Series of association football friendly tournaments in 2016
2016 International Champions Cup|
| Host country | Australia China England Republic of Ireland Scotland Sweden United States |
|---|
| Dates | July 22 – August 13 |
|---|
| Teams | 17 (from 2 confederations) |
|---|
| Venue | 19 (in 19 host cities) |
|---|
|
| Champions | Australia:
Juventus (1st title) China: None[1] United States and Europe:
Paris Saint-Germain (2nd title) |
|---|
|
| Matches played | 20 |
|---|
| Goals scored | 67 (3.35 per match) |
|---|
| Attendance | 963,900 (48,195 per match) |
|---|
| Top scorer(s) | Julian Green
Marcelo
Munir
Franck Ribéry (3 goals each) |
|---|
|
International football competition
The 2016 International Champions Cup (or ICC) was a series of friendly association football tournaments that began on 22 July and ended on 13 August 2016.[2][3]
In December 2015, Juventus, Tottenham Hotspur and Melbourne Victory were confirmed to play in the Australian version of the tournament.[3] Atlético Madrid were confirmed as the fourth team on 1 March.[4] Melbourne Victory was the first team from the Asian Football Confederation to compete in the International Champions Cup.
On 5 February 2016, Manchester City was announced as a competing team once again, this time in the China edition. They were joined by Manchester United and Borussia Dortmund on 23 March 2016. Borussia Dortmund topped the table of this edition but as the match between Manchester City and Manchester United was cancelled no trophy was awarded.
The American dates were reported in March 2016 as featuring Barcelona, Bayern Munich, Celtic, Chelsea, Liverpool, Inter Milan, Milan, Real Madrid, Leicester City, and Paris Saint-Germain.[citation needed]
Australia
China
United States and Europe
Australia
China
United States
| Ann Arbor
|
Columbus
|
Pasadena
|
East Rutherford
|
| Michigan Stadium
|
Ohio Stadium
|
Rose Bowl
|
MetLife Stadium
|
| 47°35′42.72″N 122°19′53.76″W / 47.5952000°N 122.3316000°W / 47.5952000; -122.3316000
|
40°0′6″N 83°1′11″W / 40.00167°N 83.01972°W / 40.00167; -83.01972
|
34°9′41″N 118°10′3″W / 34.16139°N 118.16750°W / 34.16139; -118.16750
|
40°44′12″N 74°9′1″W / 40.73667°N 74.15028°W / 40.73667; -74.15028
|
| Capacity: 107,601
|
Capacity: 104,944
|
Capacity: 92,542
|
Capacity: 82,566
|
|
|
|
|
| Charlotte
|
|
Santa Clara
|
| Bank of America Stadium
|
Levi's Stadium
|
| 35°13′33″N 80°51′10″W / 35.22583°N 80.85278°W / 35.22583; -80.85278
|
37°24′10.8″N 121°58′12″W / 37.403000°N 121.97000°W / 37.403000; -121.97000
|
| Capacity: 74,455
|
Capacity: 68,500
|
|
|
| Minneapolis
|
Chicago
|
Eugene
|
Carson
|
| U.S. Bank Stadium
|
Soldier Field
|
Autzen Stadium
|
StubHub Center
|
| 44°58′26″N 93°15′28″W / 44.97389°N 93.25778°W / 44.97389; -93.25778
|
41°51′45″N 87°37′0″W / 41.86250°N 87.61667°W / 41.86250; -87.61667
|
44°3′30″N 123°4′7″W / 44.05833°N 123.06861°W / 44.05833; -123.06861
|
33°51′52″N 118°15′40″W / 33.86444°N 118.26111°W / 33.86444; -118.26111
|
| Capacity: 66,792
|
Capacity: 61,500
|
Capacity: 59,000
|
Capacity: 27,000
|
|
|
|
|
Europe
United States and Europe
[edit]
24 July 2016 (2016-07-24)
27 July 2016 (2016-07-27)
30 July 2016 (2016-07-30)
Source:
ICCRules for classification: 1) Points; 2) Goal difference; 3) Goals scored
Since a match was cancelled, no champion was declared.[1]
Source:
ICCRules for classification: 1) Points; 2) Goal difference; 3) Goals scored
United States and Europe
[edit]
Source:
ICCRules for classification: 1) Points; 2) Goal difference; 3) Goals scored
- ^ The match was cancelled due to adverse weather and poor pitch conditions.[1]