These are the squads of the 1980 Mundialito, tournament that was played between 30 December 1980, and 10 January 1981, in Uruguay.
Head coach: Cesar Luis Menotti
| No. | Pos. | Player | Date of birth (age) | Caps | Club |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | GK | Ubaldo Fillol | 21 July 1950 (aged 30) | | |
| 2 | DF | Luis Galván | 24 February 1948 (aged 32) | | |
| 3 | DF | Alberto Tarantini | 3 December 1955 (aged 25) | | |
| 4 | DF | Jorge Olguín | 17 May 1952 (aged 28) | | |
| 5 | MF | Américo Gallego | 25 April 1955 (aged 25) | | |
| 6 | DF | Daniel Passarella | 25 May 1953 (aged 27) | | |
| 7 | MF | Daniel Bertoni | 14 March 1955 (aged 25) | | |
| 8 | MF | Osvaldo Ardiles | 3 August 1952 (aged 28) | | |
| 9 | FW | Ramón Díaz | 29 August 1959 (aged 21) | | |
| 10 | MF | Diego Maradona | 30 October 1960 (aged 20) | | |
| 11 | FW | Mario Kempes | 15 July 1954 (aged 26) | | |
| 12 | GK | Héctor Baley | 16 November 1950 (aged 30) | | |
| 13 | MF | Carlos Fren | 27 December 1954 (aged 26) | | |
| 14 | FW | Leopoldo Luque | 3 May 1949 (aged 31) | | |
| 15 | MF | Juan Barbas | 23 August 1959 (aged 21) | | |
| 16 | MF | José Daniel Valencia | 3 October 1955 (aged 25) | | |
| 17 | DF | José Van Tuyne | 13 December 1954 (aged 26) | | |
| 18 | DF | Victorio Ocaño | 9 June 1954 (aged 26) | |
Head coach: Telê Santana
| No. | Pos. | Player | Date of birth (age) | Caps | Club |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | GK | Carlos | 4 March 1956 | | |
| 2 | DF | Edevaldo | 28 January 1953 | | |
| 3 | DF | Oscar | 20 January 1954 | | |
| 4 | DF | Luizinho | 22 October 1958 | | |
| 5 | MF | Batista | 8 March 1955 | | |
| 6 | DF | Júnior | 29 June 1954 | | |
| 7 | MF | Tita | 1 April 1958 | | |
| 8 | MF | Toninho Cerezo | 21 April 1955 | | |
| 9 | MF | Sócrates | 19 February 1954 | | |
| 10 | FW | Renato | 21 February 1957 | | |
| 11 | FW | Zé Sérgio | 8 March 1957 | | |
| 12 | GK | João Leite | 13 October 1955 | | |
| 13 | DF | Getúlio | 25 February 1954 | | |
| 14 | DF | Juninho | 29 August 1959 | | |
| 15 | DF | Edinho | 5 June 1955 | | |
| 16 | MF | Paulo Isidoro | 3 August 1953 | | |
| 17 | FW | Serginho | 23 December 1953 | | |
| 18 | FW | Éder | 25 March 1957 | |
Head coach: Enzo Bearzot
| No. | Pos. | Player | Date of birth (age) | Caps | Club |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | GK | Ivano Bordon | 13 April 1951 | | |
| 2 | DF | Giuseppe Baresi | 7 February 1958 | | |
| 3 | DF | Antonio Cabrini | 8 October 1957 | | |
| 4 | DF | Claudio Gentile | 27 September 1953 | | |
| 5 | DF | Gaetano Scirea | 25 May 1953 | | |
| 6 | DF | Pietro Vierchowod | 6 April 1959 | | |
| 7 | MF | Carlo Ancelotti | 10 June 1959 | | |
| 8 | MF | Giancarlo Antognoni | 1 April 1954 | | |
| 9 | MF | Giampiero Marini | 25 February 1951 | | |
| 10 | MF | Gabriele Oriali | 25 November 1952 | | |
| 11 | MF | Marco Tardelli | 24 September 1954 | | |
| 12 | GK | Giovanni Galli | 29 April 1958 | | |
| 13 | MF | Renato Zaccarelli | 18 January 1951 | | |
| 14 | MF | Salvatore Bagni | 25 September 1956 | | |
| 15 | MF | Bruno Conti | 13 March 1955 | | |
| 16 | FW | Alessandro Altobelli | 28 November 1955 | | |
| 17 | FW | Francesco Graziani | 16 December 1952 | | |
