Star Sixes is a competitive six-a-side indoor football competition where former international association football players are chosen to represent a senior national team for which they played.[1][2][3] The inaugural event took place in July 2017 in London, at The O2 Arena.[1][2][3] Further regionalised events were set for late-2017 in Asia.[1][2][3] A 2019 edition was confirmed in October 2018.[4]

Format

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For the inaugural edition, all teams participating had a squad of ten players, with six being on the field of play including a captain.[5] Squads were chosen by the team captain and the tournament organisers. There were three groups of four.[5] In the groups, each team played each other team once and the top two from each group, plus two best third-placed teams, progressed to the quarter-finals, before facing off for a place in the semi-final and subsequent final. Six group matches (two from each group) took place on day one, before the same amount on days two and three.[5] The quarter-finals were held on day three with the semi-finals, third place play-off and final following on the last day of competition. There was no extra time or penalties in the group stage but a penalty shoot-out could have been played if a knockout fixture ended tied.[5] Group matches lasted for 20 minutes, while knockout fixtures lasted for 30 minutes, with short half-time breaks.[5]

2017 edition

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2017 Star Sixes Betsafe
Tournament details
Host country  England
Dates13–16 July
Teams12
Venue(s)1 (in 1 host city)
Final positions
Champions  France (1st title)
Runners-up  Denmark
Third place  Spain
Fourth place  Brazil
Tournament statistics
Matches played26
Goals scored135 (5.19 per match)
Top scorer(s)  Míchel Salgado
Best player(s)  Chris Sørensen

Before the launch, Steven Gerrard, Michael Owen, Robert Pires, Michael Ballack, Deco, Carles Puyol, Roberto Carlos and Jay-Jay Okocha were announced as player participants while Australia, Brazil, China, England, France, Germany, Italy, Mexico, Netherlands, Nigeria, Portugal and Spain were announced as nation participants.[1][2][3] The 2017 edition was officially launched at The O2 Arena on 24 January 2017, during which more players were announced, namely Jens Lehmann, David James, Emile Heskey, Rio Ferdinand, Dominic Matteo and Gaizka Mendieta.[6] Australia and Netherlands were replaced with Denmark and Scotland, but no reason was given.[6][7][8]

The group stage draw, conducted by captains Ballack and Pires, took place on 24 March, it was broadcast live in the United Kingdom on Sky Sports News HQ.[9]

Players

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Gerrard, Pires, Ballack, Okocha, Deco, Matteo and Puyol were captains of their respective teams.[10][11][12][13][14][15][16] Don Hutchison, Olivier Dacourt, Míchel Salgado, Martin Jørgensen, Stig Tøfting, William Gallas and Eric Abidal were later announced.[15][17][18][19][20][21] Five players were added to Scotland's squad on 10 March, including Paul Dickov and Barry Ferguson.[22] Marcel Desailly was one of three players added to France's squad on 15 March.[23] Juliano Belletti was added for Brazil five days later.[24] Spain added four players on 24 March, and the full Mexico squad was announced on 28 March.[25][26] Gilberto Silva (Brazil) and Christian Abbiati (Italy) were announced on 31 March.[27]

Maniche, Vítor Baía and Fernando Couto joined Portugal's squad on 12 April.[28] Germany added three players days later.[29] John Sivebæk and Daniel Jensen were added to Denmark's squad on 19 April.[30] Scotland completed their squad on 21 April with the additions of Jackie McNamara, Mark Burchill and Neil McCann.[31] Celestine Babayaro joined Nigeria's squad on 5 May.[32] Five more players were announced in May, while Betsafe became the naming rights holders.[33][34] On 26 May, Daniel Amokachi, Julius Aghahowa and Garba Lawal joined Nigeria.[35] José Bosingwa joined Portugal on 7 June.[36] Rivaldo was one of three players added for Brazil on 9 June, he was also named captain for Brazil.[37][38] Fabrizio Ravanelli joined Italy on 15 June.[39]

