- Source: 2010 in association football
The following are the association football events of the year 2010 throughout the world.
News
In 2010, the two top-level leagues in the United States both added at least one new team:
Major League Soccer, which also has one team in Canada and is recognized as the top level of the (men's) sport in that country, added its 16th team, Philadelphia Union, located in the Philadelphia suburb of Chester, Pennsylvania.
Women's Professional Soccer, which currently has teams only in the United States, added two teams to the six teams returning from its inaugural 2009 season:
The Atlanta Beat, the new incarnation of a team from the defunct Women's United Soccer Association, who play in the Atlanta suburb of Kennesaw, Georgia.
Philadelphia Independence, sister team to Philadelphia Union. Due to construction delays at the new stadium it will eventually share with Union, Independence played their first season in another Philadelphia suburb, West Chester, Pennsylvania.
However, during the 2010 WPS season, another charter team, Saint Louis Athletica, folded, bringing WPS back to the same number of teams it had in the 2009 season. The league also lost its season champions, FC Gold Pride, and the Chicago Red Stars, although it will add an expansion team in Western New York for 2011.
Following the 2010 MLS regular season, the Kansas City Wizards announced a name change to Sporting Kansas City.
Events
= Men's national teams
=FIFA
11 June – 11 July: 2010 FIFA World Cup in South Africa
Spain
Netherlands
Germany
4th: Uruguay
14 August – 22 August: 2010 IBSA World Blind Football Championship in England
Brazil
Spain
China
4th: England
CAF
10 January – 31 January: 2010 African Cup of Nations in Angola
Egypt
Ghana
Nigeria
4th: Algeria
AFC
December 1–29: 2010 AFF Suzuki Cup in Indonesia and Vietnam
Winners: Malaysia
Runners-up: Indonesia
Third place: Philippines, Vietnam
= Women's national teams
=24 February – 3 March: 2010 Algarve Cup in Portugal
United States
Germany
Sweden
4th: China
4–21 November 2010: 2010 South American Women's Football Championship in Ecuador
Brazil
Colombia
Chile
4th: Argentina
= Women's youth
=July 13 – August 1: 2010 FIFA U-20 Women's World Cup in Germany
Germany
Nigeria
South Korea
4th: Colombia
5 September - 25 September: 2010 FIFA U-17 Women's World Cup in Trinidad and Tobago
South Korea
Japan
Spain
4th: North Korea
March 3 - March 17: 2010 South American U-20 Women Championship in Colombia
Brazil
Colombia
Paraguay
4th: Chile
= Multi-sports events
=Men
August 12–25: 2010 Summer Youth Olympics in Singapore
Bolivia
Haiti
Singapore
4th: Montenegro
November 7–25: 2010 Asian Games in Guangzhou, China
Japan
United Arab Emirates
South Korea
4th: Iran
Women
August 12–24: 2010 Summer Youth Olympics in Singapore
Chile
Equatorial Guinea
Turkey
4th: Iran
November 14–22: 2010 Asian Games in Guangzhou, China
Japan
North Korea
South Korea
4th: China
Club football
= Women
=National champions
= AFC
== CAF
== CONCACAF
=Note: "(A)" means Apertura champion; (B) means Bicentenario champion; "(C)" means Clausura champion.
Note: "(P)" designates the league champion, by winning the playoffs; "(R)" designates the regular season champion.
