The 2023 FIFA U-17 World Cup was the 19th edition of the FIFA U-17 World Cup, the biennial international men's youth football tournament contested by the under-17 national teams of the member associations of FIFA. It was held in Indonesia from 10 November to 2 December 2023.[1] This was the first time that Indonesia hosted a FIFA tournament, the first time that the FIFA U-17 World Cup was held in Southeast Asia and the third Asian country to host U-17 World Cup after United Arab Emirates in 2013 and India in 2017. It was the third time a FIFA tournament was held in the region since the 1997 FIFA World Youth Championship in Malaysia and 2012 FIFA Futsal World Cup in Thailand.

2023 FIFA U-17 World Cup
Piala Dunia U-17 FIFA 2023
Tournament details
Host countryIndonesia
Dates10 November – 2 December
Teams24 (from 6 confederations)
Venue(s)4 (in 4 host cities)
Final positions
Champions Germany (1st title)
Runners-up France
Third place Mali
Fourth place Argentina
Tournament statistics
Matches played52
Goals scored175 (3.37 per match)
Attendance437,575 (8,415 per match)
Top scorer(s)Argentina Agustín Ruberto
(8 goals)
Best player(s)Germany Paris Brunner
Best goalkeeperFrance Paul Argney
Fair play award England
2025

This edition marked the return of the tournament after a four-year hiatus due to the COVID-19 pandemic forcing FIFA to cancel the 2021 edition.[2]

Brazil were the defending champions, having won their fourth title in 2019, but were eliminated after losing 3–0 to Argentina in the quarter-finals.

Host selection

Peru were announced as the 2021 U-17 World Cup hosts following a FIFA Council meeting on 24 October 2019 in Shanghai, China.[3]

After the 2021 edition was cancelled, Peru was awarded the hosting rights of the next edition in 2023.[3]

However, after extensive discussions between the Peruvian Football Federation and FIFA on the hosting suitability of Peru caused by its infrastructural deficiencies, Peru withdrew as hosts on 3 April 2023, with FIFA announcing an immediate opening of a replacement hosting rights tender.[4]

On 23 June 2023, FIFA officially appointed Indonesia as the new host, believed to have been in compensation for the loss of the 2023 FIFA U-20 World Cup hosting rights which were given to Argentina after Indonesia took issue with the Israeli team in that tournament.[5]

Venues

Chairman of the Football Association of Indonesia (PSSI), Erick Thohir, announced that they would propose eight stadiums to FIFA for hosting the tournament. Six of these stadiums, Gelora Bung Karno Stadium (Jakarta), Gelora Bung Tomo Stadium (Surabaya), Jalak Harupat Stadium (Bandung Regency), Manahan Stadium (Surakarta/Solo), Kapten I Wayan Dipta Stadium (Bali), and Gelora Sriwijaya Stadium (Palembang) were chosen for the 2023 FIFA U-20 World Cup when Indonesia were eligible to be the host. Another two additional stadiums were Jakarta International Stadium and Pakansari Stadium.[6]

Erick Thohir subsequently confirmed that both semi-final and final matches would be played at the Manahan Stadium.[7][8]

The capacity listed below are the tournament capacity and does not necessarily reflect the maximum capacity of the stadiums.[9]

JakartaSurabaya
Jakarta International StadiumGelora Bung Tomo Stadium
Capacity: 23,422Capacity: 44,200
Location of the stadiums of the 2023 FIFA U-17 World Cup (Indonesia)
Bandung RegencySurakarta
Jalak Harupat StadiumManahan Stadium
Capacity: 22,700Capacity: 19,700

Teams

Qualification

A total of 24 teams qualified for the final tournament. Indonesia, the host team along with 23 other teams qualified from six separate continental competitions.

