Also at the Soccer World Cup 2022 in Qatar it is extended by a name: die winner list the World Cup. How many World Champion is there? How often stands Germany on the winners list? sport.de provides an overview.
There’s a compact overview of the World Cup schedule and the German opponents in Qatar here.
Who won the most titles at the World Cup?
- With five titles (1958, 1962, 1970, 1994, 2002). Brazil record world champion.
- Germany (1954, 1974, 1990, 2014) and Italy (1934, 1938, 1982, 2006) follow four World Cup triumphs.
- Argentina (1978, 1986), France (1998, 2018) and Uruguay (1930, 1950) stand at respectively two World Cup successes.
- England (1966) and Spain (2010) have so far been able to once raise the World Cup trophy.
- Both 21 previous world championships so there was eight different world champions.
All football world champions at a glance
That World Cup year and the World Champion are respectively greased (the result and the final opponent are in brackets):
- 1930 in Uruguay: Uruguay (4:2 v Argentina)
- 1934 in Italy: Italy (2:1 nV against the Czechoslovakia)
- 1938 in France: Italy (4:2 v Hungary)
- 1950 in Brasil: Uruguay. Note: It is the only World Cup without a final. Uruguay beat hosts in final game of four-team finals Brazil 2-1.
- 1954 in Switzerland: Germany (3:2 v Hungary)
- 1958 in Sweden: Brazil (5:2 against Sweden)
- 1962 in Chile: Brazil (3-1 v Czechoslovakia)
- 1966 in England: England (4:2 aet against Germany)
- 1970 in Mexico: Brazil (4:1 against Italy)
- 1974 in Germany: Germany (2-1 v Netherlands)
- 1978 in Argentina: Argentina (3:1 aet against the Netherlands)
- 1982 in Spain: Italy (3:1 against Germany)
- 1986 in Mexico: Argentina (3:2 against Germany)
- 1990 in Italy: Germany (1-0 v Argentina)
- 1994 in the USA: Brazil (3:2 penalties against Italy)
- 1998 in France: France (3-0 v Brazil)
- 2002 in Japan and South Korea: Brazil (2:0 against Germany)
- 2006 in Germany: Italy (5:3 pens against France)
- 2010 in South Africa: Spain (1-0 aet v Netherlands)
- 2014 in Brasil: Germany (1-0 aet v Argentina)
- 2018 in Russia: France (4:2 against Croatia)