Football at the 2011 Pan American Games – Men's tournament

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Men's football tournament at the XVI Pan American Games
Football pictogram.svg
VenueOmnilife Stadium
DatesOctober 19 – October 28
Competitors144 from 8 nations
Medalists
Gold medal 
Silver medal 
Bronze medal 
«2007
2015»

The men's association football tournament at the 2011 Pan American Games was held in Guadalajara, Mexico at the Omnilife Stadium from October 19 to 28, 2011. Associations affiliated with FIFA were invited to send their men's U-22 national teams, with 3 no-age-limit players per team allowed.[1] [2] Ecuador were the defending champions from the 2007 Pan American Games in Rio de Janeiro, defeating Jamaica 2–1, but they were eliminated during the group stage.

For these Games, the men competed in an eight-team tournament, which is a drop from 12 at the 2007 games. Preliminary matches commenced on October 19. The teams were grouped into two pools of four teams each for a round-robin preliminary round. The top two teams in each pool advanced to a four-team single-elimination bracket.

Mexico won the gold medal for the fourth time in this competition, defeating six-time gold-medalists Argentina in the tournament's final. Uruguay took the bronze medal.

Teams[]

Qualification[]

Event Date Location Vacancies Qualified
Host Nation 1  Mexico
CONCACAF Qualifying Tournament Mar 28 – Apr 10, 2011 Guatemala 3*  
 Costa Rica
 
 Trinidad and Tobago*
CONMEBOL Qualifying Tournament Mar 12 – Apr 9, 2011 Ecuador Ecuador 4  Brazil
 Uruguay
 Argentina
 Ecuador
TOTAL 8
  • The highest finisher from each the Caribbean and Central American regions will qualify, along with the best qualifying team from either region.[3]
  • Guatemala later withdrew due to issues of discipline within the team. They were replaced by Trinidad and Tobago, after Honduras and Panama who finished ahead of Trinidad and Tobago declined to participate.[4]

Squads[]

The men's tournament is a full international tournament with a U-22 age limit. Each nation must submit a squad of 18 players September 2011. A minimum of two goalkeepers (plus one optional alternate goalkeeper) must be included in the squad.[2]

Format[]

  • Eight teams are split into 2 preliminary round groups of 4 teams each. The top 2 teams from each group qualify for the knockout stage.
  • The third and fourth placed teams are eliminated from the competition.
  • In the semifinals, the matchups are as follows: A1 vs. B2 and B1 vs. A2
  • The winning teams from the semifinals play for the gold medal. The losing teams compete for the bronze medal.

Preliminary round[]

All times are local Central Daylight Time (UTC-5)[5]

Qualified for the Semifinals

Group A[]

Nation PLD W D L GF GA GD Pts
 Mexico 3 2 1 0 8 4 +4 7
 Uruguay 3 1 1 1 4 6 -2 4
 Trinidad and Tobago 3 0 3 0 3 3 0 3
 Ecuador 3 0 1 2 2 4 -2 1
Mexico 2–1 Ecuador
Peralta Goal 25'
Enriquez Goal 80'
Report[dead link] Congo Goal 8'
Estadio Omnilife, Guadalajara
Referee: (El Salvador)

Ecuador 0–1 Uruguay
Report Puppo Goal 4'
Estadio Omnilife, Guadalajara
Referee: (Honduras)

Mexico 1–1 Trinidad and Tobago
Peralta Goal 30' Report Gay Goal 12'
Estadio Omnilife, Guadalajara
Referee: Omar Ponce (Ecuador)

Trinidad and Tobago 1–1 Ecuador
Goal 69' Report[dead link] Goal 17'
Estadio Omnilife, Guadalajara
Referee: David Gantar (Canada)

Mexico 5–2 Uruguay
Amione Goal 15'48'
Ponce Goal 29'
Zavala Goal 42'
Peralta Goal 71'
Report Prieto Goal 51'
M. Rodríguez Goal 57'
Estadio Omnilife, Guadalajara

Uruguay 1–1 Trinidad and Tobago
Abero Goal 17' Report[dead link] Winchester Goal 10'
Estadio Omnilife, Guadalajara
Referee: (El Salvador)
  • Match was moved to October 25, because of a volcanic eruption spewed ash clouds in Chile which prevented the team from Uruguay to travel to Guadalajara in time.[6]

Group B[]

