Olympic Games 1908 - 2000 (MEN)

 

1908 in London:

1. Great Britain

(Horace Peter Bailey, William Samuel Corbett, Herbert Smith, Kenneth Reginald Hunt, Frederick William Chapman, Robert Hawkes, Arthur Berry, Vivian Woodward, Henry Stapley, Claude Purnell, Harold Hardman)

2. Denmark

(Ludvig Drescher, Charles Buchwald, Harald Hansen, Harald Bohr, Kristian Middelboe, Nils Middelboe, Oscar Nielsen, August Lindgren, Sophus Nielsen, Vilhelm Wolffhagen, Bjorn Rasmussen, Marius Andersen, Johannes Gandil)

3. Netherlands

(Reinier Bertus Beeuwkes, Karel Heijting, Louis Otten, Johan Wilhelm Eduard  Sol, Johannes Marius de Korver, Emil Gustav Mundt, Jan Herman Welcker, Everardus "Edu" Snethlage, Gerard Reeman, Johannes "Jan" Thomee, Georges de Bruyn Kops, Johan Adolf Frederik Kok)

  

1912 in Stockholm:

1. Great Britain

(Ronald Brebner, Thomas Burn, Arthur Knight, Douglas McWirter, Horace Littleworth, James Dines, Arthur Berry, Vivian Woodward, Harold Walden, Gorden Hoare, Ivan Sharpe, Edward Hanney, Harold Stamper, Edward Gordon Wright, W.W. Martin, S. Sanders, Harold Bailey, W.G. Bailey)

2. Denmark

(Sophus Hansen, Nils Middelboe, Harald Hansen, Charles von Buchwald, Emil Jörgensen, Poul Berth, Oscar Nielsen-Norlund, Axel Thufvason, Anthon Olsen, Sophus Nielsen, Vilhelm Wolffhagen, Aksel Petersen, Hjalmar Christoffersen, Ivar-Lykke Seidelin, Poul Nielsen)

3. Netherlands

(Marius Gobel, David Wijnveldt, Piet Bouman, Gerardus Fortgens, Johannes Boutmy, Dirk Lotsy, Jan van Breda Kolff, Henri de Groot, Caesar ten Cate, Jan van der Sluis, Johannes de Korver, Nicolaas Bouvy)

 

1920 in Antwerpen:

1. Belgium

(Jan de Bie, Armand Swartenbroeks, Oscar Verbeck, Joseph Musch, Emile Hanse, Andre Fierens, Louis van Hege, Henri Larnoe, Mathieu Bragard, Robert Coppee, Desire Bastin, Felix Balyu, Fernand Nisot, Georges Hebdin)

2. Spain

(Ricardo Zamora, Pedro Vallana, Mariano Arrate, Francisco Artola, Agustin Sancho, Ramon Equiazabal, Francisco Pagazaurtunduo, Felix Sesumaga, Patricio Arabolaza, Rafael Moreno, Domingo Acedo, Jose Belaustequigoitin, Jose Samitier, Luis Otero, Joaquin Vazquez, Sabino Bilbao, Ramon Gil, Silverio Izaguirre)

3. Netherlands

(Robert MacNeill, Henri Denis, Leonard Bosschart, Johannes de Natris, Evert Bulder, Bernardus Groosjohan, Jan van Dort, Oscar van Rappard, Herman von Heyden, Adrianus Bieshaar, Bernard Verwey, Frederik Kuipers, Hermanus Steeman, Jacob Bulder)

 

1924 in Paris:

1. Uruguay

(Andres Mazali, Jose Nasazzi, Pedro Arispe, Jose Andrade, Jose Vidal, Alfredo Ghierra, Santos Urdinaran, Hector Scarone, Pedro Petrone, Pedro Cea, Alfredo Romano, Juan Naya, Umbero Tomasina, Antonio Urdinaran, Alfredo Zibechi)

