Tournament details | |
---|---|
Dates | 23 May – 19 September 2004 |
Teams | 7 (from 1 confederation) |
Final positions | |
Champions | Nigeria (2nd title) |
Runners-up | South Africa |
Third place | DR Congo Equatorial Guinea |
Tournament statistics | |
Matches played | 3 |
Goals scored | 11 (3.67 per match) |
The 2004 African U-19 Women's Championship was the second edition of the African under-19 women's football championship. The winners of the tournament Nigeria have qualified to the 2004 FIFA U-20 Women's World Cup. [1]
Team 1 | Agg. | Team 2 | 1st leg | 2nd leg |
---|---|---|---|---|
Morocco | 1–2 | Equatorial Guinea | 1–1 | 0–1 |
Madagascar | w/o | South Africa | — | — |
DR Congo | w/o | Mozambique | — | — |
Nigeria | bye |
Morocco | 1−1 | Equatorial Guinea |
---|---|---|
|
|
Equatorial Guinea | 1−0 | Morocco |
---|---|---|
|
Equatorial Guinea won 2−1 on aggregate and advanced to the Semifinals.
Madagascar | Cancelled | South Africa |
---|---|---|
South Africa won on walkover after Madagascar did not appear for the first leg and advanced to the Semifinals.
DR Congo | Cancelled | Mozambique |
---|---|---|
DR Congo won on walkover after Mozambique did not appear for the first leg and advanced to the Semifinals.
Team 1 | Agg. | Team 2 | 1st leg | 2nd leg |
---|---|---|---|---|
Nigeria | 7–0 | Equatorial Guinea | 3–0 | 4–0 |
South Africa | w/o | DR Congo | — | — |
Equatorial Guinea | 0−4 | Nigeria |
---|---|---|
|
Nigeria won 7−0 on aggregate and advanced to the final.
South Africa | Cancelled | DR Congo |
---|---|---|
South Africa won on walkover after DR Congo did not appear for the first leg and advanced to the final.
Team 1 | Agg. | Team 2 | 1st leg | 2nd leg |
---|---|---|---|---|
South Africa | 0–1 | Nigeria | 0–1 | 0–0 |
South Africa | 0−1 | Nigeria |
---|---|---|
|
Nigeria | 0−0 | South Africa |
---|---|---|
Nigeria won 1−0 on aggregate and became the champion.
The following team from CAF qualified for the 2004 FIFA U-20 Women's World Cup.
Team | Qualified on | Previous appearances in FIFA U-20 Women's World Cup 1 |
---|---|---|
Nigeria | 19 September 2004 | 1 (2002) |
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