2017 in association football
The following were the scheduled events of association football for the year 2017 throughout the world.
Years in association football |
|
|
|
Events
Men's national teams
AFC
- 9 – 16 December: 2017 EAFF E-1 Football Championship in
Japan : South Korea : Japan : China PR - 4th:
North Korea
CAF
- 14 January – 5 February: 2017 Africa Cup of Nations in
Gabon : Cameroon : Egypt : Burkina Faso - 4th:
Ghana
CONCACAF
- 13 – 22 January: 2017 Copa Centroamericana in
Panama : Honduras : Panama : El Salvador - 4th:
Costa Rica
- 7 – 26 July: 2017 CONCACAF Gold Cup in the
United States : United States : Jamaica
Youth
- 18 January – 11 February: 2017 South American Youth Football Championship in
Ecuador - 11 – 24 February: 2017 OFC U-17 Championship in
Tahiti - 17 February – 5 March: 2017 CONCACAF U-20 Championship in
Costa Rica - 23 February – 19 March: 2017 South American Under-17 Football Championship in
Chile - 26 February – 12 March: 2017 Africa U-20 Cup of Nations in
Zambia : Zambia : Senegal : Guinea - 4th:
South Africa
- 21 April – 7 May: 2017 CONCACAF U-17 Championship in
Panama : Mexico : United States
- 3 May – 19 May: 2017 UEFA European Under-17 Championship in
Croatia - 14 – 28 May: 2017 Africa U-17 Cup of Nations in
Gabon - 20 May – 11 June: 2017 FIFA U-20 World Cup in
South Korea - 16 – 30 June: 2017 UEFA European Under-21 Championship in
Poland - 2 – 15 July: 2017 UEFA European Under-19 Championship in
Georgia - 18 – 27 September: 2017 SAFF U-18 Championship in
Bhutan : Nepal : Bangladesh : India - 4th:
Bhutan
- 6 – 28 October: 2017 FIFA U-17 World Cup in
India
Women's
- 16 July – 6 August: UEFA Women's Euro 2017 in the
Netherlands : Netherlands : Denmark
- 8 – 16 December: 2017 EAFF E-1 Football Championship (women) in
Japan : North Korea : Japan : China PR - 4th:
South Korea
Women's youth
- 2 – 14 May: 2017 UEFA Women's Under-17 Championship in the
Czech Republic - 8 – 20 August: 2017 UEFA Women's Under-19 Championship in
Northern Ireland - 10 – 23 September: 2017 AFC U-16 Women's Championship in
Thailand : North Korea : South Korea : Japan - 4th:
China PR
- 14 – 28 October: 2017 AFC U-19 Women's Championship in
China : Japan : North Korea : China PR - 4th:
Australia
Multi-sport events
Men's
Women's
- 15–24 August: Southeast Asian Games in
Malaysia : Vietnam : Thailand : Myanmar - 4th:
Philippines
News
- February 3 – CAS rejected the request for provisional measures made by Jeonbuk Hyundai Motors in relation to the club's entry into the 2017 AFC Champions League.[1]
Fixed dates for national team matches
Scheduled international matches per their International Match Calendar. Also known as FIFA International Day/Date(s).[2]
- 20–28 March
- 5–13 June
- 28 August – 5 September
- 2–10 October
- 6–14 November
Club continental champions
Men
- Notes
- Awarded title by CONMEBOL after most of the team died in a plane crash on their way to the first leg of the final, at the urging of their intended opponent, Atlético Nacional.[3]
Women
Region | Tournament | Defending champion | Champion | Title | Last honor |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
CONMEBOL (South America) | 2017 Copa Libertadores Femenina | 1 | — | ||
UEFA (Europe) | 2016–17 UEFA Women's Champions League | 4 | 2015–16 |
Domestic leagues
UEFA
AFC
CAF
CONCACAF
CONMEBOL
OFC
Nation | Tournament | Champion | Second place | Title | Last honor |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
2017 Fiji National Football League | Lautoka | Ba | 4 | 2009 | |
2016–17 New Zealand Football Championship | Team Wellington | Auckland City | 2 | 2015–16 | |
2017 PNG National Soccer League | Lae City Dwellers | Madang FC | 2 | 2015 |
Domestic cups
In all tables below, the "title" and "last honor" refer to each cup winner's record in that specific cup competition.
AFC
- The Emperor's Cup final is traditionally held on 1 January of the next calendar year.
- Includes three cups won under the club's original identity of Yanmar Diesel.
UEFA
CAF
Nation | Tournament | Champion | Final score | Second place | Title | Last honor |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2017 Angola Super Cup | 1º de Agosto | 1–0 | Recreativo Libolo | 8 | 2010 | |
2016–17 Algerian Cup | CR Belouizdad | 1–0 | ES Sétif | 7 | 2009 | |
2016–17 Egypt Cup | Al Ahly | 2–1 | Al-Masry SC | 36 | 2006–07 | |
2017 Coupe du Trône | Raja Casablanca | 1–1 (3–1 p) | Difaâ Hassani El Jadidi | 8 | 2012 | |
2016–17 Nedbank Cup | SuperSport United | 4–1 | Orlando Pirates | 5 | 2015–16 | |
2016–17 Tunisian Cup | Club Africain | 1–0 | US Ben Guerdane | 12 | 1999–2000 |
CONCACAF
Nation | Tournament | Champion | Final score | Second place | Title | Last honor |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2017 Canadian Championship | Toronto FC | 3–2 | Montreal Impact | 6 | 2016 | |
2016–17 Copa El Salvador | Santa Tecla | 1–0 | C.D. FAS | 1 | – | |
2017 Honduran Cup | Marathón | 3–0 | Gimnástico | 2 | 1994 | |
Clausura 2017 Copa MX | Guadalajara | 0–0 (3–1 p) | Morelia | 4 | 2015 | |
Apertura 2017 Copa MX | Monterrey | 1–0 | Pachuca | 2 | 1992 | |
2017 Lamar Hunt U.S. Open Cup | Sporting Kansas City | 2–1 | New York Red Bulls | 4 | 2015 |
CONMEBOL
Nation | Tournament | Champion | Final score | Second place | Title | Last honor |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2016–17 Copa Argentina | River Plate | 2–1 | Atlético Tucumán | 2 | 2016 | |
2017 Supercopa Argentina | River Plate | 2–0 | Boca Juniors | 1st | — | |
2017 Copa do Brasil | Cruzeiro | 0–0 (5–3 p) | Flamengo | 5 | 2003 | |
2017 Copa Chile | Santiago Wanderers | 3–1 | Universidad de Chile | 3 | 1961 | |
2017 Copa Colombia | Junior | 3–1 | Independiente Medellín | 2 | 2015 | |
2017 Copa Venezuela | Mineros | 5–4 | Zamora | 3 | 2011 |
II/III Divisions
In all tables below, the "title" and "last honor" listings are in reference to each champion's record at that specific level.
