FIFA World Cup records and statistics
Appearance
This is a list of records of the FIFA World Cup and its qualification matches.
Team
Overall
- Most World Cup appearances
- 19, Brazil (only country to appear in every World Cup)
- For a detailed list, see National team appearances in the FIFA World Cup
- Most championships
- 5, Brazil
- Most appearances in a World Cup final
- 7 , Germany
- Most appearances in World Cup semifinal
- 12, Germany
- For a detailed list of top four appearances, see FIFA World Cup results
- Most matches played
- 99, Germany
- Fewest matches played
- 1, Indonesia (as Dutch East Indies)
- Most wins
- 67, Brazil
- Most losses
- 24, Mexico
- Most draws
- 21, Italy
- Most matches played without a win or a draw
- 6, El Salvador
- Most matches played without a win
- 6, Bolivia, New Zealand and El Salvador
- Most goals scored
- 210, Brazil
- Most goals conceded
- 115, Germany
- Fewest goals scored
- 0, Canada, China, Indonesia (as Dutch East Indies), Trinidad and Tobago, and DR Congo (as Zaire).
- Fewest goals conceded
- 2, Angola
- Highest average of goals scored per match
- 2.72, Hungary
- Lowest average of goals conceded per match
- 0.67, Angola (2 goals in 3 matches)[1]
- Most meetings between two teams
- 7 times, Brazil vs Sweden (1938, 1950, 1958, 1978, 1990 and twice in 1994) and Germany vs Yugoslavia / Serbia (1954, 1958, 1962, 1974, 1990, 1998 and 2010)
- Most meetings between two teams, Final match
- 2 times, Brazil vs Italy (1970 & 1994) & Argentina vs Germany (1986 & 1990)
- Most appearances, always advancing from first round
- 3,[2] Republic of Ireland
- Most appearances, never advancing from first round
- 8, Scotland
- Most matches to qualify for World Cup Finals
- 20, Uruguay (2002 & 2010)
- Largest distance travelled in a single qualifying campaign
- 55,000 miles: New Zealand (1982)[3]
In one tournament
- Most wins
- [4] 7, Brazil, 2002
- Fewest wins, champions
- 3, Uruguay, 1950
- Most matches not won, champions
- 3, Italy, 1982
- Most losses, champions
- 1, Germany, 1954 and 1974; Argentina, 1978
- Most goals scored
- 27, Hungary, 1954
- Fewest goals conceded
- 0, Switzerland, 2006
- Most goals conceded
- 16, South Korea, 1954
- Most minutes without conceding a goal
- 517 mins, Italy, 1990
- Highest goal difference
- +17, Hungary, 1954
- Highest goal difference, champions
- +14, Brazil, 2002
- Lowest goal difference
- -16, South Korea, 1954
- Lowest goal difference, champions
- +6, Italy, 1982
- Highest average of goals scored per match
- 5.40, Hungary, 1954
- Most goals scored, champions
- 25, Germany, 1954
- Fewest goals scored, champions
- 8, Spain, 2010
- Fewest goals conceded, champions
- 2, France, 1998, and Italy, 2006
- Most goals conceded, champions
- 14, Germany, 1954
- Lowest average of goals scored per match, champions
- 1.14, Spain, 2010
- Worst performance by a defending champion
- 1 draw, 2 losses (goal difference 0-3), France, 2002[5]
Streaks
- Most consecutive championships
- 2, Italy (1934–1938) and Brazil (1958–1962).
- Most consecutive final matches
- 3, Germany (1982–1990) and Brazil (1994–2002).
- Most consecutive runners-up
- 2, Netherlands (1974–1978) and Germany (1982–1986).
- Most consecutive finals tournaments
- 19, Brazil (1930–2010).
- Most consecutive successful qualification attempts[6]
- 7, Spain (1986–2010).
- Most consecutive failed qualification attempts
- 18, Luxembourg (1934–2010).
- Most consecutive wins
- 11, Brazil, from 2–1 Turkey (2002) to 3–0 Ghana (2006).
- Most consecutive matches without a loss
- 13, Brazil, from 3–0 Austria (1958) to 2–0 Bulgaria (1966).
- Most consecutive losses
- 9, Mexico, from 1–4 France (1930) to 0–3 Sweden (1958)
- Most consecutive matches without a win
- 17, Bulgaria, from 0–1 Argentina (1962) to 0–3 Nigeria (1994).
- Most consecutive draws
- 5, Belgium, from 0–0 Netherlands (1998) to 1–1 Tunisia (2002).
- Most consecutive matches without a draw
- 16, Portugal, from 3–1 Hungary (1966) to 1–0 Netherlands (2006).
- Most consecutive matches scoring at least one goal
- 18, Brazil (1930–1958) and Germany (1934–1958).
