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		<title>By: Abba Mai Adda Arsenal Musa Muhd</title>
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		<description>AFC Ajax
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Ajax 
 
Full name Amsterdamsche
Football Club Ajax NV 
Nickname(s) Godenzonen (Sons of the Gods)
Joden (Jews)
Neuzen (Noses) 
Founded March 18, 1900 
Ground Amsterdam ArenA
Amsterdam 
Capacity 51,628 [1] 
Chairman  John Jaakke 
Manager  Adrie Koster 
League Eredivisie 
2006-07 Eredivisie, 2nd 
   
 
 
　 
Home colours 
    
 
 
　 
Away colours 
 
 
Amsterdamsche Football Club Ajax (Euronext: AJAX), also referred to as AFC Ajax, or simply Ajax, is a professional football club from Amsterdam, Netherlands. The club is historically one of the three clubs that dominate the Dutch national football league (Eredivisie), the other two being Feyenoord and PSV.

Ajax is one of the five teams that has earned the right to keep the European Cup; they won consecutively in 1971-1973. In 1972, they completed The Treble by winning the Dutch Eredivisie, KNVB Cup, and the European Cup; to date they are the only team to keep the European Cup and accomplish the European Treble , also AFC Ajax are one of the only two teams (with Manchester United in 1999) to win the The Treble and the Intercontinental Cup in the same season/calender year, this was achieved in the legendary 1971/72 season [2]. They are also one of only three clubs (with Juventus and Bayern Munich) to have won all three major European trophies at least once (the European Cup, the European Cup Winners&#039; Cup and the UEFA Cup). They were the first team to win what has become the UEFA Intertoto Cup [3]. Ajax has also won the Intercontinental Cup twice.

Contents [hide]
1 History 
1.1 Professional football and the road to the top 
1.2 Gloria Ajax 
1.3 The 1st Renaissance 
1.4 Recent events 
2 Youth program 
3 Rivalry 
4 Satellite clubs 
5 Logo 
6 Colors 
7 Stadium 
8 Supporters 
8.1 References to Judaism 
9 Players and managers 
9.1 Current squad 
9.2 Notable Ajax players 
9.2.1 Notable professional Ajax players (1954-present) 
9.2.2 Notable non-professional Ajax players (1900-1954) 
9.3 List of Ajax managers 
9.4 Number 14 
10 Honours 
10.1 Official trophies (recognized by UEFA and FIFA) 
10.1.1 National 
10.1.2 International 
10.2 Other trophies 
11 See also 
12 References 
13 Bibliography 
14 External links 
 


[edit] History
The club was founded in Amsterdam on March 18, 1900 by Floris Stempel, Carel Reeser and the brothers Han and Johan Dade. It was the second incarnation, after a short-lived previous attempt (as the Footh-Ball Club Ajax) in 1894.

After several years, Ajax succeeded in promotion to the highest level of football in 1911, under the guidance of Jack Kirwan (their first official coach). Besides the achievement itself, this year turned out to be another historical milestone: due to the fact that Sparta Rotterdam (a respected and successful football club in those days) already wore the jersey with the vertical red and white stripes, Ajax was prompted to alter its own design with the famous red-and-white combination that they have donned as their home outfit until this day.

Although their efforts were not unnoticed (Gé Fortgens became a frequent member of the Dutch national team for a while) they were relegated in 1914. While they immediately bounced back, they had to wait until 1917 to regain higher level status again: they did become league champions in both 1915 and 1916, however the 1915 league was declared unofficial (due to World War I), whereas in 1916 they did not make it through the promotion round.

Under the guidance of Jack Reynolds (Kirwan&#039;s successor as of 1915) the club promoted to the highest level in 1917 and won the Dutch national cup final - defeating VSV with 5-0. Ajax went on to win their first national championship in 1918.

The championship was secured in Tilburg (where they faced Willem II in the league), though not without some consternation: Jan de Natris, arguably the club&#039;s first &#039;star player&#039;, missed the train to Tilburg and opted to stay in Amsterdam instead - earning him a fine of 10 cents. In the following season he even earned a six month ban, but Ajax did well in his absence: not only did they retain the championship title, their 1919 campaign was also an unbeaten run for them - an accomplishment that was only repeated 76 years later by Ajax themselves.

Now a regular contender for the Western Regional championship in the Netherlands, Ajax marched through the twenties with regional titles in 1921, 1927 and 1928, next to a few minor cups. The 1930s would prove to be more successful however; with household names as Wim Anderiesen Sr., Dolf van Kol, Piet Strijbosch, Wim Volkers, Jan van Diepenbeek, Bob ten Have, Erwin van Wijngaarden and prolific striker Piet van Reenen, Ajax&#039; period from the late twenties until World War II was so successful that many people dubbed it &#039;the golden century&#039; (a pun on the 17th century, the heyday of the Dutch Republic

With no less than six regional titles (1930, 1931, 1932, 1934, 1935, 1936, 1937, 1939) and 5 national championships (1931, 1932, 1934, 1937, 1939) Ajax was the most successful team of that era. The thirties were also notable for the final culmination of the rivalry with Feyenoord, another squad that earned many awards in that time, as well as the creation of the stadium &#039;het Ajax-Stadion&#039; dubbed &#039;De Meer&#039; (named after the borough of its residence). Until the emergence of the Amsterdam ArenA in 1996, this was Ajax&#039; home ground (alongside the Olympic Stadium for matches of greater notoriety).

As of the 1940&#039;s, perhaps in line with Jack Reynolds&#039; retirement (he had stayed - save for a few spells of absence - on for the entire time as Ajax&#039; manager since his entry in 1915), Ajax went through a period of recuperation. Except for Gerrit Fischer and Erwin van Wijngaarden, Ajax got a complete make-over. Now with Joop Stoffelen, Guus Dräger, Gé van Dijk, Jan Potharst and later Rinus Michels and Cor van der Hart as the new icons, Ajax managed to keep its name among the greatest in the Dutch national league. After a Cup Final victory in 1943, Ajax went on to finish second in the championship league in 1946 (behind HFC Haarlem followed by a number one finish in 1947.

They became regional champions in 1950 again, though they never came near winning the championship. Nevertheless, their performance was not an anonymous one, as this contained the famous match against Heerenveen. In that match Ajax were completely overthrown by Heerenveen in the later phase of the match, not even able to maintain a lead with a 1-5 score (the match ended 6-5 in favor of the Frisian side). In March 1941 Ajax performed the opposite: after being 6-0 behind to VUC in The Hague they managed to pull out a draw in the end (6-6).

Until 1954, the year that professional football was introduced in the Netherlands, Ajax had some minor successes, with the regional title in 1952 and a second place in the regional championship in 1954 (equalling in points with fellow Amsterdam club DWS).


[edit] Professional football and the road to the top
While professional football was finally permitted in the Netherlands, Ajax was still far from the international top, as was demonstrated in the European Cup match against Vasas SC, where they overthrown by the Hungarians 4-0 in the Népstadion). Similar disappointing international knock-outs followed in 1960 (by the Norwegian amateurs of Fredrikstad FK, and, in the Cup Winners&#039; Cup in 1961 against the Újpesti Dózsa of Ferenc Bene.

But they did fairly well on national level, earning the first Eredivisie-championship in 1957 and again in 1960. Especially that last title became memorable because of the way it was won; after equalling in points with arch-rivals Feyenoord a decisive match had to be played between the two contenders. Ajax cruised to a 5-1 victory with striker Wim Bleijenberg getting his name on the score sheet in threefold.

Bleijenberg was not the great striker of that time however, that title belonged to Henk Groot (although his older brother Cees Groot also scored a 100 goals for Ajax in his 5 year stay.). Arriving in 1959 from Stormvogels he immediately went on a scoring spree, scoring 38 goals in 1959/60 and 41 goals in 1960/61. He was a vital part of the Ajax in the early sixties, virtually replacing Piet van der Kuil (the star in the late fifties, who left to PSV in 1960) as the new &#039;man of the hour&#039;. Alongside the man who would later become Mister Ajax, Sjaak Swart, Co Prins, Ton Pronk, Bennie Muller and a young Piet Keizer Ajax added the National Cup in 1961 and the Intertoto Cup 1962 to their trophy cabinet.

After missing the championship after a 5-2 defeat against PSV in 1963, Ajax went descendo in the national competition. Henk Groot left to Feyenoord that summer, and in 1964/65 it went so bad that they were near direct relegation. Things would turn for the better though, especially after former player Rinus Michels replaced Vic Buckingham as the head manager. Ajax managed to secure a midtable spot under Michels, but Buckingham&#039;s second tenure was not a complete disappointment as he was the first coach to introduce Johan Cruijff (during the 3-1 loss at GVAV).

Michels started a revolution in Amsterdam, beginning with the return of Henk Groot and Co Prins, as well as the installment of Gert Bals as the new first goalie. Taking delicate steps on the way to the &#039;total football&#039; that Michels envisioned, he showed no mercy in sacrificing players who he considered not to be good enough. Most notable example of this was defender Frits Soetekouw (who was replaced by Ajax&#039; new leader Velibor Vasović), whose own goal aided to the victory of Dukla Prague in the quarter-final of the European Cup in 1966/67, after Ajax had knocked out Beşiktaş and defeated Liverpool with 5-1.

Ajax sealed their second consecutive championship in 1967. Not as dominant as the previous year, but with a seemingly unstoppable offensive side: they scored no less than 122 goals (still a national record), of which 33 were from Johan Cruijff, at 20 years old already the star player. It was also the season for another important milestone: for the first time in history, Ajax won the double (after defeating NAC in the cup final).

It earned them a European Cup match-up against Real Madrid in the next season, providing them an even greater reputation than they had last year. However, after two 1-1 draws, Ignacio Zoco scored the winner for Los Merengues in extra time.

Ajax won the Dutch title of 1968 (after Feyenoord had led the league for a long while) and reached the European Cup final of 1969 in Madrid. Getting there proved to be quite difficult though. After deafeating FC Nürnberg in the first round, they were almost knocked out by Benfica in the second one, losing 3-1 to them in Amsterdam. Thanks to an amazing comeback, given shape by goals of Inge Danielsson and Johan Cruijff, Ajax returned their favour in Lisbon and knocked the Portuguese champions out in a decisive match played in Paris (3-0). They repeated this score against the next opponent, Spartak Trnava, but barely survived in the away match.

Keeping the score at 2-0, Ajax went on to be AC Milan&#039;s opponent in the final. The Italians, lauded for their excellent defense and counter-attacks, waltzed over them with ease. Pierino Prati opened the score after 7 minutes and went on to become the man of match with three goals, while Velibor Vasović was the only Ajax player to get one back at Milan by scoring a penalty. Thanks to Milan-striker Angelo Sormani the game ended in 4-1.


[edit] Gloria Ajax
As of the new season, Ajax&#039; primary team was renewed. Among the new additions were national top scorer Dick van Dijk and midfielders Gerrie Mühren and Nico Rijnders, while second team player Ruud Krol was promoted to the first eleven. They replaced Klaas Nuninga, Inge Danielsson, Theo van Duijvenbode (all sold to other clubs) and Henk Groot (quit football after an injury while playing against Poland, while Ton Pronk and Bennie Muller were no longer as frequently in the first XI after many years of service.

With a refreshed selection, Ajax went for another attempt to win the European Cup. They had lost the Eredivisie title to Feyenoord last season, but conquering this season&#039;s title proved to be an easy task, winning 27 out of 34 games by scoring exactly 100 goals. For a long while Feyenoord stayed close to the men from Amsterdam, but they had to settle for a second place. In the end both clubs could bring a cup home: Ajax won the Eredivisie title while Feyenoord won the European Cup.

After Ajax reached the semi-finals of the Inter-Cities Fairs Cup in 1970 (being knocked out by Arsenal after defeating Hannover 96, Napoli, Ruch Chorzów and Carl Zeiss Jena), 1971 became the long awaited year of glory. For a long while Ajax seemed to be on their way to the treble (a feat only previously performed by Celtic in 1967) if it weren&#039;t for the longer breath that Feyenoord had in the competition. The national cup stayed in Ajax&#039; hands however (won after a double final against Sparta).

Ajax had defeated (17 Nëntori, FC Basel, Celtic and Atlético Madrid en route to the 1971 European Cup final played at Wembley on June 2. There, 83,000 spectators witnessed how Dick van Dijk opened the score against Panathinaikos. Ajax scored another goal in the dying minutes of the game when Arie Haan&#039;s shot was deflected by defender Kapsis.

Wrapping things up with a 2-0 score, team captain Vasović could finally lift the European Cup (losing the final in 1966 with FK Partizan and again in 1969), showing it later to the crowd that was celebrating on the streets of Amsterdam.

In the following years Ajax established itself as the new ruler of Europe. Staff and team changes could not discourage the team&#039;s power. Whether it was Stefan Kovacs replacing coach Michels in 1971, Rijnders and Vasović&#039; departure in the same year, Van Dijk&#039;s departure in 1972 - it seemed like nothing could stop them. Perhaps the greatest example of this was their performance chart of 1972, winning all the of the competitions that they participated in (European Cup, Intercontinental Cup, European Super Cup, National Championship and the KNVB Cup), an achievement never shown again by any other club. And 1973 seemed like a simple continuation of that situation, securing themselves of yet another Dutch championship and moreover, the third consecutive European Cup.

It all started to fall apart when Johan Cruijff left the gang for Barcelona in 1973, effectively ending the reign of the &#039;Twelve Apostles&#039; (The usual line-up Heinz Stuy - Wim Suurbier, Barry Hulshoff, Horst Blankenburg, Ruud Krol - Arie Haan, Johan Neeskens, Gerrie Mühren - Sjaak Swart, Johan Cruijff, Keizer plus the usual twelfth man which was Ruud Suurendonk until 1972 and then Johnny Rep). Were clubs like Real Madrid, Bayern Munich, Internazionale, Arsenal, Juventus and Independiente not too big of an obstacle until then, they could not get past CSKA Sofia in late &#039;73. With the European Super Cup of &#039;73 as a consolation prize, Ajax had to wait for a couple of decades for another era of European success.

Nevertheless, the &#039;total football&#039; that they had propagated became a lasting memory for many football fans, also because of the great performance of the Dutch national team on the following World Cup - using similar tactics. Manager Tomislav Ivić would later dub the era &#039;Gloria Ajax&#039;, illustrating the impact of their years at the top.


[edit] The 1st Renaissance
That same Ivić coached Ajax to their first championship after their heyday, in 1977. After that year Ajax resumed to frequently winning national honours, though impressive international performances were sparse. An unfortunate knock-out against Juventus in the quarterfinal of the European Cup in 1978 and a European Cup semifinal in 1980 (KO by Nottingham Forest) was all that Ajax could do until the late eighties. Especially the run between 1980 and 1986 was disappointing, not getting past the second round for six years in a row. 1987 would become the turning point however, in two different ways.

Until then there was rarely something to complain on national level (although the club went through a period of several internal conflicts) as they won 5 championships after &#039;77 as well as 4 cups. Johan Cruijff even came back in 1981, giving the talented youngsters Wim Kieft, John van &#039;t Schip, Marco van Basten, Gerald Vanenburg, Jesper Olsen and Frank Rijkaard - Ajax&#039;s trademark players of the 80&#039;s - some guidance. After leaving the club in &#039;83 (after a conflict with president Harmsen) for Feyenoord, he returned once again in 1985 as the new manager.

Cruijff&#039;s offensive tactics are immediately illustrated in his first active season, when Ajax ends the season with 120 goals in total on the scoresheet, of which 37 were from Ajax&#039; new great star, forward Marco van Basten. It was not enough to retain the championship however, losing for two years in a row to PSV.

Despite the lack of a championship Cruijff&#039;s Ajax did bring a European Cup back to Amsterdam. Following the victory against Lokomotive Leipzig, they could once again celebrate on the balcony on the Leidseplein, this time to show Amsterdam the &#039;87 Cup Winners Cup. They got close to winning it in the consecutive year, but KV Mechelen proved to be too strong in the final which Ajax ended with 10 men.

By that time Cruijff was already gone, as a result of the declining results in the national league. With most of the 80&#039;s stars also departed, Ajax continued to compete for the title with PSV in the next years, usually ending in favour of the latter party. Other negative aspects of the period 1988-1991 was the fraud-case in 1989, as well as the European suspension after a hooligan threw a bar at the goalie of Austria Wien in a UEFA-Cup match in the same year.

Things seemed to clear up a bit later that year, as they even went on to win the championship race with PSV for a change in 1990, and came shy of two goals in 1991 for a back-to-back run.

Early in the next season, the coach under whom the abovementioned was achieved left; lured by his former club, Leo Beenhakker went back to Real Madrid. His successor was Louis van Gaal, the former assistant-coach. Like Cruijff, Van Gaal rapidly made his mark by altering Ajax&#039; tactics. Also like Cruijff his efforts were rewarded in his first season at the helm, by winning the UEFA Cup after a thrilling final against AC Torino. Although he did not play the last game of the final, Europe had also definitely met the skills of Ajax&#039; most talented player: Dennis Bergkamp, who had contributed six goals on the road to their victory.

In the Netherlands, Bergkamp had already won 2 consecutive topscorer titles (1991, 1992) but once again the Eredivisie title had to be left for PSV to take. In 1992/93 Ajax even had to settle for a third spot in the final ranking (for first time since 1984), somewhat making up for it by winning the national cup.

It turned out to be the last award that Bergkamp would win with Ajax, as he and buddy Wim Jonk left to Internazionale. His loss was quickly forgotten by an excellent performance of Jari Litmanen on his position, establishing himself as the new number 10 of Ajax. Aside from Litmanen, Ajax attracted Finidi George and the returned Frank Rijkaard, providing the base for van Gaal to build on.

They won the national title of 1994, followed by a Champions league victory in 1995. Preceded by an unbeaten run in the national league to take the title of 1995, the season was a memorable way for Rijkaard to end his playing career, while striker Patrick Kluivert had an excellent start to his, with the then 18-year-old coming off the bench to score a late winner to beat AC Milan in the final of the Champions League. Ajax went on to beat Brazilian side Grêmio on penalties to win the unofficial World Club Cup -- the Intercontinental Cup, also known as the Toyota Cup.

The following season, Ajax continued to succeed on the European front, succumbing only to Juventus on penalties in the final. Van Gaal&#039;s success came to an end in 1997, and he duly parted ways with the Amsterdam club.

Danish coach Morten Olsen was brought in. He attracted Danish national team captain Michael Laudrup to the club, and together they won the Double of league championship and the Dutch cup. In his second year at the club, tension arose between Olsen and the Dutch players Ronald de Boer and Frank de Boer, and Olsen was sacked in 1998.

Soon all the team&#039;s young stars that had heralded the Ajax Renaissance were gone -- Clarence Seedorf in 1995 Edgar Davids, Michael Reiziger, Finidi George and Nwankwo Kanu in 1996 Patrick Kluivert, Marc Overmars and Winston Bogarde in 1997 Ronald de Boer and Frank de Boer in 1998 and Edwin van der Sar and Jari Litmanen in 1999, together with the retirment of Frank Rijkaard in 1995 and Danny Blind in 1999 every key player of the fabulous 1994/1995 team left Amsterdam; together with the departure of the technical team and the change of homeground from De Meer to the Amsterdam ArenA and the fact that the football club went public by going to the Amsterdam Stock Exchange, the AEX it signaled the end of an era for the club.


[edit] Recent events
Since the success with the 1995 Champions league, Ajax have struggled to rediscover their European form. The only minor encouragement came in the 2002/03 season. Led by captain Cristian Chivu, Rafael van der Vaart, Zlatan Ibrahimović, Mido and the return of a legend in Jari Litmanen, manager Ronald Koeman guided a new crop of talent to within seconds of the Champions League semifinal. Ajax surged through to the quarterfinal of the Champions League, getting past two group stages that contained a number of European heavyweights including Inter, Lyon, Valencia, Roma, and Arsenal. Facing AC Milan in the quarterfinals, Ajax held their own against the Rossoneri, but were finally undone by a last-gasp winner in the dying seconds of the second-leg encounter at the San Siro.

 
Ajax in a match against NEC in the Amsterdam ArenA in 2006Koeman&#039;s early success was short-lived. In 2005, he resigned after Ajax&#039; defeat to Auxerre in the UEFA Cup tournament. This resignation was also the aftermath of Koeman&#039;s long-standing spat with then football director Louis van Gaal who had questioned Koeman&#039;s managerial abilities after Ajax&#039; dry spell in the domestic league — which saw them languishing in fifth position at the beginning of 2005. Former Ajax-player Danny Blind, who, aside from working as Koeman&#039;s technical coach and advisor, had virtually no top-level manager experience, was unveiled as their new coach. Blind instantly caused consternation by announcing that the club was to play using a 4-4-2, abandoning the Total Football-oriented 4-3-3 that has become Ajax&#039; trademark. This season also saw the departure of key players Rafael van der Vaart and Nigel de Jong to Hamburger SV, while six others (Hatem Trabelsi, Tomáš Galásek, Hans Vonk, Nourdin Boukhari, Steven Pienaar and Maxwell) revealed they would leave the club at the end of the 2005-2006 season. Blind was sacked on May 10, 2006 after 422 days in charge. New coach Henk ten Cate, who won the Champions League and La Liga in 2006 as the assistant of Frank Rijkaard with FC Barcelona gave youngsters a shot to enter the selection of the first team. Ten Cate said youngsters Jan Vertonghen, Rydell Poepon and Robbert Schilder would be included in the selection, whereas Greek forward Angelos Charisteas was sold to Feyenoord. Ten Cate announced that he wished to return to form and win the Eredivisie in 2007.

Ajax missed out on a Champions League place in 2006/2007 after their defeat against FC Copenhagen (3-2 on aggregate). As a result, Ajax played against IK Start from Norway in the first round of the UEFA Cup September 14 and 28, and won the match 9-2 on aggregate (2-5 away and 4-0 home). Having then gotten through the Group Stage, they drew German club Werder Bremen in the Round of 32. In the first leg in Germany, Ajax lost 3-0. On the return leg in Amsterdam, they rallied for two second half goals to win 3-1, but lost 4-3 in aggregate.

In the 2006-07 season Ajax also achieved some successes with Henk ten Cate in charge. They won the Johan Cruijff Shield after a 3-1 win over rivals PSV and they also beat AZ 8-9 on penalties in the Dutch Cup final after a 1-1 draw after extra time. Ajax was very close to clinch the Eredivisie title after deducting a 10 point deficit from PSV, but lost it on goal difference on the last matchday to PSV (PSV: 75-25, Ajax 84-35).

In the following 2007-08 season Ajax sold two of the biggest talents, Ryan Babel for 17 million Euros to Liverpool FC and Wesley Sneijder for 27 million Euros to Real Madrid. Luis Suarez came from FC Groningen to replace Ryan Babel. Ajax decided not to buy a replacement for Wesley Sneijder because of the difficulty in finding a similar-position type of player to replace him and also because the deal was finished close to the transfer deadline and Ajax would not rush though any signings.

These events together with Edgar Davids breaking a leg disrupted the preparation for the qualification games for a Champions League place. Opponent Slavia Prague won both matches; with a 2-1 scoreline in Prague and 0-1 victory in Amsterdam. The failure to clinch a position in the Champions League group stage led to great critism from both the supporters and the media, mainly directed at Henk ten Cate and the board of directors. A 1-0 victory over PSV Eindhoven for the Johan Cruiffschaal could not make up for the loss of a Champions League spot. Despite quite a good start in the competition with a lot of goals from both Luis Suarez and Klaas-Jan Huntelaar, Ajax lost ground again in Europe after not making it to the group phase of the UEFA Cup; managing a 0-1 win away against Dinamo Zagreb but lost the tie in Amsterdam after extra time with the score 2-3 to Dinamo. With these string of European failures, coach Ten Cate has already failed to lead the team to the Champions League group stage for two seasons in a row and no European football at the ArenA for the remainder of the 2007/2008 season. With this result, Ten Cate lost the confidence of the supporters who demanded that the board sack him. A more viable solution came when Chelsea (in the same week) offered Ten Cate the job of assistant manager with a 3-year deal. On Tuesday 9 October Ten Cate left Ajax. Adrie Koster was selected to helm the squad.


[edit] Youth program
The club is also particularly famous for its renowned youth program that has introduced many great footballers - Cruijff being the best example. Ajax has also expanded its talent searching program to South Africa and the United States with Ajax Cape Town and Ajax America respectively. Its satellite club is Ajax Cape Town of South Africa from where youth players have been drafted into the Eredivisie squad, such as Steven Pienaar and Aaron Mokoena. In 1995, the year that they won the Champions League, the Dutch national team was almost entirely composed of Ajax players, with goalkeeper Edwin van der Sar, players such as Michael Reiziger, Frank de Boer and Danny Blind in defense, Ronald de Boer, Edgar Davids and Clarence Seedorf in midfield, and Patrick Kluivert and Marc Overmars in attack. The team was coached by Louis van Gaal, and also featured foreign stars such as Jari Litmanen, Nwankwo Kanu and Finidi George. Its current successes are mostly domestic, notwithstanding some minor successes in the 2002-03 Champions League. Its youth team continues to develop talented individuals like Wesley Sneijder, John Heitinga, Hedwiges Maduro, Urby Emanuelson, Ryan Babel and Maarten Stekelenburg. At the 2006 World Cup, Sneijder, Heitinga, Babel, Maduro and Stekelenburg were included in the national squad, alongside other players from the youth program who now play elsewhere, such as Edwin van der Sar and Rafael van der Vaart.


[edit] Rivalry
Although Ajax have been vying for the championship with PSV in recent years, its main traditional rivalry is with Feyenoord from Rotterdam, culminating every year in the &quot;Klassieker&quot;. It is a match between the two largest cities of the Netherlands, which are both really distinct from each other. Amsterdam is a business city and is the financial capital of the country (as well as the political capital). Furthermore the city identifies itself with artists, creativity and sophistication. Whilst Rotterdam hosts the biggest port of Europe and thus identifies itself with hard, no-nonsense, industrial labour. There have been violent clashes between the supporters of both clubs, of which the Beverwijk fight in 1997 was the most infamous, resulting in the murder of Ajax supporter Carlo Picornie. Ajax is both the best supported club in The Netherlands and thus the most hated one by supporters of other clubs. Not only Feyenoord from Rotterdam but also fans of FC Utrecht and ADO Den Haag regard Ajax as there main rival.


[edit] Satellite clubs
The following clubs are affiliated with AFC Ajax:

 Ajax Cape Town 
 HFC Haarlem 
 FC Omniworld[4] 
 FC Volendam 
 Ajax America 

[edit] Logo
In 1900, when the club was founded, the emblem of Ajax was just a picture of an Ajax player. In 1928, the club logo was introduced with the head of the Greek hero Ajax. The logo was once again changed in 1990, making the old one more abstract. It should also be noted that the portrait of Ajax on the logo is drawn with eleven lines, symbolising the eleven players of a football team. [5]


[edit] Colors
Ajax originally played in an all black uniform with a red sash tied around the players&#039; waists, but that uniform was soon replaced by a red/white striped shirt and black shorts. Red, black and white are the three colors of the flag of Amsterdam. However, when, under manager Jack Kirwan, the club got promoted to the top flight of Dutch football for the first time in 1911 (then the Eerste Klasse or &#039;First Class&#039;, later named the Eredivisie), Ajax were forced to change their colors because Sparta Rotterdam already had the exact same outfit. Special kits for away fixtures did not exist at the time and according to football association regulations the newcomers had to change their colors if two teams in the same league had identical uniforms. Ajax opted for white shorts and white shirt with a broad, vertical red stripe over chest and back, which still is Ajax&#039;s outfit. Ajax&#039;s shirts have been sponsored by ABN AMRO since 1991, the current sponsorship contract is going to run through 2010-2011 season.[6] The shirts have been manufactured by Adidas since 2000 (until at least 2009); before that Umbro (1989-2000) was manufacturing clothing for the team.[7] On the April 1 2007, Ajax wore a different sponsor for the match against Heracles Almelo: Florius. Florius is a banking program just launched by ABN AMRO who wanted it to be the shirt sponsor for one match.


[edit] Stadium
Main article: Amsterdam ArenA
 
Amsterdam ArenA 
Exterior of StadiumAjax&#039; first stadium was built in 1911 out of wood and was simply called The Stadium. Ajax later played in the stadium that was built for the 1928 Summer Olympics, held in Amsterdam. This stadium, designed by Jan Wils, is simply known as the Olympic Stadium. In 1934, Ajax moved to De Meer Stadion in east Amsterdam, where they would play until 1996. During big European fixtures the club would often play at the Olympic Stadium, where the capacity was higher.

In 1996, Ajax moved to a new home ground in the southeast of the city known as the Amsterdam ArenA that was built at the cost of $134 million. The stadium is capable of holding approximately 52,000 people. The average attendance in 2006/07 was 48,610 people. The Arena has a retractable roof and was the example for other modern stadiums built in Europe in the following years. In the Netherlands, the Arena had earned a reputation for having a terrible grass pitch caused by the removable roof that, even when open, takes away too much sunlight and ventilation from the ground, and by the NFL Europa&#039;s Amsterdam Admirals who played their home games on it.

The much loved De Meer stadium was torn down and the land was sold to the city council.


[edit] Supporters

[edit] References to Judaism
The Ajax fans have developed the tradition of using Jewish and Israeli symbols to express their allegiance, despite being almost entirely non Jewish in their composition. Regularly, the supporters wave large Star of David flags and scream Joden! Joden! (&quot;Jews! Jews!&quot;) to fire up their team. Die-hard Ajax supporters call themselves &quot;F-Siders&quot; or &quot;Joden&quot; — Dutch for &quot;Jews&quot; — a nickname that reflects both the team&#039;s and the city&#039;s Jewish heritage. This nickname for Ajax fans dates back to before World War II, when Amsterdam was home to most of the Netherlands&#039; 140,000 Jews and the Ajax stadium itself was located near a Jewish neighborhood. Most Dutch Jews were murdered by the Nazis during the occupation, and today very little remains of Amsterdam&#039;s old Jewish quarter. But the tradition at Ajax survived. Ajax currently has no Jewish players, the last player with any Jewish roots being Daniël de Ridder.

More recently, the issue has become a significant social problem in that in an increasingly bizarre and racist way, opposing supporters specifically use antisemitism to express their antipathy towards Ajax. This is expressed in chants such as Hamas, Hamas, Jews into the gas (Hamas, hamas, joden aan het gas) or producing hissing sounds that imitate the flow of gas. This in turn does not withhold the &#039;Jewish&#039; Ajax supporters from celebrating the Bombing of Rotterdam by Nazi Germany when facing Feyenoord with songs like When spring comes we will throw bombs on Rotterdam! (Als de lente komt dan gooien wij bommen op Rotterdam). Songs like this (using the melody of ´Tulips from Amsterdam´) were sung from the stage, i.e. organised, at the celebration of the winning of the Dutch Cup in 2006.

However, hardcore Ajax fans, although almost entirely gentiles, are proud of their &#039;outsider&#039; image as &quot;Jews&quot; and feel encouraged to display more Jewish / Israeli symbols at matches, using them as a &quot;badge of battle&quot;.

Those Ajax fans who are actually Jewish are split on the morality of this matter; some feel it is perversely flattering but many others feel it is disrespectful and racist for non Jews to act in such a way that encourages antisemitic abuse. Dutch authorities have tried to tone down the Jewish symbols of support for Ajax, hoping to lead to a decrease of antisemitic counter-incidents. However, the head of the European Board of Jewish Deputies has signalled his support for the F-siders, stating that antisemitism in Europe would be generally lessened if more non-Jews so readily identified with Jewish culture. The mayor of Amsterdam, Job Cohen, is also Jewish himself and has not condemned the Ajax fans.

However club chairman John Jaakke has asked the club to distance its self from the &#039;supposed&#039; Jewish identity:

&quot;Ajax is being presented as a &#039;Jewish club&#039; and some of our supporters have taken to calling themselves &#039;Jews&#039; as an honorary nickname. I want to state for the record that Ajax wants to shed this image and will do what is necessary to achieve this,&quot; [1]

Related Trivia

A similar situation exists at English Premier League club Tottenham Hotspur F.C., which also has a reputation for having a large Jewish following, where supporters proudly call themselves Yids to diffuse its use as anti-semitic provocation by opposition fans.

In the Australian south eastern state of Victoria, there exists the Ajax Amateur Football Club, which is a Jewish Australian rules football club, in that the vast majority of administrators and players are Jewish, and the club has a Magen David (Star of David) on its uniform. Their playing colours are also the same as AFC Ajax.


[edit] Players and managers

[edit] Current squad
As of September 19, 2007.