UEFA
CONMEBOL
Nation | Tournament | Champion | Second place | Title | Last honor |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
2016–17 Primera B Nacional | Argentinos Juniors | Chacarita Juniors | 2 | 1996-97 | |
2016–17 Primera B Metropolitana | Deportivo Morón | Deportivo Riestra | 2 | 1989-90 | |
2016–17 Torneo Federal A | Agropecuario Argentino | Gimnasia y Esgrima (M) | 1 | – | |
2017 Campeonato Brasileiro Série B | América Mineiro | Internacional | 2 | 1997 | |
2017 Campeonato Brasileiro Série C | CSA | Fortaleza | 1 | – | |
2017 Campeonato Brasileiro Série D | Operário Ferroviário | Globo | 1 | 2017 | |
2016–17 Primera B | Curicó Unido | San Marcos de Arica | 2 | 2008 | |
2017 Primera B Transición | Unión La Calera | Deportes Copiapó | 3 | 1984 | |
2016–17 Segunda División Profesional | Barnechea | Deportes Melipilla | 1 | – | |
2017 Segunda División Profesional Transición | Deportes Vallenar | Naval | 1 | – | |
2017 Categoría Primera B | Boyacá Chicó | Leones | 2 | 2003 |
CONCACAF
Nation | Tournament | Champion | Second place | Title | Last honor |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
2017 League1 Ontario | Oakville Blue Devils | Vaughan Azzurri | |||
2017 Première Ligue de soccer du Québec season | Blainville | Gatineau | 1 | – | |
2017 Pacific Coast Soccer League | |||||
2017 Ascenso MX Clausura | Lobos BUAP | FC Juárez | 1 | — | |
2017 Ascenso MX Apertura | Alebrijes de Oaxaca | FC Juárez | 1 | — | |
2017 Segunda División Clausura | Tlaxcala | Irapuato | 2 | 2016 Clausura | |
2017 Segunda División Apertura | Tepatitlán | Irapuato | 1 | – | |
2016–17 Tercera División de México | Tecos[lower-alpha 1] | Sporting Canamy | 2 | 1972–73 | |
2017 North American Soccer League[lower-alpha 2] | San Francisco Deltas | New York Cosmos | 1 | — | |
2017 United Soccer League[lower-alpha 2] | Louisville City FC | Swope Park Rangers | 1 | — | |
2017 Premier Development League[lower-alpha 2] | Charlotte Eagles | Thunder Bay Chill | 1 | — | |
2017 National Premier Soccer League | Elm City Express | Midland-Odessa FC | 1 | — | |
2016–17 American Soccer League | Philadelphia Fury | SGFC Eagles Maryland | 1 | – |
- Tecos lost the final, but were named champions after it was found that Sporting Canamy used an ineligible player throughout the season.
- This league includes teams from both the U.S. and Canada.
CAF
Nation | Tournament | Champion | Second place | Title | Last honor |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
2016–17 Ligue 2 | Paradou AC | USM Blida | 1 | – | |
2016–17 Egyptian Second Division | Group A – Alassiouty Sport
Group B – Al Nasr Group C – Raja CA |
Sohag | 1
1 1 |
–
– – | |
2016–17 National First Division | Thanda Royal Zulu F.C. | Black Leopards | 1 | – |
AFC
Women's leagues
UEFA
- Notes
- Includes two titles won under the club's former identity of FSK St. Pölten-Spratzern.
- England is not holding an official women's championship in 2017. The FA is returning top-flight women's football to the autumn-to-spring season that had prevailed prior to the establishment of the WSL, which started play in 2011 under a spring-to-autumn format. To that effect, a one-off FA WSL Spring Series will be held in spring 2017.
AFC
Nation | Tournament | Champion | Second place | Title | Last honor |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
2016–17 W-League | Melbourne City | Perth Glory | 2 | 2015–16 | |
2017 Nadeshiko League Division 1 | NTV Beleza | INAC Kobe Leonessa | 15 | 2016 | |
2016–17 PFF Women's League[lower-alpha 1] | De La Salle University | University of Santo Tomas | 1 | — |
- Inaugural season for the Philippine women's league.
CONCACAF
Nation | Tournament | Champion | Second place | Title | Last honor |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
2017 Liga MX Femenil Apertura[lower-alpha 1] | Guadalajara | Pachuca | 1 | — | |
2017 NWSL | Portland Thorns FC | North Carolina Courage | 2 | 2013 |
- Inaugural season for the Mexican women's league.
Women's cups
UEFA
Nation | Tournament | Champion | Final score | Second place | Title | Last honor |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2016–17 FA Women's Cup | Manchester City | 4–1 | Birmingham City | 1 | — | |
2016–17 Frauen-DFB-Pokal | VfL Wolfsburg | 2–1 | SC Sand | 4 | 2015–16 | |
2016–17 Slovenian Women's Cup[5] | Pomurje Beltinci | 6–0 | Rudar Škale | 7 | 2015–16 |
Detailed results
FIFA
- May 20 – June 11: 2017 FIFA U-20 World Cup in
South Korea[6] - June 17 – July 2: 2017 FIFA Confederations Cup in
Russia[7] - October 6 – 28: 2017 FIFA U-17 World Cup in
India[8] - December 6 – 16: 2017 FIFA Club World Cup in the
United Arab Emirates[9]
Europe (UEFA)
Nations
Men's events:
- May 3 – 19: 2017 UEFA European Under-17 Championship in
Croatia[10] - June 16 – 30: 2017 UEFA European Under-21 Championship in
Poland[11] - July 2 – 15: 2017 UEFA European Under-19 Championship in
Georgia[12]
Women's events:
- May 2 – 14: 2017 UEFA Women's Under-17 Championship in the
Czech Republic[13] - July 16 – August 6: UEFA Women's Euro 2017 in the
Netherlands[14] - The
Netherlands defeated Denmark, 4–2, to win their first UEFA Women's Euro title.
- The
- August 8 – 20: 2017 UEFA Women's Under-19 Championship in
Northern Ireland[15]
University event:
- July 23 – 30: 2017 European Universities Football Championships in
Porto[16] - Men:
Kuban State University defeated University of Lille, 2–1, in the final. University of Bordeaux took third place.
- Women:
University of Montpellier defeated University of Valencia, 7–1, in the final. Paul Sabatier University took third place.
- Men:
Clubs
Men's events:
- September 13, 2016 – June 3, 2017: 2016–17 UEFA Champions League (final in
Cardiff)[17] Real Madrid C.F. defeated Juventus F.C., 4–1, to win their second consecutive and 12th overall UEFA Champions League title. - Note: Real Madrid would represent UEFA at the 2017 FIFA Club World Cup.
- September 15, 2016 – May 24, 2017: 2016–17 UEFA Europa League (final in
Stockholm)[18] Manchester United F.C. defeated AFC Ajax, 2–0, to win their first UEFA Europa League title.