Saint Kitts: Newtown United
Saint Lucia: Roots Alley Ballers
Saint-Martin: Orleans Attackers
Saint Vincent and the Grenadines: Avenues United
Sint Maarten: D & P Connection
Turks and Caicos Islands: AFC Academy
= CONMEBOL
== OFC
== UEFA
=Albania: Dinamo Tirana
Andorra: FC Santa Coloma
Armenia: Pyunik Yerevan
Austria: Red Bull Salzburg
Azerbaijan: Inter Baku
Belarus: FC BATE Borisov
Belgium: Anderlecht
Bosnia and Herzegovina: FK Željezničar Sarajevo
Bulgaria: Litex Lovech
Croatia: Dinamo Zagreb
Cyprus: Omonia
Czech Republic: Sparta Prague
Denmark: Copenhagen
England: Chelsea
Estonia: FC Flora Tallinn
Faroe Islands: HB Thorshavn
Finland: HJK Helsinki
France: Marseille
Georgia: Olimpi Rustavi
Germany: Bayern Munich
Greece: Panathinaikos
Hungary: Debreceni VSC
Iceland: Breiðablik UBK
Republic of Ireland: Shamrock Rovers
Israel: Hapoel Tel Aviv
Italy: Internazionale
Kazakhstan: Tobol Kostanay
Latvia: Skonto Riga
Lithuania: Ekranas Panevezys
Luxembourg: Jeunesse Esch
Macedonia: Renova
Malta: Birkirkara
Moldova: Sheriff Tiraspol
Montenegro: Rudar Pljevlja
Netherlands: Twente
Northern Ireland: Linfield
Norway: Rosenborg Trondheim
Poland: Lech Poznań
Portugal: Benfica
Romania: Cluj
Russia: FC Zenit Saint Petersburg
San Marino: Tre Fiori
Scotland: Rangers
Serbia: Partizan
Slovakia: MŠK Žilina
Slovenia: Koper
Spain: Barcelona
Sweden: Malmö FF
Switzerland: Basel
Turkey: Bursaspor
Ukraine: Shakhtar Donetsk
Wales: The New Saints
Domestic cup winners
= AFC
=Japan
Emperor's Cup: Kashima Antlers
Qatar
Emir of Qatar Cup: Al-Rayyan
Singapore
Singapore Cup: Bangkok Glass
Thailand
Thai FA Cup: Chonburi FC
= CAF
=South Africa
Nedbank Cup: Bidvest Wits
= CONCACAF
=Canada
Canadian Championship: Toronto FC
Suriname
Beker van Suriname: Excelsior
United States
U.S. Open Cup: Seattle Sounders FC
= CONMEBOL
=Brazil
Copa do Brasil: Santos
= OFC
=New Zealand
Chatham Cup: Miramar Rangers
= UEFA
=England
FA Cup: Chelsea
League Cup: Manchester United
France
Coupe de France: Paris Saint-Germain
Coupe de la Ligue: Marseille
Germany
DFB-Pokal: Bayern Munich
Greece
Greek Cup: Panathinaikos
Italy
Coppa Italia: Internazionale
Netherlands
KNVB Cup: Ajax
Portugal
Taça de Portugal: Porto
Taça da Liga: Benfica
Russia
Russian Cup: Zenit St. Petersburg
Scotland
Scottish Cup: Dundee United
Scottish League Cup: Rangers
Slovenia
Slovenian Cup: Maribor
Spain
Copa del Rey: Sevilla
Turkey
Turkish Cup: Trabzonspor
Deaths
= January
=1 January – Sergio Messen, Chilean midfielder (60)
1 January – Jean-Pierre Posca, French defender (57)
3 January - Gus Alexander, Scottish footballer (75)
7 January – Alex Parker, Scottish defender (74)
9 January - Améleté Abalo, Togolese football manager (47)
11 January - Johnny King, English footballer (83)
13 January - Tommy Sloan, Scottish footballer (84)
15 January – Detlev Lauscher, German striker (57)
18 January – Lino Grava, Italian defender (82)
19 January – Nils Jensen, Danish goalkeeper (74)
19 January – Panajot Pano, Albanian striker (70)
19 January - Christos Hatziskoulidis, Greek footballer (57)
20 January - Jack Parry, Welsh footballer (86)
21 January – Marino Bergamasco, Italian midfielder (84)
26 January – Lars Larsson, Swedish defender (76)
= February
=1 February - Bobby Kirk, Scottish footballer (82)
3 February – Gil Merrick, English goalkeeper (88)
5 February – Galimzyan Khusainov, Russian striker (72)
7 February - Bobby Dougan, Scottish footballer (83)
8 February – Angelo Franzosi, Italian goalkeeper (88)
