2014 FIFA World Cup awards

The following article outlines the awards for the 2014 FIFA World Cup played in Brazil from 12 June to 13 July 2014. The following awards were given at the conclusion of the tournament:[1][2]

Golden Ball

The adidas Golden Ball is given to the outstanding player at the FIFA World Cup. The players who finish second and third are given the Silver Ball and Bronze Ball respectively.[3]

On 11 July 2014, the FIFA Technical Study Group announced the ten-player shortlist for the Golden Ball award.[4]

Golden Boot

The adidas Golden Boot is given to the top goalscorer at the FIFA World Cup. If two or more players are tied on goals, the ranking is decided by the number of assists. If still tied, the players who played the least minutes are ranked first. The players who finish second and third are given the Silver Boot and Bronze Boot respectively.[5]

The top ten players were as follows:[6]

Rank Player Goals Assists Minutes played
1 James Rodríguez 6 2 399'
2 Thomas Müller 5 3 682'
3 Neymar 4 1 457'
4 Lionel Messi 4 1 693'
5 Robin van Persie 4 0 548'
6 Karim Benzema 3 2 450'
7 André Schürrle 3 1 244'
8 Arjen Robben 3 1 690'
9 Enner Valencia 3 0 270'
10 Xherdan Shaqiri 3 0 387'

Golden Glove

The adidas Golden Glove is given to the most outstanding goalkeeper at the FIFA World Cup.[7]

On 11 July 2014, the FIFA Technical Study Group announced the three-player shortlist for the Golden Glove award.[8]

Best Young Player

The Hyundai Young Player Award is given to the most outstanding young player at the FIFA World Cup.[9] Players must be at most 21 years old to receive the award; for the 2014 FIFA World Cup, they must be born on or after 1 January 1993.

On 11 July 2014, the FIFA Technical Study Group announced the three-player shortlist for the Young Player award.[10]

FIFA Fair Play Trophy

The FIFA Fair Play Award is given to the team with the tournament's best disciplinary record. Only teams that reach the knockout phase are eligible.[11]

Man of the Match

Man of the Match trophy.

The Budweiser Man of the Match was given to the best player of each match. It was decided by popular voting online, through FIFA's website, Twitter, and FIFA's mobile phone application.[12]

By match

DayStageTeam 1ResultTeam 2Man of the Match[13]
Thursday
12 June
First round of group stage matches
Group ABrazil 3–1 Croatia Neymar
Friday
13 June
Mexico 1–0 Cameroon Giovani dos Santos
Group BSpain 1–5 Netherlands Robin van Persie
Chile 3–1 Australia Alexis Sánchez
Saturday
14 June
Group CColombia 3–0 Greece James Rodríguez
Ivory Coast 2–1 Japan Yaya Touré
Group DUruguay 1–3 Costa Rica Joel Campbell
England 1–2 Italy Mario Balotelli
Sunday
15 June
Group ESwitzerland  2–1 Ecuador Xherdan Shaqiri
France 3–0 Honduras Karim Benzema
Group FArgentina 2–1 Bosnia and Herzegovina Lionel Messi
Monday
16 June
Iran 0–0 Nigeria John Obi Mikel
Group GGermany 4–0 Portugal Thomas Müller
Ghana 1–2 United States Clint Dempsey
Tuesday
17 June
Group HBelgium 2–1 Algeria Kevin De Bruyne
Russia 1–1 South Korea Son Heung-min
Second round of group stage matches
Group ABrazil 0–0 Mexico Guillermo Ochoa
Wednesday
18 June
Cameroon 0–4 Croatia Mario Mandžukić
Group BSpain 0–2 Chile Eduardo Vargas
Australia 2–3 Netherlands Arjen Robben
Thursday
19 June
Group CColombia 2–1 Ivory Coast James Rodríguez
Japan 0–0 Greece Keisuke Honda
Group DUruguay 2–1 England Luis Suárez
Friday
20 June
Italy 0–1 Costa Rica Bryan Ruiz
Group ESwitzerland  2–5 France Karim Benzema
Honduras 1–2 Ecuador Enner Valencia
Saturday
21 June
Group FArgentina 1–0 Iran Lionel Messi
Nigeria 1–0 Bosnia and Herzegovina Peter Odemwingie
Group GGermany 2–2 Ghana Mario Götze
Sunday
22 June
United States 2–2 Portugal Tim Howard
Group HBelgium 1–0 Russia Eden Hazard
South Korea 2–4 Algeria Islam Slimani
Monday
23 June
Third round of group stage matches
Group ACameroon 1–4 Brazil Neymar
Croatia 1–3 Mexico Rafael Márquez
Group BAustralia 0–3 Spain David Villa
Netherlands 2–0 Chile Arjen Robben
Tuesday
24 June
Group CJapan 1–4 Colombia Jackson Martínez
Greece 2–1 Ivory Coast Georgios Samaras
Group DItaly 0–1 Uruguay Gianluigi Buffon
Costa Rica 0–0 England Keylor Navas
Wednesday
25 June
Group EHonduras 0–3  Switzerland Xherdan Shaqiri
Ecuador 0–0 France Alexander Domínguez
Group FNigeria 2–3 Argentina Lionel Messi
Bosnia and Herzegovina 3–1 Iran Edin Džeko
Thursday
26 June
Group GUnited States 0–1 Germany Thomas Müller
Portugal 2–1 Ghana Cristiano Ronaldo
Group HSouth Korea 0–1 Belgium Jan Vertonghen
Algeria 1–1 Russia Islam Slimani
Friday
27 June
Rest day
Saturday
28 June
Knockout stage matches
Round of 16Brazil 1–1 (a.e.t.)
(3–2 pen.)
 Chile Júlio César
Colombia 2–0 Uruguay James Rodríguez
Sunday
29 June
Netherlands 2–1 Mexico Guillermo Ochoa
Costa Rica 1–1 (a.e.t.)
(5–3 pen.)
 Greece Keylor Navas
Monday
30 June
France 2–0 Nigeria Paul Pogba
Germany 2–1 (a.e.t.) Algeria Raïs M'Bolhi
Tuesday
1 July
Argentina 1–0 (a.e.t.)  Switzerland Lionel Messi
Belgium 2–1 (a.e.t.) United States Tim Howard
Wednesday
2 July
Rest days
Thursday
3 July
Friday
4 July
Quarter-finalsBrazil 2–1 Colombia David Luiz
France 0–1 Germany Mats Hummels
Saturday
5 July
Netherlands 0–0 (a.e.t.)
(4–3 pen.)
 Costa Rica Keylor Navas
Argentina 1–0 Belgium Gonzalo Higuaín
Sunday
6 July
Rest days
Monday
7 July
Tuesday
8 July
Semi-finalsBrazil 1–7 Germany Toni Kroos
Wednesday
9 July
Netherlands 0–0 (a.e.t.)
(2–4 pen.)
 Argentina Sergio Romero
Thursday
10 July
Rest days
Friday
11 July
Saturday
12 July
Third place matchBrazil 0–3 Netherlands Arjen Robben
Sunday
13 July
FinalGermany 1–0 (a.e.t.) Argentina Mario Götze

