FIFA World Cup

FIFA World Cup 2006 Champions, matches, fact and achievements

FIFA World Cup 2006 was the 18th FIFA World Cup, the quadrennial international football world championship tournament. Germany was selected as the host in July 2000. The qualification process, which started in September 2003, saw participation from 198 national football associations across all six populated continents. Out of these, 31 teams qualified to join host nation Germany in the finals. This event marked the second time Germany hosted the competition, but the first time as a unified country including the former East Germany, with Leipzig as one of the host cities. Previously, West Germany hosted the World Cup in 1974. This was also the 10th time the tournament was held in Europe.

ChampionsRunners- UpThird PlaceFourth Place
Italy (4th title) France Germany Portugal

Golden Ball WinnerGolden Boot WinnerFIFA Fair Play Trophy
Zinedine Zidane Miroslav Klose Brazil
Spain

Best young player: Lukas Podolski
Yashin Award (Best goalkeeper): Gianluigi Buffon
Most Entertaining Team: Portugal

FIFA World Cup 2006 Group stage
Group A

PositionTeamPlayedWinDrawLossGFGAGDPoints
1. Qualified Germany (Host)330082+69
2. Qualified Ecuador320153+26
3 Poland310224−23
4 Costa Rica300339−60

Group B
PositionTeamPlayedWinDrawLossGFGAGDPoints
1. Qualified England321052+37
2. Qualified Sweden312032+15
3 Paraguay31022203
4 Trinidad and Tobago301204−41

Group C
PositionTeamPlayedWinDrawLossGFGAGDPoints
1. Qualified Argentina321081+77
2. Qualified Netherlands321031+27
3 Ivory Coast310256−13
4 Serbia and Montenegro3003210−80

Group D
PositionTeamPlayedWinDrawLossGFGAGDPoints
1. Qualified Portugal330051+49
2. Qualified Mexico311143+14
3 Angola302112−12
4 Iran301226−41

Group E
PositionTeamPlayedWinDrawLossGFGAGDPoints
1. Qualified Italy321051+47
2. Qualified Ghana320143+16
3 Czech Republic310234−13
4 United States301226−41

Group F
PositionTeamPlayedWinDrawLossGFGAGDPoints
1. Qualified Brazil330071+69
2. Qualified Australia31115504
3 Croatia302123−12
4 Japan301227−51

Group G
PositionTeamPlayedWinDrawLossGFGAGDPoints
1. Qualified Switzerland321040+47
2. Qualified France312031+25
3 South Korea311134−14
4 Togo300316−50

Group H
PositionTeamPlayedWinDrawLossGFGAGDPoints
1. Qualified Spain330081+79
2. Qualified Ukraine320154+16
3 Tunisia301236−31
4 Saudi Arabia301227−51

FIFA World Cup 2006 Round of 16

DateTeam 1ResultTeam 2
24 June 2006 Germany2–0 Sweden
24 June 2006 Argentina2–1 (a.e.t.) Mexico
25 June 2006 England1–0 Ecuador
25 June 2006 Portugal1–0 Netherlands
26 June 2006 Italy1–0 Australia
26 June 2006 Switzerland0–0 (a.e.t.)
0–3 (Penalties)
Ukraine
27 June 2006 Brazil3–0 Ghana
27 June 2006 Spain1–3 France

FIFA World Cup 2006 Quarter finals

DateTeam 1ResultTeam 2
30 June 2006 Germany1–1 (a.e.t.)
4–2 (penalties)
Argentina
30 June 2006 Italy3–0 Ukraine
1 July 2006 England0–0 (a.e.t.)
1–3 (penalties)
Portugal
1 July 2006 Brazil0–1 France

FIFA World Cup 2006 semi finals
4 July 2006 21:00, Westfalenstadion, Dortmund

Germany 0 – 2 (a.e.t.) Italy
Fabio Grosso 119′
Del Piero 120+1

5 July 2006 21:00, Allianz Arena, Munich

Portugal 0 – 1 France
Zidane 33′ (pen.)