- Most consecutive matches scoring at least two goals
- 11, Uruguay (1930–1954)
- Most consecutive matches scoring at least three / four goals
- 4, Uruguay (1930–1950) and Hungary (1954) (four goals); also Portugal (1966), Germany (1970), Brazil (1970),
- Most consecutive matches scoring at least six / eight goals
- 2, Hungary (1954) (eight goals); also Brazil (1950) (six goals)
- Most consecutive matches without scoring a goal
- 5, Bolivia (1930–1994).
- Most consecutive matches without conceding a goal (clean sheets)
- 5, Italy (1990) and Switzerland (2006–2010).
- Most consecutive minutes without conceding a goal
- 559, Switzerland (1994, 2006–2010)[7][8].
- Most consecutive matches conceding at least one goal
- 22, Switzerland (1934–1994).
- Most consecutive matches conceding at least two goals
- 9, Mexico (1930–1958).
- Most consecutive matches conceding at least three goals
- 5, Mexico (1930–1950).
- Most consecutive matches conceding at least four goals
- 3, Bolivia (1930–1950), Mexico (1930–1950).
- Most consecutive matches conceding at least five / six / seven goals
- 2, South Korea (1954) (seven goals); also United States (1930–1934) (six goals); also Austria (1954) (five goals).
Individual
- For records regarding goalscoring, see Goalscoring; for records regarding goalkeeping, see Goalkeeping
- Most tournaments played
- 5, Antonio Carbajal ( Mexico, 1950–1966) and Lothar Matthäus ( Germany, 1982–1998).
- See here for a list of players who have appeared in multiple FIFA World Cups
- Most championships
- 3, Pelé ( Brazil, 1958, 1962 and 1970).
- See here for a list of players who have won multiple FIFA World Cups
- Most matches played, finals
- 25, Lothar Matthäus ( Germany, 1982–1998).
- Most minutes played, finals
- 2,217 minutes, Paolo Maldini ( Italy, 1990–2002).
- Most matches played, qualifying
- 68, Iván Hurtado ( Ecuador, 1994–2010)
- Most matches won
- 16, Cafu ( Brazil, 1994–2006).
- Most appearances in a World Cup final
- 3, Cafu ( Brazil, 1994–2002).[9]
- Most appearances as captain
- 16, Diego Maradona ( Argentina, 1986–1994).
- Most appearances as substitute
- 11, Denílson ( Brazil, 1998–2002).
- Youngest player
- 17 years and 41 days, Norman Whiteside ( Northern Ireland, vs Yugoslavia, 1982).
- Youngest player, final
- 17 years and 249 days, Pele ( Brazil, vs Sweden, 1958).
- Youngest player, qualifying match
- 13 years and 310 days, Souleymane Mamam ( Togo, vs Zambia, May 6, 2001, 2002 CAF Group 1).[10]
- Youngest captain
- 21 years and 109 days, Tony Meola ( United States, vs Czechoslovakia, June 10, 1990).[11]
- Oldest player
- 42 years and 39 days, Roger Milla ( Cameroon, vs Russia, 1994).
- Oldest player, final
- 40 years and 133 days, Dino Zoff ( Italy, vs Germany, 1982).
- Oldest player, qualifying match
- 46 years and 180 days, MacDonald Taylor ( U.S. Virgin Islands, vs St. Kitts and Nevis, February 18, 2004, 2006 CONCACAF Prelim Group 4).[12]
- Oldest captain
- 40 years and 292 days, Peter Shilton ( England, vs Italy, July 7, 1990).
- Oldest player to debut in a World Cup finals tournament
- 39 years and 321 days, David James ( England, vs Algeria, June 18, 2010).
- Largest age difference on the same team
- 24 years and 42 days, 1994, Cameroon (Rigobert Song: 17 years and 358 days; Roger Milla: 42 years and 35 days).
- Largest age difference on a champion team
- 21 years and 297 days, 1982, Italy (Dino Zoff: 40 years and 133 days; Giuseppe Bergomi: 18 years and 201 days).
- Longest period between World Cup finals appearances as a player
- 12 years and 13 days, Alfred Bickel ( Switzerland, 1938–1950).
- Longest span of World Cup finals appearances as a player
- 16 years, Antonio Carbajal ( Mexico, 1950–1966); Elías Figueroa ( Chile, 1966–1982); Hugo Sánchez ( Mexico, 1978–1994); Giuseppe Bergomi ( Italy, 1982–1998); Lothar Matthäus ( Germany, 1982–1998); Rigobert Song ( Cameroon, 1994–2010).
- Longest period between World Cup finals appearances, overall
- 44 years, Tim ( Brazil, 1938, as a player; and Peru, 1982, as coach).
Goalscoring
Individual
- Most goals scored, overall finals
- 15, Ronaldo ( Brazil, 1998–2006).
- For a detailed list of the overall top goalscorers, see FIFA World Cup goalscorers#Overall top goalscorers
- Most goals scored, overall qualifying
- 35, Ali Daei ( Iran, 1994–2006).[13]
- Most goals scored in a tournament
- 13, Just Fontaine ( France), 1958.
