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***Official Soccer Chat Thread***
- LordNu
- Posts: 10609
- Joined: Sun Aug 27, 2017 2:15 am
Re: ***Official Soccer Chat Thread***
Arsenal :/
-
- Posts: 6135
- Joined: Thu Sep 07, 2017 9:35 pm
- Location: Minneapolis
Re: ***Official Soccer Chat Thread***
Abe Froman wrote: ↑Mon Sep 04, 2017 7:57 pm For now, Soccer will be placed here. If it starts to get enough behind it, I'll create an actual forum!
- LordNu
- Posts: 10609
- Joined: Sun Aug 27, 2017 2:15 am
Re: ***Official Soccer Chat Thread***
You laugh, but a number of Frubes do follow the EPL.
- milquetoast
- Posts: 2680
- Joined: Mon Sep 18, 2017 5:14 pm
Re: ***Official Soccer Chat Thread***
And the Bundesliga as well
Spoiler:
When fact is fiction and TV reality
- LordNu
- Posts: 10609
- Joined: Sun Aug 27, 2017 2:15 am
Re: ***Official Soccer Chat Thread***
Football Chat should go ahead then!
- Face The Facts
- Posts: 1955
- Joined: Thu Oct 05, 2017 11:36 pm
Re: ***Official Soccer Chat Thread***
What a cluster that was tonight. US Soccer needs a total revamp.
- Ash Ketchum
- Posts: 7922
- Joined: Mon Sep 18, 2017 9:11 pm
Re: ***Official Soccer Chat Thread***
Didn’t realize there were other soccer Froobs.
US Soccer needs better leadership at the top.
As far as the “quality” of soccer in the country, we’re headed in the right direction. There are infinitely more and higher quality academy options for young American kids today vs. even 10 years ago. The development of our youth pipeline has improved and we’re going to start seeing the benefits of that in the coming years.
What US Soccer needs to do is ensure that that growth keeps going and they build upon it.
They have to do something to help make high school and college soccer more of an asset to US Soccer. As it stands now, your typical high level soccer-playing 14 year old plays club soccer in the spring, summer and winter (which is good), but then spends the other months playing for their local high school where usually they are playing on a less talented teams for a lesser coach against lesser competition. Bad habits, injury, etc. are all risks. At best, it’s a waste of time in terms of their development if they are truly a legitimate US Soccer prospect.
Kids in other countries don’t have this importance attached to playing soccer for your school. The best kids in Europe get snatched up by an academy and soccer becomes their lives.
Not advocating for that here, but I’m just saying thereinlies the difference.
US Soccer needs better leadership at the top.
As far as the “quality” of soccer in the country, we’re headed in the right direction. There are infinitely more and higher quality academy options for young American kids today vs. even 10 years ago. The development of our youth pipeline has improved and we’re going to start seeing the benefits of that in the coming years.
What US Soccer needs to do is ensure that that growth keeps going and they build upon it.
They have to do something to help make high school and college soccer more of an asset to US Soccer. As it stands now, your typical high level soccer-playing 14 year old plays club soccer in the spring, summer and winter (which is good), but then spends the other months playing for their local high school where usually they are playing on a less talented teams for a lesser coach against lesser competition. Bad habits, injury, etc. are all risks. At best, it’s a waste of time in terms of their development if they are truly a legitimate US Soccer prospect.
Kids in other countries don’t have this importance attached to playing soccer for your school. The best kids in Europe get snatched up by an academy and soccer becomes their lives.
Not advocating for that here, but I’m just saying thereinlies the difference.
- Ash Ketchum
- Posts: 7922
- Joined: Mon Sep 18, 2017 9:11 pm
Re: ***Official Soccer Chat Thread***
Minnesota United is #5 in the West currently. Go Loons!
- beetlebum71
- Posts: 9298
- Joined: Wed Aug 30, 2017 5:25 pm
- Location: Everywhere and Nowhere
- Qman65
- Posts: 5566
- Joined: Mon Oct 09, 2017 11:05 pm
Re: ***Official Soccer Chat Thread***
I think bowling on ESPN has higher ratings than futbol.
"That's like uh, your opinion man"!