| 18 | FW | Roberto Pruzzo | 1 April 1955 | |
Head coach: Jan Zwartkruis
| No. | Pos. | Player | Date of birth (age) | Caps | Club |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | GK | Pim Doesburg | 28 October 1943 | | |
| 2 | DF | Ben Wijnstekers | 31 August 1955 | | |
| 3 | DF | Ronald Spelbos | 8 July 1954 | | |
| 4 | DF | Ernie Brandts | 3 February 1956 | | |
| 5 | DF | Hugo Hovenkamp | 5 October 1950 | | |
| 6 | MF | Willy van de Kerkhof | 16 September 1951 | | |
| 7 | MF | Martin Jol | 16 January 1956 | | |
| 8 | MF | Jan Peters | 18 August 1954 | | |
| 9 | FW | Kees Kist | 7 August 1952 | | |
| 10 | MF | René van de Kerkhof | 16 September 1951 | | |
| 11 | FW | Pierre Vermeulen | 16 March 1956 | | |
| 12 | DF | John Metgod | 27 February 1958 | | |
| 13 | MF | Michel Valke | 24 August 1959 | | |
| 14 | FW | Pier Tol | 12 July 1958 | | |
| 15 | MF | Toine van Mierlo | 25 June 1957 | | |
| 16 | MF | Peter Arntz | 5 February 1953 | | |
| 17 | DF | Piet Wildschut | 25 October 1957 | | |
| 18 | GK | Hans van Breukelen | 4 October 1956 | |
Head coach: Roque Máspoli
| No. | Pos. | Player | Date of birth (age) | Caps | Club |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | GK | Rodolfo Rodríguez | 20 January 1956 | | |
| 2 | DF | Walter Olivera | 26 August 1952 | | |
| 3 | DF | Hugo de León | 27 February 1958 | | |
| 4 | DF | José Moreira | 30 September 1958 | | |
| 5 | MF | Ariel Krasouski | 31 May 1958 | | |
| 6 | DF | Daniel Martínez | 21 December 1959 | | |
| 7 | FW | Venancio Ramos | 20 June 1959 | | |
| 8 | MF | Eduardo de la Peña | 7 June 1955 | | |
| 9 | FW | Waldemar Victorino | 22 June 1952 | | |
| 10 | MF | Rubén Paz | 8 August 1959 | | |
| 11 | FW | Julio Morales | 16 February 1945 | | |
| 12 | GK | Fernando Alvez | 4 September 1959 | | |
| 13 | FW | Jorge Siviero | 13 May 1952 | | |
| 14 | DF | Nelson Marcenaro | 4 September 1952 | | |
| 15 | DF | Víctor Diogo | 9 April 1958 | | |
| 16 | FW | Arsenio Luzardo | 4 September 1959 | | |
| 17 | MF | Jorge Barrios | 24 January 1961 | | |
| 18 | MF | Ernesto Vargas | 1 May 1961 | |
Head coach: Jupp Derwall
| No. | Pos. | Player | Date of birth (age) | Caps | Club |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | GK | Harald Schumacher | 6 March 1954 | | |
| 2 | DF | Manfred Kaltz | 6 January 1953 | | |
| 3 | MF | Rainer Bonhof | 29 March 1952 | | |
| 4 | DF | Karlheinz Förster | 25 July 1958 | | |
| 5 | DF | Bernard Dietz | 22 March 1948 | | |
| 6 | DF | Hans-Peter Briegel | 11 October 1955 | | |
| 7 | MF | Felix Magath | 26 July 1953 | | |
| 8 | FW | Karl-Heinz Rummenigge | 25 September 1955 | | |
| 9 | FW | Horst Hrubesch | 17 April 1951 | | |
| 10 | MF | Hansi Müller | 27 July 1957 | | |
| 11 | FW | Klaus Allofs | 5 December 1956 | | |
| 12 | GK | Eike Immel | 27 November 1960 | | |
| 13 | DF | Kurt Niedermayer | 25 November 1955 | | |
| 14 | DF | Wilfried Hannes | 17 May 1957 | | |
| 15 | MF | Miroslav Votava | 25 April 1956 | | |
| 16 | MF | Wolfgang Dremmler | 12 July 1954 | | |
| 17 | MF | Karl Allgöwer | 5 January 1957 | | |
| 18 | MF | Ronny Borchers | 10 August 1957 | |
