Football at the Southeast Asian Games

Football has been part of the Southeast Asian Games sport since the 1959 edition. The women's football competition was held for the first time in 1985 in Thailand.

Football at the Southeast Asian Games
Founded1959 (men)
1985 (women)
RegionSoutheast Asia (AFF)
Number of teamsat most 11 (men)
at most 11 (women)
Current champions Vietnam (men; 2nd title)
 Vietnam
(women; 6th title)
Most successful team(s) Thailand (men; 16 titles)
 Vietnam
(women; 6 titles)
2019 Southeast Asian Games

From the 2001 Southeast Asian Games to the 2015 Southeast Asian Games, the age limit for men's teams was under-23 plus up to three over-aged players for each squad.

Since the 2017 Southeast Asian Games, the age limit for men's teams is under-22. At the 2019 Southeast Asian Games, two over-aged players were allowed for each team.

Results

Men's tournament

Southeast Asian Peninsular Games

Year Host Gold medal match Bronze medal match
Gold Medal Score Silver Medal Bronze Medal Score Fourth Place
1959
Details

Bangkok

South Vietnam
3–1
Thailand

Malaya
1
Burma
1961
Details

Rangoon

Malaya
2–0
Burma

South Vietnam

Thailand
1–1 2
1965
Details

Kuala Lumpur

Burma

Thailand
2–2 2 (shared gold)2
South Vietnam
2–0
Malaysia
1967
Details

Bangkok

Burma
2–1
South Vietnam

Thailand
5–2
Laos
1969
Details

Rangoon

Burma
3–0
Thailand

Laos

Malaysia
3
1971
Details

Kuala Lumpur

Burma
2–1
Malaysia

Thailand

South Vietnam
0–0 2
1973
Details

Singapore

Burma
3–2
South Vietnam

Malaysia
3–0
Singapore
1975
Details

Bangkok

Thailand
2–1
Malaysia

Burma

Singapore
2–2 (a.e.t.)2

1 Decided by round-robin standings.
2 The title was shared.
3 There was no bronze medal game held.

Southeast Asian Games

Year Host Gold medal match Bronze medal match
Gold Medal Score Silver Medal Bronze Medal Score Fourth Place
1977
Details
Kuala Lumpur
Malaysia
2–0
Thailand

Burma
Walkover4
Indonesia
1979
Details
Jakarta
Malaysia
1–0
Indonesia

Thailand
(RR)5
Singapore
1981
Details
Manila
Thailand
2–1
Malaysia

Indonesia
2–0
Singapore
1983
Details
Singapore
Thailand
2–1
Singapore

Malaysia
5–0
Brunei
1985
Details
Bangkok
Thailand
2–0
Singapore

Malaysia
1–0
Indonesia
1987
Details
Jakarta
Indonesia
1–0 (a.e.t.)
Malaysia

Thailand
4–0
Burma
1989
Details
Kuala Lumpur
Malaysia
3–1
Singapore

Indonesia
1–1 (a.e.t.)
9–8 (p)

Thailand
1991
Details
Manila
Indonesia
0–0 (a.e.t.)
4–3 (p)

Thailand

Singapore
2–0
Philippines
1993
Details
Singapore
Thailand
4–3
Myanmar

Singapore
3–1
Indonesia
1995
Details
Chiang Mai
Thailand
4–0
Vietnam

Singapore
1–0
Myanmar
1997
Details
Jakarta
Thailand
1–1 (a.e.t.)
4–2 (p)

Indonesia

Vietnam
1–0
Singapore
1999
Details
Bandar Seri Begawan
Thailand
2–0
Vietnam

Indonesia
0–0 (a.e.t.)
4–2 (p)

Singapore
2001
Details
Kuala Lumpur
Thailand
1–0
Malaysia

Myanmar
1–0
Indonesia
2003
Details
Hanoi / Ho Chi Minh City
Thailand
2–1 (a.e.t.)
Vietnam

