Football 7-a-side at the 2008 Summer Paralympics
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7-a-side football at the 2008 Summer Paralympics
2008 Summer Paralympics
The 2008 Summer Paralympic Games, the thirteenth Paralympics, took place in Beijing, China from September 6 to September 17, 2008. As with the 2008 Summer Olympics, equestrian events were held in Hong Kong and sailing events in Qingdao....

was held at the Olympic Green Hockey Field
Olympic Green Hockey Field
The Olympic Green Hockey Field was one of nine temporary venues used for the 2008 Summer Olympics. It hosted the field hockey competitions during those games....

 from September 8 to September 16. One event was contested, a men's team competition.

Classfication

The sport of 7-a-side football is for people with cerebral palsy; athletes classified as CP5 through CP8 may take part. The classification system grades player by the extent of their disability, with lower numbers corresponding to more severe impairment. At least one CP5 or CP6 player, and no more than three CP8 players, may be on the field at a given time.

Qualification

Match Qualification Criteria Amount Nations
2006/2007 Zonal Qualify Tournament (Team qualify with this must reach top 10 in world championship, otherwise the slots will allocate to highest rank and not qualifed team in the world championship) 2006 European CPISRA Football 7-a-side Championship 1
2006 FESPIC Games 1
2007 Para-Pan America Games 1
2007 CPISRA Football 7-a-side World Championship Top 4 in the team not qualifed 4
1
2
Host Nation Auto-qualification if take part in either 2007 World Championship or 2006/07 Zonal Championship 1
Total 8

  1. The slot was won by team Scotland
    Scotland
    Scotland is a country that is part of the United Kingdom. Occupying the northern third of the island of Great Britain, it shares a border with England to the south and is bounded by the North Sea to the east, the Atlantic Ocean to the north and west, and the North Channel and Irish Sea to the...

     but is allocated to the unified team of Scotland, England, Wales and Northern Ireland.
  2. The rank of the united team of England and Wales is higher than Ireland, but only one team can represent Great Britain, so the Republic of Ireland qualified as following best non-qualified team.

Competition format

The eight teams were divided into two even groups for a single round robin group stage. The top two teams of each group qualified for the semifinal, while the lower two teams from each group competed for 5th through 8th places. Games consisted of two 30-minute halves. A victory ceremony was held just after the finish of the gold medal match, at 18:00 on September 16.

Group A

Team P W D L G GA GD Score
3 3 0 0 21 1
20
9
3 2 0 1 9 3
6
6
3 1 0 2 9 14
3
3 0 0 3 1 22
0

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Group B

Team P W D L G GA GD Score
3 3 0 0 19 1
18
9
3 2 0 1 7 6
1
6
3 0 1 2 3 12
1
3 0 1 2 2 12
1

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5th-8th classfication

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Semifinal

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Bronze medal match

Final

Medallists

Men's team

Volodymyr Antonyuk (captain)

Kostyantyn Symashko 

Vitaliy Trushev 

Serhiy Vakulenko 

Taras Dutko 

Anatolii Shevchyk 

Oleksandr Devlysh 

Ivan Shkvarlo 

Andriy Tsukanov 

Denys Ponomaryov 

Mykola Mikhovych 

Ihor Kosenko 

Coach: Sergiy Ovcharenko


Ivan Potekhin (captain)

Alexander Lekov 

Lasha Murvanadze 

Pavel Borisov 

Aleksey Tumakov 

Alexey Chesmin 

Andrey Kuvaev 

Oleg Smirnov 

Andrey Lozhechnikov 

Georgy Nadzharyan 

Mamuka Dzimistarishvili 

Stanislav Kolykhalov 

Coach: Avtandil Baramidze


Ardeshir Mahini (captain)

Esmaeil Malekzadeh 

Bahman Ansari 

Morteza Heidari 

Ehsan Gholam-Hosseinpour 

Moslem Akbari 

Abdolreza Karimzadeh 

Habibollah Heidari-Mehr 

Gholamreza Najafi 

Hadi Safari 

Rasoul Atash-Afrouz 

Coach: Alireza Raadi

External links

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