Chinese women's national soccer team
Nickname (s) |
The steel roses , (铿锵 玫瑰) |
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Association | Chinese Football Association | ||||||
confederacy | AFC | ||||||
Technical sponsor | Nike | ||||||
Head coach | Jia Xiuquan | ||||||
captain | Wu Haiyan | ||||||
Record scorer | Sun Wen (120) | ||||||
Record player | Pu Wei (217) | ||||||
Home stadium | Changing stages | ||||||
FIFA code | CHN | ||||||
FIFA rank | 15. (1867 points) (as of August 14, 2020) |
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statistics | |||||||
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First international match USA 2-1 PR China ( Jesolo , Italy ; July 20, 1986 )
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Biggest win Philippines 0:21 PR China ( Kota Kinabalu , Malaysia ; September 24, 1995 )
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Biggest defeat Germany 8-0 PR China ( Patras , Greece ; August 11, 2004 )
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Successes in tournaments | |||||||
World Championship | |||||||
Participation in the finals | 7 ( first : 1991 ) | ||||||
Best results | Vice World Champion ( 1999 ) | ||||||
Asian Championship | |||||||
Participation in the finals | 13 ( first : 1986 ) | ||||||
Best results | Asian champions (8 × 1986 - 1999 , 2006 ) | ||||||
CONCACAF Women's Gold Cup | |||||||
Participation in the finals | 1 | ||||||
Best results | Third 2000 | ||||||
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(As of June 25, 2019 ) |
The Chinese national women's soccer team represents the People's Republic of China in international women's soccer. The Chinese selection has long been one of the strongest women's national football teams in the world. Overall, the Chinese team was Asian champions eight times, once vice world champion and once won the silver medal at the Olympic Games . In the meantime, however, the team has not been able to qualify for the World Cup in Germany or the Olympic Games in London , has not reached the final of the last three Asian Championships and has lost its leading position in Asia to Japan . In March 2011, the Chinese team fell back to 15th place in the FIFA world rankings and in August to 19th place, which is their worst position so far.
Tournament balance sheets
World Championship
year | Result | Trainer | Most games | Most goals |
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1991 | Quarter finals | Shang Ruihua | 11 players with 4 games | Liu Ailing (4) |
1995 | Fourth | Yuanan Ma | 7 players with 6 games | Shi Guihong (3) |
1999 | Vice world champion | Yuanan Ma | 12 players with 6 games | Sun Wen (7), top scorer |
2003 | Quarter finals | Ma Liangxing | 10 players with 4 games | Bai Jie (2) |
2007 | Quarter finals | Marika Domanski Lyfors ( SWE ) | 9 players with 4 games | Li Jie (2) |
2011 | not qualified | |||
2015 | Quarter finals | Hao Wei | 10 players with 5 games | Wang Shanshan , Wang Lisi (2) |
2019 | Round of 16 | Jia Xiuquan | 11 players with 4 games | Li Ying (1) |
All | Sun Wen (20) | Sun Wen (11) |
Olympic Summer Games
Asian Championship
East Asian Championship
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Asian Games
China and North Korea are record winners at the Asian Games.
Algarve Cup
The national team took part for the first time in 1996 and then in all other events of the Algarve Cup - except in 2016. The final was reached four times and the tournament was won twice. In 2015, after losing on penalties to hosts Portugal, they only finished last.
Previous trainers
- 1984-1988 Cong Zheyu
- 1988-1991 Shang Ruihua
- 1991-2001 Ma Yuanan
- 2002-2003 Ma Liangxing
- 2003-2004 Zhang Haitao
- 2004-2005 Wang Haiming
- 2005 Pei Encai
- 2005-2006 Ma Liangxing
- 2007 Wang Haiming
- 2007 Marika Domanski-Lyfors
- 2007–2008 Elisabeth Loisel
- 2008-2010 Shang Ruihua
- 2011-2012 Li Xiaopeng
- 2012-2015 Hao Wei
- 2015–2017 Bruno Bini
- 2017– Sigurður Ragnar Eyjólfsson
Current squad
See: World Cup squad 2019
Well-known players
Games against national teams from German-speaking countries
All results from a Chinese perspective.
Germany
The balance against Germany shows 8 wins, 6 draws and 17 defeats, including the highest defeat with 0: 8. On February 25, 2009, the last time a goal was scored against the German team.
date | place | Result | occasion |
June 30, 1991 | Ludenscheid | 0: 2 | |
August 6, 1994 | New Britain | 3: 2 | |
May 25, 1995 | Rotenburg | 1: 3 | |
June 15, 1995 | Helsingborg | 0: 1 | World Cup semi-finals |
March 20, 1997 | Euskirchen | 2: 2 | |
March 23, 1997 | Warendorf | 1: 1 | |
March 25, 1999 | Holzwickede | 3-0 | |
March 28, 1999 | Hamburg | 1: 4 | |
July 16, 2000 | Osnabrück | 3: 1 | DFB anniversary tournament |
March 6, 2001 | augsburg | 0: 1 | |
March 8, 2001 | Ulm | 4: 2 | |
January 23, 2002 | Huadu | 2: 1 | |
March 3, 2002 | Vila Real de Santo Antonio | 4: 2 | Algarve Cup |
January 23, 2003 | Yiwu | 0-0 | |
March 4, 2003 | Gutersloh | 2: 2 | |
March 6, 2003 | Arnsberg | 1: 3 | |
March 4, 2004 | Fuerth | 1-0 | |
August 11, 2004 | Patras | 0: 8 | Olympic preliminary round |
February 1, 2005 | Quanzhou | 0: 2 | |
March 13, 2005 | Alvor | 0: 2 | Algarve Cup |
March 1, 2006 | Homburg | 1-0 | |
January 28, 2007 | Guangzhou | 0-0 | Four Nations Tournament in China |
February 28, 2008 | Freiburg in Breisgau | 0: 2 | |
February 25, 2009 | Bielefeld | 1: 1 | |
March 6, 2009 | Albufeira | 0: 3 | Algarve Cup |
March 1, 2010 | Faro | 0: 5 | Algarve Cup |
March 2, 2012 | Vila Real de Santo Antonio | 0: 1 | Algarve Cup |
March 7, 2014 | Albufeira | 0: 1 | Algarve Cup |
March 6, 2015 | Vila Real de Santo Antonio | 0: 2 | Algarve Cup |
August 12, 2016 | Salvador | 0: 1 | Olympic quarter-finals |
June 8, 2019 | Rennes | 0: 1 | World Cup group game |
Switzerland
The PR China won the only game against Switzerland so far .
date | place | Result | occasion |
July 13, 2009 | Amsterdam | 2-0 | Four Nations Tournament 2009 |
Austria
So far there have been no games against the Austrian selection .
See also
- List of international matches for the Chinese national women's soccer team
- Chinese national soccer team
Web links
- Chinese Football Association Official Website (Chinese)
- PR China on the FIFA website
Individual evidence
- ↑ Women's world rankings. In: fifa.com. FIFA , August 14, 2020, accessed on August 14, 2020 (teams without a place and points are provisional because no more than five games have been played or the teams have been inactive for more than 18 months).
- ↑ rsssf.com