Thai women's national soccer team
Nickname (s) |
Changsuk ( ช้าง ศึก ; "The War Elephants") |
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Association | Football Association of Thailand | |||
confederacy | AFC | |||
Technical sponsor | Grand Sport | |||
Head coach |
หนึ่ง ฤทัย สระ ทอง เวียน Nuengrutai Srathongvian |
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captain |
ดวง นภา ศรี ตะ ลา Duangnapa Sritala |
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FIFA code | THA | |||
FIFA rank | 39th (1596 points) (as of August 14, 2020) |
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statistics | ||||
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First international Taiwanese 2-0 Thailand ( Taiwan ; October 16, 1981 )
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Biggest win Thailand 14-0 Malaysia ( Vientiane , Laos ; December 4, 2009 )
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Biggest defeat North Korea 15-0 Thailand ( Bangkok , Thailand ; December 12, 1998 )
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Successes in tournaments | ||||
World Championship | ||||
Participation in the finals | 2 ( first : 2015 ) | |||
Best results | Preliminary round ( 2015 , 2019 ) | |||
Asian Championship | ||||
Participation in the finals | 15 ( first : 1975 ) | |||
Best results | 1st place 1983 | |||
(As of June 21, 2019 ) |
The Thai national soccer team for women ( Thai : ฟุตบอล หญิง ทีม ชาติ ไทย ) is the representative selection of Thai soccer players for international matches made by the responsible trainer .
history
Her first official international match she played on October 16, 1981 against Taiwan ; the game ended in a 2-0 defeat for Thailand. Thailand is said to have played international matches as early as the 1970s, but these do not appear in the FIFA statistics. The current coach is Nuengrutai Srathongvian.
The biggest success for the Thai women's soccer players was winning the Asian Cup in 1983, when they defeated India 3-0. At the tournaments in 1975, 1977 and 1981 you had finished second, 1986 you came third.
Although Thailand is still the strongest women's national team in Southeast Asia today , the team was no longer happy about major successes in Asia. In 2004, Thailand hosted the U-19 Women's World Cup , but the host's team was eliminated from the preliminary round without points or goalless.
For the 2010 Asian women's soccer championship, the eleven qualified before all qualifying games were completed. This was the sixth time in a row that the women took part in the Asian Cup.
By increasing to 5 participants from Asia at the 2015 World Cup and excluding North Korea due to doping offenses at the 2011 World Cup, Thailand was able to win the 2014 Asian Women's Cup against host Vietnam for the first time for the World Cup. Qualify final tournament.
Playing attire and jersey
Traditionally, the Thai national team has always played in red and blue jerseys. Red is used for home games, blue for away games. The colors are borrowed from the national colors of the country. Since November 2008, the team has been playing in yellow jerseys for the first time, with a slight blue. Yellow is considered the color of King Bhumibol , as there is a fixed assignment of days of the week and colors . Yellow is assigned to Monday, the day the monarch was born. With the outfitter Nike , the association also signed a contract with a foreign company for the first time. Prior to this, the national sporting goods manufacturers Grand Sport and FBT had supplied the national teams. The contract with Nike was signed in 2007 and is valid for five years. It is estimated that the contract is worth more than 150 million baht.
Tournament balance sheet
World Championship
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Asian Championship
Asian Games
Olympic games
Southeast Asian Championship
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Games against national teams from German-speaking countries
International matches against Switzerland
- October 20, 1981 in Taipei - Thailand 0: 4 Switzerland
International matches against Germany
- June 15, 2015 in Winnipeg - Thailand 0: 4 Germany (World Cup preliminary round)
So far, no international matches have been played against Austria .
See also
References
- ↑ 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).
- ↑ Rec.Sport.Soccer Statistics Foundation
- ↑ the-afc.com: Thailand, Vietnam reach AFC Women's Asian Cup finals
- ↑ nationmultimedia.com: Report in the Nation ( Memento of the original from April 2, 2009 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice.
- ↑ footballshirtculture.com: Pictures from the presentation