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Malaysia women's national football team

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

Malaysia
Shirt badge/Association crest
Nickname(s)Harimau Malaya
(Malayan Tigress)
[1]
Skuad Kebangsaan
(National Team)
AssociationFootball Association of Malaysia (FAM)
ConfederationAFC (Asia)
Sub-confederationAFF (Southeast Asia)
Head coachJoel Cornelli
CaptainSteffi Sarge Kaur
MostcapsJaciah Jumilis (72)
Top scorerDadree Rofinus (10)
Home stadiumUiTM Stadium
FIFA codeMAS
Firstcolours
Secondcolours
FIFA ranking
Current 91Increase 1 (11 December 2025)[2]
Highest69 (July 2003)
Lowest102 (December 2024 – June 2025)
First international
 New Zealand 3–0Malaysia 
(Hong Kong; 27 August 1975)
Biggest win
 Timor-Leste 0–13Malaysia 
(Mandalay, Myanmar; 31 July 2016)
Biggest defeat
 Chinese Taipei 16–0Malaysia 
(Iloilo, Philippines; 7 November 1999)
 Malaysia 0–16Myanmar 
(Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia; 25 May 2005)
Asian Cup
Appearances9 (first in1975)
Best resultThird place (1983)
AFF Championship
Appearances10 (first in2007)
Best resultFourth place (2007)
Medal record

TheMalaysia women's national football team representsMalaysia in internationalwomen's association football; it is controlled by theFootball Association of Malaysia (FAM). Unlike the men's team, Malaysia women's football team is represented by amateur players and semi professional players.

History

[edit]

1970s until 1990s

[edit]

In March 1975, Women's Football Association of Malaysia was established with Tun Sharifah Rodziah as its first President and Datin Teoh Chye Hin taking on the role of Secretary General. Among the earlier member states in this new association were Perak, Penang, Negri Sembilan and Melaka.[3]

Soon after its formation, the Malaysia women's national football team participated in their first competition, the first Asian Women's Football Championship which now known as AFC Women's Asian Cup organised by the Asian Football Confederation (AFC) in Hong Kong. The Malaysian team managed to earn a respectable fourth placing after losing to Australia in the third place play-off.[3]

Encouraged by the team's success in Hong Kong, Datin Teoh Chye Hin set in motion plans in 1976 to organise a special football competition for secondary schoolgirls in Perak. By the late 1970s, football associations in other states also started organising similar competitions to inject fresh blood into their respective state teams.[3]

These efforts started bearing fruit in the early 1980s when the Malaysian women's football team coached byShamdin Yusoff finished third in the 1983 AFC Women's Asian Cup tournament held in Bangkok, Thailand.[3] One of Malaysia's key player in the 1983 tournament isNormala Rashid who is dubbed as the 'LadyMokhtar Dahari' by the Malaysian media in the 1980s.[4]

Despite the success in 1983, not much has been heard about Malaysia women's football team until 1995 Southeast Asian Games. Assembles only 15 days before the tournament, Malaysia coached byParamsivam Manickam manage to grab the silver medal, losing 1–0 to host Thailand in the final.[5]

2000s

[edit]

Entering 2000s, women's football in Malaysia is considerably underdeveloped with no women's football league. Despite that, Malaysia still manage to enter the semi final and finish fourth at the 2003 Southeast Asian Games under the guidance of Zhang Hong, a women's football coach from China which also the first female to coach Malaysia women's football team.[6][7]

In 2005, the team was one of eight that includedthe Philippines,Thailand,Indonesia,Laos,Vietnam,Myanmar andSingapore, that were expected to field a women's football team to compete at theSEA Games in thePhilippines.[8] However,Olympic Council of Malaysia decided not to sent the team to the competition after they suffered their heaviest defeat in history, a 16–0 lost at home to Myanmar in a friendly.[9]

