Football at the South American Games
{{Infobox football tournament
| name = Football at the
South American Games
| image = Flag of ODESUR.svg
| imagesize = 150
| alt =
| caption =
| organiser = ODESUR
| title =
| founded = 1978
| abolished =
| region = South America
| number of teams = 8 (men)
6 (women)
| qualifier for =
| related comps = Bolivarian Games
| domestic cup =
| confed cup =
| current champions = {{fbu|20|PAR}}
(men)
{{fbwu|20|VEN}}
(women)
| most successful team = {{fbu|20|COL}}
3 titles (men)
| most appearances =
| top goalscorer =
| broadcasters =
| motto =
| website =
| current =
| American =
}}
Football at the South American Games is the multi-sport event football tournament of the South American Games (also known as "ODESUR Games"). The competition has been played since 1978 and is organized by the Organización Deportiva Suramericana (South American Sport Organization). Only youth teams from South America have participated in it throughout its history.
During the first 2 editions (1978 and 1982) they were known as "Cruz del Sur Games", between 1998 and 2006 the football tournament was not played, instead a futsal tournament was organized.
In the first edition (1978) U-20 teams participated, while in the following ones (1982 and 1986) U-19 teams participated, for the 1990 tournament, the football section was played by U-20 teams preparing to the 1991 South American championship. Three editions of the tournament (1994, 2010 and 2014) were played with U-17 teams, returning to U-20 teams in 2018.
In 2014, a women's tournament was included.[https://www.rsssf.org/tableso/odesur.html Juegos Odesur] by Neil Morrison, José Luis Pierrend and Erik Garin at the RSSSF
Eligible participants
{{div col|colwidth=20em}}
- {{fbu|20|ARG}}
- {{fbu|20|Aruba}}
- {{fbu|20|Bolivia}}
- {{fbu|20|Brazil}}
- {{fbu|20|Chile}}
- {{fbu|20|Colombia}}
- {{fbu|20|Curaçao}}
- {{fbu|20|Ecuador}}
- {{fbu|20|Guyana}}
- {{fbu|20|Panama}}
- {{fbu|20|Paraguay}}
- {{fbu|20|Peru}}
- {{fbu|20|Surinam}}
- {{fbu|20|Uruguay}}
- {{fbu|20|Venezuela}}
{{div col end}}
Men's tournament
=Summaries=
- 1978, 1990, 2018–present: U-20 teams
- 1982, 1986: U-19 teams
- 1994, 2010, 2014: U-17 teams
class="wikitable sortable" style="text-align: " | ||||||
Ed.
! Year ! Host ! width=120px| {{gold01}} Gold medal ! width=120px| {{silver02}} Silver medal ! width=120px| {{bronze03}} Bronze medal ! Num. | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
{{center|1}} | 1978 | La Paz | {{fbu|20|PAR|1954}} | {{fbu|20|ECU|1900}} | {{fbu|20|BOL}} | {{center|3}} |
{{center|2}} | 1982 | Rosario | {{fbu|20|ARG}} | {{fbu|20|ECU|1900}} | {{fbu|20|PER}} | {{center|4}} |
{{center|3}} | 1986 | Santiago | {{fbu|20|ARG}} | {{fbu|20|COL}} | {{fbu|20|BRA|1968}} | {{center|10}} |
{{center|4}} | 1990 | Lima | {{fbu|20|PER}} | {{fbu|20|ECU|1900}} | {{fbu|20|COL}} | {{center|4}} |
{{center|5}} | 1994 | Valencia | {{fbu|17|COL}} | {{fbu|17|VEN|1930}} | {{fbu|17|PER}} | {{center|4}} |
{{center|–}} | 1998 | Cuenca | colspan=4| {{center|(not held){{refn|Not association football but a futsal tournament organised.|group=n|name=futsal}}}} | |||
{{center|–}} | 2002 | Brazil{{refn|No fixed host but held in Rio de Janeiro, São Paulo, Curitiba, and Belém.|group=n|name=nofixbr}} | colspan=4| {{center|(not held){{refn|group=n|name=futsal}}}} | |||
{{center|–}} | 2006 | Buenos Aires | colspan=4| {{center|(not held){{refn|group=n|name=futsal}}}} | |||
{{center|6}} | 2010 | Medellin | {{fbu|17|COL}} | {{fbu|17|ECU}} | {{fbu|17|BOL}} | {{center|6}} |
{{center|7}} | 2014 | Santiago | {{fbu|17|COL}} | {{fbu|17|ARG}} | {{fbu|17|ECU}} | {{center|6}} |
{{center|8}} | 2018 | Cochabamba | {{fbu|20|CHI}} | {{fbu|20|URU}} | {{fbu|20|COL}} | {{center|8}} |
{{center|9}} | 2022 | Asunción | {{fbu|20|PAR}} | {{fbu|20|ECU}} | {{fbu|20|COL}} | {{center|8}} |
;Notes
{{reflist|group=n}}
= Medals =
class="wikitable"
!Rank |Country |bgcolor="gold" align=center width=40|Gold |bgcolor="silver" align=center width=40|Silver |bgcolor="CC9966" align=center width=40|Bronze !width=60|Total | |||||
1 | {{fb|COL}} | 3 | 1 | 3 | 7 |
2 | {{fb|ARG}} | 2 | 1 | 0 | 3 |
3 | {{fb|PAR}} | 2 | 0 | 0 | 2 |
4 | {{fb|PER}} | 1 | 0 | 2 | 3 |
5 | {{fb|CHI}} | 1 | 0 | 0 | 1 |
6 | {{fb|ECU}} | 0 | 5 | 1 | 6 |
7 | {{fb|VEN}} | 0 | 1 | 0 | 1 |
7 | {{fb|URU}} | 0 | 1 | 0 | 1 |
9 | {{fb|BOL}} | 0 | 0 | 2 | 2 |
10 | {{fb|BRA}} | 0 | 0 | 1 | 1 |
Women's tournament
=Summaries=
- 2014: Senior teams
- 2018–present: U-20 teams
class="wikitable sortable" style="text-align: " | ||||||
Ed.
! Year ! width=100px| Host ! width=120px| {{gold01}} Gold medal ! width=120px| {{silver02}} Silver medal ! width=120px| {{bronze03}} Bronze medal ! Num. | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
{{center|1}} | 2014 | Santiago | {{fbw|ARG}} | {{fbw|CHI}} | {{fbw|BRA}} | {{center|7}} |
{{center|2}} | 2018 | Cochabamba | {{fbwu|20|PAR}} | {{fbwu|20|COL}} | {{fbwu|20|ECU}} | {{center|6}} |
{{center|3}} | 2022 | Asunción | {{fbwu|20|VEN}} | {{fbwu|20|URU}} | {{fbwu|20|COL}} | {{center|6}} |
References
{{reflist}}
{{Football at the South American Games}}
{{South American Games sports}}
{{International football}}