dzmitry Baha
- BLR Renan Bressan
- BLR Andrey Varankow
- BRA Danilo
- BRA Hulk
- BRA Oscar
- BRA Alexandre Pato
- BRA Rafael
- BRA Rômulo
- BRA Sandro
- EGY Marwan Mohsen
- GAB Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang
- GBR Craig Bellamy
- GBR Ryan Giggs
- GBR Aaron Ramsey
- GBR Scott Sinclair
- HON Roger Espinoza
- HON Mario Martínez
- JPN Maya Yoshida
- KOR Koo Ja-cheol
- KOR Kim Bo-kyung
- KOR Ji Dong-won
- MEX Javier Aquino
- MEX Javier Cortés
- MEX Jorge Enríquez
- MEX Marco Fabián
- MEX Héctor Herrera
- MAR Abdelaziz Barrada
- MAR Zakaria Labyad
- NZL Chris Wood
- SEN Ibrahima Baldé
- SUI Innocent Emeghara
- SUI Admir Mehmedi
- UAE Rashed Eisa
- URU Nicolás Lodeiro
- URU Gastón Ramírez
Discipline
;Red cards
- BRA Alex Sandro
- GAB Henri Ndong
- EGY Saad Samir
- HON Wilmer Crisanto
- HON Roger Espinoza
- MAR Zakarya Bergdich
- SEN Abdoulaye Ba
- ESP Iñigo Martínez
- SUI Oliver Buff
Final ranking
As per statistical convention in football, matches decided in extra time are counted as wins and losses, while matches decided by penalty shoot-outs are counted as draws.
quarter-finals group stage
Controversies
Queues
For the first matchday at St James' Park, there were long queues at the box office, leading to fans missing some of the game. A spokesman for Ticketmaster said: "We saw extremely high numbers of spectators arriving at St James' Park to purchase football tickets on the day of the event. While Ticketmaster is contracted to manage the box offices at Olympic venues, the staff numbers at those venues are determined by LOCOG. We will continue to work closely with LOCOG to ensure that the box office staff levels are sufficient to meet the demands for ticket sales and collection". LOCOG described the situation as "totally and completely 100% unacceptable", and after changes were made in the process, the issue was reportedly avoided for the second round of matches.
During the matches held at the Wembley Stadium on 29 July, fans were subjected to long queues at the concession stands in the ground after Visa's card payment system crashed, leaving cash payment as the only alternative. The situation was compounded by the fact that, as Visa had been granted exclusive rights to the Olympics, other cards could not be accepted as payment, and the number of cash machines in the stadium had been reduced after 27 that worked on the LINK system had been removed to be replaced by eight that could only be used by Visa cards.
There were several problems relating to transport for events held at the Millennium Stadium in Cardiff. There was severe congestion at Cardiff Central railway station when Great Britain played South Korea; and the bronze medal match also had rail disruption when a retaining wall collapsed onto the tracks.
Player sent home
Swiss footballer Michel Morganella was sent home by the Switzerland team following their 2–1 loss against South Korea after he sent a tweet that, according to the director of Swiss Olympic Committee Gian Gilli, "discriminated, insulted and violated the dignity of the South Korean football team and people".
Great Britain football teams
Following the criticism against Scottish female player Kim Little, for choosing not to sing the British national anthem "God Save the Queen" because of her national identity, other Scottish and Welsh players, Ryan Giggs, Craig Bellamy and Ifeoma Dieke, also attracted comment in the media for remaining silent. Giggs, the Great Britain men's captain, later said: "The problem is the British anthem is the same as the English anthem and if you're a Welshman or a Scotsman it's difficult".
LOCOG also apologised after an error in the official match programme for the first game mistakenly described Welsh player Joe Allen as being English.
