Toulon Tournament

The Toulon Tournament (officially the Festival International "Espoirs" - Tournoi Maurice Revello) is a football tournament which traditionally features invited national teams composed of youth players from U-17 to U-23 level. The tournament is named after Maurice Revello, who started the tournament in 1967 and died in 2016. Although the first tournament in 1967 featured club teams, it has been limited to national teams since 1975 (except in 1986 and 1989 when INF Vichy was invited).[1] The tournament is held around Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur, with the final usually being held in Toulon itself.

Toulon Tournament
Founded1967
RegionInternational
Number of teams12
Current champions Brazil (9th title)
Most successful team(s) France (12 titles)
WebsiteOfficial website

History

Toulon Tournament is not run under the supervision of FIFA or an individual national association. Therefore, it is deemed as the most prestigious of all friendly tournaments involving youth teams, and considered an unofficial world championship before FIFA introduced the official World Youth Cup in 1977.[1] Despite the establishment of the FIFA U-20 World Cup and later, FIFA U-17 World Cup however, the Toulon Tournament remains one of the major competition for youth football teams.

Rules

The Toulon Tournament usually was played with two 40-minute halves. In 2019 every match consisted of two periods of 45 minutes each. In a match, every team has eleven named substitutes and the maximum number of substitutions permitted is four.

In the knockout stage, if a game tied at the end of regulation time, extra time is not played and the penalty shoot-out is used to determine the winner.

Results

EditionYearTeamsWinnersScoreRunners-upThird placeScoreFourth place
1
1967[2]6 Anderlecht1–0 Slovan BratislavaNo third place match
2
19748 Poland1–1* Hungary Czechoslovakia3–2* Brazil
3
1975[3]8 Argentina1–0 France Italy2–0 Mexico
4
19768 Bulgaria3–2 France Mexico2-1 Portugal
5
19778 France1–0 Bulgaria Netherlands3–1 Hungary
6
19788 Hungary4–3 France Netherlands2–1 Mexico
7
19798 Soviet Union2–0 Netherlands Hungary2–0 France
8
19808 Brazil2–1 France Czechoslovakia1–1 Soviet Union
9
19818 Brazil2–0 Czechoslovakia Soviet Union0–0 France
10
19828 Yugoslavia2–2 Czechoslovakia Netherlands1–1 East Germany
11
19838 Brazil1–1 Argentina France0–0 (4–3 (p)) Germany
12
19848 France1–1 Soviet Union Czechoslovakia2–0 Netherlands
13
19858 France3–1 England Spain1–0 Cameroon
14
19868 Bulgaria1–0 France Soviet Union2–1 Portugal
15
19878 France1–1 Bulgaria Brazil1–0 Soviet Union
16
19888 France4–2 England Bulgaria1–1 (5–4 (p)) Soviet Union
17
19898 France3–0 Bulgaria United States2–0 England
18
19908 England2–1 Czechoslovakia Brazil2–1 Portugal
19
19918 England1–0 France No third place playoff match played between 1991 and 1997
20
19928 Portugal2–1 Yugoslavia
21
19938 England1–0 France
22
19948 England2–0 Portugal
23
19958 Brazil1–0 France
24
199610 Brazil1–1 France
25
199710 France2–1 Portugal
26
19988 Argentina2–0 France Portugal2–0 China PR
27
19998 Colombia1–1 (a.e.t.) (6–5 (p)) Argentina France3–2 Mexico
28
20008 Colombia1–1 asdet (3–1 (p)) Portugal Italy1–0 Ivory Coast
29
20018 Portugal2–1 Colombia France2–0 Netherlands
30
200210 Brazil2–0 Italy Japan0–0 (5–4 (p)) England
31
200310 Portugal3–1 Italy Argentina1–0 Mexico
32
20048 France1–0 Sweden China PR1–0 Brazil
33
20058 France4–1 Portugal England1–1 (3–2 (p)) Mexico
34
20068 France0–0 (a.e.t.) (5–3 (p)) Netherlands Portugal1–0 China PR
35
20078 France3–1 China PR Ivory Coast0–0 (a.e.t.) (5–4 (p)) Portugal
36
20088 Italy1–0 Chile Ivory Coast2–2 (a.e.t.) (4–3 (p)) Japan
37
20098 Chile1–0 France Argentina1–0 Netherlands
38
20108 Ivory Coast3–2 Denmark France2–1 Chile
39
20118 Colombia1–1 (a.e.t.) (3–1 (p)) France Italy1–1 (5–4 (p)) Mexico
40
20128 Mexico3–0 Turkey Netherlands3–2 France
41
201310 Brazil1–0 Colombia France2–1 Portugal
42
201410 Brazil5–2 France Portugal1–0 England
43
201510 France3–1 Morocco United States2–1 England
44
201610 England2–1 France Portugal1–1 (4–2 (p)) Czech Republic
45
201712 England1–1 (5–3 (p)) Ivory Coast Scotland3–0 Czech Republic
46
201812 England2–1 Mexico Turkey0–0 (5–3 (p)) Scotland
47
201912 Brazil1–1 (5–4 (p)) Japan Mexico0–0 (4–3 (p)) Republic of Ireland
2020Cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic in France.[note 1]
Notes
  1. The 2020 Toulon Tournament was scheduled to be held from 1 to 14 June 2020 but it was indefinitely postponed in April and finally cancelled on 24 October 2020.[4]

