OFC U-19 Women's Championship
The OFC U-19 Women's Championship (previously the OFC U-20 Women's Championship or OFC Women's Under 20 Qualifying Tournament) is a football tournament held every two years to decide the only qualification spot for the Oceania Football Confederation (OFC) representative at the FIFA U-20 Women's World Championship.[1]
| Founded | 2002 | 
|---|---|
| Region | Oceania (OFC) | 
| Number of teams | Various | 
| Current champions |  New Zealand (7th title) | 
| Most successful team(s) |  New Zealand (7 titles) | 
|  2022 OFC U-20 Women's Championship | |
Until 2006 it was an under-19 tournament. The most recent edition for 1 to 15 July 2017 was again an U-19 tournament,[2] and the tournament was called the OFC U-19 Women's Championship.
Results
    
There was no 2008 edition.
Summaries
    
| Year | Host | Final | Third Place Match | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Champion | Score | Second Place | Third Place | Score | Fourth Place | ||||
| 2002 details |  Tonga | .svg.png.webp)  Australia | 6 – 0 |  New Zealand |   Tonga | 2 – 0 |   Samoa | ||
| 2004 details |  Papua New Guinea | .svg.png.webp)  Australia | RR |   Papua New Guinea |   Solomon Islands | RR | _ | ||
| 2006 details |  Samoa |  New Zealand | 6 – 0 |   Tonga |   Papua New Guinea | 4 – 1 |   Samoa | ||
| 2010 details |  New Zealand |  New Zealand | RR |   Cook Islands |   Tonga | RR |   American Samoa | ||
| 2012 details |  New Zealand |  New Zealand | RR |  Papua New Guinea | .svg.png.webp) New Caledonia | RR |  Samoa | ||
| 2014 details |  New Zealand |  New Zealand | RR |  Papua New Guinea |  Tonga | RR |  Vanuatu | ||
| 2015 details |  Tonga |  New Zealand | RR |  Samoa |  Vanuatu | RR | .svg.png.webp) New Caledonia | ||
| 2017 details |  New Zealand |  New Zealand | RR |  Fiji |  Papua New Guinea | RR | .svg.png.webp) New Caledonia | ||
| 2019 details |  Cook Islands |  New Zealand | 5 – 2 | .svg.png.webp) New Caledonia |  Tahiti | 4 – 1 |  Vanuatu | ||
| 2022 details | Cancelled[3] | ||||||||
Performances by countries
    
| Team | Titles | Runners-up | Third-place | Fourth-place | 
|---|---|---|---|---|
|  New Zealand | 7 (2006, 2010, 2012, 2014, 2015, 2017, 2019) | 1 (2002) | ||
| .svg.png.webp) Australia | 2 (2002, 2004) | |||
|  Papua New Guinea | 3 (2004, 2012, 2014) | 2 (2006, 2017) | ||
|  Tonga | 1 (2006) | 3 (2002, 2010, 2014) | ||
| .svg.png.webp) New Caledonia | 1 (2019) | 1 (2012) | 2 (2015, 2017) | |
|  Samoa | 1 (2015) | 3 (2002, 2006, 2012) | ||
|  Cook Islands | 1 (2010) | |||
|  Fiji | 1 (2017) | |||
|  Vanuatu | 1 (2015) | 2 (2014, 2019) | ||
|  Solomon Islands | 1 (2004) | |||
|  Tahiti | 1 (2019) | |||
|  American Samoa | 1 (2010) | 
Participating nations
    
- Legend
- 1st – Champions
- 2nd – Runners-up
- 3rd – Third place
- 4th – Fourth place
- SF – Semi-finals
- 5th–7th – Fifth to Seventh place
- GS – Group stage
- PR – Preliminary round
- q – Qualified
- — Hosts
- •• – Qualified but withdrew
- × – Did not enter
- • – Did not qualify
- × – Withdrew / Banned / Entry not accepted by FIFA
- — Country not affiliated to OFC at that time
- — Country did not exist or national team was inactive
- – Not affiliated to FIFA
| Team |  2002 |  2004 |  2006 |  2010 |  2012 |  2014 |  2015 |  2017 |  2019 | Years | 
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|  American Samoa | GS | × | × | 4th | × | × | × | × | GS | 3 | 
| .svg.png.webp) Australia | 1st | 1st | AFC member | 2 | ||||||
|  Cook Islands | GS | × | × | 2nd | × | × | × | × | GS | 3 | 
|  Fiji | GS | × | GS | × | × | × | × | 2nd | GS | 4 | 
| .svg.png.webp) New Caledonia | × | × | GS | × | 3rd | × | 4th | 4th | 2nd | 5 | 
|  New Zealand | 2nd | × | 1st | 1st | 1st | 1st | 1st | 1st | 1st | 8 | 
|  Papua New Guinea | × | 2nd | 3rd | × | 2nd | 2nd | ×[lower-alpha 1] | 3rd | GS | 6 | 
|  Samoa | 4th | × | 4th | × | 4th | × | 2nd | 5th | GS | 6 | 
|  Solomon Islands | × | 3rd | GS | × | × | × | × | × | GS | 3 | 
|  Tahiti | × | × | × | × | × | × | × | × | 3rd | 1 | 
|  Tonga | 3rd | × | 2nd | 3rd | × | 3rd | 5th | 6th | GS | 7 | 
|  Vanuatu | × | × | GS | × | × | 4th | 3rd | × | 4th | 4 | 
- Notes
- Papua New Guinea did not compete in 2015, as they had already qualified for the 2016 FIFA U-20 Women's World Cup as hosts.
Women's U-20 World Cup record
    
- Legend
- 1st – Champions
- 2nd – Runners-up
- 3rd – Third place
- 4th – Fourth place
- QF – Quarterfinals
- GS – Group stage
- — Hosts
| Team | .svg.png.webp) 2002 |  2004 |  2006 |  2008 |  2010 |  2012 | .svg.png.webp) 2014 |  2016 |  2018 |   2020 |  2022 | Total | 
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| .svg.png.webp) Australia | QF | QF | AFC member | 2 | ||||||||
|  New Zealand | GS | GS | GS | GS | QF | GS | GS | x | q | 8 | ||
|  Papua New Guinea | GS | 1 | ||||||||||
References
    
- "Technical Rules for the OFC U-20 Women's Championship" (PDF). OFC. p. 19. Archived from the original (PDF) on 29 August 2012. Retrieved 3 June 2011.
- "Lutu standing out for Tonga". oceaniafootball.com. 21 April 2017. Retrieved 21 April 2017.
- "OFC competitions schedule update for 2022". oceaniafootball.com. Oceania Football Confederation. 8 October 2021.
External links
    
    
    This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.