2. Switzerland

(Hans Pulver, Adolphe Reymond, Rudolf Ramseyer, August Oberhauser, Paul Schmiedlin, Aron Politz, Karl Ehrenbolger, Robert Pache, Walter Dietrich, Xam Abbeglen, Paul Fassler, Paul Sturzenegger, Felix Bedouret, Adolphe Mengotti, Edmond Kramer)

3. Sweden

(Sigfrid Lindberg, Axel Alfredsson, Fritjof Hillen, Sven Friberg, Gustaf Carlson, Gunnar Holmberg, Harry Sundberg, Evert Lundqvist, Sven Rydell, Per Kaufeldt, Tore Keller, Rudolf Kock, Charles Brommesson, Thorsten Svensson, Albin Dahl, Konrad Hirsch, Sven Lundqvist, Sten Mellgren)

 

1928 in Amsterdam:

1. Uruguay

(Andres Mazali, Jose Nasazzi, Pedro Arispe, Jose Andrade, Lorenzo Fernandez, Juan Piriz, Alvaro Gestido, Santos Urdinaran, Hector Castro, Pedro Petrone, PedroCea, Antonio Campolo, Hector Scarone, Juan Arremon, Rene Borjas, Adhemar Canavesi, Roberto Figueroa, F. Batignani, D. Tejera, V. Bartibas, A. Melogno, Pedro Anselmo)

2. Argentina

(Angelo Bosio, Fernando Paternoster, Ludovico Bidoglio, Juan Evaristo, Luis Monti, Segundo Medici, Raimundo Orsi, Enrique Gainzarain, Manuel Ferreyra, Domingo Tarasconi, Adolfo Carricaberry, Feliciano Perducca, Octavio Diaz, Roberto Cherro, Rodolfo Orlandini, Saul Calandra, A. Helman, L.F. Weihmuller, A.B. Zumelzu, N. Perinetta, P. Ochoa, S.N. Gomez)

3. Italy

(Giampiero Combi, Delfo Bellini, Umberto Caligaris, Alfredo Pitto, Fulvio Bernardini, Pietro Genovesi, Adolfo Baloncieri, Elvio Banchero, Angelo Schiavio, Mario Magnozzi, Virgilio Levratto, Giovanni Deprá, Virginio Rosetta, Silvio Pietroboni, Antonio Janni, Enrico Rivolta, Gino Rossetti, Pietro Pastore, Attilio Ferraris, Felice Gasperi, A. Viviano, Valentino Degani)

 

1936 in Berlin:

1. Italy

(Bruno Venturini, Alfredo Foni, Pietro Rava, Giuseppe Baldo, Achille Piccini, Ugo Locatelli, Annibale Frossi, Libero Marchini, Sergio Bertoni, Carlo Biagi, Francesco Cabriotti, Giulio Capelli, Alfonso Negro, Luigi Scarabello)

2. Austria

(Eduard Kainberger, Ernst Kunz, Martin Kargl, Anton Krenn, Karl Wahlmuller, Max Hofmeister, Walter Werginz, Adolf Laudon, Klement Steinmetz, Karl Kainberger, Franz Fuchsberger, Franz Mandl, Joseph Kitzmuller)

3. Norway

(Henry Johansen, Fritjof Ulleberg, Jurgen Juve, Rolf Holmberg, Magdalon Monsen, Reidar Kvammen, Alf Martinsen, Odd Frantzen, Arne Brustad, Nils Eriksen, Oivind Holmsen, Sverre Hansen, Fredrik Horn, Magnar Isaksen)

 

1948 in London:

1. Sweden

(Torsten Lindberg, Knut Nordahl, Erik Nilsson, Birger Rosengren, Bertil Nordahl, Sune Andersson, Kjell Rosen, Gunnar Gren, Gunnar Nordahl, Henry "Garvis" Carlsson, Niels Liedholm, Borje Leander, Rune Emanuelsson, Stellan Nilsson, Stig Nystrom, Karl Svensson)

