Sabtu, 26 Maret 2011

Futsal BGA

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Futsal
Futebol Salao Pan2007.jpg
Futsal at the 2007 Pan American Games
Highest governing body FIFA, AMF
Characteristics
Team members 5-a-side
Categorization Indoor
Equipment Futsal ball (similar to football)

Futsal is a variant of association football that is played on a smaller playing surface and mainly played indoors. Its name is derived from the Portuguese futebol de salão and the Spanish fútbol de salón (colloquially fútbol sala), which can be translated as "hall football" or "indoor football". During the sport's second world championships held in Madrid in 1985, the name fútbol de salón was used. Since then, all other names have been officially and internationally changed to futsal.

Futsal is played between two teams each with five players, one of whom is the goalkeeper. Unlimited substitutes per team are permitted. Unlike some other forms of indoor football, the game is played on a hard court surface delimited by lines; walls or boards are not used. Futsal is also played with a smaller ball with less bounce than a regular football.[1] The rules create an emphasis on improvisation, creativity and technique as well as ball control and passing in small spaces.[2]

Contents

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[edit] History

Futsal started in Montevideo, Uruguay, in 1930, when Juan Carlos Ceriani created a version of football for competition in YMCAs. In Brazil, this version developed on the streets of São Paulo, and, eventually, a rule book was published. The sport began to spread across South America, and its popularity ensured that a governing body was formed under the name of FIFUSA (Federación Internacional de Fútbol de Salón) in 1971, along with the World Championships. The first World Championships were held in Río de Janeiro, with hosts Brazil crowned champions ahead of Paraguay. Even more countries participated in the second World Championships held in Las Vegas in early 2000's.[3] Due to a dispute between FIFA and FIFUSA over the administration of fútbol, FIFUSA coined the word fut-sal in 1985.

FIFA took control of the World Championships in 1989. Under new rules made by FIFA, the technical aspects of the game for players and spectators were improved. The linesmen were replaced with a second referee, and there were unlimited substitutions.[4] It also introduced a size 4 football, which was weighted to reduce bounce by 30% compared to a conventional ball, which enabled faster play and, for the first time, scoring goals with the head.[3][5]

BrazilArgentina futsal game

FIFA's relationships with its member associations allowed more countries to gain knowledge and resources about futsal.[3] FIFA soon began to administer its own indoor football games, hosting its first FIFA Indoor Soccer World Championship in 1989 in Rotterdam, Netherlands. In 1992, it was the FIFA Five-a-Side World Championship (Hong Kong), and, since 1996, it has been called the FIFA Futsal World Championship. Thanks to the increase of the number of nations that participated in the FIFA Futsal World Championships held in 2000, Brazil's dominance in the competition was ended by Spain.[3]

In 2004, members of PANAFUTSAL (La Confederación Panamericana de Futsal, The Pan-American Futsal Confederation) formed AMF (Asociación Mundial de Fútbol de Salón, World Futsal Association), an international futsal governing body independent of FIFA. Both FIFA and AMF continue to administer the game.[6]

Rules

As international governing bodies of futsal, FIFA and AMF are responsible for maintaining and promulgating the official rules of their respective versions of futsal. Like football, futsal has laws that define all aspects of the game, including what may be changed to suit local competitions and leagues. There are seventeen laws in the Futsal Laws of the Game.

Players, equipment and officials

The Brazil national futsal team line up before a match.

There are five players on each team, one of whom is the goalkeeper. The maximum number of substitutes allowed is seven, with unlimited substitutions during the match. Substitutes can come on even when the ball is in play.[8] If a team has fewer than three players in the team, the match is abandoned.[9]

The kit is made up of a jersey or shirt with sleeves, shorts, socks, shinguards made out of rubber or plastic, and shoes with rubber soles. The goalkeeper is allowed to wear long trousers and a different coloured kit, to distinguish himself from the other players in the team and the referee. Jewellery is not allowed, as are other items that could be dangerous to the player wearing the effects or to other active participants.[10]