9 February – Constant de Backer, Belgian midfielder (81)
10 February – Orlando, Brazilian defender (74)
11 February – Brian Godfrey, Welsh striker (69)
11 February – Yury Sevidov, Russian striker (67)
12 February – Werner Krämer, German striker (70)
12 February – Petar Borota, Serbian goalkeeper (57)
12 February – Luis Molowny, Spanish midfielder and manager (84)
13 February – Marian Parse, Romanian striker (23, cancer)
14 February – Zhang Yalin, Chinese midfielder (28, lymphoma)
February 15 – Juan Carlos González, Uruguayan defender, winner of the 1950 FIFA World Cup. (85)
16 February – Wan Chi Keung, Hong Kong striker (53)
18 February - Alan Gordon, Scottish footballer (65)
20 February - Bobby Cox, Scottish footballer (76)
22 February - Bobby Smith, Scottish footballer (56)
23 February – Gerhard Neef, German goalkeeper (63)
27 February - Charlie Crowe, English footballer (85)
28 February - Adam Blacklaw, Scottish footballer (72)
= March
=3 March - Keith Alexander, English footballer (53)
4 March - Tony Richards, English footballer (75)
6 March - Mansour Amirasefi, Iranian footballer (76)
6 March - Endurance Idahor, Nigerian footballer (25)
9 March - Gheorghe Constantin, Romanian footballer (77)
11 March - Wille MacFarlane, Scottish footballer (79)
12 March - Aleksandr Minayev, Russian footballer (51)
12 March - Hugh Robertson, Scottish footballer (70)
13 March - Édouard Kargu, French footballer (84)
13 March - Charlie Ashcroft, English footballer (83)
17 March - Abdellah Blinda, Moroccan footballer (58)
18 March - Júlio Correia da Silva, Portuguese footballer (90)
19 March - Bob Curtis, English footballer (60)
20 March - Naim Kryeziu, Albanian footballer (92)
27 March - Zbigniew Gut, Polish footballer (60)
28 March - Derlis Florentín, Paraguayan footballer (26)
= April
=3 April - Oleg Kopayev, Russian footballer (72)
6 April - Sid Storey, English footballer (90)
9 April - Zoltán Varga, Hungarian footballer (65)
10 April - Manfred Reichert, German footballer (69)
11 April - Hans-Joachim Göring, German footballer (86)
11 April - Theodor Homann, German footballer (61)
12 April - Alper Balaban, Turkish footballer (22)
13 April - Jorge Bontemps, Argentine footballer (32)
13 April - Charlie Timmins, English footballer (87)
15 April - Wilhelm Huxhorn, German footballer (54)
17 April - Alexandru Neagu, Romanian footballer (61)
21 April - Sammy Baird, Scottish footballer (79)
21 April - Tony Ingham, English footballer (85)
21 April - Manfred Kallenbach, German footballer (68)
22 April - Emilio Álvarez, Uruguayan footballer (71)
22 April - Victor Nurenberg, Luxembourgian footballer (79)
22 April - Piet Steenbergen, Dutch footballer (81)
25 April - Ian Lawther, Northern Irish footballer (70)
26 April – Alberto Vitoria, Spanish midfielder (54)
26 April - Yuri Vshivtsev, Russian footballer (70)
= May
=May - Bert Padden, Scottish football referee (born 1932)
3 May - Denis Obua, Ugandan footballer (62)
6 May - Guillermo Meza, Mexican footballer (21)
6 May - Giacomo Neri, Italian footballer (94)
7 May – Denovan Morales, Honduran midfielder (22)
11 May
Brian Gibson, English footballer (82)
Emmanuel Ngobese, South African footballer (29; tuberculosis)
13 May - Walter Klimmek, German football defender (91)
15 May - Besian Idrizaj, Austrian footballer (22)
19 May - Harry Vos, Dutch footballer (63)
24 May - Kambozia Jamali, Iranian midfielder (71)
26 May - Leo Canjels, Dutch footballer (77)