Dietmar Hamann joined Germany on 16 June,[40] prior to Nuno Gomes, Raul Meireles, Kevin Kurányi, Mads Junker, Mikkel Beckmann, Chris Sørensen, Hjalte Nørregaard and Per Krøldrup all signing up on 23 June.[41] Juninho, Djalminha, Danny Murphy, Paul Merson, Carlos Marchena and Lee Hendrie joined during the following week.[42] Italy added six on 29 June, including Paolo Di Canio, but also lost two as Christian Abbiati and Simone Perrotta (injured) left the competition.[43][44][45] Also on 29 June, three players joined Nigeria.[43] On 30 June, Portugal completed their squad while China's entire team was announced. Youri Djorkaeff also joined France.[46] Twelve new faces joined on 6 July, including two replacements; Richard Hughes replaced Neil McCann (who pulled out following his appointment as Dundee manager) while Erubey Cabuto took the place of the injured Jorge Campos.[45] The squad lists were completed on 11 July with France, Germany and Spain adding players; Germany added three including Timo Hildebrand who replaces Lehmann; this means Germany have eleven players, it is presumed that one of their players will withdraw - that player was later confirmed as David Odonkor.[33][47] German-born former Northern Irish international Maik Taylor was announced as the competition's back-up goalkeeper.[47] Ferdinand withdrew from the competition on 13 July following the death of his mother. He was replaced by Luke Young.[48]

Nation Player 1 Player 2 Player 3 Player 4 Player 5 Player 6 Player 7 Player 8 Player 9 Player 10
  Brazil Rivaldo (C) Roberto Carlos Juliano Belletti Gilberto Silva Elano Dida Juninho Djalminha Júlio Baptista Amaral
  China Peng Weiguo Peng Weijun Yao Xia Fu Bin Liang Jianfeng Jiang Feng Wei Qun Liu Cheng Chen Yongqiang Hu Zhijun
  Denmark Stig Tøfting (C) Martin Jørgensen John Sivebæk Daniel Jensen Mads Junker Mikkel Beckmann Chris Sørensen Hjalte Nørregaard Per Krøldrup Jan Hoffmann
  England Steven Gerrard (C) Michael Owen David James Emile Heskey Phil Neville Danny Murphy Paul Merson Lee Hendrie Wes Brown Luke Young
  France Robert Pires (C) Olivier Dacourt William Gallas Eric Abidal Ludovic Giuly Sébastien Frey Marcel Desailly Youri Djorkaeff Bruno Cheyrou Vincent Candela
  Germany Michael Ballack (C) Marco Reich Simon Rolfes Dietmar Hamann Kevin Kurányi Jörg Albertz Jens Nowotny Timo Hildebrand Maurizio Gaudino Dariusz Wosz
  Italy Alessandro Del Piero (C) Simone Barone Fabrizio Ravanelli Paolo Di Canio Angelo Di Livio Stefano Fiore Marco Delvecchio Marco Amelia Massimo Oddo Luciano Zauri
  Mexico Jared Borgetti (C) Luis Hernández Alberto García Aspe Joaquín Reyes Braulio Luna Mario Méndez Miguel Zepeda Alberto Rodríguez Héctor Altamirano Erubey Cabuto
  Nigeria Jay-Jay Okocha (C) Celestine Babayaro Daniel Amokachi Julius Aghahowa Garba Lawal Joseph Yobo Taribo West Victor Ikpeba Peter Rufai Uche Okechukwu
  Portugal Deco (C) Maniche Vítor Baía Fernando Couto José Bosingwa Nuno Gomes Raul Meireles Paulo Ferreira Hélder Postiga Luís Boa Morte
  Scotland Dominic Matteo (C) Don Hutchison Robert Douglas Christian Dailly Simon Donnelly Paul Dickov Barry Ferguson Jackie McNamara Mark Burchill Richard Hughes
  Spain Carles Puyol (C) Gaizka Mendieta Míchel Salgado Luis García David Albelda Pedro Contreras Alfonso Pérez Fernando Morientes Carlos Marchena Joan Capdevila

Maik Taylor was a reserve goalkeeper for all nations. Colin Hendry was a replacement for Scotland.

Group standings

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Group A

Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Qualification
1   Spain 3 3 0 0 12 2 +10 9 Advance to knockout stage
2   England 3 2 0 1 6 6 0 6
3   Scotland 3 1 0 2 4 10 −6 3 Knockout stage or elimination
4   Mexico 3 0 0 3 3 7 −4 0
Updated to match(es) played on unknown. Source: Star Sixes[49]
England  1-4  Spain
  • Owen   2'
Report
Mexico  1-3  Scotland
Report