No.  Position Player 
1  GK Maarten Stekelenburg 
2  DF John Heitinga (vice-captain) 
3  DF Jaap Stam (captain) 
4  DF Thomas Vermaelen 
5  DF Urby Emanuelson 
6  MF Hedwiges Maduro 
7  FW Kennedy Bakircioglü 
8  FW Ismael Urzaiz 
9  FW Klaas-Jan Huntelaar 
10  FW Albert Luque 
11  FW Leonardo 
12  GK Erik Heijblok 
13  MF Edgar Davids 
15  MF Laurent Delorge 
16  FW Luis Suárez 
17  MF Jan Vertonghen 
  No.  Position Player 
18  MF Gabri 
19  MF Dennis Rommedahl 
20  DF George Ogăraru 
21  FW Edgar Manucharyan 
22  DF Robbert Schilder 
23  FW Nicolae Mitea 
24  MF Mitchell Donald 
25  DF Gregory van der Wiel 
26  MF Jeffrey Sarpong 
27  MF Vurnon Anita 
28  MF Michael Krohn-Dehli 
30  GK Dennis Gentenaar 
31  DF Jurgen Colin 
32  GK Marco van Duin 
34  FW John Goossens 
38  MF Siem De Jong 
 

Out on loan 
No.  Position Player 
––  FW Rydell Poepon (on loan to Willem II) 
––  GK Kenneth Vermeer (on loan to Willem II) 
 


[edit] Notable Ajax players

[edit] Notable professional Ajax players (1954-present)
Netherlands

 Wim Anderiesen (jr.) 
 Ryan Babel 
 Gert Bals 
 Marco van Basten 
 Dennis Bergkamp 
 Wim Bleyenberg 
 Danny Blind 
 Frank de Boer 
 Ronald de Boer 
 Peter Boeve 
 Winston Bogarde 
 John Bosman 
 Willy Brokamp 
 John van den Brom 
 Johan Cruijff 
 Lloyd Doesburg 
 Pim van Dord 
 Dick van Dijk 
 Gerard van Dijk 
 Theo van Duivenbode 
 Johnny Dusbaba 
 Jan Everse 
 Ruud Geels 
 Eddy Pieters Graafland 
 Cees Groot 
 Henk Groot 
 Arie Haan 
 Peter Hoekstra 
 Bertus Hoogerman 
 Barry Hulshoff 
 Wim Jansen 
 Nigel de Jong 
 Wim Jonk 
 Piet Keizer 
 Wim Kieft 
 Patrick Kluivert 
 Ronald Koeman 
 Michel Kreek 
 Ruud Krol 
 Piet van der Kuil 
 Tscheu La Ling 
 Denny Landzaat 
 John van Loen 
 Hennie Meijer 
 Stanley Menzo 
 Wim Meutstege 
 Andy van der Meyde 
 Rinus Michels 
 Keje Molenaar 
 Ger van Mourik 
 Arnold Mühren 
 Gerrie Mühren 
 Jan Mulder 
 Ben Muller 
  Johan Neeskens 
 René Notten 
 Klaas Nuninga 
 Edo Ophof 
 Piet Ouderland 
 Marc Overmars 
 Peet Petersen 
 Co Prins 
 Ton Pronk 
 Michael Reiziger 
 Johnny Rep 
 Martijn Reuser 
 Frank Rijkaard 
 Nico Rijnders 
 Bryan Roy 
 Edwin van der Sar 
 Werner Schaaphok 
 John van &#039;t Schip 
 Dick Schoenaker 
 Arnold Scholten 
 Piet Schrijvers 
 Clarence Seedorf 
 Sonny Silooy 
 Wesley Sneijder 
 Frits Soetekouw 
 Ronald Spelbos 
 Heinz Stuy 
 Wim Suurbier 
 Sjaak Swart 
 Simon Tahamata 
 Rafael van der Vaart 
 Gerald Vanenburg 
 John Veldman 
 Frank Verlaat 
 Ferdi Vierklau 
 Marciano Vink 
 Peter van Vossen 
 Aron Winter 
 Rob de Wit 
 Richard Witschge 
 Rob Witschge 
 Jan Wouters 
Australia

 Michael Petersen 
Austria

 Felix Gasselich 
 Heinz Schilcher 
Argentina

 Mauro Rosales 
 Armenia

 Edgar Manucharyan 
Belgium

 Jelle van Damme 
 Walter Meeuws 
 Tom de Mul 
 Tom Soetaers 
 Wesley Sonck 
Brazil

 Maxwell 
 Márcio Santos 
 Wamberto 
Croatia

 Božo Broketa 
 Joey Didulica 
Czech Republic

 Tomáš Galásek 
 Zdeněk Grygera 
Denmark

 Frank Arnesen 
 Jesper Grønkjær 
 Johnny Hansen 
 Henning Jensen 
 Brian Laudrup 
 Michael Laudrup 
 Søren Lerby 
 Jan Mølby 
 Jesper Olsen 
 Kenneth Perez 
 Dan Petersen 
 Tom Søndergaard 
 Jan Sørensen 
 Ole Tobiasen 
 Steen Ziegler 
England

 Ray Clarke (1978-79) 
 Ally Dick 
Egypt

 Mido 
Finland

 Jari Litmanen 
 Petri Pasanen 
 Petri Tiainen 
France

 Julien Escudé 
Ghana

 Abubakari Yakubu 
Georgia

 Shota Arveladze 
 Georgiou Kinkladze 
Germany

 Horst Blankenburg 
 Arno Steffenhagen 
 Greece

 Nikos Machlas 
 Angelos Charisteas 
 Yannis Anastasiou 
Hungary

 Pál Fischer 
 Zoltán Varga 
Tunisia

 Hatem Trabelsi 
Turkey

 Mustafa Yücedağ 
Ireland

 Frank Stapleton 
Morocco

 Nourdin Boukhari 
Nigeria

 Tijjani Babangida 
 Finidi George 
 Pius Ikedia 
 Christopher Kanu 
 Nwankwo Kanu 
 Sunday Oliseh 
Norway

 André Bergdølmo 
Portugal

 Dani 
Romania

 Cristian Chivu 
 Bogdan Lobonţ 
Serbia

 Velibor Vasović 
South Africa

 Benni McCarthy 
 Aaron Mokoena 
 Steven Pienaar 
 Hans Vonk 
Spain

 Juanfran 
 Roger 
 Gabri 
Sweden

 Inge Danielsson 
 Zlatan Ibrahimović 
 Peter Larsson 
 Stefan Pettersson 
 Markus Rosenberg 
 


[edit] Notable non-professional Ajax players (1900-1954)
Netherlands

 Henk Anderiesen 
 Wim Anderiesen (sr.) 
 Henk Blomvliet 
 Jan de Boer 
 Theo Brokmann (sr.) 
 Theo Brokmann (jr.) 
 Frans Couton 
 Piet van Deyck 
 Jan van Diepenbeek 
  Jan van Dort 
 Guus Dräger 
 Gerrit Fischer 
 Cor van der Hart 
 Jan Hassink 
 Bob ten Have 
 Henk Hordijk 
 Dolf van Kol 
 Gerrit Keizer 
 Ko Loois 
  Joop Martens 
 Henk Mulders 
 Jan de Natris 
 Fons Pelser 
 Joop Pelser 
 Jan Potharst 
 Piet van Reenen 
 Jan Schubert 
 Jan Schindeler 
 Joop Stoffelen 
  Piet Strijbosch 
 Henk Twelker 
 Jany van der Veen 
 Wim Volkers 
 Erwin van Wijngaarden 
United States

 Eddy Hamel 
 


[edit] List of Ajax managers
 Adrie Koster (2007-present) 
 Henk ten Cate (2006-2007) 
 Danny Blind (2005-2006) 
 Ruud Krol (interim, 2005) 
 Ronald Koeman (2001-2005) 
 Co Adriaanse (2000-2001) 
 Hans Westerhof (interim, 2000) 
 Jan Wouters (1999-2000) 
 Morten Olsen (1997-1999) 
 Louis van Gaal (1991-1997) 
 Leo Beenhakker (1989-1991) 
 Kurt Linder (1988) 
 Johan Cruijff (1985-1988) 
 Aad de Mos (1982-1985) 
 Kurt Linder (1981-1982) 
  Leo Beenhakker (1979-1981) 
 Cor Brom (1978-1979) 
 Tomislav Ivić (1976-1978) 
 Rinus Michels (1975-1976) 
 Hans Kraay (1974-1975) 
 George Knoebel (1973-1974) 
 Stefan Kovacs (1971-1973) 
 Rinus Michels (1969-1971) 
 Karl Humenberger (1968-1969) 
 Vic Buckingham (1964-1968) 
 Jack Rowley (1963-1964) 
 Joseph Gruber (1962-1963) 
 Keith Spurgeon (1961-1962) 
 Vic Buckingham (1959-1961) 
 Karl Humenberger (1954-1959) 
  Walter Crook (1953-1954) 
 Robert Thomson (1950-1953) 
 Walter Crook (1948-1950) 
 Robert Smith (1947-1948) 
 Jack Reynolds (1942-1947) 
 Dolf van Kol (1942-1942) 
 Wim Volkers (1941-1942) 
 Vilmos Halpern (1940-1941) 
 Jack Reynolds (1928-1940) 
 Stanley Castle (1926-1928) 
 Harold Rose (1925-1926) 
 Jack Reynolds (1915-1925) 
 Jack Kirwan (1910-1915) 
 


[edit] Number 14
As of the following season (2007-08), no player will wear the number 14 shirt at Ajax, since the club decided to retire the shirt in respect to formidable legend, Johan Cruijff, who presented his number for his 60th Birthday, though Cruijff said that it should be better if the best player of the team would wear number 14. Spanish midfielder Roger was the last player to wear the number. [8]


[edit] Honours

[edit] Official trophies (recognized by UEFA and FIFA)

[edit] National
Eredivisie: 29

1917-18, 1918-19, 1930-31, 1931-32, 1933-34, 1936-37, 1938-39, 1946-47, 1956-57, 1959-60, 1965-66, 1966-67, 1967-68, 1969-70, 1971-72, 1972-73, 1976-77, 1978-79, 1979-80, 1981-82, 1982-83, 1984-85, 1989-90, 1993-94, 1994-95, 1995-96, 1997-98, 2001-02, 2003-04 
KNVB Cup: 17

1917, 1943, 1961, 1967, 1970, 1971, 1972, 1979, 1983, 1986, 1987, 1993, 1998, 1999, 2002, 2006, 2007 
KNVB Cup runner-up: 5

1900, 1968, 1978, 1980, 1981 
Johan Cruijff Shield: 7

1993, 1994, 1995, 2002, 2005, 2006, 2007 
Johan Cruijff Shield runners-up: 4

1996, 1998, 1999, 2004 

[edit] International
Intercontinental Cup: 2

1972, 1995 [9] 
European Champion Club&#039;s Cup / Champions League: 4

1971, 1972, 1973, 1995 [9] 
European Champion Club&#039;s Cup / Champions League runners-up: 2

1969, 1996 [9] 
European Cup Winners&#039; Cup: 1

1987 [9] 
European Cup Winners&#039; Cup runners-up: 1

1988 [9] 
UEFA Cup: 1

1992 [9] 
European Super Cup: 2

1973, 1995 [2] 
European Super Cup runners-up: 1

1988 [2] 

[edit] Other trophies
Rangers FC First Centenary 1872-1972: 1

1972 [2] 
UEFA Intertoto Cup: 1

1962 [3] 
Trofeo Santiago Bernabéu: 1

1992 
Trofeo Santiago Bernabéu runners-up: 2

1979, 1995 
Preceded by
Feyenoord European Cup
1971, 1972, 1973
Runners-up:
Panathinaikos FC, Internazionale Milano, Juventus Succeeded by
Bayern Munich 
Preceded by
A.C. Milan Champions League
1995
Runner up: A.C. Milan Succeeded by
Juventus 
Preceded by
Dinamo Kiev UEFA Cup Winners&#039; Cup Winner
1987
Runner up: Lokomotive Leipzig Succeeded by
KV Mechelen 
Preceded by
Internazionale Milano UEFA Cup
1992
Runner up: Torino Succeeded by
Juventus 


[edit] See also
Dutch football league teams 

[edit] References
^ Amsterdan ArenA - Did you know?. Amsterdam ArenA. Retrieved on 2006-12-10. 
^ a b c d UEFA sanctioned the UEFA Supercup for the first time in 1973. In 1972 was a unofficial edition and the I Centenary of Rangers FC (see History of the UEFA Supercup in uefa.com). 
^ a b UEFA sanctioned the UEFA Intertoto Cup for the first time in 1995. In 1960&#039;s has an unofficial status (See History of UEFA Intertoto Cup in uefa.com). 
^ Ajax agree technical partnership with FC Omniworld. AJAX-USA.com. Retrieved on 2006-12-14. 
^ History of the Ajax logo 
^ Ajax Extend Sponsor Contract with ABN AMRO until 2011. ABNAMRO.com. Retrieved on 2006-12-10. 
^ Contract with kit sponsor Adidas extended until summer 2009. AJAX-USA.com. Retrieved on 2006-12-10. 
^ Ajax retire number 14. Ajax.nl. Retrieved on 2007-04-18. 
^ a b c d e f Football Europe: AFC Ajax; uefa.com 

[edit] Bibliography
(Dutch) David Endt, De godenzonen van Ajax, Rap, Amsterdam, 1993, ISBN 90-6005-463-6 
(Dutch) Jan Baltus Kok, Naar Ajax. Mobiliteitspatronen van bezoekers bij vier thuiswedstrijden van Ajax, University of Amsterdam, Amsterdam, 1992, ISSN 0922-5625 
Simon Kuper, Ajax, The Dutch, The War. Football in Europe during the Second World War, Orion, London (Translation of: Ajax, de Joden en Nederland (&quot;Ajax, the Jews, The Netherlands)&quot; [10], 2003, ISBN 0-7528-4274-9 
(Dutch) Evert Vermeer, 95 jaar Ajax. 1900-1995, Luitingh-Sijthoff, Amsterdam, 1996, ISBN 90-245-2364-8 

[edit] External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to: 
Ajax AmsterdamOfficial 
Ajax.nl - Official website of AFC Ajax (Dutch) / (English) 
Unofficial 
Ajax Foto Side - Photo fansite of AFC Ajax (Dutch) 
Ajaxfanz - Popular fansite of AFC Ajax (Dutch) 
Ajax Live - Dutch fansite of Ajax (Dutch) 
Ajax USA - American fansite of AFC Ajax (English) 
Ajaxsupporters.com - German fansite of AFC Ajax (German) 
Ajax Fr - French supporters site (French) 
Ajax en France - French fansite of AFC Ajax (French) 
Ajax Poland - Polish Ajax fansite (Polish) 
Superajax.com - Russian fansite of AFC Ajax (Russian) 
Ajax Portal (Hungarian) 
Football-Lineups.com - Ajax tactics and lineups (English) 
 Eredivisie • 2007/08 v • d • e  
 
Ajax &#124; AZ &#124; Excelsior &#124; Feyenoord &#124; De Graafschap &#124; Groningen &#124; Heerenveen &#124; Heracles &#124; NAC &#124; NEC &#124; PSV &#124; Roda JC &#124; Sparta &#124; Twente &#124; Utrecht &#124; Vitesse &#124; VVV-Venlo &#124; Willem II
 
 
Eredivisie seasons 
1993/94 &#124; 1994/95 &#124; 1995/96 &#124; 1996/97 &#124; 1997/98 &#124; 1998/99 &#124; 1999/00 &#124; 2000/01 &#124; 2001/02 &#124; 2002/03 &#124; 2003/04 &#124; 2004/05 &#124; 2005/06 &#124; 2006/07 &#124; 2007/08
 
 
Football competitions in the Netherlands 
Eredivisie &#124; Eerste Divisie &#124; Hoofdklasse &#124; KNVB Cup &#124; Johan Cruijff-schaal
 



 
Members of G-14 v • d • e 
 Ajax •  Arsenal •  FC Barcelona •  Bayer Leverkusen •  Bayern Munich

 Borussia Dortmund •  PSV Eindhoven •  Internazionale •  Juventus

 Liverpool •  Manchester United •  AC Milan •  Lyon •  Marseille

 Paris Saint-Germain •  FC Porto •  Real Madrid •  Valencia
 

Retrieved from &quot;http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/AFC_Ajax&quot;
Categories: Companies listed on the Euronext exchanges &#124; Dutch football clubs &#124; Companies of the Netherlands &#124; Football (soccer) clubs established in 1900 &#124; G-14 clubs &#124; Ajax Amsterdam