ConfederationQualifying tournamentTeamAppearanceLast appearancePrevious best performance
AFC
(Asia)
Host nation  Indonesia1stN/ADebut
2023 AFC U-17 Asian Cup  Iran5th2017Quarter-finals (2017)
 Japan10th2019Quarter-finals (1993, 2011)
 South Korea7th2019Quarter-finals (1987, 2009, 2019)
 Uzbekistan3rd2013Quarter-finals (2011)
CAF
(Africa)
2023 U-17 Africa Cup of Nations  Burkina Faso5th2011Third place (2001)
 Mali6th2017Runners-up (2015)
 Morocco2nd2013Round of 16 (2013)
 Senegal2nd2019Round of 16 (2019)
CONCACAF
(Central, North America and Caribbean)
2023 CONCACAF U-17 Championship  Canada8th2019Group stage (1987, 1989, 1993, 1995, 2011, 2013, 2019)
 Mexico15th2019Champions (2005, 2011)
 Panama3rd2013Round of 16 (2011)
 United States18th2019Fourth place (1999)
CONMEBOL
(South America)
2023 South American U-17 Championship  Argentina15th2019Third place (1991, 1995, 2003)
 Brazil18th2019Champions (1997, 1999, 2003, 2019)
 Ecuador6th2019Quarter-finals (1995, 2015)
 Venezuela2nd2013Group stage (2013)
OFC
(Oceania)
2023 OFC U-17 Championship  New Caledonia2nd2017Group stage (2017)
 New Zealand10th2019Round of 16 (2009, 2011, 2015)
UEFA
(Europe)
2023 UEFA European Under-17 Championship  England5th2017Champions (2017)
 France8th2019Champions (2001)
 Germany11th2017Runners-up (1985)[a]
 Poland3rd1999Fourth place (1993)
 Spain11th2019Runners-up (1991, 2003, 2007, 2017)
Notes

Squads

Players born on or after 1 January 2006 and on or before 31 December 2008 were eligible to compete in the tournament.

Seeding

The 24 teams were organised to be drawn into six groups of four teams. The hosts Indonesia were automatically seeded to Pot 1 and into the first position of Group A, while the remaining teams were seeded into pots based on their results in the last five FIFA U-17 World Cups (with more recent tournaments weighted more heavily, and with five bonus points added to each of the 6 continental champions from the 2023 qualifying tournaments), as follows:[10]

PotTeamConfederation20112013201520172019BPTotal points
Pts20%Pts40%Pts60%Pts80%Pts 100%
1  IndonesiaAFCHost nation, automatically assigned to Pot 1
 BrazilCONMEBOL132.6135.295.41814.421+553.6
 MexicoCONCACAF214.2135.2137.821.611+534.8
 FranceUEFA81.6DNQ10697.21832.8
 SpainUEFADNQDNQDNQ15121022
 JapanAFC10293.6DNQ547+521.6
2  GermanyUEFA183.6DNQ63.697.2DNQ+519.4
 MaliCAFDNQDNQ169.6129.6DNQ19.2
 EnglandUEFA81.60021.21915.2DNQ18
 South KoreaAFCDNQDNQ74.2DNQ913.2
 ArgentinaCONMEBOL40.8135.200DNQ713
 EcuadorCONMEBOL61.2DNQ95.4DNQ612.6
3  New ZealandOFC40.80042.410.83+512
 IranAFCDNQ52DNQ129.6DNQ11.6
 SenegalCAFDNQDNQDNQDNQ6+511
 United StatesCONCACAF40.8DNQ10.697.219.6
 UzbekistanAFC91.872.8DNQDNQDNQ4.6
 MoroccoCAFDNQ72.8DNQDNQDNQ2.8
4  CanadaCONCACAF20.420.8DNQDNQ01.2
 New CaledoniaOFCDNQDNQDNQ10.8DNQ0.8
 PanamaCONCACAF30.600DNQDNQDNQ0.6
 VenezuelaCONMEBOLDNQ00DNQDNQDNQ0
 Burkina FasoCAF00DNQDNQDNQDNQ0
 PolandUEFADNQDNQDNQDNQDNQ0