In 2006, Football Association of Malaysia (FAM) appointed former player Normala Rashid as FAM's head of women's football. Among the achievements during her role is the first ever gold medal for the national women's team at the Arafura sports festival in Australia, a semi-final qualification at the2007 AFF Women's Championship in Myanmar, and the first national women's futsal interstate championship.[4]

However, Malaysia still performing badly in regional and continental competition, especially in the 2009 Southeast Asian Games, which saw Malaysia lose all matches by large margins, leading FAM to suspend the women's national team from international competition.[10]

2010s

[edit]

Malaysia return to international stages in2011 AFF Women's Championship but still lost heavily to Thailand and Myanmar. In2012 AFF Women's Championship, Malaysia have the chance to enter the semi final but eventually lost 3–2 to Laos. At the 2013 Southeast Asian Games, Malaysia coached byJacob Joseph qualified to the semi final for the first time after 10 years and finish in fourth place.[11]

In December 2015, FAM hiredAsyraaf Fong Abdullah to coach the women's national team.[12] However, Malaysia still failed to advance past the group stage of AFF Women's Championship in 2015 and 2016. In 2017 the team start the year on positive notes by defeating Bangladesh 2–1 and Singapore 4–0 to win the Women's Development Tournament hosted by Singapore.[13] At the 2017 Southeast Asian Games, Malaysia lost all their matches despite playing at home.

Jacob Joseph return as the head coach of Malaysia women's team in 2018 and led the team at the 2018 and 2019 AFF Women's Championship and 2019 Southeast Asian Games which Malaysia failed to advance past the group stage.

2020s

[edit]

After the pandemic in 2020, Malaysia played their first match after 2 years against Thailand and Palestine for the qualification to2022 AFC Women's Asian Cup. Malaysia lost 4–0 to Thailand and won 2–0 against Palestine. After the qualification match ended, the national players urged FAM to setup the first women football league inMalaysia.[14] Consequently, FAM finally establishMalaysia National Women's League in 2023.[15]

On 17 November 2022, FAM appointedSoleen Al-Zoubi from Jordan, the second female head coach in Malaysia women's team history.[15] Under Al-Zoubi, Malaysia finisehd third in the 2023 Women's International Friendly Tournament defeating host Saudi Arabia 1–0.[16]

On 14 May 2025, FAM appointedJoel Cornelli as the first Brazilian head coach of the national women's football team replacing Soleen Al-Zoubi, who had been reassigned as FAM women's football technical director.[17] Cornelli lost the first match 2–1 against Hong Kong at the2025 Women's Tri-Nation Cup. Eventually, he become the first coach to won 5 straight games for Malaysia women's team starting in the match against Bhutan, 2 times friendly against United Arab Emirates, and Palestine and Tajikistan at the2026 AFC Women's Asian Cup qualification. The winning streak was ended by North Korea in the final match of the qualifiers.

Team image

[edit]

Nicknames

[edit]

The Malaysia women's national football team has been known or nicknamed as the "Harimau Malaya (Malayan Tigress)"[1] orSkuad Kebangsaan (National Team)".

Kits and crest

[edit]

The logo symbolises the unity and forward progress of Malaysian football. Composed of four main elements, the logo stands for the development and awareness of the international image and patriotism of the sport in Malaysia. The Malayan tiger leaping over a football is the main element of the logo, and symbolises the courage and dignity portrayed while playing the game. The paddy stalks represent the prosperity and wealth of Malaysia, and the development of football in the country from the grassroots level. The Malay kris that rests at the top represents nationalism, and awareness that represents Malaysia at every level of football. The entire emblem is enclosed within a circle that represents the unity and timelessness of the sport.