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		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>AFC Ajax<br />
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia<br />
• Learn more about using Wikipedia for research •Jump to: navigation, search<br />
Ajax </p>
<p>Full name Amsterdamsche<br />
Football Club Ajax NV<br />
Nickname(s) Godenzonen (Sons of the Gods)<br />
Joden (Jews)<br />
Neuzen (Noses)<br />
Founded March 18, 1900<br />
Ground Amsterdam ArenA<br />
Amsterdam<br />
Capacity 51,628 [1]<br />
Chairman  John Jaakke<br />
Manager  Adrie Koster<br />
League Eredivisie<br />
2006-07 Eredivisie, 2nd </p>
<p>　<br />
Home colours </p>
<p>　<br />
Away colours </p>
<p>Amsterdamsche Football Club Ajax (Euronext: AJAX), also referred to as AFC Ajax, or simply Ajax, is a professional football club from Amsterdam, Netherlands. The club is historically one of the three clubs that dominate the Dutch national football league (Eredivisie), the other two being Feyenoord and PSV.</p>
<p>Ajax is one of the five teams that has earned the right to keep the European Cup; they won consecutively in 1971-1973. In 1972, they completed The Treble by winning the Dutch Eredivisie, KNVB Cup, and the European Cup; to date they are the only team to keep the European Cup and accomplish the European Treble , also AFC Ajax are one of the only two teams (with Manchester United in 1999) to win the The Treble and the Intercontinental Cup in the same season/calender year, this was achieved in the legendary 1971/72 season [2]. They are also one of only three clubs (with Juventus and Bayern Munich) to have won all three major European trophies at least once (the European Cup, the European Cup Winners&#8217; Cup and the UEFA Cup). They were the first team to win what has become the UEFA Intertoto Cup [3]. Ajax has also won the Intercontinental Cup twice.</p>
<p>Contents [hide]<br />
1 History<br />
1.1 Professional football and the road to the top<br />
1.2 Gloria Ajax<br />
1.3 The 1st Renaissance<br />
1.4 Recent events<br />
2 Youth program<br />
3 Rivalry<br />
4 Satellite clubs<br />
5 Logo<br />
6 Colors<br />
7 Stadium<br />
8 Supporters<br />
8.1 References to Judaism<br />
9 Players and managers<br />
9.1 Current squad<br />
9.2 Notable Ajax players<br />
9.2.1 Notable professional Ajax players (1954-present)<br />
9.2.2 Notable non-professional Ajax players (1900-1954)<br />
9.3 List of Ajax managers<br />
9.4 Number 14<br />
10 Honours<br />
10.1 Official trophies (recognized by UEFA and FIFA)<br />
10.1.1 National<br />
10.1.2 International<br />
10.2 Other trophies<br />
11 See also<br />
12 References<br />
13 Bibliography<br />
14 External links </p>
<p>[edit] History<br />
The club was founded in Amsterdam on March 18, 1900 by Floris Stempel, Carel Reeser and the brothers Han and Johan Dade. It was the second incarnation, after a short-lived previous attempt (as the Footh-Ball Club Ajax) in 1894.</p>
<p>After several years, Ajax succeeded in promotion to the highest level of football in 1911, under the guidance of Jack Kirwan (their first official coach). Besides the achievement itself, this year turned out to be another historical milestone: due to the fact that Sparta Rotterdam (a respected and successful football club in those days) already wore the jersey with the vertical red and white stripes, Ajax was prompted to alter its own design with the famous red-and-white combination that they have donned as their home outfit until this day.</p>
<p>Although their efforts were not unnoticed (Gé Fortgens became a frequent member of the Dutch national team for a while) they were relegated in 1914. While they immediately bounced back, they had to wait until 1917 to regain higher level status again: they did become league champions in both 1915 and 1916, however the 1915 league was declared unofficial (due to World War I), whereas in 1916 they did not make it through the promotion round.</p>
<p>Under the guidance of Jack Reynolds (Kirwan&#8217;s successor as of 1915) the club promoted to the highest level in 1917 and won the Dutch national cup final &#8211; defeating VSV with 5-0. Ajax went on to win their first national championship in 1918.</p>
<p>The championship was secured in Tilburg (where they faced Willem II in the league), though not without some consternation: Jan de Natris, arguably the club&#8217;s first &#8217;star player&#8217;, missed the train to Tilburg and opted to stay in Amsterdam instead &#8211; earning him a fine of 10 cents. In the following season he even earned a six month ban, but Ajax did well in his absence: not only did they retain the championship title, their 1919 campaign was also an unbeaten run for them &#8211; an accomplishment that was only repeated 76 years later by Ajax themselves.</p>
<p>Now a regular contender for the Western Regional championship in the Netherlands, Ajax marched through the twenties with regional titles in 1921, 1927 and 1928, next to a few minor cups. The 1930s would prove to be more successful however; with household names as Wim Anderiesen Sr., Dolf van Kol, Piet Strijbosch, Wim Volkers, Jan van Diepenbeek, Bob ten Have, Erwin van Wijngaarden and prolific striker Piet van Reenen, Ajax&#8217; period from the late twenties until World War II was so successful that many people dubbed it &#8216;the golden century&#8217; (a pun on the 17th century, the heyday of the Dutch Republic</p>
<p>With no less than six regional titles (1930, 1931, 1932, 1934, 1935, 1936, 1937, 1939) and 5 national championships (1931, 1932, 1934, 1937, 1939) Ajax was the most successful team of that era. The thirties were also notable for the final culmination of the rivalry with Feyenoord, another squad that earned many awards in that time, as well as the creation of the stadium &#8216;het Ajax-Stadion&#8217; dubbed &#8216;De Meer&#8217; (named after the borough of its residence). Until the emergence of the Amsterdam ArenA in 1996, this was Ajax&#8217; home ground (alongside the Olympic Stadium for matches of greater notoriety).</p>
<p>As of the 1940&#8217;s, perhaps in line with Jack Reynolds&#8217; retirement (he had stayed &#8211; save for a few spells of absence &#8211; on for the entire time as Ajax&#8217; manager since his entry in 1915), Ajax went through a period of recuperation. Except for Gerrit Fischer and Erwin van Wijngaarden, Ajax got a complete make-over. Now with Joop Stoffelen, Guus Dräger, Gé van Dijk, Jan Potharst and later Rinus Michels and Cor van der Hart as the new icons, Ajax managed to keep its name among the greatest in the Dutch national league. After a Cup Final victory in 1943, Ajax went on to finish second in the championship league in 1946 (behind HFC Haarlem followed by a number one finish in 1947.</p>
<p>They became regional champions in 1950 again, though they never came near winning the championship. Nevertheless, their performance was not an anonymous one, as this contained the famous match against Heerenveen. In that match Ajax were completely overthrown by Heerenveen in the later phase of the match, not even able to maintain a lead with a 1-5 score (the match ended 6-5 in favor of the Frisian side). In March 1941 Ajax performed the opposite: after being 6-0 behind to VUC in The Hague they managed to pull out a draw in the end (6-6).</p>
<p>Until 1954, the year that professional football was introduced in the Netherlands, Ajax had some minor successes, with the regional title in 1952 and a second place in the regional championship in 1954 (equalling in points with fellow Amsterdam club DWS).</p>
<p>[edit] Professional football and the road to the top<br />
While professional football was finally permitted in the Netherlands, Ajax was still far from the international top, as was demonstrated in the European Cup match against Vasas SC, where they overthrown by the Hungarians 4-0 in the Népstadion). Similar disappointing international knock-outs followed in 1960 (by the Norwegian amateurs of Fredrikstad FK, and, in the Cup Winners&#8217; Cup in 1961 against the Újpesti Dózsa of Ferenc Bene.</p>
<p>But they did fairly well on national level, earning the first Eredivisie-championship in 1957 and again in 1960. Especially that last title became memorable because of the way it was won; after equalling in points with arch-rivals Feyenoord a decisive match had to be played between the two contenders. Ajax cruised to a 5-1 victory with striker Wim Bleijenberg getting his name on the score sheet in threefold.</p>
<p>Bleijenberg was not the great striker of that time however, that title belonged to Henk Groot (although his older brother Cees Groot also scored a 100 goals for Ajax in his 5 year stay.). Arriving in 1959 from Stormvogels he immediately went on a scoring spree, scoring 38 goals in 1959/60 and 41 goals in 1960/61. He was a vital part of the Ajax in the early sixties, virtually replacing Piet van der Kuil (the star in the late fifties, who left to PSV in 1960) as the new &#8216;man of the hour&#8217;. Alongside the man who would later become Mister Ajax, Sjaak Swart, Co Prins, Ton Pronk, Bennie Muller and a young Piet Keizer Ajax added the National Cup in 1961 and the Intertoto Cup 1962 to their trophy cabinet.</p>
<p>After missing the championship after a 5-2 defeat against PSV in 1963, Ajax went descendo in the national competition. Henk Groot left to Feyenoord that summer, and in 1964/65 it went so bad that they were near direct relegation. Things would turn for the better though, especially after former player Rinus Michels replaced Vic Buckingham as the head manager. Ajax managed to secure a midtable spot under Michels, but Buckingham&#8217;s second tenure was not a complete disappointment as he was the first coach to introduce Johan Cruijff (during the 3-1 loss at GVAV).</p>
<p>Michels started a revolution in Amsterdam, beginning with the return of Henk Groot and Co Prins, as well as the installment of Gert Bals as the new first goalie. Taking delicate steps on the way to the &#8216;total football&#8217; that Michels envisioned, he showed no mercy in sacrificing players who he considered not to be good enough. Most notable example of this was defender Frits Soetekouw (who was replaced by Ajax&#8217; new leader Velibor Vasović), whose own goal aided to the victory of Dukla Prague in the quarter-final of the European Cup in 1966/67, after Ajax had knocked out Beşiktaş and defeated Liverpool with 5-1.</p>
<p>Ajax sealed their second consecutive championship in 1967. Not as dominant as the previous year, but with a seemingly unstoppable offensive side: they scored no less than 122 goals (still a national record), of which 33 were from Johan Cruijff, at 20 years old already the star player. It was also the season for another important milestone: for the first time in history, Ajax won the double (after defeating NAC in the cup final).</p>
<p>It earned them a European Cup match-up against Real Madrid in the next season, providing them an even greater reputation than they had last year. However, after two 1-1 draws, Ignacio Zoco scored the winner for Los Merengues in extra time.</p>
<p>Ajax won the Dutch title of 1968 (after Feyenoord had led the league for a long while) and reached the European Cup final of 1969 in Madrid. Getting there proved to be quite difficult though. After deafeating FC Nürnberg in the first round, they were almost knocked out by Benfica in the second one, losing 3-1 to them in Amsterdam. Thanks to an amazing comeback, given shape by goals of Inge Danielsson and Johan Cruijff, Ajax returned their favour in Lisbon and knocked the Portuguese champions out in a decisive match played in Paris (3-0). They repeated this score against the next opponent, Spartak Trnava, but barely survived in the away match.</p>
<p>Keeping the score at 2-0, Ajax went on to be AC Milan&#8217;s opponent in the final. The Italians, lauded for their excellent defense and counter-attacks, waltzed over them with ease. Pierino Prati opened the score after 7 minutes and went on to become the man of match with three goals, while Velibor Vasović was the only Ajax player to get one back at Milan by scoring a penalty. Thanks to Milan-striker Angelo Sormani the game ended in 4-1.</p>
<p>[edit] Gloria Ajax<br />
As of the new season, Ajax&#8217; primary team was renewed. Among the new additions were national top scorer Dick van Dijk and midfielders Gerrie Mühren and Nico Rijnders, while second team player Ruud Krol was promoted to the first eleven. They replaced Klaas Nuninga, Inge Danielsson, Theo van Duijvenbode (all sold to other clubs) and Henk Groot (quit football after an injury while playing against Poland, while Ton Pronk and Bennie Muller were no longer as frequently in the first XI after many years of service.</p>
<p>With a refreshed selection, Ajax went for another attempt to win the European Cup. They had lost the Eredivisie title to Feyenoord last season, but conquering this season&#8217;s title proved to be an easy task, winning 27 out of 34 games by scoring exactly 100 goals. For a long while Feyenoord stayed close to the men from Amsterdam, but they had to settle for a second place. In the end both clubs could bring a cup home: Ajax won the Eredivisie title while Feyenoord won the European Cup.</p>
<p>After Ajax reached the semi-finals of the Inter-Cities Fairs Cup in 1970 (being knocked out by Arsenal after defeating Hannover 96, Napoli, Ruch Chorzów and Carl Zeiss Jena), 1971 became the long awaited year of glory. For a long while Ajax seemed to be on their way to the treble (a feat only previously performed by Celtic in 1967) if it weren&#8217;t for the longer breath that Feyenoord had in the competition. The national cup stayed in Ajax&#8217; hands however (won after a double final against Sparta).</p>
<p>Ajax had defeated (17 Nëntori, FC Basel, Celtic and Atlético Madrid en route to the 1971 European Cup final played at Wembley on June 2. There, 83,000 spectators witnessed how Dick van Dijk opened the score against Panathinaikos. Ajax scored another goal in the dying minutes of the game when Arie Haan&#8217;s shot was deflected by defender Kapsis.</p>
<p>Wrapping things up with a 2-0 score, team captain Vasović could finally lift the European Cup (losing the final in 1966 with FK Partizan and again in 1969), showing it later to the crowd that was celebrating on the streets of Amsterdam.</p>
<p>In the following years Ajax established itself as the new ruler of Europe. Staff and team changes could not discourage the team&#8217;s power. Whether it was Stefan Kovacs replacing coach Michels in 1971, Rijnders and Vasović&#8217; departure in the same year, Van Dijk&#8217;s departure in 1972 &#8211; it seemed like nothing could stop them. Perhaps the greatest example of this was their performance chart of 1972, winning all the of the competitions that they participated in (European Cup, Intercontinental Cup, European Super Cup, National Championship and the KNVB Cup), an achievement never shown again by any other club. And 1973 seemed like a simple continuation of that situation, securing themselves of yet another Dutch championship and moreover, the third consecutive European Cup.</p>
<p>It all started to fall apart when Johan Cruijff left the gang for Barcelona in 1973, effectively ending the reign of the &#8216;Twelve Apostles&#8217; (The usual line-up Heinz Stuy &#8211; Wim Suurbier, Barry Hulshoff, Horst Blankenburg, Ruud Krol &#8211; Arie Haan, Johan Neeskens, Gerrie Mühren &#8211; Sjaak Swart, Johan Cruijff, Keizer plus the usual twelfth man which was Ruud Suurendonk until 1972 and then Johnny Rep). Were clubs like Real Madrid, Bayern Munich, Internazionale, Arsenal, Juventus and Independiente not too big of an obstacle until then, they could not get past CSKA Sofia in late &#8216;73. With the European Super Cup of &#8216;73 as a consolation prize, Ajax had to wait for a couple of decades for another era of European success.</p>
<p>Nevertheless, the &#8216;total football&#8217; that they had propagated became a lasting memory for many football fans, also because of the great performance of the Dutch national team on the following World Cup &#8211; using similar tactics. Manager Tomislav Ivić would later dub the era &#8216;Gloria Ajax&#8217;, illustrating the impact of their years at the top.</p>
<p>[edit] The 1st Renaissance<br />
That same Ivić coached Ajax to their first championship after their heyday, in 1977. After that year Ajax resumed to frequently winning national honours, though impressive international performances were sparse. An unfortunate knock-out against Juventus in the quarterfinal of the European Cup in 1978 and a European Cup semifinal in 1980 (KO by Nottingham Forest) was all that Ajax could do until the late eighties. Especially the run between 1980 and 1986 was disappointing, not getting past the second round for six years in a row. 1987 would become the turning point however, in two different ways.</p>
<p>Until then there was rarely something to complain on national level (although the club went through a period of several internal conflicts) as they won 5 championships after &#8216;77 as well as 4 cups. Johan Cruijff even came back in 1981, giving the talented youngsters Wim Kieft, John van &#8216;t Schip, Marco van Basten, Gerald Vanenburg, Jesper Olsen and Frank Rijkaard &#8211; Ajax&#8217;s trademark players of the 80&#8217;s &#8211; some guidance. After leaving the club in &#8216;83 (after a conflict with president Harmsen) for Feyenoord, he returned once again in 1985 as the new manager.</p>
<p>Cruijff&#8217;s offensive tactics are immediately illustrated in his first active season, when Ajax ends the season with 120 goals in total on the scoresheet, of which 37 were from Ajax&#8217; new great star, forward Marco van Basten. It was not enough to retain the championship however, losing for two years in a row to PSV.</p>
<p>Despite the lack of a championship Cruijff&#8217;s Ajax did bring a European Cup back to Amsterdam. Following the victory against Lokomotive Leipzig, they could once again celebrate on the balcony on the Leidseplein, this time to show Amsterdam the &#8216;87 Cup Winners Cup. They got close to winning it in the consecutive year, but KV Mechelen proved to be too strong in the final which Ajax ended with 10 men.</p>
<p>By that time Cruijff was already gone, as a result of the declining results in the national league. With most of the 80&#8217;s stars also departed, Ajax continued to compete for the title with PSV in the next years, usually ending in favour of the latter party. Other negative aspects of the period 1988-1991 was the fraud-case in 1989, as well as the European suspension after a hooligan threw a bar at the goalie of Austria Wien in a UEFA-Cup match in the same year.</p>
<p>Things seemed to clear up a bit later that year, as they even went on to win the championship race with PSV for a change in 1990, and came shy of two goals in 1991 for a back-to-back run.</p>
<p>Early in the next season, the coach under whom the abovementioned was achieved left; lured by his former club, Leo Beenhakker went back to Real Madrid. His successor was Louis van Gaal, the former assistant-coach. Like Cruijff, Van Gaal rapidly made his mark by altering Ajax&#8217; tactics. Also like Cruijff his efforts were rewarded in his first season at the helm, by winning the UEFA Cup after a thrilling final against AC Torino. Although he did not play the last game of the final, Europe had also definitely met the skills of Ajax&#8217; most talented player: Dennis Bergkamp, who had contributed six goals on the road to their victory.</p>
<p>In the Netherlands, Bergkamp had already won 2 consecutive topscorer titles (1991, 1992) but once again the Eredivisie title had to be left for PSV to take. In 1992/93 Ajax even had to settle for a third spot in the final ranking (for first time since 1984), somewhat making up for it by winning the national cup.</p>
<p>It turned out to be the last award that Bergkamp would win with Ajax, as he and buddy Wim Jonk left to Internazionale. His loss was quickly forgotten by an excellent performance of Jari Litmanen on his position, establishing himself as the new number 10 of Ajax. Aside from Litmanen, Ajax attracted Finidi George and the returned Frank Rijkaard, providing the base for van Gaal to build on.</p>
<p>They won the national title of 1994, followed by a Champions league victory in 1995. Preceded by an unbeaten run in the national league to take the title of 1995, the season was a memorable way for Rijkaard to end his playing career, while striker Patrick Kluivert had an excellent start to his, with the then 18-year-old coming off the bench to score a late winner to beat AC Milan in the final of the Champions League. Ajax went on to beat Brazilian side Grêmio on penalties to win the unofficial World Club Cup &#8212; the Intercontinental Cup, also known as the Toyota Cup.</p>
<p>The following season, Ajax continued to succeed on the European front, succumbing only to Juventus on penalties in the final. Van Gaal&#8217;s success came to an end in 1997, and he duly parted ways with the Amsterdam club.</p>
<p>Danish coach Morten Olsen was brought in. He attracted Danish national team captain Michael Laudrup to the club, and together they won the Double of league championship and the Dutch cup. In his second year at the club, tension arose between Olsen and the Dutch players Ronald de Boer and Frank de Boer, and Olsen was sacked in 1998.</p>
<p>Soon all the team&#8217;s young stars that had heralded the Ajax Renaissance were gone &#8212; Clarence Seedorf in 1995 Edgar Davids, Michael Reiziger, Finidi George and Nwankwo Kanu in 1996 Patrick Kluivert, Marc Overmars and Winston Bogarde in 1997 Ronald de Boer and Frank de Boer in 1998 and Edwin van der Sar and Jari Litmanen in 1999, together with the retirment of Frank Rijkaard in 1995 and Danny Blind in 1999 every key player of the fabulous 1994/1995 team left Amsterdam; together with the departure of the technical team and the change of homeground from De Meer to the Amsterdam ArenA and the fact that the football club went public by going to the Amsterdam Stock Exchange, the AEX it signaled the end of an era for the club.</p>
<p>[edit] Recent events<br />
Since the success with the 1995 Champions league, Ajax have struggled to rediscover their European form. The only minor encouragement came in the 2002/03 season. Led by captain Cristian Chivu, Rafael van der Vaart, Zlatan Ibrahimović, Mido and the return of a legend in Jari Litmanen, manager Ronald Koeman guided a new crop of talent to within seconds of the Champions League semifinal. Ajax surged through to the quarterfinal of the Champions League, getting past two group stages that contained a number of European heavyweights including Inter, Lyon, Valencia, Roma, and Arsenal. Facing AC Milan in the quarterfinals, Ajax held their own against the Rossoneri, but were finally undone by a last-gasp winner in the dying seconds of the second-leg encounter at the San Siro.</p>
<p>Ajax in a match against NEC in the Amsterdam ArenA in 2006Koeman&#8217;s early success was short-lived. In 2005, he resigned after Ajax&#8217; defeat to Auxerre in the UEFA Cup tournament. This resignation was also the aftermath of Koeman&#8217;s long-standing spat with then football director Louis van Gaal who had questioned Koeman&#8217;s managerial abilities after Ajax&#8217; dry spell in the domestic league — which saw them languishing in fifth position at the beginning of 2005. Former Ajax-player Danny Blind, who, aside from working as Koeman&#8217;s technical coach and advisor, had virtually no top-level manager experience, was unveiled as their new coach. Blind instantly caused consternation by announcing that the club was to play using a 4-4-2, abandoning the Total Football-oriented 4-3-3 that has become Ajax&#8217; trademark. This season also saw the departure of key players Rafael van der Vaart and Nigel de Jong to Hamburger SV, while six others (Hatem Trabelsi, Tomáš Galásek, Hans Vonk, Nourdin Boukhari, Steven Pienaar and Maxwell) revealed they would leave the club at the end of the 2005-2006 season. Blind was sacked on May 10, 2006 after 422 days in charge. New coach Henk ten Cate, who won the Champions League and La Liga in 2006 as the assistant of Frank Rijkaard with FC Barcelona gave youngsters a shot to enter the selection of the first team. Ten Cate said youngsters Jan Vertonghen, Rydell Poepon and Robbert Schilder would be included in the selection, whereas Greek forward Angelos Charisteas was sold to Feyenoord. Ten Cate announced that he wished to return to form and win the Eredivisie in 2007.</p>
<p>Ajax missed out on a Champions League place in 2006/2007 after their defeat against FC Copenhagen (3-2 on aggregate). As a result, Ajax played against IK Start from Norway in the first round of the UEFA Cup September 14 and 28, and won the match 9-2 on aggregate (2-5 away and 4-0 home). Having then gotten through the Group Stage, they drew German club Werder Bremen in the Round of 32. In the first leg in Germany, Ajax lost 3-0. On the return leg in Amsterdam, they rallied for two second half goals to win 3-1, but lost 4-3 in aggregate.</p>
<p>In the 2006-07 season Ajax also achieved some successes with Henk ten Cate in charge. They won the Johan Cruijff Shield after a 3-1 win over rivals PSV and they also beat AZ 8-9 on penalties in the Dutch Cup final after a 1-1 draw after extra time. Ajax was very close to clinch the Eredivisie title after deducting a 10 point deficit from PSV, but lost it on goal difference on the last matchday to PSV (PSV: 75-25, Ajax 84-35).</p>
<p>In the following 2007-08 season Ajax sold two of the biggest talents, Ryan Babel for 17 million Euros to Liverpool FC and Wesley Sneijder for 27 million Euros to Real Madrid. Luis Suarez came from FC Groningen to replace Ryan Babel. Ajax decided not to buy a replacement for Wesley Sneijder because of the difficulty in finding a similar-position type of player to replace him and also because the deal was finished close to the transfer deadline and Ajax would not rush though any signings.</p>
<p>These events together with Edgar Davids breaking a leg disrupted the preparation for the qualification games for a Champions League place. Opponent Slavia Prague won both matches; with a 2-1 scoreline in Prague and 0-1 victory in Amsterdam. The failure to clinch a position in the Champions League group stage led to great critism from both the supporters and the media, mainly directed at Henk ten Cate and the board of directors. A 1-0 victory over PSV Eindhoven for the Johan Cruiffschaal could not make up for the loss of a Champions League spot. Despite quite a good start in the competition with a lot of goals from both Luis Suarez and Klaas-Jan Huntelaar, Ajax lost ground again in Europe after not making it to the group phase of the UEFA Cup; managing a 0-1 win away against Dinamo Zagreb but lost the tie in Amsterdam after extra time with the score 2-3 to Dinamo. With these string of European failures, coach Ten Cate has already failed to lead the team to the Champions League group stage for two seasons in a row and no European football at the ArenA for the remainder of the 2007/2008 season. With this result, Ten Cate lost the confidence of the supporters who demanded that the board sack him. A more viable solution came when Chelsea (in the same week) offered Ten Cate the job of assistant manager with a 3-year deal. On Tuesday 9 October Ten Cate left Ajax. Adrie Koster was selected to helm the squad.</p>
<p>[edit] Youth program<br />
The club is also particularly famous for its renowned youth program that has introduced many great footballers &#8211; Cruijff being the best example. Ajax has also expanded its talent searching program to South Africa and the United States with Ajax Cape Town and Ajax America respectively. Its satellite club is Ajax Cape Town of South Africa from where youth players have been drafted into the Eredivisie squad, such as Steven Pienaar and Aaron Mokoena. In 1995, the year that they won the Champions League, the Dutch national team was almost entirely composed of Ajax players, with goalkeeper Edwin van der Sar, players such as Michael Reiziger, Frank de Boer and Danny Blind in defense, Ronald de Boer, Edgar Davids and Clarence Seedorf in midfield, and Patrick Kluivert and Marc Overmars in attack. The team was coached by Louis van Gaal, and also featured foreign stars such as Jari Litmanen, Nwankwo Kanu and Finidi George. Its current successes are mostly domestic, notwithstanding some minor successes in the 2002-03 Champions League. Its youth team continues to develop talented individuals like Wesley Sneijder, John Heitinga, Hedwiges Maduro, Urby Emanuelson, Ryan Babel and Maarten Stekelenburg. At the 2006 World Cup, Sneijder, Heitinga, Babel, Maduro and Stekelenburg were included in the national squad, alongside other players from the youth program who now play elsewhere, such as Edwin van der Sar and Rafael van der Vaart.</p>
<p>[edit] Rivalry<br />
Although Ajax have been vying for the championship with PSV in recent years, its main traditional rivalry is with Feyenoord from Rotterdam, culminating every year in the &#8220;Klassieker&#8221;. It is a match between the two largest cities of the Netherlands, which are both really distinct from each other. Amsterdam is a business city and is the financial capital of the country (as well as the political capital). Furthermore the city identifies itself with artists, creativity and sophistication. Whilst Rotterdam hosts the biggest port of Europe and thus identifies itself with hard, no-nonsense, industrial labour. There have been violent clashes between the supporters of both clubs, of which the Beverwijk fight in 1997 was the most infamous, resulting in the murder of Ajax supporter Carlo Picornie. Ajax is both the best supported club in The Netherlands and thus the most hated one by supporters of other clubs. Not only Feyenoord from Rotterdam but also fans of FC Utrecht and ADO Den Haag regard Ajax as there main rival.</p>
<p>[edit] Satellite clubs<br />
The following clubs are affiliated with AFC Ajax:</p>
<p> Ajax Cape Town<br />
 HFC Haarlem<br />
 FC Omniworld[4]<br />
 FC Volendam<br />
 Ajax America </p>
<p>[edit] Logo<br />
In 1900, when the club was founded, the emblem of Ajax was just a picture of an Ajax player. In 1928, the club logo was introduced with the head of the Greek hero Ajax. The logo was once again changed in 1990, making the old one more abstract. It should also be noted that the portrait of Ajax on the logo is drawn with eleven lines, symbolising the eleven players of a football team. [5]</p>
<p>[edit] Colors<br />
Ajax originally played in an all black uniform with a red sash tied around the players&#8217; waists, but that uniform was soon replaced by a red/white striped shirt and black shorts. Red, black and white are the three colors of the flag of Amsterdam. However, when, under manager Jack Kirwan, the club got promoted to the top flight of Dutch football for the first time in 1911 (then the Eerste Klasse or &#8216;First Class&#8217;, later named the Eredivisie), Ajax were forced to change their colors because Sparta Rotterdam already had the exact same outfit. Special kits for away fixtures did not exist at the time and according to football association regulations the newcomers had to change their colors if two teams in the same league had identical uniforms. Ajax opted for white shorts and white shirt with a broad, vertical red stripe over chest and back, which still is Ajax&#8217;s outfit. Ajax&#8217;s shirts have been sponsored by ABN AMRO since 1991, the current sponsorship contract is going to run through 2010-2011 season.[6] The shirts have been manufactured by Adidas since 2000 (until at least 2009); before that Umbro (1989-2000) was manufacturing clothing for the team.[7] On the April 1 2007, Ajax wore a different sponsor for the match against Heracles Almelo: Florius. Florius is a banking program just launched by ABN AMRO who wanted it to be the shirt sponsor for one match.</p>
<p>[edit] Stadium<br />
Main article: Amsterdam ArenA</p>
<p>Amsterdam ArenA<br />
Exterior of StadiumAjax&#8217; first stadium was built in 1911 out of wood and was simply called The Stadium. Ajax later played in the stadium that was built for the 1928 Summer Olympics, held in Amsterdam. This stadium, designed by Jan Wils, is simply known as the Olympic Stadium. In 1934, Ajax moved to De Meer Stadion in east Amsterdam, where they would play until 1996. During big European fixtures the club would often play at the Olympic Stadium, where the capacity was higher.</p>
<p>In 1996, Ajax moved to a new home ground in the southeast of the city known as the Amsterdam ArenA that was built at the cost of $134 million. The stadium is capable of holding approximately 52,000 people. The average attendance in 2006/07 was 48,610 people. The Arena has a retractable roof and was the example for other modern stadiums built in Europe in the following years. In the Netherlands, the Arena had earned a reputation for having a terrible grass pitch caused by the removable roof that, even when open, takes away too much sunlight and ventilation from the ground, and by the NFL Europa&#8217;s Amsterdam Admirals who played their home games on it.</p>
<p>The much loved De Meer stadium was torn down and the land was sold to the city council.</p>
<p>[edit] Supporters</p>
<p>[edit] References to Judaism<br />
The Ajax fans have developed the tradition of using Jewish and Israeli symbols to express their allegiance, despite being almost entirely non Jewish in their composition. Regularly, the supporters wave large Star of David flags and scream Joden! Joden! (&#8221;Jews! Jews!&#8221;) to fire up their team. Die-hard Ajax supporters call themselves &#8220;F-Siders&#8221; or &#8220;Joden&#8221; — Dutch for &#8220;Jews&#8221; — a nickname that reflects both the team&#8217;s and the city&#8217;s Jewish heritage. This nickname for Ajax fans dates back to before World War II, when Amsterdam was home to most of the Netherlands&#8217; 140,000 Jews and the Ajax stadium itself was located near a Jewish neighborhood. Most Dutch Jews were murdered by the Nazis during the occupation, and today very little remains of Amsterdam&#8217;s old Jewish quarter. But the tradition at Ajax survived. Ajax currently has no Jewish players, the last player with any Jewish roots being Daniël de Ridder.</p>
<p>More recently, the issue has become a significant social problem in that in an increasingly bizarre and racist way, opposing supporters specifically use antisemitism to express their antipathy towards Ajax. This is expressed in chants such as Hamas, Hamas, Jews into the gas (Hamas, hamas, joden aan het gas) or producing hissing sounds that imitate the flow of gas. This in turn does not withhold the &#8216;Jewish&#8217; Ajax supporters from celebrating the Bombing of Rotterdam by Nazi Germany when facing Feyenoord with songs like When spring comes we will throw bombs on Rotterdam! (Als de lente komt dan gooien wij bommen op Rotterdam). Songs like this (using the melody of ´Tulips from Amsterdam´) were sung from the stage, i.e. organised, at the celebration of the winning of the Dutch Cup in 2006.</p>
<p>However, hardcore Ajax fans, although almost entirely gentiles, are proud of their &#8216;outsider&#8217; image as &#8220;Jews&#8221; and feel encouraged to display more Jewish / Israeli symbols at matches, using them as a &#8220;badge of battle&#8221;.</p>
<p>Those Ajax fans who are actually Jewish are split on the morality of this matter; some feel it is perversely flattering but many others feel it is disrespectful and racist for non Jews to act in such a way that encourages antisemitic abuse. Dutch authorities have tried to tone down the Jewish symbols of support for Ajax, hoping to lead to a decrease of antisemitic counter-incidents. However, the head of the European Board of Jewish Deputies has signalled his support for the F-siders, stating that antisemitism in Europe would be generally lessened if more non-Jews so readily identified with Jewish culture. The mayor of Amsterdam, Job Cohen, is also Jewish himself and has not condemned the Ajax fans.</p>
<p>However club chairman John Jaakke has asked the club to distance its self from the &#8217;supposed&#8217; Jewish identity:</p>
<p>&#8220;Ajax is being presented as a &#8216;Jewish club&#8217; and some of our supporters have taken to calling themselves &#8216;Jews&#8217; as an honorary nickname. I want to state for the record that Ajax wants to shed this image and will do what is necessary to achieve this,&#8221; [1]</p>
<p>Related Trivia</p>
<p>A similar situation exists at English Premier League club Tottenham Hotspur F.C., which also has a reputation for having a large Jewish following, where supporters proudly call themselves Yids to diffuse its use as anti-semitic provocation by opposition fans.</p>
<p>In the Australian south eastern state of Victoria, there exists the Ajax Amateur Football Club, which is a Jewish Australian rules football club, in that the vast majority of administrators and players are Jewish, and the club has a Magen David (Star of David) on its uniform. Their playing colours are also the same as AFC Ajax.</p>
<p>[edit] Players and managers</p>
<p>[edit] Current squad<br />
As of September 19, 2007.</p>
<p>No.  Position Player<br />
1  GK Maarten Stekelenburg<br />
2  DF John Heitinga (vice-captain)<br />
3  DF Jaap Stam (captain)<br />
4  DF Thomas Vermaelen<br />
5  DF Urby Emanuelson<br />
6  MF Hedwiges Maduro<br />
7  FW Kennedy Bakircioglü<br />
8  FW Ismael Urzaiz<br />
9  FW Klaas-Jan Huntelaar<br />
10  FW Albert Luque<br />
11  FW Leonardo<br />
12  GK Erik Heijblok<br />
13  MF Edgar Davids<br />
15  MF Laurent Delorge<br />
16  FW Luis Suárez<br />
17  MF Jan Vertonghen<br />
  No.  Position Player<br />
18  MF Gabri<br />
19  MF Dennis Rommedahl<br />
20  DF George Ogăraru<br />
21  FW Edgar Manucharyan<br />
22  DF Robbert Schilder<br />
23  FW Nicolae Mitea<br />
24  MF Mitchell Donald<br />
25  DF Gregory van der Wiel<br />
26  MF Jeffrey Sarpong<br />
27  MF Vurnon Anita<br />
28  MF Michael Krohn-Dehli<br />
30  GK Dennis Gentenaar<br />
31  DF Jurgen Colin<br />
32  GK Marco van Duin<br />
34  FW John Goossens<br />
38  MF Siem De Jong </p>
<p>Out on loan<br />
No.  Position Player<br />
––  FW Rydell Poepon (on loan to Willem II)<br />
––  GK Kenneth Vermeer (on loan to Willem II) </p>
<p>[edit] Notable Ajax players</p>
<p>[edit] Notable professional Ajax players (1954-present)<br />
Netherlands</p>
<p> Wim Anderiesen (jr.)<br />
 Ryan Babel<br />
 Gert Bals<br />
 Marco van Basten<br />
 Dennis Bergkamp<br />
 Wim Bleyenberg<br />
 Danny Blind<br />
 Frank de Boer<br />
 Ronald de Boer<br />
 Peter Boeve<br />
 Winston Bogarde<br />
 John Bosman<br />
 Willy Brokamp<br />
 John van den Brom<br />
 Johan Cruijff<br />
 Lloyd Doesburg<br />
 Pim van Dord<br />
 Dick van Dijk<br />
 Gerard van Dijk<br />
 Theo van Duivenbode<br />
 Johnny Dusbaba<br />
 Jan Everse<br />
 Ruud Geels<br />
 Eddy Pieters Graafland<br />
 Cees Groot<br />
 Henk Groot<br />
 Arie Haan<br />
 Peter Hoekstra<br />
 Bertus Hoogerman<br />
 Barry Hulshoff<br />
 Wim Jansen<br />
 Nigel de Jong<br />
 Wim Jonk<br />
 Piet Keizer<br />
 Wim Kieft<br />
 Patrick Kluivert<br />
 Ronald Koeman<br />
 Michel Kreek<br />
 Ruud Krol<br />
 Piet van der Kuil<br />
 Tscheu La Ling<br />
 Denny Landzaat<br />
 John van Loen<br />
 Hennie Meijer<br />
 Stanley Menzo<br />
 Wim Meutstege<br />
 Andy van der Meyde<br />
 Rinus Michels<br />
 Keje Molenaar<br />
 Ger van Mourik<br />
 Arnold Mühren<br />
 Gerrie Mühren<br />
 Jan Mulder<br />
 Ben Muller<br />
  Johan Neeskens<br />
 René Notten<br />
 Klaas Nuninga<br />
 Edo Ophof<br />
 Piet Ouderland<br />
 Marc Overmars<br />
 Peet Petersen<br />
 Co Prins<br />
 Ton Pronk<br />
 Michael Reiziger<br />
 Johnny Rep<br />
 Martijn Reuser<br />
 Frank Rijkaard<br />
 Nico Rijnders<br />
 Bryan Roy<br />
 Edwin van der Sar<br />
 Werner Schaaphok<br />
 John van &#8216;t Schip<br />
 Dick Schoenaker<br />
 Arnold Scholten<br />
 Piet Schrijvers<br />
 Clarence Seedorf<br />
 Sonny Silooy<br />
 Wesley Sneijder<br />
 Frits Soetekouw<br />
 Ronald Spelbos<br />
 Heinz Stuy<br />
 Wim Suurbier<br />
 Sjaak Swart<br />
 Simon Tahamata<br />
 Rafael van der Vaart<br />
 Gerald Vanenburg<br />
 John Veldman<br />
 Frank Verlaat<br />
 Ferdi Vierklau<br />
 Marciano Vink<br />
 Peter van Vossen<br />
 Aron Winter<br />
 Rob de Wit<br />
 Richard Witschge<br />
 Rob Witschge<br />
 Jan Wouters<br />
Australia</p>
<p> Michael Petersen<br />
Austria</p>
<p> Felix Gasselich<br />
 Heinz Schilcher<br />
Argentina</p>
<p> Mauro Rosales<br />
 Armenia</p>
<p> Edgar Manucharyan<br />
Belgium</p>
<p> Jelle van Damme<br />
 Walter Meeuws<br />
 Tom de Mul<br />
 Tom Soetaers<br />
 Wesley Sonck<br />
Brazil</p>
<p> Maxwell<br />
 Márcio Santos<br />
 Wamberto<br />
Croatia</p>
<p> Božo Broketa<br />
 Joey Didulica<br />
Czech Republic</p>
<p> Tomáš Galásek<br />
 Zdeněk Grygera<br />
Denmark</p>
<p> Frank Arnesen<br />
 Jesper Grønkjær<br />
 Johnny Hansen<br />
 Henning Jensen<br />
 Brian Laudrup<br />
 Michael Laudrup<br />
 Søren Lerby<br />
 Jan Mølby<br />
 Jesper Olsen<br />
 Kenneth Perez<br />
 Dan Petersen<br />
 Tom Søndergaard<br />
 Jan Sørensen<br />
 Ole Tobiasen<br />
 Steen Ziegler<br />
England</p>
<p> Ray Clarke (1978-79)<br />
 Ally Dick<br />
Egypt</p>
<p> Mido<br />
Finland</p>
<p> Jari Litmanen<br />
 Petri Pasanen<br />
 Petri Tiainen<br />
France</p>
<p> Julien Escudé<br />
Ghana</p>
<p> Abubakari Yakubu<br />
Georgia</p>
<p> Shota Arveladze<br />
 Georgiou Kinkladze<br />
Germany</p>
<p> Horst Blankenburg<br />
 Arno Steffenhagen<br />
 Greece</p>
<p> Nikos Machlas<br />
 Angelos Charisteas<br />
 Yannis Anastasiou<br />
Hungary</p>
<p> Pál Fischer<br />
 Zoltán Varga<br />
Tunisia</p>
<p> Hatem Trabelsi<br />
Turkey</p>
<p> Mustafa Yücedağ<br />
Ireland</p>
<p> Frank Stapleton<br />
Morocco</p>
<p> Nourdin Boukhari<br />
Nigeria</p>
<p> Tijjani Babangida<br />
 Finidi George<br />
 Pius Ikedia<br />
 Christopher Kanu<br />
 Nwankwo Kanu<br />
 Sunday Oliseh<br />
Norway</p>
<p> André Bergdølmo<br />
Portugal</p>
<p> Dani<br />
Romania</p>
<p> Cristian Chivu<br />
 Bogdan Lobonţ<br />
Serbia</p>
<p> Velibor Vasović<br />
South Africa</p>
<p> Benni McCarthy<br />
 Aaron Mokoena<br />
 Steven Pienaar<br />
 Hans Vonk<br />
Spain</p>
<p> Juanfran<br />
 Roger<br />
 Gabri<br />
Sweden</p>
<p> Inge Danielsson<br />
 Zlatan Ibrahimović<br />
 Peter Larsson<br />
 Stefan Pettersson<br />
 Markus Rosenberg </p>
<p>[edit] Notable non-professional Ajax players (1900-1954)<br />
Netherlands</p>
<p> Henk Anderiesen<br />
 Wim Anderiesen (sr.)<br />
 Henk Blomvliet<br />
 Jan de Boer<br />
 Theo Brokmann (sr.)<br />
 Theo Brokmann (jr.)<br />
 Frans Couton<br />
 Piet van Deyck<br />
 Jan van Diepenbeek<br />
  Jan van Dort<br />
 Guus Dräger<br />
 Gerrit Fischer<br />
 Cor van der Hart<br />
 Jan Hassink<br />
 Bob ten Have<br />
 Henk Hordijk<br />
 Dolf van Kol<br />
 Gerrit Keizer<br />
 Ko Loois<br />
  Joop Martens<br />
 Henk Mulders<br />
 Jan de Natris<br />
 Fons Pelser<br />
 Joop Pelser<br />
 Jan Potharst<br />
 Piet van Reenen<br />
 Jan Schubert<br />
 Jan Schindeler<br />
 Joop Stoffelen<br />
  Piet Strijbosch<br />
 Henk Twelker<br />
 Jany van der Veen<br />
 Wim Volkers<br />
 Erwin van Wijngaarden<br />
United States</p>
<p> Eddy Hamel </p>
<p>[edit] List of Ajax managers<br />
 Adrie Koster (2007-present)<br />
 Henk ten Cate (2006-2007)<br />
 Danny Blind (2005-2006)<br />
 Ruud Krol (interim, 2005)<br />
 Ronald Koeman (2001-2005)<br />
 Co Adriaanse (2000-2001)<br />
 Hans Westerhof (interim, 2000)<br />
 Jan Wouters (1999-2000)<br />
 Morten Olsen (1997-1999)<br />
 Louis van Gaal (1991-1997)<br />
 Leo Beenhakker (1989-1991)<br />
 Kurt Linder (1988)<br />
 Johan Cruijff (1985-1988)<br />
 Aad de Mos (1982-1985)<br />
 Kurt Linder (1981-1982)<br />
  Leo Beenhakker (1979-1981)<br />
 Cor Brom (1978-1979)<br />
 Tomislav Ivić (1976-1978)<br />
 Rinus Michels (1975-1976)<br />
 Hans Kraay (1974-1975)<br />
 George Knoebel (1973-1974)<br />
 Stefan Kovacs (1971-1973)<br />
 Rinus Michels (1969-1971)<br />
 Karl Humenberger (1968-1969)<br />
 Vic Buckingham (1964-1968)<br />
 Jack Rowley (1963-1964)<br />
 Joseph Gruber (1962-1963)<br />
 Keith Spurgeon (1961-1962)<br />
 Vic Buckingham (1959-1961)<br />
 Karl Humenberger (1954-1959)<br />
  Walter Crook (1953-1954)<br />
 Robert Thomson (1950-1953)<br />
 Walter Crook (1948-1950)<br />
 Robert Smith (1947-1948)<br />
 Jack Reynolds (1942-1947)<br />
 Dolf van Kol (1942-1942)<br />
 Wim Volkers (1941-1942)<br />
 Vilmos Halpern (1940-1941)<br />
 Jack Reynolds (1928-1940)<br />
 Stanley Castle (1926-1928)<br />
 Harold Rose (1925-1926)<br />
 Jack Reynolds (1915-1925)<br />
 Jack Kirwan (1910-1915) </p>
<p>[edit] Number 14<br />
As of the following season (2007-08), no player will wear the number 14 shirt at Ajax, since the club decided to retire the shirt in respect to formidable legend, Johan Cruijff, who presented his number for his 60th Birthday, though Cruijff said that it should be better if the best player of the team would wear number 14. Spanish midfielder Roger was the last player to wear the number. [8]</p>
<p>[edit] Honours</p>
<p>[edit] Official trophies (recognized by UEFA and FIFA)</p>
<p>[edit] National<br />
Eredivisie: 29</p>
<p>1917-18, 1918-19, 1930-31, 1931-32, 1933-34, 1936-37, 1938-39, 1946-47, 1956-57, 1959-60, 1965-66, 1966-67, 1967-68, 1969-70, 1971-72, 1972-73, 1976-77, 1978-79, 1979-80, 1981-82, 1982-83, 1984-85, 1989-90, 1993-94, 1994-95, 1995-96, 1997-98, 2001-02, 2003-04<br />
KNVB Cup: 17</p>
<p>1917, 1943, 1961, 1967, 1970, 1971, 1972, 1979, 1983, 1986, 1987, 1993, 1998, 1999, 2002, 2006, 2007<br />
KNVB Cup runner-up: 5</p>
<p>1900, 1968, 1978, 1980, 1981<br />
Johan Cruijff Shield: 7</p>
<p>1993, 1994, 1995, 2002, 2005, 2006, 2007<br />
Johan Cruijff Shield runners-up: 4</p>
<p>1996, 1998, 1999, 2004 </p>
<p>[edit] International<br />
Intercontinental Cup: 2</p>
<p>1972, 1995 [9]<br />
European Champion Club&#8217;s Cup / Champions League: 4</p>
<p>1971, 1972, 1973, 1995 [9]<br />
European Champion Club&#8217;s Cup / Champions League runners-up: 2</p>
<p>1969, 1996 [9]<br />
European Cup Winners&#8217; Cup: 1</p>
<p>1987 [9]<br />
European Cup Winners&#8217; Cup runners-up: 1</p>
<p>1988 [9]<br />
UEFA Cup: 1</p>
<p>1992 [9]<br />
European Super Cup: 2</p>
<p>1973, 1995 [2]<br />
European Super Cup runners-up: 1</p>
<p>1988 [2] </p>
<p>[edit] Other trophies<br />
Rangers FC First Centenary 1872-1972: 1</p>
<p>1972 [2]<br />
UEFA Intertoto Cup: 1</p>
<p>1962 [3]<br />
Trofeo Santiago Bernabéu: 1</p>
<p>1992<br />
Trofeo Santiago Bernabéu runners-up: 2</p>
<p>1979, 1995<br />
Preceded by<br />
Feyenoord European Cup<br />
1971, 1972, 1973<br />
Runners-up:<br />
Panathinaikos FC, Internazionale Milano, Juventus Succeeded by<br />
Bayern Munich<br />
Preceded by<br />
A.C. Milan Champions League<br />
1995<br />
Runner up: A.C. Milan Succeeded by<br />
Juventus<br />
Preceded by<br />
Dinamo Kiev UEFA Cup Winners&#8217; Cup Winner<br />
1987<br />
Runner up: Lokomotive Leipzig Succeeded by<br />
KV Mechelen<br />
Preceded by<br />
Internazionale Milano UEFA Cup<br />
1992<br />
Runner up: Torino Succeeded by<br />
Juventus </p>
<p>[edit] See also<br />
Dutch football league teams </p>
<p>[edit] References<br />
^ Amsterdan ArenA &#8211; Did you know?. Amsterdam ArenA. Retrieved on 2006-12-10.<br />
^ a b c d UEFA sanctioned the UEFA Supercup for the first time in 1973. In 1972 was a unofficial edition and the I Centenary of Rangers FC (see History of the UEFA Supercup in uefa.com).<br />
^ a b UEFA sanctioned the UEFA Intertoto Cup for the first time in 1995. In 1960&#8217;s has an unofficial status (See History of UEFA Intertoto Cup in uefa.com).<br />
^ Ajax agree technical partnership with FC Omniworld. AJAX-USA.com. Retrieved on 2006-12-14.<br />
^ History of the Ajax logo<br />
^ Ajax Extend Sponsor Contract with ABN AMRO until 2011. ABNAMRO.com. Retrieved on 2006-12-10.<br />
^ Contract with kit sponsor Adidas extended until summer 2009. AJAX-USA.com. Retrieved on 2006-12-10.<br />
^ Ajax retire number 14. Ajax.nl. Retrieved on 2007-04-18.<br />
^ a b c d e f Football Europe: AFC Ajax; uefa.com </p>
<p>[edit] Bibliography<br />
(Dutch) David Endt, De godenzonen van Ajax, Rap, Amsterdam, 1993, ISBN 90-6005-463-6<br />
(Dutch) Jan Baltus Kok, Naar Ajax. Mobiliteitspatronen van bezoekers bij vier thuiswedstrijden van Ajax, University of Amsterdam, Amsterdam, 1992, ISSN 0922-5625<br />
Simon Kuper, Ajax, The Dutch, The War. Football in Europe during the Second World War, Orion, London (Translation of: Ajax, de Joden en Nederland (&#8221;Ajax, the Jews, The Netherlands)&#8221; [10], 2003, ISBN 0-7528-4274-9<br />
(Dutch) Evert Vermeer, 95 jaar Ajax. 1900-1995, Luitingh-Sijthoff, Amsterdam, 1996, ISBN 90-245-2364-8 </p>
<p>[edit] External links<br />
Wikimedia Commons has media related to:<br />
Ajax AmsterdamOfficial<br />
Ajax.nl &#8211; Official website of AFC Ajax (Dutch) / (English)<br />
Unofficial<br />
Ajax Foto Side &#8211; Photo fansite of AFC Ajax (Dutch)<br />
Ajaxfanz &#8211; Popular fansite of AFC Ajax (Dutch)<br />
Ajax Live &#8211; Dutch fansite of Ajax (Dutch)<br />
Ajax USA &#8211; American fansite of AFC Ajax (English)<br />
Ajaxsupporters.com &#8211; German fansite of AFC Ajax (German)<br />
Ajax Fr &#8211; French supporters site (French)<br />
Ajax en France &#8211; French fansite of AFC Ajax (French)<br />
Ajax Poland &#8211; Polish Ajax fansite (Polish)<br />
Superajax.com &#8211; Russian fansite of AFC Ajax (Russian)<br />
Ajax Portal (Hungarian)<br />
Football-Lineups.com &#8211; Ajax tactics and lineups (English)<br />
 Eredivisie • 2007/08 v • d • e  </p>
<p>Ajax | AZ | Excelsior | Feyenoord | De Graafschap | Groningen | Heerenveen | Heracles | NAC | NEC | PSV | Roda JC | Sparta | Twente | Utrecht | Vitesse | VVV-Venlo | Willem II</p>
<p>Eredivisie seasons<br />
1993/94 | 1994/95 | 1995/96 | 1996/97 | 1997/98 | 1998/99 | 1999/00 | 2000/01 | 2001/02 | 2002/03 | 2003/04 | 2004/05 | 2005/06 | 2006/07 | 2007/08</p>
<p>Football competitions in the Netherlands<br />
Eredivisie | Eerste Divisie | Hoofdklasse | KNVB Cup | Johan Cruijff-schaal</p>
<p>Members of G-14 v • d • e<br />
 Ajax •  Arsenal •  FC Barcelona •  Bayer Leverkusen •  Bayern Munich</p>
<p> Borussia Dortmund •  PSV Eindhoven •  Internazionale •  Juventus</p>
<p> Liverpool •  Manchester United •  AC Milan •  Lyon •  Marseille</p>
<p> Paris Saint-Germain •  FC Porto •  Real Madrid •  Valencia</p>
<p>Retrieved from &#8220;http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/AFC_Ajax&#8221;<br />
Categories: Companies listed on the Euronext exchanges | Dutch football clubs | Companies of the Netherlands | Football (soccer) clubs established in 1900 | G-14 clubs | Ajax Amsterdam</p>
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	</item>
	<item>
		<title>By: Abba Mai Adda Arsenal Musa Muhd</title>
		<link>http://netherlands.worldcupblog.org/1/ajax-gets-more-money-fans-protest.html/comment-page-1#comment-102194</link>
		<dc:creator>Abba Mai Adda Arsenal Musa Muhd</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 17 Oct 2007 19:36:06 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://netherlands.worldcupblog.org/1/ajax-gets-more-money-fans-protest.html#comment-102194</guid>
		<description>UEFA Champions League
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected from Uefa Champions League)• Ten things you may not know about images on Wikipedia •Jump to: navigation, search
“European Cup” redirects here. For other uses, see European Cup (disambiguation).
UEFA Champions League 
 2007-08 Champions League 
 
Founded 
1955 
Continent 
Europe (UEFA) 
Number of teams 
32 (Group Stage)
76 (total) 
Current champions (2006-07) 
 AC Milan (7th time) 
Most successful club 
 Real Madrid (9 times) 
Website 
UEFA Champions League 
Television broadcasters 
List of broadcasters 
Motto 
UEFA Champions League Hymn 
The UEFA Champions League (also known as the European Cup, UCL, CE1, C1[1] or CL) is a seasonal club football competition organised by the Union of European Football Associations (UEFA) since 1955 for the most successful football clubs in Europe. The prize, the European Champion Clubs&#039; Cup, is considered the most prestigious club trophy in the sport.

The UEFA Champions League is separate from the less prestigious UEFA Cup and the defunct Cup Winners&#039; Cup.

The tournament consists of several stages. In the present format it begins in mid-July with three preliminary knockout qualifying rounds. The 16 surviving teams join 16 seeded teams in a group stage. Eight group winners and eight runners-up enter the final knockout rounds, which end with the final match in May.

The current holders of the UEFA Champions League trophy are AC Milan, who beat Liverpool FC 2-1 at the Olympic Stadium in Athens, Greece on 23 May 2007.

Moscow will host its first European Cup final for the 2007-08 season.

Contents [hide]
1 History 
2 Qualification 
3 The stages 
4 Champions League finals 
5 Records and statistics 
6 Hymn 
7 Financial 
8 See also 
9 References 
10 External links 
 


[edit] History
Main article: European Cup and Champions League history
The tournament was inaugurated in 1955, at the suggestion of the French sports journalist and editor of L&#039;Équipe Gabriel Hanot,[2] as a continental competition for winners of the European national football leagues, as the European Champion Clubs&#039; Cup, abbreviated to European Cup.

The competition began in 1955/56 using a two-leg knockout format where the teams would play two matches, one at home and one away, and the team with the highest overall score qualifying for the next round of the competition. Entry was restricted to the teams that won their national league championships, plus the current European Cup holder. This qualification system continued until 1992. In the 1992–93 season, the tournament was renamed to UEFA Champions League and eligibility was expanded to include not just domestic champions but also the best performing runners up according to UEFA&#039;s coefficient ranking list[3]. In UEFA&#039;s coefficient system, a team finishing second in the Spanish La Liga would be more deserving of an automatic place in the Champions League than a team finishing first in, for example, Polish Orange Ekstraklasa. As a result, the system was restructured to force &quot;weaker&quot; national champions to qualify for the group stages, while other, &quot;stronger&quot; national runners-up would automatically get places.

The competition system has been undergoing changes since the 1991/92 season (see history). The current system was adopted in 2003.

Between 1960 and 2004 the winner of the tournament qualified for the now defunct Intercontinental Cup (against the winner of the Copa Libertadores of South America). Since then, with FIFA taking over, the winner automatically qualifies for the FIFA Club World Cup with other winners of continental club championships.


[edit] Qualification
See also: UEFA coefficients 
 
The Champions League flag is shown on the centre of the pitch before every game in the competitionThe UEFA Champions league is open to the league champions of all UEFA member associations (except Liechtenstein, which has no league competition), as well as to the clubs finishing from second to fourth position in the strongest leagues. Since January 2007 the two lowest-ranked league competitions (currently the Andorra and San Marino leagues) can also represent their domestic champions in the Champions League.

The number of places in the competition depends on the association&#039;s rank in the UEFA coefficients table:

associations ranked 1 to 3 have four positions, 
associations ranked 4 to 6 have three positions, 
associations ranked 7 to 15 have two positions, 
associations ranked 16 or lower have one position. 
An association&#039;s rank also determines the stage at which the clubs enter the competition. For example, the three highest-ranked associations have two places in the group stage (for champions and runners-up) and two in the third qualifying round (for third and fourth-placed teams), whereas the lowest-ranked associations have only one place in the first qualifying round for their champions. Nine highest-ranked associations have at least one automatic place in the group stage.

An additional place in the group stage is reserved for the title-holders, in case they don&#039;t qualify via their domestic league. However, an association is limited to sending at most four clubs for a season. This means that if the title-holders come from a league given four positions, but finish out of the top four, it will take the place of the fourth placed team. The fourth placed team will go to the UEFA Cup.

In addition to sporting criteria, any club must be licensed by its national association to participate in the Champions league. To obtain a license, club must meet certain stadium, infrastructure and finance requirements.

There was controversy when Liverpool won the competition in 2004/2005, but finished outside the top four in the Premiership. The Football Association ruled that Everton F.C. (who finished fourth) would get the final spot. However, UEFA came to an agreement that both Merseyside rivals would be allowed to enter the competition with Liverpool starting from the first qualifying round and Everton starting from the third qualifying round. Liverpool became the first team to negotiate all three rounds of qualification and reach the Champions League group phase, a feat matched by Artmedia Bratislava of Slovakia in the same season.

FC Barcelona, Manchester United and FC Porto are the teams that have appeared most often in the group stages: thirteen each. However, each has won the Champions League only once since the group stage was established.


[edit] The stages
The tournament consists of several stages and begins with three preliminary knockout qualifying rounds. Different teams start in different rounds, according to their position in domestic league and the UEFA coefficients of their league, while the sixteen top ranked teams spread across the biggest domestic leagues qualify directly.

In the subsequent preliminary round, participating teams are paired, with aggregate winners proceeding into the next round. Qualifying rounds span from mid-July to late August. The losers of the third qualifying round are transferred to the UEFA Cup, while the sixteen winners of the final qualifying round are joined by the sixteen teams who have qualified directly, to participate in the group stage.

Teams are drawn into eight groups of four teams, each team playing every other team in the group twice (home and away). The group stage is played between mid-September and early December. The teams finishing third in their groups are transferred to the UEFA Cup, while the top two teams from every group qualify for the next round. Here the sixteen remaining teams take part in the knock-out stage, which starts in late February and ends with the final match in May.

All qualifying rounds and knock-out ties are two-legged, with each team hosting one match. The team which scores the greater aggregate number of goals qualifies for the next round. The away goals rule applies. Extra time and penalty kicks are used to determine the winner, if necessary. An exception is the final, which is a single match played at a predetermined venue.

The draws are currently structured to ensure that clubs representing the same national association cannot play each other until the quarter-finals. This rule however was lifted for Liverpools Entry in 2006, as England had 5 representatives in the competition. As a result Liverpool were drawn against Chelsea in the group stages. In addition, seeding of the teams according to their UEFA coefficients is used. The competition system has been undergoing changes since the 1991/92 season (see history). The current system was adopted in 2003.


[edit] Champions League finals
Main article: European Cup and Champions League finals
The Champions League final is the most important match of the season in European club football. The stadium to host the final is selected by UEFA two years before the match.

