From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
1
Wild card Quarterfinals Semifinals Final
Performances by nation [ edit ]
The "Season" column refers to the season the competition was held, and wikilinks to the article about that season.
The wikilinks in the "Score" column point to the article about that season's final game.
List of finals [ edit ]
The "Season" column refers to the season during which the competition was held, and links to the article about that season.
The two-legged final matches are listed in the order they were played.
The "UCL" note by a team means that the team initially competed in the UEFA Champions League for that season (since the 1999–2000 season).
The link in the "Score" column directs to the article about that season's final.
List of finals [ edit ]
The "Season" column refers to the season during which the competition was held, and links to the article about that season.
The two-legged final matches are listed in the order they were played.
The "UCL" note by a team means that the team initially competed in the UEFA Champions League for that season (since the 1999–2000 season).
The link in the "Score" column directs to the article about that season's final.
List of finals [ edit ]
The "Season" column refers to the season the competition was held, and wikilinks to the article about that season.
The wikilinks in the "Score" column point to the article about that season's final game.
Madrid
Lisbon
Barcelona
Santiago Bernabéu
Wanda Metropolitano
Estádio da Luz
Camp Nou
Capacity: 81,044 [33]
Capacity: 68,456 [34]
Capacity: 64,642 [35]
Capacity: 99,354 [36]
Seville
Valencia
Estadio Benito Villamarín
Estadio de Mestalla
Capacity: 60,721 [37]
Capacity: 55,000 [38]
Bilbao
Porto
San Mamés
Estádio do Dragão
Capacity: 53,289 [39]
Capacity: 50,033 [40]
San Sebastián
Oeiras
Faro
Braga
Reale Arena
Estádio Nacional
Estádio Algarve
Estádio Municipal de Braga
Capacity: 39,500 [41]
Capacity: 37,593 [42]
Capacity: 30,305 [43]
Capacity: 30,286 [44]
Grands Prix [ edit ]
Category:1994 FIFA World Cup templates
References
These references will appear in the article, but this list appears only on this page.
^ "FIFA Club World Championship Brazil 2000" . FIFA.com . Fédération Internationale de Football Association. Retrieved 6 March 2013 .
^ Pontes, Ricardo (29 May 2007). "FIFA Club World Championship 2000" . Rec.Sport.Soccer Statistics Foundation . Retrieved 6 March 2013 .
^ "World Club Championship axed" . BBC Sport . British Broadcasting Corporation. 18 May 2001. Retrieved 26 August 2014 .
^ "FIFA Club World Championship Toyota Cup Japan 2005" . FIFA.com . Fédération Internationale de Football Association. Retrieved 6 March 2013 .
^ Nakanishi, Masanori "Komabano"; de Arruda, Marcelo Leme (30 April 2006). "FIFA Club World Championship 2005" . Rec.Sport.Soccer Statistics Foundation . Retrieved 6 March 2013 .
^ "FIFA Club World Cup Japan 2006" . FIFA.com . Fédération Internationale de Football Association. Retrieved 6 March 2013 .
^ Nakanishi, Masanori "Komabano"; de Arruda, Marcelo Leme (10 May 2007). "FIFA Club World Championship 2006" . Rec.Sport.Soccer Statistics Foundation . Retrieved 6 March 2013 .
^ "FIFA Club World Cup Japan 2007" . FIFA.com . Fédération Internationale de Football Association. Retrieved 6 March 2013 .
^ de Arruda, Marcelo Leme (28 May 2008). "FIFA Club World Championship 2007" . Rec.Sport.Soccer Statistics Foundation . Retrieved 6 March 2013 .
^ "FIFA Club World Cup Japan 2008" . FIFA.com . Fédération Internationale de Football Association. Retrieved 6 March 2013 .
^ Nakanishi, Masanori "Komabano"; de Arruda, Marcelo Leme (21 May 2009). "FIFA Club World Championship 2008" . Rec.Sport.Soccer Statistics Foundation . Retrieved 6 March 2013 .
^ "FIFA Club World Cup UAE 2009" . FIFA.com . Fédération Internationale de Football Association. Retrieved 6 March 2013 .
^ de Arruda, Marcelo Leme (14 May 2010). "FIFA Club World Championship 2009" . Rec.Sport.Soccer Statistics Foundation . Retrieved 6 March 2013 .
^ "FIFA Club World Cup UAE 2010" . FIFA.com . Fédération Internationale de Football Association. Retrieved 6 March 2013 .
^ de Arruda, Marcelo Leme (17 July 2012). "FIFA Club World Championship 2010" . Rec.Sport.Soccer Statistics Foundation . Retrieved 6 March 2013 .
