Uruguay have won four FIFA-organized World Football Championships. They won the first World Championship organized by FIFA under the Olympic Committee umbrella with true representation from all continents; before then, football in the Olympics comprised only European teams. Uruguay then won the next two World Cups (
Jules Rimet Trophy) in which they participated; these tournaments, the
1930 and
1950FIFA World Cups, were fully independent from the Olympics and employed clear rules distinguishing professional and amateur football players. Since 1924 marked the beginning of true international football competition, organized by FIFA, FIFA recognizes Uruguay as four-time world champions and allows the team to wear four stars on their uniforms during official international football competitions. (Before
1974, the FIFA World Cup was referred to as the Football World Championship, and the nine champions from 1930 to
1970 received replicas of the
Jules Rimet Trophy.) Uruguay hosted and won the first FIFA World Cup in 1930, beating
Argentina 4–2 in the
final. They won their second and last title in
1950, upsetting host
Brazil 2–1 in the
final match. The team have qualified for fourteen World Cups, reaching the second round in ten, the semi-finals five times, and the final twice. They also won the gold medal in
Olympic football twice, in
1924 and
1928, before the creation of the World Cup. Uruguay won the
1980 Mundialito, a tournament comprising former World Cup champions hosted in Uruguay to celebrate the 50th anniversary of the first World Championship.
Uruguay is one of the most successful teams in the world, having won nineteen FIFA official titles: two World Cups, two
Olympic Games, and fifteen
Copa América championships.
Uruguay refused to participate in
1934 and defend their title because many European nations declined to take part in
1930 held in Uruguay. They also refused to enter in
1938 because FIFA's decision to hold the tournament in France caused outrage in South America where it was believed that the venue would alternate between the two continents.
^There was no official World Cup final match in 1950. The tournament winner was decided by a final round-robin group contested by four teams (Uruguay, Brazil, Sweden, and Spain). However, Uruguay's 2–1 victory over Brazil (a match known as
Maracanazo) was the decisive match (and also coincidentally one of the last two matches of the tournament) which put them ahead on points and ensured that they finished top of the group as world champions. Therefore, this match is often considered the "final" of the 1950 World Cup
"WC Finals 1950"(PDF). Archived from
the original(pdf) on December 6, 2006. | (150
KiB). Likewise, Sweden's 3–1 victory over Spain (played at the same time as Uruguay vs Brazil) ensured that they finished third.
^
abcdefghThis is one of several goals for which the statistical details are disputed. The goalscorers and timings used here are those of FIFA, the official record. Some other sources, such as RSSSF, state a different scorer and/or timing. See
"World Cup 1930 finals". Rec.Sport.Soccer Statistics Foundation (RSSSF).
1 Considered a successor team by FIFA, or have competed under another name(s). 2 Have been member of multiple confederations. 3 Team and national federation no longer exist.