The match is controlled by a referee, who enforces the Laws of the Game, and the first referee is the only one who can abandon the match because of interference from outside the pitch. This referee is also assisted by a second referee. The decisions made by the referees are final and can only be changed if the referees think it is necessary and play has not restarted.[11] There is also a third referee and a timekeeper, who are provided with equipment to keep a record of fouls in the match. In the event of injury to the referee or second referee, the third referee will replace the second referee. [12]

[edit] The pitch

A futsal pitch

The pitch is made up of wood or artificial material, Yinghui Court, or similar surface, although any flat, smooth and non-abrasive material may be used. The length of the pitch is in the range of 38–42 m (42–46 yd), and the width is in the range of 18–25 m in international matches. For other matches, it can be 25–42 m (27–46 yd)in length, while the width can be 15–25 m (16–27 yd), as long as the length of the longer boundary lines (touchlines) are greater than the shorter boundaries where the goals are placed (goal lines).[13] The ceiling must be at least 4 m (4 yd) high.[14] A rectangular goal is positioned at the middle of each goal line. The inner edges of the vertical goal posts must be 3 m (3 yd) apart, and the lower edge of the horizontal crossbar supported by the goal posts must be 2 m (2.2 yd) above the ground. Nets made of hemp, jute or nylon are attached to the back of the goalposts and crossbar. The lower part of the nets is attached to curved tubing or another suitable means of support. The depth of the goal is 80 cm at the top and 1 m at the bottom.[15]

A futsal arena in Tokyo

In front of each goal is an area known as the penalty area. This area is created by drawing quarter-circles with a 6 m (7 yd) radius from the goal line, centred on the goalposts. The upper part of each quarter-circle is then joined by a 3.16 m (3.46 yd) line running parallel to the goal line between the goalposts. The line marking the edge of the penalty area is known as the penalty area line.[16] The penalty area marks where the goalkeeper is allowed to touch the ball with his hands. The penalty mark is six metres from the goal line when it reaches the middle of the goalposts. The second penalty mark is 10 metres (11 yd) from the goal line when it reaches the middle of the goalposts. A penalty kick from the penalty spot is awarded if a player commits a foul inside the penalty area.[17] The second penalty spot is used if a player commits his team's sixth foul in the opposing team's half or in his own half in the area bordered by the halfway line and an imaginary line parallel to the halfway line passing through the second penalty mark; the free kick is taken from the second penalty mark.[18]

Duration and tie-breaking methods

A standard match consists of two equal periods of 20 minutes. The length of either half is extended to allow penalty kicks to be taken or a direct free kick to be taken against a team that has committed more than five fouls. The halftime interval between the two halves cannot exceed 15 minutes.[19]

In some competitions, the game cannot end in a draw, so away goals, extra time and penalties are the three methods for determining the winner after a match has been drawn. Away goals mean that if the team's score is level after playing one home and one away game, the goals scored in the away match count as double. Extra time consists of two periods of five minutes. If no winner is produced after these methods, five penalties are taken, and the team that has scored the most wins. If it is not decided after five penalties, it continues to go on with one extra penalty to each team at a time until one of them has scored more goals than the other. Unlike extra time, the goals scored in a penalty shoot-out do not count towards the goals scored throughout the match.[20]

The start and restart of play

At the beginning of the match, a coin toss is used to decide who will start the match. A kick-off is used to signal the start of play and is also used at the start of the second half and any periods of extra time. It is also used after a goal has been scored, with the other team starting the play.[21] After a temporary stoppage for any reason not mentioned in the Laws of the Game, the referee will drop the ball where the play was stopped, provided that, prior to the stoppage, the ball was in play and had not crossed either the touch lines or goal lines.[22]

If the ball goes over the goal line or touchline, hits the ceiling, or the play is stopped by the referee, the ball is out of play. If it hits the ceiling of an indoor arena, play is restarted with a kick-in to the opponents of the team that last touched the ball, under the place where it hit the ceiling.[14]

Misconduct


Players are cautioned with a yellow card and sent off with a red card.

