| Nickname(s) | Atlas Lions | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Association | Fédération Royale Marocaine de Football | ||
| Head coach | Slimani Alaoui | ||
| FIFA ranking | 60 | ||
| Highest FIFA ranking | 52 (July 2003) | ||
| Lowest FIFA ranking | 67 (December 2007) | ||
|
|||
| First international | |||
| South Africa 1 – 1 Morocco Pretoria, South Africa; 5 July 1998 |
|||
| Biggest win | |||
| Morocco 8 – 0 Lebanon Alexandria, Egypt; 23 April 2006 |
|||
| Biggest defeat | |||
| Nigeria 8 – 0 Morocco Kaduna, Nigeria; 17 October 1998 |
|||
| Appearances | (First in -) | ||
| Best result | - | ||
| Appearances | (First in -) | ||
| Best result | - | ||
| Appearances | (First in -) | ||
| Best result | - | ||
The Morocco women's national football team represents Morocco in international women's football and is controlled by the Royal Moroccan Football Federation. The team played its first international match in 1998, as part of the third African Women's Championship.
Contents |
History
After being given a walk-over following Kenya's withdrawal from the 1998 Championship, the team made it to the finals in Nigeria, where they lost 0–8 to the hosts before beating Egypt 4–1. Morocco met fellow African Women's Championship debutants Republic of Congo in the final group game, with both teams having the chance to qualify for the semi-finals with a win. However, the eventual 0–0 draw sent Morocco out, as Congo qualified on better goal difference[1].
Two years later, Morocco qualified for the African Championship in South Africa with a 6–1 aggregate victory over Algeria. However, after the team scored the first goal against Cameroon in the opening group stage match, they went on to concede 13 goals, lose all three matches, and finish last in the group[2].
Their 2002 and 2006 campaigns were both stopped by Mali in the qualifying stages. Morocco had been seeded into the second qualifying round, but two goalless draws in Bamako and Rabat sent the tie into a penalty shoot-out which Mali won 5–4[3]. In 2004, Morocco did not enter, while a 1–6 aggregate defeat to Mali sent them out of the 2006 African Championship and the 2007 World Cup.
World Cup record
African Championship record
- 1991 to 1995 - Did not enter
- 1998 to 2000 - Group stage
- 2002 - Did not qualify
- 2004 - Did not enter
- 2006 - Did not qualify
Sport equipment
External links
References and notes
- ^ Africa - Women's Championship 2000, from RSSSF, retrieved 29 May 2006
- ^ Africa - Women's Championship 2000, from RSSSF, retrieved 29 May 2006
- ^ 2003 FIFA Women's World Cup Preliminaries, from FIFAWorldcup.com, retrieved 30 May 2006
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
This entry is from Wikipedia, the leading user-contributed encyclopedia. It may not have been reviewed by professional editors (see full disclaimer)




