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Saturday, October 10, 2015

With just nine days remaining until the FIFA U-17 World Cup kicks off in Chile, the official squad lists for the tournament have been announced

A general view from inside the Australian dressing room
http://www.fifadata.com/document/FU17/2015/pdf/FU17_2015_SquadLists.pdf

Gifted youngsters offered Chilean chance

 
A general view from inside the Australian dressing room
© Getty Images
With just nine days remaining until the FIFA U-17 World Cup kicks off in Chile, the official squad lists for the tournament have been announced. A total of 504 young hopefuls can now begin to dream of following in the footsteps of famous graduates of the tournament, such as Neymar, Ronaldinho, Gianluigi Buffon and Andres Iniesta.
Some familiar names grace the lists, including Luca Zidane, Zinedine's son - who also has a penchant for Panenka penalties - in the France squad, while Davor Lovren, younger brother of Dejan, features in the Croatian ranks. Some of the most talked-about prospects in world football will also grace the global stage, with Barcelona's Lee Seung-Woo taking Korea Republic's No10 shirt, while New York Cosmos starlet Haji Wright will don USA's No7.
The talented youngsters will showcase their prodigious talents across eight host cities: Chillan, Concepcion, Coquimbo, La Serena, Puerto Montt, Santiago, Talca and Vina Del Mar. The opening game on Saturday 17 October will see England take on Guinea in Coquimbo, with holders Nigeria and hosts Chile making their bow in Santiago later that day. Vina Del Mar will host the final, which will take place on Sunday 8 November.
You can follow all the action on FIFA.com, with match reports, video highlights and exclusive interviews coming your way throughout the tournament. We also have you covered on social media, with @FIFAcom on Twitter, the FIFA U-17 World Cup Facebook page and our Instagram account providing exclusive, behind-the-scenes contenthttp://www.fifadata.com/document/FU17/2015/pdf/FU17_2015_SquadLists.pdf


Discounted Chile 2015 tickets available now

A Chile fan has face paint applied
© Getty Images
The Local Organising Committee of the FIFA U-17 World Cup is pleased to offer affordable prices to all domestic and international fans who wish to attend matches at Chile 2015, which will be held in La Serena, Coquimbo, Vina del Mar, Santiago, Talca, Chillan, Concepcion and Puerto Montt in October and November later this year.
From Monday, 24 August  until the day before each game, you can buy individual tickets for 25% off of the listed price. These reduced prices will be as follows: CAT 1: $5,100; CAT 2: $3,000 and CAT 3: $1,500. (All prices shown are in Chilean pesos)
During this phase we are also selling venue packages CAT 1, CAT 2, which we are now offering for 35% off of the listed price. You can purchase tickets online or from the following retail outlets.
·         La Serena: Tienda Hites (Gregorio Cordovez #435)
·         Coquimbo: Sede Club Coquimbo Unido (Guillermo Edwards #50)
·         Talca: Tienda Hites (Uno Sur #1371)
·         Chillan: Tienda Hites (Isabel Riquelme #709)
·         Concepcion: Tienda Hites (Barros Arana #890)
·         Puerto Montt: Sede Deportes Puerto Montt (Urmeneta #214)
·         Vina del Mar: Tienda Grial (Arlegui #358 local 109)
·         Santiago: Tiendas Hites (Ahumada #390) and Sencillito payment points. 
If you purchase tickets on matchdays, you will be required to pay the full list price, i.e. $6,800, $4,000 and $2,000 for Categories 1, 2 and 3 respectively.


FIFA U-17 World Cup

Juarez: 2018 will be Mexico's tournament

 
The history of Mexican football reached a turning point on 2 October 2005, a day that defined a generation, a day that will live long in the memory of those that had the good fortune to experience it, a day on which they will never forget where they were.
It was ten years ago today that Mexico’s so-called Generación Dorada beat Brazil 3-0 to win the FIFA U-17 World Cup Peru 2005, a stunning triumph achieved by the likes of Carlos Vela, Giovani dos Santos, Hector Moreno and Efrain Juarez and celebrated by the whole country, which reserved a place for their young heroes in the collective imagination.