- For a detailed list of top goalscorers in each tournament (Golden Boot winner), see FIFA World Cup awards#Golden Boot
- Most goals scored in a match
- 5, Oleg Salenko ( Russia, vs Cameroon, 1994).
- Most goals scored in a lost match
- 4, Ernest Wilimowski ( Poland, vs Brazil, 1938).
- Most goals scored in a qualifying match
- 13, Archie Thompson ( Australia, vs American Samoa, 2002 OFC Group 1).
- Most goals scored in one Final
- 3, Geoff Hurst ( England, vs West Germany, 1966).
- Most goals scored in all Final matches
- 3, Vavá ( Brazil, 2 vs Sweden in 1958 & 1 vs Czechoslovakia in 1962), Pelé ( Brazil, 2 vs Sweden in 1958 & 1 vs Italy in 1970), Geoff Hurst ( England, 3 vs West Germany in 1966), and Zinedine Zidane ( France, 2 vs Brazil in 1998 & 1 vs Italy in 2006).
- Most matches with at least one goal
- 11, Ronaldo ( Brazil, 1998–2006).
- Most consecutive matches with at least one goal
- 6, Just Fontaine ( France, 1958) and Jairzinho ( Brazil, 1970).
- Most matches with at least two goals
- 4, Sándor Kocsis ( Hungary, 1954), Just Fontaine ( France, 1958), and Ronaldo ( Brazil, 1998–2006).
- Most consecutive matches with at least two goals
- 4, Sándor Kocsis ( Hungary, 1954).
- Most hat-tricks
- 2, Sándor Kocsis ( Hungary, 1954), Just Fontaine ( France, 1958), Gerd Müller ( West Germany, 1970), and Gabriel Batistuta ( Argentina, 1994 and 1998).
- Most consecutive hat-tricks
- 2, Sándor Kocsis ( Hungary, 1954) and Gerd Müller ( West Germany, 1970).
- Fastest hat-trick & Most goals scored by a substitute in a match
- 8 minutes, László Kiss ( Hungary), scored at 69', 72', and 76' against El Salvador, 1982.
- Hat-tricks from the penalty spot
- Never occurred in the final tournament. Thrice in qualification: Kubilay Türkyilmaz ( Switzerland, vs Faroe Islands, October 7, 2000, 2002 UEFA Group 1); Henrik Larsson ( Sweden, vs Moldova, June 6, 2001, 2002 UEFA Group 4); Ronaldo ( Brazil, vs Argentina, June 2, 2004, 2006 CONMEBOL).
- Scoring in every match of a World Cup
- Alcides Ghiggia ( Uruguay), 4 goals in 4 matches (1950), Just Fontaine ( France), 13 goals in 6 matches (1958), Jairzinho ( Brazil), 7 goals in 6 matches (1970).[14]
- Most tournaments with at least one goal
- 4, Pelé ( Brazil, 1958–1970) and Uwe Seeler ( West Germany, 1958–1970).
- Most tournaments with at least two goals
- 4, Uwe Seeler ( West Germany, 1958–1970).
- Most tournaments with at least three goals
- 3, Jürgen Klinsmann ( Germany, 1990–1998), Ronaldo ( Brazil, 1998–2006), and Miroslav Klose ( Germany, 2002–2010).
- Most tournaments with at least four goals
- 3, Miroslav Klose ( Germany, 2002–2010).
- Most tournaments with at least five goals
- 2, Teófilo Cubillas ( Peru 1970, 1978) and Miroslav Klose ( Germany, 2002–2006).
- Longest period between a player's first and last goals
- 12 years, Pelé ( Brazil, 1958–1970), Uwe Seeler ( West Germany, 1958–1970), Diego Maradona ( Argentina, 1982–1994), Michael Laudrup ( Denmark, 1986–1998), Henrik Larsson ( Sweden, 1994–2006), Sami Al-Jaber ( Saudi Arabia, 1994–2006), and Cuauhtémoc Blanco ( Mexico, 1998–2010).
- Youngest goalscorer
- 17 years and 239 days, Pelé ( Brazil, vs Wales, 1958).
- Youngest hat-trick scorer
- 17 years and 244 days, Pelé ( Brazil, vs France, 1958).
- Youngest goalscorer, final
- 17 years and 249 days, Pelé ( Brazil, vs Sweden, 1958).
- Oldest goalscorer
- 42 years and 39 days, Roger Milla ( Cameroon, vs Russia, 1994).
- Oldest hat-trick scorer
- 33 years and 159 days, Tore Keller ( Sweden, vs Cuba, 1938).[15]
- Oldest goalscorer, final
- 35 years, 263 days, Nils Liedholm ( Sweden, vs Brazil, 1958).
- Most penalties scored (excluding during shootouts)
- 4, Eusébio ( Portugal, 4 in 1966), Rob Rensenbrink ( Netherlands, 4 in 1978) – both records for one tournament – and Gabriel Batistuta ( Argentina, 2 each in 1994 and 1998).