- July 1 – 9: 2017 UEFA Regions' Cup Final Tournament in
Istanbul[19] - July 18 – 30: 2017 International Champions Cup in
China, Singapore, and the United States[20][21][22] - Singapore -> Champions:
Internazionale; Second: FC Bayern Munich; Third: Chelsea F.C.
- Singapore -> Champions:
- August 8: 2017 UEFA Super Cup in
Skopje[23] Real Madrid C.F. defeated Manchester United F.C., 2–1, to win their fourth UEFA Super Cup title.
Women's events:
- October 5, 2016 – June 1, 2017: 2016–17 UEFA Women's Champions League (final in
Cardiff)[24] Lyon defeated fellow French team Paris Saint-Germain in the final 7–6 on penalties, following a 0–0 score at the end of extra time. Lyon won their second consecutive and fourth overall UEFA Women's Champions League title.
Youth events:
- September 13, 2016 – April 24, 2017: 2016–17 UEFA Youth League (final in
Nyon)[25] FC Red Bull Salzburg defeated S.L. Benfica Juniors, 2–1, to win their first UEFA Youth League title.
North, Central America & Caribbean (CONCACAF)
- August 2, 2016 – April 26, 2017: 2016–17 CONCACAF Champions League
C.F. Pachuca defeated fellow Mexican team, Tigres UANL, 2–1 on aggregate, to win their fifth CONCACAF Champions League title. - Note: Pachuca would represent CONCACAF at the 2017 FIFA Club World Cup.
- January 13 – 22: 2017 Copa Centroamericana in
Panama[26] Honduras won the round-robin competition with four wins and one draw, in order to win their fourth Copa Centroamericana title. - Note: Along with Honduras,
Panama, El Salvador, and Costa Rica all qualified to compete at the 2017 CONCACAF Gold Cup.
- February 17 – March 5: 2017 CONCACAF U-20 Championship in
Costa Rica United States defeated Honduras, 5–3 in penalties and after a 0–0 score in regular play, to win their first CONCACAF U-20 Championship title. - Note: Along with the two teams mentioned here,
Mexico, and Costa Rica all qualified to compete at the 2017 FIFA U-20 World Cup.
- April 21 – May 7: 2017 CONCACAF U-17 Championship in
Panama Mexico defeated the United States, 5–4 in penalties and after a 1–1 score in regular play, to win their seventh CONCACAF U-17 Championship title. - Note: Along with the two teams mentioned here,
Costa Rica and Honduras all qualified to compete at the 2017 FIFA U-17 World Cup.
- June 22 & 25: 2017 Caribbean Cup in
Martinique Curaçao defeated Jamaica, 2–1, to win their first Caribbean Cup title. French Guiana took third place.
- July 7 – 26: 2017 CONCACAF Gold Cup in the
United States[27] - The
United States defeated Jamaica, 2–1, to win their sixth CONCACAF Gold Cup title.
- The
South America (CONMEBOL)
- January 18 – February 11: 2017 South American Youth Football Championship in
Ecuador - Champions:
Uruguay; Second: Ecuador; Third: Venezuela; Fourth: Argentina - Note: All the teams mentioned above all qualify to compete in the 2017 FIFA U-20 World Cup.
- Champions:
- January 23 – November 29: 2017 Copa Libertadores
Grêmio defeated Lanús, 3–1 on aggregate, to win their third Copa Libertadores title. - Note: Grêmio would represent CONMEBOL at the 2017 FIFA Club World Cup.
- February 23 – March 19: 2017 South American Under-17 Football Championship in
Chile - Champions:
Brazil; Second: Chile; Third: Paraguay; Fourth: Colombia - Note: All the teams mentioned above all qualify to compete in the 2017 FIFA U-17 World Cup.
- Champions:
- February 28 – December 13: 2017 Copa Sudamericana
Independiente defeated Flamengo, 3–2 on aggregate, to win their second Copa Sudamericana title.
- April 4 & May 10: 2017 Recopa Sudamericana
Atlético Nacional defeated Chapecoense, 5–3 on aggregate, to win their first Recopa Sudamericana title.
- August 15: 2017 Suruga Bank Championship in
Saitama Urawa Red Diamonds defeated Chapecoense, 1–0, to win their first Suruga Bank Championship title.
- October 7 – 21: 2017 Copa Libertadores Femenina in
Paraguay Corinthians–Audax defeated Colo-Colo, 5–4 in penalties and after a 0–0 score in regular play, to win their first Copa Libertadores Femenina title. River Plate took third place.
- November 4 – 19: 2017 South American Under-15 Football Championship in
Argentina Argentina defeated Brazil, 3–2, to win their first South American Under-15 Football Championship title.
Africa (CAF)
- January 14 – February 5: 2017 Africa Cup of Nations in
Gabon Cameroon defeated Egypt, 2–1, to win their fifth Africa Cup of Nations title. Burkina Faso took third place. - Note: Cameroon has qualified to compete at the 2017 FIFA Confederations Cup.
- February 10 – November 4: 2017 CAF Champions League
Wydad Casablanca defeated Al Ahly, to win their second CAF Champions League title. - Note: Wydad Casablanca would represent the CAF at the 2017 FIFA Club World Cup.
- February 10 – November 25: 2017 CAF Confederation Cup
TP Mazembe defeated SuperSport United F.C., 2–1 on aggregate, to win their second consecutive CAF Confederation Cup title.
- February 18: 2017 CAF Super Cup
Mamelodi Sundowns F.C. defeated TP Mazembe, 1–0, to win their first CAF Super Cup title.
- February 26 – March 12: 2017 Africa U-20 Cup of Nations in
Zambia Zambia defeated Senegal, 2–0, to win their first Africa U-20 Cup of Nations title. Guinea took third place. - Note: Along with the three teams mentioned above,
South Africa have qualified to compete at the 2017 FIFA U-20 World Cup.
- May 14 – 28: 2017 Africa U-17 Cup of Nations in
Gabon[28] Mali defeated Ghana, 1–0, to win their second consecutive Africa U-17 Cup of Nations title. Guinea took third place. - Note: Along with the three teams mentioned above and
Niger, all four of them qualified to compete at the 2017 FIFA U-17 World Cup.
- June 25 – July 9: 2017 COSAFA Cup in
Moruleng and Phokeng - September 9 – 24: 2017 WAFU Cup of Nations in
Ghana - December 3 – 17: 2017 CECAFA Cup in
Kenya - December 6 – 16: 2017 COSAFA U-20 Cup in
Zambia South Africa defeated Lesotho, 2–1, to win their seventh COSAFA U-20 Cup title. Egypt took third place.
- July 21, 2017 – January 28, 2018: 2018 African U-20 Women's World Cup Qualifying Tournament
Asia (AFC)
- January 24 – November 4: 2017 AFC Cup
Al-Quwa Al-Jawiya defeated Istiklol, 1–0, to win their second consecutive AFC Cup title.