- Ash Ketchum
- Posts: 7922
- Joined: Mon Sep 18, 2017 9:11 pm
- Qman65
- Posts: 5566
- Joined: Mon Oct 09, 2017 11:05 pm
Re: ***Official Soccer Chat Thread***
Soccer= Croquet. I'd rather play the latter.
"That's like uh, your opinion man"!
- Qman65
- Posts: 5566
- Joined: Mon Oct 09, 2017 11:05 pm
Re: ***Official Soccer Chat Thread***
How about MMA? Where does it rank between 18-35 yr olds? Not that I give a shit, just looking for a point of reference.Ash Ketchum wrote: ↑Sat Aug 04, 2018 12:07 amYou're incorrect.
In fact, among 18-35 year olds, soccer is actually tied for the second most popular sport in the US in terms of viewing on TV, ahead of baseball and tied with basketball.
"That's like uh, your opinion man"!
- The Lizard King
- Posts: 21525
- Joined: Tue Aug 14, 2018 11:01 am
Re: ***Official Soccer Chat Thread***
2019 Women's World Cup...
Group F: USA, Thailand, Chile, and Sweden.
Group F: USA, Thailand, Chile, and Sweden.
"If you ever need anything, please don't hesitate to ask someone else first." - KDC
- Ash Ketchum
- Posts: 7922
- Joined: Mon Sep 18, 2017 9:11 pm
Re: ***Official Soccer Chat Thread***
USA and Sweden will be the heavy favorites to emerge from the group.The Lizard King wrote: ↑Sat Dec 08, 2018 11:02 pm 2019 Women's World Cup...
Group F: USA, Thailand, Chile, and Sweden.
- Bon Scott
- Posts: 5288
- Joined: Mon Sep 18, 2017 4:51 pm
- Location: New Prague
Re: ***Official Soccer Chat Thread***
Is it true that mnufc has more away games than home games this season. Why did we pay for this stadium?
Trump will forever be known as Potus who was so full of shit that country ran out of Toilet Paper.
-
- Posts: 2875
- Joined: Mon Apr 02, 2018 7:22 pm
Re: ***Official Soccer Chat Thread***
https://www.mlssoccer.com/post/2019/04/ ... -lookahead
Just seen the new stadium for the first time.
Looks pretty impressive for the size
Just seen the new stadium for the first time.
Looks pretty impressive for the size
Self praise is no praise. But i am pretty great...
-
- Posts: 213
- Joined: Fri Dec 07, 2018 5:36 pm
Re: ***Official Soccer Chat Thread***
Anyone watching FIFA Women’s World Cup?
- Slap Shot
- Posts: 40579
- Joined: Fri Sep 08, 2017 12:17 pm
- Location: Here there and everywhere
Re: ***Official Soccer Chat Thread***
US up 2-1 over Spain in extra time of the Round of 16. 7+ added at the end.
- memyworld
- Posts: 1660
- Joined: Thu Sep 07, 2017 9:23 am
- Location: Sioux Falls
Re: ***Official Soccer Chat Thread***
Could clinch the same night as the Twins:
- Rusty Kuntz
- Posts: 13809
- Joined: Thu Sep 07, 2017 3:51 pm
- Location: NBA Replay Center, Secaucus, NJ
Re: ***Official Soccer Chat Thread***
Im trying to watch my first Loons game but the fucking constant drumming is so annoying. I can't.
- Ash Ketchum
- Posts: 7922
- Joined: Mon Sep 18, 2017 9:11 pm
Re: ***Official Soccer Chat Thread***
Stick with a sport with quiet fans or no fans in the stands at all like baseball.Rusty Kuntz wrote: ↑Sat Mar 07, 2020 7:17 pm Im trying to watch my first Loons game but the fucking constant drumming is so annoying. I can't.
- Mandatory
- ***Official MNRC HOF Member***
- Posts: 43992
- Joined: Thu Sep 07, 2017 8:05 am
- Location: The Gothic Asshole
Re: ***Official Soccer Chat Thread***
This thread deserves it's own forum. People would post. I'll even run it. Moderate it.
Really sucks that Liverpool aren't going to get the celebration of their championship they deserve.
