FIFA U-17 World Cup records and statistics

This is a list of records of the FIFA U-17 World Cup.[1]

Awards

Tournament Golden Ball Golden Boot Goals Golden Gloves Fair Play
1985 China William Marcel Witeczek 8 Not awarded  West Germany
1987 Canada Philip Osundu Moussa Traoré 5  Soviet Union
1989 Scotland James Will Fode Camara 3  Bahrain
1991 Italy Nii Lamptey Adriano 4  Argentina
1993 Japan Daniel Addo Wilson Oruma 6  Nigeria
1995 Ecuador Mohamed Kathiri Daniel Allsopp 5  Brazil
1997 Egypt Sergio Santamaría David 7  Argentina
1999 New Zealand Landon Donovan Ishmael Addo 7  Mexico
2001 Trinidad and Tobago Florent Sinama Pongolle Florent Sinama Pongolle 9  Nigeria
2003 Finland Cesc Fàbregas Cesc Fàbregas 5  Costa Rica
2005 Peru Anderson Carlos Vela 5  North Korea
2007 South Korea Toni Kroos Macauley Chrisantus 7  Costa Rica
2009 Nigeria Sani Emmanuel Borja 5 Benjamin Siegrist  Nigeria
2011 Mexico Julio Gómez Souleymane Coulibaly 9 Jonathan Cubero  Japan
2013 United Arab Emirates Kelechi Iheanacho Valmir Berisha 7 Dele Alampasu  Nigeria
2015 Chile Kelechi Nwakali Victor Osimhen 10 Samuel Diarra  Ecuador
2017 India Phil Foden Rhian Brewster 8 Gabriel Brazão  Brazil
2019 Brazil Gabriel Veron Sontje Hansen 6 Matheus Donelli  Ecuador
2023 Peru TBA TBA TBA TBA TBA

Team: tournament position

Most championships
5;  Nigeria (1985, 1993, 2007, 2013, 2015)
Most finishes in the top two
8;  Nigeria (1985, 1987, 1993, 2001, 2007, 2009, 2013, 2015)
Most finishes in the top three
8;  Nigeria (1985, 1987, 1993, 2001, 2007, 2009, 2013, 2015),  Brazil (1985, 1995, 1997, 1999, 2003, 2005, 2017, 2019)
Most World Cup appearances
17;  Brazil (every tournament except 1993) and  United States (every tournament except 2013)
Most second-place finishes
4;  Spain (1991, 2003, 2007, 2017)
Most third-place finishes
3;  Argentina (1991, 1995, 2003)
Most fourth-place finishes
2;  Argentina (2001, 2013) and  Colombia (2003, 2009)
Most 3rd-4th-place finishes
5;  Argentina (1991, 1995, 2001, 2003, 2013)

Consecutive

Most consecutive championships
2;  Brazil (1997–1999),  Nigeria (2013–2015)
Most consecutive finishes in the top two
4;  Ghana (1991–1997)
Most consecutive finishes in the top three
5;  Ghana (1991–1999)
Most consecutive finishes in the top four
5;  Ghana (1991–1999)
Most consecutive finals tournaments
14;  United States (1985–2011)
Most consecutive second-place finishes
no country has finished 2nd in two consecutive tournaments
Most consecutive third-place finishes
no country has finished 3rd in two consecutive tournaments
Most consecutive fourth-place finishes
no country has finished 4th in two consecutive tournaments
Most consecutive 3rd-4th-place finishes
2;  Argentina (2001–2003)

Gaps

Longest gap between successive titles
16 years;  Brazil (2003–2019)
Longest gap between successive appearances in the top two
14 years;  Brazil (2005–2019)
Longest gap between successive appearances in the top three
22 years;  Germany (1985–2007)
Longest gap between successive appearances in the top four
18 years;  France (2005–2019)
Longest gap between successive appearances in the finals
26 years;  Soviet Union, later continued by  Russia (1987–2013)

Host team

Best finish by a host team
Champions;  Mexico (2011),  Argentina (2019)
Worst finish by a host team
Group stage;  Canada (1987),  Trinidad and Tobago (2001),  India (2017)

Defending champion

Best finish by defending champion
Champion;  Brazil (1999),  Nigeria (2015)
Worst finish by defending champion
Did not qualify;  Soviet Union (1989),  Saudi Arabia (1991),  France (2003),  Mexico (2007),   Switzerland (2011),  Nigeria (2017),  England (2019)
Worst finish by defending champion who participates in the next tournament
Quarter-finals;  Brazil (2001)

Debuting teams

Best finish by a debuting team
Champions;  Nigeria (1985),  Soviet Union (1987),   Switzerland (2009)

Other

Most finishes in the top two, never become champions
4;  Spain (1991, 2003, 2007, 2017)
Most finishes in the top four, never become champions
6;  Spain (1991, 1997, 2003, 2007, 2009, 2017)
Most appearances, never become champions
15;  United States (all except 2013)
Most finishes in the top four, never finish in the top two
5;  Argentina (1991, 1995, 2001, 2003, 2013)
Most appearances, never finish in the top two
15;  United States (all except 2013)
Most appearances, never finish in the top four
10;  Costa Rica (1985, 1995, 1997, 2001, 2003, 2005, 2007, 2009, 2015, 2017)

All time

Most appearances in the group stage
17;  Brazil (every tournament except 1993),  United States (every tournament except 2013)
Most progression from the group stage
15;  Brazil (every tournament except 1987 and 2009)
Most consecutive appearances, progressing from the group stage
7;  Brazil (1995–2007)
Most appearances, never progressing from the group stage
7;  Canada (1987, 1989, 1993, 1995, 2011, 2013)

