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词条 2010 FIFA World Cup qualification (AFC)
释义

  1. Seeding

      Seeding for the first two rounds  

  2. First round

  3. Second round

  4. Third round

      Qualified teams    Seeding    Groups    Group 1    Group 2    Group 3    Group 4    Group 5  

  5. Fourth round

      Qualified teams    Seeding    Groups    Group A    Group B  

  6. Fifth round

  7. Inter-confederation play-offs

  8. Qualified teams

  9. Goalscorers

  10. References

  11. External links

{{Infobox international football competition
| tourney_name = 2010 FIFA World Cup qualification (AFC)
| year =
| alt =
| caption =
| dates =
| num_teams = 43
| confederations = 1
| matches =
| goals =
| attendance =
| top_scorer =
| prevseason = 2006
| nextseason = 2014
}}{{Use dmy dates|date=April 2016}}

The Asian Football Confederation was allocated four assured qualifying berths for the 2010 FIFA World Cup, and one place in a play-off. 43 teams were in the running for these spots; Laos, Brunei and the Philippines did not attempt to qualify. This was the first time Timor-Leste competed in World Cup qualification and the first time Australia attempted to qualify for the World Cup as a member of the AFC, having moved from the Oceania Football Confederation at the start of 2006.

Asia's four automatic qualifying berths were taken by Australia, Japan and both North and South Korea, all of them from East Asia. Bahrain failed to become a fifth Asian representative in the World Cup after losing their AFC/OFC playoff against New Zealand. No Middle East nation qualified for the World Cup, the first time since 1974.

Seeding

The initial seeding (used in the draw for the first two rounds) was based on each team's performance during the qualification stage for the previous World Cup.[1] The admission of Australia to the AFC complicated matters slightly (as they had not taken part in the previous AFC qualification cycle, but had progressed to the World Cup finals in Germany - and had advanced further than the AFC qualifiers).

Initially, the AFC placed Australia as the first seed even though this contradicted the letter of the seeding - past practice (such as adopted by the AFC in the draw for the qualification to the 2008 Olympic Football Tournament) would have seeded Australia last.

By the time of the main qualification draw in Durban (which included the AFC third round), the seeding had been adjusted to rank the top 5 AFC nations according to their performance in the World Cup Final Tournament (of 2006). This resulted in minor changes to the seeding at that point.

Seeding for the first two rounds

Teams ranked 1–5 received a bye from the first two knockout rounds and are entered into the third round.

Teams ranked 6–43 entered at the first round, with teams ranked from 6–24 drawn against teams ranked from 25–43.

Of the first round winners, the eight lowest remaining seeds would go on to play in the second round. The other teams would receive a bye to the third round.[2]

Top Seeds
(Ranked 1st to 5th)
Pot A
(Ranked 6th to 24th)
Pot B
(Ranked 25th to 43rd)
start=1AUS}}KOR|1997}}KSA}}JPN}}IRN}}
}}
{{ordered list|start=6BHR}}UZB}}KUW}}PRK}}CHN}}JOR}}IRQ|2004}}LIB}}OMA}}UAE}}QAT}}SYR}}PLE}}THA}}TKM}}TJK}}IDN}}HKG}}YEM}}
}}
{{ordered list|start=25VIE}}KGZ}}MDV}}IND}}SIN}}SRI}}MAS}}TPE}}BAN}}MAC}}PAK}}AFG|2004}}MGL}}GUM}}NEP}}CAM}}BHU}}MYA|1974}}TLS}}
}}
  • Guam and Bhutan withdrew after the draw, but before playing any matches.

First round

{{Main|2010 FIFA World Cup qualification – AFC First Round}}

The official draw took place on 6 August 2007 at the AFC House in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. Teams from Pot A were randomly paired with a team from Pot B.