Really sucks that Liverpool aren't going to get the celebration of their championship they deserve.
I am a part of all whom I have met. - Alfred the Great
#BaltimoreStrong
#BaltimoreStrong
- Face The Facts
- Posts: 1955
- Joined: Thu Oct 05, 2017 11:36 pm
Re: ***Official Soccer Chat Thread***
MNUFC - Big game tonight!
- Slap Shot
- Posts: 40579
- Joined: Fri Sep 08, 2017 12:17 pm
- Location: Here there and everywhere
Re: ***Official Soccer Chat Thread***
Possibly outplayed so far but the US goes up 1-0 at 35:00!!
- Porridge
- Posts: 8655
- Joined: Fri Mar 02, 2018 3:06 pm
Re: ***Official Soccer Chat Thread***
I know folks have been eagerly awaiting this!!!
It’s the *** Official World Cup Prequalification Schedule ***!
Qualifying for the 2022 World Cup began on June 6, 2019, when minor nations from the Asian confederation played their first round of matches. Mongolia's Norjmoogiin Tsedenbal scored the very first goal in qualifying in a 2-0 win over Brunei Darussalam.
NB: World Cup qualifying has been seriously affected by the coronavirus pandemic with many qualifying paths suspended. The information below may change depending on the viability of the qualifying paths and local situations.
EUROPE (UEFA; 13 PLACES)
• European qualifying home page
There are 55 European nations and qualifying begins March 2021. There are 10 groups of 5 or 6 teams, with qualifying treble headers in March and September to make up for the lost World Cup qualifying dates from June 2021 (the new date for Euro 2020).
Group winners will go direct to the finals.
The groups are:
Group A: Portugal, Serbia, Republic of Ireland, Luxembourg, Azerbaijan
Group B: Spain, Sweden, Greece, Georgia, Kosovo
Group C: Italy, Switzerland, Northern Ireland, Bulgaria, Lithuania
Group D: France, Ukraine, Finland, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Kazakhstan
Group E: Belgium, Wales, Czech Republic, Belarus, Estonia
Group F: Denmark, Austria, Scotland, Israel, Faroe Islands, Moldova
Group G: Netherlands, Turkey, Norway, Montenegro, Latvia, Gibraltar
Group H: Croatia, Slovakia, Russia, Slovenia, Cyprus, Malta
Group I: England, Poland, Hungary, Albania, Andorra, San Marino
Group J: Germany, Romania, Iceland, North Macedonia, Armenia, Liechtenstein
- Click here to see the upcoming European fixtures
Match Dates:
MD 1-3: March 24 to 31
MD 4-6: Sept. 1 to 8
MD 7-8: Oct. 8-12
MD 9-10: Nov. 11-16
The final three places with be allocated via playoffs. This will involve the 10 runners-up plus the two best-ranked group winners in the 2020-21 UEFA Nations League not to have qualified.
The order of preference for the two teams to enter the playoffs (if required) via the Nations League is: France, Belgium, Italy, Spain, Wales, Austria, Czech Republic, Hungary, Slovenia, Montenegro, Albania, Armenia, Gibraltar, Faroe Islands.
There will be three routes, each with four teams with a semifinal and a final for a place at the World Cup, playoffs to be held in March 2022. The draw will be seeded based upon qualifying round points. The two UEFA Nations League teams will be unseeded.
SOUTH AMERICA (CONMEBOL 4.5 PLACES)
• South American qualifying home page
As in recent qualifying competitions, all 10 nations play each other home and away. The top four nations qualify directly to the finals. The fifth-place team will go into an intercontinental playoff (draw to be determined).
The first four rounds of qualifiers in March and September 2020 were suspended and it finally began in October 2020.
However, the two planned rounds of matches in March 2021 were postponed due to issues with European players being able to travel to South America amid the pandemic.
There will already be an additional international break in January 2022 to help complete qualifying in full in the existing format. But the loss of another two rounds puts that in jeopardy. There is at present no news on how the games will fit into the calendar.
- Check out the latest fixtures and results here | Latest table
NORTH AMERICA, CENTRAL AMERICA, CARIBBEAN (CONCACAF; 3.5 PLACES)
• CONCACAF qualifying home page
CONCACAF has 35 FIFA-affiliated nations, most of them very minor in world football.