Spain  2-1  Mexico
Report
Scotland  1-3  England
Report

Spain  6-0  Scotland
England  2-1  Mexico

Group B

Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Qualification
1   Brazil 3 3 0 0 12 1 +11 9 Advance to knockout stage
2   Italy 3 2 0 1 7 5 +2 6
3   Nigeria 3 1 0 2 4 7 −3 3 Knockout stage or elimination
4   China 3 0 0 3 4 14 −10 0
Updated to match(es) played on unknown. Source: Star Sixes[49]
Nigeria  3-2  China PR
Report
Brazil  2-1  Italy
Report

China PR  0-7  Brazil
Report
Italy  2-1  Nigeria
Report

Brazil  3-0  Nigeria
Italy  4-2  China PR

Group C

Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Qualification
1   Denmark 3 1 2 0 9 7 +2 5 Advance to knockout stage
2   France 3 1 1 1 7 7 0 4
3   Germany 3 1 1 1 6 7 −1 4 Knockout stage or elimination
4   Portugal 3 1 0 2 8 9 −1 3
Updated to match(es) played on unknown. Source: Star Sixes[49]
Portugal  4-6  Denmark
Report
Germany  4-3  France
Report

France  3-2  Portugal
Report
Denmark  2-2  Germany
Report

France  1-1  Denmark
Germany  0-2  Portugal

Knockout phase

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Knockout stage

 
Quarter-finalsSemi-finalsFinal
 
          
 
15 July — London
 
 
  Spain8
 
16 July — London
 
  Nigeria1
 
  Spain2
 
15 July — London
 
  France5
 
  Italy2
 
16 July — London
 
  France4
 
  France2
 
15 July — London
 
  Denmark1
 
  Brazil3
 
16 July — London
 
  Germany1
 
  Brazil2
 
15 July — London
 
  Denmark4 Third place
 
  Denmark3
 
16 July — London
 
  England1
 
  Spain11
 
 
  Brazil3
 

Quarter-finals

Spain  8-1  Nigeria
Brazil  3-1  Germany
Denmark  3-1  England
Italy  2-4  France

Semi-finals

Spain  2-5  France
Brazil  2-4  Denmark

Third place play-off

Spain  11-3  Brazil

Final

France  2-1  Denmark

Top goalscorers

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9 goals

6 goals

5 goals

4 goals

2019 edition

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2019 FansBet Star Sixes
Tournament details
Host country  Scotland
Dates4–6 January
Teams6
Venue(s)1 (in 1 host city)
Final positions
ChampionsEngland
Runners-upRest of The World

The competition's second edition was announced in October 2018, with the SSE Hydro in Glasgow, Scotland hosting.[4] It will feature past participants England and Scotland, along with Northern Ireland, the Republic of Ireland, Wales and a Rest of the World XI.[4] The schedule was revealed on 23 October, with the Rest of the World facing Northern Ireland in the opening fixture.[50]

Players

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Michael Owen and Robert Pires were the first players announced.[4] Barry Ferguson returned to play for hosts Scotland, captaining the side in place of Dominic Matteo.[51] Simon Donnelly, Keith Gillespie and Paddy McCourt were revealed as players in October 2018.[52][53] Stiliyan Petrov and Jason McAteer were two of seven new faces announced on 18 October, on the same day as FansBet were announced as title sponsors.[54] David James and Emile Heskey's return for England was confirmed on 25 October, with Wayne Bridge joining a day later.[55][56][57] Maik Taylor, Stephen Craigan, Steven Reid, Gaizka Mendieta and Luke Young were added to their respective teams towards the end of October.[58][59][60][61][62] Jay-Jay Okocha agreed to return on 1 November.[63] Tony Capaldi and Colin Murdock joined Northern Ireland on 2 November, while Scotland announced three signings on 5 November.[64][65] Vítor Baía and Ronald de Boer joined the ROTW later that day.[66][67] Republic of Ireland's John Aldridge signed on 7 November, along with Wes Brown (England) and Pierre van Hooijdonk (Rest of the World) days later.[68][69][70]

Joe Cole joined England on 15 November, days after he announced his retirement from professional football.[71] Scotland's Lee McCulloch was announced on 16 November.[72] Star Sixes revealed Martin Jørgensen and Ryan Giggs as players at the end of November, with Craig Bellamy, Darren Bent and Charlie Miller subsequently being announced.[73][74][75][76][77] Dean Shiels was added to Northern Ireland's squad in December, along with David Dunn (England) and Owen Coyle (Rep. of Ireland).[78][79] Ryan Giggs withdrew due to injury on 30 December.[80] Before Giggs' departure, the rest of the tournament's players were revealed two days prior.[81] Andy Legg and Simon Church were revealed on the opening day, replacing Giggs and Craig Bellamy; whose withdrawal coincided with his temporary departure as academy coach of Cardiff City after claims of bullying.[82][83] Warren Feeney replaced Capaldi, Stephen Hunt replaced Reid and Niall Quinn replaced Aldridge.[82]