Patrick James Riley is an American professional basketball executive and a former coach and player in the National Basketball Association (NBA). He has been the team president of the Miami Heat since 1995, and he also served as the team's head coach from 1995 to 2003 and again from 2005 to 2008. Regarded as one of the greatest NBA coaches of all time, Riley has won five NBA championships as a head coach, including four with the Los Angeles Lakers during their Showtime era in the 1980s and one with the Heat in 2006. Riley is a ten-time NBA champion across his tenures as a player (1972), assistant coach (1980), head coach, and executive.
Michael William Krzyzewski is an American basketball coach. He has served as the head men's basketball coach at Duke University since 1980, where he led the Blue Devils to five NCAA Division I titles, 12 Final Fours, 15 ACC Men's Basketball Tournament championships, and 12 ACC regular season titles. Among men's college basketball coaches, only UCLA's John Wooden has won more NCAA championships with a total of 10. He is widely regarded as one of the best college basketball coaches of all time.
The 1998 FIFA World Cup was the 16th FIFA World Cup, a quadrennial football tournament contested by the senior men's teams of the national associations affiliated to FIFA. The tournament was played in France from 10 June to 12 July 1998 and featured 32 teams divided into eight groups of four. Each team was required to submit a squad of 22 players – numbered sequentially from 1 to 22 – from whom they would select their teams for each match at the tournament, with the final squads to be submitted by 1 June 1998. In total, 704 players were selected for the tournament.
Michael Dean Woodson is an American basketball coach and former professional player who is the head coach of the Indiana Hoosiers men's team.
William Leon Barmore is a college women's basketball coach best known for his 35-year association with the Louisiana Tech University Lady Techsters. After five years as an assistant coach, he served as head coach from 1982 to 2002, serving the first three years as co-head coach with Sonja Hogg, who had begun the program in 1974. Upon his retirement, Barmore's .869 winning percentage was the best in major college basketball history. Barmore was inducted into the Women's Basketball Hall of Fame in 2003.
Sue Gunter was an American women's college basketball coach. She is best known as the head coach of the Louisiana State University (LSU) Lady Tigers basketball team. Gunter was inducted into the Women's Basketball Hall of Fame in 2000.
Vincent Joseph Dooley is the former head football coach and athletic director at the University of Georgia. During his 25-year coaching career at UGA, Dooley compiled a 201–77–10 record. His teams won six Southeastern Conference titles and the 1980 national championship. After the 1980 season, Dooley was recognized as college football's "Coach of the Year" by several organizations, including the National Sportscasters and Sportswriters Association, whose annual award has since been renamed as the Paul "Bear" Bryant Award. Dooley's teams were known for their hard nosed defense and conservative yet fundamentally sound offenses. From 1964 to 1980, Dooley was assisted by his defensive coordinator, Erskine "Erk" Russell.
