| Nickname(s) | Repre | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Association | Slovak Football Association (Slovenský futbalový zväz) |
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| Confederation | UEFA (Europe) | ||
| Head coach | |||
| Asst coach | |||
| Captain | Marek Hamšík | ||
| Most caps | Miroslav Karhan (95) | ||
| Top scorer | Szilárd Németh (22) | ||
| Home stadium | Tehelné pole (Bratislava) | ||
| FIFA code | SVK | ||
| FIFA ranking | 34 | ||
| Highest FIFA ranking | 17 (May 1997) | ||
| Lowest FIFA ranking | 150 (December 1993) | ||
| Elo ranking | 48 | ||
| Highest Elo ranking | 28 (May 2001) | ||
| Lowest Elo ranking | 58 (September 2001) | ||
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| First international | |||
(Bratislava, Slovakia; 27 August 1939) Second Slovak Republic: (Dubai, UAE; 2 February 1994) |
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| Biggest win | |||
(Bratislava, Slovakia; 8 September 2004) (Dubnica nad Váhom, Slovakia; 13 October 2007) (Bratislava, Slovakia; 6 June 2009) |
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| Biggest defeat | |||
(Mendoza, Argentina; 22 June 1995) |
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| World Cup | |||
| Appearances | 1 (First in 2010) | ||
The Slovakia national football team represents Slovakia in international football and is controlled by the Slovak Football Association. After the dissolution of Czechoslovakia, the Slovak Football Association was founded in 1993, and has been affiliated to both FIFA and UEFA since the same year.
Contents |
History
The first official match of the first Slovak Republic (1939–1945) was played in Prague against Germany on 27 August 1939, and ended in a 2-0 victory for Slovakia. After the Second World War, the national football team was subsumed into the team of Czechoslovakia, and for over fifty years Slovakia played no matches as an independent country. During this period they contributed several key players to the Czechoslovak team, including the majority of the team that won the 1976 European Championships.
Slovakia's first official international after regaining independence was a 1-0 victory in Dubai over the United Arab Emirates on 2 February 1994. Their match back on Slovakian soil was the 4-1 defeat against Croatia in Bratislava on 20 April 1994. Slovakia suffered their biggest defeat since independence (6-0) on 22 June 1995, in Mendoza, against Argentina. Their biggest wins (7-0) have come against Liechtenstein in 2004 and San Marino in 2007.
Slovakia played in a major championship as an independent team for the first time in Euro '96 qualifying, but finished in third place in their qualifying group, behind Romania and France, having recorded wins against Poland, Israel and Azerbaijan, twice. In the 1998 World Cup qualifiers, Slovakia finished fourth in their six-team group with five wins, one draw and four defeats.
Slovakia will participate in the FIFA World Cup for the first time in their history as an independent nation after finishing in first place in 2010 FIFA World Cup qualification - UEFA Group 3 ahead of Slovenia, Czech Republic, Northern Ireland, and Poland. On 14 October 2009, they clinched qualification with a 1-0 away win against Poland.[1]
Stadium
Tehelné pole is most popular name for a football stadium in Bratislava. Named after the surrounding neighbourhood in Bratislava. The stadium is the home field for Slovan and Slovakia national football team. Capacity of the stadium is 30,085 spectators. The construction of the stadium was begun in 1939 and was finished in 1944 however the stadium was opened already in September 1940. The first official match was played on 27 October 1940 when Slovan hosted Hertha. The match ended 2-2. The stadium was also the home field for Czechoslovakia national football team in common era and it was second biggest stadium in Czechoslovakia after the Strahov. In 2005-06 season Artmedia used this stadium for a contests in UEFA Champions League and UEFA Cup.
National team of Slovakia also use Stadium Pod Dubňom in Žilina and Stadium of Anton Malatinský in Trnava.