^ "FIFA Club World Cup Japan 2011" . FIFA.com . Fédération Internationale de Football Association. Retrieved 6 March 2013 .
^ de Arruda, Marcelo Leme (17 July 2012). "FIFA Club World Championship 2011" . Rec.Sport.Soccer Statistics Foundation . Retrieved 6 March 2013 .
^ "FIFA Club World Cup Japan 2012" . FIFA.com . Fédération Internationale de Football Association. Retrieved 6 March 2013 .
^ de Arruda, Marcelo Leme (10 January 2013). "FIFA Club World Championship 2012" . Rec.Sport.Soccer Statistics Foundation . Retrieved 6 March 2013 .
^ "FIFA Club World Cup Morocco 2013" . FIFA.com . Fédération Internationale de Football Association. Retrieved 29 August 2014 .
^ de Arruda, Marcelo Leme (23 December 2013). "FIFA Club World Championship 2013" . Rec.Sport.Soccer Statistics Foundation . Retrieved 29 August 2014 .
^ "FIFA Club World Cup Morocco 2014" . FIFA.com . Fédération Internationale de Football Association. Retrieved 29 August 2014 .
^ de Arruda, Marcelo Leme (23 December 2014). "FIFA Club World Championship 2014" . Rec.Sport.Soccer Statistics Foundation . Retrieved 29 August 2014 .
^ "FIFA Club World Cup Japan 2015" . FIFA.com . Fédération Internationale de Football Association. Retrieved 13 September 2016 .
^ King, Ian; Stokkermans, Karel (20 December 2015). "FIFA Club World Cup 2015" . Rec.Sport.Soccer Statistics Foundation . Retrieved 13 September 2016 .
^ "FIFA Club World Cup Japan 2016" . FIFA.com . Fédération Internationale de Football Association. Archived from the original on 25 December 2011. Retrieved 18 December 2016 .
^ Stokkermans, Karel (18 December 2016). "FIFA Club World Cup 2016" . Rec.Sport.Soccer Statistics Foundation . Retrieved 18 December 2016 .
^ King, Ian (22 December 2018). "FIFA Club World Cup 2017" . Rec.Sport.Soccer Statistics Foundation . Retrieved 22 December 2018 .
^ King, Ian (3 January 2019). "FIFA Club World Cup 2018" . Rec.Sport.Soccer Statistics Foundation . Retrieved 17 January 2019 .
^ a b Cite error: The named reference FIFA10
was invoked but never defined (see the help page ).
^ a b c d e Cite error: The named reference revamp
was invoked but never defined (see the help page ).
^ "UEFA Champions League – Statistics Handbook 2012/13" (PDF) . UEFA.com . Union of European Football Associations. p. 141. Retrieved 22 September 2013 .
^ "Luzhniki Stadium" . FIFA. Archived from the original on 16 November 2017. Retrieved 15 June 2018 .
^ "Spartak Stadium" . FIFA. Archived from the original on 14 June 2018. Retrieved 15 June 2018 .
^ "Saint Petersburg Stadium" . FIFA. Archived from the original on 6 December 2017. Retrieved 15 June 2018 .
^ "Fisht Stadium" . FIFA. Archived from the original on 15 June 2018. Retrieved 15 June 2018 .
^ "Volgograd Arena" . FIFA. Archived from the original on 15 October 2017. Retrieved 15 June 2018 .
^ "Rostov Arena" . FIFA. Archived from the original on 15 June 2018. Retrieved 15 June 2018 .
^ "Nizhny Novgorod Stadium" . FIFA. Archived from the original on 15 June 2018. Retrieved 15 June 2018 .
^ "Kazan Arena" . FIFA. Archived from the original on 15 June 2018. Retrieved 15 June 2018 .
^ "Samara Arena" . FIFA. Archived from the original on 12 June 2018. Retrieved 15 June 2018 .
^ "Mordovia Arena" . FIFA. Archived from the original on 14 May 2018. Retrieved 15 June 2018 .
^ "Kaliningrad Stadium" . FIFA. Archived from the original on 8 October 2017. Retrieved 15 June 2018 .
^ "Ekaterinburg Arena" . FIFA. Archived from the original on 31 March 2018. Retrieved 15 June 2018 .
^ "Sebastian Vettel wins Canadian F1 Grand Prix after chequered flag is waved a lap early in Montreal" . abc.net.au . Australian Broadcasting Corporation . 11 June 2018. Retrieved 11 June 2018 .