Malaysia
1–1 (a.e.t.)
4–2 (p)

Myanmar
2005
Details
Bacolod
Thailand
3–0
Vietnam

Malaysia
1–0
Indonesia
2007
Details
Nakhon Ratchasima
Thailand
2–0
Myanmar

Singapore
5–0
Vietnam
2009
Details
Vientiane
Malaysia
1–0
Vietnam

Singapore
3–1
Laos
2011
Details
Jakarta
Malaysia
1–1 (a.e.t.)
4–3 (p)

Indonesia

Myanmar
4–1
Vietnam
2013
Details
Naypyidaw / Yangon
Thailand
1–0
Indonesia

Singapore
2–1
Malaysia
2015
Details
Singapore
Thailand
3–0
Myanmar

Vietnam
5–0
Indonesia
2017
Details
Kuala Lumpur
Thailand
1–0
Malaysia

Indonesia
3–1
Myanmar
2019
Details
Manila / Biñan / Imus
Vietnam
3–0
Indonesia

Myanmar
2–2
5–4 (p)

Cambodia

*Under-23 tournament from 2001 until 2015. Under-22 tournament starting from 2017.[1]
4 Indonesia did not turn up at the appointed time. After waiting for 15 minutes the referee called off the game and reported to the technical committee which awarded the bronze to Burma.
5 Decided by round-robin standings.

Women's tournament

Southeast Asian Games

1 Played as round-robin.

Year Host Gold medal match Bronze medal match
Gold Medal Score Silver Medal Bronze Medal Score Fourth Place
1985
Details

Bangkok

Thailand
(RR)1
Singapore

Philippines
1995
Details

Chiang Mai

Thailand
1–0
Malaysia

Myanmar
No play-off
Philippines
1997
Details

Jakarta

Thailand
5–1
Myanmar

Vietnam
2–0
Indonesia
2001
Details

Kuala Lumpur

Vietnam
4–0
Thailand

Myanmar
3–0
Indonesia
2003
Details

Hai Phong / Nam Dinh

Vietnam
2–1
Myanmar

Thailand
6–1
Malaysia
2005
Details

Marikina

Vietnam
1–0
Myanmar

Thailand
No play-off
Philippines
2007
Details

Nakhon Ratchasima

Thailand
2–0
Vietnam

Myanmar
5–0
Laos
2009
Details

Vientiane

Vietnam
0–0 (a.e.t.)
3–0 (p)

Thailand

Myanmar
No play-off
Laos
2013
Details

Mandalay

Thailand
2–1
Vietnam

Myanmar
6–0
Malaysia
2017
Details

Kuala Lumpur

Vietnam
(RR)1
Thailand

Myanmar
(RR)1
Philippines
2019
Details

Manila / Biñan

Vietnam
1–0 (a.e.t.)
Thailand

Myanmar
2–1
Philippines

Medal tally

Men's tournament

RankNationGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1 Thailand164525
2 Malaysia[1]66719
3 Myanmar[2]54514
4 Vietnam[3]27514
5 Indonesia25411
6 Singapore03710
7 Laos0011
Totals (7 nations)31293494

  • ^[1] – Competed as Malaya in the inaugural games until 1961.
  • ^[2] – Competed as Burma until 1987.
  • ^[3] – Including South Vietnam.

Women's tournament

RankNationGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1 Vietnam6219
2 Thailand54211
3 Myanmar03710
4 Malaysia0101
 Singapore0101
6 Philippines0011
Totals (6 nations)11111133
gollark: 16GB is basically the standard for power users.
gollark: My swap is also encrypted, because I have high pH.
gollark: I prefer some slowdown over horrible OOMing, mostly.
gollark: I would do that, but it would be bad, so I don't.
gollark: I have 12GB of total swap, so this might be a problem.

See also

References

  1. "2017 SEA Asian Games football competition to be playground for under-22 players". Tuổi Trẻ. 1 December 2015. Retrieved 26 December 2015.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.