2. Yugoslavia

(Ljubomir Lovric, Miroslav Brozovic, Branislav Stankovic, Zlatko Cajkovski, Miodrag Jovanovic, Aleksandar Atanackovic, Zvonko Cimermancic, Rajko Mitic, Stjepan Bobek, Zeljko Cajkovski, Bernard Vukas, Franjo Sostaric, Prvoslav Mihajlovic, Franjo Wolfl, Kosta Tomasevic)

3. Denmark

(Ejgil Nielsen, Viggo Jensen, Knud Overgaard, Axel Pilmark, Dion Ornvold, Ivan Jensen, Johannes Ploger, Knud Lundberg, Carl Aage Praest, John Hansen, Jurgen Sorensen, Holger Seebach, Karl Aage Hansen)

 

1952 in Helsinki:

1. Hungary

(Gyula Grosics, Jeno Buzansky, Mihaly Lantos, Jozsef Bozsik, Gyula Lorant, Jozsef Zakarias, Nandor Hidegkuti, Sandor Kocsis, Peter Palotas, Ferenc Puskas, Zoltan Csibor, Jeno Dalnoki, Imre Kovacs, Laszlo Budai, Lajos Csordas, Sandor Geller, Janos Borzsei, Ferenc Szojka)

2. Yugoslavia

(Vladimir Beara, Branislav Stankovic, Tomislav Crnkovic, Zlatko Cajkovski, Ivan Horvat, Vujadin Boskov, Tihomir Ognjanov, Rajko Mitic, Bernard Vukas, Stjepan Bobek, Branko Zebec)

3. Sweden

(Karl Svensson, Lennart Samuelsson, Erik Nilsson, Olof Ahlund, Bengt Gustavsson, Gösta Lindh, Sylve Bengtsson, Gosta Lofgren, Ingvar Rydell, Yngve Brodd, Gosta Sandberg, Holger Hansson)

 

1956 in Melbourne:

1. Soviet Union

(Lev Yashin, Anatoli Bashashkin, Mikhail Ogonkov, Boris Kuznezov, Igor Netto, Anatoli Masljonkin, Boris Tatushin, Anatoli Isaev, Nikita Simonjan, Sergey Salnikov, Anatoli Ilyin, Alexey Paramonov, Eduard Streltsov, Nikolai Tishenko, Vladimir Ryzhkin, Josif Beza, Valentin Ivanov, Boris Rasinski)

2. Yugoslavia

(Petar Radenkovic, Mladen Koscak, Ljubisa Spajic, Nikola Radovic, Ivan Santek, Dobroslav Krstic, Dragoslav Sekularac, Zlatko Papec, Sava Antic, Todor Veselinovic, Muhamed Mujic, Blagoje Vidinic, Ibrahim Biogradlic, Luka Liposinovic)

3. Bulgaria

(Jordan Jossifov, Kiril Rakarov, Nikola Kovatschev, Stefan Bojkov, Manol Manolov, Gavril Stojanov, Dimiter Milanov, Georgi Dimitrov, Panajot Panajotov, Ivan Kolev, Todor Dijev, Georgi Naidenov, Milko Goranov, Krum Janev, Ilia Kirzev, Milsco Goranov)

 

1960 in Rome:

1. Yugoslavia

(Blagoje Vidinic, Novak Roganovic, Fahrudin Jusufi, Zeljko Perusic, Vladimir Durkovic, Ante Zanetic, Andrija Ankovic, Zeljko Matus, Milan Galic, Tomislav Knez, Borivoje Kostic, Milutin Soskic)

2. Denmark

(Henry From, Poul Andersen, Poul Jensen, Bent Hansen, Hans Nielsen, Flemming Nielsen, Poul Pedersen, Thomas Troelsen, Harald Nielsen, Henning Enoksen, John Sorensen, John Danielsen, Poul Mejer, Bent Krogh, Erling Linde-Larsen, Finn Sterebo, Henning Hellbrandt)

