Panamerican Championship

The Panamerican Championship was an official continental competition of Association football organized by the Panamerican Football Confederation (PFC) every four years for senior national teams, with three editions held from 1952 through 1960.[1]

Panamerican Championship
Trophy given to the champion
Organising bodyPanamerican Football Confederation (PFC)
Founded1949
Abolished1960
RegionAmericas
Number of teams6 (1952-1956)
4 (1960)
Related competitions
Most successful team(s) Brazil
(2 titles)

The competition was similar to the Copa América but included nations from the North American Football Confederation (NAFC) and the Confederación Centroamericana y del Caribe de Fútbol (CCCF) (which merged to form CONCACAF in 1961).

History

edit

Panamerican Championship (Spanish: Campeonato Panamericano de Fútbol) and (Portuguese: Campeonato Panamericano de futebol) was a competition founded in 1949 by the Panamerican Football Confederation to unify the three existing confederations of the Americas: CONMEBOL, NAFC and CCCF. This tournament had 3 editions which the champions were Brazil having two titles and one for Argentina.[2][3] as an attempt to create an Americas-wide, each winners of NAFC Championship (until 1949), CCCF Championship (until 1960), South American Championship (currently Copa América) and the host would qualified to the tournament, since the Copa América, was restricted to South American teams.

Panamerican Football Confederation

edit
Panamerican Football Confederation
AbbreviationPFC
Formation1946
Dissolved1961
TypeFootball organization
Membership32 members associations

The Panamerican Football Confederation (Spanish: Confederación Panamericana de Fútbol) (Portuguese: Confederação Panamericana de Futebol) (French: Confédération Panaméricaine de football) (Dutch: Panamerikaanse voetbalconfederatie) and abbreviation (PFC) was a football confederation founded in 1946 in an attempt to unite all the countries of the Americas into a single confederation, It consisted of the North American Football Confederation (NAFC), the Central American and Caribbean Football Confederation (CCCF) and the South American Football Confederation (CONMEBOL), the confederation was dissolved on 1961 when CCCF and NAFC were merged to from CONCACAF and with the exit of CONMEBOL.

Competitions

edit
  • Panamerican Championship (3 editions)

Results

edit
Ed. Year Host city   Champions   Runners-up   Third place Fourth place
1 1952 Santiago, Chile   Brazil   Chile   Uruguay   Peru
2 1956 Mexico City, Mexico   Brazil   Argentina   Costa Rica   Peru
3 1960 San José, Costa Rica   Argentina   Brazil   Mexico   Costa Rica

Performance by nation

edit
Team Champions Runners-up Third place Appearances
  Brazil 2 1 0 3 (1952, 1956, 1960)
  Argentina 1 1 0 2 (1956, 1960)
  Chile 0 1 0 2 (1952, 1956)
  Costa Rica 0 0 1 2 (1956, 1960)
  Mexico 0 0 1 3 (1952, 1956, 1960)
  Uruguay 0 0 1 1 (1952)
  Peru 0 0 0 2 (1952, 1956)
  Panama 0 0 0 1 (1952)

Record and statistics

edit

All-time top scorers

edit
 
Valeriano López, all-time top scorer with 7 goals
Rank Nat. Player Goals Played
1
  Valeriano López
7
5
2
  Andrés Prieto
6
2
3
  Oscar Míguez
5
5
  Omar Sívori
5
  Julio Abbadie
5
4
  Chinesinho
4
3
  Carlos Septién
5
  Larry
5
  Baltazar
5
  Rodrigues Tatu
5
  Pinga
5
  Jorge Monge
5
5
  Humberto Maschio
3
4
  Osvaldo Nardiello
5
  Juarez
5
  Raúl Belén
6
  Sigifredo Mercado
6
  Elton
6

Winning Coaches

edit
Edition Coach
1952   Zezé Moreira
1956   Teté
1960   Guillermo Stábile

Table Rankings

edit
Rank Team Part Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Titles
1   Brazil 3 16 11 3 2 34 15 +19 25 2
2   Argentina 2 11 6 4 1 20 9 +11 16 1
3   Mexico 3 16 3 4 9 18 30 -12 10 -
4   Peru 2 10 3 3 4 20 16 +4 9 -
5   Chile 2 10 4 1 5 20 17 +3 9 -
6   Costa Rica 2 11 3 3 5 15 25 -10 9 -
7   Uruguay 1 5 3 0 2 16 10 +6 6 -
8   Panama 1 5 0 0 5 5 28 -23 0 -

Largest Goals

edit

More that 5 goals are considered largest goals on the tournament, between the 1952 had the most scored goals of 69 goals on 15 matches, while the 1960 had the less scored goals, In the match of Peru vs Panama and Brazil vs Costa Rica were the matches were both 1952 and 1956 the scores were on both (7–1) becoming the most scores in the tournament history.

The largest scores were:

Team Store Team Edition
  Peru 7–1   Panama   1952 Panamerican Championship
  Brazil 7–1   Costa Rica   1956 Panamerican Championship
  Chile 6–1   Panama   1952 Panamerican Championship
  Uruguay 6–1   Panama   1952 Panamerican Championship
  Brazil 5–0   Panama   1952 Panamerican Championship

See also

edit

References

edit
  1. ^ Panamerican Championship Archived 2023-04-09 at the Wayback Machine by Macario Reyes on the RSSSF
  2. ^ Memoria y Balance AFA 1946, p. 29 Archived 2022-03-08 at the Wayback Machine on AFA website
  3. ^ Triunfos y Tristezas del equipo Tricolor: Historia de la Selección Mexicana de Fútbol- México: EDAMEX. pp. 26-36 - ISBN 968-409-832-4