2008 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup

The 2008 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup was the fourth edition of the FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup, governed by FIFA. Overall, this was the 14th edition of a world cup in beach soccer since the establishment of the Beach Soccer World Championships which ran from 1995–2004 but was not governed by FIFA. It took place in Marseille, France, in the Plages du Prado from 17 to 27 July 2008. It was the first tournament to take place outside Brazil.

The winners of the tournament were Brazil, who won their third consecutive FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup title and their twelfth title overall.

Africa
The qualifiers to determine the two African nations who would play in the World Cup took place in Durban, South Africa for the third year running between March 25 and March 30. Eight nations took part in the competition, all of whom participated in the 2007 Championship, which eventually saw Senegal claim their first title, qualifying for the second successive World Cup and which saw Cameroon finish in second place, also qualifying for the second time.

Asia
The Asian qualifiers took place in Dubai, United Arab Emirates, for the third time, between May 6 and May 10. The hosts, the United Arab Emirates qualified for the second time after beating Japan in the final of the championship, 4-3, for the second consecutive year. Iran beat China in the third place play off to claim the third berth at the World Cup for the third year in a row.

Europe
For the first time since the FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup qualifiers began in 2006, due to the large interest of European nations in beach soccer, UEFA held a tournament dedicated to World Cup qualification in Benidorm, Spain, between, May 11 and May 18, instead of allowing European nations to qualify to the World Cup through the Euro Beach Soccer League. Hosts Spain won the championship, with neighbours Portugal finishing second. Russia beat Italy in the third place play off, but regardless of the result, both teams qualified to the World Cup, along with the finalists.

North, Central American and Caribbean Zone
The North, Central America and the Caribbean Zone qualifiers took place between April 17 and April 19 in Puerto Vallarta, Mexico. Mexico and El Salvador were the two finalists, meaning they both qualified for the World Cup; Mexico for the second time and El Salvador for the first. Mexico defeated El Salvador in the final to win their first title.

South America
The South American qualifiers took place between April 23 and April 27, in the Argentinean capital, Buenos Aires. Brazil and hosts Argentina were the two finalists, meaning they both qualified for the World Cup. Brazil defeated Argentina in the final to win the title. Uruguay and Venezuela were knocked out in the semi-finals and played each other in the third place play off. Uruguay beat Venezuela to claim the third berth at the World Cup.

Oceania
For the first and to date only time, no Oceanian qualifiers were held. The Oceania Football Confederation nominated the Solomon Islands as their representative in the World Cup, based on their results over the past two years, which showed that they were by far the strongest team in the confederation.

Hosts
France qualified automatically as the hosts.

Teams
These are the teams that qualified to the World Cup:

Asian zone:

African zone:

European zone:
 * (hosts)

North, Central American and Caribbean zone:
 * (First Appearance)

Oceanian zone:

South American zone:

Venue
A stadium on the Plage du Prado in southern Marseille was used known as the Stade du Prado or the Stadium of the Beach in English. The stadium hosted all 32 matches.

Group stage
The 16 teams present at the finals in Brazil were split into 4 groups of 4 teams. Each team played the other 3 teams in its group in a round-robin format, with the top two teams advancing to the quarter finals. The quarter finals, semi finals and the final itself was played in the form of a knockout tournament.

All matches are listed as local time (UTC+1)

Group A

 * Note: France, Uruguay and Senegal were involved in a tie-break situation and therefore their matches against Iran were ignored and the nations were ranked by their goal difference in the matches against each other. Despite France having the worst overall goal difference, they had the best goal difference between the three teams involved in the tie-break and therefore finished in first place. Uruguay, with an equal number of goals scored and conceded, against France and Senegal finished second, and Senegal with a negative goal difference of -1, finished third.

Top scorers

 * 13 goals
 * Madjer
 * 11 goals
 * Amarelle
 * 10 goals
 * Belchior
 * 8 goals
 * James Naka
 * Pape Koukpaki
 * 7 goals
 * Alan
 * Jeremy Basquaise
 * 6 goals
 * Benjamin
 * Bruno
 * Ricar
 * 5 goals
 * Buru
 * Paolo Palmacci
 * Didier Samoun
 * Egor Shaykov
 * Simone Feudi
 * Roberto Pasquali
 * Federico Hilaire
 * Andre


 * 4 goals
 * Martin
 * Daniel
 * Facundo Minici
 * Nico
 * 3 goals
 * Gomis Mbengue
 * Dmitry Shishin
 * Fabian
 * Torres
 * Massimiliano Esposito
 * Ali Naderi
 * Bakhit Alabadla
 * Rami Al Mesaabi
 * Parrillo
 * 2 goals
 * Ilya Leonov
 * Betinho
 * Júnior Negrão
 * Agustin Ruiz
 * Christopher Flores
 * Javi Alvarez
 * Gibson Hosea
 * Joan Etame
 * Mehdi Davoudi


 * 2 goals (cont.)
 * Moslem Mesigar
 * Omo
 * Ricardo Villalobos
 * Tomoya Uehara
 * Victor Diagne
 * Ibrahim Albalooshi
 * Tomas Hernandez
 * Alexey Makarov
 * Cesar Leguizamon
 * Stéphane François
 * Beirao Sousa
 * Bilro
 * Diego Maradona Jr
 * Francesco Corosiniti
 * Giuseppe Condorelli
 * Sidney
 * Giuseppe Soria
 * Own goals
 * Alireza Rahimi (for France )
 * Gideon Omokirio (for Portugal )
 * Ekwalla Eyoum (for the United Arab Emirates )
 * Aime Yombi (for Russia )
 * Katsuhiro Yoshii (for Brazil )
 * Coco (for Portugal )
 * 35 others scored 1 goal each