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2004 AFF Championship

The 2004 AFF Championship (officially known as the 2004 Tiger Cup for sponsorship reasons) was the 5th edition of the AFF Championship, the football championship of nations affiliated to the ASEAN Football Federation (AFF), and the last time under the name Tiger Cup. This was the first time a new format had been applied, with Group stage was jointly hosted by Vietnam and Malaysia from 7 to 16 December 2004, and top two teams from each group advanced to the Semi-finals and the Final, which was played in a two-leg home-and-away format from 28 December 2004 to 16 January 2005. This was also the final AFF Cup has a third-place match, then it wasn't continued since the 2007 edition.

Thailand were the two-time defending champions, but were eliminated in Group stage. Singapore won the tournament by a 5–2 victory in the two-legged final against Indonesia to secure their second title.

Summary

In the group matches, Indonesia, coached by former Thailand coach Peter Withe, emerged as the Group A winners with ten points, 17 goals scored and none conceded. They were the hot favourites to win the 2004 AFF Championship after bundling out the hosts Vietnam with an unexpected 3–0 victory. Less than a day after the match had ended, the Vietnam Football Federation requested the resignation from its national coach Edson Tavares, despite his requests to stay on until the last match. Singapore, led by Radojko Avramović pipped out the hosts by just a single point and remained to be the only team in the championship to not lose a single match.

Following the tournament motto "Anything can happen", Myanmar, under coach Ivan Kolev emerged as the surprise, holding defending champions Thailand to a draw and beating Malaysia on their own turf.

Teams

All teams from member associations of the ASEAN Football Federation (AFF) participated with the exception of Brunei. However, they would be replaced by East Timor when sponsors Tiger Beer stated in May 2004 that the world's newest country at the time would be joining the competition.[1] This kept the tournament at 10 teams.

Squads

Venues

Tournament

Group stage

Group A


Thống Nhất Stadium, Ho Chi Minh City
Referee: Ahmad Khalidi Supian (Malaysia)

Mỹ Đình National Stadium, Hanoi
Referee: Abdulhameed Ebrahim (Bahrain)

Mỹ Đình National Stadium, Hanoi
Referee: Ahmad Khalidi Supian (Malaysia)

Mỹ Đình National Stadium, Hanoi
Referee: Rungklay Mongkol (Thailand)
Lạch Tray Stadium, Hai Phong
Referee: Abdulhameed Ebrahim (Bahrain)

Group B

Bukit Jalil National Stadium, Kuala Lumpur
Referee: Subash Anthony Lazar (Singapore)




KLFA Stadium, Kuala Lumpur
Referee: Subash Anthony Lazar (Singapore)

Knockout stage

Semi-finals

First Leg

KLFA Stadium, Kuala Lumpur
Referee: Rungklay Mongkol (Thailand)
Second Leg

Singapore win 8–5 on aggregate


Indonesia win 5–3 on aggregate

Third place play-off

Final

First Leg
Second Leg

Singapore win 5–2 on aggregate

View of the Singapore National Stadium just before the commencement of the 2004 AFF Championship finals match.

Awards

Goal scorers

7 goals
6 goals
5 goals
4 goals
3 goals
2 goals
1 goal
Own goal

Team statistics

This table will show the ranking of teams throughout the tournament.

Notes

  1. ^ This match was moved by two days from 1 January 2005 as a mark for respect for the victims of the Indian Ocean tsunami catastrophe.[2][3][4]

References

General
Specific
  1. ^ "East Timor to play in Southeast Asia's 2004 Tiger Cup soccer tournament". Associated Press. 7 May 2004.
  2. ^ "Hoãn trận bán kết Tiger Cup lượt về Malaysia - Indonesia". VnExpress. Retrieved 3 January 2005.
  3. ^ Hughes, Rob (30 December 2004). "Soccer : Around the globe, the show goes on". New York Times. Retrieved 3 January 2005.
  4. ^ "Tiger Cup game hit by tsunami". RTE. 30 December 2004. Retrieved 3 January 2005.

External links