= June
=1 June - John Hagart, Scottish footballer (72)
4 June - Hennadiy Popovych, Ukrainian footballer (37)
6 June - Mabi de Almeida, Angolan football manager (46)
7 June - Jorge Ginarte, Argentine footballer (70)
9 June - Mohamed Sylla, Guinean footballer (39)
12 June – Mao Mengsuo, Chinese midfielder (20)
20 June – Lai Sun Cheung, Hong Kong defender (59)
20 June - Roberto Rosato, Italian footballer (66)
22 June - Amokrane Oualiken, Algerian footballer (77)
23 June - Jörg Berger, German footballer (65)
27 June - Édgar García de Dios, Mexican footballer (32)
= July
=July 1 - Eddie Moussa, Swedish footballer (26)
July 3 - Colin Gardner, British football manager
July 3 – Herbert Erhardt, West-German defender, winner of the 1954 FIFA World Cup, listed by the DFB in the top 20 best German defenders of all time. (79)
July 6 - Alekos Sofianidis, Greek footballer (76)
July 8 - Guillermo León, Costa Rican footballer
July 11 - Rudi Strittich, Austrian footballer (88)
July 13 - Ken Barnes, British footballer (81)
July 17 - Shaun Mawer, English footballer (50)
July 17 - Ioannis Stefas, Greek footballer (61)
July 17 - Gunārs Ulmanis, Latvian footballer (71)
July 19 - Joseph Aghoghovbia, Nigerian footballer (69)
July 19 - Daiki Sato, Japanese footballer (21)
July 28 - Daniel Pettit, English footballer (95)
July 29 - Alex Wilson, Polish footballer (76)
July 30 - Stanley Milburn, English footballer (83)
July 31 - Pedro Dellacha, Argentine footballer (84)
= August
=August 2 - José María Silvero, Argentine footballer (78)
August 3 - Edmund Zientara, Polish footballer (81)
August 5 - Yuri Shishlov, Russian footballer (65)
August 8 - Ken Boyes, English footballer (75)
August 8 - Massamasso Tchangai, Togolese footballer (32)
August 10 - Brian Clark, English footballer (67)
August 10 - Adam Stansfield, English footballer (31)
August 13 - Panagiotis Bachramis, Greek footballer (34)
August 22 - Raúl Belén, Argentine footballer (79)
August 22 – Juan Carlos González, Uruguayan defender, winner of the 1950 FIFA World Cup. (85)
August 22 - Stjepan Bobek, Yugoslav footballer (86)
August 27 - Oscar Ntwagae, South African footballer (33)
August 28 - Isa Bakar, Malaysian footballer (57)
August 30 - Francisco Varallo, Argentine striker and the last surviving player of the 1930 FIFA World Cup and the final. (100)
August 30 - Henryk Czapczyk, Polish footballer (88)
August 30 - Philip Tisson, Saint Lucian footballer (24)
= September
=2 September - Jackie Sinclair, Scottish midfielder (67, cancer)
3 September - Jose Augusto Torres, Portuguese striker and manager (71, heart failure)
10 September - Andrei Timoshenko, Russian striker (41)
10 September - Fridrikh Maryutin, Soviet striker (85)
11 September - Diego Rodríguez Cano, Uruguayan defender (22, car accident)
18 September - Bobby Smith, English striker (77, after a short illness)
18 September - Øystein Gåre, Norwegian manager (56, after a short illness)
22 September - Vyacheslav Tsaryov, Russian defender (39, after a short illness)
23 September - Fernando Riera, Chilean striker and manager (90)
28 September - Orvin Cabrera, Honduran striker (33, liver cancer)
= October
=1 October - Ian Buxton, English striker (72)
1 October - Bobby Craig, Scottish footballer (75)
1 October - Dezső Bundzsák, Hungarian midfielder and manager (82)
6 October - Norman Christie, Scottish footballer (85)
9 October - Les Fell, English midfielder (89)
12 October - José Casas 'Pepín', Spanish goalkeeper (78)
