1998_CONCACAF_Women's_Championship

1998 CONCACAF Women's Championship

1998 CONCACAF Women's Championship

International football competition


The 1998 CONCACAF Women's Championship was the fourth staging of the CONCACAF Women's Championship, the international women's association football tournament for North America, Central America and Caribbean nations organized by CONCACAF. The final stage of the tournament took place at Etobicoke and Scarborough in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. Canada took the sole automatic qualifying place for the 1999 FIFA Women's World Cup by finishing first. The runner-up, Mexico, qualified after defeating Argentina in a two-leg playoff in December 1998.

Quick Facts Tournament details, Host country ...

The tournament was originally planned to take place in Haiti, but was moved due to disputes between the Haitian government and the Haitian Football Federation.[2] This was the only edition of CONCACAF's Women's Championship or the CONCACAF Women's Gold Cup in which the traditional superpower of CONCACAF women's football, the United States, did not participate. This was because they directly qualified for the 1999 Women's World Cup as hosts of the event.

Qualification

UNCAF qualifying tournament

The 1998 UNCAF Qualifying Tournament took place in Guatemala City between 19 July and 25 July 1998. It was won by the hosts Guatemala after defeating Haiti 1–0 in the final match. Guatemala, Haiti and Costa Rica qualified for the 1998 CONCACAF Women's Championship.

Group A

More information Team, Pld ...
More information Costa Rica, 17–0 ...

More information Haiti, 2–0 ...

More information Haiti, 7–1 ...

Group B

More information Team, Pld ...
More information Guatemala, 11–0 ...

More information El Salvador, 1–1 ...

More information Guatemala, 4–1 ...

Third place play-off

More information Costa Rica, 5–1 ...

Final

More information Guatemala, 1–0 ...

CFU Qualifying Round

The CFU Qualifying Round consisted of home-and-away ties. It is not clear whether Martinique and Puerto Rico received a bye to the finals, or whether their (unknown) intended opponents withdrew.

More information Team 1, Agg.Tooltip Aggregate score ...

1 Haiti were to play Bahamas but apparently the latter withdrew.

More information Trinidad and Tobago, 7–0 ...
Centre of Excellence Ground, Macoya

More information Trinidad and Tobago, 8–1 ...
Centre of Excellence Ground, Macoya

Costa Rica, Guatemala, Haiti, Martinique, Puerto Rico and Trinidad and Tobago qualified for the final tournament.

Participating teams

More information Team, Qualification ...

Venues

More information Toronto ...

Final tournament

Group A

More information Team, Pld ...
More information Canada, 21–0 ...
More information Guatemala, 2–0 ...

More information Puerto Rico, 0–8 ...
More information Canada, 14–0 ...

More information Puerto Rico, 0–9 ...
More information Canada, 4–0 ...

Group B

More information Team, Pld ...
More information Trinidad and Tobago, 2–1 ...
More information Mexico, 3–2 ...

More information Haiti, 1–7 ...
More information Costa Rica, 3–1 ...

More information Costa Rica, 2–1 ...
More information Trinidad and Tobago, 2–2 ...

Knockout stage

Bracket

 
Semi-finalsFinal
 
      
 
4 September
 
 
 Guatemala0
 
6 September
 
 Mexico8
 
 Mexico0
 
4 September
 
 Canada1
 
 Canada2
 
 
 Costa Rica0
 
Third place
 
 
6 September
 
 
 Guatemala0
 
 
 Costa Rica4

Semi-finals

More information Guatemala, 0–8 ...

More information Canada, 2–0 ...

Third place playoff

More information Costa Rica, 4–0 ...

Final

More information Canada, 1–0 ...

Canada won the tournament and qualified for 1999 FIFA Women's World Cup. Mexico advanced to CONCACAF–CONMEBOL play-off.

Awards

 1998 CONCACAF's Women's Championship winners 

Canada
First title

Statistics

Final ranking

More information Pos, Team ...

References

  1. "Canadian soccer timeline from 1997 to 2000". canadasoccer.com. Archived from the original on March 15, 2016. Retrieved February 22, 2016.
  2. Giron, Carlos (June 29, 1998). "Canada to host CONCACAF Women's World Cup Qualifier". CONCACAF. New York. Archived from the original on January 21, 2001. Retrieved January 21, 2021.

Share this article:

This article uses material from the Wikipedia article 1998_CONCACAF_Women's_Championship, and is written by contributors. Text is available under a CC BY-SA 4.0 International License; additional terms may apply. Images, videos and audio are available under their respective licenses.