{{TwoLegStart}}{{TwoLegResult| {{fb-rt|PAK}} || 0–7 | {{fb|IRQ|2004}} || 0–7 | 0–0{{ref|first1|1}}}}{{TwoLegResult| {{fb-rt|UZB}} || 11–0 | {{fb|TPE}} || 9–0 | 2–0}}{{TwoLegResult| {{fb-rt|THA}} || 13–2 | {{fb|MAC}} || 6–1 | 7–1}}{{TwoLegResult| {{fb-rt|SRI}} || 0–6 | {{fb|QAT}} || 0–1 | 0–5}}{{TwoLegResult| {{fb-rt|CHN}} || 11–0 | {{fb|MYA|1974}} || 7–0 | 4–0{{ref|first4|4}}}}{{TwoLegResult| {{fb-rt|BHU}} || w/o{{ref|first2|2}} | {{fb|KUW}} || | }}{{TwoLegResult| {{fb-rt|KGZ}} || 2–2
(5–6 pens) | {{fb|JOR}} || 2–0 | 0–2 (aet)}}{{TwoLegResult| {{fb-rt|VIE}} || 0–6 | {{fb|UAE}} || 0–1 | 0–5}}{{TwoLegResult| {{fb-rt|BHR}} || 4–1 | {{fb|MAS}} || 4–1 | 0–0}}{{TwoLegResult| {{fb-rt|TLS}} || 3–11 | {{fb|HKG}} || 2–3{{ref|first5|5}} | 1–8}}{{TwoLegResult| {{fb-rt|SYR}} || 5–1 | {{fb|AFG|2004}} || 3–0 | 2–1{{ref|first1|1|noid=noid}}}}{{TwoLegResult| {{fb-rt|YEM}} || 3–2 | {{fb|MDV}} || 3–0 | 0–2}}{{TwoLegResult| {{fb-rt|BAN}} || 1–6 | {{fb|TJK}} || 1–1 | 0–5}}{{TwoLegResult| {{fb-rt|MGL}} || 2–9 | {{fb|PRK}} || 1–4 | 1–5}}{{TwoLegResult| {{fb-rt|OMA}} || 4–0 | {{fb|NEP}} || 2–0 | 2–0}}{{TwoLegResult| {{fb-rt|PLE}} || 0–7 | {{fb|SIN}} || 0–4{{ref|first1|1|noid=noid}} | 0–3{{ref|first6|6}}}}{{TwoLegResult| {{fb-rt|LIB}} || 6–3 | {{fb|IND}} || 4–1 | 2–2}}{{TwoLegResult| {{fb-rt|CAM}} || 1–5 | {{fb|TKM}} || 0–1 | 1–4}}{{TwoLegResult| {{fb-rt|GUM}}|| w/o{{ref|first3|3}} | {{fb|IDN}} || | }}
|}
  1. {{note|first1}} For security reasons, Iraq played their home leg in Syria, Palestine played their home leg in Qatar and Afghanistan played their home leg in Tajikistan.&91;3&93;
  2. {{note|first2}} Bhutan withdrew.&91;4&93;
  3. {{note|first3}} Guam withdrew.&91;5&93;
  4. {{note|first4}} FIFA decided to move Myanmar home match to Malaysia.&91;6&93;
  5. {{note|first5}} Timor-Leste elected to play their home leg in Indonesia.
  6. {{note|first6}} Palestine failed to appear; Singapore was awarded a 3–0 win. The Palestine Football Federation appealed to have the match rescheduled on the grounds that its players did not receive permits to leave the Gaza Strip, but FIFA dismissed the appeal.&91;7&93;

Second round

{{Main|2010 FIFA World Cup qualification – AFC Second Round}}

Of the nineteen teams that progressed from the first round, the eight lowest seeded teams by FIFA rankings were required to play in the second round (the other eleven teams received a bye to the third round). As with the first round the draw took place on 6 August 2007 at AFC House in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia.

As the teams involved were not known at the time, the draw placed teams ranked 16-19 against teams ranked 12-15. The ties drawn were

  • 17th against 14th
  • 16th against 12th
  • 18th against 13th
  • 19th against 15th
{{TwoLegStart}}{{TwoLegResult| {{fb-rt|HKG}} || 0–3 | {{fb|TKM}} || 0–0 | 0–3}}{{TwoLegResult| {{fb-rt|IDN}} || 1–11 | {{fb|SYR}} || 1–4 | 0–7}}{{TwoLegResult| {{fb-rt|SIN}} || 3–1 | {{fb|TJK}} || 2–0 | 1–1}}{{TwoLegResult| {{fb-rt|YEM}} || 1–2 | {{fb|THA}} || 1–1 | 0–1}}
|}

Third round

{{Main|2010 FIFA World Cup qualification – AFC Third Round}}

The top 5 seeds were joined by the eleven highest-ranked winners from the first round and the four second round winners.