Results [ edit ]
#
Year
Hosts
Champions
Score and Venue
Runners-up
Third place
Score and Venue
Fourth place
No. of Teams
1
1930 Details
Uruguay
Uruguay
4–2 Estadio Centenario , Montevideo
Argentina
United States
[note 2]
Yugoslavia
13
2
1934 Details
Italy
Italy
2–1 (a.e.t. ) Stadio Nazionale PNF , Rome
Czechoslovakia
Germany
3–2 Stadio Giorgio Ascarelli , Naples
Austria
16
3
1938 Details
France
Italy
4–2 Stade de Colombes , Paris
Hungary
Brazil
4–2 Parc Lescure , Bordeaux
Sweden
15
1942
Editions not organized because of World War II .
1946
4
1950 Details
Brazil
Uruguay
[note 3] 2–1 Maracanã , Rio de Janeiro
Brazil
Sweden
[note 3] 3–1 Pacaembu , São Paulo
Spain
13
5
1954 Details
Switzerland
West Germany
3–2 Wankdorfstadion , Bern
Hungary
Austria
3–1 Hardturm , Zürich
Uruguay
16
6
1958 Details
Sweden
Brazil
5–2 Råsundastadion , Solna
Sweden
France
6–3 Ullevi , Gothenburg
West Germany
16
7
1962 Details
Chile
Brazil
2–1 Estadio Nacional , Santiago
Yugoslavia
Soviet Union
3–0 Estadio Nacional, Santiago
Czechoslovakia
16
8
1966 Details
England
Soviet Union
4–2 (a.e.t. ) Wembley Stadium , London
England
Hungary
1–0 Wembley Stadium, London
Argentina
16
9
1970 Details
Australia
England
3–2 Melbourne Cricket Ground , East Melbourne
Scotland
Italy
3–0 Melbourne Cricket Ground, East Melbourne
Yugoslavia
16
10
1974 Details
Netherlands
Netherlands
3–2 De Kuip , Rotterdam
West Germany
Brazil
5–1 Olympiastadion , Amsterdam
Belgium
16
11
1978 Details
Mexico
West Germany
3–1 Estadio Azteca , Mexico City
Poland
Czechoslovakia
2–1 (a.e.t. ) Estadio Azteca, Mexico City
Peru
16
12
1982 Details
West Germany
Brazil
2–0 Olympiastadion , Munich
France
Italy
3–1 Weserstadion , Bremen
West Germany
24
13
1986 Details
United States
France
4–4 (a.e.t. ) (11–10 pen. ) Rose Bowl , Pasadena
Brazil
Denmark
3-1 (a.e.t. ) Rose Bowl, Pasadena
Northern Ireland
24
14
1990 Details
Italy
Argentina
3-1 Stadio Olimpico , Rome
Italy
Netherlands
1-0 (a.e.t. ) Stadio San Nicola , Bari
England
24
15
1994 Details
Morocco
Germany
4–0 Stade Mohamed V , Casablanca
Brazil
Denmark
4–0 Stade Mohamed V, Casablanca
Wales
24
16
1998 Details
England
France
6–1 Wembley Stadium , London
England
Tunisia
3–2 (a.e.t. )Anfield , Liverpool
Netherlands
32
17
2002 Details
Japan South Korea
Italy
4–2 International Stadium , Yokohama
Germany
Japan
4–2 Daegu Stadium , Daegu
Portugal
32
18
2006 Details
South Africa
Argentina
3–1 (a.e.t. ) Soccer City , Johannesburg
France
Spain
2–1 (a.e.t. )Nelson Mandela Bay Stadium , Port Elizabeth
Germany
32
19
2010 Details
Germany
Uruguay
2–0 Olympiastadion , Berlin
Ghana
Germany
2–0 Gottlieb-Daimler-Stadion , Stuttgart
Portugal
32
20
2014 Details
Argentina
Spain
3–1 Estádio Monumental Antonio Vespucio Liberti , Buenos Aires
Germany
France
2–0 Estádio Mario Alberto Kempes , Córdoba
Argentina
32
21
2018 Details
Spain Portugal
France
2–0 Estadio Santiago Bernabeu , Madrid
Belgium
England
1–1 (4–3 pen. ) Estadio da Luz , Lisbon
South Korea
32
22
2022 Details
Australia
TBD
TBDMelbourne Cricket Ground , Melbourne
TBD
TBD
TBDTBD
TBD
32
23
2026 Details
Canada Mexico United States
TBD
TBDTBD, United States
TBD
TBD
TBDTBD
TBD
48
a.e.t. : after extra time
pen. : after penalty shoot-out
TBD : to be determined
Year
Debuting teams
Successor and renamed teams
Teams
No.
