World Cup of Masters
| Organiser(s) | IMFA |
|---|---|
| Founded | 1987 |
| Abolished | 1997 |
| Region | International |
| Teams | 8 (1995) |
| Related competitions | Legends Cup |
| Last champions | File:Flag of Brazil.svg Brazil (1995) |
| Most championships | File:Flag of Brazil.svg Brazil (4 titles) |
| Broadcaster | Bandeirantes |
| Tournaments |
|---|
The World Cup of Masters, also known as the Pelé World Cup and Mundial de Seniors, was a Mini World Cup event that ran every two years from 1987 until 1995. The tournament was for senior (35+) players and it was under the rules of the IMFA (International Master Football Association), presided by Julio Mazzei at the time. In 1990 the term "seniors" was replaced by "masters". The editions until 1991 were organized by Brazilian TV station Bandeirantes, and the International Masters Football Association.[1]
Most of the teams participated used to play masters games on a regular basis and kept the quality of football on a competitive level. Brazil Masters team, which won the 1989 event and finished second to Argentina in 1987.
There were two exceptions to FIFA rules: players must be 34-and-over, and teams were allowed five substitutions instead of two. Teams were awarded two points for a win, one point for a tie and no points for a loss in group play. Semifinal, third-place and championship matches would be decided by penalty kicks if tied at the end of regulation time.[2]
International Master Football Association
[edit | edit source]IMFA after consultation with FIFA's general secretary Sepp Blatter took initiative to organise the tournaments for legendary veteran players in an attempt to bring back a glimpse of the previous glorious World Cups. Julio Mazzei as a president of IMFA played a major part, while assisted by vice-president and England representative Sandra Roberts and German Werner Treimetten.
World Cup Legends
[edit | edit source]Legends of the game participated in the tournaments reviving somehow the FIFA World Cups of the previous years. Pelé was a starter for Brazil in the opening game of the 1987 tournament, while Zico played a key role in Brazil's winning performance in 1990. Other players played in the World Cups of Masters were Mario Kempes, Klaus Allofs, Gerd Müller, Karl-Heinz Rummenigge and Horst Hrubesch .
As Rivellino in 1989 and 1990 after 1970 FIFA World Cup either three times, Paolo Rossi and Alessandro Altobelli were crowned World Champions for the second time in their career in 1993 after having already won the 1982 FIFA World Cup. This time it was not West Germany in the final but Austria who co-hosted the tournament with Italy. The latter presented some great players in the tournaments like Hans Krankl, Herbert Prohaska and Walter Schachner. Other big names of the world football fielded in the tournament were Paul Breitner, José Altafini, Bruno Conti, Harald Schumacher, Hans-Peter Briegel, Klaus Augenthaler, Jairzinho, Enrico Albertosi, Sócrates, Bobby Moore, Frank Worthington and René van de Kerkhof.
Luciano do Valle won 4 trophies with Brazil but Enzo Bearzot proved to be the only coach won a FIFA World Cup as well.
Results
[edit | edit source]Finals
[edit | edit source]- Keys
- aet: after extra time
- p: penalty shoot-out
| Ed. | Years | Hosts | Champions | Score | Runners up | Venues | City | Num. teams |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 1987 | Brazil |
File:Flag of Argentina.svg Argentina |
1–0 | File:Flag of Brazil.svg Brazil |
Pacaembu | São Paulo | 5 |
| 2 | 1989 | Brazil |
File:Flag of Brazil.svg Brazil |
4–2 | File:Flag of Uruguay.svg Uruguay |
Canindé | São Paulo | 6 |
| 3 | 1990 | Brazil |
File:Flag of Brazil.svg Brazil |
5–0 | File:Flag of the Netherlands.svg Netherlands |
Pacaembu | São Paulo | 5 |
| 4 | 1991 | United States | File:Flag of Brazil.svg Brazil |
2–1 | File:Flag of Argentina.svg Argentina |
Joe Robbie | Miami | 6 |
| 5 | 1993 | Italy |
File:Flag of Italy.svg Italy |
2–0 | File:Flag of Austria.svg Austria |
Nereo Rocco | Trieste | 8 |
| 6 | 1995 | File:Flag of Brazil.svg Brazil |
1–1
(3–2 p) |
File:Flag of Argentina.svg Argentina |
Wörthersee | Klagenfurt | 8 |
Results by team
[edit | edit source]Most successful team was Brazil with 4 trophies, while Argentina won only 1 Cup and lost the 1995 one to Brazil in penalties. Italy's squad of 1982 repeated the 1982 in 1993 beating Austria by 2–0 in the final.