Qualified teams

  1. {{fb|AUS}}
  2. {{fb|KOR|1997}}
  3. {{fb|KSA}}
  4. {{fb|JPN}}
  5. {{fb|IRN}}
  1. {{fb|BHR}}
  2. {{fb|UZB}}
  3. {{fb|KUW}}1
  4. {{fb|PRK}}
  5. {{fb|CHN}}
  6. {{fb|JOR}}
  7. {{fb|IRQ|2004}}
  8. {{fb|LIB}}
  9. {{fb|OMA}}
  10. {{fb|UAE}}
  11. {{fb|QAT}}
  1. {{fb|SYR}}
  2. {{fb|THA}}
  3. {{fb|TKM}}
  4. {{fb|SIN}}
Byes to Round 3Top 11 Round 1 winnersRound 2 winners
1 On 30 October 2007, the Kuwait Football Association was suspended from international football competitions by FIFA. On 9 November 2007, Kuwait was conditionally reinstated to international football competitions by FIFA.[8]

Seeding

These 20 teams were drawn into five groups of four teams at the main group draw in Durban, South Africa on 25 November 2007. The seeding for the main draw was the same for the first two rounds, with the exception that the five seeded nations (those that qualified for the 2006 finals) were ordered on the basis of results in the 2006 finals tournament.[9] This saw Iran move from fifth to third, and Japan and Saudi Arabia ranked equal fourth.

The four seeding Pots used were:

{{fb|AUS}}
{{fb|KOR|1997}}
{{fb|IRN}}
{{fb|JPN}}
{{fb|KSA}}{{fb|BHR}}
{{fb|UZB}}
{{fb|KUW}}
{{fb|PRK}}
{{fb|CHN}}{{fb|JOR}}
{{fb|IRQ|2004}}
{{fb|LIB}}
{{fb|OMA}}
{{fb|UAE}}{{fb|QAT}}
{{fb|SYR}}
{{fb|THA}}
{{fb|TKM}}
{{fb|SIN}}
Pot APot BPot CPot D

Groups

The teams in each group played each other twice, once home and once away. The teams that finished first and second in their group qualified for the fourth round.

Group 1

{{2010 FIFA World Cup qualification – AFC Group 1
expanded = yes fixtures = yes tiebreakers = yes
}}

On 26 May 2008, FIFA decided to suspend Iraq from international competition, after the Iraq Football Association was disbanded by the government on 20 May 2008.[10] The suspension was provisionally and conditionally lifted on 29 May 2008.[11]

Qatar fielded the ineligible player Emerson in the 2–0 defeat of Iraq on 26 March 2008, prompting world governing body FIFA controversially[12] to suspend the player but clear Qatar of any wrongdoing, in direct contradiction to its decisions against Singapore.

Iraq appealed the decision to the Court of Arbitration for Sport, but it was rejected by the CAS, saying that Iraq submitted documents and the appeal fees too late.[13]

Group 2

{{2010 FIFA World Cup qualification – AFC Group 2
expanded = yes fixtures = yes tiebreakers = yes
}}

Group 3

{{2010 FIFA World Cup qualification – AFC Group 3
expanded = yes fixtures = yes tiebreakers = yes
}}

Group 4

{{2010 FIFA World Cup qualification – AFC Group 4
expanded = yes fixtures = yes tiebreakers = yes
}}

Group 5

{{2010 FIFA World Cup qualification – AFC Group 5
expanded = yes fixtures = yes tiebreakers = no
}}

Fourth round

{{Main|2010 FIFA World Cup qualification – AFC Fourth Round}}

In the fourth round, the 10 remaining teams were drawn into 2 groups of 5 teams.

Qualified teams

Round 3Group winnerGroup runner-up
Group 1 AUS}}QAT}}
Group 2 JPN}}BHR}}
Group 3 KOR|1997}}PRK}}
Group 4 KSA}}*UZB}}*
Group 5 IRN}}UAE}}
  • Positions based on original final standings

Seeding

The 10 qualifiers were drawn into two groups of five teams at the draw in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia on 27 June 2008. The seeding for the fourth round was based on that used in the third round draw, but Saudi Arabia and Japan (seeded equal 4th in that draw) were separated by a random selection held at the start of the fourth round draw.[14]

The top 6 ranked qualifiers were split into 3 pots of 2 teams, with the bottom 4 ranked nations grouped together in a separate pot. Each group was allocated 1 team from each of Pots 1, 2 and 3, and 2 teams from Pot 4.