CT
1930
Argentina , Belgium , Bolivia , Brazil , Chile , France , Mexico , Paraguay , Peru , Romania , United States , Uruguay , Yugoslavia [a]
13
13
1934
Austria , Czechoslovakia ,[b] Egypt , Germany ,[c] Hungary , Italy , Netherlands , Spain , Sweden , Switzerland
10
23
1938
Cuba , Dutch East Indies ,[d] Norway , Poland
4
27
1950
England
1
28
1954
Scotland , South Korea , Turkey
3
31
West Germany [c]
1958
Northern Ireland , Soviet Union ,[e] Wales
3
34
1962
Bulgaria , Ecuador , Portugal
3
37
1966
Luxembourg , East Germany , Denmark , Israel , Republic of Ireland
5
42
1970
Australia , Costa Rica , Iran , Sudan
4
46
1974
New Zealand , Zaire , Haiti
3
49
1978
Ghana , Colombia
2
51
1982
Greece , Libya , Honduras , Kuwait , El Salvador
5
56
1986
China , Saudi Arabia , Canada , Cameroon
4
60
1990
Algeria , Nigeria
2
63
Germany ,[c]
1994
Japan , Zambia
2
65
Russia [e]
1998
South Africa , Croatia , Burkina Faso , Jamaica , Tunisia , United Arab Emirates
6
71
Czech Republic
2002
Slovenia , Mali , Senegal
3
74
Yugoslavia
2006
Panama , Solomon Islands , Latvia , Bahrain
4
78
2010
New Caledonia , Iraq , Venezuela
3
81
2014
Cape Verde , Uzbekistan , Tahiti , Ukraine
4
85
2018
Iceland
1
86
2022
Qatar , Vietnam
≥2
≥88
Airlines and destinations [ edit ]
Passenger [ edit ]
Airlines Destinations Aegean Airlines Seasonal: Athens [6]
Aer Lingus Seasonal: Cork ,[7] Dublin
Aeroflot Moscow–Sheremetyevo , Saint Petersburg
Aeromexico Mexico City
Air Algérie Algiers–Albert Camus , Constantine
airBaltic Riga
Air Canada Seasonal: Toronto–Pearson
Air Canada Rouge Seasonal: Montréal–Trudeau
Air Corsica Ajaccio , Bastia , Calvi , Figari
Air France Bordeaux , Nantes , Paris–Charles de Gaulle , Paris–Napoleon Bonaparte , Rennes Seasonal: Algiers–Albert Camus , Athens , Beirut , Tel Aviv–Ben Gurion
Air Moldova Seasonal: Chișinău [8]
Air Serbia Seasonal: Belgrade [9]
Air Transat Seasonal: Montréal–Trudeau , Quebec City–Liberté
Alitalia Rome–Fiumicino
American Airlines Boston–Lincoln , Dallas–Fort Worth
APG Airlines Bergamo [10]
Avianca Bogotà
Austrian Airlines Vienna
Bavarian Airways Münich , Stuttgart Seasonal: Nuremberg
Belavia Minsk [11]
Blue Air Bucharest , Cluj-Napoca [12]
British Airways Bristol , London–City , London–Gatwick , London–Heathrow , Newquay Seasonal: London–Stansted ,[13] Manchester [13]
Brussels Airlines Brussels
Bulgaria Air Sofia
Chalair Aviation Limoges Seasonal: Agen (begins 28 June 2019)[14] , Bergerac (begins 28 June 2019)[14]
Czech Airlines Prague
Delta Air Lines Seasonal: New York–JFK
easyJet Amsterdam ,[15] Barcelona , Berlin–Schönefeld , Berlin–Tegel , Bordeaux , Bristol , Brussels , Faro ,[16] Geneva , Lille , Lisbon , Liverpool , London–Gatwick , London–Luton , London–Stansted , Manchester [17] , Marrakech , Nantes , Naples , Paris–Charles de Gaulle , Paris–Napoleon Bonaparte , Porto , Rennes , Rome–Fiumicino , Tel Aviv–Ben Gurion , Tenerife–South , Toulouse , Venice Seasonal: Belfast–International , Biarritz , Cagliari , Catania , Chania , Edinburgh , Hamburg , Mykonos , Newcastle upon Tyne , Olbia , Palma de Mallorca , Seville
easyJet Switzerland Basel/Mulhouse , Geneva
Egyptair Cairo
El Al Tel Aviv–Ben Gurion [18]
Emirates Dubai–International
Ethiopian Airlines Addis Ababa
Eurowings Cologne/Bonn , Düsseldorf , Stuttgart Seasonal: Hamburg , Vienna
Finnair Seasonal: Helsinki
Garuda Indonesia Jakarta
Great Dane Airlines Aalborg (begins 26 June 2019)[19]
Heli Air Monaco Monaco [f]
Heli Securite Seasonal: St Tropez [20]
HOP! Biarritz , Bordeaux , Brest , Caen , Lille , Lyon , Metz/Nancy , Nantes , Rennes , Strasbourg Seasonal: La Rochelle ,[21] Pau , Quimper
Iberia Express Madrid
Iberia Regional Madrid Seasonal: Ibiza , Málaga , Palma de Mallorca
Iran Air Erbil , Isfahan , Mashhad , Rome–Fiumicino , Tehran–International
Japan Airlines Tokyo–Narita
Jet2.com Birmingham [22] , Leeds/Bradford , London–Stansted , Manchester
KLM Amsterdam , Rotterdam
Korean Air Seoul–Incheon , Vienna