Kit suppliers

[edit]

Similar to the men's team, the national team kit was manufactured byAdidas from the 1970s, who also sponsored the national team kit. Since 2007, the official Malaysia team kit has been manufactured byNike. The home kit's design of black and yellow stripes is a throwback to the kit used by the Malaysian national team of the 1920s. The great national team of the 1970s also sported similar stripes, which are supposed to be reminiscent of the stripes of a tiger, the symbol of Malaysia's national football team. Since November 2010, Nike Malaysia has replaced Adidas as the team kit sponsor.[18]

Adidas (1970–2006)
1995–1997 Home
1995–1997 Away
2000 Home
2001 Home
2002 Home
2001–2002 Away
2004–2005 Home
2004–2005 Away
Nike (2007–2024)
2007–2008 Home
2007–2008 Away
2008–2010 Home
2008–2010 Away
2010–2012 Home
2010–2012 Away
2012–2014 Home
2012–2014 Away
2014–2016 Home
2014–2016 Away
Current Home
Current Away

Home stadium

[edit]

Unlike the men's team, Malaysia women's team play in various venue at home. They played at theUiTM Stadium,Selayang Stadium andLikas Stadium.

Supporters

[edit]

Ultras Malaya is the name of the major supporter of the national team. They are known for their high fanaticism and support towards the national team. In every international match the national team played, a group standing in the supporter's area can be found. The main colours of the supporters are usually black with a yellowscarf andbanners just like the national team kit colours. These supporters always bringflares, drums and large national flags to the stadiums.[19]

Sponsors

[edit]

According to the website ofFootball Association of Malaysia, Malaysia main sponsors includeBank Islam,Malaysia Airlines,Nike,Telekom Malaysia,100plus, Extra Joss, KN, Wonda Coffee, Origina, Sanctband Active,Milo and Kronos with the association also establish social responsibilities partners with One Goal andMalaysian Conservation Alliance for Tigers (MYCAT).[20]

Results and fixtures

[edit]
Main article:Malaysia women's national football team results (2020s)

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

Legend

  Win  Draw  Loss  Fixture

2024

[edit]
Malaysia  v Indonesia
26 November2024 AFF Women's Cup GSMalaysia 0–1 IndonesiaVientiane, Laos
19:30 UTC+7ReportStadium:New Laos National Stadium
Referee: Asaka Koizumi (Japan)
Cambodia  v Malaysia
29 November2024 AFF Women's Cup GSCambodia 2–0 MalaysiaVientiane, Laos
15:00 UTC+7ReportStadium:New Laos Reserve Field
Referee: Cha Min-ji (South Korea)