A revamped qualification process was confirmed for the 2022 edition, which was due to begin in September 2020 and run to September 2021. However, this has now been abandoned due to the coronavirus pandemic.
The format had to be reworked again, as follows:
Round One: Nations ranked 6-35 in the FIFA World Ranking were drawn into six groups of five. Each team will play every other team in their group only once, with the round to be played in March and June 2021. The six group winners will progress.
- Click here to see the latest Round One fixtures and results
Group A: El Salvador, Antigua and Barbuda, Grenada, Montserrat, US Virgin Islands
Group B: Canada,Suriname, Bermuda, Cayman Islands, Aruba
Group C: Curaçao, Guatemala, St Vincent and the Grenadines, Cuba, British Virgin Islands
Group D: Panama, Dominican Republic, Barbados, Dominica, Anguilla
Group E: Haiti, Nicaragua, Belize, St Lucia, Turks and Caicos Islands
Group F: Trinidad and Tobago, St Kitts and Nevis, Guyana, Puerto Rico, Bahamas
Round Two: The six group winners will play home and away in a direct elimination format, in June 2021. The three winners will progress.
Winners of Group A vs. Winners of Group F
Winners of Group B vs. Winners of Group E
Winners of Group C vs. Winners of Group D
Final Round: The three winners join the teams ranked 1-5 in FIFA's World Ranking (Costa Rica, Honduras, Jamaica, Mexico, United States). The eight teams will play each other home and away, a total of 14 matches. The top three qualify directly, with the fourth-placed team going to the intercontinental playoff in June 2022.
Match Dates:
MD 1-3: September 2021
MD 4-6: October 2021
MD 7-8: November 2021
MD 9-11: January 2022
MD 12-14: March 2022
AFRICA (CAF; 5 PLACES)
• African qualifying home page
There are 54 FIFA-affiliated nations.
Round One: The 28 lowest ranked nations play two-legged ties. The ties were played in September 2019, with the full list of results available here.
Round Two: The 14 winners from the first round were joined by the other 26 African nations. Those 40 teams were split into 10 groups of four teams, with the group winners advancing to the final round.
This round was due to begin in March 2020 and run through to October 2021 until football was suspended. The preliminary World Cup competition will now be played in four windows in 2021, with two games each. The group stage runs from May 31-June 15, and continues in the FIFA windows on Aug. 30-Sept. 7 and Oct. 4-12.
The groups are:
Group A: Algeria, Burkina Faso, ***DO NOT SAY SHIT LIKE THAT, YOU FUCKING IDIOT!!!!***, Djibouti
Group B: Tunisia, Zambia, Mauritania, Equatorial Guinea,
Group C: Nigeria, Cape Verde, Central African Republic, Liberia
Group D: Cameroon, Ivory Coast, Mozambique, Malawi
Group E: Mali, Uganda, Kenya, Rwanda
Group F: Egypt, Gabon, Libya, Angola
Group G: Ghana, South Africa, Zimbabwe, Ethiopia
Group H: Senegal, Congo, Namibia, Togo
Group I: Morocco, Guinea, Guinea-Bissau, Sudan
Group J: Congo DR, Benin, Madagascar, Tanzania
Round Three: The 10 group winners will be drawn into head-to-head, two-legged ties for one of the five places at the World Cup. Fixtures to be played in November 2021.
ASIA (AFC; 4.5 PLACES)
• Asia qualifying home page
The first two rounds of qualifying are exactly the same as four years ago.
Round One: The 12 lowest ranked nations played two-legged ties in June 2019. Guam, Macau, Mongolia, Timor-Leste, Bangladesh and Cambodia advanced.
Round Two: The six winners from the first round joined the other 34 Asian nations, drawn into eight groups of five teams -- also played as qualifiers for the 2023 Asian Cup finals (for this reason World Cup hosts Qatar will take part).
The eight group winners and the four best group runners-up go through. If Qatar win their group, seven group winners and five best group runners-up progress.
Qualifying is still suspended due to the pandemic, with no games played since November 2019.