- January 24 – November 25: 2017 AFC Champions League
Urawa Red Diamonds defeated Al-Hilal FC, 2–1 on aggregate, to win their second AFC Champions League title. - Note: Urawa Red Diamonds would represent the AFC at the 2017 FIFA Club World Cup.
- July 9 – 22: 2017 AFF U-15 Youth Championship in
Thailand Vietnam defeated Thailand, 4–2 in penalties and after a 0–0 score in regular play, to win their third AFF U-15 Youth Championship title. Australia took third place.
- September 4 – 17: 2017 AFF U-18 Youth Championship in
Yangon - September 9 – 23: 2017 AFC U-16 Women's Championship in
Thailand North Korea defeated South Korea, 2–0, to win their second consecutive and third overall AFC U-16 Women's Championship title. Japan took third place. - Note: All three teams here have qualified to compete at the 2018 FIFA U-17 Women's World Cup.
- October 14 – 28: 2017 AFC U-19 Women's Championship in
China Japan defeated North Korea, 1–0, to win their second consecutive and fifth overall AFC U-19 Women's Championship title. China PR took third place.
- December 8 – 16: 2017 EAFF E-1 Football Championship for Men and Women in
Japan - Men:
South Korea defeated Japan, 4–1, to win their fourth men's EAFF E-1 Football Championship title. China PR took third place.
- Women:
North Korea defeated Japan, 2–0, to win their third consecutive women's EAFF E-1 Football Championship title. China PR took third place.
- Men:
- December 22, 2017 – January 8, 2018: 23rd Arabian Gulf Cup in
Kuwait
Oceania (OFC)
- February 11 – 24: 2017 OFC U-17 Championship in
Tahiti New Zealand defeated New Caledonia, 7–0, to win their sixth consecutive and seventh overall OFC U-17 Championship title. - Note: The two teams mentioned above have qualified to compete at the 2017 FIFA U-17 World Cup.
- February 25 – May 7: 2017 OFC Champions League
Auckland City FC defeated fellow New Zealand team, Team Wellington, 5–0 on aggregate, to win their seventh consecutive and ninth overall OFC Champions League title. - Note: Auckland City would represent the OFC at the 2017 FIFA Club World Cup.
- July 11 – 24: 2017 OFC U-19 Women's Championship in
New Zealand - Champions:
New Zealand; Second: Fiji; Third: Papua New Guinea - Note: New Zealand has qualified to compete at the 2018 FIFA U-20 Women's World Cup.
- Champions:
- August 4 – 18: 2017 OFC U-16 Women's Championship in
Apia New Zealand defeated New Caledonia, 6–0, to win their fourth consecutive OFC U-16 Women's Championship title. - Note: New Zealand has qualified to compete at the 2018 FIFA U-17 Women's World Cup.
Futsal
AFC
- May 16 – 26: 2017 AFC U-20 Futsal Championship in
Bangkok - In the final,
Iran defeated Iraq, 2–0, to win their 1st AFC U-20 Futsal Championship. Thailand took third place.
- In the final,
- July 3 – 9: 2017 AFF Futsal Club Championship in
Bangkok - In the final,
Thai Port defeated Sanna Khanh Hoa, 4–0, to win their 3rd title. Melaka United took third place.
- In the final,
- July 20 – 30: 2017 AFC Futsal Club Championship in
Ho Chi Minh City - In the final,
Chonburi Bluewave defeated Giti Pasand Isfahan, 3–2, to win their 2nd title. Thái Sơn Nam took third place.
- In the final,
- October 23 – November 3: 2017 AFF Futsal Championship in
Ho Chi Minh City
CONCACAF
- August 21 – 26: 2017 CONCACAF Futsal Club Championship in
Tegucigalpa
CONMEBOL
- April 5 – 12: 2017 Copa América de Futsal in
San Juan - May 22 – 28: 2017 Copa Libertadores de Futsal in
Lima - In the final,
Carlos Barbosa defeated Cerro Porteño, 2–1, to win their 5th Copa Libertadores de Futsal. Bello Real Antioquia took third place.
- In the final,
- July 15 – 22: 3rd CONMEBOL Women Futsal Club Championships in
Asunción - August 16 – 20: 2017 Liga Sudamericana de Futsal (South zone) in
Buenos Aires
UEFA
- April 28 – 30: 2016–17 UEFA Futsal Cup (final four) in
Almaty - In the final,
Inter FS defeated Sporting CP, 7–0, to win their 4th UEFA Futsal Cup. AFC Kairat took third place.
- In the final,
EUSA
- July 10 – 17: 11th European Universities Futsal Championship in
Çorum - Men's:
University of Beira Interior defeated Tbilisi State University, 5–4. University of Porto took third place. - Women's: League system: 1st.:
Moscow Polytechnic University, 2nd: University of Zagreb, 3rd: University of Münster
- Men's:
Beach soccer
International beach soccer events
- January 9 – 15: 2016 Copa Libertadores de Beach Soccer in
Santos, São Paulo (debut event)[29] CR Vasco da Gama defeated Club Atlético Rosario Central, 8–1, in the final. Deportes Iquique took third place.
- February 5 – 12: 2017 CONMEBOL Beach Soccer Championship in
Asunción[30] Brazil defeated Paraguay, 7–5, in the final. Ecuador took third place. - Note: All these teams mentioned above all qualify to compete at the 2017 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup.
- February 13 – 16: Thailand 5s Beach Soccer Championship 2017 in
Bangkok[31] - February 14 – 16: Persian Beach Soccer Cup 2017 in
Bushehr[32] - February 20 – 26: 2017 CONCACAF Beach Soccer Championship in
Nassau[33] Panama defeated Mexico, 4–2, in the final. El Salvador took third place.
- March 4 – 11: 2017 AFC Beach Soccer Championship in
Kuala Terengganu[34] Iran defeated United Arab Emirates, 7–2, in the final. Japan took third place.
- March 27 – 29: Eurasia Beach Soccer Cup 2017 in
Yazd[35] - April 13 – 15: Copa Pílsener Fútbol Playa El Salvador 2017 at the
Salvadoran Costa del Sol[36] - Champions:
Tahiti; Second: Panama; Third: El Salvador; Fourth: Ecuador
- Champions:
- April 21 – 23: 2017 Tulip Festival Beach Soccer Tournament in
Istanbul (debut event)[37] - Champions:
Belarus; Second: England; Third: Turkey; Fourth: Czech Republic
- Champions:
- April 27 – May 7: 2017 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup in
Nassau[38] - May 19 – 21: Sal Beach Soccer Cup 2017 in
Sal, Cape Verde[39] - May 19 – 21: Beach Soccer USA Cup 2017 in
Oceanside, California[40] - Champions:
Fortaleza Esporte Clube; Runner-Up: Botafogo
- Champions:
- May 29 – June 4: Euro Winners Cup 2017 for Men and Women in
Nazaré, Portugal[41][42] - Men:
S.C. Braga defeated Artur Music, 8–5, in the final. Lokomotiv Moscow took third place. - Women:
BSC Havana Shots Aargau defeated Portsmouth Ladies BSC, 4–3, in the final. Higicontrol Melilla took third place.
