Soccer (Football Association) facts
- The 2002 World Cup was held in two places—Seoul, South Korea and Tokyo, Japan. Brazil won the 2002 World Cup and also has won the most World Cups (five) since the tournament began in 1930.
- Soccer is the world's most popular game.
- Pele's real name was Edson Arantes do Nascimento.
- The rules of football were codified in England by the Football Association in 1863, and the name association football was coined to distinguish the game from the other forms of football played at the time, specifically rugby football.
- From 1962 to 1996 the world cup has been won alternately by South Americans and Europeans. Like once it goes to South Americans and the next time goes to the Europeans. Though its just a co-incidence. Amazing!
- Today the sport is generally known simply as football in English-speaking countries in which it is the most popular football code. In countries where other codes are more popular, the sport is more commonly referred to as soccer.
- The term soccer originated in England, first appearing in the 1880s as a slang abbreviation of the word "association", often credited to former England captain Charles Wreford-Brown.
- A practice match of Arsenal was the first soccer match to be telecasted on TV.
- Soccer became an olympic event in 1908.
- The World Cup is the biggest soccer tournament in the world. It is held every four years in a different country. Billions of people watch the televised games as the national teams from countries around the globe battle it out for soccer supremacy.
- Gerd Müller, who played for West Germany in the 1970 and 1974 World Cups, holds the career record for most World Cup goals with 14.
- The Women's World Cup was played in the United States in 1999 and again in 2003, and the U.S. won
- their second Cup in 1999 when Brandi Chastain scored in a penalty shootout to defeat China. The German team took the 2003 Women's World Cup.
- On June 14 1974, Carlos Caszely of Chile was the first player to be shown a red card in a match of World Cup.
- The United States' Major League Soccer made its debut in 1996, shortly after the wildly successful 1994 World Cup was hosted by the United States.
- The University of North Carolina has won an incredible 16 national championships in women's soccer since the first tournament was played in 1982.
- In 2002, Germany's Oliver Kahn became the first goalkeeper to win the Most Valuable Player of the World Cup.
- Brazilian striker Ronaldo was named the Most Valuable Player of the 1998 World Cup, even though his team lost in the championship game to France. THe has also been named World Player of the Year three times.
- The Women's United Soccer Association (WUSA) made its debut in 2001. Eight teams participated, and Brandi Chastain's Bay Area CyberRays won the inaugural league championship over Atlanta. The league disbanded in 2003.
- Mia Hamm, a star forward on the U.S. women's national team, was once a two-time national collegiate player of the year for the University of North Carolina. She was on the 1996 and 2004 Olympic gold medal winning U.S. team as well as the 1999 World Cup team.
- In 217 A.D. the British soldiers said that they played soccer with the skulls of defeated Roman soldiers from a liberated village.