2017 AFC U-20 Futsal Championship| ฟุตซอลเอเชียเยาวชนอายุไม่เกิน 20 ปี 2017 | 
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| Host country | Thailand | 
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| City | Bangkok | 
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| Dates | 16–26 May | 
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| Teams | 21 (from 1 confederation) | 
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| Venue(s) | 2 (in 1 host city) | 
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| Champions |   Iran (1st title) | 
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| Runners-up |   Iraq | 
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| Third place |   Thailand | 
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| Fourth place |   Uzbekistan | 
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| Matches played | 53 | 
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| Goals scored | 364 (6.87 per match) | 
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| Attendance | 45,235 (853 per match) | 
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| Top scorer(s) |   Akbar Usmonov (13 goals) | 
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| Best player(s) |   Touhid Lotfi | 
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| Fair play award |   Thailand | 
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 The 2017 AFC U-20 Futsal Championship was the first edition of the AFC U-20 Futsal Championship, the biennial international futsal championship organised by the Asian Football Confederation (AFC) for the men's youth national teams of Asia. The tournament was hosted by Thailand between 16 and 26 May 2017.[1] Iran and Thailand had signaled their intent to host the inaugural competition.[2] 
A total of 21 teams participated in the tournament. The 21 teams were divided into four groups (one with six teams and three with five teams), with the group winners and runners-up advancing to the quarter-finals.[2] 
The tournament served as qualifying for the futsal tournament at the 2018 Summer Youth Olympics in Buenos Aires, with the winner and the runner-up qualifying for the boys' tournament, to be represented by their under-18 representative teams.[3][4] 
  Qualified teams
 Of the 47 AFC member associations, a total of 22 teams entered the competition. There was no qualification, and all entrants advanced to the final tournament.[2] Saudi Arabia initially entered but decided to withdraw prior to the draw. 
  
 Afghanistan  
 Bahrain  
 Brunei  
 China  
 Chinese Taipei  
 Hong Kong  
 Indonesia  
 Iran  
 Iraq  
 Japan  
 Kyrgyzstan  
 Lebanon  
 Malaysia  
 Mongolia  
 Myanmar  
 Qatar  
 Saudi Arabia (withdrew)  
 Tajikistan  
 Thailand (hosts)  
 United Arab Emirates  
 Uzbekistan  
 Vietnam
   Venues
 The matches were played at the Bangkok Arena and Indoor Stadium Huamark in Bangkok. 
  Draw
 The draw for the final tournament was held on 30 March 2017, 15:00 ICT (UTC+7), at the Grand Fourwings Convention Hotel in Bangkok.[5] The 21 teams were drawn into one group of six teams (Group A) and three groups of five teams (Groups B, C and D), with the hosts Thailand automatically assigned to position A1 in the draw.[6][7] As there were no previous editions, the teams were seeded according to the performances of their senior teams in the 2016 AFC Futsal Championship.[8] 
    | Pot 1  |  Pot 2  |  Pot 3  |  Pot 4  |  Pot 5 (unranked)  | 
  |   |    Japan  Iraq  Kyrgyzstan  Qatar
    |    |    Tajikistan
    |    Afghanistan  Bahrain  Brunei  Hong Kong  Indonesia  Mongolia  Myanmar  United Arab Emirates
    | 
 Squads
  Players born after 1 January 1997 were eligible to compete in the tournament. Each team must register a squad of 14 players, minimum two of whom must be goalkeepers (Regulations Articles 27.1 and 27.2).[3] 
 Match officials
 - Referees
 
  
 Ryan Shepherd  
 Darius Turner  
 Osama Saeed Idrees  
 Liu Jianqiao  
 Lee Po-fu  
 Vahid Arzpeyma Mohammreh  
 Hasan Al-Gburi  
 Hawkar Salar Ahmed  
 Takeshi Fujita  
 Hiroyuki Harada  
 Husein Mahmoud Khalaileh  
 Nurdin Bukuev  
 Mohamad Chami  
 Helday Idang  
 Rey Ritaga Martinez  
 Azat Hajypolatov  
 Khamis Al-Shamsi  
 Anatoliy Rubakov  
 Trương Quốc Dũng
   Group stage
 The top two teams of each group advanced to the quarter-finals.  
 - Tiebreakers
 