- Men:
- June 9 – 11: NASSC - US Open 2017 in
Virginia Beach, Virginia[43] FC Barcelona defeated Gobeachsoccer, 6–1, in the final. Great Lakes BSC took third place.
- June 16 – 18: Talent Beach Soccer Tournament Siófok 2017 in
Hungary[44] - June 30 – July 2: Friendship Cup 2017 in
Vitebsk[45] - Champions:
Belarus; Second: Turkey; Third: Azerbaijan; Fourth: Lithuania
- Champions:
- July 14 – 16: Morocco Beach Soccer Cup 2017 in
Casablanca[46] - Champions:
Switzerland; Second: Morocco; Third: England; Fourth: Netherlands
- Champions:
- July 15 & 16: Nations Cup 2017 - Linz in
Austria[47] Hungary defeated Austria, 6–2, in the final. The Czech Republic took third place.
- July 19 – 22: Commonwealth Youth Games - Beach Soccer in
Nassau, Bahamas[48] - July 21 – 23: BSWW Mundialito Cascais 2017 in
Portugal[49] - September 12 – 23: Liga Sudamericana Fútbol Playa CONMEBOL 2017 in
Pimentel District & Asunción (debut event)[50] - October 20 – 22: BSWW Tour - Visit Puerto Vallarta Cup 2017 in
Mexico[51] - October 31 – November 4: Intercontinental Beach Soccer Cup Dubai 2017 in the
United Arab Emirates[52] - November 4: Beach Soccer Stars 2017 in
Dubai - For the list of winners, click here.
- November 11 – 19: 2017 Copa Libertadores de Beach Soccer in
Lambaré[53] CR Vasco da Gama defeated Club Malvín, 8–5, in the final. Universidad Autónoma de Asunción took third place.
- December 3 – 10: 2017 CONMEBOL Campeonato Sudamericano Sub-20 Futbol Playa in
Uruguay[54] - December 8 – 10: BSWW Tour - Copa Lagos 2017 in
Nigeria[55] - December 14 – 17: Mundialito de Clubes 2017 in
Vargem Grande Paulista[56] BSC Lokomotiv Moscow defeated Pars Jonoubi, 5–4, in the final. SC Corinthians Paulista took third place.
2017 Euro Beach Soccer League
- June 23 – 25: EBSL #1 in
Belgrade[57] - July 7 – 9: EBSL #2 in
Nazaré - Men's Division A Champions:
Spain (Group 1); Portugal (Group 2)[58] - Women's Champions:
England defeated Switzerland, 4–3, in the final. The Netherlands took third place.[59]
- Men's Division A Champions:
- July 28 – 30: EBSL #3 in
Moscow[60] - Division "A" Champions:
Russia; Second: Belarus; Third: Switzerland; Fourth: Greece - Division "B" Champions:
Turkey; Second: Moldova; Third: Kazakhstan
- Division "A" Champions:
- August 11 – 13: EBSL #4 in
Siófok[61] - August 25 – 27: EBSL #5 in
Warnemünde[62] - Division "A" Champions:
Ukraine; Second: Italy; Third: Azerbaijan; Fourth: Germany - Division "B" Champions:
England; Second: Romania; Third: Lithuania; Fourth: Netherlands
- Division "A" Champions:
- September 14 – 17: 2017 EBSL Superfinal and Promotion Final in
Terracina[63]
Deaths
January
- 1 January – Moruca, Spanish footballer (b. 1932)
- 2 January – Viktor Tsaryov, Russian footballer (b. 1931)
- 3 January – Enzo Benedetti, Italian footballer (b. 1931)
- 4 January
- Paul Went, English footballer (b. 1949)
- Ezio Pascutti, Italian international footballer (b. 1937)
- 5 January
- Graham Atkinson, English footballer (b. 1943)
- Harry Taylor, English footballer (b. 1935)
- 6 January – Yaron Ben-Dov, Israeli footballer (b. 1970)
- 7 January – Laurie Topp, English international footballer (b. 1923)
- 8 January – Zacharie Noah, Cameroonian footballer (b. 1937)
- 9 January – Roberto Cabañas, Paraguayan international footballer (b. 1961)
- 10 January – Achmad Kurniawan, Indonesian footballer (b. 1979)
- 11 January – François Van der Elst, Belgian international footballer (b. 1954)
- 12 January – Graham Taylor, English footballer (b. 1944)
- 15 January – Kozo Kinomoto, Japanese footballer (b. 1949)
- 16 January – Amin Nasir, Singaporean footballer
- 19 January
- Ger van Mourik, Dutch footballer (b. 1931)
- Giovanni Vastola, Italian footballer (born 1938)
- 21 January
- Marc Baecke, Belgian footballer (born 1956)
- Dave Shipperley, English footballer (born 1952)
- 24 January
- Fred André, Dutch footballer (born 1941)
- Carlos Verdejo, Chilean footballer (born 1934)
- 25 January – Ivan Pritargov, Bulgarian footballer (born 1952)
- 26 January
- Lindy Delapenha, Jamaican footballer (born 1927)
- Miikka Toivola, Finnish footballer (born 1949)
- Michael Tönnies, German footballer (born 1959)
- 27 January
- Wim Anderiesen Jr., Dutch footballer (born 1931)
- Tatiana Repeikina, Russian footballer (born 1973)
- Billy Simpson, Northern Irish footballer (born 1929)
- 29 January
- Ruslan Barburoș, Moldovan footballer (born 1978)
- Pat Corr, Northern Irish footballer (born 1927)
- Willy Fossli, Norwegian footballer (born 1931)
February
- 1 February
- Constantin Dinulescu, Romanian footballer (born 1931)
- Cor van der Hoeven, Dutch footballer (born 1921)
- 2 February
- Shunichiro Okano, Japanese international footballer, coach, and President of Japan Football Association (born 1931)
- Miltos Papapostolou, Greek footballer (born 1936)
- 4 February – Hans van der Hoek, Dutch international footballer (born 1933)
- 8 February – Viktor Chanov, Ukrainian footballer (born 1959)
- 9 February – Piet Keizer, Dutch international footballer (born 1943)
- 11 February – Juan Ulloa, Costa Rican footballer (born 1935)
- 12 February
- Sam Arday, Ghanaian football manager (born 1945)
- Bobby Murdoch, English footballer (born 1936)
- 14 February – Ríkharður Jónsson, Icelandic international footballer (born 1929)
- 15 February
- Manfred Kaiser, East-German international footballer (born 1929)
- Roy Proverbs, English footballer (born 1932)
- 16 February – Bengt Gustavsson, Swedish international footballer and manager (born 1928)
- 18 February
- Roger Hynd, Scottish footballer (born 1942)
- Henk Nienhuis, Dutch footballer (born 1941)
- 19 February
- Shibaji Banerjee, Indian footballer
- Paul McCarthy, Irish footballer (born 1971)
- Roman Zhuravskyi, Ukrainian footballer (born 1948)
- 25 February – Bobby Lumley, English footballer (born 1933)
- 27 February
- Marcel De Corte, Belgian footballer (born 1929)
