Czech Republic national football team

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Czech Republic
Shirt badge/Association crest
AssociationČeskomoravský fotbalový svaz
ConfederationUEFA (Europe)
Head coachPetr Rada
CaptainTomáš Rosický
Most capsKarel Poborský (118)
Top scorerJan Koller (55)
Home stadiumAXA Arena
Na Stínadlech
Stadion Eden
FIFA codeCZE
First colours
Second colours
FIFA ranking
Current8
Highest2 (March 1994)
Lowest67 (September 1999 From January 2000 to May 2000 from April 2005 to May 2005 From January 2006 to May 2006)
First international
 Hungary 2 - 1 Bohemia Bohemia
(Budapest, Hungary; 5 April 1903)
 Turkey 1 - 4 Czech Republic Czech Republic
(Istanbul, Turkey; 23 February 1994)
Biggest win
Czech Republic Czech Republic 8 - 1 Andorra 
(Liberec, Czech Republic; 4 June 2005)
Czech Republic Czech Republic 7 - 0 San Marino 
(Liberec, Czech Republic; 7 October 2006)
Biggest defeat
Bohemia Bohemia 0-4 England 
(Prague, Bohemia; 13 June 1908)
  Switzerland 3 - 0 Czech Republic Czech Republic
(Zürich, Switzerland; 20 April 1994)
World Cup
Appearances1 (first in 2006)
Best resultRound 1, 2006
European Championship
Appearances4 (first in 1996)
Best resultRunners-up, 1996
FIFA Confederations Cup
Appearances1 (first in 1997)
Best result3rd, 1997

The Czech national football team is the national football team of the Czech Republic controlled by the Football Association of the Czech Republic.

History

Before World War I, Bohemia (present–day Czech Republic), whilst part of Austria–Hungary, played seven matches between 1903 and 1908, six of them against Hungary and one against England. Bohemia also played a match against Yugoslavia, Ostmark and Germany in 1939 while being the Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia.

When the Czech Republic was part of Czechoslovakia, the national team had runner–up finishes in World Cups (1934, 1962) and a European Championship win in 1976.

When Czechoslovakia split and reformed into the Czech Republic and Slovakia, the Czech Republic national team was formed, and they played their first friendly match away to Turkey, winning 4–1, on 23 February 1994. The newly formed team played their first home game in Ostrava, against Lithuania, in which they registered their first home win, a 5–3 victory.

Their first competitive match was part of the UEFA Euro 1996 qualifying campaign, in which they defeated Malta 6–1 in Ostrava. During the campaign, the Czech Republic registered six wins, three draws, and a solitary defeat, finishing their qualifying group 5 in first place, above favorites The Netherlands. In the final tournament, hosted by England. The Czechs progressed from the group stage, despite a 2–0 opening game defeat to Germany. They continued their good form, and progressed to the UEFA Euro 1996 final where they lost 2–1 to the Germans at Wembley Stadium.

Given their success at Euro '96, the Czechs were expected to qualify for the 1998 FIFA World Cup, however, finished third in their group behind Spain, and Yugoslavia, and subsequently failed to qualify.

They did, however qualify for Euro 2000, winning all 10 of their group games, conceding just five goals. The team failed to perform well at the finals though, producing just one win, and being eliminated in the group stage.

Once again, the Czech Republic failed to qualify for the World Cup, this time finishing second in their group, behind Denmark, and then being beaten 1–0, and 0–1 by Belgium in the UEFA play–offs for a place in the finals.

They progressed to the finals of Euro 2004, qualifying through their group ahead of The Netherlands, and their only dropped points being in a 1–1 draw away to Holland. In the finals, the Czechs progressed to the semi–finals, where they were beaten 1–0 by the eventual champions Greece

The Czechs finally qualified for a FIFA World Cup, qualifying for the 2006 edition in Germany, via a play–off against Norway, winning both legs 1–0. They seemed set to progress to the last 16, with a 3–0 win over the USA, however, 2–0 defeats to Ghana, and Italy promptly ended their hopes of progression.

The disappointing World Cup campaign was followed by a successful qualifying campaign for Euro 2008, where they finished top of their group, above Germany on head–to–head records. The Czechs beat co–hosts Switzerland 1–0 in their opening game, before being beaten 3–1 by Portugal, this meant that they, and Turkey carried identical records going into the final group game, the Czechs took a 2–0 lead just past the hour mark, they looked set to qualify, before a stunning late Turkish comeback, and the Czechs lost 2–3, and that signaled the end of another disappointing performance at a major tournament and the final match for coach Karel Brückner.

Stadia

Outside Stadion Eden

The most important matches of the Czech national team are held in Prague´s AXA Arena, the home stadium of Sparta Prague. Other venues include Stadion Eden (the biggest and perhaps most modern in the country) and stadiums in the cities of Teplice, Olomouc and Liberec.

World Cup record

For 1930 to 1994 records, see: Czechoslovakia

Year Round Position GP W D* L GS GA
France 1998 Last of 16 11 4 2 1 1 4 3
South KoreaJapan 2002 Quarter Finals 7 5 4 0 1 6 4
Germany 2006 Forth Place 4 7 5 0 3 8 5
South Africa 2010 Qualifying1 - - - - - - -
Total 3/3 3 1 0 2 3 4

Notes

1Qualifying in progress

European Championship record

For 1960 to 1992 records, see: Czechoslovakia

Year Round GP W D* L GS GA
England 1996 Runners-up 6 2 2* 2 7 8
BelgiumNetherlands 2000 Round 1 3 1 0 2 3 3
Portugal 2004 Semi-Final 5 4 0 1 10 5
AustriaSwitzerland 2008 Round 1 3 1 0 2 4 6
PolandUkraine 2012 - - - - - -
Total 4/4 17 8 2 7 24 22
*Denotes draws include knockout matches decided on penalty shootout.
**Gold background color indicates that the tournament was won. Red border color indicates tournament was held on home soil.