In at attempt to get all games completed, the AFC has decided to hold all matches on a centralised basis. The host nations are shown in bold. The round will now be completed between May 31 and June 15, 2021.
Group A: China, Syria, Philippines, Maldives, Guam
Group B: Australia, Jordan, Chinese Taipei, Kuwait, Nepal
Group C: Iran, Iraq, Bahrain, Hong Kong, Cambodia
Group D: Saudi Arabia, Uzbekistan, Palestine, Yemen, Singapore
Group E: Bangladesh, Oman, India, Afghanistan, Qatar
Group F: Japan, Kyrgyz Republic, Tajikistan, Myanmar, Mongolia
Group G: United Arab Emirates, Vietnam, Thailand, Malaysia, Indonesia
Group H: South Korea, Lebanon, North Korea, Turkmenistan, Sri Lanka
Round Three (final group round): The remaining 12 nations will be drawn into two groups of six teams. Group winners and runners-up qualified for the World Cup. To be played September 2021 to March 2022.
Round Four: The teams finishing third in round three played a two-legged playoff, to be played May or June 2022. The winners then advanced to an inter-confederation playoff, to be played June 2022.
OCEANIA (OFC; 0.5 PLACES)
• Oceania qualifying home page
All 11 FIFA-affiliated national teams are due to take part.
Round One: Teams split into two groups based upon FIFA World Ranking playing round robin games. The top two nations in each group progress. At present there is no date though January 2022 has been suggested.
Round Two: The four teams play home and away semifinals and final for the right to go through to the intercontinental playoff (June 2022).
INTERCONTINENTAL PLAYOFFS (2 PLACES)
This will feature one team each from Asia, CONCACAF, Oceania and South America. A draw will determine the two-legged ties. They will be played in June 2022 -- pushed back from the original scheduled date in March 2022.
It’s the *** Official World Cup Prequalification Schedule ***!
Qualifying for the 2022 World Cup began on June 6, 2019, when minor nations from the Asian confederation played their first round of matches. Mongolia's Norjmoogiin Tsedenbal scored the very first goal in qualifying in a 2-0 win over Brunei Darussalam.
NB: World Cup qualifying has been seriously affected by the coronavirus pandemic with many qualifying paths suspended. The information below may change depending on the viability of the qualifying paths and local situations.
EUROPE (UEFA; 13 PLACES)
• European qualifying home page
There are 55 European nations and qualifying begins March 2021. There are 10 groups of 5 or 6 teams, with qualifying treble headers in March and September to make up for the lost World Cup qualifying dates from June 2021 (the new date for Euro 2020).
Group winners will go direct to the finals.
The groups are:
Group A: Portugal, Serbia, Republic of Ireland, Luxembourg, Azerbaijan
Group B: Spain, Sweden, Greece, Georgia, Kosovo
Group C: Italy, Switzerland, Northern Ireland, Bulgaria, Lithuania
Group D: France, Ukraine, Finland, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Kazakhstan
Group E: Belgium, Wales, Czech Republic, Belarus, Estonia
Group F: Denmark, Austria, Scotland, Israel, Faroe Islands, Moldova
Group G: Netherlands, Turkey, Norway, Montenegro, Latvia, Gibraltar
Group H: Croatia, Slovakia, Russia, Slovenia, Cyprus, Malta
Group I: England, Poland, Hungary, Albania, Andorra, San Marino
Group J: Germany, Romania, Iceland, North Macedonia, Armenia, Liechtenstein
- Click here to see the upcoming European fixtures
Match Dates:
MD 1-3: March 24 to 31
MD 4-6: Sept. 1 to 8
MD 7-8: Oct. 8-12
MD 9-10: Nov. 11-16
The final three places with be allocated via playoffs. This will involve the 10 runners-up plus the two best-ranked group winners in the 2020-21 UEFA Nations League not to have qualified.
The order of preference for the two teams to enter the playoffs (if required) via the Nations League is: France, Belgium, Italy, Spain, Wales, Austria, Czech Republic, Hungary, Slovenia, Montenegro, Albania, Armenia, Gibraltar, Faroe Islands.