- Zvjezdan Cvetković, Yugoslavian international footballer und Croatian Serb manager (born 1960)
- Alex Young, Scottish international footballer (born 1937)
March
- 2 March
- Tommy Gemmell, Scottish international footballer and manager (born 1943)
- Tarcisio Catanese, Italian footballer (born 1967)
- 3 March – Raymond Kopa, French international footballer (born 1931)
- 4 March – Alberto Villalta, Salvadorian footballer (born 1947)
- 6 March – Marek Ostrowski, Polish international footballer (born 1959)
- 7 March – Juan Carlos Touriño, Spanish international footballer (born 1944)
- 12 March – Dave Taylor, English footballer (born 1940)
- 13 March – Hiroto Muraoka, Japanese footballer (born 1931)
- 14 March
- Paul Bowles English footballer (born 1957)
- Jim McAnearney, English footballer (born 1935)
- 16 March – Arne Høivik, Norwegian international footballer (born 1932)
- 19 March – Ryan McBride, Northern Irish footballer (born 1989)
- 22 March
- Ken Currie, Scottish footballer (born 1925)
- Ronnie Moran, English footballer (born 1934)
- 24 March – Wolfgang Solz, German international footballer (born 1940)
- 25 March – Asbjørn Hansen, Norwegian footballer (born 1930)
- 26 March – Vladimir Kazachyonok, Soviet international footballer and Russian coach (born 1952)
- 27 March
- Romolo Bizzotto, Italian footballer (born 1925)
- Eduard Mudrik, Soviet Russian international footballer (born 1939)
April
- 1 April – Stuart Markland, Scottish footballer (born 1948)
- 4 April – Karl Stotz, Austrian international footballer and manager (born 1927)
- 10 April – Fred Furniss, English footballer (born 1922)
- 15 April – Amílcar Henríquez, Panamaian international footballer (born 1983)
- 16 April – Spartaco Landini, Italian footballer (born 1944)
- 18 April – Mihalj Mesaroš, Serbian footballer (born 1935)
- 20 April – Roberto Ferreiro, Argentine international footballer and manager (born 1935)
- 21 April – Ugo Ehiogu, English international footballer and coach (born 1972)
- 23 April – František Rajtoral, Czech international footballer (born 1986)
- 26 April – Moïse Brou Apanga, Gabonese international footballer (born 1982)
- 27 April – Nikolai Arefyev, Russian footballer (born 1979)
May
- 2 May – Cammy Duncan, Scottish footballer (born 1965)
- 6 May
- Peter Noble, English footballer (born 1944)
- Tony Conwell, English footballer (born 1932)
- 7 May: Eduard Gutiérrez, Colombian footballer (born 1995)
- 8 May: Ulugbek Ruzimov, Uzbekistani footballer (born 1968)
- 13 May: Yanko Daucik, Czech footballer (born 1941)
- 13 May: Rachid Natouri, Algerian footballer (born 1946)
- 16 May: Ronnie Cocks, Maltese footballer (born 1943)
- 17 May: Todor Veselinović, Serbian footballer (born 1930)
- 17 May: Raúl Córdoba, Mexican international footballer (born 1924)
- 18 May: Eric Stevenson, Scottish footballer (born 1942)
- 18 May: Volodymyr Dudarenko, Soviet footballer (born 1946)
- 19 May: Tommy Ross, Scottish footballer (born 1946)
- 19 May: Corbett Cresswell, English footballer (born 1932)
- 19 May: David Bystroň, Czech footballer (born 1982)
- 20 May: Noel Kinsey, Welsh footballer (born 1925)
- 20 May: Recep Adanır, Turkish footballer (born 1929)
- 22 May: Oscar Fulloné, Argentine footballer (born 1939)
- 25 May: Emili Vicente, Spanish footballer (born 1965)
- 27 May: Ludwig Preis, German football coach (born 1971)
- 30 May: Robert Hammond, Ghanaian footballer
- 30 May: Dibyo Previan Caesario, Indonesian footballer (born 1992)
June
- 5 June: Cheick Tioté, Ivorian footballer (born 1986)
- 5 June: Giuliano Sarti, Italian international footballer (born 1933)
- 5 June: Marcos Coll, Colombian footballer (born 1935)
- 7 June: Ernie Edds, English footballer (born 1926)
- 8 June: Václav Halama, Czech footballer (born 1940)
- 8 June: Jan Notermans, Dutch footballer (born 1932)
- 8 June: Sergo Kutivadze, Georgian footballer (born 1944)
- 12 June: Pessalli, Brazilian footballer (born 1990)
- 12 June: Karl-Heinz Weigang, German footballer (born 1935)
- 14 June: Jacques Foix, French international footballer (born 1930)
- 16 June: Edzai Kasinauyo, Zimbabwean footballer (born 1975)
- 16 June: Günter Siebert, German footballer (born 1930)
- 18 June: Albert Franks, English footballer (born 1936)
- 20 June: Frode Larsen, Norwegian footballer (born 1949)
- 21 June: Kelechi Emeteole, Nigerian footballer (born 1951)
- 23 June: Tonny van der Linden, Dutch footballer (born 1932)
- 25 June: José Manuel Mourinho Félix, Portuguese footballer (born 1938)
- 27 June: Stéphane Paille, French footballer (born 1965)
- 28 June: John Higgins, Scottish footballer (born 1930)
- 30 June: László Kovács, Hungarian footballer (born 1951)
July
- 1 July: Ibra Agbo, Equatoguinean footballer (born 1987)
- 1 July: Ayan Sadakov, Bulgarian footballer (born 1961)
- 2 July: Billy Cook, Australian footballer (born 1940)
- 2 July: John McCormick, Scottish footballer (born 1936)
- 4 July: Ntuthuko Radebe, South African footballer (born 1994)
- 5 July: John McKenzie, Scottish footballer (born 1925)
- 6 July: Heinz Schneiter, Swiss footballer and manager (born 1935)
- 6 July: Ken Wimshurst, English footballer (born 1938)
- 7 July: Ray Barnard, English footballer (born 1933)
- 7 July: Johnson Kendrick, Brazilian footballer (born 1992)
- 7 July: Tony Moore, English footballer (born 1947)
- 8 July: Roy Richards, Vincentian footballer (born 1983)
- 10 July: Eugène Koffi Kouamé, Ivorian footballer (born 1988)
- 11 July: Gert Trinklein, German footballer (born 1949)
- 14 July: Bert Hill, English footballer (1930)
- 15 July: Josef Hamerl, Austrian footballer (born 1931)
- 15 July: Davie Laing, Scottish footballer (born 1925)
- 19 July: Joe Walters, Scottish footballer (born 1935)
- 22 July: Marcel Kunz, Swiss footballer (born 1943)
- 23 July: Waldir Peres, Brazilian footballer (born 1951)