Draw

The draw took place at 16:00 CEST (21:00 WIB host time) on 15 September 2023 at FIFA headquarters in Zürich, Switzerland.[11] The ceremony was presented by Mollie Kmita and conducted by FIFA Director of Tournaments Jaime Yarza, with the former footballers Júlio César, from Brazil, and Stephen Appiah, from Ghana, acting as draw assistants.[12]

The draw started with teams from pot one being drawn first and placed in the first position of their groups (hosts Indonesia automatically assigned to A1). Then were drawn the teams from pot 2, followed by pot 3 and pot 4, with each team also drawn to one of the positions within their group; no group could contain more than one team from each confederation.

The draw resulted in the following groups:[13]

Group A
PosTeam
A1  Indonesia
A2  Ecuador
A3  Panama
A4  Morocco
Group B
PosTeam
B1  Spain
B2  Canada
B3  Mali
B4  Uzbekistan
Group C
PosTeam
C1  Brazil
C2  Iran
C3  New Caledonia
C4  England
Group D
PosTeam
D1  Japan
D2  Poland
D3  Argentina
D4  Senegal
Group E
PosTeam
E1  France
E2  Burkina Faso
E3  South Korea
E4  United States
Group F
PosTeam
F1  Mexico
F2  Germany
F3  Venezuela
F4  New Zealand

Match officials

A total of 18 refereeing trios (a referee and two assistant referees), 3 support referees, and 18 video assistant referees were appointed for the tournament. No match officials from OFC.[14]

ConfederationRefereeAssistant refereesVideo assistant referees
AFC Omar Mohamed Al Ali Jasem Al Ali
Saeed Rashed Al-Marzooqi
Khalid Saleh Al-Turais
Kate Jacewicz
Abdullah Jamali
Fu Ming Cao Yi
Ma Ji
Ko Hyung-jin Yoon Jae Yeol
Park Sang Jun
CAF Pierre Ghislain Atcho Boris Ditsoga
Carine Atezambong Fomo
Lahlou Benbraham
Daniel Nii Laryea
Dahane Beida Dimbiniaina Andriatianarivelo
Jonathan Ahonto Koffi
Ibrahim Mutaz Khalil Hassani
Ahmed Hossan Eldin
CONCACAF Selvin Brown Gerson Martinez
Roney Valladares
Ismael Cornejo
Joe Dickerson
Tatiana Guzmán
Keylor Herrera William Chow
Victor Ramirez Fonseca
Bryan López Luis Ventura
Humberto Panjoj
CONMEBOL Augusto Aragón Ricardo Baren
Andrés Tola
Igor Benevenuto
Ricardo Molina
Derlis López
Jhon Perdomo
Ivo Méndez Carlos Tapia
Roger Orellana
Roberto Pérez Alberto Garcia
Enrique Pinto
Gustavo Tejera Carlos Barreiro
Andrés Nievas
OFCNo match officials
UEFA Espen Eskås Jan Erik Engan
Isaak Bashevkin
David Coote
Aleandro Di Paolo
Rob Dieperink
Angelos Evangelou
Fedayi San
Ivaylo Stoyanov
Morten Krogh Dennis Rasmussen
Steffen Bramsen
Atilla Karaoğlan Ceyhun Sesigüzel
Cevdet Kömürcüoglu
Rade Obrenovič Jure Praprotnik
Grega Kordež
João Pinheiro Bruno Jesus
Luciano Maia
ConfederationSupport Referees
AFC Aprisman Aranda
Thoriq Alkatiri
Yudi Nurcahya

Opening ceremony

The opening ceremony took place on 10 November 2023 at the Gelora Bung Tomo Stadium in Surabaya, preceding the Group A match between Indonesia and Ecuador. It featured performances from Indonesian singers Wika Salim and Aurélie Moeremans.[15][16]

Group stage

The top two teams of each group and the four best third-placed teams advanced to the round of 16.