3. Hungary

(Gabor Torok, Zoltan Dudas, Jeno Dalnoki, Erno Solymosi, Pal Varhidi, Ferenc Kovacs, Imre Satori, Janos Gorocs, Florian Albert, Pal Orosz, Janos Dunai, Lajos Farago, Gyula Rakosi, Ozskar Vilezsal, Dezso Novak, Tibor Pal, Laszlo Pal, Antal Szentmihalyi, Antal Meszoly)

 

1964 in Tokyo:

1. Hungary

(Antal Szentmihalyi, Dezso Novak, Kalman Ihasz, Gusztav Szepesi, Arpad Orban, Ferenc Nogradi, Janos Farkas, Tibor Csernai, Ferenc Bene, Imre Komora, Sandor Katona, Jozsef Gelei, Karoly Palotai, Zoltan Varga, Antal Dunai, Benjamin Kaposzta, Gyorgy Nagy, Pal Orosz)

2. Czechoslovakia

(Frantisek Schmucker, Anton Urban, Karel Picman, Josef Vojta, Vladimir Weiss, Jan Geleta, Jan Brumovsky, Ivan Mraz, Karel Lichtnegl, Vojtech Masny, Frantisek Valosek, Anton Svajlen, Karel Knesl, Stefan Matlak, Karel Nepomucky, Frantisek Knebort, Ludevit Cvetler)

3. East Germany

(Hans-Jurgen Heinsch, Peter Rock, Manfred Geisler, Herbert Pankau, Manfred Walter, Gerhard Korner, Hermann Stocker, Otto Frassdorf, Henning Frenzel, Jurgen Noldner, Eberhard Vogel, Horst Weigang, Klaus Urbanczyk, Bernd Bauchspies, Klaus-Dieter Seehaus, Werner Unger, Wolfgang Barthels, Klaus Lisiewicz, Dieter Engelhardt, Gerd Backhaus)

 

1968 in Mexico:

1. Hungary

(Karoly Fater, Dezso Novak, Lajos Dunai, Mikos Pancsics, Ivan Menczel, Lajos Szucs, Laszlo Fazekas, Antal Dunai, Laszlo Nagy, Erno Nosko, Istvan Juhasz, Lajos Kocsis, Istvan Basti, Laszlo Keglovich, Istvan Sarközi, Miklos Szalai, Zoltan Szarka)

2. Bulgaria

(Stojan Jordanov, Atanas Gerov, Georgi Christakiev, Milko Gaidarski, Kiril Ivkov, Ivailo Georgiev, Zvetan Veselinov, Jevgeni Janchowski, Petar Zhekov, Atanas Michailov, Asparuch Nikodimov, Georgi Vasiliev, Kiril Stankov, Jancho Dimitrov, Georgi Zvetkov, Iwan Zafirov, Todor Krastev, Michail Gionin, Mitin Monev)

3. Japan

(Kenzo Yokohama, Hiroshi Katayama, Yoshitada Yamaguchi, Mitsuo Kamata, Takaji Mori, Aritatsu Ogi, Teruki Miyamoto, Masashi Watanabe, Kunishige Kamamoto, Ikuo Matsumoto, Ryuichi Sugiyama, Yasuyuki Kuwahara, Shigeo Yaegashi, Masakatsu Miyamoto, Ryozo Suzuki, Eizo Yuguchi, Masahiro Hamasaki, Shunichiro Okano)

 

1972 in Munchen:

1. Poland

(Hubert Kostka, Zbigniew Gut, Jerzy Gorgon, Zygmunt Anczok, Leslaw Cmikiewicz, Zygmunt Maszczyk, Jerzy Kraska, Kazimierz Deyna, Zygfryd Szoltysik, Wlodzimierz Lubanski, Robert Gadocha, Ryszard Szymczak, Antoni Szymanowski, Marian Ostafinski, Grzegorz Lato, Joachim Marx, Kazimierz Kmiecik, Andrzej Jarosik, Marian Sieja)