A direct free kick can be awarded to the opposing team if a player succeeds or attempts to kick or trip an opponent, jumps, charges or pushes an opponent, or strikes or attempts to strike an opponent. Holding, touching or spitting at an opponent are offenses that are worthy of a direct free kick, as are sliding in to play the ball while an opponent is playing it or carrying, striking or throwing the ball (except the goalkeeper). These are all accumulated fouls. The direct free kick is taken where the infringement occurred, unless it is awarded to the defending team in their penalty area, in which case the free kick may be taken from anywhere inside the penalty area.[23] A penalty kick is awarded if a player commits one of the fouls that are worthy of a direct free kick inside his own penalty area. The position of the ball does not matter as long as it is in play.[24]

An indirect free kick is awarded to the opposing team if a goalkeeper clears the ball but then touches it with his hands before anyone else, if he controls the ball with his hands when it has been kicked to him by a teammate, or if he touches or controls the ball with his hands or feet in his own half for more than four seconds.[24] An indirect free kick is also awarded to the opposing team if a player plays in a dangerous manner, deliberately obstructs an opponent, prevents the goalkeeper from throwing the ball with his hands or anything else for which play is stopped to caution or dismiss a player. The indirect free kick is taken from the place where the infringement occurred.[24]

Yellow and red cards are both used in futsal. The yellow card is to caution players over their actions, and, if they get two, they are given a red card, which means they are sent off the field. A yellow card is shown if a player shows unsporting behaviour, dissent, persistent infringement of the Laws of the Game, delaying the restart of play, failing to respect the distance of the player from the ball when play is being restarted, infringement of substitution procedure or entering, re-entering and leaving the pitch without the referee's permission.[25] A player is shown the red card and sent off if they engage in serious foul play, violent conduct, spitting at another person, or denying the opposing team a goal by handling the ball (except the goalkeeper inside his penalty area). Also punishable with a red card is denying an opponent moving towards the player's goal a goalscoring opportunity by committing an offence punishable by a free kick or a penalty kick and using offensive, insulting or abusive language or gestures.[25] A player who has been sent off must leave the vicinity of the pitch. A substitute player is permitted to come on two minutes after a teammate has been sent off, unless a goal is scored before the end of the two minutes. If a team of five players scores against a team of fewer than five players, another player can be added to the team with fewer than five players. If the teams are equal when the goal is scored or if the team with fewer players scores, both teams remain with the same number of players.[26]

Ranking

As of February 28, 2011, the top 20 teams according to the ELO-based rankings are:[27]

# Team Points
1 Spain 1978
2 Brazil 1970
3 Italy 1747
4 Russia 1658
5 Iran 1642
6 Portugal 1632
7 Argentina 1493
8 Ukraine 1477
9 Paraguay 1431
10 Serbia 1392
11 Japan 1356
12 Thailand 1348
13 Azerbaijan 1346
14 Czech Republic 1333
15 Belarus 1319
16 Croatia 1314
17 Uzbekistan 1300
18 Romania 1296
19 Slovenia 1280
20 Slovakia 1265

As of February 12, 2011, according to an alternative ranking, based partly on the ELO system and partly on a form-based system, the top 20 teams are:[28]

# Team Points
1 Spain 2391
2 Brazil 2351
3 Iran 2258
4 Portugal 2242
5 Russia 2241
6 Italy 2239
7 Argentina 2175
8 Paraguay 2160
9 Colombia 2126
10 Serbia 2123
11 Uruguay 2086
12 Azerbaijan 2080
13 Czech Republic 2073
14 Ukraine 2063
15 Guatemala 2032
16 Croatia 2026
17 Slovenia 2022
18 Belgium 2018
19 Hungary 2016
20 Belarus 2016