- Most penalties missed (excluding during shootouts)
- 2, Asamoah Gyan ( Ghana, 2006 vs Czech Republic and 2010 vs Uruguay).
- Fastest goal in a Fifa World Cup
- 10.89 seconds, Hakan Şükür ( Turkey, vs Korea Republic, June 29, 2002, 2002).
- For a detailed list of the fastest goals from kickoff, see below
- Fastest goal by a substitute
- 16 seconds, Ebbe Sand ( Denmark, vs Nigeria, June 28, 1998, 1998).
- Fastest goal in a final
- 90 seconds, Johan Neeskens ( Netherlands, vs West Germany, July 7, 1974, 1974).
- Fastest goal in a qualifying match
- 8 seconds, Davide Gualtieri ( San Marino, vs England, November 17, 1993, 1994 UEFA Group 2).
- Latest goal from kickoff
- 121st minute, Alessandro Del Piero ( Italy vs Germany, July 4, 2006, 2006).
- Latest goal from kickoff in a final
- 120th minute, Geoff Hurst ( England vs West Germany 1966) (see "they think it's all over").
Team
- Biggest margin of victory
- 9, Hungary (9) vs South Korea (0), 1954; Yugoslavia (9) vs Zaire (0), 1974; Hungary (10) vs El Salvador (1), 1982.
- Biggest margin of victory, qualifying match
- 31, Australia (31) vs American Samoa (0), April 11, 2001, 2002 OFC Group 1.
- Most goals scored in a match, one team
- 10, Hungary, vs El Salvador, 1982.
- Most goals scored in a match, both teams
- 12, Austria (7) vs Switzerland (5), 1954.
- Highest scoring draw
- 4–4, England vs Belgium (AET), 1954, and Soviet Union vs Colombia, 1962.
- Largest deficit overcome in a win
- 3 goals, Austria, 1954 (coming from 0–3 down to win 7–5 vs Switzerland) and Portugal, 1966 (coming from 0–3 down to win 5–3 vs North Korea).
- Largest deficit overcome in a draw
- 3 goals, Colombia, 1962 (coming from 0–3 down to draw 4–4 vs Soviet Union) and Uruguay, 2002 (coming from 0–3 down to draw 3–3 vs Senegal).
- Most goals scored in extra time, both teams
- 5, Italy (3) vs West Germany (2), 1970.
- Most goals scored in a final, one team
- 5, Brazil, 1958.
- Most goals scored in a final, both teams
- 7, Brazil (5) vs. Sweden (2), 1958.
- Fewest goals scored in a final, both teams
- 0, Brazil (0) vs. Italy (0), 1994.
- Biggest margin of victory in a final
- 3, France (3) vs. Brazil (0) 1998 and Brazil (4) vs. Italy (1), 1970 and Brazil (5) vs. Sweden (2), 1958.
- Largest deficit overcome in a win in a final
- 2, West Germany, 1954 (coming from 0–2 down to win 3–2 vs Hungary).
- Most goals in a tournament, one team
- 27, Hungary, 1954.
- Most individual goalscorers for one team, one match
- 7, Yugoslavia, vs Zaire, 1974 (Dušan Bajević, Dragan Džajić, Ivica Šurjak, Josip Katalinski, Vladislav Bogićević, Branko Oblak, Ilija Petković).
- Most individual goalscorers for one team, one tournament
- 10, France, 1982 (Gérard Soler, Bernard Genghini, Michel Platini, Didier Six, Maxime Bossis, Alain Giresse, Dominique Rocheteau, Marius Trésor, René Girard, Alain Couriol) and Italy, 2006 (Alessandro Del Piero, Alberto Gilardino, Fabio Grosso, Vincenzo Iaquinta, Filippo Inzaghi, Marco Materazzi, Andrea Pirlo, Luca Toni, Francesco Totti, Gianluca Zambrotta).
- Largest goal difference improvement in consecutive matches[16]
- +10: Turkey (1954) — lost 1–4 to West Germany, then won 7–0 over South Korea; and West Germany (1954) — lost 3–8 to Hungary, then won 7–2 over Turkey.
- Largest goal difference disimprovement in consecutive matches
- -12: Sweden (1938) — won 8–0 over Cuba, then lost 1–5 to Hungary ; Turkey (1954) — won 7–0 over South Korea, then lost 2–7 to West Germany; Hungary (1982) — won 10–1 over El Salvador, then lost 1–4 to Argentina.
Tournament
- Most goals scored in a tournament
- 171 goals, 1998.
- Fewest goals scored in a tournament
- 70 goals 1930 and 1934.
- Most goals per match in a tournament
- 5.38 goals per match, 1954.
- Fewest goals per match in a tournament
- 2.21 goals per match, 1990.
- Most scorers in a tournament
- 111, 1998.
- Most players scoring at least two goals in a tournament
- 37, 1998.