Nation Player 1 Player 2 Player 3 Player 4 Player 5 Player 6 Player 7 Player 8 Player 9 Player 10
  England Michael Owen (C) David James Emile Heskey Wayne Bridge Luke Young Wes Brown Joe Cole Darren Bent David Dunn Paul Konchesky
  Northern Ireland Maik Taylor (C) Keith Gillespie Paddy McCourt Steve Jones Stephen Craigan Colin Murdock Dean Shiels Andy Kirk Michael Hughes Warren Feeney
  Republic of Ireland Jason McAteer (C) Owen Coyle Tim Dittmer Ian Harte Phil Babb Richie Partridge Lee Carsley Liam Lawrence Stephen Hunt Niall Quinn
Rest of the World   Robert Pires (C)   Jörg Albertz   Marco Negri   Stiliyan Petrov   Gaizka Mendieta   Jay-Jay Okocha   Vítor Baía   Ronald de Boer   Pierre van Hooijdonk   Martin Jørgensen
  Scotland Barry Ferguson (C) Simon Donnelly Jackie McNamara Rab Douglas Don Hutchison Mark Burchill James McFadden Lee McCulloch Charlie Miller Stephen McManus
  Wales Danny Gabbidon (C) Paul Jones Dean Saunders Robert Earnshaw Jermaine Easter Owain Tudur Jones David Cotterill Jack Collison Andy Legg Simon Church

Dominic Matteo was announced as Scotland's manager.[81]

Group standings

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Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Qualification
1 Rest of the World 5 3 2 0 15 5 +10 11 Advance to Final
2   England 5 3 1 1 14 8 +6 10
3   Scotland 5 3 1 1 9 5 +4 10
4   Republic of Ireland 5 1 1 3 8 11 −3 4
5   Northern Ireland 5 1 1 3 10 17 −7 4
6   Wales 5 1 0 4 10 20 −10 3
Updated to match(es) played on unknown. Source: Star Sixes[51]
Rest of the World5-0  Northern Ireland
Wales  1-6  England
Scotland  2-0  Republic of Ireland

Rest of the World1-1  England
Republic of Ireland  4-3  Wales
Northern Ireland  4-1  Scotland

Rest of the World2-1  Republic of Ireland
Wales  0-2  Scotland
England  5-2  Northern Ireland

Rest of the World7-3  Wales
Republic of Ireland  3-3  Northern Ireland
England  1-4  Scotland

Wales  3-1  Northern Ireland
Scotland  0-0Rest of the World
England  1-0  Republic of Ireland

Knockout phase

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Fifth place play-off

  Northern Ireland1-1Wales  

Third place play-off

Scotland 1-1  Republic of Ireland

Final

Rest of the World2-3  England

Media coverage

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2017

Market Broadcast partner Ref
  United Kingdom
  Republic of Ireland
Sky Sports (English) [84]
  Italy Fox Sports Italy (Italian)
  France beIN Sports (French)
  Portugal Sport TV (Portuguese) [85][86]
  Denmark TV3 Sport (Danish) [87][88]
  Bosnia and Herzegovina
  Croatia
  Macedonia
  Montenegro
  Serbia
Arena Sport (Croatian/Serbian) [89]
  Costa Rica
  Dominican Republic
  El Salvador
  Guatemala
  Honduras
  Mexico
  Nicaragua
  Panama
Sky México (Spanish) [90]
  Brazil SporTV (Brazilian Portuguese)
  Israel Charlton Broadcasting Company (Hebrew)
  Algeria
  Bahrain
  Chad
  Djibouti
  Egypt
  Iran
  Iraq
  Jordan
  Kuwait
  Lebanon
  Libya
  Mauritania
  Morocco
  Oman
  Palestine
  Qatar
  Saudi Arabia
  Somalia
  South Sudan
  Sudan
  Syria
  Tunisia
  United Arab Emirates
  Yemen
beIN Sports (Arabic) [85][91]

2019

Market Broadcast partner Ref
  United Kingdom (host) Sky Sports (English) [69]
  Republic of Ireland
  Denmark TV3 Sport [92]
  Finland Viasport
  Norway [93]
  Sweden

References

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