Kuwait Airways Seasonal: Kuwait City [23]
La Compagnie Seasonal: Newark [24]
Lauda Seasonal: Stuttgart [25]
LOT Polish Airlines Warsaw–Chopin
Lufthansa Frankfurt , Munich
Luxair Luxembourg
Malaysia Airlines Kuala Lumpur , Milan–Garibaldi
Middle East Airlines Seasonal: Beirut
Monacair Monaco [26] [f]
Norwegian Air Shuttle Copenhagen , Helsinki , Oslo–Gardermoen , Stockholm–Arlanda Seasonal: Bergen , Gothenburg , Stavanger , Trondheim
Nordica Seasonal: Tallinn
Philippine Airlines Manila
Provencair Cagliari , Catane , Monastir , Olbia , Port-Etienne , Tunis–Comte de Grasse
Provence Airlines Aberdeen , Alexandria–King Farouk , Amsterdam , Antigua , Aruba , Atlanta , Baku (ends September 30, 2020), Barcelona , Beirut , Belgrade , Berlin–Tegel , Bogotà , Bordeaux , Boston–Lincoln , Brussels , Bucharest , Budapest , Cairo , Changsha , Clermont-Ferrand , Cologne , Cork , Casablanca , Copenhagen , Curaçao , Dallas–Fort Worth , Denver , Dubai–International , Dublin , Düsseldorf , Djibouti–Georges Leygues , Edinburgh , Fort-de-France , Fort Lauderdale , Frankfurt , Fuerteventura , Geneva , Hamburg , Helsinki , Hong Kong , Houston–Intercontinental , Jeddah , Lima , Lisbon , London–Heathrow , Madrid , Màlaga , Malta , Manchester , Manila , Mexico City , Miami , Minsk , Montréal , Moscow–Sheremetyevo , Munich , Muscat , Nairobi–Jomo Kenyatta , Nassau , New Delhi , New York-JFK , Orlando , Oslo–Gardermoen , Paris–Charles de Gaulle , Paris–Napoleon Bonaparte , Pointe-à-Pitre , Prague , Reykjavik , Riga , Rome–Fiumicino , San Francisco , San Salvador (Bahamas) , Seattle/Tacoma , Seoul–Incheon , Shanghai–Pudong , Singapore , Sofia , Stavanger , Stockholm–Arlanda , Tel Aviv–Ben Gurion , Toronto–Pearson , Tunis–Comte de Grasse , Vancouver , Vienna , Warsaw–Chopin , Washington–Dulles , Zürich Seasonal: Belfast–International , Bergen , Birmingham , Billund , Bristol , Burgas , Calgary , Gothenburg , Innsbruck , London–Gatwick , Katowice , Malmö , Tallinn
Qatar Airways Doha [27]
Rossiya Saint Petersburg
Royal Air Maroc Casablanca
Ryanair Dublin , London–Stansted
S7 Airlines Moscow–Domodedovo [28] Seasonal: Saint Petersburg [29]
Scandinavian Airlines Copenhagen , Oslo–Gardermoen , Stockholm–Arlanda Seasonal: Aarhus , Bergen (resumes 30 June 2019),[30] Gothenburg , Stavanger , Trondheim
SkyUp Seasonal: Kiev–Boryspil (begins 12 June 2019)[31]
Swiss International Air Lines Basel-Mulhouse , Geneva , Zürich
TAP Air Portugal Lisbon
TAROM Bucharest
Transavia Amsterdam , Eindhoven Seasonal: Rotterdam/The Hague (begins 4 July 2019)
TUI fly Belgium Seasonal: Charleroi , Marrakech , Ostend/Bruges [32]
Tunisair Djerba , Monastir , Tunis–Comte de Grasse
Turkish Airlines Istanbul [33]
Twin Jet Milan–Malpensa
Ukraine International Airlines Seasonal: Kiev–Boryspil
United Airlines Newark Seasonal: San Francisco
Uzbekistan Airways Tashkent
Volotea Strasbourg , Toulouse Seasonal: Luxembourg , Málaga , Malta , Palermo , Pau , Rennes , Split [34]
Vueling Barcelona
Wizz Air Bucharest , Budapest ,[35] Kraków ,[36] Sofia , Vilnius , Vienna ,[37] Warsaw–Chopin [38]
^ The Kingdom of Yugoslavia (1930) and the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia (1950–1990) qualified eight times from 1930–1990 under the name Yugoslavia prior to its breakup in 1992 by the secession of many of its constituent republics. The Federal Republic of Yugoslavia qualified once in 1998 under the name Yugoslavia, then changed its name to Serbia and Montenegro in 2003, first qualifying under that name in 2006. All of these teams are considered the predecessors of the current Serbia team by FIFA, which first qualified under that name in 2010. The other national teams which resulted from the breakup of the SFR Yugoslavia in 1992 — Croatia , Slovenia , Bosnia and Herzegovina and North Macedonia — are considered distinct entities from the Yugoslavia team of 1930–1990. Montenegro now also competes separately after independence in 2006 and Kosovo was recognized by FIFA in 2016.