- Most players scoring at least three goals in a tournament
- 21, 1954.
- Most players scoring at least four goals in a tournament
- 11, 1954.
- Most players scoring at least five goals in a tournament
- 6, 1994 - Hristo Stoichkov ( Bulgaria), Oleg Salenko ( Russia), Romário ( Brazil), Jürgen Klinsmann ( Germany), Roberto Baggio ( Italy) and Kennet Andersson ( Sweden).
- Most players scoring at least six goals in a tournament
- 4, 1954 - Sándor Kocsis ( Hungary), Erich Probst ( Austria), Max Morlock ( West Germany) and Josef Hügi ( Switzerland).
- Most players scoring at least seven goals in a tournament
- 2, 1970 - Gerd Müller ( West Germany) and Jairzinho ( Brazil).
Own goals
- Most own goals in a match
- 2, United States vs Portugal, 2002 (Jorge Costa of Portugal and Jeff Agoos of USA).
- Scoring for both teams in the same match
- Ernie Brandts ( Netherlands, vs Italy, 1978 – own goal in the 18th minute, goal in the 50th minute).
Goalkeeping
- Most clean sheets (matches without conceding)
- 10, Peter Shilton ( England, 1982–1990) and Fabien Barthez ( France, 1998–2006)
- Most consecutive minutes without conceding a goal (finals)
- 517 mins (5 consecutive clean sheets), Walter Zenga ( Italy, 1990)
- Most consecutive minutes without conceding a goal (qualifying)
- 921 mins (9 consecutive clean sheets[17]), Richard Wilson ( New Zealand, 1982)
- Most goals conceded
- 25, Antonio Carbajal ( Mexico) and Mohamed Al-Deayea ( Saudi Arabia)
- Most goals conceded, one tournament
- 16, Hong Duk-Yung ( South Korea), 1954
- Most goals conceded, one match
- 10, Luis Guevara Mora ( El Salvador), 1982 (vs Hungary)
- Fewest goals conceded, one tournament, champions
- 2, Fabien Barthez ( France), 1998 and Gianluigi Buffon ( Italy, 2006)
- Fewest goals conceded, one tournament
- 0, Pascal Zuberbühler ( Switzerland), 2006[18]
- Most penalties saved, one tournament (excluding during shootouts)
- 2, Jan Tomaszewski ( Poland), 1974 and Brad Friedel ( United States), 2002
Coaching
- Most matches coached
- 25, Helmut Schön ( West Germany, 1966–1978).
- Most matches won
- 16, Helmut Schön ( West Germany, 1966–1978).
- Most championships
- 2, Vittorio Pozzo ( Italy, 1934–1938).
- Most tournaments
- 6, Carlos Alberto Parreira (1982, 1990–1998, 2006, 2010).
- Most nations coached
- 5, Bora Milutinović ( Mexico, 1986; Costa Rica, 1990; United States, 1994; Nigeria, 1998; China, 2002) and Carlos Alberto Parreira ( Kuwait, 1982; United Arab Emirates, 1990; Brazil, 1994 and 2006; Saudi Arabia, 1998; South Africa, 2010)
- Most consecutive wins
- 11, Luiz Felipe Scolari ( Brazil, 2002, 7 wins; Portugal, 2006, 4 wins – Portugal "won" its next match, the quarterfinal against England, by penalty kicks, which technically counts as a draw).
- Most consecutive matches without a loss
- 12, Luiz Felipe Scolari ( Brazil, 2002, 7 matches; Portugal, 2006, 5 matches).
- Youngest coach
- 27 years and 267 days, Juan José Tramutola ( Argentina, 1930)
- Oldest coach
- 71 years and 317 days, Otto Rehhagel ( Greece, 2010)
- Quickest substitution made
- 4th minute, Cesare Maldini, Giuseppe Bergomi for Alessandro Nesta ( Italy, vs Austria, 1998); Sven-Göran Eriksson, Peter Crouch for Michael Owen ( England, vs Sweden, 2006).
- Most championship wins as player and head coach
- 3, Mário Zagallo, Brazil (1958 & 1962 as player, 1970 as coach)[19]
- Most final appearances as player and head coach
- 5, Mário Zagallo, Brazil (1958 & 1962 as player, 1970, 1974 & 1998 as coach); Franz Beckenbauer, West Germany (1966–1974 as player, 1986 & 1990 as coach)
- Won tournaments as both player and head coach
- Mário Zagallo, Brazil (1958 & 1962 as player, 1970 as coach); Franz Beckenbauer, West Germany (1974 as player, 1990 as coach)
Refereeing
- Most tournaments
- 3 – John Langenus ( Belgium, 1930–1938), Ivan Eklind ( Sweden, 1934–1950), Benjamin Griffiths ( Wales, 1950–1958), Arthur Ellis ( England, 1950–1958), Juan Gardeazábal ( Spain, 1958–1966), Jamal Al Sharif ( Syria, 1986–1994), Joël Quiniou ( France, 1986–1994), Ali Mohamed Bujsaim ( UAE, 1994–2002), Óscar Ruiz ( Colombia, 2002–2010)
- Most matches refereed, overall
- 8 – Joël Quiniou ( France, 1986–1994) and Benito Archundia ( Mexico, 2006–2010)
- Most matches refereed, one tournament
- 5 – Benito Archundia ( Mexico, 2006) and Horacio Elizondo ( Argentina, 2006)
- Youngest referee
- 24 years and 193 days – Juan Gardeazábal ( Spain, 1958)
- Oldest referee
- 53 years and 236 days – George Reader ( England, 1950)
Discipline
Note: There are no official records for cautions issued in tournaments before the introduction of yellow cards in 1970.[20]
- Fastest caution
- first minute, Giampiero Marini ( Italy), vs Poland, 1982; Sergei Gorlukovich ( Russia), vs Sweden, 1994.