 Teams were ranked according to points (3 points for a win, 1 point for a draw, 0 points for a loss), and if tied on points, the following tiebreaking criteria were applied, in the order given, to determine the rankings (Regulations Article 10.5):[3] 
 - Points in head-to-head matches among tied teams;
  - Goal difference in head-to-head matches among tied teams;
  - Goals scored in head-to-head matches among tied teams;
  - If more than two teams are tied, and after applying all head-to-head criteria above, a subset of teams are still tied, all head-to-head criteria above are reapplied exclusively to this subset of teams;
  - Goal difference in all group matches;
  - Goals scored in all group matches;
  - Penalty shoot-out if only two teams are tied and they met in the last round of the group;
  - Disciplinary points (yellow card = 1 point, red card as a result of two yellow cards = 3 points, direct red card = 3 points, yellow card followed by direct red card = 4 points);
  - Drawing of lots.
 
 All times are local, ICT (UTC+7). 
 Group A
    | Pos  |  Team  |  Pld  |  W  |  D  |  L  |  GF  |  GA  |  GD  |  Pts  |  Qualification  | 
  | 1  |    Iraq  |  5  |  5  |  0  |  0  |  25  |  10  |  +15  |  15  |  Knockout stage  | 
  | 2  |    Thailand (H)  |  5  |  4  |  0  |  1  |  30  |  10  |  +20  |  12  | 
  | 3  |    Afghanistan  |  5  |  3  |  0  |  2  |  27  |  15  |  +12  |  9  |    | 
  | 4  |    Malaysia  |  5  |  2  |  0  |  3  |  18  |  17  |  +1  |  6  | 
  | 5  |    Bahrain  |  5  |  1  |  0  |  4  |  7  |  22  |  −15  |  3  | 
  | 6  |    Brunei  |  5  |  0  |  0  |  5  |  8  |  41  |  −33  |  0  | 
    
    
    
    
    Group B
    | Pos  |  Team  |  Pld  |  W  |  D  |  L  |  GF  |  GA  |  GD  |  Pts  |  Qualification  | 
  | 1  |    Indonesia  |  4  |  2  |  2  |  0  |  15  |  9  |  +6  |  8[a]  |  Knockout stage  | 
  | 2  |    Japan  |  4  |  2  |  2  |  0  |  15  |  9  |  +6  |  8[a]  | 
  | 3  |    Vietnam  |  4  |  2  |  1  |  1  |  11  |  10  |  +1  |  7  |    | 
  | 4  |    Tajikistan  |  4  |  1  |  1  |  2  |  16  |  14  |  +2  |  4  | 
  | 5  |    Chinese Taipei  |  4  |  0  |  0  |  4  |  6  |  21  |  −15  |  0  | 
  - ^ a b Indonesia and Japan finished with identical head-to-head and overall records, and drawing of lots was used to determine their rankings.[9] 
  
    
   
   
   
   Group C
    | Pos  |  Team  |  Pld  |  W  |  D  |  L  |  GF  |  GA  |  GD  |  Pts  |  Qualification  | 
  | 1  |    Uzbekistan  |  4  |  3  |  1  |  0  |  24  |  10  |  +14  |  10  |  Knockout stage  | 
  | 2  |    Lebanon  |  4  |  3  |  1  |  0  |  16  |  5  |  +11  |  10  | 
  | 3  |    Hong Kong  |  4  |  2  |  0  |  2  |  8  |  13  |  −5  |  6  |    | 
  | 4  |    Myanmar  |  4  |  1  |  0  |  3  |  7  |  16  |  −9  |  3  | 
  | 5  |    Qatar  |  4  |  0  |  0  |  4  |  8  |  19  |  −11  |  0  | 
   