Season Winner Score Runner-up Venue 
2008/09
Details To be played. Stadio Olimpico,
Rome  
2007/08
Details To be played. Luzhniki Stadium,
Moscow  
2006/07
Details  AC Milan 2 - 1  Liverpool FC Olympic Stadium,
Athens  
2005/06
Details  FC Barcelona 2 - 1  Arsenal FC Stade de France,
Paris  
2004/05
Details  Liverpool FC 3 - 3 aet,
3-2 pen  AC Milan Atatürk Olympic Stadium,
İstanbul  
2003/04
Details  FC Porto 3 - 0  AS Monaco FC Arena AufSchalke,
Gelsenkirchen  
2002/03
Details  AC Milan 0 - 0 aet,
3-2 pen  Juventus FC Old Trafford,
Manchester 
 
2001/02
Details  Real Madrid CF 2 - 1  Bayer 04 Leverkusen Hampden Park,
Glasgow  
2000/01
Details  FC Bayern München 1 - 1 aet,
5-4 pen  Valencia CF San Siro,
Milan  
1999/2000
Details  Real Madrid CF 3 - 0  Valencia CF Stade de France,
Paris  
1998/99
Details  Manchester United FC 2 - 1  FC Bayern München Camp Nou,
Barcelona  
1997/98
Details  Real Madrid CF 1 - 0  Juventus FC Amsterdam ArenA,
Amsterdam  
1996/97
Details  BV Borussia Dortmund 3 - 1  Juventus FC Olympiastadion,
Munich  
1995/96
Details  Juventus FC 1 - 1 aet,
4-2 pen  AFC Ajax Stadio Olimpico,
Rome  
1994/95
Details  AFC Ajax 1 - 0  AC Milan Ernst Happel Stadium,
Vienna  
1993/94
Details  AC Milan 4 - 0  FC Barcelona Olympic Stadium Spiros Louis,
Athens  
1992/93
Details  Olympique de Marseille 1 - 0  AC Milan Olympiastadion,
Munich  
1991/92
Details  FC Barcelona 1 - 0 aet  UC Sampdoria Wembley Stadium,
London  
1990/91
Details  FK Crvena Zvezda 0 - 0 aet,
5-3 pen  Olympique de Marseille Stadio San Nicola,
Bari  
1989/90
Details  AC Milan 1 - 0  SL Benfica Prater Stadium,
Vienna  
1988/89
Details  AC Milan 4 - 0  FC Steaua Bucureşti Camp Nou,
Barcelona  
1987/88
Details  PSV Eindhoven 0 - 0 aet,
6-5 pen  SL Benfica Neckarstadion,
Stuttgart  
1986/87
Details  FC Porto 2 - 1  FC Bayern München Prater Stadium,
Vienna  
1985/86
Details  FC Steaua Bucureşti 0 - 0 aet,
2-0 pen  FC Barcelona Sánchez Pizjuán,
Seville  
1984/85
Details  Juventus FC 1 - 0
(see: Heysel tragedy)  Liverpool FC Heysel Stadium,
Brussels  
1983/84
Details  Liverpool FC 1 - 1 aet,
4-2 pen  AS Roma Stadio Olimpico,
Rome  
1982/83
Details  Hamburger SV 1 - 0  Juventus FC Olympic Stadium Spiros Louis,
Athens  
1981/82
Details  Aston Villa FC 1 - 0  FC Bayern München De Kuip,
Rotterdam  
1980/81
Details  Liverpool FC 1 - 0  Real Madrid CF Parc des Princes,
Paris  
1979/80
Details  Nottingham Forest FC 1 - 0  Hamburger SV Santiago Bernabéu,
Madrid  
1978/79
Details  Nottingham Forest FC 1 - 0  Malmö FF Olympiastadion,
Munich  
1977/78
Details  Liverpool FC 1 - 0  Club Brugge KV Wembley Stadium,
London  
1976/77
Details  Liverpool FC 3 - 1  Borussia Mönchengladbach Stadio Olimpico,
Rome  
1975/76
Details  FC Bayern München 1 - 0  AS Saint-Étienne Hampden Park,
Glasgow  
1974/75
Details  FC Bayern München 2 - 0  Leeds United AFC Parc des Princes,
Paris  
1973/74
Details  FC Bayern München 1 - 1 aet,
4 - 0 (replay)  Atlético de Madrid Heysel Stadium,
Brussels  
1972/73
Details  AFC Ajax 1 - 0  Juventus FC Crvena Zvezda Stadium,
Belgrade  
1971/72
Details  AFC Ajax 2 - 0  FC Internazionale De Kuip,
Rotterdam  
1970/71
Details  AFC Ajax 2 - 0  Panathinaikos FC Wembley Stadium,
London  
1969/70
Details  Feyenoord 2 - 1 aet  Celtic FC San Siro,
Milan  
1968/69
Details  AC Milan 4 - 1  AFC Ajax Santiago Bernabéu,
Madrid  
1967/68
Details  Manchester United FC 4 - 1 aet  SL Benfica Wembley Stadium,
London  
1966/67
Details  Celtic FC 2 - 1  FC Internazionale Estádio Nacional,
Oeiras  
1965/66
Details  Real Madrid CF 2 - 1  FK Partizan Heysel Stadium,
Brussels  
1964/65
Details  FC Internazionale 1 - 0  SL Benfica San Siro,
Milan  
1963/64
Details  FC Internazionale 3 - 1  Real Madrid CF Prater Stadium,
Vienna  
1962/63
Details  AC Milan 2 - 1  SL Benfica Wembley Stadium,
London  
1961/62
Details  SL Benfica 5 - 3  Real Madrid CF Olympisch Stadion,
Amsterdam  
1960/61
Details  SL Benfica 3 - 2  CF Barcelona Wankdorf Stadium,
Berne  
1959/60
Details  Real Madrid CF 7 - 3  Eintracht Frankfurt Hampden Park,
Glasgow  
1958/59
Details  Real Madrid CF 2 - 0  Stade de Reims-Champagne Neckarstadion,
Stuttgart  
1957/58
Details  Real Madrid CF 3 - 2 aet  AC Milan Heysel Stadium,
Brussels  
1956/57
Details  Real Madrid CF 2 - 0  AC Fiorentina Santiago Bernabéu,
Madrid  
1955/56
Details  Real Madrid CF 4 - 3  Stade de Reims-Champagne Parc des Princes,
Paris  

The winning club gets possession of the trophy at the awards ceremony, but must return it to UEFA headquarters two months before the following year&#039;s final. UEFA gives the winners a scaled-down replica of the trophy to keep permanently, and winning clubs are free to make replicas of the trophy as long as they are clearly marked as replicas and are no larger than 80% of the size of the actual trophy. However, the current competition rules also specify that the actual trophy will be permanently awarded to a team that wins three consecutive years or five times in all.[4]

Five clubs have been awarded the UEFA badge of honour and the right to keep the trophy permanently:

Real Madrid, who won the first five competitions from 1956 to 1960, and again in 1966, 1998, 2000 and 2002. 
Ajax, who won consecutively in 1971–1973, and again in 1995. 
Bayern Munich, who won consecutively in 1974–1976, and again in 2001. 
AC Milan, who won for the fifth time in 1994, and again in 2003 and 2007 . 
Liverpool, whose 2005 win was their fifth overall. 
The first European Cup/UEFA Champions League final to be competed between two clubs from the same country was in 2000, when Spanish giants Real Madrid and Valencia reached the final. This was followed in 2003 when Italian giants AC Milan and Juventus FC reached the final, making it only two intra-national finals since its inception in 1955.


[edit] Records and statistics
Main article: European Cup and Champions League records and statistics

[edit] Hymn
 
The UEFA Champions League Cup before the final 2002 in GlasgowThe UEFA Champions League Anthem, officially titled simply as &quot;Champions League&quot;, is an arrangement by Tony Britten of Georg Frideric Handel&#039;s &quot;Zadok the Priest&quot; from the Coronation Anthems. UEFA commissioned Britten in 1992 to arrange their hymn, and the piece was performed by the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra and sung by the Academy of St. Martin in the Fields chorus in the three official languages used by UEFA: English, German, and French. The hymn&#039;s chorus is played before each UEFA Champions League game, as well as at the beginning and end of television broadcasts of the matches. The complete hymn is about three minutes long, and has two short verses and the chorus. The hymn has never been released commercially in its original version. However, the Academy of St. Martin in the Fields chorus can be heard singing the original &quot;Zadok the Priest&quot; on the 2002 album &quot;World Soccer Anthems&quot;. Additionally, Polish trance/dance duo Kalwi &amp; Remi released a remixed version entitled &quot;Victory&quot;, which contains vocal and musical interpolations from the original, in late 2006. The only other version of the anthem available is a full piano version on YouTube.





[edit] Financial
UEFA Champions League is a highly profitable competition for the clubs that reach the group stage. UEFA distributes part of the revenue obtained from television deals between these clubs. For example, the payments for the 2004/05 competition ranged from €3.8m (Sparta Prague) to €30.6 million (Liverpool).[5] UEFA estimates the amount of money to be given to the 32 participants of the 2005/06 group stage at €430 million.[6] Clubs make additional money from ticket sales, corporate hospitality, merchandising and so on.


[edit] See also
European Cup and Champions League history 
European Cup and Champions League finals 
European Cup and Champions League records and statistics 
List of UEFA Champions League winning players 
UEFA Super Cup 
UEFA Cup Winners&#039; Cup 
UEFA Cup 
UEFA Intertoto Cup 
UEFA Club Football Awards 
UEFA Team of the Year 
European football records 
G-14 
UEFA Champions League 2006/2007 Games 

[edit] References
^ The terms CE1 and C1, which mean: &quot;European Cup 1&quot;, are rarely used in English, however they exist and are commonly used in many other countries. 
^ Matthew Spiro (2006-05-12). Hats off to Hanot (English). UEFA.com. Retrieved on 2006-07-10. 
^ http://www.uefa.com/competitions/ucl/format/index.html 
^ Regulations for the UEFA Champions League 2006/07 (PDF) (English). UEFA. Retrieved on 2006-07-10. 
^ UEFA CHAMPIONS LEAGUE - DISTRIBUTION 2002/2003 (PDF) (English). UEFA. Retrieved on 2006-07-10. 
^ Higher Champions League revenue (English). UEFA.com (2005-09-26). Retrieved on 2006-07-10. 

[edit] External links
UEFA Official Site 
MP3 of the UEFA Champions League Music 
The only cover of the &#039;UEFA Champions League Music 
RSSSF European Cups Archive 
UEFA European Cup Football - independent site with regularly updated statistics including club and country rankings, tournament seedings, and match results. 
European Cup History 
European Cup Seasons v • d • e 
1955-56 &#124; 1956-57 &#124; 1957-58 &#124; 1958-59 &#124; 1959-60 &#124; 1960-61 &#124; 1961-62 &#124; 1962-63 &#124; 1963-64 &#124; 1964-65  1965-66 &#124; 1966-67 &#124; 1967-68 &#124; 1968-69 &#124; 1969-70 &#124; 1970-71 &#124; 1971-72 &#124; 1972-73 &#124; 1973-74 &#124; 1974-75  1975-76 &#124; 1976-77 &#124; 1977-78 &#124; 1978-79 &#124; 1979-80 &#124; 1980-81 &#124; 1981-82 &#124; 1982-83 &#124; 1983-84 &#124; 1984-85  1985-86 &#124; 1986-87 &#124; 1987-88 &#124; 1988-89 &#124; 1989-90 &#124; 1990-91 &#124; 1991-92 &#124; Champions League &#124;
 
 
UEFA Champions League seasons v • d • e 
European Cup &#124; 1992-93 &#124; 1993-94 &#124; 1994-95 &#124; 1995-96 &#124; 1996-97 &#124; 1997-98 &#124; 1998-99 &#124; 1999-00 
2000-01 &#124; 2001-02 &#124; 2002-03 &#124; 2003-04 &#124; 2004-05 &#124; 2005-06 &#124; 2006-07 &#124; 2007-08 &#124; 2008-09 &#124;
 
 
European Cup and UEFA Champions League Finals v • d • e 
1956 &#124; 1957 &#124; 1958 &#124; 1959 &#124; 1960 &#124; 1961 &#124; 1962 &#124; 1963 &#124; 1964 &#124; 1965
1966 &#124; 1967 &#124; 1968 &#124; 1969 &#124; 1970 &#124; 1971 &#124; 1972 &#124; 1973 &#124; 1974 &#124; 1975
1976 &#124; 1977 &#124; 1978 &#124; 1979 &#124; 1980 &#124; 1981 &#124; 1982 &#124; 1983 &#124; 1984 &#124; 1985
1986 &#124; 1987 &#124; 1988 &#124; 1989 &#124; 1990 &#124; 1991 &#124; 1992 &#124; 1993 &#124; 1994 &#124; 1995
1996 &#124; 1997 &#124; 1998 &#124; 1999 &#124; 2000 &#124; 2001 &#124; 2002 &#124; 2003 &#124; 2004 &#124; 2005
2006 &#124; 2007 &#124; 2008 &#124; 2009
 
 
International club football v • d • e 
FIFA &#124; Club World Cup &#124; Intercontinental Cup (defunct) &#124; CWC/IC statistics &#124; Player of the Year &#124; Teams
 
 
     Asia: AFC – Champions League 
     Africa: CAF – Champions League 
     North America: CONCACAF – Champions&#039; Cup 
     South America: CONMEBOL – Copa Libertadores 
     Oceania: OFC – Champions League 
     Europe: UEFA – Champions League   
 

Retrieved from &quot;http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/UEFA_Champions_League&quot;
Categories: UEFA Champions League &#124; UEFA competitions &#124; International club football (soccer) competitions &#124; European football (soccer) competitions &#124; 1955 establishments

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		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>UEFA Champions League<br />
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia<br />
(Redirected from Uefa Champions League)• Ten things you may not know about images on Wikipedia •Jump to: navigation, search<br />
“European Cup” redirects here. For other uses, see European Cup (disambiguation).<br />
UEFA Champions League<br />
 2007-08 Champions League </p>
<p>Founded<br />
1955<br />
Continent<br />
Europe (UEFA)<br />
Number of teams<br />
32 (Group Stage)<br />
76 (total)<br />
Current champions (2006-07)<br />
 AC Milan (7th time)<br />
Most successful club<br />
 Real Madrid (9 times)<br />
Website<br />
UEFA Champions League<br />
Television broadcasters<br />
List of broadcasters<br />
Motto<br />
UEFA Champions League Hymn<br />
The UEFA Champions League (also known as the European Cup, UCL, CE1, C1[1] or CL) is a seasonal club football competition organised by the Union of European Football Associations (UEFA) since 1955 for the most successful football clubs in Europe. The prize, the European Champion Clubs&#8217; Cup, is considered the most prestigious club trophy in the sport.</p>
<p>The UEFA Champions League is separate from the less prestigious UEFA Cup and the defunct Cup Winners&#8217; Cup.</p>
<p>The tournament consists of several stages. In the present format it begins in mid-July with three preliminary knockout qualifying rounds. The 16 surviving teams join 16 seeded teams in a group stage. Eight group winners and eight runners-up enter the final knockout rounds, which end with the final match in May.</p>
<p>The current holders of the UEFA Champions League trophy are AC Milan, who beat Liverpool FC 2-1 at the Olympic Stadium in Athens, Greece on 23 May 2007.</p>
<p>Moscow will host its first European Cup final for the 2007-08 season.</p>
<p>Contents [hide]<br />
1 History<br />
2 Qualification<br />
3 The stages<br />
4 Champions League finals<br />
5 Records and statistics<br />
6 Hymn<br />
7 Financial<br />
8 See also<br />
9 References<br />
10 External links </p>
<p>[edit] History<br />
Main article: European Cup and Champions League history<br />
The tournament was inaugurated in 1955, at the suggestion of the French sports journalist and editor of L&#8217;Équipe Gabriel Hanot,[2] as a continental competition for winners of the European national football leagues, as the European Champion Clubs&#8217; Cup, abbreviated to European Cup.</p>
<p>The competition began in 1955/56 using a two-leg knockout format where the teams would play two matches, one at home and one away, and the team with the highest overall score qualifying for the next round of the competition. Entry was restricted to the teams that won their national league championships, plus the current European Cup holder. This qualification system continued until 1992. In the 1992–93 season, the tournament was renamed to UEFA Champions League and eligibility was expanded to include not just domestic champions but also the best performing runners up according to UEFA&#8217;s coefficient ranking list[3]. In UEFA&#8217;s coefficient system, a team finishing second in the Spanish La Liga would be more deserving of an automatic place in the Champions League than a team finishing first in, for example, Polish Orange Ekstraklasa. As a result, the system was restructured to force &#8220;weaker&#8221; national champions to qualify for the group stages, while other, &#8220;stronger&#8221; national runners-up would automatically get places.</p>
<p>The competition system has been undergoing changes since the 1991/92 season (see history). The current system was adopted in 2003.</p>
<p>Between 1960 and 2004 the winner of the tournament qualified for the now defunct Intercontinental Cup (against the winner of the Copa Libertadores of South America). Since then, with FIFA taking over, the winner automatically qualifies for the FIFA Club World Cup with other winners of continental club championships.</p>
<p>[edit] Qualification<br />
See also: UEFA coefficients </p>
<p>The Champions League flag is shown on the centre of the pitch before every game in the competitionThe UEFA Champions league is open to the league champions of all UEFA member associations (except Liechtenstein, which has no league competition), as well as to the clubs finishing from second to fourth position in the strongest leagues. Since January 2007 the two lowest-ranked league competitions (currently the Andorra and San Marino leagues) can also represent their domestic champions in the Champions League.</p>
<p>The number of places in the competition depends on the association&#8217;s rank in the UEFA coefficients table:</p>
<p>associations ranked 1 to 3 have four positions,<br />
associations ranked 4 to 6 have three positions,<br />
associations ranked 7 to 15 have two positions,<br />
associations ranked 16 or lower have one position.<br />
An association&#8217;s rank also determines the stage at which the clubs enter the competition. For example, the three highest-ranked associations have two places in the group stage (for champions and runners-up) and two in the third qualifying round (for third and fourth-placed teams), whereas the lowest-ranked associations have only one place in the first qualifying round for their champions. Nine highest-ranked associations have at least one automatic place in the group stage.</p>
<p>An additional place in the group stage is reserved for the title-holders, in case they don&#8217;t qualify via their domestic league. However, an association is limited to sending at most four clubs for a season. This means that if the title-holders come from a league given four positions, but finish out of the top four, it will take the place of the fourth placed team. The fourth placed team will go to the UEFA Cup.</p>
<p>In addition to sporting criteria, any club must be licensed by its national association to participate in the Champions league. To obtain a license, club must meet certain stadium, infrastructure and finance requirements.</p>
<p>There was controversy when Liverpool won the competition in 2004/2005, but finished outside the top four in the Premiership. The Football Association ruled that Everton F.C. (who finished fourth) would get the final spot. However, UEFA came to an agreement that both Merseyside rivals would be allowed to enter the competition with Liverpool starting from the first qualifying round and Everton starting from the third qualifying round. Liverpool became the first team to negotiate all three rounds of qualification and reach the Champions League group phase, a feat matched by Artmedia Bratislava of Slovakia in the same season.</p>
<p>FC Barcelona, Manchester United and FC Porto are the teams that have appeared most often in the group stages: thirteen each. However, each has won the Champions League only once since the group stage was established.</p>
<p>[edit] The stages<br />
The tournament consists of several stages and begins with three preliminary knockout qualifying rounds. Different teams start in different rounds, according to their position in domestic league and the UEFA coefficients of their league, while the sixteen top ranked teams spread across the biggest domestic leagues qualify directly.</p>
<p>In the subsequent preliminary round, participating teams are paired, with aggregate winners proceeding into the next round. Qualifying rounds span from mid-July to late August. The losers of the third qualifying round are transferred to the UEFA Cup, while the sixteen winners of the final qualifying round are joined by the sixteen teams who have qualified directly, to participate in the group stage.</p>
<p>Teams are drawn into eight groups of four teams, each team playing every other team in the group twice (home and away). The group stage is played between mid-September and early December. The teams finishing third in their groups are transferred to the UEFA Cup, while the top two teams from every group qualify for the next round. Here the sixteen remaining teams take part in the knock-out stage, which starts in late February and ends with the final match in May.</p>
<p>All qualifying rounds and knock-out ties are two-legged, with each team hosting one match. The team which scores the greater aggregate number of goals qualifies for the next round. The away goals rule applies. Extra time and penalty kicks are used to determine the winner, if necessary. An exception is the final, which is a single match played at a predetermined venue.</p>
<p>The draws are currently structured to ensure that clubs representing the same national association cannot play each other until the quarter-finals. This rule however was lifted for Liverpools Entry in 2006, as England had 5 representatives in the competition. As a result Liverpool were drawn against Chelsea in the group stages. In addition, seeding of the teams according to their UEFA coefficients is used. The competition system has been undergoing changes since the 1991/92 season (see history). The current system was adopted in 2003.</p>
<p>[edit] Champions League finals<br />
Main article: European Cup and Champions League finals<br />
The Champions League final is the most important match of the season in European club football. The stadium to host the final is selected by UEFA two years before the match.</p>
<p>Season Winner Score Runner-up Venue<br />
2008/09<br />
Details To be played. Stadio Olimpico,<br />
Rome<br />
2007/08<br />
Details To be played. Luzhniki Stadium,<br />
Moscow<br />
2006/07<br />
Details  AC Milan 2 &#8211; 1  Liverpool FC Olympic Stadium,<br />
Athens<br />
2005/06<br />
Details  FC Barcelona 2 &#8211; 1  Arsenal FC Stade de France,<br />
Paris<br />
2004/05<br />
Details  Liverpool FC 3 &#8211; 3 aet,<br />
3-2 pen  AC Milan Atatürk Olympic Stadium,<br />
İstanbul<br />
2003/04<br />
Details  FC Porto 3 &#8211; 0  AS Monaco FC Arena AufSchalke,<br />
Gelsenkirchen<br />
2002/03<br />
Details  AC Milan 0 &#8211; 0 aet,<br />
3-2 pen  Juventus FC Old Trafford,<br />
Manchester </p>
<p>2001/02<br />
Details  Real Madrid CF 2 &#8211; 1  Bayer 04 Leverkusen Hampden Park,<br />
Glasgow<br />
2000/01<br />
Details  FC Bayern München 1 &#8211; 1 aet,<br />
5-4 pen  Valencia CF San Siro,<br />
Milan<br />
1999/2000<br />
Details  Real Madrid CF 3 &#8211; 0  Valencia CF Stade de France,<br />
Paris<br />
1998/99<br />
Details  Manchester United FC 2 &#8211; 1  FC Bayern München Camp Nou,<br />
Barcelona<br />
1997/98<br />
Details  Real Madrid CF 1 &#8211; 0  Juventus FC Amsterdam ArenA,<br />
Amsterdam<br />
1996/97<br />
Details  BV Borussia Dortmund 3 &#8211; 1  Juventus FC Olympiastadion,<br />
Munich<br />
1995/96<br />
Details  Juventus FC 1 &#8211; 1 aet,<br />
4-2 pen  AFC Ajax Stadio Olimpico,<br />
Rome<br />
1994/95<br />
Details  AFC Ajax 1 &#8211; 0  AC Milan Ernst Happel Stadium,<br />
Vienna<br />
1993/94<br />
Details  AC Milan 4 &#8211; 0  FC Barcelona Olympic Stadium Spiros Louis,<br />
Athens<br />
1992/93<br />
Details  Olympique de Marseille 1 &#8211; 0  AC Milan Olympiastadion,<br />
Munich<br />
1991/92<br />
Details  FC Barcelona 1 &#8211; 0 aet  UC Sampdoria Wembley Stadium,<br />
London<br />
1990/91<br />
Details  FK Crvena Zvezda 0 &#8211; 0 aet,<br />
5-3 pen  Olympique de Marseille Stadio San Nicola,<br />
Bari<br />
1989/90<br />
Details  AC Milan 1 &#8211; 0  SL Benfica Prater Stadium,<br />
Vienna<br />
1988/89<br />
Details  AC Milan 4 &#8211; 0  FC Steaua Bucureşti Camp Nou,<br />
Barcelona<br />
1987/88<br />
Details  PSV Eindhoven 0 &#8211; 0 aet,<br />
6-5 pen  SL Benfica Neckarstadion,<br />
Stuttgart<br />
1986/87<br />
Details  FC Porto 2 &#8211; 1  FC Bayern München Prater Stadium,<br />
Vienna<br />
1985/86<br />
Details  FC Steaua Bucureşti 0 &#8211; 0 aet,<br />
2-0 pen  FC Barcelona Sánchez Pizjuán,<br />
Seville<br />
1984/85<br />
Details  Juventus FC 1 &#8211; 0<br />
(see: Heysel tragedy)  Liverpool FC Heysel Stadium,<br />
Brussels<br />
1983/84<br />
Details  Liverpool FC 1 &#8211; 1 aet,<br />
4-2 pen  AS Roma Stadio Olimpico,<br />
Rome<br />
1982/83<br />
Details  Hamburger SV 1 &#8211; 0  Juventus FC Olympic Stadium Spiros Louis,<br />
Athens<br />
1981/82<br />
Details  Aston Villa FC 1 &#8211; 0  FC Bayern München De Kuip,<br />
Rotterdam<br />
1980/81<br />
Details  Liverpool FC 1 &#8211; 0  Real Madrid CF Parc des Princes,<br />
Paris<br />
1979/80<br />
Details  Nottingham Forest FC 1 &#8211; 0  Hamburger SV Santiago Bernabéu,<br />
Madrid<br />
1978/79<br />
Details  Nottingham Forest FC 1 &#8211; 0  Malmö FF Olympiastadion,<br />
Munich<br />
1977/78<br />
Details  Liverpool FC 1 &#8211; 0  Club Brugge KV Wembley Stadium,<br />
London<br />
1976/77<br />
Details  Liverpool FC 3 &#8211; 1  Borussia Mönchengladbach Stadio Olimpico,<br />
Rome<br />
1975/76<br />
Details  FC Bayern München 1 &#8211; 0  AS Saint-Étienne Hampden Park,<br />
Glasgow<br />
1974/75<br />
Details  FC Bayern München 2 &#8211; 0  Leeds United AFC Parc des Princes,<br />
Paris<br />
1973/74<br />
Details  FC Bayern München 1 &#8211; 1 aet,<br />
4 &#8211; 0 (replay)  Atlético de Madrid Heysel Stadium,<br />
Brussels<br />
1972/73<br />
Details  AFC Ajax 1 &#8211; 0  Juventus FC Crvena Zvezda Stadium,<br />
Belgrade<br />
1971/72<br />
Details  AFC Ajax 2 &#8211; 0  FC Internazionale De Kuip,<br />
Rotterdam<br />
1970/71<br />
Details  AFC Ajax 2 &#8211; 0  Panathinaikos FC Wembley Stadium,<br />
London<br />
1969/70<br />
Details  Feyenoord 2 &#8211; 1 aet  Celtic FC San Siro,<br />
Milan<br />
1968/69<br />
Details  AC Milan 4 &#8211; 1  AFC Ajax Santiago Bernabéu,<br />
Madrid<br />
1967/68<br />
Details  Manchester United FC 4 &#8211; 1 aet  SL Benfica Wembley Stadium,<br />
London<br />
1966/67<br />
Details  Celtic FC 2 &#8211; 1  FC Internazionale Estádio Nacional,<br />
Oeiras<br />
1965/66<br />
Details  Real Madrid CF 2 &#8211; 1  FK Partizan Heysel Stadium,<br />
Brussels<br />
1964/65<br />
Details  FC Internazionale 1 &#8211; 0  SL Benfica San Siro,<br />
Milan<br />
1963/64<br />
Details  FC Internazionale 3 &#8211; 1  Real Madrid CF Prater Stadium,<br />
Vienna<br />
1962/63<br />
Details  AC Milan 2 &#8211; 1  SL Benfica Wembley Stadium,<br />
London<br />
1961/62<br />
Details  SL Benfica 5 &#8211; 3  Real Madrid CF Olympisch Stadion,<br />
Amsterdam<br />
1960/61<br />
Details  SL Benfica 3 &#8211; 2  CF Barcelona Wankdorf Stadium,<br />
Berne<br />
1959/60<br />
Details  Real Madrid CF 7 &#8211; 3  Eintracht Frankfurt Hampden Park,<br />
Glasgow<br />
1958/59<br />
Details  Real Madrid CF 2 &#8211; 0  Stade de Reims-Champagne Neckarstadion,<br />
Stuttgart<br />
1957/58<br />
Details  Real Madrid CF 3 &#8211; 2 aet  AC Milan Heysel Stadium,<br />
Brussels<br />
1956/57<br />
Details  Real Madrid CF 2 &#8211; 0  AC Fiorentina Santiago Bernabéu,<br />
Madrid<br />
1955/56<br />
Details  Real Madrid CF 4 &#8211; 3  Stade de Reims-Champagne Parc des Princes,<br />
Paris  </p>
<p>The winning club gets possession of the trophy at the awards ceremony, but must return it to UEFA headquarters two months before the following year&#8217;s final. UEFA gives the winners a scaled-down replica of the trophy to keep permanently, and winning clubs are free to make replicas of the trophy as long as they are clearly marked as replicas and are no larger than 80% of the size of the actual trophy. However, the current competition rules also specify that the actual trophy will be permanently awarded to a team that wins three consecutive years or five times in all.[4]</p>
<p>Five clubs have been awarded the UEFA badge of honour and the right to keep the trophy permanently:</p>
<p>Real Madrid, who won the first five competitions from 1956 to 1960, and again in 1966, 1998, 2000 and 2002.<br />
Ajax, who won consecutively in 1971–1973, and again in 1995.<br />
Bayern Munich, who won consecutively in 1974–1976, and again in 2001.<br />
AC Milan, who won for the fifth time in 1994, and again in 2003 and 2007 .<br />
Liverpool, whose 2005 win was their fifth overall.<br />
The first European Cup/UEFA Champions League final to be competed between two clubs from the same country was in 2000, when Spanish giants Real Madrid and Valencia reached the final. This was followed in 2003 when Italian giants AC Milan and Juventus FC reached the final, making it only two intra-national finals since its inception in 1955.</p>
<p>[edit] Records and statistics<br />
Main article: European Cup and Champions League records and statistics</p>
<p>[edit] Hymn</p>
<p>The UEFA Champions League Cup before the final 2002 in GlasgowThe UEFA Champions League Anthem, officially titled simply as &#8220;Champions League&#8221;, is an arrangement by Tony Britten of Georg Frideric Handel&#8217;s &#8220;Zadok the Priest&#8221; from the Coronation Anthems. UEFA commissioned Britten in 1992 to arrange their hymn, and the piece was performed by the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra and sung by the Academy of St. Martin in the Fields chorus in the three official languages used by UEFA: English, German, and French. The hymn&#8217;s chorus is played before each UEFA Champions League game, as well as at the beginning and end of television broadcasts of the matches. The complete hymn is about three minutes long, and has two short verses and the chorus. The hymn has never been released commercially in its original version. However, the Academy of St. Martin in the Fields chorus can be heard singing the original &#8220;Zadok the Priest&#8221; on the 2002 album &#8220;World Soccer Anthems&#8221;. Additionally, Polish trance/dance duo Kalwi &amp; Remi released a remixed version entitled &#8220;Victory&#8221;, which contains vocal and musical interpolations from the original, in late 2006. The only other version of the anthem available is a full piano version on YouTube.</p>
<p>[edit] Financial<br />
UEFA Champions League is a highly profitable competition for the clubs that reach the group stage. UEFA distributes part of the revenue obtained from television deals between these clubs. For example, the payments for the 2004/05 competition ranged from €3.8m (Sparta Prague) to €30.6 million (Liverpool).[5] UEFA estimates the amount of money to be given to the 32 participants of the 2005/06 group stage at €430 million.[6] Clubs make additional money from ticket sales, corporate hospitality, merchandising and so on.</p>
<p>[edit] See also<br />
European Cup and Champions League history<br />
European Cup and Champions League finals<br />
European Cup and Champions League records and statistics<br />
List of UEFA Champions League winning players<br />
UEFA Super Cup<br />
UEFA Cup Winners&#8217; Cup<br />
UEFA Cup<br />
UEFA Intertoto Cup<br />
UEFA Club Football Awards<br />
UEFA Team of the Year<br />
European football records<br />
G-14<br />
UEFA Champions League 2006/2007 Games </p>
<p>[edit] References<br />
^ The terms CE1 and C1, which mean: &#8220;European Cup 1&#8243;, are rarely used in English, however they exist and are commonly used in many other countries.<br />
^ Matthew Spiro (2006-05-12). Hats off to Hanot (English). UEFA.com. Retrieved on 2006-07-10.<br />
^ <a href="http://www.uefa.com/competitions/ucl/format/index.html" rel="nofollow">http://www.uefa.com/competitions/ucl/format/index.html</a><br />
^ Regulations for the UEFA Champions League 2006/07 (PDF) (English). UEFA. Retrieved on 2006-07-10.<br />
^ UEFA CHAMPIONS LEAGUE &#8211; DISTRIBUTION 2002/2003 (PDF) (English). UEFA. Retrieved on 2006-07-10.<br />
^ Higher Champions League revenue (English). UEFA.com (2005-09-26). Retrieved on 2006-07-10. </p>
<p>[edit] External links<br />
UEFA Official Site<br />
MP3 of the UEFA Champions League Music<br />
The only cover of the &#8216;UEFA Champions League Music<br />
RSSSF European Cups Archive<br />
UEFA European Cup Football &#8211; independent site with regularly updated statistics including club and country rankings, tournament seedings, and match results.<br />
European Cup History<br />
European Cup Seasons v • d • e<br />
1955-56 | 1956-57 | 1957-58 | 1958-59 | 1959-60 | 1960-61 | 1961-62 | 1962-63 | 1963-64 | 1964-65  1965-66 | 1966-67 | 1967-68 | 1968-69 | 1969-70 | 1970-71 | 1971-72 | 1972-73 | 1973-74 | 1974-75  1975-76 | 1976-77 | 1977-78 | 1978-79 | 1979-80 | 1980-81 | 1981-82 | 1982-83 | 1983-84 | 1984-85  1985-86 | 1986-87 | 1987-88 | 1988-89 | 1989-90 | 1990-91 | 1991-92 | Champions League |</p>
<p>UEFA Champions League seasons v • d • e<br />
European Cup | 1992-93 | 1993-94 | 1994-95 | 1995-96 | 1996-97 | 1997-98 | 1998-99 | 1999-00<br />
2000-01 | 2001-02 | 2002-03 | 2003-04 | 2004-05 | 2005-06 | 2006-07 | 2007-08 | 2008-09 |</p>
<p>European Cup and UEFA Champions League Finals v • d • e<br />
1956 | 1957 | 1958 | 1959 | 1960 | 1961 | 1962 | 1963 | 1964 | 1965<br />
1966 | 1967 | 1968 | 1969 | 1970 | 1971 | 1972 | 1973 | 1974 | 1975<br />
1976 | 1977 | 1978 | 1979 | 1980 | 1981 | 1982 | 1983 | 1984 | 1985<br />
1986 | 1987 | 1988 | 1989 | 1990 | 1991 | 1992 | 1993 | 1994 | 1995<br />
1996 | 1997 | 1998 | 1999 | 2000 | 2001 | 2002 | 2003 | 2004 | 2005<br />
2006 | 2007 | 2008 | 2009</p>
<p>International club football v • d • e<br />
FIFA | Club World Cup | Intercontinental Cup (defunct) | CWC/IC statistics | Player of the Year | Teams</p>
<p>     Asia: AFC – Champions League<br />
     Africa: CAF – Champions League<br />
     North America: CONCACAF – Champions&#8217; Cup<br />
     South America: CONMEBOL – Copa Libertadores<br />
     Oceania: OFC – Champions League<br />
     Europe: UEFA – Champions League   </p>
<p>Retrieved from &#8220;http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/UEFA_Champions_League&#8221;<br />
Categories: UEFA Champions League | UEFA competitions | International club football (soccer) competitions | European football (soccer) competitions | 1955 establishments</p>
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]]></content:encoded>
	</item>
	<item>
		<title>By: Abba Mai Adda Arsenal Musa Muhd</title>
		<link>http://netherlands.worldcupblog.org/1/ajax-gets-more-money-fans-protest.html/comment-page-1#comment-102192</link>
		<dc:creator>Abba Mai Adda Arsenal Musa Muhd</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 17 Oct 2007 19:33:19 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://netherlands.worldcupblog.org/1/ajax-gets-more-money-fans-protest.html#comment-102192</guid>
		<description>2006 FIFA World Cup squads
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
• Interested in contributing to Wikipedia? •Jump to: navigation, search
This article lists the confirmed national football squads for the 2006 FIFA World Cup tournament held in Germany, between June 9 and July 9, 2006. Before announcing their final squad, several teams named a provisional squad of 23 to 33 players, but each country&#039;s final squad of 23 players had to be submitted by May 15, 2006. Replacement of injured players was permitted until 24 hours before the team&#039;s first world cup game. Players marked (c) were named as captain for their national squad. Number of caps counts until the start of the World Cup, including all pre-tournament friendlies. Club information is that used by FIFA.[1] Players for whom this information changed during or in the run up to the tournament are indicated by footnotes.