"I still remember it as if it were yesterday,” Juarez told FIFA.com with a mixture of joy and nostalgia. Reflecting on the six matches that took that Tri side to the world title, the right-back said: “I’ve had a lot of good times in football. I’ve won titles in many places and I’ve played in the World Cup and for foreign clubs, but that was the most wonderful experience of my life.”
It is perhaps hard to explain to anyone outside Mexico the impact that their achievement in becoming U-17 world champions had on the country. Thousands upon thousands of people flooded the streets of Mexico City to give the warmest of homecomings to the victorious squad, who paraded through the streets of the capital in an open-top bus for a whole day, marking the start of a new era for Mexican football.
As Juarez recalled, the Peru 2005 win was also a watershed in their careers of the players themselves: “Barcelona came in and signed me. I couldn’t play because I wasn’t a European Union national, but I did get to spend a couple of years in Spain, which helped me mature,” said the former Celtic and Real Zaragoza player.
“After that I returned to Mexico, won the league title with Pumas almost straightaway, played at South Africa 2010 and then returned to Europe. They’re all things that I’m sure wouldn’t have happened if we hadn’t won that tournament in Peru.”
One big, happy family
It was a competition won in style, the Mexicans brushing the Netherlands aside 4-0 in the semi-finals before putting the Brazilians to the sword in the final. Aside from the obvious quality of the team, however, Juarez revealed another secret to their success: “We were real dreamers. It might sound strange, but there wasn’t a day that went by without us imagining what it would be like to lift the cup.
“In sharing that same dream we became a family. We spent so many months together that we got to know each other inside out. We were like brothers, and our desire and belief was bulletproof. We dreamed about success but we also worked hard to achieve it.”
The success Juarez and Co enjoyed in Peru did not come about by chance. As part of their painstaking preparations, he and his team-mates made many a sacrifice in their quest to become world champions.
“We spent our birthdays, Christmas and Mothers’ Day in team training camps and did an exhausting amount of physical work,” revealed the Monterrey defender. “But the team grew in stature along the way. Our coach, Jesus 'Chucho' Ramirez, was almost a father figure to us as well. We didn’t have our families close by and whenever we had a problem we turned to him a lot of the time. He was the only one who could give us the support we needed.”
That team went on to change the face of Mexican football, blazing a trail for the country’s youth sides, who continue to be a force on the world stage. “It would be arrogant of me to say that what we did was a turning point, though that’s what the results since then suggest. We’ve won Olympic gold, a second U-17 world title and reached the semis of the U-20 World Cup. I think the youngsters who’ve followed in our footsteps have had that same contagious belief in themselves.”
Mexico’s success at youth level begs an obvious question, however: why has the senior national team not been able to make the big step forward? The winner of 39 caps for his country, four of them coming at South Africa 2010, Juarez has a theory on that and a prediction too.
“We’ve had a bit of bad luck,” he explained. “We’ve just needed to take that little step, but circumstances have always conspired against us. There were the penalties in 1994, the Maxi Rodriguez goal in 2006, and Argentina’s opening goal in 2010, though my feeling is that Russia 2018 is going to be Mexico’s tournament. We’ll have three great generations coming together: the two U-17 world title-winning teams and the Olympic champions. So be warned: watch out for El Tri!”
Whatever the future may hold, today is about celebrating ten years of glory for Mexican football, something Juarez will be doing with his former team-mates thanks to modern technology: “We keep in contact a lot and we even have a phone group with all the players and the coaching staff. We don’t see each other that much because we play for different teams, but we chat nearly every day.”
Though they might be virtual in nature, the team’s celebrations will be enthusiastic all the same, as Juarez confirmed in revealing the name of their ultra-exclusive chat group: “Campeones del Mundo! What else would we call it?”

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