2. Hungary

(Istvan Geczi, Peter Vepi, Miklos Pancsics, Peter Juhasz, Lajos Szucs, Mihaly Kozma, Antal Dunai, Lajos Ku, Bela Varadi, Ede Dunai, Laszlo Balint, Lajos Kocsis, Kalman Toth, Jozsef Kovacs, Laszlo Branikovits, Csaba Vidats, Adam Rothermel, Imre Rapp, Istvan Basti)

3. Soviet Union

(Jewgeni Rudakov, Murtas Churzilava, Juri Istomin, Vladimir Kaplitschni, Viktor Kolotov, Jewgeni Lovchev, Sergey Olshanski, Vyacheslaw Semyonov, Oleg Blokhin, Gennadi Jevruzhikhin, Oganes Sanasanian, Andrey Yakubik, Arkadi Andreasian, Anatoli Kuksov, Iosef Sabo, Vladimir Pilgui, Vladimir Onischenko, Revaz Dsodsuashvili, Juri Eliseev)

3. East Germany

(Jurgen Croy, Manfred Zapf, Konrad Weise, Bernd Bransch, Jurgen Pommerenke, Jurgen Sparwasser, Hans-Jurgen Kreische, Joachim Streich, Wolfgang Seguin, Peter Ducke, Frank Ganzerra, Lothar Kurbjuweit, Eberhard Vogel, Ralf Schulenberg, Reinhard Hofner, Harald Irmscher, Siegmar Watzlich, Axel Tyll, Dieter Schneider)

 

1976 in Montreal:

1. East Germany

(Jurgen Croy, Hans-Jurgen Dorner, Konrad Weise, Lothar Kurbjuweit, Reinhard Lauck, Reinhard Hofner, Hans-Jurgen Riediger, Martin Hoffmann, Gerd Kische, Wolfram Lowe, Hartmut Schade, Bernd Bransch, Wilfried Grobner, Gerd Weber, Gert Heidler, Dieter Riedel, Hans-Ullrich Grapenthin)

2. Poland

(Jan Tomaszewski, Antoni Szymanowski, Wladyslaw Zmuda, Zygmunt Maszczyk, Grzegorz Lato, Henryk Kasperczak, Kazimierz Deyna, Andrzej Szarmach, Kazimierz Kmiecik, Henryk Wawrowski, Henryk Wieczorek, Pjotr Mowlik, Jerzy Gorgon, Wojciech Rudy, Leslaw Cmikiewicz, Jan Benigier, Roman Ogaza)

3. Soviet Union

(Vladimir Astapovski, Victor Matvienko, Mikhail Fomenko, Stefan Reshko, Vladimir Troshkin, Vladimir Onischenko, Viktor Kolotov, Oleg Blokhin, Leonid Burjak, Alexander Minaev, Viktor Zvyagintsev, Leonid Nazarenko, Anatoli Konkov, Vladimir Veremeev, Vladimir Fedorow, David Kipiani, Alexander Prochorov)

 

1980 in Moscow:

1. Czechoslovakia

(Stanislav Seman, Ludek Macela, Josef Mazura, Libor Radimec, Zdenek Rygel, Petr Nemec, Ladislav Vizek, Jan Berger, Jindrich Svoboda, Lubos Pokluda, Werner Licka, Oldrich Rott, Frantisek Stambacher, Rostislav Vaclavicek, Frantisek Kunzo, Jaroslav Netolika)

2. East Germany

(Bodo Rudwaleit, Artur Ullrich, Lothar Hause, Frank Baum, Rudiger Schnuphase, Frank Terletzki, Wolfgang Steinbach, Werner Peter, Dieter Kuhn, Norbert Trieloff, Matthias Muller, Matthias Liebers, Wolf-Rudiger Netz, Frank Uhlig, Jurgen Bahringer, Bernd Jakubowski)