| Teams | Winners | Runners-up |
|---|---|---|
| File:Flag of Brazil.svg Brazil | 4 | 1
(1987) |
| File:Flag of Italy.svg Italy | 1
(1993) |
0 |
| File:Flag of Argentina.svg Argentina | 1
(1987) |
2
(1991, 1995) |
| File:Flag of Uruguay.svg Uruguay | 0 | 1 (1989) |
| File:Flag of the Netherlands.svg Netherlands | 0 | 1 (1990) |
| File:Flag of Austria.svg Austria | 0 | 1 (1993) |
Participating teams and results
[edit | edit source]Brazil and Argentina participated in the 6 tournaments facing each other in the final twice, in 1989 which was the inaugural year and in 1995, the very last year of the Masters tournaments. Italy also had 6 participations winning the trophy once in the 1993 edition.
| Team | File:Flag of Brazil.svg 1987 |
File:Flag of Brazil.svg 1989 |
File:Flag of Brazil.svg 1990 |
File:Flag of USA.svg 1991 |
File:Flag of Austria.svg File:Flag of Italy.svg 1993 |
File:Flag of Austria.svg 1995 |
Total |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| File:Flag of Brazil.svg Brazil | 2nd | W | W | W | 4th | W | 6 |
| File:Flag of Argentina.svg Argentina | W | 2nd | 3rd | 2nd | G | 2nd | 6 |
| File:Flag of Austria.svg Austria | – | – | – | – | 2nd | G | 2 |
| File:Flag of England.svg England | – | – | – | G | G | – | 2 |
| File:Flag of France.svg France | – | – | – | – | – | G | 1 |
| File:Flag of Germany.svg Germany | G | G | – | G | 3rd | 3rd | 5 |
| File:Flag of the United Kingdom.svg Great Britain | – | G | – | – | – | – | 1 |
| File:Flag of Italy.svg Italy | G | G | G | 3rd | W | 4th | 6 |
| File:Flag of the Netherlands.svg Netherlands | – | – | 2nd | – | G | G | 3 |
| File:Flag of Poland.svg Poland | – | – | G | – | – | – | 1 |
| File:Flag of Portugal (official).svg Portugal | – | – | – | – | – | G | 1 |
| File:Flag of Uruguay.svg Uruguay | G | 2nd | – | 4th | G | – | 4 |
W: winner.
G: eliminated in group stage.
Top scorers
[edit | edit source]Austrian Walter Schachner is the overall goalscorer with 8 goals, all scored in 1993. Brazilian Zico was the top scorer in 1990 and 1991 scoring a total of 6 goals in the Cups.
Mario Kempes and Paolo Rossi scored 2 goals each with Rivellino having a total of 3 goals. Legendary Pelé, at the age of 47, didn't manage to score though he played for 90 minutes in the opening 1987 match.
| Edition | Golden Boot | Goals |
|---|---|---|
| 1987 | Brazil Rivellino | 2 |
| 1989 | Brazil Cláudio Adão | 7 |
| 1990 | Netherlands Johnny Rep | 4 |
| Poland Lesław Ćmikiewicz | ||
| 1991 | Brazil Zico | 3 |
| 1993 | Austria Walter Schachner | 8 |
Players with most participations
[edit | edit source]See also
[edit | edit source]References
[edit | edit source]- ^ Copa Pelé: El torneo senior de selecciones campeonas del mundo by FEDERICO KONISZCZER on Bitbol, 19 January 2022
- ^ Pelé World Cup on the RSSSF
- World Cup of Masters
- Defunct international association football competitions in South America
- Defunct international association football competitions
- International men's association football invitational tournaments
- Recurring sporting events established in 1987
- Recurring sporting events disestablished in 1995