2006 FIFA World Cup qualification (CONMEBOL–OFC play-off)
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2006 FIFA World Cup qualification (CONMEBOL–OFC play-off)
Summary
2006 FIFA World Cup qualification (CONMEBOL–OFC play-off) is a qualification event[1]. 2006 FIFA World Cup qualification (CONMEBOL–OFC play-off) ranks in the top 9% of qualification_event entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (43 views/month).[2]
Key Facts
- 2006 FIFA World Cup qualification (CONMEBOL–OFC play-off) is in the country of Australia[3].
- 2006 FIFA World Cup qualification (CONMEBOL–OFC play-off)'s instance of is recorded as qualification event[4].
- 2006 FIFA World Cup qualification (CONMEBOL–OFC play-off)'s part of is recorded as 2006 FIFA World Cup qualification (inter-confederation play-offs)[5].
- 2006 FIFA World Cup qualification (CONMEBOL–OFC play-off)'s start time is recorded as +2005-11-12T00:00:00Z[6].
- 2006 FIFA World Cup qualification (CONMEBOL–OFC play-off)'s end time is recorded as +2005-11-16T00:00:00Z[7].
- 2006 FIFA World Cup qualification (CONMEBOL–OFC play-off)'s point in time is recorded as +2006-00-00T00:00:00Z[8].
- 2006 FIFA World Cup qualification (CONMEBOL–OFC play-off)'s sport is recorded as association football[9].
- 2006 FIFA World Cup qualification (CONMEBOL–OFC play-off)'s Freebase ID is recorded as /m/07t6h8[10].
- 2006 FIFA World Cup qualification (CONMEBOL–OFC play-off)'s organizer is recorded as FIFA[11].
- 2006 FIFA World Cup qualification (CONMEBOL–OFC play-off)'s participating team is recorded as Uruguay men's national football team[12].
- 2006 FIFA World Cup qualification (CONMEBOL–OFC play-off)'s participating team is recorded as Australia men's national soccer team[13].
- 2006 FIFA World Cup qualification (CONMEBOL–OFC play-off)'s competition class is recorded as men's association football[14].
Why It Matters
2006 FIFA World Cup qualification (CONMEBOL–OFC play-off) ranks in the top 9% of qualification_event entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (43 views/month).[2] 2006 FIFA World Cup qualification (CONMEBOL–OFC play-off) has Wikipedia articles in 6 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[15]