{{fb|AUS}}
{{fb|KOR|1997}}
{{fb|IRN}}
{{fb|JPN}}
{{fb|KSA}}
{{fb|BHR}}
{{fb|UZB}}
{{fb|PRK}}
{{fb|UAE}}
{{fb|QAT}}
Pot 1Pot 2Pot 3Pot 4

Groups

The teams in each group played each other twice, once home and once away. The top 2 teams in each group qualified for the 2010 FIFA World Cup Finals in South Africa. The third-placed teams met in a play-off to determine who would play the OFC winner, New Zealand, in a separate playoff for a spot in the Finals.

Group A

{{2010 FIFA World Cup qualification – AFC Group A
expanded = yes fixtures = yes tiebreakers = yes scenarios = yes
}}

Group B

{{2010 FIFA World Cup qualification – AFC Group B
expanded = yes fixtures = yes tiebreakers = yes scenarios = yes
}}

Fifth round

{{Main|2010 FIFA World Cup qualification – AFC fifth round}}

Teams finishing 3rd in the fourth round groups played each other to determine a possible 5th qualifier from Asia. The draw for the order in which the two matches would be played was held on 2 June 2009 during the FIFA Congress in Nassau, the Bahamas.[15]

{{TwoLegStart}}{{TwoLegResult|{{fb-rt|BHR}}||2–2 (a)|{{fb|KSA}}||0–0|2–2}}
|}

Bahrain advanced to the Asia-Oceania play-off on the away goals rule.

Inter-confederation play-offs

{{main|2010 FIFA World Cup qualification (AFC–OFC play-off)}}

The Fifth Round winner then played the winner of the OFC qualifying group, New Zealand, in a home-and-away play-off. The winner of this play-off qualified for the 2010 FIFA World Cup finals.

The draw for the order in which the two matches would be played was held on 2 June 2009 during the FIFA Congress in Nassau, the Bahamas.[15]

{{#lst:2010 FIFA World Cup qualification (inter-confederation play-offs)|playoff1}}

Qualified teams

The following four teams from AFC qualified for the final tournament.

Team Qualified as Qualified onPrevious appearances in FIFA World Cup1
AUS}}A1|Fourth Round Group A winners}}6 June 2009}} 2 (1974, 2006)
KOR}}A2|Fourth Round Group B winners}}6 June 2009|addkey=1}} 7 (1954, 1986, 1990, 1994, 1998, 2002, 2006)
JPN}}B1|Fourth Round Group A runners-up}}6 June 2009}} 3 (1998, 2002, 2006)
PRK}}B2|Fourth Round Group B runners-up}}17 June 2009}} 1 (1966)

1 Bold indicates champions for that year. Italic indicates hosts for that year.

Goalscorers

There were 374 goals scored in 144 games, for an average of 2.60 goals per game.

