Vietnamese women's national soccer team
Nickname (s) |
Ngôi sao Vàng (The golden star) |
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Association | Vietnam Football Federation (VFF) | ||
confederacy | AFC | ||
Head coach | Mai Đức Chung | ||
Record scorer | Lưu Ngọc Mai | ||
Record player | Lưu Ngọc Mai | ||
Home stadium | Mỹ-Đình | ||
FIFA code | VIE | ||
FIFA rank | 35th (1657 points) (as of August 14, 2020) |
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statistics | |||
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First international Thailand 3-2 Vietnam ( Jakarta , Indonesia ; October 7, 1997 )
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Biggest wins Vietnam 14-0 Maldives ( Ho Chi Minh City , Vietnam ; October 4, 2004 ) Indonesia 0:14 Vietnam ( Vientiane , Laos ; October 20, 2011) Vietnam 14: 0 Singapore ( Mandalay , Myanmar ; 26. July 2016)
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Biggest defeats Vietnam 1:12 North Korea ( Iloilo , Malaysia ; November 9, 1999 ) Australia 11: 0 Vietnam ( Sydney , Australia ; May 21, 2015 )
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Successes in tournaments | |||
Asian Championship | |||
Participation in the finals | 8 ( first : 1999 ) | ||
Best results | 6th place 2014 | ||
(As of April 13, 2018 ) |
The Vietnamese national soccer team represents Vietnam in international women's soccer . The national team is subordinate to the Vietnamese Football Association and is coached by Chem Yun Fa. The team has participated in the Asian Cup seven times so far , but never got beyond the preliminary round. At the 2014 home championship, the team could not use the home advantage and lost the game for 5th place, which led to the direct qualification for the 2015 World Cup, against Thailand.
Tournament balance sheet
Women's World Cup
Asian Championship
Since the team has been participating, they have always been able to qualify, but have not yet reached the top three places.
Asian Games
Olympic games
See also
Web links
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).