- 26 July: Maxlei dos Santos Luzia, Brazilian footballer (born 1975)
- 26 July: Jimmy White, English footballer (born 1942)
- 27 July: Perivaldo Dantas, Brazilian footballer (born 1953)
- 27 July: Abdelmajid Dolmy, Moroccan footballer (born 1953)
- 27 July: Valeri Maslov, Russian footballer (born 1940)
- 27 July: Ovidio Messa, Bolivian footballer (born 1952)
- 27 July: Manfred Rummel, German footballer (born 1938)
August
- 2 August: Dave Caldwell, Scottish footballer (born 1932)
- 2 August: Ely Tacchella, Swiss footballer (born 1936)
- 5 August: Joe Cilia, Maltese footballer (born 1937)
- 7 August: Tor Røste Fossen, Norwegian footballer (born 1940)
- 9 August: Beethoven Javier, Uruguayan footballer (born 1940)
- 10 August: Miroslav Ćurčić, Serbian footballer (born 1962)
- 10 August: Alois Eisenträger, German footballer (born 1927)
- 18 August: Pertti Alaja, Finnish footballer (born 1952)
- 15 August: Joe McGurn, Scottish footballer (born 1965)
- 16 August: John Ogston, Scottish footballer (born 1939)
- 21 August: Bill Green, English footballer (born 1950)
- 23 August: Engelbert Jarek, Polish footballer (born 1935)
- 24 August: Alan Boswell, English footballer (born 1943)
- 26 August: Dave Bumpstead, English footballer (born 1935)
- 30 August: Elmer Acevedo, Salvadoran footballer (born 1949)
September
- 3 September: Piet Ouderland, Dutch footballer (born 1933)
- 6 September: Nicolae Lupescu, Romanian footballer (born 1940)
- 8 September: Humberto Rosa, Argentine-Italian footballer (born 1932)
- 12 September: Bert McCann, Scottish footballer (born 1932)
- 13 September: Derek Wilkinson, English footballer (born 1935)
- 14 September: Wim Huis, Dutch footballer (born 1927)
- 17 September: Eugenio Bersellini, Italian footballer (born 1936)
- 18 September: Jean Plaskie, Belgian international footballer (born 1941)
- 18 September: Zurab Sotkilava, Georgian-Russian footballer (born 1937)
- 18 September: Paul Wilson, Scottish footballer (born 1950)
- 22 September: John Worsdale, English footballer (born 1948)
- 26 September: Richard Boucher, French footballer (born 1932)
- 28 September: Aleksey Arifullin, Russian footballer (born 1970)
- 28 September: Željko Perušić, Croatian footballer (born 1936)
- 29 September: Rolf Herings, German football coach (born 1940)
- 30 September: Gunnar Thoresen, Norwegian footballer (born 1920)
October
- 1 October: Olivier Baudry, French footballer (born 1973)
- 2 October: Patrocinio Samudio, Paraguayan footballer (born 1975)
- 3 October: Les Mutrie, English footballer (born 1951)
- 5 October: Georges Griffiths, Ivorian footballer (born 1990)
- 6 October: Roberto Anzolin, Italian footballer (born 1938)
- 7 October: Konstantin Sarsania, Russian footballer, manager and agent (born 1968)
- 8 October: Michel Fernando Costa, Brazilian footballer (born 1981)
- 8 October: Mlondi Dlamini, South African footballer (born 1997)
- 9 October: Jimmy Reid, Scottish footballer (born 1935)
- 9 October: József Tóth, Hungarian footballer (born 1929)
- 11 October: Dick Hewitt, English footballer (born 1943)
- 13 October: Pierre Hanon, Belgian footballer (born 1936)
- 15 October: Choirul Huda, Indonesian footballer (born 1979)
- 17 October: Giuseppe Massa, Italian footballer (born 1948)
- 19 October: Brian Riley, English footballer (born 1937)
- 24 October: Ebrahim Ashtiani, Iranian footballer (born 1942)
- 27 October: Abdoulaye Soulama, Burkinabé footballer (born 1979)
- 28 October: Viktor Karachun, Russian footballer (born 1959)
- 30 October: Eugène Parlier, Swiss footballer (born 1929)
- 31 October: Stefano Salvatori, Italian footballer (born 1967)
- 31 October: Abubakari Yakubu, Ghanaian footballer (born 1981)
November
- 1 November: Ramón Cabrero, Argentinian footballer and coach (born 1947)
- 2 November: Costanzo Balleri, Italian footballer (born 1933)
- 4 November: Tallys Machado de Oliveira, Brazilian footballer (born 1987)
- 5 November: Dionatan Teixeira, Slovak footballer (born 1992)
- 5 November: Erlandas Duršlikas, Lithuanian footballer (born 1998)
- 6 November: Feliciano Rivilla, Spanish footballer (born 1936)
- 6 November: Günter Hoge, German footballer (born 1940)
- 7 November: Hans Schäfer, German footballer (born 1927)
- 8 November: Josip Weber, Croatian-Belgian footballer (born 1964)
- 9 November: Akbar Eftekhari, Iranian footballer (born 1943)
- 11 November: Nate Hobgood-Chittick, American footballer (born 1974)
- 11 November: Amar Rouaï, Algerian footballer (born 1932)
- 12 November: Santiago Vernazza, Argentine footballer (born 1928)
- 13 November: Frank O'Connor, Australian footballer (born 1923)
- 15 November: Hamad Ndikumana, Rwandan footballer (born 1978)
- 15 November: Bert Ormond, New Zealand footballer (born 1931)
- 16 November: Tommy Farrer, English footballer (born 1922)
- 18 November: Commins Menapi, Solomon Islands footballer (born 1977)
- 18 November: Friedel Rausch, German footballer (born 1940)
- 20 November: Janusz Wójcik, Polish footballer (born 1953)
- 21 November: Luis Garisto, Uruguayan footballer (born 1945)
- 22 November: Otto Luttrop, German footballer (born 1939)
- 23 November: Allan Harris, English footballer (born 1942)
- 24 November: Ángel Berni, Paraguayan footballer (born 1931)
- 26 November: Eliezer Spiegel, Israeli footballer (born 1922)
- 27 November: Dermot Drummy, English footballer (1961)
- 28 November: Jimmy McEwan, Scottish footballer (born 1929)
- 28 November: Zdeněk Šreiner, Czech footballer (born 1954)
- 29 November: Ján Strausz, Slovak footballer (born 1942)
December
- 3 December: Ian Twitchin, English footballer (born 1952)
- 4 December: Henning Jensen, Danish footballer (born 1949)
- 4 December: Gregory Rigters, Surinamese footballer (born 1985)
- 5 December: Michel Dighneef, Belgian footballer (born 1936)
- 5 December: Laurie Rymer, Australian footballer (1934)
- 5 December: Jacques Simon, French footballer (born 1941)
