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Algeria national football team

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Men's association football team
This article is about the men's team. For the women's team, seeAlgeria women's national football team.

Algeria
Shirt badge/Association crest
Nickname(s)الخُضر (The Greens)[1]
الأفناك (TheFennecs)[2]
مُحَارِبِي الصَّحْرَاء (The Desert Warriors)[3]
AssociationAlgerian Football Federation (FAF)
ConfederationCAF (Africa)
Sub-confederationUNAF (North Africa)
Head coachVladimir Petković
CaptainRiyad Mahrez
MostcapsAïssa Mandi (106)
Top scorerIslam Slimani (45)[4]
Home stadiumNelson Mandela Stadium
FIFA codeALG
Firstcolours
Secondcolours
FIFA ranking
Current 36Increase 1 (3 April 2025)[5]
Highest15 (October 2014)
Lowest103 (June 2008)
First international
 Algeria 2–1Bulgaria 
(Algiers,Algeria; 6 January 1963)
Biggest win
 Algeria 15–1South Yemen 
(Tripoli,Libya; 17 August 1973)
Biggest defeat
 Hungary 9–2Algeria 
(Budapest,Hungary; 16 August 1967)
World Cup
Appearances4 (first in1982)
Best resultRound of 16 (2014)
Africa Cup of Nations
Appearances21 (first in1968)
Best resultChampions (1990,2019)
Arab Cup
Appearances3 (first in 1988)
Best resultChampions (2021)

TheAlgeria national football team (Arabic:منتخب الْجَزَائِر لِكُرَّةُ الْقَدَم) representsAlgeria in men's internationalfootball, and is governed by theAlgerian Football Federation. The team plays their home matches at the5 July Stadium in Algiers andMiloud Hadefi Stadium in Oran. Algeria joinedFIFA on 1 January 1964, a year and a halfafter gaining independence. They are the current champions of theFIFA Arab Cup.

The North African team has qualified for fourWorld Cups in1982,1986,2010 and2014. Algeria has won the Africa Cup of Nations twice, once in1990, when they hosted the tournament, and again inEgypt in2019. They were also champions of the2021 FIFA Arab Cup, the1991 Afro-Asian Cup of Nations, themen's football tournament of the 1978 All-Africa Games and themen's football tournament of the 1975 Mediterranean Games.

The traditional rivals of Algeria are mainly:Egypt,Morocco, andTunisia. Algeria has also had very competitive matches againstNigeria, especially in the 1980s during Algeria's best football generation, againstMali due tosharing a common border and a long-standing competitive rivalry, and againstSenegal, where Algeria's first global success began. For the Algerians, their biggest victory on the world stage was their 2–1 win againstWest Germany during the1982 FIFA World Cup in which the African nation shocked the world. Algeria has produced many talented players throughout its history and is considered one of the best teams in African football history. At the2014 World Cup inBrazil, Algeria became the first African team to score at least four goals in a match at a World Cup, which was againstSouth Korea.

History

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The ALN football team, 1957–1958

[edit]

On 1956, inTunis, Tunisia, was formed the first team to represent Algeria, the Armée de Libération Nationale (ALN) team by Ahmed Benelfoul and Habib Draoua.[7][8] The team was approved by the FLN in May 1957 and was managed by Salah Saidou and the player Abdelkader Zerrar was the captain.[9] The first game was played on 1 June 1957 againstTunisia in theStade Chedly Zouiten. In April 1958, the team was dissolved and was replaced by the FLN team.

The FLN football team, 1958–1962

[edit]
Main article:FLN football team

The FLN football team was a team made up mainly of professional players in France, who then joined the Algerian independence movement of theNational Liberation Front (FLN), and assisted in organizing football matches against national football teams. The FLN linked African football to anti-colonial resistance using the idea ofPan-Africanism as a legitimizing tool and symbol of national identity. The French authorities easily obtained the non-recognition of the team by FIFA.

The Beginning, 1962

[edit]

Football in Algeria was established in the 1830s by European settlers bringing the sport to the country. The Algerian football team was established in 1962 after gaining independence from France, as the successor of theFLN football team.[10] Under French rule, Algeria was not allowed to have a national team, the FLN football team was sort of a rebellion against the French colonization. All of their games were considered friendlies and were unrecognized byFIFA. During a press conference in Tunis, the Algerian football team refused to make any political statements, referring to football as a sport rather than a political influence.[11] After the Algerian national football team was officially recognized by FIFA in 1963, the team only qualified to the1968 Africa Cup of Nations and failed to qualify for the next five editions of the African cup until 1980.

The best XI, 1980–1990

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1982 FIFA World Cup

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Algeria's squad against Austria during1982 FIFA World Cup
Belloumi, one of the greatest African players

Algeria caused one of the great World Cup upsets on the first day of the tournament with a 2–1 victory overcurrent European championsWest Germany. In the final match in the group between West Germany andAustria, with Algeria andChile having already played their final group game the day before, the European teams knew that a West German win by 1 or 2 goals would qualify them both, while a larger West German victory would qualify Algeria over Austria, and a draw or an Austrian win would eliminate the West Germans. After 10 minutes of all-out attack, West Germany scored through a goal byHorst Hrubesch. After the goal was scored, the two teams kicked the ball around aimlessly for the rest of the match. Chants of "Fuera, fuera" ("Out, out") were screamed by the Spanish crowd, while angry Algerian supporters waved banknotes at the players. This performance was widely deplored, even by the West German and Austrian fans. Algeria protested to FIFA, who ruled that the result be allowed to stand; FIFA introduced a revised qualification system at subsequent World Cups in which the final two games in each group were played simultaneously.[12]

1986 FIFA World Cup

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In 1984, Algeria took third place in the1984 Africa Cup of Nations in Ivory Coast. During the1986 Africa Cup of Nations, the national teams recorded two defeats and one draw and was eliminated in the first round. In Mexico, at the1986 World Cup, the Algerians were not able to pass the first round once again in a group that includedNorthern Ireland (1–1 draw),Brazil (1–0 loss), andSpain (3–0 loss). Only one Algerian scored during this competition:Djamel Zidane. From thereon, Algeria failed to qualify for anotherWorld Cup until 2010.

Madjer is considered one of the best players in Algerian Football history

1990 African Cup of Nations

[edit]

In 1990, Algeria hosted the1990 Africa Cup of Nations for the first time and were strongly considered to win the competition. drawn in Group A, the Algerians started the tournament by beatingNigeria 5–1, with doubles byDjamel Menad andRabah Madjer and a goal byDjamel Amani. After a great start with a convincing victory against the Nigerians, they then beatIvory Coast 3–0, with goals by Djamel Menad,Tahar Chérif El-Ouazzani, andChérif Oudjani. The last game of the group, Algeria beatEgypt 2–0, with goals by Djamel Amani andMoussa Saïb. After a perfect start with three wins in as many games, Algeria beatSenegal 2–1 in the semi-finals after Djamel Menad and Djamel Amani scored in front of 85,000 fans in theStade du 5 Juillet to reach the final for the second time in history. In the final againstNigeria, in front of 105,302 fans in the same stadium,Chérif Oudjani, in the 38th minute, enabled Algeria to win theAfrican Cup of Nations for the first time. Djamel Menad was crowned top scorer of the competition with four goals.[citation needed]

The dark years, 1992–2008

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After winning the1990 African Cup of Nations and barely missing out in qualifying to the1990 World Cup, Algerian football was still at its peak. However, with Algeria being on the brink of a civil war in the early 90s, social and political unrest started having a negative impact in every domain in the country including football. Although Algeria qualified to the1992 African Cup of Nations, the title holders were disappointing and were eliminated in the first round of the competition.

