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Football at the 1980 Summer Olympics

The football tournament at the 1980 Summer Olympics started on 20 July and ended on 2 August. Only one event, the men's tournament, was contested. Seven qualified countries did not participate, joining the American-led boycott in protest of the December 1979 Soviet invasion of Afghanistan.[1]

Sixteen teams were divided into four groups:

In the technical report following the competition, FIFA reported that: "Compared with the 1979 World Youth Tournament in Japan and the 1978 World Cup finals in Argentina, the standard of football at the Olympic Football Tournament was generally of an inferior quality".[2]

The tournament was primarily hosted by Moscow and Leningrad in the Russian SFSR, with some group stage games in Kiev, Ukrainian SSR and Minsk, Byelorussian SSR.

Venues

The football tournament was the most attended event on these Olympics: 1,821,624 spectators watched 32 matches of it at the stadiums.

Qualification

Due to the American-led boycott, countries (in brackets) who qualified did not enter the final tournament. Spain sent a team under the IOC flag. The following 16 teams qualified for the 1980 Olympics football tournament:

Match officials

Squads

Final tournament

First round

Group A

Source: FIFA
Kirov Stadium, Leningrad
Attendance: 100,000
Referee: Marijan Raus (Yugoslavia)

Lenin Stadium, Moscow
Attendance: 80,000
Referee: Franz Woehrer (Austria)

Kirov Stadium, Leningrad
Attendance: 70,000
Referee: Emilio Guruceta-Muro (Spain)

Lenin Stadium, Moscow
Attendance: 80,000
Referee: Marwan Arafat (Syria)

Dinamo Stadium, Moscow
Attendance: 52,000
Referee: Bob Valentine (Great Britain)

Kirov Stadium, Leningrad
Attendance: 80,000
Referee: Luis Paulino Siles (Costa Rica)

Group B

Source: FIFA

Dinamo Stadium, Moscow
Referee: Klaus Scheurell (East Germany)

Dinamo Stadium, Moscow
Referee: Anders Mattson (Finland)


Dinamo Stadium, Moscow
Referee: Salim Naji Al-Hachami (Iraq)

Group C

Source: FIFA
Republican Stadium, Kiev
Attendance: 100,000
Referee: Ulf Eriksson (Sweden)

Dinamo Stadium, Minsk
Referee: Vojtech Christov (Czechoslovakia)

Republican Stadium, Kiev
Attendance: 70,000
Referee: Romualdo Arppi Filho (Brazil)

Dinamo Stadium, Minsk
Referee: José Castro Lozada (Venezuela)

Dinamo Stadium, Minsk
Referee: Eldar Azimzade (Soviet Union)

Republican Stadium, Kiev
Attendance: 80,000
Referee: Ulf Eriksson (Sweden)

Group D

Source: FIFA
Dinamo Stadium, Minsk
Referee: Mario Rubio Vázquez (Mexico)

Republican Stadium, Kiev
Referee: Nyirenda Chayu (Zambia)

Dinamo Stadium, Minsk
Referee: Bassey Eyo-Honesty (Nigeria)

Republican Stadium, Kiev
Attendance: 40,000
Referee: Ramón Calderón Castro (Cuba)

Republican Stadium, Kiev
Attendance: 50,000
Referee: Ali Albannai Abdulwahab (Kuwait)

Dinamo Stadium, Minsk
Referee: André Daina (Switzerland)

Bracket

Quarter-finals

Dinamo Stadium, Minsk
Referee: Klaus Scheurell (East Germany)

Dinamo Stadium, Moscow
Attendance: 48,000
Referee: Mario Rubio Vázquez (Mexico)


Republican Stadium, Kiev
Attendance: 48,000
Referee: Romualdo Arppi Filho (Brazil)

Semi-finals

Lenin Stadium, Moscow
Attendance: 95,000
Referee: Ulf Eriksson (Sweden)

Dinamo Stadium, Moscow
Attendance: 48,000
Referee: Franz Woehrer (Austria)

Bronze Medal match

Dinamo Stadium, Moscow
Attendance: 45,000
Referee: Bob Valentine (Great Britain)

Gold Medal match

Lenin Stadium, Moscow
Attendance: 70,000
Referee: Eldar Azimzade (Soviet Union)

The final was played in a hard rain for the third straight Olympics. Both teams played with ten players after the 58th minute after one player from each team was red-carded.

Medalists

View of the stadium from the final
Olympic football pins from 1980

Goalscorers

With five goals, Sergey Andreyev of Soviet Union was the top scorer of the tournament. In total, 82 goals were scored by 52 different players, with only one of them credited as own goal.

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

Final ranking

Below the final ranking after the end of the tournament.[3]

Source: [citation needed]

References

  1. ^ "Football at the 1980 Moscow Summer Games". Sports Reference. Archived from the original on 17 April 2020. Retrieved 27 October 2018.
  2. ^ "FIFA Technical Report - 1980 Olympics Football Tournament" (PDF). FIFA. 1980. Archived from the original (PDF) on 20 December 2011. Retrieved 26 February 2014.
  3. ^ "Football Tournament 1980 Olympiad".

External links