OFC U-19 Women's Championship

Football tournament From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The OFC U-19 Women's Championship (previously the OFC U-20 Women's Championship or OFC Women's Under 20 Qualifying Tournament) is a football tournament held every two years to decide the only qualification spot for the Oceania Football Confederation (OFC) representative at the FIFA U-20 Women's World Cup.[1]

Quick Facts Founded, Region ...
OFC U-19 Women's Championship
Founded2002
RegionOceania (OFC)
Number of teamsVarious
Current champions New Zealand
(8th title)
Most successful team(s) New Zealand
(8 titles)
2023 OFC U-19 Women's Championship
Close

Until 2006 it was an under-19 tournament. The most recent edition for 1 to 15 July 2017 was again an U-19 tournament,[2] and the tournament was called the OFC U-19 Women's Championship.

Results

There was no 2008 edition.

Summaries

U20 format

More information Year, Host ...
Close

U19 format

More information Year, Host ...
Year Host Final Third Place Match
Champion Score Second Place Third Place Score Fourth Place
2002
details
 Tonga
Australia
6 – 0
New Zealand

Tonga
2 – 0
Samoa
2004
details
 Papua New Guinea
Australia
RR
Papua New Guinea

Solomon Islands
RR _
2017
details
 New Zealand
New Zealand
RR
Fiji

Papua New Guinea
RR
New Caledonia
2019
details
 Cook Islands
New Zealand
5 – 2
New Caledonia

Tahiti
4 – 1
Vanuatu
2022
details
Cancelled[3]
2023
details
 Fiji
New Zealand
7 – 0
Fiji

Samoa
2 – 1
Cook Islands
Close

Performances by countries

More information Team, Titles ...
Team Titles Runners-up Third-place Fourth-place
 New Zealand 8 (2006, 2010, 2012, 2014, 2015, 2017, 2019, 2023) 1 (2002)
 Australia 2 (2002, 2004)
 Papua New Guinea 3 (2004, 2012, 2014) 2 (2006, 2017)
 Fiji 2 (2017, 2023)
 Tonga 1 (2006) 3 (2002, 2010, 2014)
 Samoa 1 (2015) 1 (2023) 3 (2002, 2006, 2012)
 New Caledonia 1 (2019) 1 (2012) 2 (2015, 2017)
 Cook Islands 1 (2010) 1 (2023)
 Vanuatu 1 (2015) 2 (2014, 2019)
 Solomon Islands 1 (2004)
 Tahiti 1 (2019)
 American Samoa 1 (2010)
Close

Participating nations

Legend
  • 1st – Champions
  • 2nd – Runners-up
  • 3rd – Third place
  • 4th – Fourth place
  • SF – Semi-finals
  • 5th–7th – Fifth to Seventh place
  • GS – Group stage
  • PR – Preliminary round
  • q – Qualified
  •     — Hosts
  •  ••  – Qualified but withdrew
  •  ×  – Did not enter
  •    – Did not qualify
  •  ×  – Withdrew / Banned / Entry not accepted by FIFA
  • — Country not affiliated to OFC at that time
  • — Country did not exist or national team was inactive
  •      – Not affiliated to FIFA
More information Team, Years ...
Team Tonga
2002
Papua New Guinea
2004
Samoa
2006
New Zealand
2010
New Zealand
2012
New Zealand
2014
Tonga
2015
New Zealand
2017
Cook Islands
2019
Fiji
2023
Years
 American Samoa GS××4th××××GS× 3
 Australia 1st1stAFC member 2
 Cook Islands GS××2nd××××GS4th 4
 Fiji GS×GS××××2ndGS2nd 5
 New Caledonia ××GS×3rd×4th4th2ndQF 6
 New Zealand 2nd×1st1st1st1st1st1st1st1st 9
 Papua New Guinea ×2nd3rd×2nd2nd×[a]3rdGSGS 7
 Samoa 4th×4th×4th×2nd5thGS3rd 7
 Solomon Islands ×3rdGS×××××GSQF 4
 Tahiti ××××××××3rdQF 2
 Tonga 3rd×2nd3rd×3rd5th6thGSGS 8
 Vanuatu ××GS××4th3rd×4thQF 5
Close
Notes
  1. Papua New Guinea did not compete in 2015, as they had already qualified for the 2016 FIFA U-20 Women's World Cup as hosts.

Women's U-20 World Cup record

Legend
  • 1st – Champions
  • 2nd – Runners-up
  • 3rd – Third place
  • 4th – Fourth place
  • QF – Quarterfinals
  • GS – Group stage
  •     — Hosts
More information Team, Total ...
Close

References

Wikiwand - on

Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.