In the1994 African Cup of Nations Algeria was disqualified from the tournament after fielding an ineligible player, and many fans back home strongly criticized the staff of the team, accusing them of being irresponsible and unprofessional. In 1996, Algeria returned toAfrican Cup of Nations, but were eliminated by hostsSouth Africa in the quarter-finals. The Algerians failed to qualify for the followingWorld Cups in1998,2002 and2006. During the1998 African Cup of Nations, Algeria finished last in its group with three defeats and was eliminated in the group stage. Algerian football was losing its reputation and the team that was once considered one of the best teams in Africa, was no longer feared.

In the2000 African Cup of Nations, the Fennecs passed the first round only to lose to 2–1 to eventual championsCameroon in the quarter-finals. Algeria once more failed to pass the first round in the African competition in2002. but in the2004, Algeria, coached byRabah Saadane were looking good and full of confidence, After drawing the first game of the group 1–1 against tournament favoritesCameroon, Algeria recorded a historic win against archrivalsEgypt 2–1. After a good start by Algeria, the north African side surprisingly lost the last game of the group againstZimbabwe 2–1 However, because of the 2–1 victory against Egypt, Algeria finished second in their group and advanced to the next round. Their next opponent wasMorocco and after a goalless game for over 80 minutes, Algeria took the lead in the 84th minute after a goal fromAbdelmalek Cherrad, nearly seconds before the final whistleMorocco scored which meant the two sides would have to play in extra time, where Morocco would go on to win 3–1. The loss against their North African neighbors was heartbreaking, and after that game, Algeria failed to qualify for the following twoAfrica Cup of Nations in2006 and2008 and nothing seemed to be working for Algerian football.

The return

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2010 World Cup qualifiers

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Main article:2010 FIFA World Cup qualification (CAF)
Algerian training camp during the 2013 African Cup of Nations

On 11 October 2008, Algeria returned to the top 20 African teams in the Fifa ranking by finishing first in their group ahead ofSenegal,Gambia, andLiberia for the second round in the combined2010 World Cup and 2010 African Cup of Nations qualifications. In the third and final round of thequalifiers, Algeria was joined byZambia,Rwanda, andEgypt in group C. Egypt was widely considered the favorites to win the group and qualify for theWorld Cup. However, in June 2009, Algeria beat the double African championsEgypt 3–1 which ultimately changed the teams objectives from just qualifying for the African Cup of Nations, to qualifying for the World Cup after a 24-year absence. The next game was against Zambia where the Desert Foxes won 2–0 inLusaka. Algeria then again beat Zambia at home inBlida 1–0 followed by a 3–1 win against Rwanda, the Algerians ensured that the qualification for the World Cup would go down to the wire with a final encounter against Egypt inCairo, where only a loss by three goals would stop the Fennecs from going to South Africa. Prior to the game, the Algerian team bus was attacked in Cairo by Egyptian fans, leaving several team members injured. This led to a diplomatic row between the two countries. The attack prior to the game left the Algerian players in shock which resulted in a 2–0 loss in a controversial situation, conceding a goal just within a couple seconds from the final whistle. The loss would mean that the two north African sides would have a to play a playoff game in Sudan with the winner qualifying to the world cup in South Africa. Algeria won 1–0 after a stunning goal fromAnthar Yahia and qualified for the World Cup for the third time in their history.[13][14]

2010 Africa Cup of Nations

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Main article:2010 Africa Cup of Nations

After qualifying to the 2010 world cup at the expense of Egypt, Algeria was gaining back the respect that they lost in the early 90s. So they came in the 2010 tournament full of confidence. Being drawn in Group A, withAngola,Malawi, andMali, Algeria started poorly, surprisingly losing 3–0 to group outsiders Malawi. After that loss Algeria had to prove that the first game was only a mistake and in the following game against Mali they won 1–0 thanks to aRafik Halliche header. In the last match, they drew 0–0 with Angola, which sent them to the second round, finishing with the same number of points as Mali, but with a superior head-to-head record. Playing inCabinda, Algeria facedIvory Coast in the quarterfinals who were considered heavy favorites. After trailing 1–0,Karim Matmour equalized in the first half, the Algerians were having a great game but as the game was heading into extra timeKeita gave the Ivorians the lead in the 89th minute, a goal which seemed sure to seal their victory. However, the Algerians equalized withMadjid Bougherra just 2 minutes later in added time, and in extra time a perfectKarim Ziani cross foundHamer Bouazza who gave the Fennecs the lead.Algeria shocked the whole continent with a convincing win against a Cote Ivoire team that was considered the best in Africa. Next Algeria faced Egypt in the semi-finals, tensions were still high between the two nations after theWorld Cup qualification play-off incident and fans from both sides felt it was a must win game for them. Unfortunately for Algeria, things did not go as planned. After waves of controversial decisions from the referee for both sides, Algeria ended the game with 3 red cards which led to Egypt winning 4–0 which was the biggest defeat in the history of the teams' meetings. Algeria then lost 1–0 toNigeria in the third-place game and finished fourth in the competition.

2010 FIFA World Cup

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Main article:2010 FIFA World Cup Group C
Algeria vs England in the 2010 FIFA World Cup

Algeria was drawn in Group C withEngland,USA,Slovenia. The north African side came in the tournament in poor form, losing nearly all their world cup preparation games in friendlies. In their first game they lost to Slovenia 0–1. The match was scoreless until Slovenia's captainRobert Koren scored in the 79th minute afterAbdelkader Ghezzal was sent off for hissecond bookable offence. In their second group game, Algeria drew withEngland leading to mass celebration throughout the world's Algerian communities.[15] The Fennecs lost their final group game to the United States 1–0 thanks to aLandon Donovan winner in second-half injury time. Algeria exited the championship as one of two teams, along withHonduras, to fail to score a goal.

2010–11: A team in trouble

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After the World Cup, bad results were growing and growing with no wins. After a 2–1 home loss to Guinea in a friendly match and a 1–1 draw at home to Tanzania, veteran managerRabah Saâdane resigned and was replaced withAbdelhak Benchikha. The newly appointed coach tried to bring in new faces to the squad to bolster their offense but poor results continued for Benchikha's side who started off with a 2–0 away loss to Central African Republic. There was a little bit of hope restored for the Algerians after they beat Morocco 1–0 at home after a goal fromHassan Yebda but After they lost 4–0 toMorocco in the return leg, their manager resigned. Algeria failed to qualify for the2012 Africa Cup of Nations and the nightmare continued.