3. Soviet Union

(Rinat Dasaew, Tengiz Sulakvelidze, Alexander Chiwadze, Wagiz Khidiatulin, Oleg Romanzev, Sergey Shavlo, Sergey Andreev, Vladimir Bessonov, Juri Gavrilov, Fedor Cherenkov, Valeri Gazzaev, Sergey Baltacha, Khoren Ognesian, Vladimir Pilgui, Sergey Nikulin, Alexander Prokopenko, Revaz Chelebadze)

 

1984 in Los Angeles:

1. France

(Albert Rust, William Ayache, Michel Bibard, Dominique Bijotat, Francois Brisson, Patrick Cubaynes, Patrice Garande, Philippe Jeannol, Guy Lacombe, Jean-Claude Lemoult, Jean-Philippe Rohr, Didier Senac, Jean-Christoph Thouvenel, Jose Toure, Daniel Xuereb, Jean-Louis Zanon, Michel Benoussan)

2. Brazil

(Gilmar Rinaldi, Ronaldo Silva, Jorge Luiz Brum, Mauro Galvao, Ademir Rock Kaefer, André Luiz Ferreira, Paulo Santos, Carlos Dunga, Joao Leiehardt Neto, Augilmar Oliveira, Silvio Paiva, Luiz Dias, Luiz Carlos Winck, Davi Cortez Silva, Jose Antonio Gil, Francisco Vidal, Milton Cruz)

3. Yugoslavia

(Ivan Pudar, Vlado Caplijic, Mirsad Baljic, Srecko Katanec, Marko Elsner, Ljubomir Radanovic, Admir Smajic, Nenad Gracan, Milko Djurovski, Mehmed Bazdarevic, Borislav Cvetkovic, Tomislav Ivkovic, Jovica Nikolic, Stjepan Deveric, Branko Miljus, Dragan Stojkovic, Mitar Mrkela)

 

1988 in Seoul:

1. Soviet Union

(Alexander Borodyuk, Sergey Gorlukovich, Igor Dobrowolski, Geta Ketashvili, Jewgeni Kusnetsow, Vladimir Lyuty, Viktor Losev, Alexey Mikhailichenko, Arminas Narbekovas, Igor Ponomaryov, Alexej Prudnikov, Juri Savichev, Igor Skljarov, Vladimir Tatarchuk, Vadim Tischenko, Sergey Fokin, Dimitri Kharin, Alexey Cherednik, Arvidas Janonis, Jewgeni Yarovenko)

2. Brazil

(Claudio Taffarel, Jorge Campos "Jorginho", Joao Santos "Batista", Ricardo Raimundo, Ademir Kaefer, Iomar Nascimento "Mazinho", Valdo Candido, Geovani Silva, Edmar Santos, Hamilton Souza "Careca II", Romario Farias, Jose Araujo, André Cruz, Luiz Winck, Aloisio Alves, Milton Souza, José Ferreira "Neto", Sergio Luiz "Joao Paulo", Jorge Silva "Andrade", Jose Oliveira "Bebeto")

3. West Germany

(Uwe Kamps, Oliver Reck, Wolfgang Funkel, Roland Grahammer, Thomas Horster, Gunnar Sauer, Michael Schulz, Rudi Bommer, Holger Fach, Gerhard Kleppinger, Armin Gortz, Thomas Hassler, Olaf Janssen, Christian Schreier, Ralf Sievers, Wolfram Wuttke, Jurgen Klinsmann, Fritz Walter, Frank Mill, Karl-Heinz Riedle)

 

1992 in Barcelona:

