Date | R | Home vs Away | - |
---|---|---|---|
06/11 21:00 | 1 | [2] Uruguay U20 vs Italy U20 [2] | 1-0 |
06/11 17:30 | 50 | [2] Israel U20 vs South Korea U20 [2] | 3-1 |
06/08 21:00 | 2 | [2] Italy U20 vs South Korea U20 [2] | 2-1 |
06/08 17:30 | 2 | [2] Uruguay U20 vs Israel U20 [2] | 1-0 |
06/04 21:00 | 3 | [1] USA U20 vs Uruguay U20 [2] | 0-2 |
06/04 17:30 | 3 | [2] South Korea U20 vs Nigeria U20 [3] | 0-0 |
06/03 21:00 | 3 | [1] Colombia U20 vs Italy U20 [2] | 1-3 |
06/03 17:30 | 3 | [2] Israel U20 vs Brazil U20 [1] | 1-1 |
06/01 21:00 | 4 | [2] Ecuador U20 vs South Korea U20 [2] | 2-3 |
06/01 17:30 | 4 | [1] Gambia U20 vs Uruguay U20 [2] | 0-1 |
05/31 21:00 | 4 | [1] England U20 vs Italy U20 [2] | 1-2 |
05/31 21:00 | 4 | [1] Argentina U20 vs Nigeria U20 [3] | 0-2 |
The FIFA U-20 World Cup is the biennial football world championship tournament for FIFA members’ men's national teams with players under the age of 20. The competition has been staged every two years since the inaugural tournament in 1977 when it was hosted by Tunisia under the tournament name of FIFA World Youth Championship until 2005. In 2007 the name was changed to its present form. FIFA bills the men's Under-20 World Cup as "the tournament of tomorrow's superstars." Diego Maradona, Lionel Messi and Paul Pogba are previous winners of the official player of the tournament award, and Erling Haaland was the top scorer at the 2019 edition. The current title holder is Uruguay, which won its first title at the 2023 tournament in Argentina.
In the twenty-three editions of the tournament held, twelve nations have won the title. Argentina U20 is the most successful team with six titles, followed by Brazil U20 with five titles. Portugal U20 and Serbia U20 have both won two titles (with the latter winning once as Yugoslavia U20), while Ghana U20, Germany U20, Spain U20, France U20, England U20, Ukraine U20, Russia U20 (as the USSR U20) and Uruguay U20 have won the title once each.[]
A corresponding event for women's teams, the FIFA U-20 Women's World Cup, began in 2002 with the name "FIFA U-19 Women's World Championship" and an age limit of 19. The age limit for the women's competition was changed to 20 beginning with the 2006 FIFA U-20 Women's World Championship, and the competition was renamed as a "World Cup" in 2007 in preparation for the 2008 event. The next edition is planned to be held in 2025 in Chile.