Contents [hide]
1 Group A 
1.1 Costa Rica 
1.2 Ecuador 
1.3 Germany 
1.4 Poland 
2 Group B 
2.1 England 
2.2 Paraguay 
2.3 Sweden 
2.4 Trinidad and Tobago 
3 Group C 
3.1 Argentina 
3.2 Côte d&#039;Ivoire (Ivory Coast) 
3.3 Netherlands 
3.4 Serbia and Montenegro 
4 Group D 
4.1 Angola 
4.2 Iran 
4.3 Mexico 
4.4 Portugal 
5 Group E 
5.1 Czech Republic 
5.2 Ghana 
5.3 Italy 
5.4 United States 
6 Group F 
6.1 Australia 
6.2 Brazil 
6.3 Croatia 
6.4 Japan 
7 Group G 
7.1 France 
7.2 Korea Republic 
7.3 Switzerland 
7.4 Togo 
8 Group H 
8.1 Saudi Arabia 
8.2 Spain 
8.3 Tunisia 
8.4 Ukraine 
9 Player representation by league 
10 Player representation by club 
11 Footnotes 
12 References 
 


[edit] Group A

[edit]  Costa Rica
Head coach: Alexandre Guimarães

No. Pos. Player DoB/Age Caps Club 
1 GK Álvaro Mesén 24 December 1972 38  Club Sport Herediano 
2 DF Jervis Drummond 8 September 1976 56  Deportivo Saprissa 
3 DF Luis Marín (c) 10 August 1974 120  LD Alajuelense 
4 DF Michael Umaña 16 July 1982 18  Brujas 
5 DF Gilberto Martínez 1 October 1979 57  Brescia 
6 MF Danny Fonseca 7 November 1979 22  C.S. Cartaginés 
7 MF Christian Bolaños 17 May 1984 16  Deportivo Saprissa 
8 MF Mauricio Solís 13 December 1972 107  CSD Comunicaciones 
9 FW Paulo Wanchope 31 July 1976 69  Club Sport Herediano 
10 MF Walter Centeno 6 October 1974 93  Deportivo Saprissa 
11 FW Rónald Gómez 21 January 1975 80  Deportivo Saprissa 
12 DF Leonardo González 21 November 1980 36  Club Sport Herediano 
13 FW Kurt Bernard 8 August 1977 3  Puntarenas 
14 MF Randall Azofeifa 30 December 1984 5  Deportivo Saprissa 
15 DF Harold Wallace 7 September 1975 78  LD Alajuelense 
16 MF Carlos Hernández 9 April 1982 17  LD Alajuelense 
17 DF Gabriel Badilla 30 June 1984 7  Deportivo Saprissa 
18 GK José Porras 8 November 1970 16  Deportivo Saprissa 
19 FW Álvaro Saborío 25 March 1982 23  Deportivo Saprissa 
20 MF Douglas Sequeira 23 August 1977 29  Real Salt Lake 
21 FW Victor Núñez 15 April 1980 3  C.S. Cartaginés 
22 DF Michael Rodríguez 30 December 1981 3  LD Alajuelense 
23 GK Wardy Alfaro 31 December 1977 2  LD Alajuelense 
 





[edit]  Ecuador
Head coach:  Luis Fernando Suárez

No. Pos. Player DoB/Age Caps Club 
1 GK Edwin Villafuerte 12 March 1979 15  Deportivo Quito 
2 DF Jorge Guagua 28 September 1981 18  El Nacional 
3 DF Iván Hurtado (c) 16 August 1974 130  Al-Arabi 
4 DF Ulises de la Cruz 8 February 1974 84  Aston Villa 
5 DF José Luis Perlaza 6 October 1981 3  Olmedo 
6 MF Patricio Urrutia 15 October 1977 6  LDU Quito 
7 MF Christian Lara 27 April 1980 19  El Nacional 
8 MF Edison Méndez 16 March 1979 64  Liga Deportiva Universitaria 
9 FW Félix Borja 2 April 1983 6  El Nacional [2] 
10 FW Iván Kaviedes 24 October 1977 44  Argentinos Juniors 
11 FW Agustín Delgado 23 December 1974 68  LDU Quito 
12 GK Cristian Mora 26 August 1979 8  LDU Quito 
13 DF Paul Ambrosi 14 October 1980 24  LDU Quito 
14 MF Segundo Castillo 15 May 1982 11  El Nacional 
15 MF Marlon Ayoví 27 August 1971 74  Deportivo Quito 
16 MF Luis Antonio Valencia 4 August 1985 17  Villarreal [3] 
17 DF Giovanny Espinoza 12 April 1977 56  LDU Quito 
18 DF Neicer Reasco 23 July 1977 31  LDU Quito [4] 
19 MF Luis Saritama 20 October 1983 15  Deportivo Quito 
20 MF Edwin Tenorio 16 June 1976 68  Barcelona de Guayaquil 
21 FW Carlos Tenorio 14 May 1979 29  Al Sadd 
22 GK Damián Lanza 10 April 1982 5  Aucas 
23 FW Cristian Benítez 1 May 1986 5  El Nacional 
 





[edit]  Germany
Head coach: Jürgen Klinsmann

No. Pos. Player DoB/Age Caps Club 
1 GK Jens Lehmann 10 November 1969 32  Arsenal 
2 DF Marcell Jansen 4 November 1985 7  Borussia Mönchengladbach 
3 DF Arne Friedrich 29 May 1979 36  Hertha Berlin 
4 DF Robert Huth 18 August 1984 16  Chelsea 
5 MF Sebastian Kehl 13 February 1980 27  Borussia Dortmund 
6 DF Jens Nowotny 11 January 1974 46  Bayer Leverkusen 
7 MF Bastian Schweinsteiger 1 August 1984 28  Bayern Munich 
8 MF Torsten Frings 22 November 1976 52  Werder Bremen 
9 FW Mike Hanke 5 November 1983 6  Wolfsburg 
10 FW Oliver Neuville 1 May 1973 55  Borussia Mönchengladbach 
11 FW Miroslav Klose 9 June 1978 55  Werder Bremen 
12 GK Oliver Kahn 15 June 1969 85  Bayern Munich 
13 MF Michael Ballack (c) 26 September 1976 65  Bayern Munich [5] 
14 FW Gerald Asamoah 3 October 1978 40  Schalke 04 
15 MF Thomas Hitzlsperger 14 May 1982 15  VfB Stuttgart 
16 DF Philipp Lahm 11 November 1983 18  Bayern Munich 
17 DF Per Mertesacker 29 September 1984 23  Hannover 96 
18 MF Tim Borowski 2 May 1980 20  Werder Bremen 
19 MF Bernd Schneider 17 November 1973 64  Bayer Leverkusen 
20 FW Lukas Podolski 4 June 1985 25  FC Cologne [6] 
21 DF Christoph Metzelder 5 November 1980 22  Borussia Dortmund 
22 MF David Odonkor 21 February 1984 1  Borussia Dortmund 
23 GK Timo Hildebrand 5 April 1979 3  VfB Stuttgart 
 





[edit]  Poland
Head coach: Paweł Janas

No. Pos. Player DoB/Age Caps Club 
1 GK Artur Boruc 20 February 1980 17  Celtic 
2 DF Mariusz Jop 3 August 1978 12  FC Moskva 
3 DF Seweryn Gancarczyk 22 November 1981 2  Metalist Kharkiv 
4 DF Marcin Baszczyński 7 June 1977 32  Wisła Kraków 
5 MF Kamil Kosowski 30 August 1977 45  Kaiserslautern [7] 
6 DF Jacek Bąk (c) 24 March 1973 72  Al Rayyan [8] 
7 MF Radosław Sobolewski 13 December 1976 19  Wisła Kraków 
8 MF Jacek Krzynówek 15 May 1976 58  Bayer Leverkusen [9] 
9 FW Maciej Żurawski 12 September 1976 50  Celtic 
10 MF Mirosław Szymkowiak 12 November 1976 29  Trabzonspor 
11 FW Grzegorz Rasiak 12 January 1979 30  Tottenham Hotspur [10] 
12 GK Tomasz Kuszczak 23 March 1982 4  West Bromwich Albion 
13 MF Sebastian Mila 10 July 1982 27  Austria Vienna 
14 DF Michał Żewłakow 22 April 1976 56  Anderlecht [11] 
15 MF Euzebiusz Smolarek 9 January 1981 13  Borussia Dortmund 
16 MF Arkadiusz Radomski 27 June 1977 20  Austria Vienna 
17 DF Dariusz Dudka 9 December 1983 7  Wisła Kraków 
18 DF Mariusz Lewandowski 18 May 1979 25  Shakhtar Donetsk 
19 DF Bartosz Bosacki 20 December 1975 11  Lech Poznań [12] 
20 MF Piotr Giza 28 February 1980 4  Cracovia Kraków 
21 FW Ireneusz Jeleń 9 April 1981 9  Wisła Płock 
22 GK Łukasz Fabiański 18 April 1985 2  Legia Warszawa 
23 FW Paweł Brożek 21 April 1983 4  Wisła Kraków 
 





[edit] Group B

[edit]  England
Head coach:  Sven-Göran Eriksson

No. Pos. Player DoB/Age Caps Club 
1 GK Paul Robinson 15 October 1979 21  Tottenham Hotspur 
2 DF Gary Neville 18 February 1975 79  Manchester United 
3 DF Ashley Cole 20 December 1980 46  Arsenal 
4 MF Steven Gerrard 30 May 1980 42  Liverpool 
5 DF Rio Ferdinand 7 November 1978 47  Manchester United 
6 DF John Terry 7 December 1980 24  Chelsea 
7 MF David Beckham (c) 2 May 1975 89  Real Madrid 
8 MF Frank Lampard 20 June 1978 40  Chelsea 
9 FW Wayne Rooney 24 October 1985 29  Manchester United 
10 FW Michael Owen 14 December 1979 77  Newcastle United 
11 MF Joe Cole 8 November 1981 32  Chelsea 
12 DF Sol Campbell 18 September 1974 68  Arsenal 
13 GK David James 1 August 1970 34  Manchester City 
14 DF Wayne Bridge 5 August 1980 23  Chelsea [13] 
15 DF Jamie Carragher 28 January 1978 25  Liverpool 
16 MF Owen Hargreaves 20 January 1981 30  Bayern Munich 
17 MF Jermaine Jenas 18 February 1983 15  Tottenham Hotspur 
18 MF Michael Carrick 28 July 1981 6  Tottenham Hotspur 
19 MF Aaron Lennon 16 April 1987 1  Tottenham Hotspur 
20 MF Stewart Downing 22 July 1984 2  Middlesbrough 
21 FW Peter Crouch 30 January 1981 7  Liverpool 
22 GK Scott Carson 3 September 1985 0  Liverpool [14] 
23 FW Theo Walcott 16 March 1989 1  Arsenal 
 





[edit]  Paraguay
Head coach:  Aníbal Ruiz

No. Pos. Player DoB/Age Caps Club 
1 GK Justo Villar 30 June 1977 39  Newell&#039;s Old Boys 
2 DF Jorge Núñez 22 January 1978 15  Estudiantes de La Plata 
3 DF Delio Toledo 10 February 1974 30  Real Zaragoza 
4 DF Carlos Gamarra (c) 17 February 1971 106  Palmeiras 
5 DF Julio César Cáceres 5 October 1979 32  River Plate 
6 MF Carlos Bonet 2 October 1977 29  Libertad 
7 FW Salvador Cabañas 5 August 1980 15  Jaguares[15] 
8 MF Edgar Barreto 15 July 1984 15  NEC Nijmegen 
9 FW Roque Santa Cruz 16 August 1981 42  Bayern Munich 
10 MF Roberto Acuña 25 March 1972 93  Deportivo La Coruña 
11 MF Diego Gavilán 1 March 1980 39  Newell&#039;s Old Boys 
12 GK Derlis Gómez 12 November 1972 5  Sportivo Luqueño 
13 MF Carlos Paredes 16 July 1976 68  Reggina [16] 
14 DF Paulo da Silva 1 February 1980 33  Toluca 
15 DF Julio Manzur 22 June 1981 13  Santos 
16 MF Cristian Riveros 16 October 1982 9  Libertad 
17 MF José Montiel 19 March 1988 6  Olimpia Asunción 
18 FW Nelson Haedo Valdez 28 November 1983 11  Werder Bremen[17] 
19 MF Julio dos Santos 5 May 1983 17  Bayern Munich 
20 FW Dante López 16 August 1983 7  Genoa 
21 DF Denis Caniza 29 August 1974 74  Cruz Azul [18] 
22 GK Aldo Bobadilla 20 April 1976 5  Libertad 
23 FW Nelson Cuevas 10 January 1980 35  Pachuca 
 





[edit]  Sweden
Head coach: Lars Lagerbäck

No. Pos. Player DoB/Age Caps Club 
1 GK Andreas Isaksson 3 October 1981 39  Rennes 
2 DF Mikael Nilsson 24 June 1978 27  Panathinaikos 
3 DF Olof Mellberg (c) 3 September 1977 64  Aston Villa 
4 DF Teddy Lučić 15 April 1973 81  Häcken 
5 DF Erik Edman 11 November 1978 37  Rennes 
6 MF Tobias Linderoth 21 April 1979 58  FC Copenhagen 
7 MF Niclas Alexandersson 29 December 1971 87  Göteborg 
8 MF Anders Svensson 17 July 1976 66  Elfsborg 
9 MF Fredrik Ljungberg 16 April 1977 57  Arsenal 
10 FW Zlatan Ibrahimović 3 October 1981 38  Juventus 
11 FW Henrik Larsson 20 September 1971 89  Barcelona[19] 
12 GK John Alvbåge 10 August 1982 2  Viborg 
13 DF Petter Hansson 14 December 1976 13  Heerenveen 
14 DF Fredrik Stenman 2 June 1983 1  Bayer Leverkusen 
15 DF Karl Svensson 21 March 1984 1  Göteborg[20] 
16 MF Kim Källström 24 August 1982 34  Rennes[21] 
17 FW Johan Elmander 27 May 1981 18  Brøndby 
18 MF Mattias Jonson 16 January 1974 53  Djurgården 
19 MF Daniel Andersson 28 August 1977 47  Malmö 
20 FW Marcus Allbäck 5 July 1973 56  FC Copenhagen 
21 MF Christian Wilhelmsson 8 December 1979 29  Anderlecht 
22 FW Markus Rosenberg 27 September 1982 8  Ajax 
23 GK Rami Shaaban 30 June 1975 1  Fredrikstad 
 





[edit]  Trinidad and Tobago
Head coach:  Leo Beenhakker

No. Pos. Player DoB/Age Caps Club 
1 GK Shaka Hislop 22 February 1969 24  West Ham United [22] 
2 DF Ian Cox 25 March 1971 16  Gillingham 
3 DF Avery John 18 June 1975 57  New England Revolution 
4 DF Marvin Andrews 22 December 1975 98  Rangers 
5 DF Brent Sancho 13 March 1977 40  Gillingham 
6 DF Dennis Lawrence 1 August 1974 63  Wrexham [23] 
7 MF Christopher Birchall 5 May 1984 19  Port Vale 
8 DF Cyd Gray 21 November 1973 39  San Juan Jabloteh 
9 MF Aurtis Whitley 1 May 1977 24  San Juan Jabloteh 
10 MF Russell Latapy 8 August 1968 66  Falkirk 
11 MF Carlos Edwards 24 October 1978 51  Luton Town 
12 FW Collin Samuel 27 August 1981 18  Dundee United 
13 FW Cornell Glen 21 October 1980 35  Los Angeles Galaxy 
14 FW Stern John 30 October 1976 95  Coventry City 
15 FW Kenwyne Jones 5 October 1984 29  Southampton 
16 MF Evans Wise 23 November 1973 16  Waldhof Mannheim 
17 DF David Atiba Charles 29 August 1977 19  W Connection 
18 MF Densill Theobald 27 June 1982 38  Falkirk 
19 FW Dwight Yorke (c) 3 November 1971 54  Sydney FC 
20 FW Jason Scotland 18 February 1979 25  St Johnstone 
21 GK Kelvin Jack 29 April 1976 32  Dundee 
22 GK Clayton Ince 12 July 1972 63  Coventry City 
23 MF Anthony Wolfe 31 December 1981 4  San Juan Jabloteh 
 





[edit] Group C

[edit]  Argentina
Head coach: José Pekerman

No. Pos. Player DoB/Age Caps Club 
1 GK Roberto Abbondanzieri 19 August 1972 22  Boca Juniors 
2 DF Roberto Ayala 14 April 1973 100  Valencia 
3 DF Juan Pablo Sorín (c) 5 May 1976 71  Villarreal 
4 DF Fabricio Coloccini 22 January 1982 23  Deportivo La Coruña 
5 MF Esteban Cambiasso 18 August 1980 22  Internazionale 
6 DF Gabriel Heinze 19 April 1978 29  Manchester United 
7 FW Javier Saviola 11 December 1981 31  Barcelona [24] 
8 MF Javier Mascherano 8 June 1984 15  Corinthians 
9 FW Hernán Crespo 5 July 1975 55  Chelsea 
10 MF Juan Román Riquelme 24 June 1978 31  Villarreal 
11 FW Carlos Tévez 5 February 1984 21  Corinthians 
12 GK Leo Franco 29 May 1977 3  Atlético Madrid 
13 MF Lionel Scaloni 16 May 1978 6  Deportivo [25] 
14 FW Rodrigo Palacio 5 February 1982 2  Boca Juniors 
15 DF Gabriel Milito 7 September 1980 15  Real Zaragoza 
16 MF Pablo Aimar 3 November 1979 40  Valencia 
17 DF Leandro Cufré 9 May 1978 2  Roma 
18 MF Maxi Rodríguez 2 January 1981 13  Atlético Madrid 
19 FW Lionel Messi 24 June 1987 7  Barcelona 
20 FW Julio Cruz 10 October 1974 15  Internazionale 
21 DF Nicolás Burdisso 12 April 1981 8  Internazionale 
22 MF Lucho González 19 January 1981 27  FC Porto 
23 GK Oscar Ustari 3 July 1986 0  Independiente 
 





[edit]  Côte d&#039;Ivoire (Ivory Coast)
Head coach:  Henri Michel

No. Pos. Player DoB/Age Caps Club 
1 GK Jean-Jacques Tizié 7 September 1972 24  Espérance 
2 MF Kanga Akalé 7 March 1981 22  Auxerre 
3 DF Arthur Boka 2 April 1983 23  Strasbourg 
4 DF Kolo Touré 19 March 1981 42  Arsenal 
5 MF Didier Zokora 14 December 1980 38  Saint-Étienne 
6 DF Blaise Kouassi 2 February 1974 36  Troyes 
7 MF Emerse Faé 24 January 1984 14  Nantes 
8 MF Bonaventure Kalou 12 January 1978 49  Paris Saint-Germain 
9 FW Arouna Koné 11 November 1983 17  PSV 
10 MF Gilles Yapi Yapo 13 January 1982 26  Young Boys Bern 
11 FW Didier Drogba (c) 11 March 1978 32  Chelsea 
12 DF Abdoulaye Méïté 6 October 1980 18  Marseille 
13 DF Marco Zoro 27 December 1983 13  Messina 
14 FW Bakari Koné 17 September 1981 16  Nice 
15 FW Aruna Dindane 26 November 1980 34  Lens 
16 GK Gérard Gnanhouan 12 December 1979 6  Montpellier 
17 DF Cyril Domoraud 22 July 1971 50  Créteil 
18 MF Abdul Kader Keïta 6 August 1981 26  Lille 
19 MF Yaya Touré 13 March 1983 14  Olympiacos 
20 MF Guy Demel 13 June 1981 7  Hamburger SV 
21 DF Emmanuel Eboué 4 June 1983 11  Arsenal 
22 MF Koffi Ndri Romaric 4 June 1983 8  Le Mans 
23 GK Boubacar Barry 20 December 1979 6  Beveren 
 





[edit]  Netherlands
Head coach: Marco van Basten

No. Pos. Player DoB/Age Caps Club 
1 GK Edwin van der Sar (c) 29 October 1970 109  Manchester United 
2 DF Kew Jaliens 15 September 1978 1  AZ Alkmaar 
3 DF Khalid Boulahrouz 28 December 1981 11  Hamburg 
4 DF Joris Mathijsen 5 April 1980 8  AZ Alkmaar 
5 DF Giovanni van Bronckhorst 5 February 1975 57  Barcelona 
6 MF Denny Landzaat 6 May 1976 23  AZ Alkmaar 
7 FW Dirk Kuyt 22 July 1980 19  Feyenoord 
8 MF Phillip Cocu 29 October 1970 97  PSV Eindhoven 
9 FW Ruud van Nistelrooy 1 July 1976 51  Manchester United 
10 MF Rafael van der Vaart 11 February 1983 35  Hamburg 
11 MF Arjen Robben 23 January 1984 20  Chelsea 
12 DF Jan Kromkamp 17 August 1980 11  Liverpool 
13 DF André Ooijer 11 July 1974 19  PSV Eindhoven 
14 DF John Heitinga 15 November 1983 18  Ajax 
15 DF Tim de Cler 8 November 1978 3  AZ Alkmaar 
16 MF Hedwiges Maduro 13 February 1985 11  Ajax 
17 FW Robin van Persie 6 August 1983 10  Arsenal 
18 MF Mark van Bommel 22 April 1977 37  Barcelona 
19 FW Jan Vennegoor of Hesselink 7 November 1978 7  PSV Eindhoven 
20 MF Wesley Sneijder 9 June 1984 23  Ajax 
21 FW Ryan Babel 19 December 1986 6  Ajax 
22 GK Henk Timmer 3 December 1971 2  AZ Alkmaar 
23 GK Maarten Stekelenburg 22 September 1982 2  Ajax 
 





[edit]  Serbia and Montenegro
Head coach: Ilija Petković

No. Pos. Player DoB/Age Caps Club 
1 GK Dragoslav Jevrić 8 July 1974 40  Ankaraspor 
2 MF Ivan Ergić 21 January 1981 1  Basel 
3 DF Ivica Dragutinović 13 November 1975 26  Sevilla 
4 MF Igor Duljaj 29 October 1979 37  Shakhtar Donetsk 
5 DF Nemanja Vidić 21 October 1981 20  Manchester United 
6 DF Goran Gavrančić 2 August 1978 25  Dynamo Kyiv 
7 MF Ognjen Koroman 19 September 1978 25  Portsmouth 
8 FW Mateja Kežman 12 April 1979 47  Atlético Madrid 
9 FW Savo Milošević (c) 2 September 1973 98  CA Osasuna 
10 MF Dejan Stanković 11 September 1978 58  Internazionale 
11 MF Predrag Đorđević 4 August 1972 34  Olympiacos 
12 GK Oliver Kovačević 29 December 1974 3  CSKA Sofia 
13 DF Dušan Basta 18 August 1984 2  Red Star Belgrade 
14 DF Nenad Đorđević 7 August 1979 15  Partizan 
15 DF Milan Dudić 1 November 1979 11  Red Star Belgrade 
16 DF Dušan Petković[26] June 13, 1974 12  OFK Beograd 
17 MF Albert Nađ 29 October 1974 42  Partizan 
18 MF Zvonimir Vukić 19 July 1979 25  Shakhtar Donetsk [27] 
19 FW Nikola Žigić 25 September 1980 11  Red Star Belgrade 
20 DF Mladen Krstajić 4 March 1974 45  Schalke 04 
21 FW Danijel Ljuboja 4 September 1978 15  Paris St. Germain [28] 
22 MF Saša Ilić 30 December 1977 32  Galatasaray 
23 GK Vladimir Stojković 28 July 1983 0  Red Star Belgrade[29] 
 





[edit] Group D

[edit]  Angola
Head coach: Luís Oliveira Gonçalves

No. Pos. Player DoB/Age Caps Club 
1 GK João Ricardo 7 January 1970 26  Moreirense FC [30] 
2 DF Marco Airosa 6 August 1984 2  F.C. Barreirense 
3 DF Jamba 10 July 1977 35  AS Aviacao 
4 DF Lebo Lebo 29 May 1977 15  Petro Atletico 
5 DF Kali 11 October 1978 21  F.C. Barreirense 
6 MF Miloy 27 May 1981 11  InterClube 
7 MF Figueiredo 28 November 1972 22  Varzim 
8 MF André 14 May 1978 33  Kuwait S.C. 
9 FW Mantorras 18 March 1982 11  Benfica 
10 FW Akwá (c) 30 May 1977 77  Al-Wakra [31] 
11 FW Mateus 19 June 1984 4  Gil Vicente F.C. 
12 GK Lamá 1 February 1981 9  Petro Atletico 
13 MF Édson 3 February 1980 7  FC Paços de Ferreira 
14 MF Mendonça 9 October 1982 34  Varzim 
15 DF Rui Marques 3 September 1977 1  Leeds United [32] 
16 FW Flávio 20 December 1979 46  Al-Ahly 
17 MF Zé Kalanga 12 October 1983 23  Petro Atletico 
18 FW Love 10 January 1982 35  AS Aviacao 
19 FW Titi Buengo 11 February 1980 2  Clermont Foot 
20 DF Locó 25 December 1984 11  Primeiro Agosto 
21 DF Delgado 1 November 1972 17  Petro Atletico 
22 GK Mário 1 June 1985 1  InterClube 
23 DF Marco Abreu 8 December 1974 3  Portimonense 
 





[edit]  Iran
Head coach:  Branko Ivanković

No. Pos. Player DoB/Age Caps Club 
1 GK Ebrahim Mirzapour 16 September 1978 64  Foolad 
2 MF Mehdi Mahdavikia 24 July 1977 89  Hamburger SV 
3 DF Sohrab Bakhtiarizadeh 11 September 1972 31  Saba Battery 
4 DF Yahya Golmohammadi 16 March 1971 69  Saba Battery 
5 DF Rahman Rezaei 20 February 1975 43  Messina 
6 MF Javad Nekounam 7 September 1980 71  Al-Sharjah [33] 
7 MF Ferydoon Zandi 26 April 1979 10  Kaiserslautern 
8 MF Ali Karimi 8 November 1978 90  Bayern Munich 
9 FW Vahid Hashemian 21 July 1976 28  Hannover 96 
10 FW Ali Daei (c) 21 March 1969 147  Saba Battery 
11 FW Rasoul Khatibi 22 September 1978 12  Sepahan 
12 GK Hassan Roudbarian 6 July 1978 3  Pas 
13 DF Hossein Kaebi 23 September 1985 44  Foolad 
14 MF Andranik Teymourian 6 March 1983 7  Abu Moslem 
15 FW Arash Borhani 14 September 1983 20  Pas 
16 FW Reza Enayati 23 September 1976 15  Esteghlal 
17 FW Javad Kazemian 23 April 1981 25  Persepolis 
18 MF Moharram Navidkia 1 November 1982 24  VfL Bochum 
19 DF Amir Hossein Sadeqi 6 September 1981 1  Esteghlal 
20 DF Mohammad Nosrati 10 January 1982 44  Pas 
21 MF Mehrzad Madanchi 10 January 1985 6  Persepolis 
22 GK Vahid Talebloo 26 May 1982 1  Esteghlal 
23 MF Masoud Shojaei 9 June 1984 3  Saipa 
 





[edit]  Mexico
Head coach:  Ricardo Lavolpe

No. Pos. Player DoB/Age Caps Club 
1 GK Oswaldo Sánchez 21 September 1973 70  Guadalajara 
2 DF Claudio Suárez 17 December 1968 178  Chivas USA 
3 DF Carlos Salcido 2 April 1980 32  Guadalajara [34] 
4 DF Rafael Márquez (c) 13 February 1979 65  Barcelona 
5 DF Ricardo Osorio 30 March 1980 39  Cruz Azul [35] 
6 MF Gerardo Torrado 30 April 1979 56  Cruz Azul 
7 MF Ântonio Naelson 23 May 1976 32  Toluca 
8 MF Pavel Pardo 26 July 1976 125  América [36] 
9 FW Jared Borgetti 14 August 1973 75  Bolton [37] 
10 FW Guillermo Franco 3 November 1976 7  Villarreal 
11 MF Ramón Morales 10 October 1975 46  Guadalajara 
12 GK José de Jesús Corona 26 January 1981 6  U.A.G. 
13 GK Guillermo Ochoa 13 July 1985 1  América 
14 DF Gonzalo Pineda 19 October 1982 30  Guadalajara 
15 DF José Antonio Castro 11 August 1980 12  América 
16 DF Mario Méndez 1 June 1979 32  Monterrey 
17 FW Francisco Fonseca 2 October 1979 29  Cruz Azul [38] 
18 MF Andrés Guardado 28 September 1986 7  Atlas 
19 FW Omar Bravo 4 March 1980 33  Guadalajara 
20 MF Rafael García 14 August 1974 52  Atlas 
21 MF Jesús Arellano 8 May 1973 69  Monterrey 
22 DF Francisco Rodríguez 20 October 1981 32  Guadalajara 
23 MF Luis Pérez 12 January 1981 52  Monterrey 
 





[edit]  Portugal
Head coach:  Luiz Felipe Scolari

No. Pos. Player DoB/Age Caps Club 
1 GK Ricardo 11 February 1976 49  Sporting 
2 DF Paulo Ferreira 18 January 1979 30  Chelsea 
3 DF Marco Caneira 9 February 1979 14  Valencia [39] 
4 DF Ricardo Costa 16 May 1981 3  FC Porto 
5 DF Fernando Meira 5 June 1978 30  VfB Stuttgart 
6 MF Costinha 1 December 1974 44  Dynamo Moscow [40] 
7 MF Luís Figo (c) 4 November 1972 120  Internazionale 
8 MF Petit 25 September 1976 36  Benfica 
9 FW Pauleta 28 April 1973 82  Paris Saint-Germain 
10 MF Hugo Viana 15 January 1983 21  Valencia 
11 MF Simão 31 October 1979 43  Benfica 
12 GK Quim 13 November 1975 24  Benfica 
13 DF Miguel 4 January 1980 28  Valencia 
14 DF Nuno Valente 12 September 1974 23  Everton 
15 FW Luís Boa Morte 4 August 1977 24  Fulham 
16 DF Ricardo Carvalho 18 May 1978 24  Chelsea 
17 MF Cristiano Ronaldo 5 February 1985 32  Manchester United 
18 MF Maniche 11 November 1977 31  Dynamo Moscow [41] 
19 MF Tiago 3 May 1981 22  Lyon 
20 MF Deco 27 August 1977 35  Barcelona 
21 FW Nuno Gomes 5 July 1976 53  Benfica 
22 GK Paulo Santos 11 December 1972 1  S.C. Braga 
23 FW Hélder Postiga 2 August 1982 24  FC Porto [42] 
 





[edit] Group E

[edit]  Czech Republic
Head coach: Karel Brückner

No. Pos. Player DoB/Age Caps Club 
1 GK Petr Čech 20 May 1982 41  Chelsea 
2 DF Zdeněk Grygera 14 May 1980 41  Ajax 
3 DF Pavel Mareš 18 January 1976 10  Zenit St. Petersburg 
4 MF Tomáš Galásek(c) 15 January 1973 49  Ajax [43] 
5 DF Radoslav Kováč 11 November 1979 6  Spartak Moscow 
6 DF Marek Jankulovski 9 May 1977 48  Milan 
7 MF Libor Sionko 1 February 1977 17  Austria Wien [44] 
8 MF Karel Poborský 30 March 1972 115  Dynamo České Budějovice 
9 FW Jan Koller 30 March 1973 68  Borussia Dortmund [45] 
10 MF Tomáš Rosický 4 October 1980 54  Borussia Dortmund [46] 
11 MF Pavel Nedvěd 30 August 1972 87  Juventus 
12 FW Vratislav Lokvenc 27 September 1973 72  Red Bull Salzburg 
13 DF Martin Jiránek 25 May 1979 24  Spartak Moscow 
14 MF David Jarolím 17 May 1979 3  Hamburg 
15 FW Milan Baroš 28 October 1981 49  Aston Villa 
16 GK Jaromír Blažek 29 December 1972 11  AC Sparta Praha 
17 FW Jiří Štajner 27 May 1976 21  Hannover 96 
18 FW Marek Heinz 4 August 1977 28  Galatasaray 
19 MF Jan Polák 14 March 1981 18  Nürnberg 
20 MF Jaroslav Plašil 5 January 1982 14  Monaco 
21 DF Tomáš Ujfaluši 24 March 1978 48  Fiorentina 
22 DF David Rozehnal 5 July 1980 22  Paris Saint-Germain 
23 GK Antonín Kinský 31 May 1975 5  Saturn Ramenskoye 
 





[edit]  Ghana
Head coach:  Ratomir Dujković

No. Pos. Player DoB/Age Caps Club 
1 GK Sammy Adjei 1 September 1980 31  Ashdod 
2 DF Hans Sarpei 28 June 1976 7  Wolfsburg 
3 FW Asamoah Gyan 22 November 1985 13  Udinese [47] 
4 DF Samuel Kuffour 3 September 1976 58  Roma 
5 DF John Mensah (vc) 29 November 1982 33  Rennes 
6 DF Emmanuel Pappoe 3 March 1981 27  Hapoel Kfar Saba 
7 DF Illiasu Shilla 3 March 1981 2  Asante Kotoko 
8 MF Michael Essien 3 December 1982 17  Chelsea 
9 MF Derek Boateng 2 May 1983 11  AIK 
10 MF Stephen Appiah (c) 24 December 1980 42  Fenerbahçe 
11 MF Sulley Muntari 27 August 1984 16  Udinese 
12 FW Alex Tachie-Mensah 15 February 1977 5  St Gallen 
13 DF Habib Mohamed 10 December 1983 1  King Faisal Babes 
14 FW Matthew Amoah 24 October 1980 16  Borussia Dortmund 
15 DF John Paintsil 15 June 1981 21  Hapoel Tel Aviv 
16 GK George Owu 17 June 1982 6  Ashanti Gold 
17 DF Daniel Quaye 25 December 1980 7  Hearts of Oak 
18 MF Eric Addo 12 November 1978 6  PSV 
19 FW Razak Pimpong 30 December 1982 4  FC Copenhagen 
20 MF Otto Addo 9 June 1975 13  Mainz 05 
21 DF Issah Ahmed 24 May 1982 10  Randers 
22 GK Richard Kingson 13 July 1975 33  Ankaraspor 
23 MF Haminu Dramani 1 April 1986 7  Red Star Belgrade [48] 
 





[edit]  Italy
Head coach: Marcello Lippi

No. Pos. Player DoB/Age Caps Club 
1 GK Gianluigi Buffon 28 January 1978 60  Juventus 
2 DF Cristian Zaccardo 21 December 1981 12  Palermo 
3 DF Fabio Grosso 28 November 1977 17  Palermo [49] 
4 MF Daniele De Rossi 24 July 1983 17  Roma 
5 DF Fabio Cannavaro (c) 13 September 1973 93  Juventus 
6 DF Andrea Barzagli 8 May 1981 8  Palermo 
7 FW Alessandro Del Piero 9 November 1974 74  Juventus 
8 MF Gennaro Gattuso 9 January 1978 43  Milan 
9 FW Luca Toni 26 May 1977 18  Fiorentina 
10 FW Francesco Totti 27 September 1976 51  Roma 
11 FW Alberto Gilardino 5 July 1982 15  Milan 
12 GK Angelo Peruzzi 16 February 1970 31  Lazio 
13 DF Alessandro Nesta 19 March 1976 74  Milan 
14 GK Marco Amelia 2 April 1982 1  Livorno 
15 FW Vincenzo Iaquinta 29 November 1979 12  Udinese 
16 MF Mauro Camoranesi 4 October 1976 21  Juventus 
17 MF Simone Barone 30 April 1978 13  Palermo 
18 FW Filippo Inzaghi 9 August 1973 49  Milan 
19 DF Gianluca Zambrotta 19 February 1977 52  Juventus 
20 MF Simone Perrotta 17 September 1977 24  Roma 
21 MF Andrea Pirlo 19 May 1979 24  Milan 
22 DF Massimo Oddo 14 June 1976 20  Lazio 
23 DF Marco Materazzi 19 August 1973 28  Internazionale 
 





[edit]  United States
Head coach: Bruce Arena

No. Pos. Player DoB/Age Caps Club 
1 GK Tim Howard 6 March 1979 16  Manchester United [50] 
2 DF Chris Albright 14 January 1979 20  Los Angeles Galaxy [51] 
3 DF Carlos Bocanegra 25 May 1979 40  Fulham 
4 MF Pablo Mastroeni 26 August 1976 48  Colorado Rapids 
5 MF John O&#039;Brien 29 August 1977 31  Chivas USA 
6 DF Steve Cherundolo 19 February 1979 35  Hannover 96 
7 MF Eddie Lewis 17 May 1974 69  Leeds United 
8 MF Clint Dempsey 9 March 1983 21  New England Revolution 
9 FW Eddie Johnson 31 March 1984 18  Kansas City Wizards 
10 MF Claudio Reyna (c) 20 July 1973 109  Manchester City 
11 FW Brian Ching 24 May 1978 20  Houston Dynamo 
12 DF Gregg Berhalter 1 August 1973 44  Energie Cottbus [52] 
13 DF Jimmy Conrad 12 February 1977 15  Kansas City Wizards 
14 MF Ben Olsen 3 May 1977 34  D.C. United 
15 MF Bobby Convey 27 May 1983 39  Reading 
16 FW Josh Wolff 25 February 1977 47  Kansas City Wizards 
17 MF DaMarcus Beasley 24 May 1982 58  PSV 
18 GK Kasey Keller 29 November 1969 93  Borussia Mönchengladbach 
19 GK Marcus Hahnemann 15 June 1972 6  Reading 
20 FW Brian McBride 19 June 1972 92  Fulham 
21 FW Landon Donovan 4 March 1982 81  Los Angeles Galaxy 
22 DF Oguchi Onyewu 13 May 1982 14  Standard Liège 
23 DF Eddie Pope 24 December 1973 80  Real Salt Lake 
 





[edit] Group F

[edit]  Australia
Head coach:  Guus Hiddink

No. Pos. Player DoB/Age Caps Club 
1 GK Mark Schwarzer 6 October 1972 37  Middlesbrough 
2 DF Lucas Neill 9 March 1978 25  Blackburn Rovers 
3 DF Craig Moore 12 December 1975 33  Newcastle United 
4 MF Tim Cahill 6 December 1979 16  Everton 
5 MF Jason Čulina 5 August 1980 13  PSV 
6 DF Tony Popović 4 July 1973 56  Crystal Palace [53] 
7 MF Brett Emerton 22 February 1979 48  Blackburn Rovers 
8 MF Josip Skoko 10 December 1975 46  Wigan Athletic [54] 
9 FW Mark Viduka (c) 9 October 1975 33  Middlesbrough 
10 FW Harry Kewell 22 September 1978 20  Liverpool 
11 MF Stan Lazaridis 16 August 1972 59  Birmingham [55] 
12 GK Ante Čović 13 June 1975 1  Hammarby 
13 MF Vince Grella 5 October 1979 17  Parma 
14 MF Scott Chipperfield 30 December 1975 46  Basel 
15 FW John Aloisi 5 February 1976 41  Alavés 
16 DF Michael Beauchamp 8 March 1981 2 Central Coast Mariners [56] 
17 FW Archie Thompson 23 October 1978 20  Melbourne Victory [57] 
18 GK Željko Kalac 16 December 1972 52  A.C.Milan 
19 FW Joshua Kennedy 20 August 1982 1  Dynamo Dresden [58] 
20 MF Luke Wilkshire 2 October 1981 8  Bristol City 
21 MF Mile Sterjovski 27 May 1979 22  Basel 
22 DF Mark Milligan 4 August 1985 1  Sydney FC 
23 MF Mark Bresciano 11 February 1980 24  Parma 
 