- 6 December: Juan José Díaz Galiana, Spanish football coach (born 1949)
- 8 December: Pál Dárdai, Hungarian footballer (born 1951)
- 9 December: Benjamin Massing, Cameroonian footballer (born 1962)
- 10 December: Ivan Stoyanov, Bulgarian footballer (born 1949)
- 11 December: Paul Holz, German footballer (born 1952)
- 15 December: Dave Boyd, Australian footballer (born 1927)
- 15 December: Felipe Mesones, Argentine footballer (born 1936)
- 15 December: Paul Straney, Northern Irish footballer (born 1975)
- 17 December: Higinio García Fernández, Spanish footballer (born 1956)
- 17 December: Frank Hodgkin, Australian footballer (born 1941)
- 18 December: Josef Pešice, Czech footballer (born 1950)
- 19 December: Yevhen Kotelnykov, Ukrainian footballer (born 1939)
- 20 December: Jiří Sloup, Czech footballer (born 1953)
- 21 December: Zdzisław Bieniek, Polish footballer (born 1930)
- 21 December: Renan Martins Pereira, Brazilian footballer (born 1997)
- 21 December: Timur Segizbayev, Kazak footballer (born 1941)
- 22 December: Cyril Beavon, English footballer (born 1937)
- 22 December: Ken Hands, Australian footballer (born 1926)
- 23 December: Cesare Zamboni, Italian footballer (born 1931)
- 24 December: Edu Ferreira, Portuguese footballer (born 1997)
- 24 December: Ken Feltscheer, Australian footballer (born 1915)
- 24 December: Renato Marchiaro, Italian footballer (born 1919)
- 26 December: Gerd Hennig, German football referee (born 1935)
- 26 December: Willie Penman, Scottish footballer (born 1939)
- 26 December: Steve Piper, English footballer (born 1953)
- 27 December: Osvaldo Fattori, Italian footballer (born 1922)
- 27 December: Roberto Ortega, Argentine footballer (born 1932)
- 27 December: Lothar Schämer, German footballer (born 1940)
- 28 December: Stanisław Terlecki, Polish footballer (born 1955)
- 30 December: John Faulkner, English footballer (born 1948)
- 30 December: Sean McCaffrey, Irish football manager (born 1959)
gollark: Oh, jua.
gollark: node.lua, you mean?
gollark: 4, actually.
gollark: Also, channels should be arbitrary real numbers instead of foolish 2-byte integers.
gollark: I doubt squid would like it much honestly.
References
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- "1.SŽNL 2016/17" (in Slovenian). Football Association of Slovenia official website. Retrieved 22 April 2017.
- "Ženski pokal 2016/17" (in Slovenian). Football Association of Slovenia official website. Retrieved 22 April 2017.
- FIFA.com. "FIFA U-20 World Cup Korea Republic 2017 - FIFA.com". FIFA.com.
- FIFA.com. "FIFA Confederations Cup Russia 2017 - FIFA.com". FIFA.com.
- FIFA.com. "FIFA U-17 World Cup India 2017 - FIFA.com". FIFA.com.
- FIFA's Club World Cup Page Archived 2011-12-25 at the Wayback Machine
- UEFA European Under-17 Championship Website
- UEFA European Under-21 Championship Website
- UEFA European Under-19 Championship Website
- UEFA Women's Under-17 Championship Website
- UEFA Women's Euro Website
- UEFA Women's Under-19 Championship Website
- "European Universities Football Championship 2017 - EUSA". football2017.eusa.eu.
- UEFA.com. "UEFA Champions League". UEFA.com.
- UEFA.com. "UEFA Europa League". UEFA.com.
- uefa.com. "Regions' Cup – UEFA.com". UEFA.com.
- "International Champions Cup - United States". www.internationalchampionscup.com. Archived from the original on 2017-11-02. Retrieved 2017-11-06.
- "International Champions Cup - Singapore". www.internationalchampionscup.com.
- "International Champions Cup - China". www.internationalchampionscup.com.
- UEFA's Super Cup Page
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- UEFA's Youth League Page
- "Honduras captures Copa Centroamericana crown". concacaf.com. Archived from the original on 2 February 2017. Retrieved 22 January 2017.
- "CONCACAF confirms 2017 Gold Cup venues".
- Football, CAF - Confederation of African. "CAF - Competitions - 12th Edition TOTAL U-17 Africa Cup of Nations, Madagascar 2017 - Home". www.cafonline.com.
- "Beach Soccer Worldwide". www.beachsoccer.com.
- "BSWW's FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup 2017 - CONMEBOL Qualifier Asuncion Page". Archived from the original on 2016-12-27. Retrieved 2017-12-10.
- "Beach Soccer Worldwide". www.beachsoccer.com.
- "Beach Soccer Worldwide". www.beachsoccer.com.
- "Beach Soccer Worldwide". www.beachsoccer.com.
- "Beach Soccer Worldwide". www.beachsoccer.com.
- "Beach Soccer Worldwide". www.beachsoccer.com.
- "Beach Soccer Worldwide". www.beachsoccer.com.
- "Beach Soccer Worldwide". www.beachsoccer.com.
- "Beach Soccer Worldwide". www.beachsoccer.com.
- "Beach Soccer Worldwide". www.beachsoccer.com.
- "Beach Soccer Worldwide". www.beachsoccer.com.
- "Beach Soccer Worldwide". www.beachsoccer.com.
- "Beach Soccer Worldwide". www.beachsoccer.com.
- "Beach Soccer Worldwide". www.beachsoccer.com.
- "Beach Soccer Worldwide". beachsoccer.com.
- "Beach Soccer Worldwide". beachsoccer.com.
- "Beach Soccer Worldwide". beachsoccer.com.
- "Beach Soccer Worldwide". beachsoccer.com.
- "Beach Soccer Worldwide". beachsoccer.com.
- "Beach Soccer Worldwide". beachsoccer.com.
- "Beach Soccer Worldwide". beachsoccer.com.
- "Beach Soccer Worldwide". beachsoccer.com.
- "Beach Soccer Worldwide". beachsoccer.com.
- "Beach Soccer Worldwide". www.beachsoccer.com.
- "Beach Soccer Worldwide". www.beachsoccer.com.
- "Beach Soccer Worldwide". beachsoccer.com.
- "Beach Soccer Worldwide". www.beachsoccer.com.
- "Beach Soccer Worldwide". beachsoccer.com.
- "Beach Soccer Worldwide". beachsoccer.com.
- "Beach Soccer Worldwide". beachsoccer.com.
- "Beach Soccer Worldwide". beachsoccer.com.
- "Beach Soccer Worldwide". beachsoccer.com.
- "Beach Soccer Worldwide". beachsoccer.com.
- "Beach Soccer Worldwide". beachsoccer.com.
External links
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