Statistics

Performances by countries

Team Titles Runners-up Third place Fourth place
 France 12 (1977, 1984, 1985, 1987, 1988, 1989, 1997, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2015) 14 (1975, 1976, 1978, 1980, 1986, 1991, 1993, 1995, 1996, 1998, 2009, 2011, 2014, 2016) 5 (1983, 1999, 2001, 2010, 2013) 3 (1979, 1981, 2012)
 Brazil 9 (1980, 1981, 1983, 1995, 1996, 2002, 2013, 2014, 2019) 2 (1987, 1990) 2 (1974, 2004)
 England 7 (1990, 1991, 1993, 1994, 2016, 2017, 2018) 2 (1985, 1988) 1 (2005) 4 (1989, 2002, 2014, 2015)
 Portugal 3 (1992, 2001, 2003) 4 (1994, 1997, 2000, 2005) 4 (1998, 2006, 2014, 2016) 5 (1976, 1986, 1990, 2007, 2013)
 Colombia 3 (1999, 2000, 2011) 2 (2001, 2013)
 Bulgaria 2 (1976, 1986) 3 (1977, 1987, 1989) 1 (1988)
 Argentina 2 (1975, 1998) 2 (1983, 1999) 2 (2003, 2009)
 Hungary 2 (1974, 1978) 1 (1979) 1 (1977)
 Italy 1 (2008) 2 (2002, 2003) 3 (1975, 2000, 2011)
 Chile 1 (2009) 1 (2008) 1 (2010)
 Yugoslavia 1 (1982) 1 (1992)
 Soviet Union 1 (1979) 1 (1984) 2 (1981, 1986) 3 (1980, 1987, 1988)
 Ivory Coast 1 (2010) 1 (2017) 2 (2007, 2008) 1 (2000)
 Mexico 1 (2012) 1 (2018) 2 (1976, 2019) 6 (1975, 1978, 1999, 2003, 2005, 2011)
 Poland 1 (1974)
 Belgium 1 (1967)
 Czechoslovakia 4 (1967, 1981, 1982, 1990) 3 (1974, 1980, 1984)
 Netherlands 2 (1979, 2006) 4 (1977, 1978, 1982, 2012) 2 (1984, 2009)
 China PR 1 (2007) 1 (2004) 2 (1998, 2006)
 Sweden 1 (2004)
 Denmark 1 (2010)
 Turkey 1 (2012) 1 (2018)
 Morocco 1 (2015)
 Japan 1 (2019) 1 (2002) 1 (2008)

Performances by confederations

Confederation Titles Runners-up
UEFA 28 (1974, 1976–1979, 1982, 1984–1994, 1997, 2001, 2003–2008, 2015-2018) 36 (1967, 1975–1982, 1984–1998, 2000, 2002–2006, 2009–2012, 2014, 2016)
CONMEBOL 15 (1975, 1980-1981, 1983, 1995-1996, 1998–2000, 2002, 2009, 2011, 2013-2014, 2019) 5 (1983, 1999, 2001, 2008, 2013)
CAF 1 (2010) 2 (2015, 2017)
CONCACAF 1 (2012) 1 (2018)
AFC 2 (2007, 2019)