2011–12: The arrival of Halilhodžić

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Algeria's Islam Slimani in Action

After new coachVahid Halilhodžić was appointed, he got a few decent results before the start of theWorld cup qualifiers. The Bosnian coach's debut resulted in a 1–1 away draw againstTanzania, they then beatCentral African Republic 2–0 with goals coming fromHassan Yebda andFoued Kadir. After a good game against Tanzania and a convincing win against The Central African Rep, the Algerian fans started to believe in their national team again and put all their trust in coach Vahid to revive the national team, and that is exactly what happened as the good results kept on coming, Algeria then beatNiger 3–0 in a friendly, and with the start of the 2014 Fifa World Cup qualifiers Algeria beatRwanda 4–0 to start off brightly. Qualifying for The 2013 African cup of Nations was the next target for Les Fennecs and they started off with beatingGambia 2–1 inBanjul followed by a 4–1 victory inBlida to advance to the final qualifying round, where the Algerians would take on north African neighborsLibya. The desert warriors ended up winning 3–0 on aggregate against the Libyans to qualify for the2013 Africa Cup of Nations.

2013 Africa Cup of Nations: Disappointing results

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Algeria arrived to the2013 Africa Cup of Nations with plenty of confidence and with the emergence ofIslam Slimani andEl Arbi Hillel Soudani, as well as the addition to the squad of talentedValencia CF wingerSofiane Feghouli, Algeria was even considered one of the favorites to win the competition, but unfortunately for them they lacked experience and despite clear domination against their opponents, they finished last in their group after losing the first game againstTunisia 1–0 after a crucial 90'minute goal fromYoussef Msakni. In their second game againstTogo, Algeria was widely expected to come out with a victory but again the lack of experience was once again crucial, after dominating the game, they conceded two goals and were officially eliminated from the competition. The last game againstIvory Coast ended in a 2–2 draw. The Algerian fans were extremely disappointed with their team's early exit from the competition, and the Algerian media even speculated coach Vahid would be sacked, but the president of theAlgerian Football Federation decided to maintain Vahid.

Road to Brazil 2014

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After a disappointing campaign in the2013 Africa Cup of Nations, and theAlgerian Football Federation confirming their manager's stay. Algeria would then focus on their World cup qualifying campaign which they had a decent start to with one win and one loss, They continued their campaign winning 3–1 versusBenin at home and beating them again 3–1 away inBenin. After travelling toKigali to faceRwanda, a 1–0 away victory guaranteed them the first-place position in their group which means they would advance to the final round of the qualifying campaign. Their last game didn't have any effect on the standings but Algeria still won 1–0 versusMali national football team. After topping group H, Algeria was drawn withBurkina Faso as their final opponent. The 1st leg was held in Burkina Faso and the second was in Algeria. The first leg ended in a highly-competitive 3–2 loss toBurkina Faso. The second leg was also a tightly contested, competitive match with Algeria managing a 1–0 victory to advance to the2014 World Cup.

Making history, 2014 FIFA World Cup

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Main article:2014 FIFA World Cup
Algeria national football team in the 2014 FIFA World Cup

Algeria were drawn in Group H with World Cup favoritesBelgium,Russia, andSouth Korea. In their opening game against Belgium,Sofiane Feghouli scored Algeria's first World Cup goal for 28 years giving his team the lead 1–0. Eventually, Belgium caught up and scored two goals to give themselves a 2–1 victory. In their second game against South Korea, the Algerians needed a strong win to have a good chance of going to the next round. They won 4–2, withYacine Brahimi scored the fourth goal against the opposition to set a record of being the first African team to score four or more goals in a single match in the World Cup. On 26 June, Algeria played Russia for second place in Group H. Russia scored the opening goal butIslam Slimani became a hero by scoring the equalizer to carry Algeria to the second round of the World Cup for the first time. In the second round, Algeria was able to hold eventual championsGermany to a goalless draw for 90 minutes. In extra-time the Germans scored twice while Algeria scored a lone goal fromAbdelmoumene Djabou. The match that ended in elimination for the Algerian team.

Decline (2015–2018)

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After coach Vahid decided to opt out of a contract extension following their World Cup,Lorient coachChristian Gourcuff was appointed by FAF president Mohamed Raouraoua to help Algeria reach its goals.

2015 Africa Cup of Nations

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Algeria lining up during the2015 Africa Cup of Nations

After topping their 2015 Africa Cup of Nations qualification group which consisted of Mali, Malawi, and Ethiopia, Algeria were heavy favorites to win the 2015 edition of the tournament hosted in Equatorial Guinea. Algeria were drawn in a very group that included South Africa, Ghana, and Senegal. Algeria struggled in the first game against the South Africans and were a goal down before finally beating them 3–1. In the second game against Ghana, theBlack Stars were in desperate need of a victory after losing the first game to Senegal, after 90 minutes, and while the game looked like it was heading to a goalless draw with neither side looking dangerous,Asamoah Gyan struck before the final whistle to give a 1–0 victory to Ghana. In the last game of the group against Senegal, Algeria looked better and after goals from Riyad Mahrez and youngster Nabil Bentaleb the Foxes were through to the next round. The Desert Foxes finished second in their group behind Ghana despite their goal difference due to their head-to-head record. Ivory Coast awaited them, where Wilfried Bony would score twice for an eventual 2–1 win for the Elephants, eliminating the Desert Foxes from the competition.

2017–2018: Africa Cup of Nations and World Cup qualification

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Manager Christian Gourcuff was widely criticized after the African Cup exit, he continued being criticized for his tactics and results, losing 2–1 in a friendly against Guinea and drawing 2–2 Against Tanzania. Although Algeria would achieve wins at home, such as the 7–0 return leg win against Tanzania the team was very fragile on away games and conceded too many goals. The Tanzania win allowed them to reach the Final round of the 2018 World Cup qualifiers. Algeria were drawn in a group with Nigeria, Cameroon and Zambia with only the team finishing top of the group qualifying to the 2018 FIFA World Cup.

After a 3–3 away draw against Ethiopia, Manager Christian Gourcuff resigned from his position. Milovan Rajevac was then appointed manager in June 2016, but resigned 4 months later after Algeria's first World cup qualifying game ended in a home draw against Cameroon. The Algerian Football federation then hired Georges Leekens who did no better than his predecessor by losing to Nigeria 3–1 during match day 2 of the World cup Qualifiers in November 2016.

Leekens then coached Algeria during the 2017 Africa Cup of Nations where the desert foxes had a horrible campaign drawing against Zimbabwe and Senegal and losing against Tunisia which resulted in an early group stage elimination. The African nation was on a steady decline and once again Algeria would get a new coach after Leekens resigned right after the African Cup and FAF president Raouraoua also left his position and was replaced by Kheiredine Zetchi. The new president came with new ideas, he brought in Spanish coach Lucas Alcaraz to try to kick start the national team once again, however the Spaniard was sacked after poor results which meant Algeria would miss the 2018 Fifa World cup. Missing the World cup was a huge upset in the country.

In November 2017, Former Algerian Superstar Rabah Madjer was appointed as manager, the decision to bring in Madjer was a controversial one as he hadn't coached any team for over 10 years and did have a past failed coaching experience with Algeria. Madjer wouldn't last very long either, after a couple of bad results in friendly matches including a 3–0 loss against Portugal, he would also be sacked after only 7 months in charge. Within four years of the end of the 2014 World cup, Algeria had five different coaches with the performances and results only getting worse.

