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Football at the 2005 SEA Games

The football tournament at the 2005 SEA Games was held from 20 November to 4 December. The men's tournament is played at under-23 level, while the women's tournament has no age limit.

Venues

Men's tournament
Women's tournament

Teams

Men's tournament

Notes:

  1. Brunei withdrew.
  2. Cambodia were represented by champions Khemera, who had been declared Cambodia's national team by their owner and president of the Cambodian National Olympic Committee, Prince Norodom Ranariddh.
Women's tournament

Squads

Men's tournament

Football at the 2005 SEA Games – Men's team squads

Women's tournament

Men's tournament

Group stage

Group A


Panaad Stadium, Bacolod
Attendance: 25,000

Panaad Stadium, Bacolod
Attendance: 15,000


Panaad Stadium, Bacolod
Attendance: 20,000

Group B

Paglaum Stadium, Bacolod
Referee: Roon-Sang Tossapom (Thailand)




Knockout stage

Semi-finals


Bronze medal match

Gold medal match

Winners

Final ranking

Source: [citation needed]
(H) Hosts

Match-fixing controversy

Two players from the Vietnamese team, striker Pham Van Quyen and midfielder Le Quoc Vuong, were arrested in Hanoi for "indulging in betting on games and organising betting" (match-fixing). The scandal apparently took place in a match with Vietnam placed against Myanmar, with Vietnam winning 1–0. However, the results are disputed after allegations rose on state television state that some Vietnamese players appeared to slow down their play. It's also been alleged that Van Quyen received 23 million đồng from two women in Ho Chi Minh City on the way to Hanoi from Manila for the match-fix. Meanwhile, the Philippine government praised Vietnamese officials for the crackdown on football corruption and the arrest of the two players. Philippine Olympic Committee chairman Robert Aventajado said that the arrests were made to protect the sport and that Vietnam is working to stem further damage that the scandal has caused to it. Two more players, midfielder Huynh Quoc Anh and defender Le Bat Hieu, were arrested on the same charges over the same scandal. It is believed that these players also received twenty million đồng from local bookmakers to make sure that Vietnam won't win by more than one goal. The same accusation is also believed to be applied to the 23 million đồng payout to Van Quyen.[1][2][3][4][5]

Women's tournament

Group stage

Due to last minute withdrawals from Laos, Singapore and Malaysia, the remaining 5 countries were put into one group.





Finals

Winners

Final ranking

Source: [citation needed]
(H) Hosts

Medal winners

References

  1. ^ SPORTS CZAR TO BE SACKED: Osmeña declines Guardo resignation - Philippine Daily Inquirer
  2. ^ AFTER GAMES, UTANG: P7M owed to Cebu suppliers for hosting foreign athletes - Philippine Daily Inquirer
  3. ^ Cebu City Mayors assails SEAG Overspending Archived 17 March 2010 at the Wayback Machine - Sun.Star
  4. ^ Thai official claims RP is cheating - Philippine Daily Inquirer
  5. ^ Medal-fixing allegations tarnish South East Asian Games Archived 2009-12-20 at the Wayback Machine - Channel NewsAsia