- Fastest sending off
- 56 seconds, José Batista ( Uruguay), vs Scotland, 1986.
- Latest caution
- during penalty shootout: Edinho ( Brazil) v France 1986; Carlos Roa ( Argentina), vs England, 1998.
- Latest sending off
- John Heitinga ( Netherlands), vs Spain, 2010.
- Sent off from the bench
- Claudio Caniggia ( Argentina), vs Sweden, 2002.
- Most cards (all-time, player)
- 6, Zinedine Zidane ( France, 1998–2006) and Cafu ( Brazil, 1994–2006).
- Most cautions (all-time, player)
- 6, Cafu ( Brazil, 1994–2006).
- Most sendings off (all-time, player)
- 2, Rigobert Song ( Cameroon, 1994 and 1998) and Zinedine Zidane ( France, 1998 and 2006).
- Most sendings off (tournament)
- 28 (in 64 games), 2006.
- Most sendings off (all-time, team)
- 10 (in 64 games), Argentina
- Most sendings off (match, both teams)
- 4 (2 each) in Portugal vs Netherlands , 2006. (referee: Valentin Ivanov)
- Most sendings off (final match)
- 2, Pedro Monzón & Gustavo Dezotti (both Argentina), v West Germany, 1990
- Most cautions (tournament)
- 345 (in 64 matches), 2006.
- Most cautions (all-time, team)
- 88 (in 64 games), Argentina
- Most cautions (match, one team)
- 9, Portugal, 2006, vs Netherlands
- Most cautions (match, both teams)
- 16 – Portugal vs Netherlands, 2006;[21] and Cameroon v Germany, June 11, 2002[22]
- Most cautions (match, player)
- 3 (61', 90', 93') Josip Šimunić ( Croatia), vs Australia, 2006 (referee: Graham Poll)[23]
- Most suspensions (tournament, player)
- 2, André Kana-Biyik ( Cameroon 1990)[24]
- Longest suspension (player, doping)
- 15 months, Diego Maradona ( Argentina vs Nigeria, 1994)[25]
- Longest suspension (player, misconduct)
- 8 matches, Mauro Tassotti ( Italy vs Spain, 1994) for elbowing Luis Enrique.[26]
- 1 year, Samir Shaker Mahmoud ( Iraq vs Belgium, 1986) for spitting at the referee[27][28]
- Longest suspension, qualifying
- Life (amnestied after 12 years): Roberto Rojas ( Chile vs Brazil, 1989) for feigning injury from a firecracker.[29]
Host Records
- Most times hosted
- 2, Mexico 1970 & 1986, Italy 1934 & 1990, France 1938 & 1998, Germany 1974 (as West Germany) & 2006.
- Best performance by host
- Champions, 6 times: Uruguay 1930, Italy 1934, England 1966, West Germany 1974, Argentina 1978, France 1998
- Worst performance by host
- South Africa in 2010 became the first host to be eliminated in the first round.[30] United States reached the second round in 1994 but finished with a worse W–D–L record (1–1–2 compared to 1–1–1).
Attendance
- Final
- 199,854, Uruguay vs Brazil, 16 July 1950, Maracanã Stadium, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, World Cup 1950.
- Lowest match attendance in a World Cup tournament
- 300, Romania vs Peru, 14 July 1930, Estadio Pocitos, Montevideo, Uruguay, World Cup 1930.
- Highest match attendance in a World Cup qualifying match
- 162,764, Brazil vs Colombia, 9 March 1977, Maracanã Stadium, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, 1978 CONMEBOL Group 1.
- Lowest match attendance in a World Cup qualifying match
- 0, Costa Rica vs Panama, 26 March 2005, Estadio Ricardo Saprissa, San Juan de Tibás, San José, Costa Rica, 2006 CONCACAF Final Group.[31][32]
- Highest average of attendance per match
- 68,991, 1994.
- Lowest average of attendance per match
- 23,235, 1934.