2019–2024: The Belmadi era

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Algeria starting line-up againstSenegal at the2019 Africa Cup of Nations Final, a match they won 1–0.

After a slew of underperforming coaches, the federation appointed former Algerian internationalDjamel Belmadi on 2 August 2018.[16] Belmadi was a young coach and had mainly previously coached in Qatar. However, due to his unsuccessful tenure with theQatar national team, when they were eliminated early in the2015 AFC Asian Cup,[17] skepticism arose about the manager. Algeria's performance in the2019 AFCON qualification, while acceptable, also suffered setback, such as a shocking 0–1 away loss toBenin[18] and two 1–1 draws to less knownGambia,[19][20] raising big concerns over Algeria in the2019 Africa Cup of Nations. Thus, Algeria was not expected to contend for the trophy, but was nonetheless expected to proceed at least to the quarter-finals. In spite of criticisms of Belmadi, Algeria toppedgroup C won all three matches including a 1–0 victory over2018 FIFA World Cup's participantSenegal.[21] Algeria's solid performance continued with a 3–0 win overGuinea in the round of sixteen;[22] before they overcameIvory Coast in a hard-fought encounter which they won in a penalty shootout 4–3, after having drawn 1–1 after 120 minutes.[23] The Algerians then went on to defeatNigeria 2–1 with a dying minute's free kick shot byRiyad Mahrez.[24] Facing Senegal once again in the final,Baghdad Bounedjah scored the only goal of the game as Algeria won 1–0, earning them their second title since 1990. This made Algeria the second North African side after Egypt to win more than one AFCON trophy.[25]

To continue off the high of the African Cup win, Algeria competed in the2021 FIFA Arab Cup which was held in Qatar. As the tournament did not occur during the international break, Belmadi was unable to coach and national team veteran and assistant coach Madjid Bougherra filled in. Algeria managed to stay undefeated through the group stages. Their first match ended in a 4–0 win overSudan with goals from Bounedjah, Benlamri, and Soudani. The second match againstLebanon ended in a 2–0 win with goals from Brahimi and Meziani. The last match for the top of Group D ended in a tie against Egypt, putting Egypt at the top of the group due to their fewer fouls throughout the tournament. This brought them to the knockout stages where they started with a match against Morocco. Brahimi scored off a penalty that was immediately equalized by Morocco's Nahiri. After Belaili scored in overtime and Morocco equalized again, the game went onto a penalty shootout that ended in a 5–3 win for Algeria, moving them to the semi-finals against the host country, Qatar. Benlamri took the lead in the 59th minute but when the unnecessary 5 minutes of stoppage time extended to 7 minutes for Qatar to score off a corner, the game appeared to be heading into overtime. However, the referee kept the match going when Qatar regained possession beyond reason which backfired when Algeria made a counterattack that ultimately led to a free kick scored by Belaili at 90+17', with the game concluding at a record 90+19'. The Arab Cup final against neighbours Tunisia ended regular time in a scoreless draw. In overtime, Algeria took the lead with a goal by Sayoud in the 99th minute. The match ended with Tunisia attempting to equalise on a corner and go into a penalty shootout. However, Tunisia missed the chance when Algeria gained possession for a counter-attack by Brahimi to conclude the match with a goal at 120+5' and winning the team another trophy.

AFCON 2022 came off to a rough start. Their first match againstSierra Leone ended in a scoreless draw for 1 point each. Their second match ended in their first loss since 2019 againstEquatorial Guinea, losing 0–1, ending their 35-game unbeaten streak, 2 games away from the record held byItaly. The Algeria team suffered a defeat to Ivory Coast which led to their early exit at the group stages of the AFCON 2021.[26]

Home stadium

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Main article:Algeria national football team home stadium

The Algerian National Football Team play traditionally in the5 July Stadium in Algiers. However the team have played their home games at theMustapha Tchaker Stadium in Blida from 2009 to 2022. Now, theMiloud Hadefi Stadium in Oran which was inaugurated on 2021 had become the home venue of the team. Also other new stadiums being built in Algeria, one of which is expected to be also the home venue for the team, the forty thousand capacityNelson Mandela Stadium being built in Algiers. Another Stadium currently under construction, where the National team is expected to play some of its scheduled friendly games is in theHocine Aït Ahmed Stadium of Tizi Ouzou.

  • Nelson Mandela Stadium, Algiers
    Nelson Mandela Stadium, Algiers
  • 5 July Stadium, Algiers
    5 July Stadium, Algiers
  • Miloud Hadefi Stadium, Oran
    Miloud Hadefi Stadium, Oran

Team image

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Wikimedia Commons has media related toAlgeria national football team kits.

The Algeria national team home kit is all white with green trim, and the away kit is all green with white trim.

Kit sponsorship

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SupplierPeriod
None1962–1968
Algeria Delta1971
None1972-1974
West GermanyAdidas1975–1977
Algeria Sonitex1978–1990
GermanyAdidas1991–1992
ItalyLotto1993–1994
Algeria Cirta Sport1995–2002
FranceLe Coq Sportif2003–2009
GermanyPuma2010–2014
GermanyAdidas2015–present

Results and fixtures

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Main article:Algeria national football team results (2020–present)

The following is a list of match results in the last 12 months, as well as any future matches that have been scheduled.

  Win  Draw  Loss  Fixture

2024

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Algeria  v Bolivia
22 March2024 FIFA World SeriesAlgeria 3–2 BoliviaAlgiers, Algeria
22:00 UTC+1ReportStadium:Nelson Mandela Stadium
Referee: Dahane Beida (Mauritania)
Algeria  v South Africa
26 March2024 FIFA World SeriesAlgeria 3–3 South AfricaAlgiers, Algeria
22:00 UTC+1
Report
Stadium:Nelson Mandela Stadium
Referee:Amir Loussaif (Tunisia)
Algeria  v Guinea
6 June2026 FIFA WC qualificationAlgeria 1–2 GuineaAlgiers, Algeria
20:00 UTC+1
ReportStadium:Nelson Mandela Stadium
Attendance: 32,000
Referee:Bamlak Tessema Weyesa (Ethiopia)
Uganda  v Algeria
10 June2026 FIFA WC qualificationUganda 1–2 AlgeriaKampala, Uganda
19:00 UTC+3ReportStadium:Mandela National Stadium
Attendance: 45,000
Referee: Adissa Abdul Raphiou Ligali (Benin)
Algeria  v Equatorial Guinea
5 September2025 AFCON qualificationAlgeria 2–0 Equatorial GuineaOran, Algeria
20:00 UTC+1
ReportStadium:Miloud Hadefi Stadium
Attendance: 40,000
Referee: Djindo Louis Houngnandande (Benin)
Liberia  v Algeria
10 September2025 AFCON qualificationLiberia 0–3 AlgeriaMonrovia, Liberia
16:00 UTC+0ReportStadium:Samuel Kanyon Doe Sports Complex
Algeria  v Togo
10 October2025 AFCON qualificationAlgeria 5–1 TogoAnnaba, Algeria
20:00 UTC+1
ReportKlidjé11'Stadium:19 May 1956 Stadium
Attendance: 60,000
Referee: Boubou Traoré (Mali)
Togo  v Algeria
14 October2025 AFCON qualificationTogo 0–1 AlgeriaLomé, Togo
16:00 UTC+0ReportStadium:Stade de Kégué
Referee: Jean-Jacques Ndala (Congo DR)
Equatorial Guinea  v Algeria
14 November2025 AFCON qualificationEquatorial Guinea 0–0 AlgeriaMalabo, Equatorial Guinea
13:00 UTC+1ReportStadium:Estadio de Malabo
Referee: Kalilou Ibrahim Traoré (Ivory Coast)
Algeria  v Liberia
17 November2025 AFCON qualificationAlgeria 5–1 LiberiaTizi Ouzou, Algeria
16:00 UTC+1ReportStadium:Hocine Aït Ahmed Stadium
Referee: Tanguy Mebiame (Gabon)

