2017 Toulon Tournament
The 2017 Toulon Tournament was the 45th edition of the Toulon Tournament. The tournament was named after Maurice Revello, who started the tournament in 1967 and died in 2016. It was held in the department of Bouches-du-Rhône from 29 May to 10 June 2017. The 2017 edition was the first to feature 12 teams.
The tournament was won by the defending champions England, who claimed their sixth title, beating Ivory Coast 5–3 in a penalty shootout after the game ended 1–1.
Participants
Twelve participating teams were announced on April 12, 2017.;AFC
;CAF
;CONCACAF
;CONMEBOL
;UEFA
*
Squads
The twelve national teams involved in the tournament were required to register a squad of 20 Under-20 players.Venues
A total of four cities hosted the tournament.Match officials
The referees were:Hélder Martins de Carvalho and António Muachihuissa Caxala
Pavel Orel
Karim Abed
Anastasios Papapetrou
Yusuke Araki
Alan Mario Sant
Radu Petrescu
Don Robertson
Matches rules
Every match consisted of two periods of 40 minutes each. In a match, every team had nine named substitutes and the maximum number of substitutions permitted was four.In the knockout stage, if a game tied at the end of regulation time, extra time would not be played and the penalty shoot-out would be used to determine the winner.
Group stage
The draw was held on 15 April 2017. The twelve teams were drawn into three groups of four. The group winners and the best second-placed team qualified for the semi-finals. The Group stage was played from 29 May to 6 June 2017.Group A
----
----
Group B
----
----
Group C
----
----
Knockout stage
The knockout stage was played on 8 and 10 June 2017.Goalscorers
61 goals were scored in 22 matches, for an average of goals per match.;4 goals
;3 goals
;2 goals
- Ondřej Šašinka
- David Brooks
- Martell Taylor-Crossdale
- Bilal Boutobba
- Jean-Philippe Krasso
- Jean Thierry Lazare
- Oliver Burke
- George Thomas
- Rui
- Vá
- Abdulaziz Khalid
- Gabriel Novaes
- Rolando Oviedo
- Eduardo Puga
- Lázaro Tuero
- Ondřej Chvěja
- Martin Graiciar
- Roman Kašiar
- Ondřej Novotný
- Elliot Embleton
- Iké Ugbo
- Yanis Barka
- Vincent Marcel
- Jean-Philippe Mateta
- Arnaud Nordin
- Derick Osei
- Hanis Saghara Putra
- Wilfried Gnoukouri
- Aké Arnaud Loba
- Christ Tiéhi
- Yaya Kader Touré
- Mizuki Ando
- Hiroki Ito
- Takumi Sasaki
- Greg Taylor
- Craig Wighton
- Daniel James
Awards
Individual awards
After the final, the following players were rewarded for their performances during the competition.- Best player: David Brooks
- Second best player: Joe Worrall
- Third best player: Jean Thierry Lazare
- Fourth best player: Greg Taylor
- Breakthrough player: Egy Maulana
- Best goalkeeper: Luke Pilling
- Younger player of the final: Reece James
- Best goal of the tournament: Hiroki Ito
- '''Fair-Play:'''
Best XI
The best XI team was a squad consisting of the eleven most impressive players at the tournament.| Pos. | Player |
| GK | ![]() |
