Please note, this is a STATIC archive of website www.w3resource.com from 19 Jul 2022, cach3.com does not collect or store any user information, there is no "phishing" involved.
w3resource

SQL Joins exercises on soccer Database: Find the player along with his country who taken the penalty shot number 26

SQL soccer Database: Joins Exercise-37 with Solution

37. From the following tables, write a SQL query to find the player who taken the penalty shot number 26. Return match number, country name, player name.

Sample table: penalty_shootout


Sample table: player_mast


Sample table: soccer_country


Sample Solution:

SQL Code:

SELECT match_no,
       country_name,
       player_name
FROM penalty_shootout a
JOIN player_mast b ON a.player_id=b.player_id
JOIN soccer_country c ON b.team_id=c.country_id
WHERE kick_id=26;

Sample Output:

 match_no | country_name |  player_name
----------+--------------+----------------
       47 | Italy        | Graziano Pelle
(1 row)

Relational Algebra Expression:

Relational Algebra Expression: Find the player along with his country who taken the penalty shot number 26.

Relational Algebra Tree:

Relational Algebra Tree: Find the player along with his country who taken the penalty shot number 26.

Practice Online


Sample Database: soccer

soccer database relationship structure

Have another way to solve this solution? Contribute your code (and comments) through Disqus.

Previous: From the following table, write a SQL query to prepare a list for the player of the match against each match. Return match number, play date, country name, player of the Match, jersey number.
Next: From the following tables, write a SQL query to find the team against which the penalty shot number 26 had been taken. Return match number, country name.

What is the difficulty level of this exercise?

Test your Programming skills with w3resource's quiz.



SQL: Tips of the Day

SQL Server SELECT into existing table.

INSERT INTO dbo.TABLETWO
SELECT col1, col2
  FROM dbo.TABLEONE
 WHERE col3 LIKE @search_key

This assumes there's only two columns in dbo.TABLETWO - you need to specify the columns otherwise:

INSERT INTO dbo.TABLETWO
  (col1, col2)
SELECT col1, col2
  FROM dbo.TABLEONE
 WHERE col3 LIKE @search_key

Database: SQL Server

Ref: https://bit.ly/3y6tpA3