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Javi Sanchez of Spain fights for the ball with Manoel
Tobias of Brazil 03 December 2000 in Guatemala City.
(AFP)
Jorge UZON
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(FIFA.com) 23 Sep 2004
The first record
of an organized five-a-side brand of football dates back to
1930 in Montevideo, Uruguay. The same year the pioneering
football nation hosted the first FIFA World Cup™ at its
brand-new Estadio Centenario, an Argentine-born coach by the
name of Juan Carlos Ceriani, so tired of rain-soaked pitches
and cancelled training sessions, brought the game indoors for
the first time.
With an eye to
making his new indoor game more accessible, but also more
organized, he put together a set of rules strikingly similar
to those that govern futsal today. The children of Montevideo
took to the small-sided game with aplomb, and it was played in
YMCA houses throughout the capital. The hybrid version was
perfectly suited to either outdoor or indoor venues, as all
that was needed was a small, basketball-size court.
Hazy
origins
While Ceriani was fostering the game Uruguay, a similar
small-sided game was being played on the streets of Sao Paolo,
Brazil.
The game
quickly spread throughout South America as 'futbol sala' (room
football, or indoor football) or 'futebol de salao' in Brazil
- where the first local leagues sprang up like weeds.
Not
surprisingly Brazil took to the hyper-technical, sometimes
claustrophobic hybrid of football better than any other.
Today many of Brazil's greats point to a childhood full of
futsal as one of the main reasons for their skilful ability.
Ronaldinho, Pele, Zico, Socrates, Bebeto and countless others
all grew up playing futsal, and credit the game freely.
Going
global
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Majo (L) of Portugal
goes for the goal as Russian Oleg Denisov defends 03
December 2000. |
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(AFP) |
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Jorge UZON |
It didn't take
long for the game to spread to every corner of Latin America,
and the first international futsal competition kicked off in
1965. And in a bit of a shock it was Paraguay that got off the
blocks best, taking home the first South American honours.
Brazil won the next six Championships between 1965 and 1979.
The yellow-clad pioneers of the five-a-side art then went on
to extend their dominance with victories in the 1980 and 1984
Pan American games.
With a lesser
number of players, a smaller field and a weighted ball, futsal
demanded the emergence of new strategies. Quick feet and a
quick mind were imperative, as was the use of the toes and the
bottom of the foot.
The
International Federation for Futebol de Sala (FIFUSA) was
officially founded in Brazil in 1971. And the first Futsal
World Championship (though not yet affiliated to FIFA) took
place in 1982 in the five-a-side hotbed of Sao Paolo.
Continuing their stranglehold on the game, Brazil again took
the honours with a team studded with stars from the outdoor
game. They then went on to repeat their winning ways in Spain
three years later in 1985, before losing their crown in
Australia to rivals Paraguay.
Enter
FIFA
FIFA got on board in 1989, bringing the five-a-side game under
its auspices and sponsoring the first 'official' FIFA Futsal
World Championship in 1989 in Holland. With the new official
tag, the name of the game officially became 'futsal.' Brazil
also got themselves back on track and won the title twice on
the trot (Holland 1989 and Hong Kong 1992)
In 1996 the
Brazilians again took the world title, but four years later in
2000, Spain - Europe's emerging power - upset the South
American apple cart in Guatemala.
Currently
on the cusp of challenging Brazil's
long-term supremacy, Spain is
not the only European team finding their way in the world of
futsal. Russia, England, Italy and Ukraine are all emerging
as fine five-a-side purveyors in their own right.
With
professional leagues popping up in Brazil, Russia, Portugal,
Spain, Iran and Japan, the old assumption that futsal is
merely a means of developing creativity and skills to be used
in the outdoor game is beginning to fade. The small-sided
game is thriving, in its own right, on six continents.
Crucial
for development
Futsal's role
in fostering imagination and creativity to be used in the
outdoor game is still crucial.
"Players in
Brazil are better than Americans in general because they are
more technically sound," current U.S. futsal captain and
veteran of Spain 96 Sean Bowers recently told FIFA.com. "We
(in the USA) are some of the best athletes in the world, but
we really need to get that extra technical edge, and this is
where futsal comes in."
Brazil and Real
Madrid superstar Ronaldo pointed directly to futsal after
scoring a brilliant, toe-poke goal against Turkey in the
semi-final of the FIFA World Cup Korea/Japan 2002.
"Nobody
expected me to do it," he admitted. "It's not easy to shoot
the ball with the point of the toe, but it was just
instinctive, and I owe it to playing a lot of futsal when I
was a boy."
Looking
ahead to the upcoming FIFA Futsal World Championship in Chinese
Taipei (21 November - 5
December), all eyes will surely be on Brazil's five-a-side
maestros. But with development and participation on the rise,
parity is bound to be the watchword this tim around.
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