Awards

Year Top Goalscorer Player of the Tournament Best Goalkeeper
1967 Jozef Čapkovič[a] Jacques Teugels[b] Augustín Ivančík[a]
1974 József Sipőcz (4) Tibor Nyilasi John Turner[c]
1975 András Törőcsik (2) Roberto Antonelli József Kollár
1976 Radoslav Zdravkov (4) Krasimir Manolov Boris Manolkov
1977 Gérard Soler (4) Gérard Soler Boris Manolkov
1978 László P. Nagy (4) Henri Zambelli Alberto Aguilar
1979 Sergio Fortunato
Roger Schouwenaar (3)
László Gyimesi Valeri Novikov
1980 Lubomír Pokluda (4) José Touré Luděk Mikloško
1981 Sauro Fattori (3) Vazha Zhvania Marolla
1982 Stanislav Griga
Laurent Paganelli (4)
Rainer Ernst Luděk Mikloško
1983 Eamonn O'Keefe (4) Luvanor Stanislav Rudenko
1984 Meziane Zaghzi (5) Mikhail Rusiaev Aleksandr Zhidkov
1985 Jean-Pierre Papin (3) François Omam-Biyik Jean-Claude Nadon
1986 József Zvara (3) Jean-Luc Ribar Ivko Ganchev
1987 Lyuboslav Penev (3) David Ginola Taffarel
1988 David Zitelli (6) Michael Thomas Nigel Martyn
1989 Petar Mihtarski (5) Radko Kalaydzhiev Franck Chaumin[d]
1990 Mark Robins (6) Radim Nečas Tomáš Bernady
1991 Alan Shearer (7) Alan Shearer David James
1992 Rui Costa (4) Rui Costa Željko Cicović
1993 Florian Maurice (4) Florian Maurice Paul Gerrard
1994 Bob Peeters (3) Régis Genaux Grégory Coupet
1995 Franck Histilloles (5) Vikash Dhorasoo Fábio Noronha
1996 Adaílton
Nuno Gomes (5)
Adaílton Fábio Noronha
1997 Gustavo Victoria
Thierry Henry
Carlitos
Josh Wolff (3)
Thierry Henry Nuno Santos
1998 Francisco Guerrero
Emile Heskey (3)
Juan Román Riquelme Nuno Santos
1999 Peguy Luyindula (5) Guillermo Pereyra Sebastián Saja
2000 Tressor Moreno (5) Tressor Moreno Sérgio Leite
2001 Djibril Cissé
Lourenço (3)
Felipe Chará Neco Martínez
2002 Alessandro Pellicori
Satoshi Nakayama (3)
Pinga Rubinho
2003 Germán Herrera
Francesco Ruopolo
Lourenço (3)
Javier Mascherano Bruno Vale
2004 Bryan Bergougnoux (4) Rio Mavuba Jérémy Gavanon
2005 Vaz Tê (3) Arnold Mvuemba Steve Mandanda
2006 David Gigliotti (3) Ricardo Faty Hugo Lloris
2007 Kevin Gameiro (5) Kevin Gameiro Ibrahim Koné
2008 Sekou Cissé (4) Sebastian Giovinco Davide Bassi
2009 Diego Buonanotte
Gerson Martínez (4)
Diego Buonanotte Agustín Marchesín
Cristopher Toselli
2010 Nicki Bille Nielsen (5) Serges Déblé Mikkel Andersen
2011 Steeven Joseph-Monrose (5) James Rodríguez Franck L'Hostis
2012 Marco Fabián (7) Héctor Herrera Nick Marsman
Ertuğrul Taşkıran
2013 Vinícius Araújo
José Abella
Aladje (3)
Yuri Mamute Zacharie Boucher
2014 Jean-Christophe Bahebeck (4) Rodrigo Caio Paul Nardi
2015 Enzo Crivelli
Achraf Bencharki (4)
Walid El Karti Badreddine Benachour
2016 Lewis Baker (4) Ruben Loftus-Cheek Joel Pereira
2017 Chico Banza
Harvey Barnes
George Hirst (4)
David Brooks Luke Pilling
2018 Eduardo Aguirre (7) Diego Lainez Freddie Woodman
2019 Matheus Cunha (4) Douglas Luiz Chen Wei
a Playing for Slovan Bratislava.
b Playing for Anderlecht.
c Playing for Derby County.
d Playing for INF Vichy.

See also

References and notes

  1. Garin, Erik; Pierrend, José Luis (9 June 2016). "Tournoi Espoirs de Toulon". RSSSF.com. Rec.Sport.Soccer Statistics Foundation. Retrieved 21 January 2017. A tournament for U-21 players, usually played in several cities in the Region du Var (southern France), with the final in Toulon. Participation is by invitation. Has been disputed yearly since 1974 with national teams, but the first (1967) edition featured clubs. The most prestigious of all friendly tournaments involving U-21 teams, and considered an unofficial world championship before FIFA introduced the official World Youth Cup in 1977.
  2. The 1967 edition was the first, and only, tournament not to feature national sides
  3. The 1975 edition was the first tournament to feature only national sides; this tradition has remained ever since
  4. "Announcement : the Maurice Revello Tournament 2020 is cancelled". Toulon Tournament. 24 October 2020.
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