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FIFA - The FIFA Futsal World Championship 2004 will be taking place in Chinese Taipei from 21 November to 5 December. Who will emerge victorious: holders Spain, three-time world champions Brazil or an outsider such as Iran, Ukraine, Argentina or Italy?

The opening match in Chinese Taipei's first-ever national futsal championship in September 2003 attracted fewer than 100 spectators. In contrast, competitive matches in Brazil and Spain are played to full houses and shown live on television.

The discrepancies in futsal remain huge: here the amateurs, there the professionals. Here a fun and popular pastime, there a business generating millions from broadcasting and sponsorship deals.

Brazil, who have claimed the world title three times, and Spain, the reigning champions, are dominant in a sport that is steadily gaining in popularity. A total of 46 teams took part in the qualifying competition for the 1996 Futsal World Championship in Spain, but twice as many teams fought out the 16 places for this year's tournament in Chinese Taipei.

Nations such as Argentina, Paraguay, Italy, Portugal, Ukraine and Iran have made significant progress in the past few years and are now at the stage where they can make life difficult for masters Brazil and Spain. A warm-up tournament staged recently in Iran was won by the hosts in the face of competition from Brazil and Ukraine.

Falcao is the best
On paper, though, Brazil have to be the favourites to lift the crown in Chinese Taipei, where the host team and the Czech Republic are making their debuts at the Futsal World Championship. More than ten million people play futsal in Brazil - a gigantic reservoir of talent that once included modern greats such as Ronaldo, Ronaldinho and Lucio.


The top Brazilian league has 17 teams, all of them fully professional. Its leading protagonist is Falcao, according to experts the best futsal player in the world. Falcao stands out not only as a goalscorer but also as a provider. He is a technically very gifted player whose skills do not come cheaply, bringing him 10,000 US dollars a month from his club Malwee/Jaragua, with sponsors contributing a further 5,000 US dollars.

His international team mate Manoel Tobias, twice a World Championship winner, leading marksman at the tournaments in 1996 (14 goals) and 2000 (19 goals) and scorer of 278 international goals, has the edge over Falcao in financial terms, though. Tobias earns 20,000 US dollars a month at Polaris World Cartagena, one of the leading clubs in Spain.

Brazil's national coach Fernando Coelho "Ferretti", who four years ago managed the host Guatemala side that lost 29-2 to Brazil in a group game, has only one objective in Chinese Taipei - to regain the title the South Americans relinquished in a memorable final against Spain (4-3) in December 2000.

Brazilian records
Brazil are by far the most successful futsal team to date, having won three world championship titles in succession (1989, 1992, 1996) and scored the highest number of goals at the previous four tournaments (210, an average of 6.6 goals per game). In second place come Spain with 131 goals (4.9 per game), followed by The Netherlands with 75 (2.9 per game), who surprisingly failed to qualify for Chinese Taipei.


Brazil and Spain have also set attendance records, with the final of the 1996 World Championship between the two futsal powers at the Palau Sant Jordi in Barcelona attracting 15,500 fans. There was to be no giant victory party for the home team, though, as the visitors from Brazil ran out 6-4 winners. The attendance record at a futsal world championship tournament, however, is held by Guatemala. Four years ago, more than 224,000 people - 5,600 per game - saw the tournament at the two indoor stadiums in Guatemala City.


Will the record be broken in Chinese Taipei? The hosts have the stadiums to do it (one holds almost 15,000 spectators, the other 5,000), and the list of qualifiers is an extremely attractive one. As most of the 16 teams favour an attacking style of play, a festival of goals and attractive matches is almost guaranteed. The only question is whether a country with no futsal tradition and starting from scratch will be able to win over enough people to this fascinating version of football and persuade them to watch a total of 40 matches in 14 days.

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