There will be three routes, each with four teams with a semifinal and a final for a place at the World Cup, playoffs to be held in March 2022. The draw will be seeded based upon qualifying round points. The two UEFA Nations League teams will be unseeded.
SOUTH AMERICA (CONMEBOL 4.5 PLACES)
• South American qualifying home page
As in recent qualifying competitions, all 10 nations play each other home and away. The top four nations qualify directly to the finals. The fifth-place team will go into an intercontinental playoff (draw to be determined).
The first four rounds of qualifiers in March and September 2020 were suspended and it finally began in October 2020.
However, the two planned rounds of matches in March 2021 were postponed due to issues with European players being able to travel to South America amid the pandemic.
There will already be an additional international break in January 2022 to help complete qualifying in full in the existing format. But the loss of another two rounds puts that in jeopardy. There is at present no news on how the games will fit into the calendar.
- Check out the latest fixtures and results here | Latest table
NORTH AMERICA, CENTRAL AMERICA, CARIBBEAN (CONCACAF; 3.5 PLACES)
• CONCACAF qualifying home page
CONCACAF has 35 FIFA-affiliated nations, most of them very minor in world football.
A revamped qualification process was confirmed for the 2022 edition, which was due to begin in September 2020 and run to September 2021. However, this has now been abandoned due to the coronavirus pandemic.
The format had to be reworked again, as follows:
Round One: Nations ranked 6-35 in the FIFA World Ranking were drawn into six groups of five. Each team will play every other team in their group only once, with the round to be played in March and June 2021. The six group winners will progress.
- Click here to see the latest Round One fixtures and results
Group A: El Salvador, Antigua and Barbuda, Grenada, Montserrat, US Virgin Islands
Group B: Canada,Suriname, Bermuda, Cayman Islands, Aruba
Group C: Curaçao, Guatemala, St Vincent and the Grenadines, Cuba, British Virgin Islands
Group D: Panama, Dominican Republic, Barbados, Dominica, Anguilla
Group E: Haiti, Nicaragua, Belize, St Lucia, Turks and Caicos Islands
Group F: Trinidad and Tobago, St Kitts and Nevis, Guyana, Puerto Rico, Bahamas
Round Two: The six group winners will play home and away in a direct elimination format, in June 2021. The three winners will progress.
Winners of Group A vs. Winners of Group F
Winners of Group B vs. Winners of Group E
Winners of Group C vs. Winners of Group D
Final Round: The three winners join the teams ranked 1-5 in FIFA's World Ranking (Costa Rica, Honduras, Jamaica, Mexico, United States). The eight teams will play each other home and away, a total of 14 matches. The top three qualify directly, with the fourth-placed team going to the intercontinental playoff in June 2022.
Match Dates:
MD 1-3: September 2021
MD 4-6: October 2021
MD 7-8: November 2021
MD 9-11: January 2022
MD 12-14: March 2022
AFRICA (CAF; 5 PLACES)
• African qualifying home page
There are 54 FIFA-affiliated nations.
Round One: The 28 lowest ranked nations play two-legged ties. The ties were played in September 2019, with the full list of results available here.
Round Two: The 14 winners from the first round were joined by the other 26 African nations. Those 40 teams were split into 10 groups of four teams, with the group winners advancing to the final round.
This round was due to begin in March 2020 and run through to October 2021 until football was suspended. The preliminary World Cup competition will now be played in four windows in 2021, with two games each. The group stage runs from May 31-June 15, and continues in the FIFA windows on Aug. 30-Sept. 7 and Oct. 4-12.
The groups are:
Group A: Algeria, Burkina Faso, ***DO NOT SAY SHIT LIKE THAT, YOU FUCKING IDIOT!!!!***, Djibouti
Group B: Tunisia, Zambia, Mauritania, Equatorial Guinea,
Group C: Nigeria, Cape Verde, Central African Republic, Liberia
Group D: Cameroon, Ivory Coast, Mozambique, Malawi
Group E: Mali, Uganda, Kenya, Rwanda
Group F: Egypt, Gabon, Libya, Angola
Group G: Ghana, South Africa, Zimbabwe, Ethiopia
Group H: Senegal, Congo, Namibia, Togo
Group I: Morocco, Guinea, Guinea-Bissau, Sudan
Group J: Congo DR, Benin, Madagascar, Tanzania
Round Three: The 10 group winners will be drawn into head-to-head, two-legged ties for one of the five places at the World Cup. Fixtures to be played in November 2021.
