1992 King Fahd Cup
The 1992 King Fahd Cup, named after Fahd of Saudi Arabia, was the first association football tournament of the competition that would later be known as the FIFA Confederations Cup. It was hosted by Saudi Arabia in October 1992, and was won by Argentina, who beat Saudi Arabia 3–1 in the final. The 1992 tournament was the only one not to feature a group stage and only featured four nations. Disputed as the King Fahd Cup, in honor of the then Saudi ruler who organized the tournament with his country's federation, he was recognized by FIFA in 1997.
Qualified teams
Team | Confederation | Qualification method | Participation no. |
AFC | Hosts and 1988 AFC Asian Cup winners | 1st | |
CONCACAF | 1991 CONCACAF Gold Cup winners | 1st | |
CONMEBOL | 1991 Copa América winners | 1st | |
CAF | 1992 African Cup of Nations winners | 1st |
Squads
Venue
All matches were played at the 67,000-capacity King Fahd II Stadium in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia.Match referees
;Africa;Asia
;North, Central America and Caribbean
;South America
- Ulisses Tavares da Silva
Final tournament
Bracket
Semi-finals
----Third place match
Final
Statistics
Goalscorers
With two goals, Gabriel Batistuta and Bruce Murray were the top scorers in the tournament. In total, 18 goals were scored by 16 different players, with none of them credited as own goal.;2 goals
- Gabriel Batistuta
- Bruce Murray
- Alberto Acosta
- Ricardo Altamirano
- Claudio Caniggia
- Leonardo Rodríguez
- Diego Simeone
- Donald-Olivier Sié
- Abdoulaye Traoré
- Fahad Al-Bishi
- Khaled Al-Muwallid
- Saeed Al-Owairan
- Yousuf Al-Thunayan
- Marcelo Balboa
- Cobi Jones
- Eric Wynalda
Tournament ranking