All times are local, WIB (UTC+7).

Tiebreakers

The ranking of teams in the group stage was determined as follows:[17]

  1. Points obtained in all group matches (three points for a win, one for a draw, none for a defeat);
  2. Goal difference in all group matches;
  3. Number of goals scored in all group matches;
  4. Points obtained in the matches played between the teams in question;
  5. Goal difference in the matches played between the teams in question;
  6. Number of goals scored in the matches played between the teams in question;
  7. Fair play points in all group matches (only one deduction could be applied to a player in a single match):
    • Yellow card: −1 points;
    • Indirect red card (second yellow card): −3 points;
    • Direct red card: −4 points;
    • Yellow card and direct red card: −5 points;
  8. Drawing of lots.

Group A

PosTeamPldWDLGFGAGDPtsQualification
1  Morocco320153+26Knockout stage
2  Ecuador312042+25
3  Indonesia (H)302135−22
4  Panama302124−22
Source: FIFA
(H) Hosts
Panama  0–2  Morocco
Report
Indonesia  1–1  Ecuador
Report
Attendance: 30,583
Referee: Espen Eskås (Norway)

Morocco  0–2  Ecuador
Report
Attendance: 5,498
Referee: Keylor Herrera (Costa Rica)
Indonesia  1–1  Panama
Report
Attendance: 17,239
Referee: Rade Obrenovič (Slovenia)

Morocco  3–1  Indonesia
Report
Attendance: 26,454
Referee: Morten Krogh (Denmark)
Ecuador  1–1  Panama
Report
Attendance: 7,956
Referee: Fu Ming (China)

Group B

PosTeamPldWDLGFGAGDPtsQualification
1  Spain321052+37Knockout stage
2  Mali320182+66
3  Uzbekistan31115504
4  Canada3003110−90
Source: FIFA
Mali  3–0  Uzbekistan
Report
Attendance: 3,014
Referee: Gustavo Tejera (Uruguay)
Spain  2–0  Canada
Report
Attendance: 6,613
Referee: Roberto Pérez (Peru)

Spain  1–0  Mali
Report
Attendance: 4,723
Referee: Bryan López (Guatemala)
Uzbekistan  3–0  Canada
Report
Attendance: 6,919
Referee: Ivo Méndez (Bolivia)

Uzbekistan  2–2  Spain
Report
Attendance: 5,554
Referee: Augusto Aragón (Ecuador)
Canada  1–5  Mali
Report
Attendance: 10,269
Referee: Espen Eskås (Norway)

Group C

PosTeamPldWDLGFGAGDPtsQualification
1  England3201133+106Knockout stage
2  Brazil3201134+96
3  Iran320194+56
4  New Caledonia3003024−240
Source: FIFA
New Caledonia  0–10  England
Report
Brazil  2–3  Iran
Report
Attendance: 9,283
Referee: Selvin Brown (Honduras)

Brazil  9–0  New Caledonia
Report
Attendance: 4,529
Referee: Pierre Atcho (Gabon)
England  2–1  Iran
Report
Attendance: 7,698
Referee: Gustavo Tejera (Uruguay)

England  1–2  Brazil
Report
Attendance: 15,171
Referee: Bryan López (Guatemala)
Iran  5–0  New Caledonia
Report
Attendance: 6,762
Referee: Ivo Méndez (Bolivia)

Group D

PosTeamPldWDLGFGAGDPtsQualification
1  Argentina320183+56Knockout stage
2  Senegal320164+26
3  Japan320143+16
4  Poland300319−80
Source: FIFA
Japan  1–0  Poland
Report
Attendance: 4,961
Referee: Pierre Atcho (Gabon)
Argentina  1–2  Senegal
Report
Attendance: 6,222
Referee: Atilla Karaoğlan (Turkey)