[edit]  Brazil
Head coach: Carlos Alberto Parreira

No. Pos. Player DoB/Age Caps Club 
1 GK Dida 7 October 1973 86  Milan 
2 DF Cafu (c) 7 June 1970 138  Milan 
3 DF Lúcio 8 May 1978 50  Bayern München 
4 DF Juan 1 February 1979 38  Bayer Leverkusen 
5 MF Emerson 4 April 1976 70  Juventus 
6 DF Roberto Carlos 10 April 1973 121  Real Madrid 
7 FW Adriano 17 February 1982 32  Internazionale 
8 MF Kaká 22 April 1982 38  Milan 
9 FW Ronaldo 22 September 1976 92  Real Madrid 
10 FW Ronaldinho 21 March 1980 63  Barcelona 
11 MF Zé Roberto 6 July 1974 79  Bayern München [59] 
12 GK Rogério Ceni 22 January 1973 15  São Paulo 
13 DF Cicinho 24 June 1980 10  Real Madrid 
14 DF Luisão 13 February 1981 19  Benfica 
15 DF Cris 3 June 1977 16  Lyon 
16 DF Gilberto 25 April 1976 9  Hertha Berlin 
17 MF Gilberto Silva 7 October 1976 36  Arsenal 
18 MF Mineiro 2 August 1975 2  São Paulo [60] 
19 MF Juninho 30 January 1975 37  Lyon 
20 MF Ricardinho 23 May 1976 19  Corinthians 
21 FW Fred 3 October 1983 3  Lyon 
22 GK Júlio César 3 September 1979 11  Internazionale 
23 FW Robinho 25 January 1984 23  Real Madrid 
 





[edit]  Croatia
Head coach: Zlatko Kranjčar

No. Pos. Player DoB/Age Caps Club 
1 GK Stipe Pletikosa 8 January 1979 50  Shakhtar Donetsk [61] 
2 MF Darijo Srna 1 May 1982 36  Shakhtar Donetsk 
3 DF Josip Šimunić 18 February 1978 42  Hertha Berlin 
4 DF Robert Kovač 6 April 1974 56  Juventus 
5 DF Igor Tudor 16 April 1978 52  Juventus [62] 
6 MF Jurica Vranješ 30 January 1980 24  Werder Bremen 
7 DF Dario Šimić 12 November 1975 80  Milan 
8 MF Marko Babić 28 January 1981 33  Bayer Leverkusen 
9 FW Dado Pršo 5 November 1974 29  Rangers 
10 MF Niko Kovač (c) 15 October 1971 58  Hertha Berlin[63] 
11 DF Mario Tokić 23 June 1975 28  Austria Wien 
12 GK Joey Didulica 14 October 1977 4  Austria Wien 
13 DF Stjepan Tomas 6 March 1976 48  Galatasaray 
14 MF Luka Modrić 9 September 1985 5  Dinamo Zagreb 
15 MF Ivan Leko 7 February 1978 13  Club Brugge 
16 MF Jerko Leko 9 April 1980 36  Dynamo Kyiv[64] 
17 FW Ivan Klasnić 29 January 1980 20  Werder Bremen 
18 FW Ivica Olić 14 September 1979 36  CSKA Moscow 
19 MF Niko Kranjčar 13 August 1984 21  Hajduk Split 
20 MF Anthony Šerić 15 January 1979 14  Panathinaikos 
21 FW Boško Balaban 15 October 1978 27  Club Brugge 
22 FW Ivan Bošnjak 6 February 1979 13  Dinamo Zagreb[65] 
23 GK Tomislav Butina 30 March 1974 28  Club Brugge 
 





[edit]  Japan
Head coach:  Zico

No. Pos. Player DoB/Age Caps Club 
1 GK Seigo Narazaki 15 April 1976 50  Nagoya Grampus Eight 
2 DF Teruyuki Moniwa 8 September 1981 8  FC Tokyo 
3 DF Yuichi Komano 25 July 1981 8  Sanfrecce Hiroshima 
4 MF Yasuhito Endo 28 January 1980 40  Gamba Osaka 
5 DF Tsuneyasu Miyamoto 7 February 1977 69  Gamba Osaka 
6 DF Kōji Nakata 9 July 1979 55  Basel 
7 MF Hidetoshi Nakata(c) 22 January 1977 74  Fiorentina [66] 
8 MF Mitsuo Ogasawara 5 April 1979 51  Kashima Antlers 
9 FW Naohiro Takahara 4 June 1979 41  Hamburger SV [67] 
10 MF Shunsuke Nakamura 24 June 1978 60  Celtic 
11 FW Seiichiro Maki 7 August 1980 10  JEF United Ichihara Chiba 
12 GK Yoichi Doi 25 July 1973 4  FC Tokyo 
13 FW Atsushi Yanagisawa 27 May 1977 56  Kashima Antlers 
14 DF Alessandro dos Santos 20 July 1977 72  Urawa Red Diamonds 
15 MF Takashi Fukunishi 1 September 1976 62  Júbilo Iwata 
16 FW Masashi Oguro 4 May 1980 18  Grenoble 
17 MF Junichi Inamoto 18 September 1979 63  West Bromwich Albion 
18 MF Shinji Ono 27 September 1979 54  Urawa Red Diamonds 
19 DF Keisuke Tsuboi 16 September 1979 33  Urawa Red Diamonds 
20 FW Keiji Tamada 11 April 1980 39  Nagoya Grampus Eight 
21 DF Akira Kaji 13 January 1980 43  Gamba Osaka 
22 DF Yuji Nakazawa 25 February 1978 50  Yokohama F. Marinos 
23 GK Yoshikatsu Kawaguchi 15 August 1975 89  Júbilo Iwata 
 





[edit] Group G

[edit]  France
Head coach: Raymond Domenech

No. Pos. Player DoB/Age Caps Club 
1 GK Mickaël Landreau 14 May 1979 3  Nantes [68] 
2 DF Jean-Alain Boumsong 14 December 1979 19  Newcastle United 
3 DF Éric Abidal 11 July 1979 8  Lyon 
4 MF Patrick Vieira 23 June 1976 87  Juventus 
5 DF William Gallas 17 August 1977 40  Chelsea 
6 MF Claude Makélélé 18 February 1973 43  Chelsea 
7 MF Florent Malouda 13 June 1980 13  Lyon 
8 MF Vikash Dhorasoo 10 October 1973 16  Paris Saint-Germain 
9 FW Sidney Govou 27 July 1979 19  Lyon[69] 
10 MF Zinedine Zidane (c) 23 June 1972 102  Real Madrid[70] 
11 FW Sylvain Wiltord 10 May 1974 80  Lyon 
12 FW Thierry Henry 17 August 1977 78  Arsenal 
13 DF Mikael Silvestre 9 August 1977 39  Manchester United 
14 FW Louis Saha 8 August 1978 9  Manchester United 
15 DF Lilian Thuram 1 January 1972 114  Juventus 
16 GK Fabien Barthez 28 June 1971 80  Marseille [71] 
17 DF Gaël Givet 9 October 1981 11  Monaco 
18 MF Alou Diarra 15 July 1981 9  Lens 
19 DF Willy Sagnol 18 March 1977 38  Bayern München 
20 FW David Trézéguet 15 October 1977 63  Juventus 
21 DF Pascal Chimbonda 21 February 1979 1  Wigan Athletic 
22 MF Franck Ribéry 1 April 1983 3  Marseille 
23 GK Grégory Coupet 31 December 1972 18  Lyon 
 





[edit]  Korea Republic
Head coach:  Dick Advocaat

No. Pos. Player DoB/Age Caps Club 
1 GK Lee Woon-Jae (c) 26 April 1973 97  Suwon Samsung Bluewings 
2 DF Kim Young-Chul 30 June 1976 12  Seongnam Ilhwa Chunma 
3 DF Kim Dong-Jin 29 January 1982 34  FC Seoul 
4 DF Choi Jin-Cheul 26 March 1971 62  Jeonbuk Hyundai Motors 
5 MF Kim Nam-Il 14 March 1977 66  Suwon Samsung Bluewings 
6 DF Kim Jin-Kyu 16 February 1985 23  Júbilo Iwata 
7 MF Park Ji-Sung 25 February 1981 60  Manchester United 
8 MF Kim Doo-Hyun 14 July 1982 32  Seongnam Ilhwa Chunma 
9 FW Ahn Jung-Hwan 27 January 1976 61  MSV Duisburg 
10 FW Park Chu-Young 10 July 1985 18  FC Seoul 
11 FW Seol Ki-Hyeon 8 January 1979 67  Wolverhampton Wanderers 
12 DF Lee Young-Pyo 23 April 1977 85  Tottenham Hotspur 
13 MF Lee Eul-Yong 23 April 1977 47  Trabzonspor 
14 FW Lee Chun-Soo 9 July 1981 62  Ulsan Hyundai Horang-i 
15 MF Baek Ji-Hoon 28 February 1985 12  FC Seoul 
16 FW Chung Kyung-Ho 22 May 1980 40  Gwangju Sangmu Phoenix 
17 MF Lee Ho 22 December 1984 11  Ulsan Hyundai Horang-i 
18 MF Kim Sang-Sik 17 December 1976 42  Seongnam Ilhwa Chunma 
19 FW Cho Jae-Jin 9 July 1981 21  Shimizu S-Pulse 
20 GK Kim Yong-Dae 11 October 1979 15  Seongnam Ilhwa Chunma 
21 GK Kim Young-Kwang 28 June 1983 6  Chunnam Dragons 
22 DF Song Chong-Gug 20 February 1979 51  Suwon Samsung Bluewings 
23 DF Cho Won-Hee 17 April 1983 13  Suwon Samsung Bluewings 
 





[edit]  Switzerland
Head coach: Köbi Kuhn

No. Pos. Player DoB/Age Caps Club 
1 GK Pascal Zuberbühler 8 January 1971 40  Basel 
2 DF Johan Djourou 18 January 1987 2  Arsenal 
3 DF Ludovic Magnin 20 April 1979 30  Stuttgart 
4 DF Philippe Senderos 14 February 1985 12  Arsenal 
5 MF Xavier Margairaz 17 January 1984 3  FC Zürich 
6 MF Johann Vogel (c) 8 March 1977 85  Milan 
7 MF Ricardo Cabanas 17 January 1979 37  FC Köln 
8 MF Raphaël Wicky 26 April 1977 67  Hamburger SV 
9 FW Alexander Frei 15 July 1979 45  Rennes [72] 
10 MF Daniel Gygax 28 August 1981 22  Lille 
11 FW Marco Streller 18 June 1981 10  FC Köln 
12 GK Diego Benaglio 8 July 1983 1  Nacional 
13 DF Stéphane Grichting 30 March 1979 6  Auxerre 
14 MF David Degen 15 February 1983 3  Basel [73] 
15 MF Blerim Džemaili 12 April 1986 3  FC Zürich 
16 MF Tranquillo Barnetta 22 May 1985 13  Bayer Leverkusen 
17 DF Christoph Spycher 30 March 1978 21  Eintracht Frankfurt 
18 FW Mauro Lustrinelli 26 February 1976 5  Sparta Praha 
19 MF Valon Behrami 19 April 1985 6  Lazio 
20 DF Patrick Müller 17 December 1976 64  Lyon 
21 GK Fabio Coltorti 3 December 1980 2  Grasshoppers 
22 MF Hakan Yakın 22 February 1977 46  BSC Young Boys [74] 
23 DF Philipp Degen 15 February 1983 15  Borussia Dortmund 
 





[edit]  Togo
Head coach:  Otto Pfister[75]

No. Pos. Player DoB/Age Caps Club 
1 GK Ouro-Nimini Tchagnirou 31 December 1977 9  Djoliba 
2 DF Daré Nibombé 16 June 1980 16  Mons 
3 DF Jean-Paul Abalo (c) 26 June 1975 65  APOEL 
4 FW Emmanuel Adebayor 16 February 1984 29  Arsenal 
5 DF Massamasso Tchangai 8 August 1978 34  Benevento 
6 MF Yao Aziawonou 30 November 1979 32  BSC Young Boys 
7 FW Moustapha Salifou 1 June 1983 34  Brest 
8 MF Kuami Agboh 28 December 1977 4  Beveren 
9 MF Thomas Dossevi 6 March 1979 10  Valenciennes 
10 MF Mamam Cherif Touré 13 January 1981 39  Metz 
11 FW Robert Malm 21 August 1973 1  Brest 
12 DF Éric Akoto 20 July 1980 32  Admira Wacker[76] 
13 FW Richmond Forson 23 May 1980 8  Poiré 
14 MF Adékambi Olufadé 7 January 1980 24  Al Siliyah 
15 MF Alaixys Romao 18 January 1984 11  Louhans-Cuiseaux 
16 GK Kossi Agassa 2 July 1978 49  Metz 
17 FW Mohamed Kader 8 April 1979 46  Guingamp 
18 MF Yao Junior Sènaya 19 April 1984 16  YF Juventus 
19 DF Ludovic Assemoassa 18 September 1980 5  Ciudad de Murcia 
20 DF Affo Erassa 19 February 1983 6  Clermont 
21 MF Franck Atsou 1 August 1978 13  Al-Hilal [77] 
22 GK Kodjovi Obilale 8 October 1984 0  Etoile Filante 
23 DF Assimiou Touré 1 January 1988 1  Bayer Leverkusen 
 





[edit] Group H

[edit]  Saudi Arabia
Head coach:  Marcos Paquetá

No. Pos. Player DoB/Age Caps Club 
1 GK Mohamed Al-Deayea 2 August 1972 181  Al-Hilal 
2 DF Ahmed Dokhi 25 October 1976 68  Al-Ittihad 
3 DF Redha Tukar 29 November 1975 37  Al-Ittihad 
4 DF Hamad Al-Montashari 22 June 1982 32  Al-Ittihad 
5 DF Naif Al-Qadi 3 April 1979 28  Al-Ahli 
6 MF Omar Al-Ghamdi 11 April 1979 38  Al-Hilal 
7 MF Mohammed Ameen 29 April 1980 16  Al-Ittihad 
8 MF Mohammed Noor 26 February 1978 63  Al-Ittihad 
9 FW Sami Al-Jaber (c) 11 December 1972 160  Al-Hilal 
10 MF Mohammad Al-Shalhoub 8 December 1980 48  Al-Hilal 
11 FW Saad Al-Harthi 3 February 1984 15  Al-Nasr 
12 DF Abdulaziz Khathran 31 July 1973 19  Al-Hilal 
13 DF Hussein Sulaimani 21 January 1977 97  Al-Ahli 
14 MF Saud Khariri 8 July 1980 34  Al-Ittihad 
15 DF Ahmed Al-Bahri 18 September 1980 11  Al-Ittifaq 
16 MF Khaled Aziz 14 July 1981 14  Al-Hilal 
17 FW Mohammad Al-Bishi 3 May 1987 0  Al-Ahli 
18 MF Nawaf Al-Temyat 28 June 1976 56  Al-Hilal 
19 DF Mohammad Massad 17 February 1983 5  Al-Ahli 
20 FW Yasser Al-Qahtani 10 October 1982 45  Al-Hilal 
21 GK Mabrouk Zaid 11 February 1979 33  Al-Ittihad 
22 GK Mohammad Khouja 15 March 1982 8  Al-Shabab 
23 FW Malek Mouath 10 August 1981 5  Al-Ahli 
 





[edit]  Spain
Head coach: Luis Aragonés

No. Pos. Player DoB/Age Caps Club 
1 GK Iker Casillas 20 May 1981 58  Real Madrid 
2 DF Míchel Salgado 22 October 1975 50  Real Madrid 
3 DF Mariano Pernía 4 May 1977 1  Getafe [78][79] 
4 DF Carlos Marchena 31 July 1979 27  Valencia 
5 DF Carles Puyol 13 April 1978 47  Barcelona 
6 MF David Albelda 1 September 1977 33  Valencia 
7 FW Raúl (c) 27 June 1977 95  Real Madrid 
8 MF Xavi 25 January 1980 36  Barcelona 
9 FW Fernando Torres 20 March 1984 30  Atlético Madrid 
10 FW José Antonio Reyes 1 September 1983 19  Arsenal 
11 MF Luis García 24 June 1978 10  Liverpool 
12 DF Antonio López 13 September 1981 8  Atlético Madrid 
13 MF Andrés Iniesta 11 May 1984 3  Barcelona 
14 MF Xabi Alonso 25 November 1981 26  Liverpool 
15 DF Sergio Ramos 30 March 1986 11  Real Madrid 
16 MF Marcos Senna 17 July 1976 3  Villarreal 
17 MF Joaquín 21 July 1981 38  Real Betis 
18 MF Cesc Fàbregas 4 May 1987 4  Arsenal 
19 GK Santiago Cañizares 18 December 1969 45  Valencia 
20 DF Juanito 23 July 1976 15  Real Betis 
21 FW David Villa 3 December 1981 8  Valencia 
22 DF Pablo Ibáñez 3 August 1981 11  Atlético Madrid 
23 GK José Manuel Reina 31 August 1982 3  Liverpool 
 





[edit]  Tunisia
Head coach:  Roger Lemerre

No. Pos. Player DoB/Age Caps Club 
1 GK Ali Boumnijel 13 April 1966 48  Club Africain 
2 FW Karim Essediri 29 July 1979 7  Rosenborg 
3 DF Karim Haggui 21 January 1984 26  Strasbourg 
4 DF Alaeddine Yahia 26 September 1981 13  Saint-Étienne 
5 FW Ziad Jaziri 12 July 1978 61  Troyes 
6 DF Hatem Trabelsi 25 January 1977 56  Ajax 
7 FW Haykel Guemamdia 22 December 1981 13  Strasbourg [80] 
8 MF Mehdi Nafti 28 November 1978 29  Birmingham City 
9 FW Yassine Chikhaoui 2 September 1986 1  Étoile du Sahel 
10 MF Kaies Ghodhbane 7 January 1976 89  Konyaspor 
11 FW Francileudo Santos 20 March 1979 28  Toulouse 
12 MF Jawhar Mnari 8 November 1976 37  Nürnberg 
13 MF Riadh Bouazizi (c) 8 April 1973 85  Kayserispor 
14 MF Adel Chedli 16 September 1976 38  Nürnberg 
15 DF Radhi Jaïdi 30 August 1975 89  Bolton Wanderers 
16 GK Adel Nefzi 16 March 1974 0  US Monastir 
17 FW Chaouki Ben Saada 1 July 1984 11  Bastia [81] 
18 DF David Jemmali 13 December 1974 2  Bordeaux 
19 DF Anis Ayari 16 February 1982 24  Samsunspor 
20 MF Hamed Namouchi 12 January 1984 14  Rangers 
21 DF Karim Saidi 24 March 1983 15  Feyenoord[82] 
22 GK Hamdi Kasraoui 18 January 1983 6  Espérance de Tunis 
23 MF Sofiane Melliti 18 August 1978 14  Gaziantepspor 
 





[edit]  Ukraine
Head coach: Oleg Blokhin

No. Pos. Player DoB/Age Caps Club 
1 GK Oleksandr Shovkovskiy 2 January 1975 68  Dynamo Kyiv 
2 DF Andriy Nesmachniy 28 February 1979 49  Dynamo Kyiv 
3 DF Oleksandr Yatsenko 24 February 1985 1  FC Kharkiv [83] 
4 MF Anatoliy Tymoschuk 30 March 1979 55  Shakhtar Donetsk 
5 DF Volodymyr Yezerskiy 15 November 1976 24  Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk 
6 DF Andriy Rusol 16 January 1983 23  Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk 
7 FW Andriy Shevchenko (c) 29 September 1976 64  A.C. Milan [84] 
8 MF Oleh Shelayev 5 November 1976 19  Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk 
9 MF Oleh Husyev 25 April 1983 25  Dynamo Kyiv 
10 FW Andriy Voronin 21 July 1979 32  Bayer Leverkusen 
11 FW Serhiy Rebrov 6 March 1974 70  Dynamo Kyiv 
12 GK Andriy Pyatov 28 June 1984 1  Vorskla Poltava 
13 DF Dmytro Chygrynskiy 7 November 1986 0  Shakhtar Donetsk 
14 MF Andriy Husin 11 December 1972 64  Krylya Sovetov 
15 FW Artem Milevskiy 12 January 1985 0  Dynamo Kyiv 
16 FW Andriy Vorobei 29 November 1978 53  Shakhtar Donetsk 
17 DF Vladislav Vashchuk 2 January 1975 58  Dynamo Kyiv 
18 MF Serhiy Nazarenko 16 February 1980 15  Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk 
19 MF Maksym Kalynychenko 26 January 1979 21  Spartak Moscow 
20 FW Oleksiy Byelik 15 February 1981 15  Shakhtar Donetsk 
21 MF Ruslan Rotan 29 October 1981 19  Dynamo Kyiv 
22 DF Vyacheslav Sviderskiy 1 January 1979 6  Shakhtar Donetsk [85] 
23 GK Bohdan Shust 4 March 1986 2  Shakhtar Donetsk 
 





[edit] Player representation by league
Country Players Percentage Outside national squad 
Total 736   
England 102 13.86% 81 
Germany 74 10.05% 54 
Italy 60 8.15% 37 
France 58 7.89% 45 
Spain 52 7.07% 35 
Ukraine 25 3.40% 8 
Netherlands 25 3.40% 11 
Saudi Arabia 24 3.26% 1 
Mexico 23 3.125% 4 
Portugal 20 2.72% 12 
Costa Rica 20 2.72% 0 
Others 253 34.38% 

The Italian and Saudi Arabian squads were made up entirely of players from the respective countries&#039; domestic leagues. The Côte d&#039;Ivoire (Ivory Coast) squad was made up entirely of players employed by overseas clubs (in fact, only one of their players is employed on the African continent; the other 22 all play in Europe). Although Turkey, Scotland, and Russia failed to qualify for the finals, their domestic leagues were represented by 12, 11, and 10 players respectively: altogether, there were 48 national leagues who had players in the tournament.


[edit] Player representation by club
As of 2006-06-14. 
Finalised clubs&#039; listing as per FIFA, excluding players on standby and loans.

Players Clubs 
15  Arsenal 
14  Chelsea 
13  Milan 
12  Juventus,  Manchester United 
11  Barcelona,  Bayern München 
10  Real Madrid,  Lyon 
9  Liverpool,  Al-Hilal,  Ajax,  Bayer Leverkusen,  Dynamo Kyiv, 
8  Shakhtar Donetsk,  Borussia Dortmund,  Deportivo Saprissa,  Internazionale,  PSV Eindhoven,  Hamburger SV,  Valencia 
7  Al-Ittihad,  LDU Quito 
6  Benfica,  Atlético Madrid,  Chivas,  Basel,  Werder Bremen 
5  LD Alajuelense,  AZ,  Rennes,  Roma,  Stuttgart,  Rangers,  Tottenham Hotspur,  El Nacional,  Red Star Belgrade 


[edit] Footnotes
^ FIFA World Cup. Official FIFA World Cup website. Retrieved on May 24, 2006. 
^ Borja will join Olympiacos after the tournament. Olympiacos sign Ecuador striker. uefa.com (1 May 2006). Retrieved on 18 June 2006. 
^ Valencia was on loan to Recreativo Huelva in the run up to the tournament. Luis Valencia. Official FIFA World Cup website. Retrieved on 18 June 2006. 
^ Reasco has agreed to join São Paulo after the tournament. Neicer Reasco. Official FIFA World Cup website. Retrieved on 18 June 2006. 
^ Ballack has agreed to join Chelsea when his contract with Bayern Munich expires on July 1. Ballack cheered by Chelsea challenge. uefa.com (15 May 2006). Retrieved on 18 June 2006. 
^ FC Köln chairman Wolfgang Overath has confirmed that Podolski will play for Bayern Munich in the upcoming season. Podolski ready to join Bayern. uefa.com (1 June 2006). Retrieved on 18 June 2006. 
^ Kosowski was on loan to Southampton in the run-up to the tournament. He will become a free agent after the tournament. Kosowski wants last farewell. football.co.uk (25 April 2006). Retrieved on 18 June 2006. 
^ Bak will become a free agent after the tournament. 
^ Krzynówek will join Wolfsburg after the tournament. Leverkusen capture Swiss starlet. uefa.com (16 May 2006). Retrieved on 21 June 2006. 
^ Rasiak has spent the run-up of the World Cup on loan to Southampton, and will join the club permanently after the tournament Poland looking to add extra polish. uefa.com (2 May 2006). Retrieved on 21 June 2006. 
^ Żewłakow will join Olympiacos after the tournament. Iuliano returns to Italy. uefa.com (30 January 2006). Retrieved on 21 June 2006. 
^ Bosacki was called up after Damian Gorawski sustained an injury and had to withdraw from the squad Injuries spell late squad changes. Official FIFA World Cup website (8 June 2006). Retrieved on 21 June 2006. 
^ Bridge was on loan to Fulham in the run up to the tournament. Nélson fit for Mersey mission. uefa.com (2 March 2006). Retrieved on 21 June 2006. 
^ Carson has spent the run-up of the tournament on loan to Sheffield Wednesday. Scott Carson, Liverpool. The Football Association official website. Retrieved on 21 June 2006. 
^ Salvador Cabañas will join Club América (México) after the tournament. América returns to Houston. Chron.com (8 June 2006). Retrieved on 21 June 2006. 
^ Carlos Paredes will join Sporting after the tournament. 
^ Nelson Valdez will join Borussia Dortmund after the tournament. Valdez delighted with Dortmund move. uefa.com (30 May 2006). Retrieved on 21 June 2006. 
^ Denis Caniza will join CF Atlas after the tournament. 
^ Larsson has a pre-contract agreement with Helsingborg, and will join them after the tournament. Larsson looks to bow out in style. uefa.com (16 May 2006). Retrieved on 21 June 2006. 
^ Svensson has agreed to join Rangers after the tournament. Rangers move delights Svensson. uefa.com (26 May 2006). Retrieved on 21 June 2006. 
^ Källström has agreed to join Lyon after the tournament. Lyon land Swede Källström. uefa.com (27 May 2006). Retrieved on 21 June 2006. 
^ Hislop will join Dallas FC after the tournamen. 
^ Wrexham are a team from  Wales who play in England&#039;s football league. The flag of England is used for the purposes of official records as Wrexham are a team representing The Football Association. 
^ Saviola was on loan to Sevilla in the run-up to the tournament 
^ Scaloni was on loan to West Ham United in the run-up to the tournament 
^ *Mirko Vučinić was forced to withdraw through injury on May 23. He was replaced by Dušan Petković on May 29 [1]. However, Petković, the son of team coach Ilija Petković, decided not to play in the World Cup, because of numerous accusations of nepotism in Serbian press and public. Petković left the training camp on June 6. [2]. Since there was no possibility for replacement, as there was no injury, Serbia and Montenegro national team is the only one in the World Cup to have only 22 players in the squad. 
^ Vukić has spent the run up to the tournament on loan to Partizan 
^ Ljuboja has spent the run up to the tournament on loan to VfB Stuttgart, and will join VfB Stuttgart permanently after the tournament. 
^ Stojković has agreed to join Nantes after the tournament. 
^ João Ricardo will become a free agent after the tournament 
^ Akwá will become a free agent after the tournament 
^ Marques has spent the run-up of the World Cup on loan to Hull City 
^ Nekounam will join Osasuna after the tournament. 
^ Salcido will join PSV Eindhoven after the tournament. 
^ Osorio will join VfB Stuttgart after the tournament. 
^ Pardo will join VfB Stuttgart after the tournament. 
^ Borgetti will join Al Ittihad after the tournament. 
^ Fonseca will join SL Benfica after the tournament. 
^ Caneira has spent the run up to the tournament on loan to Sporting 
^ Costinha will join Atlético Madrid after the tournament. 
^ Maniche has spent the run up to the tournament on loan to Chelsea 
^ Postiga has spent the run up to the tournament on loan to Saint-Étienne. 
^ Galasek will join Nürnberg after the tournament. 
^ Sionko will join Rangers F.C. on a Bosman transfer after the tournament. 
^ Koller will join Monaco after the tournament. 
^ Rosický will join Arsenal after the tournament. 
^ Asamoah has spent the run up to the tournament on loan to Modena. 
^ Dramani will join Gençlerbirliği after the tournament. 
^ Grosso will join Internazionale after the tournament. 
^ Howard will spend the 06/07 season on loan to Everton. 
^ Albright was called up after an injury to Frankie Hejduk. 
^ Berhalter, who will join 1860 Munich after the World Cup, was called up after an injury to Cory Gibbs. 
^ Popovic&#039;s Crystal Palace contract expires after the tournament, and his future will be decided between the end Australia&#039;s tournament and the expiry date. 
^ Skoko has spent the run-up of the tournament on loan to Stoke City. 
^ Lazaridis will join Perth Glory FC after the tournament. 
^ Beauchamp has agreed to join Nuremberg after the tournament. 
^ Thompson has spent the run-up of the tournament on loan to PSV Eindhoven. 
^ Kennedy has agreed to join Nuremberg after the tournament. 
^ Zé Roberto will become a free agent after the tournament 
^ Mineiro was called up after an injury to Edmilson 
^ Pletikosa was on loan to Hajduk Split in the run-up to the tournament 
^ Tudor was on loan to Siena in the run-up to the tournament 
^ Niko Kovač will join Red Bull Salzburg after the tournament. 
^ Jerko Leko will join Monaco after the tournament. 
^ Ivan Bošnjak will join K.R.C. Genk after the tournament. 
^ Nakata was on loan to Bolton in the run-up to the tournament. 
^ Takahara has agreed to join Frankfurt after the World Cup. 
^ Landreau has agreed to join Paris Saint-Germain after the tournament. 
^ Govou was called up as a replacement for the injured Djibril Cissé. 
^ Zidane will retire from football after the tournament. 
^ Barthez will become a free agent after the tournament. 
^ Frei will join Borussia Dortmund after the tournament. 
^ David Degen will join Borussia Mönchengladbach after the tournament. 
^ Yakin was called up after an injury to Johan Vonlanthen. 
^ Disputes over the Togo players&#039; pay bonuses caused Pfister to walk out after Togo&#039;s first match, but he returned before their second match. [3] 
^ Akoto have not played for Admira Wacker since the end of 2005 due to a contract dispute, and spent the run up to the tournament training with Austrian club SV Schwechat. 
^ Franck Atsou replaced Karim Guede 
^ Asier Del Horno was originally named in the squad, but sustained an ankle injury in the build-up to the tournament. He was replaced by Pernía. 
^ Pernía will join Atlético Madrid after the tournament. 
^ Mehdi Meriah was originally named in the squad but sustained an injury in the week leading up to the tournament. He was replaced by Guemamdia. 
^ Issam Jomaa was originally named in the squad but sustained an injury prior to the tournament. He was replaced by Ben Saada. 
^ Karim Saidi has spent the run up to the tournament on loan to Lecce 
^ Yatsenko was called up as a replacement for the injured Serhiy Fedorov. 
^ Shevchenko will join Chelsea after the tournament. 
^ Svydersky was on loan to Arsenal Kyiv in the run-up to the World Cup. 

[edit] References
(English) Planet World Cup website 
FIFA World Cup v • d • e 
Uruguay 1930 &#124; Italy 1934 &#124; France 1938 &#124; Brazil 1950 &#124; Switzerland 1954 &#124; Sweden 1958 &#124; Chile 1962 &#124; England 1966 &#124; Mexico 1970 &#124; West Germany 1974 &#124; Argentina 1978 &#124; Spain 1982 &#124; Mexico 1986 &#124; Italy 1990 &#124; United States 1994 &#124; France 1998 &#124; Korea/Japan 2002 &#124; Germany 2006 &#124; South Africa 2010 &#124; 2014 &#124; 2018 
 
Awards Goalscorers History 
Hosts Mascots Qualification 
Records Team apps Trophy 
 
FIFA Women&#039;s World Cup 
China 1991 &#124; Sweden 1995 &#124; USA 1999 &#124; USA 2003 &#124; China 2007 &#124; 2011
 
FIFA World Cup squads v • d • e 
Uruguay 1930 &#124; Italy 1934 &#124; France 1938 &#124; Brazil 1950 &#124; Switzerland 1954 &#124; Sweden 1958 &#124; Chile 1962 &#124; England 1966 &#124; Mexico 1970 &#124; West Germany 1974 &#124; Argentina 1978 &#124; Spain 1982 &#124; Mexico 1986 &#124; Italy 1990 &#124; USA 1994 &#124; France 1998 &#124; Korea/Japan 2002 &#124; Germany 2006
 
 
2006 FIFA World Cup stages v • d • e 
Group A Group B Group C Group D Group E 
Group F Group G Group H Knockout stage Final 
 
2006 FIFA World Cup general information 
Qualification Seeding Squads Schedule Discipline 
Officials Controversies Broadcasting Sponsorship Miscellany 
 
2006 FIFA World Cup finalists v • d • e 
Champions: Italy 

Runners-up: France 

Third place: Germany 

Fourth place: Portugal 

Eliminated in Quarter-finals: Argentina &#124; Brazil &#124; England &#124; Ukraine &#124;

Eliminated in Round of 16: Australia &#124; Ecuador &#124; Ghana &#124; Mexico &#124; Netherlands &#124; Spain &#124; Sweden &#124; Switzerland

Eliminated in Group Stage: Angola &#124; Costa Rica &#124; Côte d&#039;Ivoire &#124; Croatia &#124; Czech Republic &#124; Iran &#124; Japan &#124; Korea Republic &#124; Paraguay &#124; Poland &#124; Saudi Arabia &#124; Serbia &amp; Montenegro &#124; Togo &#124; Trinidad and Tobago &#124; Tunisia &#124; United States
 
 

Retrieved from &quot;http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2006_FIFA_World_Cup_squads&quot;
Categories: 2006 FIFA World Cup related lists &#124; FIFA World Cup squads