^ Czechoslovakia qualified eight times prior to being divided into Slovakia and the Czech Republic in 1993. FIFA considers the Czech Republic as the successor team of Czechoslovakia. The other national team which resulted from the breakup of the Czechoslovakia, Slovakia , is considered a distinct entity from the Czechoslovakia team. The Czech Republic national team qualified for the World Cup for the first time as a separate nation in 2006, with Slovakia doing the same in 2010.
^ a b c Germany , officially the Federal Republic of Germany since 1949, has been represented by the same governing body, Deutscher Fußball-Bund (DFB), since 1904. After World War II and the division of Germany, the DFB was re-admitted to FIFA after the 1950 World Cup as West Germany . Saar competed in the 1954 World Cup qualifying before joining West Germany in 1956. East Germany fielded teams from 1958 to 1990 of their own before joining with West Germany and the DFB in the German reunification . FIFA officially attributes all international results of the DFB team since 1908 to Germany, including the results of West Germany from 1954–1990.
^ Indonesia competed as the Dutch East Indies in 1938.
^ a b The Soviet Union qualified seven times prior to being dissolved in 1991. The 15 nations that were former Soviet Republics now compete separately. FIFA considers Russia as the successor team of the USSR.
^ a b by helicopter
Airlines Destinations ASL Airlines France Marseille , Paris-Charles de Gaulle
DHL Aviation Abu Dhabi , Bahrain , Cairo , Dubai-Al Maktoum , Frankfurt , Istanbul-Atatürk , Madrid , Malta , Marseille , Sharjah
FedEx Express Cincinnati , Memphis , Nashville , New York-JFK , Paris–Charles de Gaulle
Bracket [ edit ]
Group A: Portugal - Denmark-Norway - Naples - Romania
Group B: France - England - Russia - Ukraine
Group C: Germany - Wales - Provence - Turkey
Group D: Piedmont - Poland-Lithuania - Spain - Austria
Group E: Bavaria - Flanders - Catalonia - Netherlands
Group F: Hungary - Iceland - Italy - Finland
Euro 2020 Venues: Zagreb, Venice, Ljubljana, Dubrovnik, Trieste, Pula, Split, Zadar, Maribor, Udine, Verona, Treviso
Euro 2024 Venues: Glasgow, Dublin, Edinburgh, Aberdeen, Cork, Belfast, Limerick, Kilmarnock, Castlebar, Dundee
List of finals [ edit ]
The "Season" column refers to the season the competition was held, and wikilinks to the article about that season.
The wikilinks in the "Score" column point to the article about that season's final game.
List of Redoutable -class submarines [ edit ]
Name
Pennant number
Ordered
Launched
Commissioned
Fate
Redoutable
Q136
1924
24 February 1928
10 July 1931
Decommissioned, 13 April 1944
Vengeur [fr ]
Q137
1924
1 September 1928
18 December 1931
Decommissioned, 13 April 1944
Pascal [fr ]
Q138
1925
19 July 1928
10 September 1931
Decommissioned, 13 April 1944
Pasteur [fr ]
Q139
1925
19 August 1928
1 September 1932
Scuttled at Brest on 18 June 1940.
Henri Poincaré [fr ]
Q140
1925
10 April 1929
23 December 1931
Decommissioned, 13 April 1944
Poncelet [fr ]
Q141
1925
10 April 1929
1 September 1932
Sunk by a German U-Boot on 6 June 1941 off Bergen.