Senegal  4–1  Poland
Report
Attendance: 7,065
Referee: Omar Al Ali (United Arab Emirates)
Japan  1–3  Argentina
Report

Senegal  0–2  Japan
Report
Attendance: 5,079
Referee: Rade Obrenovič (Slovenia)
Poland  0–4  Argentina
Report
Attendance: 7,663
Referee: Keylor Herrera (Costa Rica)

Group E

PosTeamPldWDLGFGAGDPtsQualification
1  France330070+79Knockout stage
2  United States32015506
3  Burkina Faso310236−33
4  South Korea300326−40
Source: FIFA
France  3–0  Burkina Faso
Report
South Korea  1–3  United States
Report
Attendance: 4,317
Referee: Morten Krogh (Denmark)

United States  2–1  Burkina Faso
Report
Attendance: 3,235
Referee: Roberto Pérez (Peru)
France  1–0  South Korea
Report
Attendance: 7,476
Referee: Ibrahim Mutaz (Libya)

United States  0–3  France
Report
Attendance: 14,436
Referee: Dahane Beida (Mauritania)
Burkina Faso  2–1  South Korea
Report
Attendance: 3,400
Referee: Selvin Brown (Honduras)

Group F

PosTeamPldWDLGFGAGDPtsQualification
1  Germany330092+79Knockout stage
2  Mexico311175+24
3  Venezuela31115504
4  New Zealand3003110−90
Source: FIFA
Venezuela  3–0  New Zealand
Report
Attendance: 2,932
Referee: Ibrahim Mutaz (Libya)
Mexico  1–3  Germany
Report
Attendance: 4,617
Referee: Augusto Aragón (Ecuador)

Mexico  2–2  Venezuela
Report
Attendance: 2,460
Referee: Atilla Karaoğlan (Turkey)
New Zealand  1–3  Germany
Report
Attendance: 5,353
Referee: Dahane Beida (Mauritania)

New Zealand  0–4  Mexico
Report
Attendance: 6,136
Referee: Omar Al Ali (United Arab Emirates)
Germany  3–0  Venezuela
Report

Ranking of third-placed teams

The four best third-placed teams from the six groups advanced to the knockout stage along with the six group winners and six runners-up.

PosGrpTeamPldWDLGFGAGDPtsQualification
1C  Iran320194+56Knockout stage
2D  Japan320143+16
3B  Uzbekistan31115504[a]
4F  Venezuela31115504[a]
5E  Burkina Faso310236−33
6A  Indonesia (H)302135−22
Source: FIFA
Rules for classification: 1) Points; 2) Goal difference; 3) Goals scored; 4) Fair play points; 5) Drawing of lots.[17]
(H) Hosts
Notes:
  1. ^ a b Fair play points: Uzbekistan 0, Venezuela –4.

Knockout stage

In the knockout stage, if a match was level at the end of 90 minutes of normal playing time, the match would be directly decided by a penalty shoot-out to determine the winner; no extra time would be played.

In the round of 16, the four third-placed teams were matched with the winners of groups A, B, C, and D. The specific match-ups involving the third-placed teams depended on the four third-placed teams which qualified for the round of 16:

  Combination according to the four qualified teams
Third-placed teams
qualified from groups
1A
vs
1B
vs
1C
vs
1D
vs
ABCD3C3D3A3B
ABCE3C3A3B3E
ABCF3C3A3B3F
ABDE3D3A3B3E
ABDF3D3A3B3F
ABEF3E3A3B3F
ACDE3C3D3A3E
ACDF3C3D3A3F
ACEF3C3A3F3E
ADEF3D3A3F3E
BCDE3C3D3B3E
BCDF3C3D3B3F
BCEF3E3C3B3F
BDEF3E3D3B3F
CDEF3C3D3F3E

Bracket

 
Round of 16Quarter-finalsSemi-finalsFinal
 
              
 