Political statement made by Park Jong-woo
After South Korea defeated Japan in the bronze medal match at the Millennium Stadium in Cardiff on 10 August, South Korean player Park Jong-woo walked around the field holding a banner with a political message written in Korean, "독도는 우리 땅!" (dokdo neun uri ttang, lit.: "Dokdo is our territory"). This incident occurred on the same night after South Korean President Lee Myung-bak had visited the islands which both South Korea and Japan claim as their territory. The IOC and FIFA reviewed the evidence, since FIFA statutes prohibit political statements being made by athletes at Olympic events. The IOC barred Park from the bronze medal ceremony and did not permit him to receive his medal. In addition, it asked FIFA to discipline Park, and stated that it may decide on further sanctions at a later date. IOC president Jacques Rogge told reporters: "We will take a possible decision of what will happen with the medal later". FIFA failed to reach a conclusion on the case at a meeting at its Zürich headquarters held on 5 October, and the disciplinary committee discussed the case again on the following week, then again failed to reach a verdict. After that, the Korean Olympic Committee (KOC) announced that Park would receive his bronze medal. The case was heard again by the committee on 20 November, and FIFA finally decided and announced on 3 December to suspend Park for two matches after he was considered to have breached the FIFA Disciplinary Code and the Regulations of the Olympic Football Tournaments. FIFA also imposed a warning on the Korea Football Association and reminded it of its obligation to properly instruct its players on all the pertinent rules and applicable regulations before the start of any competition, in order to avoid such incidents in the future. The Korea Football Association was warned that should incidents of such nature occur again in the future, the FIFA Disciplinary Committee may impose harsher sanctions on the Korea Football Association.
References
References
- "Regulations of the Olympic Football Tournaments London 2012, Page 15, Article 8.3". Fédération Internationale de Football Association.
- Irvin, Duncan. (11 August 2012). "Mexico Wins Soccer Gold Medal, 2-1". [[New York Times]].
- "Olympic Football Tournaments London 2012 - Men".
- "AFC slots for Olympics approved". Asian Football Confederation.
- (26 January 2012). "Play-off details confirmed". Fédération Internationale de Football Association.
- "Olympic Football Tournament London 2012 – Appointments of Match Officials". Fédération Internationale de Football Association.
- (10 November 2011). "Here we go: Team GB fixture dates confirmed and London 2012 Football tickets to go back on sale". London2012.com.
- (23 April 2012). "Britain, Spain, Brazil, Mexico top seeds in Olympic football". Reuters.com.
- (23 April 2012). "London 2012 Olympics: Team GB men's side avoid Brazil and Spain in group stage of football tournament". Telegraph Media Group.
- "Regulations for the Olympic Football Tournaments Tokyo 2020". FIFA.com.
- (30 July 2012). "Olympic football ticket delays at St James' Park eased". British Broadcasting Corporation.
- (27 July 2012). "Olympic football delay at St James' Park 'unacceptable'". British Broadcasting Corporation.
- (30 July 2012). "Olympics: Anger As Visa Cards Crash At Wembley". BSkyB.
- (5 August 2012). "Olympic football: Team GB Cardiff quarter-final attracts thousands". British Broadcasting Corporation.
- (11 August 2012). "Cardiff rail disruption 'to continue' after wall breaks". British Broadcasting Corporation.
- (10 August 2012). "Cardiff rail services disruption after wall collapse". British Broadcasting Corporation.
- (10 August 2012). "Cardiff wall collapse causes rail delays". British Broadcasting Corporation.
- (25 July 2012). "Olympics football: Michel Morganella expelled for racist tweet". British Broadcasting Corporation.
- (27 July 2012). "Controversy as team GB Scots refuse to sing God Save the Queen". Newsnetscotland.com.
- Silverman, Rosa. (27 July 2012). "London 2012 Olympics: Team GB athletes in National Anthem singing row". Telegraph Media Group.
- (30 July 2012). "Ryan Giggs urges Welsh fans not to boo anthem at Millennium". Media Wales.
- (27 July 2012). "London 2012: Wales' Joe Allen listed as English by Team GB". British Broadcasting Corporation.
- (10 August 2012). "[SS포토]동메달 축구대표팀 박종우, '독도는 우리 땅!'". Sports Seoul.
- (10 August 2012). "South Korea's Lee Myung-bak visits disputed islands". British Broadcasting Corporation.
- (11 August 2012). "IOC weighs in on flag incident". ESPN.
- (11 August 2012). "London Olympics: row over S Korea 'political celebration'". British Broadcasting Corporation.
- Hunt, Katie. (13 August 2012). "Politics keeps South Korean soccer player off medal podium". Cable News Network (CNN).
- Das, Andrew. (11 August 2012). "South Korean denied medal over politics". The New York Times.
- (12 August 2012). "IOC withholds football medal from S Korea's Park Jong-woo". British Broadcasting Corporation.
- (6 October 2012). "FIFA puts off ruling on S. Korean". theStarOnline.
- (20 November 2012). "FIFA to hear case over South Korea Olympic protest". Reuters.
- "Korea Republic’s Park Jongwoo suspended for two matches". FIFA.
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