Latest results
2008
| Year 2008 | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Date | Venue | Home Team | Score | Away Team | Goals | |
| 6 February 2008 | Limassol | 1-1 | Slovakia |
54. Gera - 64. Šesták | ||
| 26 March 2008 | Štadión FC ViOn | 1-2 | Iceland |
87. Mintál - 71. Thorvaldsson, 82. Gudjohnsen | ||
| 20 May 2008 | SchücoArena | 1-0 | Slovakia |
63. Hakan Balta | ||
| 24 May 2008 | Stadio Cornaredo | 2-0 | Slovakia |
56. Behrami, 63. Frei | ||
| 20 August 2008 | Tehelné Pole | 0-2 | Greece |
62. and 82. Gekas | ||
| 6 September 2008 | Tehelné Pole | 2-1 | Northern Ireland |
46. Škrtel, 70. Hamšík - 81. Ďurica (o.g.) | ||
| 10 September 2008 | Ljudski vrt | 2-1 | Slovakia |
22. and 81. Novakovič - 83. Jakubko | ||
| 11 October 2008 | Stadio Olimpico | 1-3 | Slovakia |
45. Selva - 33. Šesták, 39. Kozák, 51. Karhan | ||
| 15 October 2008 | Tehelné Pole | 2-1 | Poland |
84. and 86. Šesták - 70. Smolarek | ||
| 19 November 2008 | Pod Dubňom | 4-0 | Liechtenstein |
43. and 72. Hamšík, 75. Vittek, 90. Jež | ||
2009
| Date | Venue | Home Team | Score | Away Team | Goals |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 10 February 2009 | Tsirion Stadium | 2-3 | Ukraine |
42. Vittek, 69. Hamšík - 10. Valyayev, 47. Seleznyov, 83. Milevsky (pen.) | |
| 11 February 2009 | Makario Stadium | 3-2 | Slovakia |
32. Marangos (pen.), 74. Nicolaou, 82. Okkas - 88. Jež, 90.+3 Jendrišek | |
| 28 March 2009 | Wembley | 4-0 | Slovakia |
7. Heskey, 70. and 90. Rooney, 82. Lampard | |
| 1 April 2009 | AXA Arena | 1-2 | Slovakia |
30. Škrtel (o.g.) - 23. Šesták, 83. Jendrišek | |
| 6 June 2009 | Tehelné Pole | 7-0 | San Marino |
3. and 32. Čech, 12. Pekarík, 35. Stoch, 42. Kozák, 63. Jakubko, 68. Hanzel | |
| 12 August 2009 | Laugardalsvöllur | 1-1 | Slovakia |
60. K. Sigurdsson - 35. Vittek | |
| 5 September 2009 | Tehelné Pole | 2-2 | Czech Republic |
60. Šesták, 73. Hamšík (pen.) - 68. Pudil, 84. Baroš | |
| 9 September 2009 | Windsor Park | 0-2 | Slovakia |
15. Šesták, 67. Hološko | |
| 10 October 2009 | Tehelné Pole | 0-2 | Slovenia |
56. Birsa, 90.+3 Pečnik | |
| 14 October 2009 | Stadion Śląski | 0-1 | Slovakia |
3. Gancarczyk (o.g.) | |
| 14 November 2009 | Tehelné Pole | 1-0 | United States |
26. Hamšík (pen.) | |
| 17 November 2009 | Pod Dubňom | 1-2 | Chile |
17. Šesták - 9. Jara, 55. Paredes |
Score bar: Green - Friendly match, Blue - WC 2010 Qualification
World Cup record
- 1930 to 1994 - See Czechoslovakia
| Year | Round | Position | GP | W | D | L | GF | GA |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Did not Qualify | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | |
| Did not Qualify | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | |
| Did not Qualify | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | |
| Qualified | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | |
| Total | 1/4 | - | - | - | - | - | - |
European Championship record
- 1960 to 1992 - see Czechoslovakia
- 1996 to 2008 - Did not qualify
FIFA World Cup qualification
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Current squad
Date: November 14 and November 17, 2009
Venue: Tehelné Pole, Bratislava and Pod Dubňom, Žilina
Opponent:
United States and
Chile
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Caps and goals as of 17 November 2009
Recent call-up
The following players have also been called up to the Slovakia squad since 2009.
Coaching Staff
Most goals and appearancesTop goalscorersAs of 17 November 2009. Bold are still available for selection.
Most capped
ManagersSee also: Category:Slovak football managers
As of 17 November 2009.
See alsoReferences
External links
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