8 goals
{{col-begin-small}}{{col-3}}
  • {{flagicon|THA}} Sarayoot Chaikamdee
  • {{flagicon|UZB}} Maksim Shatskikh
{{col-end}}
6 goals
{{col-begin-small}}{{col-3}}
  • {{flagicon|KUW}} Ahmad Ajab
  • {{flagicon|UAE}} Ismail Matar
{{col-end}}
5 goals
{{col-begin-small}}{{col-3}}
  • {{flagicon|LIB}} Mohammed Ghaddar
  • {{flagicon|QAT}} Sebastián Soria
{{col-3}}
  • {{flagicon|KOR}} Park Ji-Sung
{{col-3}}
  • {{flagicon|SYR}} Zyad Chaabo
{{col-end}}
4 goals
{{col-begin-small}}{{col-3}}
  • {{flagicon|AUS}} Tim Cahill
  • {{flagicon|AUS}} Brett Emerton
  • {{flagicon|HKG}} Cheng Siu Wai
  • {{flagicon|IRN}} Javad Nekounam
  • {{flagicon|IRQ}} Mahdi Karim
{{col-3}}
  • {{flagicon|JOR}} Hassan Abdel Fattah
  • {{flagicon|PRK}} Hong Yong-Jo
  • {{flagicon|PRK}} Jong Chol-Min
  • {{flagicon|KSA}} Abdoh Otaif
  • {{flagicon|SIN}} Aleksandar Đurić
{{col-3}}
  • {{flagicon|KOR}} Park Chu-Young
  • {{flagicon|SYR}} Jehad Al-Hussain
  • {{flagicon|SYR}} Raja Rafe
  • {{flagicon|TJK}} Numondzhon Khakimov
  • {{flagicon|UZB}} Server Djeparov
{{col-end}}
3 goals
{{col-begin-small}}{{col-3}}
  • {{flagicon|AUS}} Joshua Kennedy
  • {{flagicon|AUS}} Harry Kewell
  • {{flagicon|BHR}} Mahmood Abdulrahman
  • {{flagicon|BHR}} A'ala Hubail
  • {{flagicon|BHR}} Salman Isa
  • {{flagicon|HKG}} Chan Siu Ki
  • {{flagicon|IRQ}} Emad Mohammed
  • {{flagicon|JPN}} Yasuhito Endō
  • {{flagicon|JPN}} Shunsuke Nakamura
{{col-3}}
  • {{flagicon|JPN}} Yuji Nakazawa
  • {{flagicon|JPN}} Marcus Tulio Tanaka
  • {{flagicon|PRK}} Pak Chol-Min
  • {{flagicon|QAT}} Sayed Ali Bechir
  • {{flagicon|KSA}} Yasser Al-Qahtani
  • {{flagicon|KSA}} Malek Mouath
  • {{flagicon|KSA}} Redha Tukar
  • {{flagicon|SIN}} John Wilkinson
  • {{flagicon|KOR}} Kim Do-Heon
{{col-3}}
  • {{flagicon|KOR}} Lee Keun-Ho
  • {{flagicon|SYR}} Mohamed Al Zeno
  • {{flagicon|THA}} Datsakorn Thonglao
  • {{flagicon|THA}} Teeratep Winothai
  • {{flagicon|TLS}} Ary
  • {{flagicon|UAE}} Mohamed Al-Shehhi
  • {{flagicon|UZB}} Odil Ahmedov
  • {{flagicon|UZB}} Timur Kapadze
  • {{flagicon|UZB}} Farhod Tadjiyev
{{col-end}}
2 goals
{{col-begin-small}}{{col-3}}
  • {{flagicon|AUS}} Mark Bresciano
  • {{flagicon|BHR}} Faouzi Aaish
  • {{flagicon|BHR}} Ismail Abdullatif
  • {{flagicon|BHR}} Abdulla Baba Fatadi
  • {{flagicon|BHR}} Jaycee John Okwunwanne
  • {{flagicon|CHN}} Liu Jian
  • {{flagicon|CHN}} Qu Bo
  • {{flagicon|IND}} Sunil Chhetri
  • {{flagicon|IRN}} Gholamreza Rezaei
  • {{flagicon|IRN}} Masoud Shojaei
  • {{flagicon|IRQ}} Nashat Akram
  • {{flagicon|JPN}} Kengo Nakamura
  • {{flagicon|JPN}} Yoshito Ōkubo
{{col-3}}