   
   
   
   Group D
    | Pos  |  Team  |  Pld  |  W  |  D  |  L  |  GF  |  GA  |  GD  |  Pts  |  Qualification  | 
  | 1  |    Iran  |  4  |  4  |  0  |  0  |  27  |  2  |  +25  |  12  |  Knockout stage  | 
  | 2  |    Mongolia  |  4  |  2  |  1  |  1  |  10  |  12  |  −2  |  7  | 
  | 3  |    United Arab Emirates  |  4  |  2  |  0  |  2  |  11  |  14  |  −3  |  6  |    | 
  | 4  |    Kyrgyzstan  |  4  |  0  |  2  |  2  |  8  |  19  |  −11  |  2  | 
  | 5  |    China  |  4  |  0  |  1  |  3  |  6  |  15  |  −9  |  1  | 
   
   
   
   
   Knockout stage
 In the knockout stage, extra time and penalty shoot-out were used to decide the winner if necessary, except for the third place match where penalty shoot-out (no extra time) was used to decide the winner if necessary (Regulations Articles 14.1 and 15.1).[3] 
 Bracket
  Quarter-finals
  
  
  
  Semi-finals
 Winners qualified for 2018 Summer Youth Olympics boys' futsal tournament, to be represented by their under-18 representative teams. 
  
  Third place match
  Final
  Winners
    |  2017 AFC U-20 Futsal Championship winners   | 
    Iran First title  | 
 Qualified teams for Youth Olympics
 The following two teams from AFC qualified for the 2018 Summer Youth Olympics boys' futsal tournament.[10] 
    | Team  |  Qualified on  |  Previous appearances in Youth Olympics  | 
    Iran |  24 May 2017 |  0 (debut)  | 
    Iraq |  24 May 2017 |  0 (debut)  | 
 - Notes
 
 - Since teams from the same association cannot play in both the Youth Olympics boys' and girls' tournaments, if teams from the same association qualify for both tournaments, they must nominate their preferred qualification team, and the next best ranked team will qualify instead if one of the qualified teams are not nominated.
  - As participation in team sports (Futsal, Beach handball, Field hockey, and Rugby sevens) are limited to one team per gender for each National Olympic Committee (NOC), the participating teams of the 2018 Youth Olympics futsal tournament will be confirmed by mid-2018 after each qualified NOC confirms their participation and any unused qualification places are reallocated.[4]
 
 Awards
 The following awards were given at the conclusion of the tournament: 
    | Top Goalscorer[11]  |  Most Valuable Player[12]  |  Fair Play award  | 
    Akbar Usmonov  |    Touhid Lotfi  |    Thailand  | 
 Goalscorers
 13 goals 
  
 Akbar Usmonov
  10 goals 
  
 Jawad Haidari
  9 goals 
  7 goals 
  
 Hamzeh Kadkhoda
  6 goals 
  5 goals 
  
 Hassan Ali Jafari  
 Samuel Eko  
 Mohammad Taheri  
 Abbas Dakheel  
 Hasan Kadhim  
 Fahad Methaq  
 Temüüjin Altansukh  
 Weerasak Srichai
  4 goals 
  
 Liu Kin Po  
 Hamid Ghahramani  
 Hamidreza Karimi  
 Awalluddin Nawi  
 Aidil Shahril  
 Amirul Sugito  
 Batbaatar Battulga  
 Fayzali Sardorov  
 Ronnachai Jungwongsuk  
 Abdulla Al-Salami  
 Ravshan Ismatullaev  
 Said Mirsharofov  
 Khusniddin Nishonov
  3 goals 
  