2025

[edit]
Botswana  v Algeria
21 March2026 FIFA WC qualificationBotswana 1–3 AlgeriaFrancistown, Botswana
15:00 UTC+2Report (FIFA)
Report (CAF)
Stadium:Obed Itani Chilume Stadium
Referee: Ahmed Arajiga (Tanzania)
Algeria  v Mozambique
25 March2026 FIFA WC qualificationAlgeria 5–1 MozambiqueTizi Ouzou, Algeria
22:00 UTC+1
Report (FIFA)
Report (CAF)
Stadium:Hocine Aït Ahmed Stadium
Referee: Pacifique Ndabihawenimana (Burundi)
Algeria  v Rwanda
5 JuneFriendlyAlgeria 2–0 RwandaConstantine, Algeria
17:00 UTC+1Stadium:Chahid Hamlaoui Stadium
Referee: Mahmood Ali Ismail (Sudan)
Sweden  v Algeria
10 JuneFriendlySweden 4–3 AlgeriaSolna, Sweden
19:00UTC+2
ReportStadium:Nationalarenan
Attendance: 15,148
Referee:Rob Harvey (Ireland)
Algeria  v Botswana
September2026 FIFA WC qualificationAlgeria  BotswanaAlgeria
--:-- UTC+1
Guinea  v Algeria
September2026 FIFA WC qualificationGuinea  Algeria
--:-- UTC+1
Somalia  v Algeria
October2026 FIFA WC qualificationSomalia  Algeria
--:-- UTC+1
Algeria  v Uganda
October2026 FIFA WC qualificationAlgeria  UgandaAlgeria
--:-- UTC+1
Algeria  v Iraq
December2025 FIFA Arab CupAlgeria  IraqQatar
--:-- UTC+3
Algeria  v Bahrain/ Djibouti
December2025 FIFA Arab CupAlgeria  Bahrain/ DjiboutiQatar
--:-- UTC+3
Algeria  v Lebanon/ Sudan
December2025 FIFA Arab CupAlgeria  Lebanon/ SudanQatar
--:-- UTC+3
Algeria  v Sudan
24 December2025 AFCON GSAlgeria  SudanRabat, Morocco
13:00 UTC+1Stadium:Moulay Hassan Stadium
Algeria  v Burkina Faso
28 December2025 AFCON GSAlgeria  Burkina FasoRabat, Morocco
13:00 UTC+1Stadium:Moulay Hassan Stadium
Equatorial Guinea  v Algeria
31 December2025 AFCON GSEquatorial Guinea  AlgeriaRabat, Morocco
18:00 UTC+1Stadium:Moulay Hassan Stadium

Coaching staff

[edit]
Main article:List of Algeria national football team managers
Vladimir Petković, the current coach of the Algeria national football team.
PositionName
Head CoachBosnia and HerzegovinaVladimir Petković
Assistant CoachesSwitzerland Davide Morandi
AlgeriaNabil Neghiz
Goalkeeping CoachAlgeria Merouane Messai
Algeria Nacereddine Berarma
Fitness CoachItaly Paolo Rongoni
PhysiotherapistFrance Rémi Lancou
Sports Massager(s)Algeria Akram Chadli
Algeria Brahim Tenkhi
Video AnalystAlgeria Zoheir Bensedira
Team DoctorAlgeria Mohamed Boughlali

Players

[edit]

Current squad

[edit]

The following players were called up for thefriendlies againstRwanda andSweden on 5 and 10 June 2025; respectively.[27]
Caps and goals correct as of 10 June 2025, after the match againstSweden.

No.Pos.PlayerDate of birth (age)CapsGoalsClub
11GKAlexis Guendouz (1996-01-26)26 January 1996 (age 29)100IranPersepolis
161GKOussama Benbot (1994-10-11)11 October 1994 (age 30)10AlgeriaUSM Alger
231GKAnthony Mandrea (1996-12-25)25 December 1996 (age 28)200FranceCaen

22DFAïssa Mandi (1991-10-22)22 October 1991 (age 33)1057FranceLille
42DFMohamed Amine Tougai (2000-01-22)22 January 2000 (age 25)231TunisiaEspérance de Tunis
132DFJaouen Hadjam (2003-03-26)26 March 2003 (age 22)92SwitzerlandYoung Boys
152DFRayan Aït-Nouri (2001-06-06)6 June 2001 (age 24)180EnglandManchester City
172DFMohamed Amine Madani (1992-03-20)20 March 1992 (age 33)40AlgeriaJS Kabylie
202DFYoucef Atal (1996-05-17)17 May 1996 (age 29)482QatarAl-Sadd
212DFRamy Bensebaini (1995-04-16)16 April 1995 (age 30)727GermanyBorussia Dortmund
2DFKevin Van Den Kerkhof (1996-03-14)14 March 1996 (age 29)90FranceMetz

33MFMohamed Farsi (1999-12-16)16 December 1999 (age 25)50United StatesColumbus Crew
63MFRamiz Zerrouki (1998-05-26)26 May 1998 (age 27)423NetherlandsFeyenoord
83MFHoussem Aouar (1998-06-30)30 June 1998 (age 27)145Saudi ArabiaAl-Ittihad
123MFYassine Benzia (1994-09-08)8 September 1994 (age 30)155AzerbaijanQarabağ
143MFHicham Boudaoui (1999-09-23)23 September 1999 (age 25)230FranceNice
193MFNabil Bentaleb (1994-11-24)24 November 1994 (age 30)546FranceLille
223MFIsmaël Bennacer (1997-12-01)1 December 1997 (age 27)513FranceMarseille
243MFIbrahim Maza (2005-11-24)24 November 2005 (age 19)40GermanyHertha BSC
283MFFarès Chaïbi (2002-11-28)28 November 2002 (age 22)182GermanyEintracht Frankfurt
3MFHimad Abdelli (1999-10-17)17 October 1999 (age 25)40FranceAngers

74FWRiyad Mahrez (1991-02-21)21 February 1991 (age 34)10232Saudi ArabiaAl-Ahli
94FWBaghdad Bounedjah (1991-11-24)24 November 1991 (age 33)7832QatarAl-Shamal
104FWSaïd Benrahma (1995-08-10)10 August 1995 (age 29)384Saudi ArabiaNeom
114FWAmine Gouiri (2000-02-16)16 February 2000 (age 25)156FranceMarseille
184FWMohamed Amoura (2000-05-09)9 May 2000 (age 25)3313GermanyVfL Wolfsburg
254FWAmin Chiakha (2006-03-12)12 March 2006 (age 19)20DenmarkCopenhagen
264FWAnis Hadj Moussa (2002-02-11)11 February 2002 (age 23)40NetherlandsFeyenoord
314FWYoucef Belaïli (1992-03-14)14 March 1992 (age 33)5610TunisiaEspérance de Tunis

Recent call-ups

[edit]

The following players have also been called up to the Algeria squad at least once within the last twelve months.