Archimède
Q142
1925
6 September 1930
22 December 1932
Decommissioned, 13 April 1944
Fresnel
Q143
1925
8 June 1929
22 February 1932
Decommissioned, 13 April 1944
Monge
Q144
1925
25 June 1929
19 June 1932
Decommissioned, 13 April 1944
Achille [fr ]
Q147
1926
28 May 1930
29 June 1933
Scuttled at Brest on 18 June 1940.
Ajax
Q148
1926
28 May 1930
1 February 1934
Sunk by a mine on 24 October 1940 off Norway
Actéon [fr ]
Q149
1926
10 April 1929
18 December 1931
Sunk on 17 August 1940 off Rhodes.
Achéron [fr ]
Q150
1926
6 August 1929
22 February 1932
Decommissioned, 13 April 1944
Argo [fr ]
Q151
1926
11 April 1929
12 February 1933
In Reserve
Prométhée
Q153
1927
23 October 1930
—
Sunk accidentally on 7 July 1932 during trials.
Persée
Q154
1927
23 May 1931
10 June 1934
Sunk on 12 September 1941 off Bergen
Protée
Q155
1927
31 July 1930
1 November 1932
Damaged beyond repair by Japanese bombers on 9 December 1941 at Haiphong
Pégase
Q156
1927
28 June 1930
19 June 1932
Beached and destroyed following a Japanese air attack on 13 December 1941 at Cam Ranh.
Phénix
Q157
1927
12 April 1930
21 October 1932
Sunk accidentally on 15 June 1939 off Indochina.
L'Espoir [fr ]
Q167
1929
18 July 1931
1 February 1934
In Reserve
Le Glorieux [fr ]
Q168
1929
29 November 1932
1 June 1934
Used as a training ship, Fort-de-France
Le Centaure [fr ]
Q169
1929
14 October 1932
1 January 1935
Beached following air attack by Japanese aircraft on 16 January 1942 in Surabaya
Le Héros [fr ]
Q170
1929
14 October 1932
12 September 1934
Sunk by a Japanese seaplane on 9 December 1941 in the South China Sea.
Le Conquérant
Q171
1929
26 June 1934
7 September 1936
Rammed by the Japanese destroyer Shirayuki on 11 January 1942 in the South China Sea.
Le Tonnant
Q172
1929
15 December 1934
1 June 1937
Active (2nd Hydrographic Group, Pacific Ocean)
Agosta
Q178
1930
30 April 1934
1 February 1937
Scuttled at Brest on 18 June 1940.
Bévéziers
Q179
1930
14 October 1935
4 June 1937
Used as a training ship, Fort-de-France
Ouessant
Q180
1930
30 November 1936
1 January 1939
Scuttled at Brest on 18 June 1940.
Sidi-Ferruch [fr ]
Q181
1930
9 July 1937
1 January 1939
Active (2nd Hydrographic Group, Pacific Ocean)
Sfax [fr ]
Q182
1930
6 December 1934
7 September 1936
Active (Pacific Ocean)
Casabianca
Q183
1930
2 February 1935
1 January 1937
Active (2nd Hydrographic Group, Pacific Ocean)
^ Daniel Ricciardo set the fastest lap on lap 70, but an error in the chequered flag being waved early saw the race results validated on lap 68. Max Verstappen was officially recognised as setting the fastest lap.[45]
^ There was no third place match in 1930 ; the United States and Yugoslavia lost in the semi-finals. FIFA now recognises the United States as the third-placed team and Yugoslavia as the fourth-placed team, using the overall records of the teams in the tournament.[1]
^ a b There was no official World Cup final match in 1950.[2] The tournament winner was decided by a final round-robin group contested by four teams (Uruguay, Brazil, Sweden, and Spain). Coincidentally, one of the last two matches of the tournament pitted the two top ranked teams against each other, with Uruguay's 2–1 victory over Brazil thus often being considered as the de facto final of the 1950 World Cup.[3] Likewise, the game between the lowest ranked teams, played at the same time as Uruguay vs Brazil, can be considered equal to a 3rd place match, with Sweden's 3–1 victory over Spain ensuring that they finished third.
^ "1930 FIFA World Cup Uruguay" . FIFA.com . Fédération Internationale de Football Association. Retrieved 30 December 2018 .
^ "1950 FIFA World Cup" . FIFA.com . Fédération Internationale de Football Association. Retrieved 5 March 2009 .
^ "FIFA World Cup Finals since 1930" (PDF) . FIFA.com . Fédération Internationale de Football Association. Retrieved 5 March 2009 .
