Georgian national soccer team
Nickname (s) | Javoznebi | ||
Association | Georgian Football Association | ||
confederacy | UEFA | ||
Technical sponsor | adidas | ||
Head coach | Vladimír Weiss (since 2016) | ||
captain | Djaba Kankava | ||
Record scorer | Shota Arweladze (26) | ||
Record player | Levan Kobiashvili (100) | ||
Home stadium | Boris Paitschadze National Stadium | ||
FIFA code | GEO | ||
FIFA rank | 91st (1267 points) (as of July 16, 2020) |
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Balance sheet | |||
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229 games 69 wins 46 draws 114 losses |
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statistics | |||
First international match Georgia 2-2 Lithuania ( Tbilisi , Georgia ; May 27, 1990 )
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Biggest win Georgia 7-0 Armenia ( Tbilisi , Georgia ; March 30, 1997 )
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Biggest defeat Denmark 6-1 Georgia ( Copenhagen , Denmark ; Sep 7, 2005 )
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(As of November 20, 2018) |
The Georgian national soccer team is the selection of Georgia . As a UEFA member, the team takes part in qualifying for the European and World Cup in the UEFA zone. Georgia has not yet qualified for a final tournament.
history
The Georgian national team won the Trans-Caucasian Cup in 1928, 1934 and 1935 , making them record winners.
For history up to 1990, see USSR National Football Team .
The Georgian Football Association was founded in 1990 and joined UEFA and FIFA in 1992 .
The first international match since independence was on May 27, 1990 in a 2-2 draw against Lithuania . On July 2, 1991 there was a 4-2 win in Moldova . Matches before joining FIFA are not recognized by FIFA as international matches.
In 1994, the Georgian national team played their first competitive game as part of qualifying for the 1996 European Football Championship . There was a 1-0 home defeat against Moldova. The first competitive win was the highest for a long time, a 5-0 win against Wales in November 1994. Only the 6-0 win in August 2006 in the Faroe Islands exceeded this result. In this first qualifying round as an independent nation, Georgia finished third in a group of six with 15 points. The biggest surprise was a 2-1 win against World Cup fourth Bulgaria .
This was the strongest qualifying round so far for the Georgians, who have also scored points against other strong teams such as Italy , Russia , Denmark , Turkey and the Ukraine . In qualifying for the 2008 European Football Championship , Georgia faced the two finalists of the 2006 World Cup, France and Italy.
Georgia already had several foreign national coaches. The first was the Dutchman Johan Boskamp . He was followed in 2003 by the Croatian Ivo Šušak , and in 2004 by the French Alain Giresse . In February 2006, Klaus Toppmöller became the Georgian national coach, who was dismissed at the beginning of April 2008. His successor, the Argentine Héctor Cúper , resigned himself as coach of the Georgian national football team after missing the 2010 World Cup qualification. He was succeeded in November 2009 by Temur Kezbaia , who held the office until November 2014, but was then on leave from the association. At the end of December, a new coach was found in the former national player Kakhaber Tskhadadze .
Participation in soccer world championships
- Until 1990 : See the USSR national football team
- 1994 : did not participate
- 1998 - 2018 : not qualified
Participation in European football championships
Georgia participated as part of the USSR and the CIS in the European Championships from 1960 to 1992. Georgian players did not play a major role in the Soviet national team. Only a few Georgian players, mostly from Dynamo Tbilisi , came to the European Championship: 1960 Giwi Tschocheli , Micheil Meschi and Slawa Metreweli , 1972 Rewas Dzodsuashvili and Murtas Churzilawa , 1988 Tengis Sulakwelidze and 1992 Kachaber Tskhadadze . After the dissolution of the Soviet Union into several independent states, Georgia first took part in the qualification for the European Championship in 1996, but has never been able to qualify. The best placement was the third place in the first qualification participation. After last places in the qualifications in 1998/99 and 2002/03, it was possible in the last preliminary rounds to reach the penultimate place in the respective group. In qualifying for the 2016 European Football Championship , Group D will face Germany, Ireland, Scotland, Poland and Gibraltar.