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This article lists the confirmed national football squads for the 2006 FIFA World Cup tournament held in Germany, between June 9 and July 9, 2006. Before announcing their final squad, several teams named a provisional squad of 23 to 33 players, but each country&#8217;s final squad of 23 players had to be submitted by May 15, 2006. Replacement of injured players was permitted until 24 hours before the team&#8217;s first world cup game. Players marked (c) were named as captain for their national squad. Number of caps counts until the start of the World Cup, including all pre-tournament friendlies. Club information is that used by FIFA.[1] Players for whom this information changed during or in the run up to the tournament are indicated by footnotes.</p>
<p>Contents [hide]<br />
1 Group A<br />
1.1 Costa Rica<br />
1.2 Ecuador<br />
1.3 Germany<br />
1.4 Poland<br />
2 Group B<br />
2.1 England<br />
2.2 Paraguay<br />
2.3 Sweden<br />
2.4 Trinidad and Tobago<br />
3 Group C<br />
3.1 Argentina<br />
3.2 Côte d&#8217;Ivoire (Ivory Coast)<br />
3.3 Netherlands<br />
3.4 Serbia and Montenegro<br />
4 Group D<br />
4.1 Angola<br />
4.2 Iran<br />
4.3 Mexico<br />
4.4 Portugal<br />
5 Group E<br />
5.1 Czech Republic<br />
5.2 Ghana<br />
5.3 Italy<br />
5.4 United States<br />
6 Group F<br />
6.1 Australia<br />
6.2 Brazil<br />
6.3 Croatia<br />
6.4 Japan<br />
7 Group G<br />
7.1 France<br />
7.2 Korea Republic<br />
7.3 Switzerland<br />
7.4 Togo<br />
8 Group H<br />
8.1 Saudi Arabia<br />
8.2 Spain<br />
8.3 Tunisia<br />
8.4 Ukraine<br />
9 Player representation by league<br />
10 Player representation by club<br />
11 Footnotes<br />
12 References </p>
<p>[edit] Group A</p>
<p>[edit]  Costa Rica<br />
Head coach: Alexandre Guimarães</p>
<p>No. Pos. Player DoB/Age Caps Club<br />
1 GK Álvaro Mesén 24 December 1972 38  Club Sport Herediano<br />
2 DF Jervis Drummond 8 September 1976 56  Deportivo Saprissa<br />
3 DF Luis Marín (c) 10 August 1974 120  LD Alajuelense<br />
4 DF Michael Umaña 16 July 1982 18  Brujas<br />
5 DF Gilberto Martínez 1 October 1979 57  Brescia<br />
6 MF Danny Fonseca 7 November 1979 22  C.S. Cartaginés<br />
7 MF Christian Bolaños 17 May 1984 16  Deportivo Saprissa<br />
8 MF Mauricio Solís 13 December 1972 107  CSD Comunicaciones<br />
9 FW Paulo Wanchope 31 July 1976 69  Club Sport Herediano<br />
10 MF Walter Centeno 6 October 1974 93  Deportivo Saprissa<br />
11 FW Rónald Gómez 21 January 1975 80  Deportivo Saprissa<br />
12 DF Leonardo González 21 November 1980 36  Club Sport Herediano<br />
13 FW Kurt Bernard 8 August 1977 3  Puntarenas<br />
14 MF Randall Azofeifa 30 December 1984 5  Deportivo Saprissa<br />
15 DF Harold Wallace 7 September 1975 78  LD Alajuelense<br />
16 MF Carlos Hernández 9 April 1982 17  LD Alajuelense<br />
17 DF Gabriel Badilla 30 June 1984 7  Deportivo Saprissa<br />
18 GK José Porras 8 November 1970 16  Deportivo Saprissa<br />
19 FW Álvaro Saborío 25 March 1982 23  Deportivo Saprissa<br />
20 MF Douglas Sequeira 23 August 1977 29  Real Salt Lake<br />
21 FW Victor Núñez 15 April 1980 3  C.S. Cartaginés<br />
22 DF Michael Rodríguez 30 December 1981 3  LD Alajuelense<br />
23 GK Wardy Alfaro 31 December 1977 2  LD Alajuelense </p>
<p>[edit]  Ecuador<br />
Head coach:  Luis Fernando Suárez</p>
<p>No. Pos. Player DoB/Age Caps Club<br />
1 GK Edwin Villafuerte 12 March 1979 15  Deportivo Quito<br />
2 DF Jorge Guagua 28 September 1981 18  El Nacional<br />
3 DF Iván Hurtado (c) 16 August 1974 130  Al-Arabi<br />
4 DF Ulises de la Cruz 8 February 1974 84  Aston Villa<br />
5 DF José Luis Perlaza 6 October 1981 3  Olmedo<br />
6 MF Patricio Urrutia 15 October 1977 6  LDU Quito<br />
7 MF Christian Lara 27 April 1980 19  El Nacional<br />
8 MF Edison Méndez 16 March 1979 64  Liga Deportiva Universitaria<br />
9 FW Félix Borja 2 April 1983 6  El Nacional [2]<br />
10 FW Iván Kaviedes 24 October 1977 44  Argentinos Juniors<br />
11 FW Agustín Delgado 23 December 1974 68  LDU Quito<br />
12 GK Cristian Mora 26 August 1979 8  LDU Quito<br />
13 DF Paul Ambrosi 14 October 1980 24  LDU Quito<br />
14 MF Segundo Castillo 15 May 1982 11  El Nacional<br />
15 MF Marlon Ayoví 27 August 1971 74  Deportivo Quito<br />
16 MF Luis Antonio Valencia 4 August 1985 17  Villarreal [3]<br />
17 DF Giovanny Espinoza 12 April 1977 56  LDU Quito<br />
18 DF Neicer Reasco 23 July 1977 31  LDU Quito [4]<br />
19 MF Luis Saritama 20 October 1983 15  Deportivo Quito<br />
20 MF Edwin Tenorio 16 June 1976 68  Barcelona de Guayaquil<br />
21 FW Carlos Tenorio 14 May 1979 29  Al Sadd<br />
22 GK Damián Lanza 10 April 1982 5  Aucas<br />
23 FW Cristian Benítez 1 May 1986 5  El Nacional </p>
<p>[edit]  Germany<br />
Head coach: Jürgen Klinsmann</p>
<p>No. Pos. Player DoB/Age Caps Club<br />
1 GK Jens Lehmann 10 November 1969 32  Arsenal<br />
2 DF Marcell Jansen 4 November 1985 7  Borussia Mönchengladbach<br />
3 DF Arne Friedrich 29 May 1979 36  Hertha Berlin<br />
4 DF Robert Huth 18 August 1984 16  Chelsea<br />
5 MF Sebastian Kehl 13 February 1980 27  Borussia Dortmund<br />
6 DF Jens Nowotny 11 January 1974 46  Bayer Leverkusen<br />
7 MF Bastian Schweinsteiger 1 August 1984 28  Bayern Munich<br />
8 MF Torsten Frings 22 November 1976 52  Werder Bremen<br />
9 FW Mike Hanke 5 November 1983 6  Wolfsburg<br />
10 FW Oliver Neuville 1 May 1973 55  Borussia Mönchengladbach<br />
11 FW Miroslav Klose 9 June 1978 55  Werder Bremen<br />
12 GK Oliver Kahn 15 June 1969 85  Bayern Munich<br />
13 MF Michael Ballack (c) 26 September 1976 65  Bayern Munich [5]<br />
14 FW Gerald Asamoah 3 October 1978 40  Schalke 04<br />
15 MF Thomas Hitzlsperger 14 May 1982 15  VfB Stuttgart<br />
16 DF Philipp Lahm 11 November 1983 18  Bayern Munich<br />
17 DF Per Mertesacker 29 September 1984 23  Hannover 96<br />
18 MF Tim Borowski 2 May 1980 20  Werder Bremen<br />
19 MF Bernd Schneider 17 November 1973 64  Bayer Leverkusen<br />
20 FW Lukas Podolski 4 June 1985 25  FC Cologne [6]<br />
21 DF Christoph Metzelder 5 November 1980 22  Borussia Dortmund<br />
22 MF David Odonkor 21 February 1984 1  Borussia Dortmund<br />
23 GK Timo Hildebrand 5 April 1979 3  VfB Stuttgart </p>
<p>[edit]  Poland<br />
Head coach: Paweł Janas</p>
<p>No. Pos. Player DoB/Age Caps Club<br />
1 GK Artur Boruc 20 February 1980 17  Celtic<br />
2 DF Mariusz Jop 3 August 1978 12  FC Moskva<br />
3 DF Seweryn Gancarczyk 22 November 1981 2  Metalist Kharkiv<br />
4 DF Marcin Baszczyński 7 June 1977 32  Wisła Kraków<br />
5 MF Kamil Kosowski 30 August 1977 45  Kaiserslautern [7]<br />
6 DF Jacek Bąk (c) 24 March 1973 72  Al Rayyan [8]<br />
7 MF Radosław Sobolewski 13 December 1976 19  Wisła Kraków<br />
8 MF Jacek Krzynówek 15 May 1976 58  Bayer Leverkusen [9]<br />
9 FW Maciej Żurawski 12 September 1976 50  Celtic<br />
10 MF Mirosław Szymkowiak 12 November 1976 29  Trabzonspor<br />
11 FW Grzegorz Rasiak 12 January 1979 30  Tottenham Hotspur [10]<br />
12 GK Tomasz Kuszczak 23 March 1982 4  West Bromwich Albion<br />
13 MF Sebastian Mila 10 July 1982 27  Austria Vienna<br />
14 DF Michał Żewłakow 22 April 1976 56  Anderlecht [11]<br />
15 MF Euzebiusz Smolarek 9 January 1981 13  Borussia Dortmund<br />
16 MF Arkadiusz Radomski 27 June 1977 20  Austria Vienna<br />
17 DF Dariusz Dudka 9 December 1983 7  Wisła Kraków<br />
18 DF Mariusz Lewandowski 18 May 1979 25  Shakhtar Donetsk<br />
19 DF Bartosz Bosacki 20 December 1975 11  Lech Poznań [12]<br />
20 MF Piotr Giza 28 February 1980 4  Cracovia Kraków<br />
21 FW Ireneusz Jeleń 9 April 1981 9  Wisła Płock<br />
22 GK Łukasz Fabiański 18 April 1985 2  Legia Warszawa<br />
23 FW Paweł Brożek 21 April 1983 4  Wisła Kraków </p>
<p>[edit] Group B</p>
<p>[edit]  England<br />
Head coach:  Sven-Göran Eriksson</p>
<p>No. Pos. Player DoB/Age Caps Club<br />
1 GK Paul Robinson 15 October 1979 21  Tottenham Hotspur<br />
2 DF Gary Neville 18 February 1975 79  Manchester United<br />
3 DF Ashley Cole 20 December 1980 46  Arsenal<br />
4 MF Steven Gerrard 30 May 1980 42  Liverpool<br />
5 DF Rio Ferdinand 7 November 1978 47  Manchester United<br />
6 DF John Terry 7 December 1980 24  Chelsea<br />
7 MF David Beckham (c) 2 May 1975 89  Real Madrid<br />
8 MF Frank Lampard 20 June 1978 40  Chelsea<br />
9 FW Wayne Rooney 24 October 1985 29  Manchester United<br />
10 FW Michael Owen 14 December 1979 77  Newcastle United<br />
11 MF Joe Cole 8 November 1981 32  Chelsea<br />
12 DF Sol Campbell 18 September 1974 68  Arsenal<br />
13 GK David James 1 August 1970 34  Manchester City<br />
14 DF Wayne Bridge 5 August 1980 23  Chelsea [13]<br />
15 DF Jamie Carragher 28 January 1978 25  Liverpool<br />
16 MF Owen Hargreaves 20 January 1981 30  Bayern Munich<br />
17 MF Jermaine Jenas 18 February 1983 15  Tottenham Hotspur<br />
18 MF Michael Carrick 28 July 1981 6  Tottenham Hotspur<br />
19 MF Aaron Lennon 16 April 1987 1  Tottenham Hotspur<br />
20 MF Stewart Downing 22 July 1984 2  Middlesbrough<br />
21 FW Peter Crouch 30 January 1981 7  Liverpool<br />
22 GK Scott Carson 3 September 1985 0  Liverpool [14]<br />
23 FW Theo Walcott 16 March 1989 1  Arsenal </p>
<p>[edit]  Paraguay<br />
Head coach:  Aníbal Ruiz</p>
<p>No. Pos. Player DoB/Age Caps Club<br />
1 GK Justo Villar 30 June 1977 39  Newell&#8217;s Old Boys<br />
2 DF Jorge Núñez 22 January 1978 15  Estudiantes de La Plata<br />
3 DF Delio Toledo 10 February 1974 30  Real Zaragoza<br />
4 DF Carlos Gamarra (c) 17 February 1971 106  Palmeiras<br />
5 DF Julio César Cáceres 5 October 1979 32  River Plate<br />
6 MF Carlos Bonet 2 October 1977 29  Libertad<br />
7 FW Salvador Cabañas 5 August 1980 15  Jaguares[15]<br />
8 MF Edgar Barreto 15 July 1984 15  NEC Nijmegen<br />
9 FW Roque Santa Cruz 16 August 1981 42  Bayern Munich<br />
10 MF Roberto Acuña 25 March 1972 93  Deportivo La Coruña<br />
11 MF Diego Gavilán 1 March 1980 39  Newell&#8217;s Old Boys<br />
12 GK Derlis Gómez 12 November 1972 5  Sportivo Luqueño<br />
13 MF Carlos Paredes 16 July 1976 68  Reggina [16]<br />
14 DF Paulo da Silva 1 February 1980 33  Toluca<br />
15 DF Julio Manzur 22 June 1981 13  Santos<br />
16 MF Cristian Riveros 16 October 1982 9  Libertad<br />
17 MF José Montiel 19 March 1988 6  Olimpia Asunción<br />
18 FW Nelson Haedo Valdez 28 November 1983 11  Werder Bremen[17]<br />
19 MF Julio dos Santos 5 May 1983 17  Bayern Munich<br />
20 FW Dante López 16 August 1983 7  Genoa<br />
21 DF Denis Caniza 29 August 1974 74  Cruz Azul [18]<br />
22 GK Aldo Bobadilla 20 April 1976 5  Libertad<br />
23 FW Nelson Cuevas 10 January 1980 35  Pachuca </p>
<p>[edit]  Sweden<br />
Head coach: Lars Lagerbäck</p>
<p>No. Pos. Player DoB/Age Caps Club<br />
1 GK Andreas Isaksson 3 October 1981 39  Rennes<br />
2 DF Mikael Nilsson 24 June 1978 27  Panathinaikos<br />
3 DF Olof Mellberg (c) 3 September 1977 64  Aston Villa<br />
4 DF Teddy Lučić 15 April 1973 81  Häcken<br />
5 DF Erik Edman 11 November 1978 37  Rennes<br />
6 MF Tobias Linderoth 21 April 1979 58  FC Copenhagen<br />
7 MF Niclas Alexandersson 29 December 1971 87  Göteborg<br />
8 MF Anders Svensson 17 July 1976 66  Elfsborg<br />
9 MF Fredrik Ljungberg 16 April 1977 57  Arsenal<br />
10 FW Zlatan Ibrahimović 3 October 1981 38  Juventus<br />
11 FW Henrik Larsson 20 September 1971 89  Barcelona[19]<br />
12 GK John Alvbåge 10 August 1982 2  Viborg<br />
13 DF Petter Hansson 14 December 1976 13  Heerenveen<br />
14 DF Fredrik Stenman 2 June 1983 1  Bayer Leverkusen<br />
15 DF Karl Svensson 21 March 1984 1  Göteborg[20]<br />
16 MF Kim Källström 24 August 1982 34  Rennes[21]<br />
17 FW Johan Elmander 27 May 1981 18  Brøndby<br />
18 MF Mattias Jonson 16 January 1974 53  Djurgården<br />
19 MF Daniel Andersson 28 August 1977 47  Malmö<br />
20 FW Marcus Allbäck 5 July 1973 56  FC Copenhagen<br />
21 MF Christian Wilhelmsson 8 December 1979 29  Anderlecht<br />
22 FW Markus Rosenberg 27 September 1982 8  Ajax<br />
23 GK Rami Shaaban 30 June 1975 1  Fredrikstad </p>
<p>[edit]  Trinidad and Tobago<br />
Head coach:  Leo Beenhakker</p>
<p>No. Pos. Player DoB/Age Caps Club<br />
1 GK Shaka Hislop 22 February 1969 24  West Ham United [22]<br />
2 DF Ian Cox 25 March 1971 16  Gillingham<br />
3 DF Avery John 18 June 1975 57  New England Revolution<br />
4 DF Marvin Andrews 22 December 1975 98  Rangers<br />
5 DF Brent Sancho 13 March 1977 40  Gillingham<br />
6 DF Dennis Lawrence 1 August 1974 63  Wrexham [23]<br />
7 MF Christopher Birchall 5 May 1984 19  Port Vale<br />
8 DF Cyd Gray 21 November 1973 39  San Juan Jabloteh<br />
9 MF Aurtis Whitley 1 May 1977 24  San Juan Jabloteh<br />
10 MF Russell Latapy 8 August 1968 66  Falkirk<br />
11 MF Carlos Edwards 24 October 1978 51  Luton Town<br />
12 FW Collin Samuel 27 August 1981 18  Dundee United<br />
13 FW Cornell Glen 21 October 1980 35  Los Angeles Galaxy<br />
14 FW Stern John 30 October 1976 95  Coventry City<br />
15 FW Kenwyne Jones 5 October 1984 29  Southampton<br />
16 MF Evans Wise 23 November 1973 16  Waldhof Mannheim<br />
17 DF David Atiba Charles 29 August 1977 19  W Connection<br />
18 MF Densill Theobald 27 June 1982 38  Falkirk<br />
19 FW Dwight Yorke (c) 3 November 1971 54  Sydney FC<br />
20 FW Jason Scotland 18 February 1979 25  St Johnstone<br />
21 GK Kelvin Jack 29 April 1976 32  Dundee<br />
22 GK Clayton Ince 12 July 1972 63  Coventry City<br />
23 MF Anthony Wolfe 31 December 1981 4  San Juan Jabloteh </p>
<p>[edit] Group C</p>
<p>[edit]  Argentina<br />
Head coach: José Pekerman</p>
<p>No. Pos. Player DoB/Age Caps Club<br />
1 GK Roberto Abbondanzieri 19 August 1972 22  Boca Juniors<br />
2 DF Roberto Ayala 14 April 1973 100  Valencia<br />
3 DF Juan Pablo Sorín (c) 5 May 1976 71  Villarreal<br />
4 DF Fabricio Coloccini 22 January 1982 23  Deportivo La Coruña<br />
5 MF Esteban Cambiasso 18 August 1980 22  Internazionale<br />
6 DF Gabriel Heinze 19 April 1978 29  Manchester United<br />
7 FW Javier Saviola 11 December 1981 31  Barcelona [24]<br />
8 MF Javier Mascherano 8 June 1984 15  Corinthians<br />
9 FW Hernán Crespo 5 July 1975 55  Chelsea<br />
10 MF Juan Román Riquelme 24 June 1978 31  Villarreal<br />
11 FW Carlos Tévez 5 February 1984 21  Corinthians<br />
12 GK Leo Franco 29 May 1977 3  Atlético Madrid<br />
13 MF Lionel Scaloni 16 May 1978 6  Deportivo [25]<br />
14 FW Rodrigo Palacio 5 February 1982 2  Boca Juniors<br />
15 DF Gabriel Milito 7 September 1980 15  Real Zaragoza<br />
16 MF Pablo Aimar 3 November 1979 40  Valencia<br />
17 DF Leandro Cufré 9 May 1978 2  Roma<br />
18 MF Maxi Rodríguez 2 January 1981 13  Atlético Madrid<br />
19 FW Lionel Messi 24 June 1987 7  Barcelona<br />
20 FW Julio Cruz 10 October 1974 15  Internazionale<br />
21 DF Nicolás Burdisso 12 April 1981 8  Internazionale<br />
22 MF Lucho González 19 January 1981 27  FC Porto<br />
23 GK Oscar Ustari 3 July 1986 0  Independiente </p>
<p>[edit]  Côte d&#8217;Ivoire (Ivory Coast)<br />
Head coach:  Henri Michel</p>
<p>No. Pos. Player DoB/Age Caps Club<br />
1 GK Jean-Jacques Tizié 7 September 1972 24  Espérance<br />
2 MF Kanga Akalé 7 March 1981 22  Auxerre<br />
3 DF Arthur Boka 2 April 1983 23  Strasbourg<br />
4 DF Kolo Touré 19 March 1981 42  Arsenal<br />
5 MF Didier Zokora 14 December 1980 38  Saint-Étienne<br />
6 DF Blaise Kouassi 2 February 1974 36  Troyes<br />
7 MF Emerse Faé 24 January 1984 14  Nantes<br />
8 MF Bonaventure Kalou 12 January 1978 49  Paris Saint-Germain<br />
9 FW Arouna Koné 11 November 1983 17  PSV<br />
10 MF Gilles Yapi Yapo 13 January 1982 26  Young Boys Bern<br />
11 FW Didier Drogba (c) 11 March 1978 32  Chelsea<br />
12 DF Abdoulaye Méïté 6 October 1980 18  Marseille<br />
13 DF Marco Zoro 27 December 1983 13  Messina<br />
14 FW Bakari Koné 17 September 1981 16  Nice<br />
15 FW Aruna Dindane 26 November 1980 34  Lens<br />
16 GK Gérard Gnanhouan 12 December 1979 6  Montpellier<br />
17 DF Cyril Domoraud 22 July 1971 50  Créteil<br />
18 MF Abdul Kader Keïta 6 August 1981 26  Lille<br />
19 MF Yaya Touré 13 March 1983 14  Olympiacos<br />
20 MF Guy Demel 13 June 1981 7  Hamburger SV<br />
21 DF Emmanuel Eboué 4 June 1983 11  Arsenal<br />
22 MF Koffi Ndri Romaric 4 June 1983 8  Le Mans<br />
23 GK Boubacar Barry 20 December 1979 6  Beveren </p>
<p>[edit]  Netherlands<br />
Head coach: Marco van Basten</p>
<p>No. Pos. Player DoB/Age Caps Club<br />
1 GK Edwin van der Sar (c) 29 October 1970 109  Manchester United<br />
2 DF Kew Jaliens 15 September 1978 1  AZ Alkmaar<br />
3 DF Khalid Boulahrouz 28 December 1981 11  Hamburg<br />
4 DF Joris Mathijsen 5 April 1980 8  AZ Alkmaar<br />
5 DF Giovanni van Bronckhorst 5 February 1975 57  Barcelona<br />
6 MF Denny Landzaat 6 May 1976 23  AZ Alkmaar<br />
7 FW Dirk Kuyt 22 July 1980 19  Feyenoord<br />
8 MF Phillip Cocu 29 October 1970 97  PSV Eindhoven<br />
9 FW Ruud van Nistelrooy 1 July 1976 51  Manchester United<br />
10 MF Rafael van der Vaart 11 February 1983 35  Hamburg<br />
11 MF Arjen Robben 23 January 1984 20  Chelsea<br />
12 DF Jan Kromkamp 17 August 1980 11  Liverpool<br />
13 DF André Ooijer 11 July 1974 19  PSV Eindhoven<br />
14 DF John Heitinga 15 November 1983 18  Ajax<br />
15 DF Tim de Cler 8 November 1978 3  AZ Alkmaar<br />
16 MF Hedwiges Maduro 13 February 1985 11  Ajax<br />
17 FW Robin van Persie 6 August 1983 10  Arsenal<br />
18 MF Mark van Bommel 22 April 1977 37  Barcelona<br />
19 FW Jan Vennegoor of Hesselink 7 November 1978 7  PSV Eindhoven<br />
20 MF Wesley Sneijder 9 June 1984 23  Ajax<br />
21 FW Ryan Babel 19 December 1986 6  Ajax<br />
22 GK Henk Timmer 3 December 1971 2  AZ Alkmaar<br />
23 GK Maarten Stekelenburg 22 September 1982 2  Ajax </p>
<p>[edit]  Serbia and Montenegro<br />
Head coach: Ilija Petković</p>
<p>No. Pos. Player DoB/Age Caps Club<br />
1 GK Dragoslav Jevrić 8 July 1974 40  Ankaraspor<br />
2 MF Ivan Ergić 21 January 1981 1  Basel<br />
3 DF Ivica Dragutinović 13 November 1975 26  Sevilla<br />
4 MF Igor Duljaj 29 October 1979 37  Shakhtar Donetsk<br />
5 DF Nemanja Vidić 21 October 1981 20  Manchester United<br />
6 DF Goran Gavrančić 2 August 1978 25  Dynamo Kyiv<br />
7 MF Ognjen Koroman 19 September 1978 25  Portsmouth<br />
8 FW Mateja Kežman 12 April 1979 47  Atlético Madrid<br />
9 FW Savo Milošević (c) 2 September 1973 98  CA Osasuna<br />
10 MF Dejan Stanković 11 September 1978 58  Internazionale<br />
11 MF Predrag Đorđević 4 August 1972 34  Olympiacos<br />
12 GK Oliver Kovačević 29 December 1974 3  CSKA Sofia<br />
13 DF Dušan Basta 18 August 1984 2  Red Star Belgrade<br />
14 DF Nenad Đorđević 7 August 1979 15  Partizan<br />
15 DF Milan Dudić 1 November 1979 11  Red Star Belgrade<br />
16 DF Dušan Petković[26] June 13, 1974 12  OFK Beograd<br />
17 MF Albert Nađ 29 October 1974 42  Partizan<br />
18 MF Zvonimir Vukić 19 July 1979 25  Shakhtar Donetsk [27]<br />
19 FW Nikola Žigić 25 September 1980 11  Red Star Belgrade<br />
20 DF Mladen Krstajić 4 March 1974 45  Schalke 04<br />
21 FW Danijel Ljuboja 4 September 1978 15  Paris St. Germain [28]<br />
22 MF Saša Ilić 30 December 1977 32  Galatasaray<br />
23 GK Vladimir Stojković 28 July 1983 0  Red Star Belgrade[29] </p>
<p>[edit] Group D</p>
<p>[edit]  Angola<br />
Head coach: Luís Oliveira Gonçalves</p>
<p>No. Pos. Player DoB/Age Caps Club<br />
1 GK João Ricardo 7 January 1970 26  Moreirense FC [30]<br />
2 DF Marco Airosa 6 August 1984 2  F.C. Barreirense<br />
3 DF Jamba 10 July 1977 35  AS Aviacao<br />
4 DF Lebo Lebo 29 May 1977 15  Petro Atletico<br />
5 DF Kali 11 October 1978 21  F.C. Barreirense<br />
6 MF Miloy 27 May 1981 11  InterClube<br />
7 MF Figueiredo 28 November 1972 22  Varzim<br />
8 MF André 14 May 1978 33  Kuwait S.C.<br />
9 FW Mantorras 18 March 1982 11  Benfica<br />
10 FW Akwá (c) 30 May 1977 77  Al-Wakra [31]<br />
11 FW Mateus 19 June 1984 4  Gil Vicente F.C.<br />
12 GK Lamá 1 February 1981 9  Petro Atletico<br />
13 MF Édson 3 February 1980 7  FC Paços de Ferreira<br />
14 MF Mendonça 9 October 1982 34  Varzim<br />
15 DF Rui Marques 3 September 1977 1  Leeds United [32]<br />
16 FW Flávio 20 December 1979 46  Al-Ahly<br />
17 MF Zé Kalanga 12 October 1983 23  Petro Atletico<br />
18 FW Love 10 January 1982 35  AS Aviacao<br />
19 FW Titi Buengo 11 February 1980 2  Clermont Foot<br />
20 DF Locó 25 December 1984 11  Primeiro Agosto<br />
21 DF Delgado 1 November 1972 17  Petro Atletico<br />
22 GK Mário 1 June 1985 1  InterClube<br />
23 DF Marco Abreu 8 December 1974 3  Portimonense </p>
<p>[edit]  Iran<br />
Head coach:  Branko Ivanković</p>
<p>No. Pos. Player DoB/Age Caps Club<br />
1 GK Ebrahim Mirzapour 16 September 1978 64  Foolad<br />
2 MF Mehdi Mahdavikia 24 July 1977 89  Hamburger SV<br />
3 DF Sohrab Bakhtiarizadeh 11 September 1972 31  Saba Battery<br />
4 DF Yahya Golmohammadi 16 March 1971 69  Saba Battery<br />
5 DF Rahman Rezaei 20 February 1975 43  Messina<br />
6 MF Javad Nekounam 7 September 1980 71  Al-Sharjah [33]<br />
7 MF Ferydoon Zandi 26 April 1979 10  Kaiserslautern<br />
8 MF Ali Karimi 8 November 1978 90  Bayern Munich<br />
9 FW Vahid Hashemian 21 July 1976 28  Hannover 96<br />
10 FW Ali Daei (c) 21 March 1969 147  Saba Battery<br />
11 FW Rasoul Khatibi 22 September 1978 12  Sepahan<br />
12 GK Hassan Roudbarian 6 July 1978 3  Pas<br />
13 DF Hossein Kaebi 23 September 1985 44  Foolad<br />
14 MF Andranik Teymourian 6 March 1983 7  Abu Moslem<br />
15 FW Arash Borhani 14 September 1983 20  Pas<br />
16 FW Reza Enayati 23 September 1976 15  Esteghlal<br />
17 FW Javad Kazemian 23 April 1981 25  Persepolis<br />
18 MF Moharram Navidkia 1 November 1982 24  VfL Bochum<br />
19 DF Amir Hossein Sadeqi 6 September 1981 1  Esteghlal<br />
20 DF Mohammad Nosrati 10 January 1982 44  Pas<br />
21 MF Mehrzad Madanchi 10 January 1985 6  Persepolis<br />
22 GK Vahid Talebloo 26 May 1982 1  Esteghlal<br />
23 MF Masoud Shojaei 9 June 1984 3  Saipa </p>
<p>[edit]  Mexico<br />
Head coach:  Ricardo Lavolpe</p>
<p>No. Pos. Player DoB/Age Caps Club<br />
1 GK Oswaldo Sánchez 21 September 1973 70  Guadalajara<br />
2 DF Claudio Suárez 17 December 1968 178  Chivas USA<br />
3 DF Carlos Salcido 2 April 1980 32  Guadalajara [34]<br />
4 DF Rafael Márquez (c) 13 February 1979 65  Barcelona<br />
5 DF Ricardo Osorio 30 March 1980 39  Cruz Azul [35]<br />
6 MF Gerardo Torrado 30 April 1979 56  Cruz Azul<br />
7 MF Ântonio Naelson 23 May 1976 32  Toluca<br />
8 MF Pavel Pardo 26 July 1976 125  América [36]<br />
9 FW Jared Borgetti 14 August 1973 75  Bolton [37]<br />
10 FW Guillermo Franco 3 November 1976 7  Villarreal<br />
11 MF Ramón Morales 10 October 1975 46  Guadalajara<br />
12 GK José de Jesús Corona 26 January 1981 6  U.A.G.<br />
13 GK Guillermo Ochoa 13 July 1985 1  América<br />
14 DF Gonzalo Pineda 19 October 1982 30  Guadalajara<br />
15 DF José Antonio Castro 11 August 1980 12  América<br />
16 DF Mario Méndez 1 June 1979 32  Monterrey<br />
17 FW Francisco Fonseca 2 October 1979 29  Cruz Azul [38]<br />
18 MF Andrés Guardado 28 September 1986 7  Atlas<br />
19 FW Omar Bravo 4 March 1980 33  Guadalajara<br />
20 MF Rafael García 14 August 1974 52  Atlas<br />
21 MF Jesús Arellano 8 May 1973 69  Monterrey<br />
22 DF Francisco Rodríguez 20 October 1981 32  Guadalajara<br />
23 MF Luis Pérez 12 January 1981 52  Monterrey </p>
<p>[edit]  Portugal<br />
Head coach:  Luiz Felipe Scolari</p>
<p>No. Pos. Player DoB/Age Caps Club<br />
1 GK Ricardo 11 February 1976 49  Sporting<br />
2 DF Paulo Ferreira 18 January 1979 30  Chelsea<br />
3 DF Marco Caneira 9 February 1979 14  Valencia [39]<br />
4 DF Ricardo Costa 16 May 1981 3  FC Porto<br />
5 DF Fernando Meira 5 June 1978 30  VfB Stuttgart<br />
6 MF Costinha 1 December 1974 44  Dynamo Moscow [40]<br />
7 MF Luís Figo (c) 4 November 1972 120  Internazionale<br />
8 MF Petit 25 September 1976 36  Benfica<br />
9 FW Pauleta 28 April 1973 82  Paris Saint-Germain<br />
10 MF Hugo Viana 15 January 1983 21  Valencia<br />
11 MF Simão 31 October 1979 43  Benfica<br />
12 GK Quim 13 November 1975 24  Benfica<br />
13 DF Miguel 4 January 1980 28  Valencia<br />
14 DF Nuno Valente 12 September 1974 23  Everton<br />
15 FW Luís Boa Morte 4 August 1977 24  Fulham<br />
16 DF Ricardo Carvalho 18 May 1978 24  Chelsea<br />
17 MF Cristiano Ronaldo 5 February 1985 32  Manchester United<br />
18 MF Maniche 11 November 1977 31  Dynamo Moscow [41]<br />
19 MF Tiago 3 May 1981 22  Lyon<br />
20 MF Deco 27 August 1977 35  Barcelona<br />
21 FW Nuno Gomes 5 July 1976 53  Benfica<br />
22 GK Paulo Santos 11 December 1972 1  S.C. Braga<br />
23 FW Hélder Postiga 2 August 1982 24  FC Porto [42] </p>
<p>[edit] Group E</p>
<p>[edit]  Czech Republic<br />
Head coach: Karel Brückner</p>
<p>No. Pos. Player DoB/Age Caps Club<br />
1 GK Petr Čech 20 May 1982 41  Chelsea<br />
2 DF Zdeněk Grygera 14 May 1980 41  Ajax<br />
3 DF Pavel Mareš 18 January 1976 10  Zenit St. Petersburg<br />
4 MF Tomáš Galásek(c) 15 January 1973 49  Ajax [43]<br />
5 DF Radoslav Kováč 11 November 1979 6  Spartak Moscow<br />
6 DF Marek Jankulovski 9 May 1977 48  Milan<br />
7 MF Libor Sionko 1 February 1977 17  Austria Wien [44]<br />
8 MF Karel Poborský 30 March 1972 115  Dynamo České Budějovice<br />
9 FW Jan Koller 30 March 1973 68  Borussia Dortmund [45]<br />
10 MF Tomáš Rosický 4 October 1980 54  Borussia Dortmund [46]<br />
11 MF Pavel Nedvěd 30 August 1972 87  Juventus<br />
12 FW Vratislav Lokvenc 27 September 1973 72  Red Bull Salzburg<br />
13 DF Martin Jiránek 25 May 1979 24  Spartak Moscow<br />
14 MF David Jarolím 17 May 1979 3  Hamburg<br />
15 FW Milan Baroš 28 October 1981 49  Aston Villa<br />
16 GK Jaromír Blažek 29 December 1972 11  AC Sparta Praha<br />
17 FW Jiří Štajner 27 May 1976 21  Hannover 96<br />
18 FW Marek Heinz 4 August 1977 28  Galatasaray<br />
19 MF Jan Polák 14 March 1981 18  Nürnberg<br />
20 MF Jaroslav Plašil 5 January 1982 14  Monaco<br />
21 DF Tomáš Ujfaluši 24 March 1978 48  Fiorentina<br />
22 DF David Rozehnal 5 July 1980 22  Paris Saint-Germain<br />
23 GK Antonín Kinský 31 May 1975 5  Saturn Ramenskoye </p>
<p>[edit]  Ghana<br />
Head coach:  Ratomir Dujković</p>
<p>No. Pos. Player DoB/Age Caps Club<br />
1 GK Sammy Adjei 1 September 1980 31  Ashdod<br />
2 DF Hans Sarpei 28 June 1976 7  Wolfsburg<br />
3 FW Asamoah Gyan 22 November 1985 13  Udinese [47]<br />
4 DF Samuel Kuffour 3 September 1976 58  Roma<br />
5 DF John Mensah (vc) 29 November 1982 33  Rennes<br />
6 DF Emmanuel Pappoe 3 March 1981 27  Hapoel Kfar Saba<br />
7 DF Illiasu Shilla 3 March 1981 2  Asante Kotoko<br />
8 MF Michael Essien 3 December 1982 17  Chelsea<br />
9 MF Derek Boateng 2 May 1983 11  AIK<br />
10 MF Stephen Appiah (c) 24 December 1980 42  Fenerbahçe<br />
11 MF Sulley Muntari 27 August 1984 16  Udinese<br />
12 FW Alex Tachie-Mensah 15 February 1977 5  St Gallen<br />
13 DF Habib Mohamed 10 December 1983 1  King Faisal Babes<br />
14 FW Matthew Amoah 24 October 1980 16  Borussia Dortmund<br />
15 DF John Paintsil 15 June 1981 21  Hapoel Tel Aviv<br />
16 GK George Owu 17 June 1982 6  Ashanti Gold<br />
17 DF Daniel Quaye 25 December 1980 7  Hearts of Oak<br />
18 MF Eric Addo 12 November 1978 6  PSV<br />
19 FW Razak Pimpong 30 December 1982 4  FC Copenhagen<br />
20 MF Otto Addo 9 June 1975 13  Mainz 05<br />
21 DF Issah Ahmed 24 May 1982 10  Randers<br />
22 GK Richard Kingson 13 July 1975 33  Ankaraspor<br />
23 MF Haminu Dramani 1 April 1986 7  Red Star Belgrade [48] </p>
<p>[edit]  Italy<br />
Head coach: Marcello Lippi</p>
<p>No. Pos. Player DoB/Age Caps Club<br />
1 GK Gianluigi Buffon 28 January 1978 60  Juventus<br />
2 DF Cristian Zaccardo 21 December 1981 12  Palermo<br />
3 DF Fabio Grosso 28 November 1977 17  Palermo [49]<br />
4 MF Daniele De Rossi 24 July 1983 17  Roma<br />
5 DF Fabio Cannavaro (c) 13 September 1973 93  Juventus<br />
6 DF Andrea Barzagli 8 May 1981 8  Palermo<br />
7 FW Alessandro Del Piero 9 November 1974 74  Juventus<br />
8 MF Gennaro Gattuso 9 January 1978 43  Milan<br />
9 FW Luca Toni 26 May 1977 18  Fiorentina<br />
10 FW Francesco Totti 27 September 1976 51  Roma<br />
11 FW Alberto Gilardino 5 July 1982 15  Milan<br />
12 GK Angelo Peruzzi 16 February 1970 31  Lazio<br />
13 DF Alessandro Nesta 19 March 1976 74  Milan<br />
14 GK Marco Amelia 2 April 1982 1  Livorno<br />
15 FW Vincenzo Iaquinta 29 November 1979 12  Udinese<br />
16 MF Mauro Camoranesi 4 October 1976 21  Juventus<br />
17 MF Simone Barone 30 April 1978 13  Palermo<br />
18 FW Filippo Inzaghi 9 August 1973 49  Milan<br />
19 DF Gianluca Zambrotta 19 February 1977 52  Juventus<br />
20 MF Simone Perrotta 17 September 1977 24  Roma<br />
21 MF Andrea Pirlo 19 May 1979 24  Milan<br />
22 DF Massimo Oddo 14 June 1976 20  Lazio<br />
23 DF Marco Materazzi 19 August 1973 28  Internazionale </p>
<p>[edit]  United States<br />
Head coach: Bruce Arena</p>
<p>No. Pos. Player DoB/Age Caps Club<br />
1 GK Tim Howard 6 March 1979 16  Manchester United [50]<br />
2 DF Chris Albright 14 January 1979 20  Los Angeles Galaxy [51]<br />
3 DF Carlos Bocanegra 25 May 1979 40  Fulham<br />
4 MF Pablo Mastroeni 26 August 1976 48  Colorado Rapids<br />
5 MF John O&#8217;Brien 29 August 1977 31  Chivas USA<br />
6 DF Steve Cherundolo 19 February 1979 35  Hannover 96<br />
7 MF Eddie Lewis 17 May 1974 69  Leeds United<br />
8 MF Clint Dempsey 9 March 1983 21  New England Revolution<br />
9 FW Eddie Johnson 31 March 1984 18  Kansas City Wizards<br />
10 MF Claudio Reyna (c) 20 July 1973 109  Manchester City<br />
11 FW Brian Ching 24 May 1978 20  Houston Dynamo<br />
12 DF Gregg Berhalter 1 August 1973 44  Energie Cottbus [52]<br />
13 DF Jimmy Conrad 12 February 1977 15  Kansas City Wizards<br />
14 MF Ben Olsen 3 May 1977 34  D.C. United<br />
15 MF Bobby Convey 27 May 1983 39  Reading<br />
16 FW Josh Wolff 25 February 1977 47  Kansas City Wizards<br />
17 MF DaMarcus Beasley 24 May 1982 58  PSV<br />
18 GK Kasey Keller 29 November 1969 93  Borussia Mönchengladbach<br />