Penalty shootouts
- Most shootouts, team, all-time
- 4, Argentina, France, Germany and Italy
- Most shootouts, team, tournament
- 2, Argentina 1990 and Spain 2002
- Most shootouts, all teams, tournament
- 4, 1990, 2006
- Most wins, team, all-time
- 4, Germany
- Most wins, team, tournament
- 2, Argentina 1990
- Most losses, team, all-time
- 3, Italy and England
- Most shootouts, kicker, all-time & Most losses, kicker, all-time
- 3, Roberto Baggio, Italy (1990 semi-final, 1994 final, 1998 quarter final)
- Most goals, shootout, one team
- 5, West Germany 1982, Belgium 1986, Republic of Ireland 1990, Sweden 1994, South Korea 2002, Italy 2006, Paraguay 2010
- Most goals, shootout, both teams
- 9, (in 4 matches)
- Most goals, team, all-time
- 17, West Germany
- Most kicks taken, shootout, both teams
- 12, West Germany vs France 1982 and Sweden vs Romania 1994
- Most kicks taken, team, all-time
- 21, France
- Most kicks taken, team, one tournament
- 10, Spain 2002
- Most kicks missed, shootout, both teams
- 5, Argentina vs Yugoslavia 1990, Spain vs Republic of Ireland 2002 and Portugal vs England 2006
- Most kicks missed, team, all-time
- 7, England (in 3 shootouts) and Italy (in 4 shootouts)
- Fewest goals, shootout, one team
- 0, Switzerland 2006 vs Ukraine
- Fewest goals conceded during after-match penalty shootouts
- 0, Oleksandr Shovkovskiy ( Ukraine), 2006, vs Switzerland
- Most saves, all-time
- 4, Sergio Goycochea Argentina and Harald Schumacher Germany
- Most saves, tournament
- 4, Sergio Goycochea Argentina, 1990.
- Most saves, shootout
- 3, Ricardo Portugal, vs England, 2006.
References and footnotes
- ^ Other low averages, in ascending order of games played: 0.77 (from 11 games) Republic of Ireland; 0.85 (from 55) England; 0.89 (from 77) Italy; 0.91 (from 92) Brazil
- ^ Germany has never failed to advance from 14 first-round group phases, but lost its first-round knockout match in 1938
- ^ http://www.nzsoccer.com/page/1982_world_cup_team.html
- ^ France in 1998 had 6 match wins; the Italy match is regarded as drawn although France progressed via penalties. In addition, France's win against Paraguay happened after extra time, while Brazil won all their matches in regulation time.
- ^ 1930 champions Uruguay refused to enter the 1934 tournament, while four defending champions were eliminated in the first round: Italy in 1950, Brazil in 1966 (both winning one match), France in 2002 (drawing one match and scoring zero goals), and Italy in 2010 (drawing two matches).
- ^ Excluding automatic qualification as host, as reigning champion, or by invitation.
- ^ Reeves, Nick (2010-06-21). "Chile fell 10-man Swiss to close in on last 16". Yahoo! News. Agence France-Presse. Retrieved 2010-06-21.
Small consolation but the Swiss set a new World Cup record of 559 minutes played without scoring a goal, to overtake Italy's mark of 550 minutes.
- ^ "Attacking excellence, defensive distinction". FIFA World Cup. FIFA. 2010-06-21. Retrieved 2010-06-22.
9 hours and 19 minutes without conceding a goal enabled Switzerland to set a new and impressive FIFA World Cup record today. The Swiss, who started the day in third place behind Italy (550 minutes) and England (501), rose to the No1 position midway through the second half, but only had eight minutes to savour their new status. That was when Chile's Mark Gonzalez became the first player to score against the Helvetians since Spain's Txiki Beguiristain at USA 1994.
- ^ Pelé, Lothar Matthäus, Pierre Littbarski and Ronaldo each appeared 3 times in the squads of the teams that reached the finals, but none of them played in all three games.
- ^ FIFA official records claimed he was born in 1987, but some sources claimed he was born in 1985, which would mean he was 15 years and 310 days old when he played the match.
- ^ According to RSSSF's 1994 World Cup page, Fuad Amin of Saudi Arabia would have been the youngest captain, at 21 years & 250 days in the 1994, but the source does not specify the match in which he was captain. It is listed that the starting captain was substituted in both the match against the Netherlands and the one against Sweden, in which Amin may have been given the armband on the captains' substitutions, but this information has not been verified. In any case, Meola still is the youngest starting captain, and players who received the captain's armband during the course of the match are generally not regarded as official captains.
- ^ According to "FIFA World Cup Superlatives: Players". A FIFA report, however, indicates that Taylor participated in another match after that date, again versus St. Kitts and Nevis, on March 31, 2004, breaking his own record. If the age listed in the "Superlatives" (PDF) file corresponds to the February match, then in accordance with the match report from March the actual record would be 40 years and 222 days.
- ^ Communications Division (27 July 2007). "History of the FIFA World Cup Preliminary Competition (by year)" (PDF). Good to Know. FIFA. p. 42. Retrieved 2009-05-05.