Host team

Host teams eliminated in the group stage
 Canada (1987),  Italy (1991),  New Zealand (1999),  Trinidad and Tobago (2001),  Finland (2003),  Peru (2005),  South Korea (2007),  United Arab Emirates (2013),  India (2017)

Teams: matches played and goals scored

All time

Most matches played
89;  Brazil
Fewest matches played
3;  Sudan,  Finland,  Togo,  Sierra Leone,  Rwanda,  Yemen,  Denmark,  Algeria,  Malawi,  Venezuela,  South Africa,  India,  New Caledonia,  Solomon Islands
Most wins
59;  Brazil
Most losses
32;  United States
Most draws
14;  Argentina
Most goals scored
192;  Brazil
Most goals conceded
102;  United States
Fewest goals scored
0;  Rwanda,  Algeria,  Solomon Islands
Fewest goals conceded
3;  Scotland,  Hungary,  Togo,  Rwanda
Highest goal difference
+106;  Nigeria
Lowest goal difference
–69;  New Zealand
Most played final
2 times;  Brazil vs  Ghana (1995, 1997),  Brazil vs  Mexico (2005, 2019)

In one tournament

Most goals scored
26;  Nigeria (2013)
Most goals scored, champions
26;  Nigeria (2013)
Most goals scored, hosts
21;  Mexico (2011)
Fewest goals scored, champions
8;  Saudi Arabia (1989),  Ghana (1991),  Brazil (1999)

Goalscoring

Individual

Most goals scored in a tournament
10; Victor Osimhen ( Nigeria (2015))
Most goals scored in a match
4; David ( Spain, vs  New Zealand (1997)), Carlos Hidalgo ( Colombia, vs  Finland (2003)), Souleymane Coulibaly ( Ivory Coast, vs  Denmark (2011)), Kelechi Iheanacho ( Nigeria, vs  Mexico (2013))
Most goals scored in one final
2; Phil Foden ( England), Sergio Gomez ( Spain) (2017)
Fastest goal in a final
3rd minute; Wilson Oruma ( Nigeria, vs  Ghana (1993))
Latest goal from kickoff in a final
93rd minute; Lázaro ( Argentina, vs  France (2019))

Team

Biggest margin of victory
13;  Spain, vs New Zealand  (1997)
Most goals scored in a match, one team
13;  Spain, vs New Zealand  (1997)
Most goals scored in a match, both teams
13;  Spain 13–0 New Zealand  (1997)
Most goals scored in a final, one team
5;  England (2017)
Most goals scored in a final, both teams
7;  England 5–2 Spain  (2017)
Fewest goals scored in a final, both teams
0;  Brazil 0–0 Australia  (1999),  Nigeria 0–0 Spain  (2007)
Biggest margin of victory in a final
3;  France (2001),  Mexico (2005),  Nigeria (2013),  England (2017)
Most goals in a tournament, one team
26;  Nigeria (2013)

Tournament

Most goals scored in a tournament
183 goals, 2017
Fewest goals scored in a tournament
77 goals, 1989
Most goals per match in a tournament
3.52 goals per match, 2017
Fewest goals per match in a tournament
2.4 goals per match, 1989

Top scoring teams by tournament

Teams listed in bold won the tournament.

World Cup Team Goals
1985 China Brazil
Germany
13
1987 Canada Soviet Union 17
1989 Scotland Portugal 11
1991 Italy Spain 13
1993 Japan Nigeria 20
1995 Ecuador Ghana
Brazil
13
1997 Egypt Spain 22
1999 New Zealand Ghana 19
2001 Trinidad and Tobago France 18
2003 Finland Spain 16
2005 Peru Mexico
Brazil
16
2007 South Korea Germany 20
2009 Nigeria Switzerland
Spain
18
2011 Mexico Germany 24
2013 United Arab Emirates Nigeria 26
2015 Chile Nigeria 23
2017 India England 23
2019 Brazil Canada 22
2023 Peru TBA TBA

Host records

Best performance by host(s)
Champions;  Mexico (2011),  Argentina (2019)
Worst performance by host(s)
Group stage;  Canada (1987),  Italy (1991),  New Zealand (1999),  Trinidad and Tobago (2001),  Finland (2003),  Peru (2005),  South Korea (2007),  United Arab Emirates (2013),  India (2017)
Had its best performance when hosting

Penalty shootouts

Most shootouts, team, all-time
4;  Brazil,  Nigeria
Most wins, team, all-time
2;  Argentina,  Brazil,  Spain,  Mexico,  Nigeria, and  Saudi Arabia
Most losses, team, all-time
2;  Australia,  Brazil,  France,  Nigeria,  Qatar,  United States
Most shootouts with 100% record (all won)
2;  Saudi Arabia
Most shootouts with 0% record (all lost)
2;  France,  United States

Most wins, penalty shoot-out

Team Won Lost Total
 Saudi Arabia202
 Argentina213
 Spain213
 Mexico213
 Brazil224
 Nigeria224
 Bahrain101
 Chile101
 Costa Rica101
 Germany101
 England101
 South Korea101
 Peru101
 Russia101
 Guinea112
 Colombia112
 Qatar123
 Australia123
 Scotland011
 Poland011
 Mali011
 Netherlands011
 Tajikistan011
 Turkey011
 Uruguay011
 France022
 United States022
Total252550

References

  1. "FIFA U-17 World Cup Final". fifa.com. Retrieved October 22, 2015.
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