The first
world cup of beach soccer was held in Brazil, in 1995, organised by the precursors to the modern-day founders of the standardised rules,
Beach Soccer Worldwide, held under the title
Beach Soccer World Championships. The last edition took place in 2004. In 2005,
FIFA paired up with BSWW to co-organise a new world cup competition under FIFA's name. They kept the tradition of holding the world cup in
Rio de Janeiro and continued to allow 12 teams to participate, following on from the 2004 competition. It was
Eric Cantona's
France that won the competition after beating Portugal on penalties in the final. The tournament was deemed a "major success" and therefore, for the 2006 competition and beyond, FIFA decided to standardise the participants to 16 countries. It was then that the
FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup qualifiers were also established that would take place throughout the year. in Brazil By the end of the 2007 World Cup, the tournament had become more popular, with the FIFA board taking over the competition, driving more countries to recognize beach soccer as a "major" sport. FIFA decided to have a change of venue. It was voted to extend the sport's popularity that the
2008 World Cup would take place in
Marseille, France, and the
2009 World Cup would take place in
Dubai, United Arab Emirates. These tournaments would be the first to take place outside Brazil. The 2008 competition was the first time that Brazil would have to qualify for the tournament since they weren't the hosts. The 2009 World Cup is the Beach Soccer World Cup's 15th birthday, with Brazil continuing their dominance. Before the final of the 2009 World Cup, FIFA announced that a new format would see the World Cup now take place every two years, starting from the 2011 World Cup. FIFA justified the decision by stating that they wanted Confederations to have more time to develop the sport, therefore allowing a year in between World Cups for Confederations to organise their own local tournaments. This was a mutual decision between the confederations and FIFA. In March 2010 FIFA confirmed that the 2011 World Cup would take place in Italy and the 2013 World Cup would take place in
Tahiti. In 2013, FIFA extended the
FIFA Champions Badge to the winners of the competition, where it was won by
Russia. ==Qualification==