2010 FIFA World Cup qualification (OFC)
0 sources
2010 FIFA World Cup qualification (OFC)
Summary
2010 FIFA World Cup qualification (OFC) is an association football competition[1]. 2010 FIFA World Cup qualification (OFC) draws 24 Wikipedia views per month (association_football_competition category, ranking #142 of 559).[2]
Key Facts
- 2010 FIFA World Cup qualification (OFC)'s image is recorded as Oceania Football Confederation member associations map.svg[3].
- 2010 FIFA World Cup qualification (OFC)'s instance of is recorded as association football competition[4].
- 2010 FIFA World Cup qualification (OFC)'s instance of is recorded as qualification event[5].
- 2010 FIFA World Cup qualification (OFC)'s location is recorded as Lautoka[6].
- 2010 FIFA World Cup qualification (OFC)'s part of is recorded as 2010 FIFA World Cup qualification[7].
- 2010 FIFA World Cup qualification (OFC)'s start time is recorded as +2007-10-17T00:00:00Z[8].
- 2010 FIFA World Cup qualification (OFC)'s end time is recorded as +2008-11-19T00:00:00Z[9].
- 2010 FIFA World Cup qualification (OFC)'s point in time is recorded as +2010-00-00T00:00:00Z[10].
- 2010 FIFA World Cup qualification (OFC)'s coordinate location is recorded as {'lat': -17.62416667, 'lon': 177.45277778}[11].
- 2010 FIFA World Cup qualification (OFC)'s sport is recorded as association football[12].
- 2010 FIFA World Cup qualification (OFC)'s Freebase ID is recorded as /m/0dz8l_[13].
- 2010 FIFA World Cup qualification (OFC)'s organizer is recorded as FIFA[14].
- 2010 FIFA World Cup qualification (OFC)'s topic's main category is recorded as Category:2010 FIFA World Cup qualification (OFC)[15].
- 2010 FIFA World Cup qualification (OFC)'s number of participants is recorded as {'amount': '+10'}[16].
- 2010 FIFA World Cup qualification (OFC)'s competition class is recorded as men's association football[17].
Why It Matters
2010 FIFA World Cup qualification (OFC) draws 24 Wikipedia views per month (association_football_competition category, ranking #142 of 559).[2] 2010 FIFA World Cup qualification (OFC) has Wikipedia articles in 23 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[18] 2010 FIFA World Cup qualification (OFC) is known by 24 alternative names across languages and contexts.[19]