19 GK Marcus Hahnemann 15 June 1972 6  Reading<br />
20 FW Brian McBride 19 June 1972 92  Fulham<br />
21 FW Landon Donovan 4 March 1982 81  Los Angeles Galaxy<br />
22 DF Oguchi Onyewu 13 May 1982 14  Standard Liège<br />
23 DF Eddie Pope 24 December 1973 80  Real Salt Lake </p>
<p>[edit] Group F</p>
<p>[edit]  Australia<br />
Head coach:  Guus Hiddink</p>
<p>No. Pos. Player DoB/Age Caps Club<br />
1 GK Mark Schwarzer 6 October 1972 37  Middlesbrough<br />
2 DF Lucas Neill 9 March 1978 25  Blackburn Rovers<br />
3 DF Craig Moore 12 December 1975 33  Newcastle United<br />
4 MF Tim Cahill 6 December 1979 16  Everton<br />
5 MF Jason Čulina 5 August 1980 13  PSV<br />
6 DF Tony Popović 4 July 1973 56  Crystal Palace [53]<br />
7 MF Brett Emerton 22 February 1979 48  Blackburn Rovers<br />
8 MF Josip Skoko 10 December 1975 46  Wigan Athletic [54]<br />
9 FW Mark Viduka (c) 9 October 1975 33  Middlesbrough<br />
10 FW Harry Kewell 22 September 1978 20  Liverpool<br />
11 MF Stan Lazaridis 16 August 1972 59  Birmingham [55]<br />
12 GK Ante Čović 13 June 1975 1  Hammarby<br />
13 MF Vince Grella 5 October 1979 17  Parma<br />
14 MF Scott Chipperfield 30 December 1975 46  Basel<br />
15 FW John Aloisi 5 February 1976 41  Alavés<br />
16 DF Michael Beauchamp 8 March 1981 2 Central Coast Mariners [56]<br />
17 FW Archie Thompson 23 October 1978 20  Melbourne Victory [57]<br />
18 GK Željko Kalac 16 December 1972 52  A.C.Milan<br />
19 FW Joshua Kennedy 20 August 1982 1  Dynamo Dresden [58]<br />
20 MF Luke Wilkshire 2 October 1981 8  Bristol City<br />
21 MF Mile Sterjovski 27 May 1979 22  Basel<br />
22 DF Mark Milligan 4 August 1985 1  Sydney FC<br />
23 MF Mark Bresciano 11 February 1980 24  Parma </p>
<p>[edit]  Brazil<br />
Head coach: Carlos Alberto Parreira</p>
<p>No. Pos. Player DoB/Age Caps Club<br />
1 GK Dida 7 October 1973 86  Milan<br />
2 DF Cafu (c) 7 June 1970 138  Milan<br />
3 DF Lúcio 8 May 1978 50  Bayern München<br />
4 DF Juan 1 February 1979 38  Bayer Leverkusen<br />
5 MF Emerson 4 April 1976 70  Juventus<br />
6 DF Roberto Carlos 10 April 1973 121  Real Madrid<br />
7 FW Adriano 17 February 1982 32  Internazionale<br />
8 MF Kaká 22 April 1982 38  Milan<br />
9 FW Ronaldo 22 September 1976 92  Real Madrid<br />
10 FW Ronaldinho 21 March 1980 63  Barcelona<br />
11 MF Zé Roberto 6 July 1974 79  Bayern München [59]<br />
12 GK Rogério Ceni 22 January 1973 15  São Paulo<br />
13 DF Cicinho 24 June 1980 10  Real Madrid<br />
14 DF Luisão 13 February 1981 19  Benfica<br />
15 DF Cris 3 June 1977 16  Lyon<br />
16 DF Gilberto 25 April 1976 9  Hertha Berlin<br />
17 MF Gilberto Silva 7 October 1976 36  Arsenal<br />
18 MF Mineiro 2 August 1975 2  São Paulo [60]<br />
19 MF Juninho 30 January 1975 37  Lyon<br />
20 MF Ricardinho 23 May 1976 19  Corinthians<br />
21 FW Fred 3 October 1983 3  Lyon<br />
22 GK Júlio César 3 September 1979 11  Internazionale<br />
23 FW Robinho 25 January 1984 23  Real Madrid </p>
<p>[edit]  Croatia<br />
Head coach: Zlatko Kranjčar</p>
<p>No. Pos. Player DoB/Age Caps Club<br />
1 GK Stipe Pletikosa 8 January 1979 50  Shakhtar Donetsk [61]<br />
2 MF Darijo Srna 1 May 1982 36  Shakhtar Donetsk<br />
3 DF Josip Šimunić 18 February 1978 42  Hertha Berlin<br />
4 DF Robert Kovač 6 April 1974 56  Juventus<br />
5 DF Igor Tudor 16 April 1978 52  Juventus [62]<br />
6 MF Jurica Vranješ 30 January 1980 24  Werder Bremen<br />
7 DF Dario Šimić 12 November 1975 80  Milan<br />
8 MF Marko Babić 28 January 1981 33  Bayer Leverkusen<br />
9 FW Dado Pršo 5 November 1974 29  Rangers<br />
10 MF Niko Kovač (c) 15 October 1971 58  Hertha Berlin[63]<br />
11 DF Mario Tokić 23 June 1975 28  Austria Wien<br />
12 GK Joey Didulica 14 October 1977 4  Austria Wien<br />
13 DF Stjepan Tomas 6 March 1976 48  Galatasaray<br />
14 MF Luka Modrić 9 September 1985 5  Dinamo Zagreb<br />
15 MF Ivan Leko 7 February 1978 13  Club Brugge<br />
16 MF Jerko Leko 9 April 1980 36  Dynamo Kyiv[64]<br />
17 FW Ivan Klasnić 29 January 1980 20  Werder Bremen<br />
18 FW Ivica Olić 14 September 1979 36  CSKA Moscow<br />
19 MF Niko Kranjčar 13 August 1984 21  Hajduk Split<br />
20 MF Anthony Šerić 15 January 1979 14  Panathinaikos<br />
21 FW Boško Balaban 15 October 1978 27  Club Brugge<br />
22 FW Ivan Bošnjak 6 February 1979 13  Dinamo Zagreb[65]<br />
23 GK Tomislav Butina 30 March 1974 28  Club Brugge </p>
<p>[edit]  Japan<br />
Head coach:  Zico</p>
<p>No. Pos. Player DoB/Age Caps Club<br />
1 GK Seigo Narazaki 15 April 1976 50  Nagoya Grampus Eight<br />
2 DF Teruyuki Moniwa 8 September 1981 8  FC Tokyo<br />
3 DF Yuichi Komano 25 July 1981 8  Sanfrecce Hiroshima<br />
4 MF Yasuhito Endo 28 January 1980 40  Gamba Osaka<br />
5 DF Tsuneyasu Miyamoto 7 February 1977 69  Gamba Osaka<br />
6 DF Kōji Nakata 9 July 1979 55  Basel<br />
7 MF Hidetoshi Nakata(c) 22 January 1977 74  Fiorentina [66]<br />
8 MF Mitsuo Ogasawara 5 April 1979 51  Kashima Antlers<br />
9 FW Naohiro Takahara 4 June 1979 41  Hamburger SV [67]<br />
10 MF Shunsuke Nakamura 24 June 1978 60  Celtic<br />
11 FW Seiichiro Maki 7 August 1980 10  JEF United Ichihara Chiba<br />
12 GK Yoichi Doi 25 July 1973 4  FC Tokyo<br />
13 FW Atsushi Yanagisawa 27 May 1977 56  Kashima Antlers<br />
14 DF Alessandro dos Santos 20 July 1977 72  Urawa Red Diamonds<br />
15 MF Takashi Fukunishi 1 September 1976 62  Júbilo Iwata<br />
16 FW Masashi Oguro 4 May 1980 18  Grenoble<br />
17 MF Junichi Inamoto 18 September 1979 63  West Bromwich Albion<br />
18 MF Shinji Ono 27 September 1979 54  Urawa Red Diamonds<br />
19 DF Keisuke Tsuboi 16 September 1979 33  Urawa Red Diamonds<br />
20 FW Keiji Tamada 11 April 1980 39  Nagoya Grampus Eight<br />
21 DF Akira Kaji 13 January 1980 43  Gamba Osaka<br />
22 DF Yuji Nakazawa 25 February 1978 50  Yokohama F. Marinos<br />
23 GK Yoshikatsu Kawaguchi 15 August 1975 89  Júbilo Iwata </p>
<p>[edit] Group G</p>
<p>[edit]  France<br />
Head coach: Raymond Domenech</p>
<p>No. Pos. Player DoB/Age Caps Club<br />
1 GK Mickaël Landreau 14 May 1979 3  Nantes [68]<br />
2 DF Jean-Alain Boumsong 14 December 1979 19  Newcastle United<br />
3 DF Éric Abidal 11 July 1979 8  Lyon<br />
4 MF Patrick Vieira 23 June 1976 87  Juventus<br />
5 DF William Gallas 17 August 1977 40  Chelsea<br />
6 MF Claude Makélélé 18 February 1973 43  Chelsea<br />
7 MF Florent Malouda 13 June 1980 13  Lyon<br />
8 MF Vikash Dhorasoo 10 October 1973 16  Paris Saint-Germain<br />
9 FW Sidney Govou 27 July 1979 19  Lyon[69]<br />
10 MF Zinedine Zidane (c) 23 June 1972 102  Real Madrid[70]<br />
11 FW Sylvain Wiltord 10 May 1974 80  Lyon<br />
12 FW Thierry Henry 17 August 1977 78  Arsenal<br />
13 DF Mikael Silvestre 9 August 1977 39  Manchester United<br />
14 FW Louis Saha 8 August 1978 9  Manchester United<br />
15 DF Lilian Thuram 1 January 1972 114  Juventus<br />
16 GK Fabien Barthez 28 June 1971 80  Marseille [71]<br />
17 DF Gaël Givet 9 October 1981 11  Monaco<br />
18 MF Alou Diarra 15 July 1981 9  Lens<br />
19 DF Willy Sagnol 18 March 1977 38  Bayern München<br />
20 FW David Trézéguet 15 October 1977 63  Juventus<br />
21 DF Pascal Chimbonda 21 February 1979 1  Wigan Athletic<br />
22 MF Franck Ribéry 1 April 1983 3  Marseille<br />
23 GK Grégory Coupet 31 December 1972 18  Lyon </p>
<p>[edit]  Korea Republic<br />
Head coach:  Dick Advocaat</p>
<p>No. Pos. Player DoB/Age Caps Club<br />
1 GK Lee Woon-Jae (c) 26 April 1973 97  Suwon Samsung Bluewings<br />
2 DF Kim Young-Chul 30 June 1976 12  Seongnam Ilhwa Chunma<br />
3 DF Kim Dong-Jin 29 January 1982 34  FC Seoul<br />
4 DF Choi Jin-Cheul 26 March 1971 62  Jeonbuk Hyundai Motors<br />
5 MF Kim Nam-Il 14 March 1977 66  Suwon Samsung Bluewings<br />
6 DF Kim Jin-Kyu 16 February 1985 23  Júbilo Iwata<br />
7 MF Park Ji-Sung 25 February 1981 60  Manchester United<br />
8 MF Kim Doo-Hyun 14 July 1982 32  Seongnam Ilhwa Chunma<br />
9 FW Ahn Jung-Hwan 27 January 1976 61  MSV Duisburg<br />
10 FW Park Chu-Young 10 July 1985 18  FC Seoul<br />
11 FW Seol Ki-Hyeon 8 January 1979 67  Wolverhampton Wanderers<br />
12 DF Lee Young-Pyo 23 April 1977 85  Tottenham Hotspur<br />
13 MF Lee Eul-Yong 23 April 1977 47  Trabzonspor<br />
14 FW Lee Chun-Soo 9 July 1981 62  Ulsan Hyundai Horang-i<br />
15 MF Baek Ji-Hoon 28 February 1985 12  FC Seoul<br />
16 FW Chung Kyung-Ho 22 May 1980 40  Gwangju Sangmu Phoenix<br />
17 MF Lee Ho 22 December 1984 11  Ulsan Hyundai Horang-i<br />
18 MF Kim Sang-Sik 17 December 1976 42  Seongnam Ilhwa Chunma<br />
19 FW Cho Jae-Jin 9 July 1981 21  Shimizu S-Pulse<br />
20 GK Kim Yong-Dae 11 October 1979 15  Seongnam Ilhwa Chunma<br />
21 GK Kim Young-Kwang 28 June 1983 6  Chunnam Dragons<br />
22 DF Song Chong-Gug 20 February 1979 51  Suwon Samsung Bluewings<br />
23 DF Cho Won-Hee 17 April 1983 13  Suwon Samsung Bluewings </p>
<p>[edit]  Switzerland<br />
Head coach: Köbi Kuhn</p>
<p>No. Pos. Player DoB/Age Caps Club<br />
1 GK Pascal Zuberbühler 8 January 1971 40  Basel<br />
2 DF Johan Djourou 18 January 1987 2  Arsenal<br />
3 DF Ludovic Magnin 20 April 1979 30  Stuttgart<br />
4 DF Philippe Senderos 14 February 1985 12  Arsenal<br />
5 MF Xavier Margairaz 17 January 1984 3  FC Zürich<br />
6 MF Johann Vogel (c) 8 March 1977 85  Milan<br />
7 MF Ricardo Cabanas 17 January 1979 37  FC Köln<br />
8 MF Raphaël Wicky 26 April 1977 67  Hamburger SV<br />
9 FW Alexander Frei 15 July 1979 45  Rennes [72]<br />
10 MF Daniel Gygax 28 August 1981 22  Lille<br />
11 FW Marco Streller 18 June 1981 10  FC Köln<br />
12 GK Diego Benaglio 8 July 1983 1  Nacional<br />
13 DF Stéphane Grichting 30 March 1979 6  Auxerre<br />
14 MF David Degen 15 February 1983 3  Basel [73]<br />
15 MF Blerim Džemaili 12 April 1986 3  FC Zürich<br />
16 MF Tranquillo Barnetta 22 May 1985 13  Bayer Leverkusen<br />
17 DF Christoph Spycher 30 March 1978 21  Eintracht Frankfurt<br />
18 FW Mauro Lustrinelli 26 February 1976 5  Sparta Praha<br />
19 MF Valon Behrami 19 April 1985 6  Lazio<br />
20 DF Patrick Müller 17 December 1976 64  Lyon<br />
21 GK Fabio Coltorti 3 December 1980 2  Grasshoppers<br />
22 MF Hakan Yakın 22 February 1977 46  BSC Young Boys [74]<br />
23 DF Philipp Degen 15 February 1983 15  Borussia Dortmund </p>
<p>[edit]  Togo<br />
Head coach:  Otto Pfister[75]</p>
<p>No. Pos. Player DoB/Age Caps Club<br />
1 GK Ouro-Nimini Tchagnirou 31 December 1977 9  Djoliba<br />
2 DF Daré Nibombé 16 June 1980 16  Mons<br />
3 DF Jean-Paul Abalo (c) 26 June 1975 65  APOEL<br />
4 FW Emmanuel Adebayor 16 February 1984 29  Arsenal<br />
5 DF Massamasso Tchangai 8 August 1978 34  Benevento<br />
6 MF Yao Aziawonou 30 November 1979 32  BSC Young Boys<br />
7 FW Moustapha Salifou 1 June 1983 34  Brest<br />
8 MF Kuami Agboh 28 December 1977 4  Beveren<br />
9 MF Thomas Dossevi 6 March 1979 10  Valenciennes<br />
10 MF Mamam Cherif Touré 13 January 1981 39  Metz<br />
11 FW Robert Malm 21 August 1973 1  Brest<br />
12 DF Éric Akoto 20 July 1980 32  Admira Wacker[76]<br />
13 FW Richmond Forson 23 May 1980 8  Poiré<br />
14 MF Adékambi Olufadé 7 January 1980 24  Al Siliyah<br />
15 MF Alaixys Romao 18 January 1984 11  Louhans-Cuiseaux<br />
16 GK Kossi Agassa 2 July 1978 49  Metz<br />
17 FW Mohamed Kader 8 April 1979 46  Guingamp<br />
18 MF Yao Junior Sènaya 19 April 1984 16  YF Juventus<br />
19 DF Ludovic Assemoassa 18 September 1980 5  Ciudad de Murcia<br />
20 DF Affo Erassa 19 February 1983 6  Clermont<br />
21 MF Franck Atsou 1 August 1978 13  Al-Hilal [77]<br />
22 GK Kodjovi Obilale 8 October 1984 0  Etoile Filante<br />
23 DF Assimiou Touré 1 January 1988 1  Bayer Leverkusen </p>
<p>[edit] Group H</p>
<p>[edit]  Saudi Arabia<br />
Head coach:  Marcos Paquetá</p>
<p>No. Pos. Player DoB/Age Caps Club<br />
1 GK Mohamed Al-Deayea 2 August 1972 181  Al-Hilal<br />
2 DF Ahmed Dokhi 25 October 1976 68  Al-Ittihad<br />
3 DF Redha Tukar 29 November 1975 37  Al-Ittihad<br />
4 DF Hamad Al-Montashari 22 June 1982 32  Al-Ittihad<br />
5 DF Naif Al-Qadi 3 April 1979 28  Al-Ahli<br />
6 MF Omar Al-Ghamdi 11 April 1979 38  Al-Hilal<br />
7 MF Mohammed Ameen 29 April 1980 16  Al-Ittihad<br />
8 MF Mohammed Noor 26 February 1978 63  Al-Ittihad<br />
9 FW Sami Al-Jaber (c) 11 December 1972 160  Al-Hilal<br />
10 MF Mohammad Al-Shalhoub 8 December 1980 48  Al-Hilal<br />
11 FW Saad Al-Harthi 3 February 1984 15  Al-Nasr<br />
12 DF Abdulaziz Khathran 31 July 1973 19  Al-Hilal<br />
13 DF Hussein Sulaimani 21 January 1977 97  Al-Ahli<br />
14 MF Saud Khariri 8 July 1980 34  Al-Ittihad<br />
15 DF Ahmed Al-Bahri 18 September 1980 11  Al-Ittifaq<br />
16 MF Khaled Aziz 14 July 1981 14  Al-Hilal<br />
17 FW Mohammad Al-Bishi 3 May 1987 0  Al-Ahli<br />
18 MF Nawaf Al-Temyat 28 June 1976 56  Al-Hilal<br />
19 DF Mohammad Massad 17 February 1983 5  Al-Ahli<br />
20 FW Yasser Al-Qahtani 10 October 1982 45  Al-Hilal<br />
21 GK Mabrouk Zaid 11 February 1979 33  Al-Ittihad<br />
22 GK Mohammad Khouja 15 March 1982 8  Al-Shabab<br />
23 FW Malek Mouath 10 August 1981 5  Al-Ahli </p>
<p>[edit]  Spain<br />
Head coach: Luis Aragonés</p>
<p>No. Pos. Player DoB/Age Caps Club<br />
1 GK Iker Casillas 20 May 1981 58  Real Madrid<br />
2 DF Míchel Salgado 22 October 1975 50  Real Madrid<br />
3 DF Mariano Pernía 4 May 1977 1  Getafe [78][79]<br />
4 DF Carlos Marchena 31 July 1979 27  Valencia<br />
5 DF Carles Puyol 13 April 1978 47  Barcelona<br />
6 MF David Albelda 1 September 1977 33  Valencia<br />
7 FW Raúl (c) 27 June 1977 95  Real Madrid<br />
8 MF Xavi 25 January 1980 36  Barcelona<br />
9 FW Fernando Torres 20 March 1984 30  Atlético Madrid<br />
10 FW José Antonio Reyes 1 September 1983 19  Arsenal<br />
11 MF Luis García 24 June 1978 10  Liverpool<br />
12 DF Antonio López 13 September 1981 8  Atlético Madrid<br />
13 MF Andrés Iniesta 11 May 1984 3  Barcelona<br />
14 MF Xabi Alonso 25 November 1981 26  Liverpool<br />
15 DF Sergio Ramos 30 March 1986 11  Real Madrid<br />
16 MF Marcos Senna 17 July 1976 3  Villarreal<br />
17 MF Joaquín 21 July 1981 38  Real Betis<br />
18 MF Cesc Fàbregas 4 May 1987 4  Arsenal<br />
19 GK Santiago Cañizares 18 December 1969 45  Valencia<br />
20 DF Juanito 23 July 1976 15  Real Betis<br />
21 FW David Villa 3 December 1981 8  Valencia<br />
22 DF Pablo Ibáñez 3 August 1981 11  Atlético Madrid<br />
23 GK José Manuel Reina 31 August 1982 3  Liverpool </p>
<p>[edit]  Tunisia<br />
Head coach:  Roger Lemerre</p>
<p>No. Pos. Player DoB/Age Caps Club<br />
1 GK Ali Boumnijel 13 April 1966 48  Club Africain<br />
2 FW Karim Essediri 29 July 1979 7  Rosenborg<br />
3 DF Karim Haggui 21 January 1984 26  Strasbourg<br />
4 DF Alaeddine Yahia 26 September 1981 13  Saint-Étienne<br />
5 FW Ziad Jaziri 12 July 1978 61  Troyes<br />
6 DF Hatem Trabelsi 25 January 1977 56  Ajax<br />
7 FW Haykel Guemamdia 22 December 1981 13  Strasbourg [80]<br />
8 MF Mehdi Nafti 28 November 1978 29  Birmingham City<br />
9 FW Yassine Chikhaoui 2 September 1986 1  Étoile du Sahel<br />
10 MF Kaies Ghodhbane 7 January 1976 89  Konyaspor<br />
11 FW Francileudo Santos 20 March 1979 28  Toulouse<br />
12 MF Jawhar Mnari 8 November 1976 37  Nürnberg<br />
13 MF Riadh Bouazizi (c) 8 April 1973 85  Kayserispor<br />
14 MF Adel Chedli 16 September 1976 38  Nürnberg<br />
15 DF Radhi Jaïdi 30 August 1975 89  Bolton Wanderers<br />
16 GK Adel Nefzi 16 March 1974 0  US Monastir<br />
17 FW Chaouki Ben Saada 1 July 1984 11  Bastia [81]<br />
18 DF David Jemmali 13 December 1974 2  Bordeaux<br />
19 DF Anis Ayari 16 February 1982 24  Samsunspor<br />
20 MF Hamed Namouchi 12 January 1984 14  Rangers<br />
21 DF Karim Saidi 24 March 1983 15  Feyenoord[82]<br />
22 GK Hamdi Kasraoui 18 January 1983 6  Espérance de Tunis<br />
23 MF Sofiane Melliti 18 August 1978 14  Gaziantepspor </p>
<p>[edit]  Ukraine<br />
Head coach: Oleg Blokhin</p>
<p>No. Pos. Player DoB/Age Caps Club<br />
1 GK Oleksandr Shovkovskiy 2 January 1975 68  Dynamo Kyiv<br />
2 DF Andriy Nesmachniy 28 February 1979 49  Dynamo Kyiv<br />
3 DF Oleksandr Yatsenko 24 February 1985 1  FC Kharkiv [83]<br />
4 MF Anatoliy Tymoschuk 30 March 1979 55  Shakhtar Donetsk<br />
5 DF Volodymyr Yezerskiy 15 November 1976 24  Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk<br />
6 DF Andriy Rusol 16 January 1983 23  Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk<br />
7 FW Andriy Shevchenko (c) 29 September 1976 64  A.C. Milan [84]<br />
8 MF Oleh Shelayev 5 November 1976 19  Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk<br />
9 MF Oleh Husyev 25 April 1983 25  Dynamo Kyiv<br />
10 FW Andriy Voronin 21 July 1979 32  Bayer Leverkusen<br />
11 FW Serhiy Rebrov 6 March 1974 70  Dynamo Kyiv<br />
12 GK Andriy Pyatov 28 June 1984 1  Vorskla Poltava<br />
13 DF Dmytro Chygrynskiy 7 November 1986 0  Shakhtar Donetsk<br />
14 MF Andriy Husin 11 December 1972 64  Krylya Sovetov<br />
15 FW Artem Milevskiy 12 January 1985 0  Dynamo Kyiv<br />
16 FW Andriy Vorobei 29 November 1978 53  Shakhtar Donetsk<br />
17 DF Vladislav Vashchuk 2 January 1975 58  Dynamo Kyiv<br />
18 MF Serhiy Nazarenko 16 February 1980 15  Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk<br />
19 MF Maksym Kalynychenko 26 January 1979 21  Spartak Moscow<br />
20 FW Oleksiy Byelik 15 February 1981 15  Shakhtar Donetsk<br />
21 MF Ruslan Rotan 29 October 1981 19  Dynamo Kyiv<br />
22 DF Vyacheslav Sviderskiy 1 January 1979 6  Shakhtar Donetsk [85]<br />
23 GK Bohdan Shust 4 March 1986 2  Shakhtar Donetsk </p>
<p>[edit] Player representation by league<br />
Country Players Percentage Outside national squad<br />
Total 736<br />
England 102 13.86% 81<br />
Germany 74 10.05% 54<br />
Italy 60 8.15% 37<br />
France 58 7.89% 45<br />
Spain 52 7.07% 35<br />
Ukraine 25 3.40% 8<br />
Netherlands 25 3.40% 11<br />
Saudi Arabia 24 3.26% 1<br />
Mexico 23 3.125% 4<br />
Portugal 20 2.72% 12<br />
Costa Rica 20 2.72% 0<br />
Others 253 34.38% </p>
<p>The Italian and Saudi Arabian squads were made up entirely of players from the respective countries&#8217; domestic leagues. The Côte d&#8217;Ivoire (Ivory Coast) squad was made up entirely of players employed by overseas clubs (in fact, only one of their players is employed on the African continent; the other 22 all play in Europe). Although Turkey, Scotland, and Russia failed to qualify for the finals, their domestic leagues were represented by 12, 11, and 10 players respectively: altogether, there were 48 national leagues who had players in the tournament.</p>
<p>[edit] Player representation by club<br />
As of 2006-06-14.<br />
Finalised clubs&#8217; listing as per FIFA, excluding players on standby and loans.</p>
<p>Players Clubs<br />
15  Arsenal<br />
14  Chelsea<br />
13  Milan<br />
12  Juventus,  Manchester United<br />
11  Barcelona,  Bayern München<br />
10  Real Madrid,  Lyon<br />
9  Liverpool,  Al-Hilal,  Ajax,  Bayer Leverkusen,  Dynamo Kyiv,<br />
8  Shakhtar Donetsk,  Borussia Dortmund,  Deportivo Saprissa,  Internazionale,  PSV Eindhoven,  Hamburger SV,  Valencia<br />
7  Al-Ittihad,  LDU Quito<br />
6  Benfica,  Atlético Madrid,  Chivas,  Basel,  Werder Bremen<br />
5  LD Alajuelense,  AZ,  Rennes,  Roma,  Stuttgart,  Rangers,  Tottenham Hotspur,  El Nacional,  Red Star Belgrade </p>
<p>[edit] Footnotes<br />
^ FIFA World Cup. Official FIFA World Cup website. Retrieved on May 24, 2006.<br />
^ Borja will join Olympiacos after the tournament. Olympiacos sign Ecuador striker. uefa.com (1 May 2006). Retrieved on 18 June 2006.<br />
^ Valencia was on loan to Recreativo Huelva in the run up to the tournament. Luis Valencia. Official FIFA World Cup website. Retrieved on 18 June 2006.<br />
^ Reasco has agreed to join São Paulo after the tournament. Neicer Reasco. Official FIFA World Cup website. Retrieved on 18 June 2006.<br />
^ Ballack has agreed to join Chelsea when his contract with Bayern Munich expires on July 1. Ballack cheered by Chelsea challenge. uefa.com (15 May 2006). Retrieved on 18 June 2006.<br />
^ FC Köln chairman Wolfgang Overath has confirmed that Podolski will play for Bayern Munich in the upcoming season. Podolski ready to join Bayern. uefa.com (1 June 2006). Retrieved on 18 June 2006.<br />
^ Kosowski was on loan to Southampton in the run-up to the tournament. He will become a free agent after the tournament. Kosowski wants last farewell. football.co.uk (25 April 2006). Retrieved on 18 June 2006.<br />
^ Bak will become a free agent after the tournament.<br />
^ Krzynówek will join Wolfsburg after the tournament. Leverkusen capture Swiss starlet. uefa.com (16 May 2006). Retrieved on 21 June 2006.<br />
^ Rasiak has spent the run-up of the World Cup on loan to Southampton, and will join the club permanently after the tournament Poland looking to add extra polish. uefa.com (2 May 2006). Retrieved on 21 June 2006.<br />
^ Żewłakow will join Olympiacos after the tournament. Iuliano returns to Italy. uefa.com (30 January 2006). Retrieved on 21 June 2006.<br />
^ Bosacki was called up after Damian Gorawski sustained an injury and had to withdraw from the squad Injuries spell late squad changes. Official FIFA World Cup website (8 June 2006). Retrieved on 21 June 2006.<br />
^ Bridge was on loan to Fulham in the run up to the tournament. Nélson fit for Mersey mission. uefa.com (2 March 2006). Retrieved on 21 June 2006.<br />
^ Carson has spent the run-up of the tournament on loan to Sheffield Wednesday. Scott Carson, Liverpool. The Football Association official website. Retrieved on 21 June 2006.<br />
^ Salvador Cabañas will join Club América (México) after the tournament. América returns to Houston. Chron.com (8 June 2006). Retrieved on 21 June 2006.<br />
^ Carlos Paredes will join Sporting after the tournament.<br />
^ Nelson Valdez will join Borussia Dortmund after the tournament. Valdez delighted with Dortmund move. uefa.com (30 May 2006). Retrieved on 21 June 2006.<br />
^ Denis Caniza will join CF Atlas after the tournament.<br />
^ Larsson has a pre-contract agreement with Helsingborg, and will join them after the tournament. Larsson looks to bow out in style. uefa.com (16 May 2006). Retrieved on 21 June 2006.<br />
^ Svensson has agreed to join Rangers after the tournament. Rangers move delights Svensson. uefa.com (26 May 2006). Retrieved on 21 June 2006.<br />
^ Källström has agreed to join Lyon after the tournament. Lyon land Swede Källström. uefa.com (27 May 2006). Retrieved on 21 June 2006.<br />
^ Hislop will join Dallas FC after the tournamen.<br />
^ Wrexham are a team from  Wales who play in England&#8217;s football league. The flag of England is used for the purposes of official records as Wrexham are a team representing The Football Association.<br />
^ Saviola was on loan to Sevilla in the run-up to the tournament<br />
^ Scaloni was on loan to West Ham United in the run-up to the tournament<br />
^ *Mirko Vučinić was forced to withdraw through injury on May 23. He was replaced by Dušan Petković on May 29 [1]. However, Petković, the son of team coach Ilija Petković, decided not to play in the World Cup, because of numerous accusations of nepotism in Serbian press and public. Petković left the training camp on June 6. [2]. Since there was no possibility for replacement, as there was no injury, Serbia and Montenegro national team is the only one in the World Cup to have only 22 players in the squad.<br />
^ Vukić has spent the run up to the tournament on loan to Partizan<br />
^ Ljuboja has spent the run up to the tournament on loan to VfB Stuttgart, and will join VfB Stuttgart permanently after the tournament.<br />
^ Stojković has agreed to join Nantes after the tournament.<br />
^ João Ricardo will become a free agent after the tournament<br />
^ Akwá will become a free agent after the tournament<br />
^ Marques has spent the run-up of the World Cup on loan to Hull City<br />
^ Nekounam will join Osasuna after the tournament.<br />
^ Salcido will join PSV Eindhoven after the tournament.<br />
^ Osorio will join VfB Stuttgart after the tournament.<br />
^ Pardo will join VfB Stuttgart after the tournament.<br />
^ Borgetti will join Al Ittihad after the tournament.<br />
^ Fonseca will join SL Benfica after the tournament.<br />
^ Caneira has spent the run up to the tournament on loan to Sporting<br />
^ Costinha will join Atlético Madrid after the tournament.<br />
^ Maniche has spent the run up to the tournament on loan to Chelsea<br />
^ Postiga has spent the run up to the tournament on loan to Saint-Étienne.<br />
^ Galasek will join Nürnberg after the tournament.<br />
^ Sionko will join Rangers F.C. on a Bosman transfer after the tournament.<br />
^ Koller will join Monaco after the tournament.<br />
^ Rosický will join Arsenal after the tournament.<br />
^ Asamoah has spent the run up to the tournament on loan to Modena.<br />
^ Dramani will join Gençlerbirliği after the tournament.<br />
^ Grosso will join Internazionale after the tournament.<br />
^ Howard will spend the 06/07 season on loan to Everton.<br />
^ Albright was called up after an injury to Frankie Hejduk.<br />
^ Berhalter, who will join 1860 Munich after the World Cup, was called up after an injury to Cory Gibbs.<br />
^ Popovic&#8217;s Crystal Palace contract expires after the tournament, and his future will be decided between the end Australia&#8217;s tournament and the expiry date.<br />
^ Skoko has spent the run-up of the tournament on loan to Stoke City.<br />
^ Lazaridis will join Perth Glory FC after the tournament.<br />
^ Beauchamp has agreed to join Nuremberg after the tournament.<br />
^ Thompson has spent the run-up of the tournament on loan to PSV Eindhoven.<br />
^ Kennedy has agreed to join Nuremberg after the tournament.<br />
^ Zé Roberto will become a free agent after the tournament<br />
^ Mineiro was called up after an injury to Edmilson<br />
^ Pletikosa was on loan to Hajduk Split in the run-up to the tournament<br />
^ Tudor was on loan to Siena in the run-up to the tournament<br />
^ Niko Kovač will join Red Bull Salzburg after the tournament.<br />
^ Jerko Leko will join Monaco after the tournament.<br />
^ Ivan Bošnjak will join K.R.C. Genk after the tournament.<br />
^ Nakata was on loan to Bolton in the run-up to the tournament.<br />
^ Takahara has agreed to join Frankfurt after the World Cup.<br />
^ Landreau has agreed to join Paris Saint-Germain after the tournament.<br />
^ Govou was called up as a replacement for the injured Djibril Cissé.<br />
^ Zidane will retire from football after the tournament.<br />
^ Barthez will become a free agent after the tournament.<br />
^ Frei will join Borussia Dortmund after the tournament.<br />
^ David Degen will join Borussia Mönchengladbach after the tournament.<br />
^ Yakin was called up after an injury to Johan Vonlanthen.<br />
^ Disputes over the Togo players&#8217; pay bonuses caused Pfister to walk out after Togo&#8217;s first match, but he returned before their second match. [3]<br />
^ Akoto have not played for Admira Wacker since the end of 2005 due to a contract dispute, and spent the run up to the tournament training with Austrian club SV Schwechat.<br />
^ Franck Atsou replaced Karim Guede<br />
^ Asier Del Horno was originally named in the squad, but sustained an ankle injury in the build-up to the tournament. He was replaced by Pernía.<br />
^ Pernía will join Atlético Madrid after the tournament.<br />
^ Mehdi Meriah was originally named in the squad but sustained an injury in the week leading up to the tournament. He was replaced by Guemamdia.<br />
^ Issam Jomaa was originally named in the squad but sustained an injury prior to the tournament. He was replaced by Ben Saada.<br />
^ Karim Saidi has spent the run up to the tournament on loan to Lecce<br />
^ Yatsenko was called up as a replacement for the injured Serhiy Fedorov.<br />
^ Shevchenko will join Chelsea after the tournament.<br />
^ Svydersky was on loan to Arsenal Kyiv in the run-up to the World Cup. </p>
<p>[edit] References<br />
(English) Planet World Cup website<br />
FIFA World Cup v • d • e<br />
Uruguay 1930 | Italy 1934 | France 1938 | Brazil 1950 | Switzerland 1954 | Sweden 1958 | Chile 1962 | England 1966 | Mexico 1970 | West Germany 1974 | Argentina 1978 | Spain 1982 | Mexico 1986 | Italy 1990 | United States 1994 | France 1998 | Korea/Japan 2002 | Germany 2006 | South Africa 2010 | 2014 | 2018 </p>
<p>Awards Goalscorers History<br />
Hosts Mascots Qualification<br />
Records Team apps Trophy </p>
<p>FIFA Women&#8217;s World Cup<br />
China 1991 | Sweden 1995 | USA 1999 | USA 2003 | China 2007 | 2011</p>
<p>FIFA World Cup squads v • d • e<br />
Uruguay 1930 | Italy 1934 | France 1938 | Brazil 1950 | Switzerland 1954 | Sweden 1958 | Chile 1962 | England 1966 | Mexico 1970 | West Germany 1974 | Argentina 1978 | Spain 1982 | Mexico 1986 | Italy 1990 | USA 1994 | France 1998 | Korea/Japan 2002 | Germany 2006</p>
<p>2006 FIFA World Cup stages v • d • e<br />
Group A Group B Group C Group D Group E<br />
Group F Group G Group H Knockout stage Final </p>
<p>2006 FIFA World Cup general information<br />
Qualification Seeding Squads Schedule Discipline<br />
Officials Controversies Broadcasting Sponsorship Miscellany </p>
<p>2006 FIFA World Cup finalists v • d • e<br />
Champions: Italy </p>
<p>Runners-up: France </p>
<p>Third place: Germany </p>
<p>Fourth place: Portugal </p>
<p>Eliminated in Quarter-finals: Argentina | Brazil | England | Ukraine |</p>
<p>Eliminated in Round of 16: Australia | Ecuador | Ghana | Mexico | Netherlands | Spain | Sweden | Switzerland</p>
<p>Eliminated in Group Stage: Angola | Costa Rica | Côte d&#8217;Ivoire | Croatia | Czech Republic | Iran | Japan | Korea Republic | Paraguay | Poland | Saudi Arabia | Serbia &amp; Montenegro | Togo | Trinidad and Tobago | Tunisia | United States</p>
<p>Retrieved from &#8220;http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2006_FIFA_World_Cup_squads&#8221;<br />
Categories: 2006 FIFA World Cup related lists | FIFA World Cup squads</p>
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