Multiple winners

Player Awards Matches played
Lionel Messi 4 7
Keylor Navas 3 5
Arjen Robben 3 7
James Rodríguez 3 5
Karim Benzema 2 5
Mario Götze 2 6
Tim Howard 2 4
Thomas Müller 2 7
Neymar 2 5
Guillermo Ochoa 2 4
Xherdan Shaqiri 2 4
Islam Slimani 2 4

All-Star Team

The Castrol Index that evaluated player performances through statistical data finished with the following players leading each position (Toni Kroos was the overall leader):[14]

Goalkeepers Defenders Midfielders Forwards

Manuel Neuer (Germany)

Marcos Rojo (Argentina)
Mats Hummels (Germany)
Thiago Silva (Brazil)
Stefan de Vrij (Netherlands)

Oscar (Brazil)
Toni Kroos (Germany)
Philipp Lahm (Germany)
James Rodríguez (Colombia)

Arjen Robben (Netherlands)
Thomas Müller (Germany)

Dream Team

The Dream Team consisted of the following players, there is a substitute for each position.[15]

Goalkeepers Defenders Midfielders Forwards Manager

Manuel Neuer (Germany)

Marcelo (Brazil)
Mats Hummels (Germany)
Thiago Silva (Brazil)
David Luiz (Brazil)

Ángel Di María (Argentina)
Toni Kroos (Germany)
James Rodríguez (Colombia)

Neymar (Brazil)
Lionel Messi (Argentina)
Thomas Müller (Germany)

Joachim Löw (Germany)

Prize money

The total prize money on offer for the tournament was confirmed by FIFA as US$576 million (including payments of US$70 million to domestic clubs), a 37 percent increase from the amount allocated in the 2010 tournament.[16] Before the tournament, each of the 32 entrants received US$1.5 million for preparation costs. At the tournament, the prize money was distributed as follows:

Goal of the Tournament

The Goal of the Tournament (presented by Sony) was decided by online voting. A total 15 goals were in the shortlist as selected by FIFA.com:[17]

On 21 July 2014, FIFA announced that after more than four million votes, Colombian player James Rodríguez's first goal against Uruguay was named as goal of the tournament.[18]

Rank[19] Date Player Match (score after goal)
1 28 June 2014 James Rodríguez Colombia 2–0 Uruguay (1–0)
2 13 June 2014 Robin van Persie Netherlands 5–1 Spain (1–1)
3 24 June 2014 James Rodríguez Colombia 4–1 Japan (4–1)
4 13 July 2014 Mario Götze Germany 1–0 Argentina (1–0)
5 4 July 2014 David Luiz Brazil 2–1 Colombia (2–0)
6 18 June 2014 Tim Cahill Australia 2–3 Netherlands (1–1)
7 23 June 2014 David Villa Spain 3–0 Australia (1–0)
8 15 June 2014 Lionel Messi Argentina 2–1 Bosnia and Herzegovina (2–0)
9 25 June 2014 Lionel Messi Argentina 3–2 Nigeria (2–1)
10 25 June 2014 Xherdan Shaqiri Switzerland 3–0 Honduras (1–0)
11 8 July 2014 André Schürrle Germany 7–1 Brazil (7–0)
12 5 July 2014 Gonzalo Higuaín Argentina 1–0 Belgium (1–0)
13 14 June 2014 Claudio Marchisio Italy 2–1 England (1–0)
14 20 June 2014 Granit Xhaka Switzerland 2–5 France (2–5)
15 16 June 2014 André Ayew Ghana 1–2 United States (1–1)

See also

References

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