year | Host country | Participation until ... | Last opponent | Result | Comments and special features |
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1996 | England | not qualified | Failed in the qualification at the later European champions Germany and the World Cup fourth Bulgaria . | ||
2000 | Netherlands and Belgium | not qualified | In the qualification of Norway and Slovenia failed. | ||
2004 | Portugal | not qualified | In qualifying at the Switzerland and Russia failed. | ||
2008 | Austria and Switzerland | not qualified | In the qualification to the World Cup finalists France and Italy failed. | ||
2012 | Poland and Ukraine | not qualified | In the qualification to Greece and Croatia failed. | ||
2016 | France | not qualified | In the qualification to Germany , Poland and Ireland failed. | ||
2021 | Europe-wide |
Squad of the Georgian national football team 2017
The following players were nominated for the friendly matches against Uzbekistan on January 23, 2017 and against Jordan on January 27, 2017 .
player
- Micheil Kawelashvili (1992-2002)
- Artschil Arweladze (1994-2002)
- Kacha Kaladze (1996-2012)
- Shota Arweladze (1997-2007)
- Levan Kobiashvili (1998-2011)
- Aleksandre Iaschwili (1998-2016)
- Zurab Chisanishvili (1999-)
- Mate Ghwinianidze (2006-)
Trainer
- Giga Norakidze (1991-1992)
- Aleksandre Chivadze (1993-1996)
- Vladimir Gutsaev (1996)
- David Kipiani (1997)
- Vladimir Gutsaev (1998–1999)
- Johan Boskamp (1999)
- David Kipiani (2000-2001)
- Aleksandre Chivadze (2001-2003)
- Ivo Susak (2003)
- Merab Jordania (2003)
- Gocha Tkebuchava (2004)
- Alain Giresse (2004-2005)
- Gaioz Darsadze (2005)
- Klaus Toppmöller (2006-2008)
- Héctor Cúper (2008-2009)
- Temur Kezbaia (2009-2014)
- Kakhaber Tskhadadze (2015-2016)
- Vladimír Weiss (2016–)
Games against German-speaking national soccer teams
date | place | Home team | result | Visiting team | |
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1. | March 29, 1995 | Tbilisi | Georgia | 0: 2 | Germany |
2. | September 6, 1995 | Nuremberg | Germany | 4: 1 | Georgia |
3. | August 15, 2001 | Monnerich | Luxembourg | 0: 3 | Georgia |
4th | September 8, 2002 | Basel | Switzerland | 4: 1 | Georgia |
5. | April 2, 2003 | Tbilisi | Georgia | 0-0 | Switzerland |
6th | October 7, 2006 | Rostock | Germany | 2-0 | Georgia |
7th | August 22, 2007 | Luxembourg | Luxembourg | 0-0 | Georgia |
8th. | August 15, 2012 | Differdange | Luxembourg | 1: 2 | Georgia |
9. | 5th March 2014 | Tbilisi | Georgia | 2-0 | Liechtenstein |
10. | March 29, 2015 | Tbilisi | Georgia | 0: 2 | Germany |
11. | October 11, 2015 | Leipzig | Germany | 2: 1 | Georgia |
12. | 5th September 2016 | Tbilisi | Georgia | 1: 2 | Austria |
13. | 5th September 2017 | Vienna | Austria | 1: 1 | Georgia |
14th | 5th June 2018 | Luxembourg | Luxembourg | 1-0 | Georgia |
See also
Web links
- Official website of the association (Georgian, English)
- Schedule and results on the UEFA website
- Georgian Football, an online magazine ( German , English , Spanish , Russian )
Individual evidence
- ↑ The FIFA / Coca-Cola World Ranking. In: fifa.com. July 16, 2020, accessed July 21, 2020 .
- ↑ Tskhadadze new coach of Georgia
- ↑ Germany will face Georgia in qualifying