Competitions

Men's national teams

International

Competition Year City Country Winner Gold medal icon.svg Runner-Up Silver medal icon.svg 3rd Bronze medal icon.svg 4th
FIFA Futsal World Cups 1989 Rotterdam Netherlands Brazil Netherlands United States Belgium
1992 Hong Kong China Brazil United States Spain Iran
1996 Barcelona Spain Brazil Spain Russia Ukraine
2000 Guatemala City Guatemala Spain Brazil Portugal Russia
2004 Taipei City Chinese Taipei Spain Italy Brazil Argentina
2008 Rio de Janeiro Brazil Brazil Spain Italy Russia
Al-Fateh Confederations Futsal Cup 2009 Tripoli Libya Iran Uruguay Libya Guatemala
Mediterranean Futsal Cup 2010 Tripoli Libya Croatia Libya Slovenia France
Pan American Games 2007 Rio de Janeiro Brazil Brazil Argentina Paraguay Costa Rica
FIFUSA World Futsal Championships 1982 São Paulo Brazil Brazil Paraguay Uruguay Colombia
1985 Madrid Spain Brazil Spain Paraguay Argentina
1988 Melbourne Australia Paraguay Brazil Spain Portugal
1991
Italy Portugal Paraguay Brazil Bolivia
1994
Argentina Argentina Colombia Uruguay Brazil
1997
Mexico Venezuela Uruguay Brazil Russia
2000
Bolivia Colombia Bolivia Argentina Russia
AMF World Futsal Championships 2003 Asunción Paraguay Paraguay Colombia Bolivia Peru
2007 Mendoza Argentina Paraguay Argentina Colombia Peru
Futsal Mundialito 1994 Milano Italy Italy Croatia Spain Hungary
1995 Rio de Janeiro Brazil Brazil Italy Spain United States
1996 Rio de Janeiro Brazil Brazil Paraguay Argentina United States
1998 Rio de Janeiro Brazil Brazil Argentina United States Italy
2001 Joinville Brazil Brazil Argentina Portugal Czech Republic
2002 Reggio Calabria Italy Brazil Italy Russia Argentina
2006 Algarve Portugal Portugal Croatia Angola Mozambique
2007 Algarve Portugal Portugal Slovakia Hungary Croatia
2008 Algarve Portugal Portugal Hungary Angola Libya
Grand Prix de Futsal 2005 Brusque Brazil Brazil Colombia Argentina Uruguay
2006 Caxias do Sul Brazil Brazil Italy Croatia Argentina
2007
Brazil Brazil Iran Argentina Hungary
2008 Fortaleza Brazil Brazil Argentina Ukraine Paraguay
2009 Anápolis & Goiânia Brazil Brazil Iran Romania Czech Republic
2010 Anápolis Brazil Spain Brazil Paraguay Iran
Arab Futsal Championship 1998 Cairo Egypt Egypt Morocco Libya Palestine
2005 Cairo Egypt Egypt Morocco Lebanon Libya
2007 Tripoli Libya Libya Egypt Lebanon Morocco
2008 Port Said Egypt Libya Egypt Jordan Lebanon

Continental (major)

Continental Year Country Winner Gold medal icon.svg Runner-Up Silver medal icon.svg 3rd Bronze medal icon.svg 4th
Africa 1996 Egypt Egypt Ghana Zimbabwe Somalia
2000 Egypt Egypt Morocco Libya South Africa
2004
Egypt Mozambique Morocco
2008 Libya Libya Egypt Morocco Mozambique
Asia 1999 Malaysia Iran South Korea Kazakhstan Japan
2000 Thailand Iran Kazakhstan Thailand Japan
2001 Iran Iran Uzbekistan South Korea Japan
2002 Indonesia Iran Japan Thailand South Korea
2003 Iran Iran Japan Thailand Kuwait
2004 Macau Iran Japan Thailand Uzbekistan
2005 Vietnam Iran Japan Uzbekistan
Kyrgyzstan