  • {{flagicon|JPN}} Keiji Tamada
  • {{flagicon|LIB}} Mahmoud El Ali
  • {{flagicon|MAC}} Kin Seng Chan
  • {{flagicon|PRK}} Choe Kum-Chol
  • {{flagicon|PRK}} Mun In-Guk
  • {{flagicon|OMA}} Ismail Sulaiman Al Ajmi
  • {{flagicon|OMA}} Amad Al Hosni
  • {{flagicon|QAT}} Fábio César Montezine
  • {{flagicon|KSA}} Ahmed Al-Fraidi
  • {{flagicon|KSA}} Saad Al-Harthi
  • {{flagicon|KSA}} Osama Hawsawi
  • {{flagicon|KSA}} Naif Hazazi
  • {{flagicon|SIN}} Shi Jiayi
{{col-3}}
  • {{flagicon|SIN}} Mohd Noh Alam Shah
  • {{flagicon|KOR}} Ki Sung-Yueng
  • {{flagicon|KOR}} Kwak Tae-Hwi
  • {{flagicon|KOR}} Seol Ki-Hyeon
  • {{flagicon|SYR}} Firas Al-Khatib
  • {{flagicon|SYR}} Feras Esmaeel
  • {{flagicon|THA}} Teerasil Dangda
  • {{flagicon|TKM}} Artur Gevorkyan
  • {{flagicon|TKM}} Mamedaly Karadanov
  • {{flagicon|TKM}} Mekan Nasyrov
  • {{flagicon|UAE}} Basheer Saeed
  • {{flagicon|UZB}} Victor Karpenko
{{col-end}}
1 goal
{{col-begin-small}}{{col-3}}
  • {{flagicon|AFG|2004}} Obaidullah Karimi
  • {{flagicon|AUS}} David Carney
  • {{flagicon|AUS}} Scott Chipperfield
  • {{flagicon|AUS}} Mile Sterjovski
  • {{flagicon|BHR}} Sayed Mohamed Adnan
  • {{flagicon|BAN}} Zumratul Hossain Mithu
  • {{flagicon|CAM}} Samel Nasa
  • {{flagicon|CHN}} Du Zhenyu
  • {{flagicon|CHN}} Li Jinyu
  • {{flagicon|CHN}} Wu Wei'an
  • {{flagicon|CHN}} Li Weifang
  • {{flagicon|CHN}} Sun Xiang
  • {{flagicon|CHN}} Yang Lin
  • {{flagicon|CHN}} Zhang Yaokun
  • {{flagicon|CHN}} Zheng Bin
  • {{flagicon|CHN}} Zheng Zhi
  • {{flagicon|HKG}} Cheung Sai Ho
  • {{flagicon|HKG}} Lam Ka Wai
  • {{flagicon|HKG}} Lo Kwan Yee
  • {{flagicon|IND}} Steven Dias
  • {{flagicon|IDN}} Budi Sudarsono
  • {{flagicon|IRN}} Karim Bagheri
  • {{flagicon|IRN}} Jalal Hosseini
  • {{flagicon|IRN}} Ali Karimi
  • {{flagicon|IRN}} Mohsen Khalili
  • {{flagicon|IRN}} Mehdi Mahdavikia
  • {{flagicon|IRN}} Alireza Vahedi Nikbakht
  • {{flagicon|IRN}} Ferydoon Zandi
  • {{flagicon|IRQ}} Jassim Mohammed Ghulam
  • {{flagicon|IRQ}} Hawar Mulla Mohammed
  • {{flagicon|JPN}} Seiichiro Maki
  • {{flagicon|JPN}} Shinji Okazaki
  • {{flagicon|JPN}} Tatsuya Tanaka
  • {{flagicon|JPN}} Atsuto Uchida
{{col-3}}
  • {{flagicon|JOR}} Waseem Al-Bzour
  • {{flagicon|JOR}} Hatem Aqel
  • {{flagicon|JOR}} Thaer Bawab
  • {{flagicon|JOR}} Mahmoud Shelbaieh
  • {{flagicon|KUW}} Fahad Al-Rashidi
  • {{flagicon|KGZ}} Aibek Bokoyev
  • {{flagicon|KGZ}} Cholponbek Esenkul Uulu
  • {{flagicon|LIB}} Roda Antar
  • {{flagicon|MAS}} Mohd Bunyamin Omar
  • {{flagicon|MDV}} Ali Ashfaq
  • {{flagicon|MDV}} Shamveel Qasim
  • {{flagicon|MNG}} Donorovyn Lkhümbengarav
