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The Final in Numbers

AIPS ASIA News:

Doha: After an action-packed month that saw 51 matches producing 132 goals, the AFC Asian Cup Qatar 2023™ came to a thrilling conclusion on Saturday with hosts Qatar emerging as the champions and defending their continental crown. 
Akram Afif was Qatar’s hero as his hat-trick of penalties defeated the tournament’s surprise package Jordan 3-1 and won the Maroons their second AFC Asian Cup title in front of more than 86,000 fans at Lusail Stadium.
As the dust begins to settle on another glorious campaign for Qatar, the-AFC.com reviews a memorable final by taking a closer look at some of the key facts and stats that caught the eye.


Qatar in good company

After being crowned the continental champions on home soil, Qatar became only the fifth team to successfully defend their AFC Asian Cup title after Korea Republic, Islamic Republic of Iran, Saudi Arabia and Japan.
The Maroons have now matched the Koreans on two titles and only record champions Japan as well as Iran and Saudi Arabia, both on three AFC Asian Cup triumphs, have been more successful than them in the tournament.


Crowds pour in

The 86,492 fans who thronged the iconic Lusail Stadium for the tournament finale was the biggest attendance at the 18th edition of the AFC Asian Cup – after the 82,490 who turned for the opener between Qatar and Lebanon at the same venue on January 12.
Saturday’s crowd also meant that the total attendance during the tournament crossed the 1.5 million mark – 1,509,496 to be exact – which extended this AFC Asian Cup’s record as the most-attended edition in the tournament’s 68-year history.


Historic hat-trick 

Akram Afif became the first player to score a hat-trick in an AFC Asian Cup final. The 27-year-old is also the third player to score eight goals or more in a single edition of the tournament after Iranian legend Ali Daei who netted eight times in 1996 and Almoez Ali who scored a record nine goals during Qatar’s maiden triumph in 2019.
Saturday’s treble, achieved by converting three penalties, also helped Afif overtake Iraq striker Aymen Hussein, who had led the chart with six goals before the final, and bag the Yili Top Scorer award in the 2023 edition.


Precise passing 
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The Final in Numbers

AIPS ASIA News:

Doha: After an action-packed month that saw 51 matches producing 132 goals, the AFC Asian Cup Qatar 2023™ came to a thrilling conclusion on Saturday with hosts Qatar emerging as the champions and defending their continental crown. 
Akram Afif was Qatar’s hero as his hat-trick of penalties defeated the tournament’s surprise package Jordan 3-1 and won the Maroons their second AFC Asian Cup title in front of more than 86,000 fans at Lusail Stadium.
As the dust begins to settle on another glorious campaign for Qatar, the-AFC.com reviews a memorable final by taking a closer look at some of the key facts and stats that caught the eye.


Qatar in good company

After being crowned the continental champions on home soil, Qatar became only the fifth team to successfully defend their AFC Asian Cup title after Korea Republic, Islamic Republic of Iran, Saudi Arabia and Japan.
The Maroons have now matched the Koreans on two titles and only record champions Japan as well as Iran and Saudi Arabia, both on three AFC Asian Cup triumphs, have been more successful than them in the tournament.


Crowds pour in

The 86,492 fans who thronged the iconic Lusail Stadium for the tournament finale was the biggest attendance at the 18th edition of the AFC Asian Cup – after the 82,490 who turned for the opener between Qatar and Lebanon at the same venue on January 12.
Saturday’s crowd also meant that the total attendance during the tournament crossed the 1.5 million mark – 1,509,496 to be exact – which extended this AFC Asian Cup’s record as the most-attended edition in the tournament’s 68-year history.


Historic hat-trick 

Akram Afif became the first player to score a hat-trick in an AFC Asian Cup final. The 27-year-old is also the third player to score eight goals or more in a single edition of the tournament after Iranian legend Ali Daei who netted eight times in 1996 and Almoez Ali who scored a record nine goals during Qatar’s maiden triumph in 2019.
Saturday’s treble, achieved by converting three penalties, also helped Afif overtake Iraq striker Aymen Hussein, who had led the chart with six goals before the final, and bag the Yili Top Scorer award in the 2023 edition.


Precise passing 
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