20 November – Surakarta
 
 
 Ecuador1
 
24 November – Jakarta
 
 Brazil3
 
 Brazil0
 
21 November – Bandung
 
 Argentina3
 
 Argentina5
 
28 November – Surakarta
 
 Venezuela0
 
 Argentina3 (2)
 
20 November – Surakarta
 
 Germany (p)3 (4)
 
 Spain2
 
24 November – Jakarta
 
 Japan1
 
 Spain0
 
21 November – Bandung
 
 Germany1
 
 Germany3
 
2 December – Surakarta
 
 United States2
 
 Germany (p)2 (4)
 
22 November – Jakarta
 
 France2 (3)
 
 France (p)0 (5)
 
25 November – Surakarta
 
 Senegal0 (3)
 
 France1
 
22 November – Jakarta
 
 Uzbekistan0
 
 England1
 
28 November – Surakarta
 
 Uzbekistan2
 
 France2
 
21 November – Surabaya
 
 Mali1Third place play-off
 
 Mali5
 
25 November – Surakarta1 December – Surakarta
 
 Mexico0
 
 Mali1  Argentina0
 
21 November – Surabaya
 
 Morocco0  Mali3
 
 Morocco (p)1 (4)
 
 
 Iran1 (1)
 

Round of 16

Ecuador  1–3  Brazil
Report
Attendance: 3,580
Referee: Atilla Karaoğlan (Turkey)

Spain  2–1  Japan
Report
Attendance: 8,587
Referee: Pierre Atcho (Gabon)

Mali  5–0  Mexico
Report
Attendance: 7,034
Referee: Gustavo Tejera (Uruguay)

Germany  3–2  United States
Report
Attendance: 5,782
Referee: Fu Ming (China)

Argentina  5–0  Venezuela
Report
Attendance: 6,187
Referee: Morten Krogh (Denmark)

Morocco  1–1  Iran
Report
Penalties
4–1

England  1–2  Uzbekistan
Report
Attendance: 7,014
Referee: Selvin Brown (Honduras)

France  0–0  Senegal
Report
Penalties
5–3
Attendance: 12,238
Referee: Roberto Pérez (Peru)

Quarter-finals

Spain  0–1  Germany
Report
Attendance: 8,379
Referee: Omar Al Ali (United Arab Emirates)

Brazil  0–3  Argentina
Report
Attendance: 14,597
Referee: Espen Eskås (Norway)

France  1–0  Uzbekistan
Report
Attendance: 5,201
Referee: Dahane Beida (Mauritania)

Mali  1–0  Morocco
Report
Attendance: 8,589
Referee: Augusto Aragón (Ecuador)

Semi-finals


France  2–1  Mali
Report
Attendance: 12,013

Third place play-off

Argentina  0–3  Mali
Report
Attendance: 10,901
Referee: Fu Ming (China)

Final

Awards

The following awards were given at the conclusion of the tournament. They were all sponsored by Adidas, except for the FIFA Fair Play Trophy.

Golden BallSilver BallBronze Ball
Paris Brunner Hamidou Makalou Mathis Amougou
Golden BootSilver BootBronze Boot
Agustín Ruberto
(8 goals, 1 assist,
607 minutes played)
Ibrahim Diarra
(5 goals, 4 assists,
566 minutes played)
Claudio Echeverri
(5 goals, 2 assists,
498 minutes played)
Golden Glove
Paul Argney
FIFA Fair Play Trophy
 England

Final ranking

As per statistical convention in football, matches decided in extra time are counted as wins and losses, while matches decided by penalty shoot-outs are counted as draws.