Notable former players

For a list of notable players from the Czechoslovakia era, see: Czechoslovakia national football team

Coaches

Slovakia Václav Ježek (1993)
Slovakia Dušan Uhrin (1994-1997)
Slovakia Jozef Chovanec (1998-2001)
Czech Republic Karel Brückner (2001-2008)
Czech Republic Petr Rada (2008-)

FIFA World Cup qualification

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Template:2010 FIFA World Cup qualification - UEFA Group 3

Results over the last 12 months

Date Home Team Score Away Team
8 September 2007  San Marino 0-3 Czech Republic 
12 September 2007  Czech Republic 1-0 Republic of Ireland 
17 October 2007  Germany 0-3 Czech Republic 
17 November 2007  Czech Republic 3-1 Slovakia 
21 November 2007  Cyprus 0-2 Czech Republic 
6 February 2008  Poland 2-0 Czech Republic 
26 March 2008  Denmark 1-1 Czech Republic 
27 May 2008  Czech Republic 2-0 Lithuania 
30 May 2008  Czech Republic 3-1 Scotland 
7 June 2008   Switzerland 0-1 Czech Republic 
11 June 2008  Czech Republic 1-3 Portugal 
15 June 2008  Czech Republic 2-3 Turkey 
20 August 2008  England 2-2 Czech Republic 

Most Recent Squad

[1]
Match Date: 20 August 2008
Venue: Wembley Stadium
Opposition:  England

Head coach: Petr Rada

No. Pos. Player Date of birth (age) Caps Goals Club
1 1GK Petr Čech 20 May 1982 62 0 England Chelsea
23 1GK Daniel Zítka 20 June 1975 1 0 Belgium R.S.C. Anderlecht
2 2DF Zdeněk Grygera 14 May 1980 56 2 Italy Juventus
6 2DF Marek Jankulovski 9 May 1977 67 10 Italy A.C. Milan
12 2DF Zdeněk Pospěch 14 December 1978 8 0 Denmark F.C. Copenhagen
13 2DF Michal Kadlec 13 December 1984 7 1 Germany Bayer Leverkusen
21 2DF Tomáš Ujfaluši 24 March 1978 71 2 Spain Atletico Madrid
22 2DF David Rozehnal 5 July 1980 48 0 Italy SS Lazio
3 3MF Jan Polák 14 March 1981 41 6 Belgium R.S.C. Anderlecht
5 3MF Radoslav Kováč 27 November 1979 24 1 Russia Spartak Moscow
14 3MF David Jarolím 17 May 1979 19 1 Germany Hamburger SV
20 3MF Jaroslav Plašil 5 January 1982 40 3 Spain CA Osasuna
2DF Jan Rajnoch 30 September 1981 1 0 Czech Republic FK Mladá Boleslav
3MF Radek Šírl 30 September 1981 1 0 Russia Zenit St Petersburg
4FW Michal Papadopulos 30 September 1981 1 0 Czech Republic FK Mladá Boleslav
10 4FW Václav Svěrkoš 1 November 1983 3 1 Czech Republic FC Baník Ostrava
11 4FW Stanislav Vlček 26 February 1976 13 0 Belgium R.S.C. Anderlecht
15 4FW Milan Baroš 28 October 1981 65 32 Turkey Galatasaray S.K.

Recent call-up

No. Pos. Player Date of birth (age) Caps Goals Club
1GK Jan Laštůvka 7 July 1982 0 0 England West Ham United
25 1GK Michal Daněk 6 July 1983 0 0 Czech Republic FC Viktoria Plzeň
16 1GK Jaromír Blažek 29 December 1972 14 0 Czech Republic AC Sparta Praha
1GK Martin Vaniak 20 October 1970 7 0 Czech Republic SK Slavia Praha
2DF Jan Šimůnek 20 February 1987 0 0 Germany VfL Wolfsburg
19 2DF Tomáš Zápotočný 13 September 1980 4 0 Turkey Besiktas J.K.
2DF Martin Jiránek 25 May 1979 31 0 Russia FC Spartak Moscow
3MF Mario Holek 28 October 1986 0 0 Ukraine FC Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk
10 3MF Tomáš Rosický (Captain) 4 October 1980 68 19 England Arsenal FC
3MF Jiří Kladrubský 19 November 1985 1 0 Czech Republic AC Sparta Praha
17 3MF Marek Matějovský 20 December 1981 12 1 England Reading F.C.
18 3MF Tomáš Sivok 15 September 1983 6 0 Turkey Besiktas J.K.
3MF Luboš Kalouda 20 May 1987 0 0 Russia CSKA Moscow
19 3MF Rudolf Skácel 17 July 1979 5 1 England Southampton F.C.
3MF Daniel Pudil 27 September 1985 3 1 Belgium KRC Genk
3MF Marek Střeštík 1 February 1987 0 0 Czech Republic 1. FC Brno
4FW Karel Piták 28 January 1980 3 0 Austria Red Bull Salzburg
4FW Marek Kulič 11 October 1975 9 2 Czech Republic AC Sparta Praha

Past squads and campaigns

European Championship Squads

World Cup Squads

See also

External links

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