- Maldives national football team
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Maldives Nickname(s) Red Snapers Association Football Association of Maldives Sub-confederation SAFF (South Asia) Confederation AFC (Asia) Head coach István Urbányi Captain Ali Ashfaq Top scorer Ali Ashfaq (20) Home stadium Rasmee Dhandu Stadium FIFA code MDV FIFA ranking 162 Highest FIFA ranking 126 (July 2006) Lowest FIFA ranking 183 (August 1997) Elo ranking 165 Highest Elo ranking 165 (23 March 2011) Lowest Elo ranking 209 (13 June 1997) Home coloursAway coloursFirst international Seychelles 9–0 Maldives
(Réunion; August 27, 1979)Biggest win Maldives 12–0 Mongolia
(Male, Maldives; December 3, 2003)Biggest defeat Iran 17–0 Maldives
(Damascus, Syria; June 2, 1997)Medal record Men’s Football South Asian Games Bronze 1984 Kathmandu Team Silver 1991 Colombo Team Bronze 2010 Dhaka Team The Maldives national football team is the national team of the Maldives and is controlled by the Football Association of Maldives. A member of the AFC, it qualified for the second stage of Asian qualifying for the 2006 World Cup, where it drew with South Korea at home 0–0.
Maldives most significant success was winning the 2008 SAFF Championship where they beat the most successful team India in the final 1–0. [1]
Contents
Supporters
About 11,500 Maldivian supporters, including the former president Maumoon Abdul Gayyoom, attended to see the 2008 SAFF Championship final match in Sugathadasa Stadium, Colombo, Sri Lanka. After their win, many supporters, together with ministers, gave a warm welcome to the team on their return with their first gold medal. To celebrate this memorable day the President declared that 15 June 2008 will be a public holiday.
Kit
Maldives' home kit comprises a red jersey and red shorts – red is the national colour of the Maldives, and represents the boldness of the nation's heroes. The current away kit comprises a blue jersey and blue shorts. Adidas is the kit provider to the national team, a sponsorship deal that began in 2011.
World Cup record
Asian Cup record
- 1956 to 1992 – Did not enter
- 1996 to 2004 – Did not qualify
- 2007 – Did not enter
- 2011 – Did not qualify
AFC Challenge Cup record
South Asian Football Federation Cup Record
South Asian Football Federation Cup record Year Round GP W D L GF GA 1995 Withdrew - - - - - - 1997 Runner Up 4 1 2 1 6 9 1999 Third Place 2 1 1 6 4 2003 Runner Up 5 3 0 11 4 2005 Semi Finals 4 2 1 1 11 2 2008 Champions 5 4 0 1 8 2 2009 Runners Up 5 3 2 0 11 3 Total Best: Champions 27 15 6 6 53 24 Current squad
The following players have been named in the squad for the SAFF Championship 2011.[2]
# Pos. Player Date of Birth (Age) Caps Goals Club 25 GK Imran Mohamed 18 December 1980 0 VB Sports Club 1 GK Mohamed Faisal 8 April 1988 3 0 Victory SC GK Mohamed Yamaan 0 0 Maziya S&RC GK Athif Ahmed 0 0 Maziya S&RC 13 DF Assad Abdhul Ghanee Club Valencia 27 DF Sabah Mohamed Ibrahim New Radiant SC 8 DF Mohamed Jameel New Radiant SC 14 DF Ahmed Saeed VB Sports Club DF Mohamed Thasneem Maziya S&RC 17 DF Shafiu Ahmed 1 Victory SC DF Ahmed Abdhullah New Radiant SC 19 DF Akram Abdhul Ghanee Maziya S&RC DF Mohamed Rasheed Victory SC 3 MF Mohamed Shifan 1 Victory SC 4 MF Mohmaed Umair Maziya S&RC 23 MF Mukhthar Naseer Victory SC 16 MF Ismail Mohamed VB Sports Club 11 MF Shamweel Ghasim VB Sports Club 6 MF Mohamed Arif VB Sports Club MF Hassan Adhuham Victory SC 5 MF Ibrahm Fazeel Victory SC 30 MF Hussain Niyaz Mohamed Maziya S&RC 22 MF Fairooz Adam Sameer VB Sports Club 7 FW Ali Ashfaq (c) VB Sports Club 12 FW Ali Fasir 3 1 New Radiant SC 10 FW Assad Ali VB Sports Club 9 FW Ahmed Thariq New Radiant SC FW Ahmed Rasheed Maziya S&RC FW Ahmed Nashid VB Sports Club 21 FW Ibrahim Shiyam New Radiant SC Coaches
- Victor Stănculescu (1999–2000)
- Jozef Jankech (2001–2003, 2007–2008)
- Teoman Yamanlar (2008–2009)
- István Urbányi (2009–2010)
- Andrés Cruciani (2010–2011)
- István Urbányi (2011–)
References
External links
International Competitions National Teams Domestic Leagues Website:National football teams of Asia (AFC) Southeast Asia (ASEAN) Central and South Asia (CSAFF) Afghanistan · Bangladesh · Bhutan · India · Kyrgyzstan · Maldives · Nepal · Pakistan · Sri Lanka · Tajikistan · Turkmenistan · UzbekistanEast Asia (EAFF) China PR · Chinese Taipei · Guam · Hong Kong2 · Japan · Korea DPR · Korea Republic · Macau2 · Mongolia · Northern Mariana Islands1West Asia (WAFF) Defunct Former Israel (moved to UEFA in 1994) · New Zealand (formed the OFC in 1966) · Kazakhstan (moved to UEFA in 2002).National teams League system men: Dhivehi League
women: Women's leagueDomestic cups Awards Maldivian Footballer of the YearLists List of Maldivian international footballers · List of clubs · List of venues · Foreign players · All-time TableMen's Clubs · Women's Clubs · Men's Players · Women's Players · Expatriate footballers · Managers · Referees · Venues · RecordsCategories:- Asian national association football teams
- Maldives national football team
- National sports teams of the Maldives
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