Third place play-off
8 July 2006 21:00, Gottlieb-Daimler-Stadion, Stuttgart

Germany 3 – 1 Portugal
Schweinsteiger 56′, 78′
Petit 60′ (o.g.)
Nuno Gomes 88′

FIFA World Cup 2006 final match
9 July 2006 20:00, Olympiastadion, Berlin

Italy 1 – 1 (a.e.t.) France
Materazzi 19′ Zidane 7′ (pen.)
Pirlo
Materazzi
De Rossi
Del Piero
Grosso
Penalties
5 – 3
Wiltord
Trezeguet
Abidal
Sagnol

FIFA World Cup 2006  top goal scores

RankPlayer NameCountryGoals
1 Miroslav KloseGermany5
2 RonaldoBrazil3
3 Hernán CrespoArgentina3
4 Maxi RodríguezArgentina3
5 Thierry HenryFrance3
6 Zinedine ZidaneFrance3
7 Lukas PodolskiGermany3
8 Fernando TorresSpain3
9 David VillaSpain3

Most assist provider list

RankPlayer NameCountryAssist
1 Francesco TottiItaly4
2 RiquelmeArgentina4
3 SchweinsteigerGermany3
4 Andrea PirloItaly3
5 Luis FigoPortugal3

All-star team

GoalkeeperDefenderMidfielderForward
Gianluigi Buffon Roberto Ayala Zé Roberto Hernán Crespo
Jens Lehmann John Terry Patrick Vieira Thierry Henry
Ricardo Lilian Thuram Zinedine Zidane Miroslav Klose
Philipp Lahm Michael Ballack Luca Toni
Fabio Cannavaro Andrea Pirlo
Gianluca Zambrotta Gennaro Gattuso
Ricardo Carvalho Francesco Totti
Luís Figo
Maniche

FIFA World Cup 2006 Summary
Italy won the 2006 FIFA World Cup, securing their fourth title by defeating France 5–3 in a penalty shoot-out after a 1–1 draw in extra time. Germany claimed third place by beating Portugal 3–1. The tournament saw the debut appearances of Angola, Ukraine, Ghana, the Ivory Coast, Trinidad and Tobago, and Togo. It was also the only appearance for Serbia and Montenegro under that name, as they had previously competed as Yugoslavia in 1998. Just before the tournament, Montenegro voted for independence from Serbia in a May 2006 referendum, with Serbia recognizing the results in early June. Due to time constraints, FIFA had Serbia and Montenegro compete as one team, marking the first time multiple sovereign nations played as a single team in a major football event since UEFA Euro 1992.
Brazil, the defending champions, were eliminated by France in the quarter-finals.
The 2006 World Cup became one of the most-watched events in television history, with an estimated total viewership of 26.29 billion across the tournament. The final alone attracted an audience of approximately 715.1 million people.

Qualification
A total of 198 teams sought to qualify for the 2006 World Cup. Host nation Germany was automatically granted a spot, while the remaining 31 places were allocated among the continental confederations. Europe (UEFA) contested 13 places, Africa (CAF) five, South America (CONMEBOL) four, Asia (AFC) four, and North and Central America and the Caribbean (CONCACAF) three. The final two spots were determined by playoffs between teams from AFC and CONCACAF and between CONMEBOL and Oceania (OFC).

Venues

StadiumCapacityCity
Olympiastadion72,000Berlin
Allianz Arena66,000Munich, Bavaria
Signal Iduna Park65,000Dortmund, North Rhine-Westphalia
Gottlieb-Daimler-Stadion52,000Stuttgart, Baden-Württemberg
Arena AufSchalke52,000Gelsenkirchen, North Rhine-Westphalia
AOL Arena50,000Hamburg
Commerzbank-Arena48,000Frankfurt, Hesse
Fritz-Walter-Stadion46,000Kaiserslautern, Rhineland-Palatinate
RheinEnergieStadion45,000Cologne, North Rhine-Westphalia
AWD-Arena43,000Hanover, Lower Saxony
Zentralstadion43,000Leipzig, Saxony
easyCredit-Stadion41,000Nuremberg, Bavaria

Recent Posts

  • UEFA Super Cup

UEFA Super Cup 2025 champions, matches and achievements

UEFA Super Cup 2025 was the 50th edition of the annual match organized by UEFA, featuring a showdown between the… Read More

  • FIFA Club World Cup

FIFA Club World Cup 2025 Champions, matches and awards

FIFA Club World Cup 2025 was the 21st edition of the competition and the first under its newly expanded 32-team… Read More

  • EPL

EPL Season 2024-25 Point table, Champions and Awards

Previous<<epl 2023-24 EPL Season 2024-25 marked the 33rd season since the league’s inception and the 126th season of top-flight English… Read More

  • La Liga

La Liga 2024–25 Champions, Point table and Awards

La Liga season 2024–25 officially known as La Liga EA Sports for sponsorship purposes, was the 94th edition of Spain's… Read More

  • Serie A

Serie A League 2024–25 Champions, point table and awards

Serie A League 2024–25 season officially known as Serie A Enilive domestically and Serie A Made in Italy abroad due… Read More

  • Bundesliga

Bundesliga 2024–25 Champions, scorers, standings and player

Bundesliga 2024–25 marked the 62nd edition of Germany’s top-tier men’s football league. The season ran from 23 August 2024 to… Read More