Nation PLD W D L GF GA GD Pts
 Argentina 3 2 1 0 5 1 +4 7
 Costa Rica 3 2 0 1 4 4 0 6
 Brazil 3 0 2 1 2 4 -2 2
  3 0 1 2 0 2 -2 1
Costa Rica 1–0 
Goal 55' Report[dead link]
Estadio Omnilife, Guadalajara

Argentina 1–1 Brazil
Araujo Goal 74' Report[dead link] Henrique Goal 63'
Estadio Omnilife, Guadalajara
Referee: Omar Ponce (Ecuador)

Costa Rica 0–3 Argentina
Report[dead link] Fragapane Goal 40'
Pezzella Goal 60'
Kruspzky Goal 76'
Estadio Omnilife, Guadalajara
Referee: David Gantar (Canada)

Brazil 0–0 
Report[dead link]
Estadio Omnilife, Guadalajara

 0–1 Argentina
Report[dead link] Laba Goal 79'
Estadio Omnilife, Guadalajara
Referee: (Honduras)

Brazil 1–3 Costa Rica
Henrique Goal 30' Report Goal 1'
McDonald Goal 20'43'
Estadio Omnilife, Guadalajara

Knockout stage[]

 
Semi-finalsFinal
 
      
 
October 26, 17:00 – Estadio Omnilife
 
 
 Mexico3
 
October 28, 20:00 – Estadio Omnilife
 
 Costa Rica0
 
 Mexico1
 
October 26, 20:00 – Estadio Omnilife
 
 Argentina0
 
 Argentina1
 
 
 Uruguay0
 
Third place
 
 
October 28, 17:00 – Estadio Omnilife
 
 
 Costa Rica 1
 
 
 Uruguay 2

Semifinals[]

Mexico 3–0 Costa Rica
Peralta Goal 19'38'46' Report[dead link]
Estadio Omnilife, Guadalajara
Referee: (Honduras)

Argentina 1–0 Uruguay
Pezzella Goal 9' Report
Estadio Omnilife, Guadalajara
Referee: Omar Ponce (Ecuador)

Bronze Medal match[]

Costa Rica 1–2 Uruguay
McDonald Goal 81' (pen.) Report G. Silva Goal 48'
Píriz Goal 61'
Estadio Omnilife, Guadalajara

Gold Medal match[]

Mexico 1–0 Argentina
Amione Goal 75' Report
Estadio Omnilife, Guadalajara
Referee: Marlon Mejía (El Salvador)
 2011 Pan American Games Winners 

Mexico
Fourth title

Goalscorers[]

6 goals
3 goals
2 goals
1 goal

Medalists[]

Event Gold Silver Bronze
Men's football  Mexico

José de Jesús Corona
Hugo Isaác Rodríguez
Hiram Mier
Néstor Araujo
Dárvin Chávez
Jesús Zavala
Javier Aquino
Carlos Emilio Orrantía
Oribe Peralta
Othoniel Arce
Jerónimo Amione
José Antonio Rodríguez
Ricardo Bocanegra
Jorge Enríquez
César Ibáñez
Miguel Ángel Ponce
Isaác Brizuela
Diego Reyes

 Argentina
Esteban Andrada
Germán Pezzella
Lucas Kruspzky
Hugo Nervo
Ezequiel Cirigliano
Leandro González Pirez
Matías Laba
Leonardo Ferreyra
Carlos Luque
Michael Hoyos
Sergio Araujo
Rodrigo Rey
David Achucarro
Franco Fragapane
Lucas Villafáñez
Adrián Martínez
Fernando Coniglio
Alan Ruiz
 Uruguay
Mathías Cubero
Guillermo de los Santos
Gastón Silva
Adrián Gunino
Facundo Píriz
Mauricio Prieto
Leonardo Pais
Gonzalo Papa
Federico Puppo
Tabaré Viudez
Maxi Rodríguez
Martín Rodríguez
Santiago Silva
Emiliano Albín
Diego Rodríguez
Mathías Abero
Gianni Rodríguez
Matías Britos

Final standings[]

Rank Team Record
Gold medal icon.svg  Mexico 4–1–0
Silver medal icon.svg  Argentina 3–1–1
Bronze medal icon.svg  Uruguay 2–1–2
4  Costa Rica 2–0–3
5  Trinidad and Tobago 0–3–0
6  Brazil 0–2–1
7  Ecuador 0–1–2
8   0–1–2

References[]

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