Do you know about Tahiti Beach Soccer World Cup

The 2015 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup was the eighth edition of the fifa coins FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup, the premier international beach soccer competition for men’s national teams, which has been organized by FIFA since 2005. Overall, it was the 18th edition since the tournament’s creation in 1995 as the Beach Soccer World Championship, and the third to take place under the biennial system introduced in 2009.

Last year, FIFA 16 looked incredible. At times, you could be playing the game when someone would pass through the room and mistake it for a TV broadcast. Not content with that, EA Canada has gone further than ever before by adding even more visual flare to the presentation. And in FIFA 16, at the beginning of a match you’ll hear about players making their debut appearance, including how much they transferred for, or even key players’ head-to-head stats. In the middle of a game, you might hear about a breaking transfer, or even have statistics appear that show what has happened while you were playing.

A crash course in the rules of the game reveals that each team consists of five players with unlimited substitutions, the action taking place on a sand pitch approximately one-third the size of a conventional football field with each match split into three 12-minute periods. Players are barefoot, there is no offside and all free kicks are direct, with walls prohibited. The win ended Tahiti’s fairytale run, reaching their first final in just their third appearance at the tournament, and they were on the back foot from basically the first kick of the game.

fifafifa-16

It couldn’t have been a better start for the hosts, with Madjer firing in straight from kick-off – not for the first time this past ten days – to register the fastest goal of the tournament in just three seconds. Despite not being written in the rules, it appears mandatory to score at least three or four barely believable goals per match that would be considered goals of the century if transposed to the grass pitches. Spectacular overhead kicks, goalkeepers blasting thunderous efforts the length of the pitch past their opposite numbers and outrageous volleys bulging the opposition net are all part of the fare.

With the likes of goalkeeper Andrade keeping Tahiti at bay in the opening period, fifa points account Belchior managed to double their advantage ahead of the first break. While Coimbra made it three once they returned, Tahiti rediscovered their goal scoring form which had been a feature of the tournament thus far. Tearii Labaste and Raimana Li Fung Kuee both fired in to send a ripple of tension throughout the arena. In the third period, further goals from Li Fung Kuee and Tahiti’s substitute goalkeeper Jonathon ‘Jo’ Torohia seemed to have the game wrapped up, but an acrobatic Kirill Romanov effort and Alexey Makarov’s side footed finish made it a tense finale, with Torohia saving a last gasp Russian chance.

Tahiti’s No7 completed his hat-trick to put his side further ahead just after the opening break and the crowd had to wait a full six minutes before Artur Paporotnyi reduced the deficit from a free-kick. Li Fung Kuee hit the post from a penalty kick, and was made to pay minutes later when Yury ‘Krash’ Krasheninnikov tapped home an equalizer. Just ten seconds later, Tainui Lehartel put the underdogs ahead before Anatoliy Peremitin missed a chance to level from the penalty spot.