Pos.PlayerDate of birth (age)CapsGoalsClubLatest call-up
GKZakaria Bouhalfaya (1997-08-11)11 August 1997 (age 27)00AlgeriaCS Constantinev. Togo, 14 October 2024
GKMoustapha Zeghba (1990-11-21)21 November 1990 (age 34)80AlgeriaCR Belouizdadv. Uganda, 10 June 2024

DFAhmed Touba (1998-03-13)13 March 1998 (age 27)141GreecePanathinaikosv. Mozambique, 25 March 2025
DFSohaib Naïr (2002-04-23)23 April 2002 (age 23)00FranceGuingampv. Mozambique, 25 March 2025
DFSaâdi Radouani (1995-03-18)18 March 1995 (age 30)30AlgeriaUSM Algerv. Liberia, 17 November 2024
DFZineddine Belaïd (1999-03-20)20 March 1999 (age 26)80BelgiumSint-Truidenv. Liberia, 10 September 2024
DFNaoufel Khacef (1997-10-27)27 October 1997 (age 27)30AlgeriaCR Belouizdadv. Liberia, 10 September 2024
DFChouaïb Keddad (1994-06-25)25 June 1994 (age 31)00AlgeriaCR Belouizdadv. Uganda, 10 June 2024

MFAdem Zorgane (2000-01-06)6 January 2000 (age 25)211BelgiumUnion SGv. Mozambique, 25 March 2025
MFAhmed Kendouci (1999-06-22)22 June 1999 (age 26)130SwitzerlandLuganov. Mozambique, 25 March 2025

FWBadredine Bouanani (2004-12-08)8 December 2004 (age 20)50FranceNicev. Liberia, 17 November 2024
FWAmir Sayoud (1990-09-30)30 September 1990 (age 34)51Saudi ArabiaAl-Raedv. Liberia, 10 September 2024
FWMonsef Bakrar (2001-01-13)13 January 2001 (age 24)40United StatesNew York Cityv. Uganda, 10 June 2024
FWYacine Brahimi (1990-02-08)8 February 1990 (age 35)6915QatarAl-Gharafav. Guinea, 6 June 2024

Notes
  • INJ = Player withdrew from the squad due to an injury.
  • PRE = Preliminary squad / standby
  • RET = Retired from international football.
  • WD = Player withdrew from the roster for non-injury related reasons.
  • COV = Player withdrew from the roster due to COVID-19.

Individual records

[edit]
As of 10 June 2025[28]
Players inbold are still active with Algeria.

Most appearances

[edit]
Aïssa Mandi is Algeria's most capped player with 106 appearances.
RankNameCapsGoalsCareer
1Aïssa Mandi10672014–present
2Riyad Mahrez103322014–present
3Islam Slimani101452012–present
4Lakhdar Belloumi100281978–1989
5Raïs M'Bolhi9602010–present
6Rabah Madjer86281978–1992
7Sofiane Feghouli83192012–present
8Billel Dziri8191992–2005
9Abdelhafid Tasfaout80361990–2002
10Djamel Menad79251980–1995

Top goalscorers

[edit]
Main article:List of leading goalscorers for the Algeria national football team
Islam Slimani is Algeria's top scorer with 45 goals.
RankNameGoalsCapsRatioCareer
1Islam Slimani45[4]1010.452012–present
2Abdelhafid Tasfaout36800.451990–2002
3Baghdad Bounedjah32780.422014–present
Riyad Mahrez321030.312014–present
5Rabah Madjer28860.331978–1992
Lakhdar Belloumi1000.281978–1989
7Djamel Menad25790.321980–1995
8Hillal Soudani24560.432010–2021
9Tedj Bensaoula19520.371979–1986
10Sofiane Feghouli830.232012–present

Competitive record

[edit]

FIFA World Cup

[edit]
Main article:Algeria at the FIFA World Cup
FIFA World Cup recordQualification record
YearRoundPositionPldWDLGFGASquadPldWDLGFGA
Uruguay1930Part of FrancePart of France
Italy1934
France1938
Brazil1950
Switzerland1954
Sweden1958
Chile1962
England1966WithdrewWithdrew
Mexico1970Did not qualify201112
West Germany1974210125
Argentina1978412123
Spain1982Group stage13th320155Squad8521166
Mexico198622nd301215Squad6510133
Italy1990Did not qualify632162
United States19948233811
France1998210123
South KoreaJapan2002103341314
Germany2006123541515
South Africa2010Group stage28th301202Squad13823178
Brazil2014Round of 1614th411277Squad8602167
Russia2018Did not qualify82241512
Qatar20228521276
CanadaMexicoUnited States2026In progress6501166
MoroccoPortugalSpain2030To be determinedTo be determined
Saudi Arabia2034
TotalRound of 164/22133371319103502528169103

Africa Cup of Nations

[edit]
Main article:Algeria at the Africa Cup of Nations
Africa Cup of Nations recordQualification record
YearRoundPositionPldWDLGFGAPldWDLGFGA
Sudan1957Part of FrancePart of France
United Arab Republic1959
Ethiopia1962
Ghana1963Did not enterDid not enter
Tunisia1965
Ethiopia1968Group stage6th310256440092
Sudan1970Did not qualify411233
Cameroon1972210134
Egypt1974201123
Ethiopia1976201123
Ghana1978420275
Nigeria1980Runners-up2nd522167210132
Libya1982Fourth place4th5212564211135
Ivory Coast1984Third place3rd5320814220104
Egypt1986Group stage6th302123422081
Morocco1988Third place3rd513144211021
Algeria1990Champions1st5500132Qualified as hosts
Senegal1992Group stage10th201114Qualified as defending champions
Tunisia1994Disqualified after qualification6411134
South Africa1996Quarter-finals5th42115310451127
Burkina Faso1998Group stage15th300325631295
GhanaNigeria2000Quarter-finals6th4121548413148
Mali2002Group stage15th301225632197
Tunisia2004Quarter-finals8th411257431061
Egypt2006Did not qualify123541515
Ghana2008622266
Angola2010Fourth place4th621341012723168
Equatorial GuineaGabon2012Did not qualify622258
South Africa2013Group stage13th301225440092
Equatorial Guinea2015Quarter-finals6th4202656501114
Gabon2017Group stage10th3021566510255
Egypt2019Champions1st7610132632194
Cameroon2021Group stage20th3012146420196
Ivory Coast202318th302134651092
Morocco2025Qualified6510162
KenyaTanzaniaUganda2027To be determinedTo be determined
2029
Total2 Titles21/35802824289793150823830265127