  • {{flagicon|MNG}} Odkhuu Selenge
  • {{flagicon|PRK}} An Chol-Hyok
  • {{flagicon|PRK}} Jon Kwang-Ik
  • {{flagicon|PRK}} Jong Tae-Se
  • {{flagicon|PRK}} Kim Kuk-Jin
  • {{flagicon|PRK}} Pak Nam-Chol
  • {{flagicon|OMA}} Mohamed Al Hinai
  • {{flagicon|OMA}} Ahmed Mubarak Al Mahaijri
  • {{flagicon|OMA}} Fawzi Bashir
  • {{flagicon|OMA}} Hassan Mudhafar
  • {{flagicon|OMA}} Hashim Saleh
  • {{flagicon|QAT}} Ali Afif
  • {{flagicon|QAT}} Talal Al-Bloushi
  • {{flagicon|QAT}} Saad Al-Shammari
  • {{flagicon|QAT}} Khalfan Ibrahim
  • {{flagicon|QAT}} Magid Mohamed
  • {{flagicon|QAT}} Majdi Siddiq
  • {{flagicon|KSA}} Hamad Al-Montashari
  • {{flagicon|KSA}} Osama Al-Muwallad
  • {{flagicon|KSA}} Nasser Al-Shamrani
  • {{flagicon|SIN}} Mustafic Fahrudin
  • {{flagicon|SIN}} Fazrul Nawaz
{{col-3}}
  • {{flagicon|KOR}} Kim Chi-Woo
  • {{flagicon|SYR}} Maher Al Sayed
  • {{flagicon|SYR}} Aatef Jenyat
  • {{flagicon|SYR}} Sanharib Malki
  • {{flagicon|TJK}} Jamshed Ismailov
  • {{flagicon|TJK}} Dzhomikhon Mukhiddinov
  • {{flagicon|TJK}} Dilshod Vasiev
  • {{flagicon|THA}} Patiparn Phetphun
  • {{flagicon|THA}} Totchtawan Sripan
  • {{flagicon|THA}} Suree Sukha
  • {{flagicon|THA}} Nirut Surasiang
  • {{flagicon|TKM}} Wladimir Baýramow
  • {{flagicon|TKM}} Arif Mirzoyev
  • {{flagicon|TKM}} Guvanch Ovekov
  • {{flagicon|UAE}} Saif Mohammed Al Bishr
  • {{flagicon|UAE}} Nawaf Mubarak
  • {{flagicon|UAE}} Ismail Al Hammadi
  • {{flagicon|UAE}} Saeed Al-Kas
  • {{flagicon|UAE}} Ahmed Mohammed Al-Mahri
  • {{flagicon|UAE}} Abdulrahim Jumaa
  • {{flagicon|UAE}} Faisal Khalil
  • {{flagicon|UAE}} Subait Khater
  • {{flagicon|UZB}} Ulugbek Bakayev
  • {{flagicon|UZB}} Vitaliy Denisov
  • {{flagicon|UZB}} Alexander Geynrikh
  • {{flagicon|UZB}} Aziz Ibrahimov
  • {{flagicon|UZB}} Islom Inomov
  • {{flagicon|UZB}} Shavkat Salomov
  • {{flagicon|UZB}} Anvarjon Soliev
  • {{flagicon|UZB}} Ilhomjon Suyunov
  • {{flagicon|YEM}} Fekri Al-Hubaishi
  • {{flagicon|YEM}} Ali Al Nono
  • {{flagicon|YEM}} Mohammed Salem
  • {{flagicon|YEM}} Haitham Thabit
{{col-end}}
1 own goal
{{col-begin-small}}{{col-3}}
  • {{flagicon|JPN}} Marcus Tulio Tanaka (playing against Bahrain)
  • {{flagicon|LIB}} Ramez Dayoub (playing against Singapore)
  • {{flagicon|QAT}} Ahmed Faris Al-Binali (playing against Japan)
{{col-3}}
  • {{flagicon|SIN}} Baihakki Khaizan (playing against Lebanon)
  • {{flagicon|SYR}} Anas Al Khouja (playing against Kuwait)
  • {{flagicon|TLS}} Alfredo Esteves (playing against Hong Kong)
{{col-3}}
  • {{flagicon|UAE}} Fares Juma (playing against Saudi Arabia)
{{col-end}}