- ^ Defined as a player who played all matches for a team that reached the final or the third-place match, meaning their team played the maximum number of matches. Because two opponents of Uruguay withdrew in 1950, Uruguay only played 4 matches instead of 6.
- ^ Some sources such as RSSSF indicated that it was Harry Andersson but not Tore Keller who scored a hat-trick in that match. (link)
- ^ Matches within one tournament. Otherwise, Hungary had a +11 swing between 2–4 v Italy in 1938 and 9–0 v South Korea in 1954; and again between 1–3 v France in 1978 and 10–1 v El Salvador in 1982; and likewise Germany between 0–3 v Croatia in 1998 and 8–0 v Saudi Arabia in 2002.
- ^ 9 consecutive clean sheets, 5 of them away from home over 2 qualifying rounds against 5 different oppositions from 2 Confederations.
- ^ Zuberbühler kept goal throughout every minute of Switzerland's 4 matches. Other keepers have kept clean sheets only playing part of their team's matches: Velloso (Brazil, 1930, 1 match of 2); Pedro Benítez (Paraguay, 1930, 1 of 2); József Háda (Hungary, 1938, 1 of 4); Giuseppe Moro (Italy, 1950, 1 of 2); István Ilku (Hungary, 1958, 1 of 4); Lorenzo Buffon (Italy, 1962, 2 of 3); Rogelio Domínguez (Argentina, 1962, 1 of 3); Adán Godoy (Chile, 1962, 1 of 6); Antonio Carbajal (Mexico, 1966, 1 of 3); Horst Wolter (West Germany, 1970, 1 of 6); József Szendrei (Hungary, 1986, 1 of 3); Viktor Chanov (USSR, 1986, 1 of 4); Manuel Bento (Portugal, 1986, 1 of 3); Plamen Nikolov (Bulgaria, 1994, 45 mins of 7); Vincent Enyeama (Nigeria, 2002, 1 of 3); Rami Shaaban (Sweden, 2006, 1 of 4); Santiago Cañizares (Spain, 2006, 1 of 4);
- ^ Zagallo was also an assistant coach when Brazil won in 1994.
- ^ Chris Goodwin & Peter Young. "England's World Cup Final Tournament Player Disciplinary Records". Retrieved 2006-11-03.
records of player discipline prior to the advent of yellow and red cards may not be complete.
- ^ 2006 Portugal – Netherlands match report
- ^ 2002 Cameroon – Germany FIFA match report
- ^ Šimunić was given three yellow cards in the match: the referee failed to send him off the pitch after the second yellow, and was only red carded after the third yellow. The original FIFA match report listed all three cautions, however was revised shortly after, with the second caution (90') not being recorded; it is unknown whether this was for consistency in the reports, or whether the caution was retrospectively overturned.
- ^ Biyik missed the team's second game after receiving a red card in the first; and then missed their fifth game after yellow cards in the third and fourth. Others, including Zinedine Zidane in 2006, have earned a second suspension in their team's final match of the tournament, not servable during the tournament.
- ^ Kerr, John H. (1997). Motivation and Emotion in Sport: reversal theory. Psychology Press. p. 2. ISBN 0863775004.
- ^
Culf, Andrew (27 July 1994). "Media umpires who point finger face questions of fair play". The Guardian. p. 5.
The Italian footballer Mauro Tassotti, who broke a Spanish player's nose with his elbow, was suspended for eight matches by FIFA during the World Cup. The referee missed the incident, but FIFA, using video footage for the first time, handed out the unprecedentedly severe punishment.
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Lewis, Michael (June–July, 2002). "The difference makers: from a do-everything goaltender to a snakebit sniper to America's newest, greatest hope, these will be the most influential players at the World Cup – The 2002 World Cup". Soccer Digest.
Iraq's Barmeer [sic] Shaker was slapped with a one-year suspension for spitting at a referee in a loss to Belgium (1986).
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"Banned for a year". The Toronto Star. 15 June 1986. p. E2.
Iraqi World Cup player Bameer [sic] Shaker has been banned for one year from international soccer for spitting at a referee.
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(help) - ^ "FIFA lifts Rojas lifetime ban". CBC Sports. 30 April 2001. Retrieved 2009-05-05.
- ^ Lucas, Ryan (22 June 2010). "South Africa beats France 2-1, but eliminated". The Associated Press. Retrieved 8 July 2010.
- ^ Reuters. "Costa Rica fans banned after violence". ESPN Soccernet. Retrieved 2007-02-13.
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(help) - ^ It has not been verified whether this is a unique occurrence, or if other World Cup qualification matches throughout history have had an attendance of 0.
External links
- FIFA World Cup superlatives – FIFA (PDF)
- Largest Margins of Victory – FIFA (PDF)
- Largest Crowds – FIFA (PDF)
- The Rec.Sport.Soccer Statistics Foundation (RSSSF)
- Template:De icon Worldcupportal.de – records