FIFA Arab Cup

[edit]
FIFA Arab Cup record
Appearances: 3
YearRoundPositionPldWDLGFGA
Lebanon1963Did not enter
Kuwait1964
Iraq1966
Saudi Arabia1985
Jordan1988Group stage15th412133
Syria1992Did not enter
Qatar1998Group stage210th201103
Kuwait2002Did not enter
Qatar2009Canceled in qualifiyng rounds
Saudi Arabia2012Did not enter
Qatar2021Champions31st6420134
Qatar2025Qualified
TotalChampions3/9125521610
  1. ^Algeria participated with the national University team
  2. ^Algeria participated with the national U-23 team
  3. ^Algeria participated with the national A' team (local players) in addition to players from other Arab leagues

Summer Olympics

[edit]
Main article:Algeria at the Olympic Games Football Tournament
Summer Olympics record
YearRoundPositionPldWDLGFGA
1908 to1960Part ofFrance
Japan1964Did not enter
Mexico1968Did not qualify
West Germany1972
Canada1976
Soviet Union1980Quarter-finals8th411245
United States1984Did not qualify
South Korea1988
Spain1992 to presentSeeAlgeria national under-23 football team
TotalQuarter-finals1/17411245

African Games

[edit]
Main article:Algeria at the African Games
African Games record
YearRoundPositionMWDLGFGA
Republic of the Congo1965Fourth place4th520365
Nigeria1973Group stage5th311166
Algeria1978 Gold1st541092
Kenya1987Disqualified1
1991 to2015SeeAlgeria national under-23 football team
2019 to presentSeeAlgeria national under-20 football team
TotalGold Medal3/4137242113
  • ^1Algeria withdrew in protest at CAF's decision to order a replay of the first leg againstTunisia; CAF had made this decision following Tunisia's protest that Algeria had fielded two ineligible players.
  • Prior to theCairo 1991 campaign, theFootball at the African Games was open to full senior national teams.

Mediterranean Games

[edit]
Main article:Algeria at the Mediterranean Games
Mediterranean Games record
YearRoundPositionPldWDLGFGA
1951 to1959Part ofFrance
Italy1963Did not enter
Tunisia1967Group stage6th310246
Turkey1971Did not qualify
Algeria19751 Gold1st6600143
Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia1979 Bronze3rd522176
Morocco1983Group stage6th210133
Syria198718th300317
1991 to1997 &2005SeeAlgeria national under-23 football team
2001See Algeria national under-21 football team
2009SeeAlgeria national under-20 football team
2013SeeAlgeria national under-19 football team
2018 to presentSeeAlgeria national under-18 football team
TotalGold Medal5/101910272925

Arab Games

[edit]
Main article:Algeria at the Arab Games
Arab Games record
YearRoundPositionPldWDLGFGA
1953 to1961Part ofFrance
United Arab Republic1965Did not enter
Syria1976
Morocco1985 Bronze13rd520345
Syria 1992Did not enter
Lebanon1997
Jordan1999Withdrew
Algeria 2004No tournament
Egypt2007Did not enter
Qatar2011
2023 to presentSeeAlgeria national under-23 football team
TotalBronze Medal1/9520345

Other records

[edit]
YearPosition
Greece1969 World military Cup2nd
Iraq1972 Palestine Cup of Nations3rd
Libya1973 Palestine Cup of Nations3rd
AlgeriaIran1991 Afro-Asian Cup of Nations1st
Tunisia7 November Cup 19952nd
Mali2004 African Military cup3rd
Germany2005 World military Cup2nd
Uganda2008 African Military cup2nd
Brazil2011 World military Cup1st
South Korea2015 World military Cup1st
China2019 World military Cup3rd
Total3 titles

All-time record against FIFA recognized nations

[edit]
See also:Algeria national football team all-time record
  • Below is a record of all matches correct as of10 June 2025 after match againstSWE
Algeria national football team head-to-head records
AgainstPlayedWonDrawnLostGFGAGD% Won
 Albania210145−150%
 Angola102711211+120%
 Argentina100134−10%
 Armenia110031+2100%
 Austria100102−20%
 Bahrain10100000%
 Bangladesh1100101100%
 Belgium301225−30%
 Benin11821258+1772%
 Bolivia110032+1100%
 Botswana4400122+10100%
 Brazil400408−80%
 Bosnia and Herzegovina100101−10%
 Bulgaria612369−316.66%
 Burkina Faso239863722+1539.13%
 Burundi6420113+766.66%
 Cameroon112451213−118.18%
 Canada1100101100%
 Cape Verde6321136+750%
 Central African Republic320152+366.67%
 Chad211041+350%
 Chile110032+1100%
 China320162+466.67%
 Colombia110030+3100%
 Congo321051+466.6%
 DR Congo523073+440%
 Ivory Coast2361072426−226.08%
 Cuba100101−10%
 Czech Republic210142+250%
 Denmark10100000%
 Djibouti2200120+12100%
 Egypt25101153132−140%
 England10100000%
 Ethiopia8431187+1150%
 Equatorial Guinea311121+133.33%
 Finland110020+2100%
 France100114−30%
 Gabon7214712−514.3%
 Gambia10532147+750.00%
 Germany320153+266.67%
 East Germanya4013414−100%
 Ghana114251413+136%
 Greece320172+566.67%
 Guinea146352018+242.85%
 Guinea-Bissau220072+5100%
 Hungary100113−20%
 Iran420255050%
 Iraq8044311−80%
 Italy100101−10%
 Jordan201123−10%
 Kenya8413127+550%
 South Korea210144050%
 Lebanon211042+250%
 Lesotho220091+8100%
 Liberia7430185+1357.14%
 Libya171322247+1775%
 Luxembourg10100000%
 Madagascar220041+3100%
 Malawi7412136+757.14%
 Malaysia202011050%
 Mali1910272522+352.63%
 Malta321031+266.67%
 Mauritania5311123+975%
 Mexico201124−20%
 Morocco36910113231+145%
 Mozambique4301113+866.66%
 Namibia440070+7100%
 Niger9801273+2488.88%
 Nigeria2110472927+247.62%
 Northern Ireland10101100%
 Oman330061+5100%
 Qatar540192+780%
 Palestine110020+2100%
 Peru10101100%
 Portugal210153+250%
 Poland200216−50%
 Republic of Ireland210123−150%
 Romania110021+1100%
 Russiab20203300%
 Rwanda7520122+971.42%
 Saudi Arabia512268−220%
 Senegal2212643218+1454.54%
 Serbia100013−30%
 Seychelles110040+4100%
 Sierra Leone623174+333%
 Slovakia10101100%
 Slovenia320141+366.6%
 Somalia110031+2100%
 South Africa513187+120%
 Spain100103−30%
 Sudan632194+550%
 Sweden6015415−110%
  Switzerland200214−30%
 Syria632174+350%
 Tanzania127412810+1858.33%
 Togo9513155+1055.56%
 Tunisia441713144436+838.63%
 Turkey320124−266.6%
 Uganda11542179+845.45%
 United Arab Emirates522133040%
 United States100101−10%
 Uruguay110010+1100%
 Vietnam110050+5100%
 South Yemena110041+3100%
 Zambia14725139+450%
 Zimbabwe6231118+333.33%
Total523219143161710524+18841.87%

(a) Denotesdefunct national football team.
(b) Includes games againstUSSR.
(c) Includes games againstYugoslavia.