References

1. ^2010 FIFA World Cup: AFC announces seedings, qualification process
2. ^[https://www.fifa.com/mm/document/tournament/competition/2010_fwc_qualification_format_asia_en_17176.pdf Asian Zone Competition Format]
3. ^{{cite web |url=https://int.soccerway.com/news/2007/August/6/no-home-play-for-iraq-in-world-cup-qualifiers |title=No home play for Iraq in World Cup qualifiers |publisher=Soccerway |date=6 August 2007 |accessdate=21 June 2009| archiveurl= https://web.archive.org/web/20090624041052/http://www.soccerway.com/news/2007/August/6/no-home-play-for-iraq-in-world-cup-qualifiers| archivedate= 24 June 2009 | deadurl= no}}
4. ^{{cite web|url=https://www.fifa.com/worldcup/news/newsid=595607.html#bhutan+2010+race |title=Bhutan out of 2010 race |publisher=FIFA |location=Zurich, Switzerland |date=13 September 2007 |accessdate=21 June 2009 |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20070915203729/http://www.fifa.com/worldcup/news/newsid%3D595607.html |archivedate=15 September 2007 |deadurl=yes |df= }}
5. ^{{cite web |url=http://www.pssi-football.com/id/view_news_111082.php?id=1061 |title=Indonesia goes straight through - Guam declines |language=Indonesian |publisher=Persatuan Sepakbola Seluruh Indonesia |accessdate=21 June 2009 |date=7 August 2007 |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20100104082529/http://pssi-football.com/id/view_news_111082.php?id=1061 |archivedate=4 January 2010}}
6. ^{{cite web|url=https://www.fifa.com/worldcup/news/newsid=619505.html#myanmar+china+switched+malaysia |title=Myanmar-China switched to Malaysia |publisher=FIFA |location=Zurich, Switzerland |accessdate=21 June 2009 |date=18 October 2007 |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20100815220411/http://www.fifa.com/worldcup/news/newsid%3D619505/index.html |archivedate=15 August 2010 |deadurl=yes |df= }}
7. ^{{cite news |url=http://english.aljazeera.net/NR/exeres/703267B5-96C2-4A35-A960-412093559409.htm |title=Fifa reject Palestinian appeal |publisher=Al Jazeera Sports |accessdate=31 October 2007 |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20080618222518/http://english.aljazeera.net/NR/exeres/703267B5-96C2-4A35-A960-412093559409.htm |archivedate=18 June 2008}}
8. ^FIFA Reinstate Kuwait to Competition, retrieved 9 November 2007
9. ^[https://www.fifa.com/mm/document/tournament/preldraw/2010%5ffwc%5ffinal%5fzones%5franking%5fand%5fpot%5fallocations%5fe%5f28656.pdf Preliminary Draw Information Final Zones Ranking and Pot Allocations], FIFA retrieved 25 November 2007
10. ^{{cite news |url=https://sports.yahoo.com/sow/news?slug=reu-fifairaq_urgent&prov=reuters&type=lgns |title=FIFA suspends Iraq from international competition |date=26 May 2008 |accessdate=26 May 2008 |work=Yahoo! Sports }}
11. ^{{cite web|url=https://www.fifa.com/aboutfifa/federation/releases/newsid=781993.html?cid=rssfeed&att= |title=Suspension of Iraqi Football Association provisionally and conditionally lifted |date=29 May 2008 |accessdate=29 May 2008 |publisher=FIFA |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20080607000427/http://www.fifa.com/aboutfifa/federation/releases/newsid%3D781993.html?cid=rssfeed&att= |archivedate=7 June 2008 |deadurl=no |df= }}
12. ^{{cite web |url=http://soccernet.espn.go.com/news/story?id=574715&sec=worldcup2010&cc=5739 |title=FIFA unable to shake off Qatar controversy |date=22 September 2008 |accessdate=8 August 2011 |publisher=ESPN SoccerNet }}
13. ^{{cite web |url=http://sports.espn.go.com/espn/wire?section=soccer&id=3615906 |title=Iraq loses last appeal to get back into World Cup |date=29 September 2008 |accessdate=8 August 2011 |publisher=ESPN SoccerNet }}
14. ^{{cite news|url=http://www.the-afc.com/eng/articles/viewArticle.jsp_167182448.html |title=FWCQ Stage 4 draw mechanics |date=12 June 2008 |publisher=The-AFC.com |accessdate=13 June 2008 |deadurl=yes |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20080614233054/http://www.the-afc.com/eng/articles/viewArticle.jsp_167182448.html |archivedate=14 June 2008 }}
15. ^[https://www.fifa.com/worldcup/organisation/media/newsid=1065516.html#intercontinental+play+dates+confirmed Intercontinental play-off dates confirmed] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090614120346/http://www.fifa.com/worldcup/organisation/media/newsid%3D1065516.html |date=14 June 2009 }}

External links

  • AFC Qualification 2010 Official Website
  • [https://www.fifa.com/worldcup/preliminaries/asia/index.html Asian zone] at FIFA.com
{{FIFA World Cup 2010 Qualifiers}}

3 : 2010 FIFA World Cup qualification (AFC)|2010 FIFA World Cup qualification|FIFA World Cup qualification (AFC)

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