^ "Final matches overview" (PDF) . FIFA.com . Archived from the original (PDF) on 9 July 2014. Retrieved 1 July 2016 .
^ "FIFA World Cup Golden Ball Awards" . RSSSF . Archived from the original on 12 January 2016. Retrieved 1 July 2016 .
^ "Book a flight" . Aegean Airlines. Retrieved 30 October 2015 .
^ "Cork Airport Welcomes New Aer Lingus Routes To Nice And Dubrovnik" . Cork Airport. 26 October 2018. Retrieved 30 October 2018 .
^ https://www.airmoldova.md/news-records-en/air-moldova-launches-new-destination-chisinau-nice
^ "Air Serbia to launch nine new routes" . Exyuaviation.com . Retrieved 23 January 2019 .
^ Dominique Gobert (15 September 2016). "APG lance sa propre compagnie aérienne, APG Airlines!" (in French). Archived from the original on 16 September 2016. Retrieved 15 September 2016 .
^ L, J (12 February 2014). "Belavia Adds Krasnodar and Nice Service from late-April 2014" . Airline Roites . Retrieved 12 February 2014 .
^ Blue Air anunţă noi rute (in Romanian)
^ a b "Launch of Seven New Routes from Manchester" . Mediacentre.britishairways.com . Retrieved 23 January 2019 .
^ a b Thierry Blancmont (1 February 2019). "Chalair reliera Agen et Bergerac à Lyon et Nice" . Air Journal (in French). Retrieved 7 February 2019 .
^ "easyJet announces six new routes from Amsterdam and strengthens its links between The Netherlands and the UK" . EasyJet. 14 October 2014.
^ "Home page" . Easyjet.com . Retrieved 23 January 2019 .
^ https://www.easyjet.com/en/
^ רוזנבלום, עירית (25 October 2018). "אל על תחל לטוס לניס שבריביירה הצרפתית באביב" . Ias.co.il . Retrieved 23 January 2019 .
^ https://www.routesonline.com/news/38/airlineroute/283511/great-dane-airlines-outlines-scheduled-operation-from-june-2019/
^ https://helisecurite.fr/en/home/
^ Liu, Jim. "HOP! adds seasonal domestic routes in S19" . Routesonline . Retrieved 9 April 2019 .
^ https://www.jet2.com/
^ Ltd. 2019, UBM (UK). "Kuwait Airways to resume Nice service in S19" . Routesonline.com . Retrieved 23 January 2019 . {{cite web }}
: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link )
^ Schlappig, Ben (2018-12-04). "La Compagnie's Nice Flight Now On Sale: $1,200 Roundtrip Fares" . Onemileatatime.com . Retrieved 2018-12-04 .
^ "Laudamotion outlines S19 Stuttgart network" . Routesonline.com . 18 October 2018.
^ "Air France se pose à Monaco" . Air-journal.fr . Retrieved 23 January 2019 .
^ "Qatar Airways Launches Direct Service To Nice" (Press release). 4 July 2017. Archived from the original on 16 November 2018. Retrieved 16 November 2018 .
^ Liu, Jim (20 December 2018). "S7 Airlines S19 Regional / International service changes as of 04JAN19" . Routesonline . Retrieved 12 January 2019 .
^ Liu, Jim (21 January 2019). "S7 Airlines further expands St. Petersburg – Europe routes in S19" . Routesonline . Retrieved 21 January 2019 .
^ "SAS S19 European network additions" . Airline Route. Retrieved 11 October 2018 .
^ "SkyUp" . skyup.aero .
^ "Vols nice - Billets d'avion nice - TUI fly, avant Jetairfly" . Tuifly.be . Retrieved 23 January 2019 .
^ "Istanbul New Airport Transition Delayed Until April 5, 2019 (At The Earliest)" .
^ "VOLOTEA - Cheap flights, offers and plane tickets to Europe" . Volotea.com . 11 January 2019. Retrieved 23 January 2019 .
^ "Wizz Air thrives in Hungary" . wizzair.com . Archived from the original on 24 September 2015.
^ "Wizz Air will fly from Krakow. Cheap carrier will open 12 routes from the capital of Lesser Poland" . Businessinsider.com.pl . 21 November 2018.
^ "Wien: Wizzair kündigt neun weitere Strecken an" . Austrianaviation.net . Retrieved 2 March 2018 .
^ "Welcome to the world of opportunity!" . wizzair.com . Retrieved 23 January 2019 .
^ "UEFA Champions League – Statistics Handbook 2012/13" (PDF) . UEFA.com . Union of European Football Associations. p. 141. Retrieved 22 September 2013 .