Honours

[edit]

Major competitions

[edit]

Intercontinental

Continental

Regional

[edit]

Friendly

[edit]

Awards

[edit]

Summary

[edit]
Senior competition1st place, gold medalist(s)2nd place, silver medalist(s)3rd place, bronze medalist(s)Total
CAF African Cup of Nations2125
CAF African Nations Championship0101
Afro-Asian Cup of Nations1001
FIFA Arab Cup21001
Total4228
  1. Competition organized by theAssociation of National Olympic Committees of Africa, officially not recognized by FIFA.
  2. According to FIFA statutes, only the officially recognized edition is counted,2021 FIFA Arab Cup was the first edition organized by FIFA. Previous tournaments were organized by the regional body (Union of Arab Football Associations).

Awards

[edit]
Winners (7): 1980, 1981, 1982, 1991, 2009, 2014, 2019

See also

[edit]

Notes

[edit]
A.^ Prior to Algerian independence in 1962, matches were organised under the auspices of theFront de Libération Nationale and it was called theFLN football team.[29]

References

[edit]
  1. ^"16 November 2014".Archived from the original on 22 October 2016. Retrieved19 October 2019.
  2. ^"1982 FIFA World Cup – News – Algeria turn Gijon green – FIFA.com".www.fifa.com. Archived fromthe original on 24 June 2018. Retrieved19 October 2019.
  3. ^"23 June 2014".Archived from the original on 20 March 2016. Retrieved19 October 2019.
  4. ^ab"C L A S S E M E N T D E S B U T E U R S".www.carfootal.dz.Archived from the original on 18 October 2021. Retrieved3 September 2021.
  5. ^"The FIFA/Coca-Cola Men's World Ranking".FIFA. 3 April 2025. Retrieved3 April 2025.
  6. ^Elo rankings change compared to one year ago."World Football Elo Ratings".eloratings.net. 29 June 2025. Retrieved29 June 2025.
  7. ^"Un seul but : l'indépendance de l'Algérie."LEl Watan. 13 April 2016. Archived fromthe original on 6 June 2021. Retrieved20 March 2021.
  8. ^"Un Autre Pan de l'Histoire du Football Algérien Disparait, Habib Draoua n'est plus".Le Soir d'Algérie. C.K. 2 November 2008.Archived from the original on 7 April 2022. Retrieved20 March 2021.
  9. ^"Algérie: L'équipe de l'ALN a balisé le chemin pour la création de l'équipe du FLN".fallafrica.com. aps. 24 January 2017.Archived from the original on 27 January 2017. Retrieved20 March 2021.
  10. ^"Une équipe qui symbolisait la révolution Algérienne " Devoir de mémoire ! "".Reflexion. 31 October 2010.Archived from the original on 11 March 2016. Retrieved29 June 2014.
  11. ^Alegi, Peter (2010).African Soccerscapes: How a Continent Changed the World's Game.
  12. ^"The Game that Changed the World Cup – Algeria".algeria.com.Archived from the original on 10 September 2015. Retrieved29 June 2014.
  13. ^"Yahia sends Algeria to World Cup".BBC Sport. 18 November 2009.Archived from the original on 19 November 2009. Retrieved19 November 2009.
  14. ^"Yahia cracker seals play-off win".ESPN. 18 November 2009. Archived fromthe original on 23 November 2009. Retrieved19 November 2009.
  15. ^"Video of Police intervention at Champs-Élysées gathering". YouTube.com. 19 June 2010.Archived from the original on 25 April 2022. Retrieved30 June 2014.
  16. ^"Algeria land former player Djamel Belmadi as new boss after Carlos Queiroz rules himself out".Arab News. 2 August 2018.Archived from the original on 16 June 2019. Retrieved19 October 2019.
  17. ^Duerden, John."Asia Angle: Qatar and Djamel Belmadi need rapid revival after dire Asian Cup – Sport360 News".sport360.com.Archived from the original on 16 July 2019. Retrieved19 October 2019.
  18. ^"Bénin 1 – Algérie 0 : Du pain sur la planche pour Belmadi".www.competition.dz. 16 October 2018.Archived from the original on 7 November 2019. Retrieved19 October 2019.
  19. ^"Gambia holds Algeria to 1–1 draw". 9 September 2018.Archived from the original on 16 July 2019. Retrieved19 October 2019.
  20. ^"Algeria ends Gambia's Afcon qualifying hopes – the Point Newspaper, Banjul, the Gambia". Archived fromthe original on 16 July 2019. Retrieved16 July 2019.
  21. ^"Senegal 0–1 Algeria: 3 Reasons why the Teranga Lions lost | African Cup of Nations 2019".www.sportskeeda.com. 28 June 2019.Archived from the original on 16 July 2019. Retrieved19 October 2019.
  22. ^"Africa Cup of Nations: Algeria 3–0 Guinea". 7 July 2019.Archived from the original on 9 July 2019. Retrieved19 October 2019.
  23. ^"Africa Cup of Nations: Ivory Coast 1–1 Algeria (AET – Algeria win 4–3 on pens)".BBC Sport. 11 July 2019.Archived from the original on 2 December 2019. Retrieved19 October 2019.
  24. ^Burnton, Simon (14 July 2019)."Algeria 2–1 Nigeria: Africa Cup of Nations semi-final – as it happened".The Guardian.Archived from the original on 14 July 2019. Retrieved19 October 2019 – via www.theguardian.com.
  25. ^"Algeria celebrate second Afcon title after beating Senegal".BBC Sport. 19 July 2019.Archived from the original on 7 November 2020. Retrieved19 July 2019.
  26. ^"AFCON 2021: Champions Algeria eliminated in group stages".Citi Sports Online. 20 January 2022.Archived from the original on 23 January 2022. Retrieved23 January 2022.
  27. ^"La Liste de Petkovic pour les matchs amicaux face au Rwanda et à la Suède" (in French). Algerian Football Federation. 29 May 2025. Retrieved9 June 2025.
  28. ^Mamrud, Roberto."Algeria – Record International Players".RSSSF.Archived from the original on 5 February 2023. Retrieved3 February 2023.
  29. ^Courtney, Barrie (23 April 2010)."Algeria – List of International matches".RSSSF.Archived from the original on 27 September 2022. Retrieved10 November 2010.

External links

[edit]
Wikimedia Commons has media related toAlgeria national association football team.
General
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Statistics
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Players
World Cup Finals
CAN Finals
Other Cup's tournaments
Games's tournaments
Culture
Noted rivalries
Other FAF teams
Links to related articles
Algeria achievements and awards
Preceded byAfrican Champions
1990 (First title)
Succeeded by
Preceded byAfrican Champions
2019 (Second title)
Succeeded by
Algeria squads
National teams
Men
Women
Defunct
League system
Men
Women
Domestic cups
Men
Women
Awards
Lists
Rivalries
International competitions
Club competitions
Youth competitions
Women's competitions
Women's youth competitions
Related competitions
AGCFF /GCC
UNAF
CECAFA
WAGF /WAFF
ANOCA,OCA /CAF,AFC
ISSF
IMGC
Other
National teams
Men's
Women's
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