 Abbas Ahmadi  
 Sadeq Ahmed  
 Wang Jiahao  
 Lin Chih-hung  
 Arjuna Rinaldi  
 Mohammad Jame  
 Mahdi Karimi  
 Sahand Rezapour  
 Ali Haqi  
 Ali Saad  
 Mitsuru Nakamura  
 Mirlan Zholdubaev  
 Hussein Albaba  
 Steve Koukezian  
 Serge Kouyoumjian  
 Tsolmonbaatar Ganzorig  
 Umed Kuziev  
 Worrapluch Jiwjaratrong  
 Witsanu Meemakbang  
 Tanachot Sosawaeng  
 Saeed Al-Marashda  
 Ilkhomjon Khamroev  
 Botirbek Rizaev  
 Dương Ngọc Linh
  2 goals 
  
 Ali Jafari  
 Farzad Mahmoodi  
 Wahid Samimi  
 Ali Husain  
 Nasy'rul Wafiy  
 Cheung Chak Wai  
 Rio Pangestu  
 Mohammad Heidari  
 Omid Khani  
 Muheb Aldeen  
 Moamin Fawzi  
 Ali Hussein  
 Hamzah Zameet  
 Koto Uematsu  
 Jiei Yamada  
 Mamatziia Zholdoshov  
 Georgio El Khoury  
 Michel Saber  
 Bat-Orgil Erdenebat  
 Yesukhei Oyunbileg  
 Shine Htet Aung  
 Ye Lin Tun  
 Hamad Al-Hashemi  
 Ahmed Al-Jalham  
 Firuz Bekmurodov  
 Firuz Sangov  
 Iqboli Vositzoda  
 Jirasin Kimseng  
 Khushnur Erkinov  
 Asli Mukhammadiev  
 Nguyễn Tuấn Thành  
 Trần Nhật Trung  
 Vũ Ngọc Lân
  1 goal 
  
 Morteza Haidari  
 Morteza Sharif Zada  
 Hosain Zadah  
 Mohamed Eid  
 Mohamed Saleem  
 Abdulazim Boll  
 Nazirul Haziq  
 Nizamuddin Ismail  
 Abdul Khaaliq  
 Radhi Raduan  
 Abdulazim Zaini  
 Paiheierding Tudahong  
 Xu Guanbin  
 Zou Lei  
 Huang Chieh  
 Lai Ming-hui  
 Tan Wu-ling  
 Leung Sin Fung  
 Faishal Ammar  
 Ghaith Riyadh  
 Takeshi Higuchi  
 Shokei Okada  
 Damir Isakov  
 Aktai Tashtanov  
 Arstanbek Tursunov  
 Hassan Alame  
 Mouhammad Hammoud  
 Jamal Selwan  
 Nurasyraaf Azle  
 Farikh Rahman  
 Saad Abdul Sani  
 Htet Wai Thein  
 Min Thu  
 Pyae Phyo Maung  
 Obaid Abusharida  
 Salim Al-Balushi  
 Khalid Al-Hanaei  
 Abdulla Guleid  
 Shavqat Halimov  
 Shohrukh Hamidov  
 Somon Saidzoda  
 Jirayu Sam Twigg  
 Abdalla Al-Hayas  
 Humaid Al-Zaabi  
 Sultan Al-Zaabi  
 Hamad Salim  
 Phạm Văn Nguyên  
 Từ Vinh Quang
  1 own goal 
  
 Morteza Haidari (against Malaysia)  
 Nazirul Haziq (against Thailand)  
 Abdul Khaaliq (against Malaysia)  
 Zhou Xu (against Iran)  
 Anton Nugroho (against Thailand)  
 Zaid Ali (against Iran)  
 Ali Hussein (against Malaysia)  
 Hussein Albaba (against Iran)  
 Michel Saber (against Uzbekistan)  
 Min Thu (against Hong Kong)  
 Ye Lin Tun (against Lebanon)  
 Jassim Al-Sadi (against Lebanon)  
 Asli Mukhammadiev (against Iraq)  
 Botirbek Rizaev (against Mongolia)
  Broadcasting rights
  See also
  References
  External links
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| Tournaments | | U-20 Futsal Championship |  | 
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 | U-20 Futsal Asian Cup |  | 
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  | 
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| Qualification |  - 2017 (no qualification)
  - 2019
  - 2021
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| Squads |  | 
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