13 October - Juan Carlos Arteche, Spanish midfielder (53, cancer)
13 October - Eddie Baily, English striker (85)
14 October - Malcolm Allison, English defender and manager (83, after a long illness)
18 October - Mel Hopkins, Welsh defender (75)
18 October - Hans Hägele, German striker and football agent (70, suicide)
21 October - Mustapha Anane, Algerian striker (60, after a long illness)
22 October - Franz Raschid, German midfielder (56, pancreatic cancer)
24 October - Fritz Grösche, German midfielder and manager (69, cancer)
26 October - Paul the Octopus, 2010 FIFA World Cup "oracle" (2, natural causes)
29 October - Ronnie Clayton, English midfielder (76)
30 October - John Benson, Scottish defender and manager (67, after a short illness)
= November
=3 November - Ron Cockerill, English defender (75)
8 November - Fred Blankemeijer, Dutch defender (84)
8 November - Tim Womack, English footballer (76)
12 November - Jim Farry, Former Chief Executive of the Scottish FA (56, heart attack)
15 November -Ángel Cabrera, Uruguayan footballer (71)
16 November - Ilie Savu, Romanian goalkeeper and manager (90)
November 17 - Olavo Rodrigues Barbosa, Brazilian defender, runner-up at the 1950 FIFA World Cup. (87)
18 November - Jim Cruickshank, Scottish goalkeeper (69)
24 November - Valentin Ivakin, Soviet goalkeeper and manager (80)
26 November - Mohammad Anwar Elahee, Mauritian defender and manager (81)
27 November - Steve Hill, English footballer (70)
28 November - Vladimir Maslachenko, Soviet European Nation's Cup winning goalkeeper (74)
= December
=3 December - Jose Ramos Delgado, Argentine defender (75, Alzheimer disease)
5 December - Shamil Burziyev, Russian defender (25, car accident)
6 December - Imre Mathesz, Hungarian midfielder (73)
6 December - Rene Hauss, French defender and manager (82)
7 December - Federico Vairo, Argentine defender (80, stomach cancer)
10 December - Marcel Domingo, French goalkeeper and manager (86)
11 December - Peter Risi, Swiss striker (60, after a long illness)
12 December - Emmanuel Ogoli, Nigerian defender (21, collapsed on the pitch)
14 December - Dale Roberts, English goalkeeper (24, suicide)
17 December - Ralph Coates, English midfielder (64, stroke)
21 December - Oleksandr Kovalenko, Ukrainian midfielder and referee (34, suicide)
21 December - Enzo Bearzot, Italian defender and World Cup winning manager (83)
24 December - Frans de Munck, Dutch goalkeeper (88)
26 December - Bill Jones, English defender (89)
27 December - Walter Balmer, Swiss international footballer (born 1948)
28 December - Jeff Taylor, English footballer (80)
29 December - Ramón Montesinos, Spanish midfielder (67)
29 December - Avi Cohen, Israeli defender (54, motorcycle accident)
References
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Piala Dunia FIFA
- Sepak bola
- Daftar final Piala Dunia FIFA
- Takefusa Kubo
- Persatuan Sepak Bola Seluruh Indonesia
- Liga Utama Inggris
- Federasi Sepak Bola Perbara
- Jordi Amat
- Ballon d'Or
- Cristiano Ronaldo
- 2010 in association football
- Association football
- 2010 FIFA World Cup
- 2010 FIFA Club World Cup
- FIFA
- History of association football
- 2010 FIFA Ballon d'Or
- The Football Association
- Captain (association football)
- 2010–11 FA Cup
Diary of a Wimpy Kid (2010)
Thirst (2010)
Elite Squad: The Enemy Within (2010)
Sweet Little Lies (2010)
Blade Runner (1982)
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