ASIA (AFC; 4.5 PLACES)
• Asia qualifying home page
The first two rounds of qualifying are exactly the same as four years ago.
Round One: The 12 lowest ranked nations played two-legged ties in June 2019. Guam, Macau, Mongolia, Timor-Leste, Bangladesh and Cambodia advanced.
Round Two: The six winners from the first round joined the other 34 Asian nations, drawn into eight groups of five teams -- also played as qualifiers for the 2023 Asian Cup finals (for this reason World Cup hosts Qatar will take part).
The eight group winners and the four best group runners-up go through. If Qatar win their group, seven group winners and five best group runners-up progress.
Qualifying is still suspended due to the pandemic, with no games played since November 2019.
In at attempt to get all games completed, the AFC has decided to hold all matches on a centralised basis. The host nations are shown in bold. The round will now be completed between May 31 and June 15, 2021.
Group A: China, Syria, Philippines, Maldives, Guam
Group B: Australia, Jordan, Chinese Taipei, Kuwait, Nepal
Group C: Iran, Iraq, Bahrain, Hong Kong, Cambodia
Group D: Saudi Arabia, Uzbekistan, Palestine, Yemen, Singapore
Group E: Bangladesh, Oman, India, Afghanistan, Qatar
Group F: Japan, Kyrgyz Republic, Tajikistan, Myanmar, Mongolia
Group G: United Arab Emirates, Vietnam, Thailand, Malaysia, Indonesia
Group H: South Korea, Lebanon, North Korea, Turkmenistan, Sri Lanka
Round Three (final group round): The remaining 12 nations will be drawn into two groups of six teams. Group winners and runners-up qualified for the World Cup. To be played September 2021 to March 2022.
Round Four: The teams finishing third in round three played a two-legged playoff, to be played May or June 2022. The winners then advanced to an inter-confederation playoff, to be played June 2022.
OCEANIA (OFC; 0.5 PLACES)
• Oceania qualifying home page
All 11 FIFA-affiliated national teams are due to take part.
Round One: Teams split into two groups based upon FIFA World Ranking playing round robin games. The top two nations in each group progress. At present there is no date though January 2022 has been suggested.
Round Two: The four teams play home and away semifinals and final for the right to go through to the intercontinental playoff (June 2022).
INTERCONTINENTAL PLAYOFFS (2 PLACES)
This will feature one team each from Asia, CONCACAF, Oceania and South America. A draw will determine the two-legged ties. They will be played in June 2022 -- pushed back from the original scheduled date in March 2022.
- Porridge
- Posts: 8655
- Joined: Fri Mar 02, 2018 3:06 pm
Re: ***Official Soccer Chat Thread***
wAt are your thoughts on the proposed European Super League of 12 teams?
Looking for a meaningful and compelling, albeit controversial discussion, on this subject.
Expecting 20+ pages in the next 30 mins.
Looking for a meaningful and compelling, albeit controversial discussion, on this subject.
Expecting 20+ pages in the next 30 mins.
- weimy froob
- Posts: 90807
- Joined: Thu Sep 07, 2017 11:10 am
Re: ***Official Soccer Chat Thread***
i'll put this out there to see if it draws in a couple posters/posts.
- Bob Wiley
- Posts: 11447
- Joined: Thu Sep 14, 2017 1:44 pm
Re: ***Official Soccer Chat Thread***
Didn’t go to well. Super League lasted 48 hours!weimy froob wrote: ↑Tue Apr 20, 2021 5:59 pmi'll put this out there to see if it draws in a couple posters/posts.
"Dude, my IQ and education level is a 1,000 times more than yours. I whip everyone's ass here and they cannot hold a candle to me." mlhouse
- Slap Shot
- Posts: 40579
- Joined: Fri Sep 08, 2017 12:17 pm
- Location: Here there and everywhere
Re: ***Official Soccer Chat Thread***
Pulisic!!