PosTeamPldWDLGFGAGDPtsFinal result
1  Germany7520189+917Champions
2  France7520123+917Runners-up
3  Mali7502184+1415Third place
4  Argentina7412199+1013Fourth place
5  Spain531174+310Eliminated in
Quarter-finals
6  Brazil5302168+89
7  Morocco521265+17
8  Uzbekistan52127707
9  Iran4211105+57Eliminated in
Round of 16
10  Senegal421164+27
11  England4202145+96
12  Japan42025506
13  United States420278−16
14  Ecuador41215505
15  Mexico4112710−34
16  Venezuela4112510−54
17  Burkina Faso310236−33Eliminated in
Group stage
18  Indonesia302135−22
19  Panama302124−22
20  South Korea300326−40
21  Poland300319−80
22  Canada3003110−90
23  New Zealand3003110−90
24  New Caledonia3003024−240
Source: [citation needed]

Goalscorers

There were 175 goals scored in 52 matches, for an average of 3.37 goals per match.

8 goals

5 goals

4 goals

3 goals

2 goals

1 goal

1 own goal

Marketing

The tournament's logo was revealed on FIFA+ on 1 September 2023. The design uses red and white inspired from the flag of Indonesia, as well as turquoise to symbolize the sea that flows through the archipelago. The crown features a ball which represents the passion for football around the world.[18]

Sponsorships

FIFA partnersNational Supporters

Symbols

Mascot

The mascot of the 2023 FIFA U17 World Cup in this edition, named Bacuya, played an important role in inviting people to come to the stadium to see the world's young footballers compete. Bacuya, or Badak Cula Cahaya. The horned rhino refers to an animal native to Indonesia. Bacuya appeared wearing a red and white Indonesian national team jersey.[22]

Bacuya's philosophy is that of a young Javan rhinoceros who is very shy and reserved. Despite these characteristics, his curiosity compels him to run stoically into the field as if in search of something. Shades of green grass motivate him until he finds a ball. When something suddenly extraordinary happens, his horns light up with new colors.[23]

Music

After previously "Glorious" became the official song for the 2023 FIFA U-20 World Cup, this song by the EDM music group from Indonesia named Weird Genius is again the official song for the 2023 FIFA U-17 World Cup. With new arrangements, this song also features three Indonesian soloists; Lyodra Ginting, Tiara Andini, and Ziva Magnolya (LTZ).[24]

Broadcasting

Notes

  1. ^ The match, originally scheduled for 19:00 local time, was delayed 30 minutes to prevent overlap with the other Group D match between Senegal and Poland, which had been delayed due to rain.
  2. ^ The match, originally scheduled for 16:00 local time, was delayed 45 minutes due to rain.
  3. ^ The match, originally scheduled for 19:00 local time, was delayed 30 minutes due to rain.

References

  1. ^ "Everything you need to know about the FIFA U-17 World Cup". FIFA.com. Fédération Internationale de Football Association. 30 June 2023. Archived from the original on 24 July 2023. Retrieved 24 July 2023.
  2. ^ "Update on FIFA Women's World Cup and men's youth competitions". FIFA.com. Fédération Internationale de Football Association. 24 December 2020. Archived from the original on 18 June 2021. Retrieved 24 December 2020.
  3. ^ a b "Update on FIFA Women's World Cup and men's youth competitions". FIFA. 24 December 2020. Archived from the original on 18 June 2021. Retrieved 24 December 2020. As a result of the COVID-19 pandemic, the Bureau of the FIFA Council has decided to cancel the 2021 editions of the men's FIFA U-20 World Cup and FIFA U-17 World Cup, and to appoint Indonesia and Peru respectively, who were due to host the tournaments in 2021, as the hosts of the 2023 editions.
  4. ^ "Peru withdrawn as host of FIFA U-17 World Cup 2023". FIFA. 3 April 2023. Archived from the original on 28 June 2023. Retrieved 3 April 2023.
  5. ^ "FIFA Council appoints United States as host of new and expanded FIFA Club World Cup". FIFA. 23 June 2023. Archived from the original on 16 September 2023. Retrieved 24 June 2023.
  6. ^ "PSSI Ajukan 8 Stadion ke FIFA untuk Piala Dunia U-17" (in Indonesian). Archived from the original on 2023-07-15. Retrieved 2023-07-09.
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External links