2006 Uzbekistan Japan Uzbekistan Iran Kyrgyzstan
2007 Japan Iran Japan Uzbekistan Kyrgyzstan
2008 Thailand Iran Thailand Japan China
2010 Uzbekistan Iran Uzbekistan Japan China
Europe (UEFA) 1996 Spain Spain Russia Belgium Italy
1999 Spain Russia Spain Italy Netherlands
2001 Russia Spain Ukraine Russia Italy
2003 Italy Italy Ukraine Spain Czech Republic
2005 Czech Republic Spain Russia Italy Ukraine
2007 Portugal Spain Italy Russia Portugal
2010 Hungary Spain Portugal Czech Republic Azerbaijan
Europe (UEFS) 1989 Spain Portugal Spain Czechoslovakia Israel
1990 Portugal Portugal Czechoslovakia Spain England
1992 Portugal Spain Russia Portugal Israel
1995 Morocco Slovakia Morocco Russia Czech Republic
1998 Slovakia Russia Spain Slovakia Belarus
2004 Belarus Belarus Czech Republic Russia Ukraine
2006 Catalonia Russia Catalonia Czech Republic Belgium
2008 Belgium Russia Czech Republic Belarus Belgium
2010 Russia Russia Belgium Czech Republic Belarus
North American and Central American 1996 Guatemala United States Cuba Mexico Guatemala
2000 Costa Rica Costa Rica Cuba United States Mexico
2004 Costa Rica United States Cuba Costa Rica Mexico
2008 Guatemala Guatemala Cuba United States Panama
Oceanian 1992 Australia Australia Vanuatu New Zealand
1996 Vanuatu Australia Vanuatu Fiji Samoa
1999 Vanuatu Australia Fiji Vanuatu Papua New Guinea
2004 Australia Australia New Zealand Vanuatu Fiji
2008 Fiji Solomon Islands French Polynesia Vanuatu New Zealand
2009 Fiji Solomon Islands Fiji Vanuatu New Caledonia
South American 1964 Paraguay Paraguay Brazil

1969 Paraguay Brazil Paraguay Argentina Uruguay
1971 Brazil Brazil Uruguay Paraguay Peru
1973 Uruguay Brazil Uruguay Paraguay Argentina
1975 Argentina Brazil Uruguay Paraguay Argentina
1976 Uruguay Brazil Paraguay Uruguay Argentina
1977 Brazil Brazil Paraguay Colombia Uruguay
1979 Colombia Brazil Uruguay

1983 Uruguay Brazil Paraguay Uruguay Argentina
1986 Argentina Brazil Paraguay Argentina Uruguay
1989 Brazil Brazil Paraguay Uruguay Bolivia
1992 Brazil Brazil Argentina Paraguay Ecuador
1995 Brazil Brazil Argentina Uruguay Paraguay
1996 Brazil Brazil Uruguay Argentina Paraguay
1997 Brazil Brazil Argentina Paraguay
1998 Brazil Brazil Paraguay Uruguay
1999 Brazil Brazil Uruguay Argentina
2000 Brazil Brazil Argentina Uruguay Bolivia
2003 Paraguay Argentina Brazil Paraguay Peru
2008 Uruguay Brazil Uruguay Argentina Paraguay

Continental (minor)

Africa
Asia
South America

Clubs

Women's national teams

International

Competition Year Host Winner Gold medal icon.svg Runner-Up Silver medal icon.svg 3rd Bronze medal icon.svg 4th
AMF World Futsal Championships 2008 Catalonia Catalonia Galicia Colombia Russia
Women's Futsal World Cup 2010 Spain Brazil Portugal Russia & Spain

Continental

Continental Year Host Winner Gold medal icon.svg Runner-Up Silver medal icon.svg 3rd Bronze medal icon.svg 4th
Europe (UEFS) 2001 Russia Russia Belarus Ukraine Italy
2004 Russia Russia Catalonia Ukraine Belgium
2007 Czech Republic Czech Republic Russia Slovakia Ukraine
2009 Poland Russia - Czech Republic Catalonia
South American 2005 Brazil Brazil Ecuador Argentina Uruguay
2007 Ecuador Brazil Colombia Venezuela Uruguay

Women's Ranking

As of February 12, 2011, according to a ranking based partly on the ELO system and partly on a form-based system, the top 10 teams are:[28]

# Team Points
1 Brazil 2237
2 Spain 2132
3 Portugal 2094
4 Russia 1977
5 Colombia 1954
6 Ukraine 1947
7 Japan 1873
8 Australia 1822
9 Netherlands 1819
10 Iran 1796

See also

References

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External links