1954 FIFA World Cup Group 1
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1954 FIFA World Cup Group 1
Summary
1954 FIFA World Cup Group 1 is a group during sports competition[1]. It draws 36 Wikipedia views per month (group_during_sports_competition category, ranking #67 of 364).[2]
Key Facts
- 1954 FIFA World Cup Group 1 is in the country of Switzerland[3].
- 1954 FIFA World Cup Group 1's instance of is recorded as group during sports competition[4].
- 1954 FIFA World Cup Group 1's part of is recorded as 1954 FIFA World Cup[5].
- 1954 FIFA World Cup Group 1's has part is recorded as 1954 FIFA World Cup Match 3[6].
- 1954 FIFA World Cup Group 1's has part is recorded as 1954 FIFA World Cup Match 4[7].
- 1954 FIFA World Cup Group 1's has part is recorded as 1954 FIFA World Cup Match 10[8].
- 1954 FIFA World Cup Group 1's has part is recorded as 1954 FIFA World Cup Match 11[9].
- 1954 FIFA World Cup Group 1's start time is recorded as +1954-06-16T00:00:00Z[10].
- 1954 FIFA World Cup Group 1's end time is recorded as +1954-06-19T00:00:00Z[11].
- 1954 FIFA World Cup Group 1's point in time is recorded as +1954-00-00T00:00:00Z[12].
- 1954 FIFA World Cup Group 1's sport is recorded as association football[13].
- 1954 FIFA World Cup Group 1's organizer is recorded as FIFA[14].
- 1954 FIFA World Cup Group 1's participating team is recorded as Brazil men's national football team[15].
- 1954 FIFA World Cup Group 1's participating team is recorded as Yugoslavia men's national football team[16].
- 1954 FIFA World Cup Group 1's participating team is recorded as France men's national association football team[17].
- 1954 FIFA World Cup Group 1's participating team is recorded as Mexico men's national football team[18].
- 1954 FIFA World Cup Group 1's competition class is recorded as men's association football[19].
- 1954 FIFA World Cup Group 1's Google Knowledge Graph ID is recorded as /g/121_52mc[20].
Why It Matters
1954 FIFA World Cup Group 1 draws 36 Wikipedia views per month (group_during_sports_competition category, ranking #67 of 364).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 6 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[21]