1. Spain

(Jose Santiago Canizares, Albert Ferrer, Mikel Lasa, Roberto Solozabal, Juan Lopez, David Villabona, Jose Amavisca, Luis Enrique, Josep Guardiola, Abelardo Fernandez, Javier Manjarin, Francisco Veza "Paqui", Antonio Jimenez, Gabriel Vidal, Francisco Soler, Miguel Hernandez, Rafael Berges, Antonio Pinilla, Quico Narvaez, Alfonso Perez)

2. Poland

(Aleksandar Klak, Marcin Jalocha, Tomasz Lapinski, Marek Kozminski, Tomasz Waldoch, Dariusz Gesior, Piotr Swierczewski, Dariusz Adamszuk, Grzegorz Mielcarski, Jerzy Brzeczek, Andrzej Juskowiak, Ryszard Staniek, Arkadiusz Onyszko, Marek Bajor, Andrzej Kobylanski, Miroslaw Waligora, Dariusz Szubert, Tomasz Wieszczycki, Dariusz Kosela, Wojciech Kowalczyk)

3. Ghana

(Yaw Acheampong, Simon Addo, Sammi Adjei, Mamood Amadu, Frank Amankwah, Bernard Nii Aryee, Isaac Asare, Kwame Ayew, Ibrahim Dossey, Mohammed Gargo, Mohammed Dramani Kalilu, Maxwell Konadu, Samuel Osei Kuffour, Samuel Ablade Kumah, Nii Lamptey, Anthony Mensah, Alex Nyarko, Yaw Preko, Shamo Quaye, Oli Rahman)

 

1996 in Atlanta:

1. Nigeria

(Celestine Babayaro, Taribo West, Nwankwo Kanu, Okechukwu Uche, Emmanuel Ammunike, Tijani Babangida, Augustine Okocha, Garba Lawal, Daniel Amokachi, Mobi Obaraku, Joseph Dosu, Emmanuel Babayaro, Wilson Oruma, Teslim Fatusi, Victor Ikpeba Nosa, Abiodon Obafemi, Sunday Oliseh, Kingsley Obiekulu)

2. Argentina

(Roberto Ayala, José Antonio Chamot, Javier Zanetti, Matias Almeyda, Roberto Sensini, Claudio Lopez, Hernan Crespo, Ariel Ortega, Hugo Morales, Pablo Cavallero, Christian Bassedas, Diego Simeone, Hector Pineda, Marcelo Gallardo, Carlos Bossio, Pablo Paz, Gustavo Lopez, Marcelo Delgado)

3. Brazil

(Dida, Ze Maria, Aldair, Ronaldo, Flavio Conceicao, Roberto Carlos, Bebeto, Amaral, Juninho, Ze Elias, Ronaldinho, Rivaldo, Savio, Danrlei, Narciso, Andre Luiz, Marcelinho Paulista, Luizao)


 

2000 in Sydney:

1. Cameroon

(Patrice Abanda, Nicolas Alnoudji, Clement Beaud, Daniel Bekono, Serge Branco, Joel Epalle, Lauren Etame Mayer, Samuel Etoo Fils, Idriss Carlos Kameni, Modeste Mbami, Patrick Mboma, Albert Meyong Ze, Serge Mimpo, Daniel Ngom Kome, Aaron Nguimbat, Geremi Njitap Fotso, Patrick Suffo, Pierre Wome)

2. Spain

(Albelda, Amaya, Angulo, Aranzubia, Capdevila, Felip, Ferron, Gabri, Ismael, Jose Mari, Lacruz, Luque, Marchena, Puyol, Tamudo, Unai, Toni Velamazan, Xavi)

3. Chile

(Cristian Alvarez, Francisco Arrue, Pablo Contreras, Javier di Gregorio, Sebastian Gonzalez, David Henriques, Manuel Ibarra, Claudio Maldonado, Reinaldo Navia, Rodrigo Nunez, Rafael Olarra, Patricio Ormazabal, Pedro Reyes, Mauricio Rojas, Hector Tapia, Nelson Tapia, Rodrigo Tello, Ivan Zamorano)