The 1980 NBA draft was the 34th annual draft of the National Basketball Association (NBA). The draft was held on June 10, 1980, at the Sheraton Centre Hotel & Towers, before the 1980–81 season. In this draft, 23 NBA teams took turns selecting amateur U.S. college basketball players and other eligible players, including international players. The first two picks in the draft belonged to the teams that finished last in each conference, with the order determined by a coin flip. The Boston Celtics, who obtained the Detroit Pistons' first-round pick in a trade, won the coin flip and were awarded the first overall pick, while the Utah Jazz were awarded the second pick. The Celtics then traded the first pick to the Golden State Warriors before the draft. The remaining first-round picks and the subsequent rounds were assigned to teams in reverse order of their win–loss record in the previous season. An expansion franchise, the Dallas Mavericks, took part in the NBA Draft for the first time and were assigned the eleventh pick in each round. A player who had finished his four-year college eligibility was automatically eligible for selection. Before the draft, five college underclassmen announced that they would leave college early and would be eligible for selection. The draft consisted of 10 rounds comprising the selection of 214 players. This draft has the distinction of being the first NBA Draft to be televised.
Alexander Yakovlevich Gomelsky was a Russian professional basketball player and coach. The father of Soviet and Russian basketball, he was inducted into the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame in 1995 and the FIBA Hall of Fame in 2007.
Alessandro "Sandro" Gamba is an Italian former professional basketball player and coach. Gamba was a finalist for induction into the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame in 2005, and was elected as a member in 2006. He was inducted in 2006 to the Italian Basketball Hall of Fame.
Rodney Douglas Dowhower is a former American football player and coach. He was the head coach at Stanford University and Vanderbilt University; in between he was the head coach of the Indianapolis Colts of the National Football League (NFL).
The Alabama Crimson Tide men's basketball team represents the University of Alabama in NCAA Division I men's basketball. The program plays in the Southeastern Conference (SEC). In the conference it trails only long-time basketball powerhouse Kentucky in SEC tournament titles, is third behind Kentucky and Arkansas in total wins, and it is also fourth behind Kentucky, LSU, and Tennessee in SEC regular season conference titles. Alabama was retroactively recognized as the pre-NCAA Tournament national champion for the 1929–30 season by the Premo-Porretta Power Poll.
The Louisville Cardinals men's basketball team is the men's college basketball program representing the University of Louisville in the Atlantic Coast Conference (ACC) of NCAA Division I. The Cardinals have officially won two NCAA championships in 1980 and 1986 ; and have officially been to 8 Final Fours in 38 official NCAA tournament appearances while compiling 61 tournament wins.
Ranko Žeravica was a Serbian professional basketball coach. With a career that spanned over 50 years, he is most noted for his work with the senior Yugoslav national team, during the 1960s, 1970s, and early 1980s. In particular, Žeravica's single biggest achievement was guiding the country to its first ever major competition win — a gold medal on home soil, at the 1970 FIBA World Championship — leading to a huge expansion of the game of basketball throughout Yugoslavia.
The South Carolina Gamecocks football program represents the University of South Carolina in the sport of American football. The Gamecocks compete in the Football Bowl Subdivision of the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) and the Eastern Division of the Southeastern Conference. The team's head coach is Shane Beamer. They play their home games at Williams-Brice Stadium.
These are the squads for the countries that competed in Football at the 1980 Summer Olympics.
The DePaul Blue Demons men's basketball program is the NCAA Division I intercollegiate men's basketball program of DePaul University in Chicago, Illinois. The team competes in the Big East Conference.
The 1980 Auburn Tigers football team achieved an overall 5–6 record in their fifth year under head coach Doug Barfield and failed to win a single game in the SEC, losing all six games. The team was also serving its second year of probation.
The 1980 Stanford Cardinals football team represented Stanford University in the Pacific-10 Conference during the 1980 NCAA Division I-A football season. Following the surprise resignation of Rod Dowhower after one season in January, Stanford's new head coach was alumnus Paul Wiggin, and he led the Cardinals to a 6–5 record. Home games were played on campus at Stanford Stadium in Stanford, California.
Players in bold have later been capped at full international level.