2025

[edit]
Malaysia  v Hong Kong
31 MayTri-Nation CupMalaysia 1–2 Hong KongThimphu, Bhutan
18:00 UTC+6Steffi 38'Report
Stadium:Changlimithang Stadium
Bhutan  v Malaysia
3 JuneTri-Nation CupBhutan 1–3 MalaysiaThimphu, Bhutan
18:00 UTC+6Bidha 24'Report
Stadium:Changlimithang Stadium
United Arab Emirates  v Malaysia
18 JuneFriendlyUnited Arab Emirates 1–3 MalaysiaDubai, United Arab Emirates
19:45 UTC+4 45'ReportStadium:Theyab Awana Stadium
United Arab Emirates  v Malaysia
22 JuneFriendlyUnited Arab Emirates 0–2 MalaysiaDubai, United Arab Emirates
19:45 UTC+4ReportStadium:Theyab Awana Stadium
Malaysia  v Palestine
29 June2026 AFC Women's Asian Cup qualificationMalaysia 1–0 PalestineDushanbe, Tajikistan
19:00 UTC+5Farahiyah 86'Report (AFC)Stadium:Pamir Stadium
Referee: Yang Shu-ting (Chinese Taipei)
Tajikistan  v Malaysia
2 July2026 AFC Women's Asian Cup qualificationTajikistan 0–1 MalaysiaDushanbe, Tajikistan
22:00 UTC+5Report (AFC)Henrietta 90+2'Stadium:Pamir Stadium
Referee: Trần Thị Thanh (Vietnam)
North Korea  v Malaysia
5 July2026 AFC Women's Asian Cup qualificationNorth Korea 6–0 MalaysiaDushanbe, Tajikistan
19:00 UTC+5
Report (AFC)Stadium:Pamir Stadium
Referee: Rawdha Almansoori (United Arab Emirates)
Hong Kong  v Malaysia
22 OctoberClosed Door Friendly[21]Hong Kong 3–2 MalaysiaTseung Kwan O, Hong Kong
16:00 UTC+8Report
Stadium:Jockey Club HKFA Football Training Centre
Hong Kong  v Malaysia
25 OctoberFriendlyHong Kong 5–0 MalaysiaKowloon, Hong Kong
18:00 UTC+8ReportStadium:Kai Tak Youth Sports Ground
Bangladesh  v Malaysia
26 November2025 Bangladesh Tri-Nations CupBangladesh 0–1 MalaysiaDhaka,Bangladesh
18:00 UTC+6ReportNur Ainsyah 29'Stadium:National Stadium
Referee: Om Choki (Bhutan)
Malaysia  v Azerbaijan
29 November2025 Bangladesh Tri-Nations CupMalaysia 0–2 AzerbaijanDhaka, Bangladesh
18:00 UTC+6ReportStadium:National Stadium
Referee: Anjana Rai (Nepal)
Vietnam  v Malaysia
5 December2025 SEA GamesVietnam 7–0 MalaysiaChonburi,Thailand
18:30 UTC+7ReportStadium:Thailand National Sports University Chonburi
Referee: Rawdha Almansoori (United Arab Emirates)
Malaysia  v Myanmar
8 December2025 SEA GamesMalaysia 0–3 MyanmarChonburi, Thailand
16:00 UTC+7ReportStadium:Thailand National Sports University Chonburi
Referee: Alesar Baddour (Syria)
Philippines  v Malaysia
11 December2025 SEA GamesPhilippines 6–0 MalaysiaChonburi, Thailand
16:00 UTC+7
Stadium:Thailand National Sports University Chonburi
Referee: Sunita Thongthawin (Thailand)

Team officials

[edit]
Coaching staff
RolesNamesAppointment date
Head coachBrazil Joel Cornelli14 May 2025
Assistant coachMalaysia Leila Chua Pak Ling
Goalkeeping coachMalaysia Kris Yong Wai Hwang
Fitness coachMalaysia Azizan Ghazali21 May 2025
DoctorMalaysia Zaidi Salleh
PhysiotherapistMalaysia Shohaili Mansor
Performance analystMalaysia Ahmad Sallehin Khalid
Technical directorJordanSoleen Al-Zoubi[22]16 December 2022[23]

Players

[edit]

Current squad

[edit]

The following players were finalised for the2025 SEA Games inChonburi,Thailand.[24]

No.Pos.PlayerDate of birth (age)CapsGoalsClub
231GKNurul Azurin Mazlan (2000-01-27)27 January 2000 (age 26)500Football Association of MalaysiaSabah
11GKNur Ezza Ashikin Abdul Razak (2003-04-18)18 April 2003 (age 22)60Football Association of MalaysiaSelangor

182DFNur Amirah Abdul Rahman (2004-11-21)21 November 2004 (age 21)100Football Association of MalaysiaSelangor
32DFEusvewana Kadius (2005-05-25)25 May 2005 (age 20)140Football Association of MalaysiaSelangor
22DFJuliana Barek (2002-01-04)4 January 2002 (age 24)151Football Association of MalaysiaSabah
52DFSiti Nurfaizah Saidin (2002-04-01)1 April 2002 (age 23)240Football Association of MalaysiaSabah
42DFNur Dhiyaa Addin Mohd Azhari (2006-03-12)12 March 2006 (age 19)10Football Association of MalaysiaMBSJ
102DFSteffi Sarge Kaur(captain) (1988-10-25)25 October 1988 (age 37)354Football Association of MalaysiaMBSJ
122DFKanchenjeet Kaur Nanua (2006-07-05)5 July 2006 (age 19)40United States Soccer FederationMiami Dade College
162DFTegen Su-Yin Butler (2008-12-25)25 December 2008 (age 17)20United States Soccer FederationDavenport Iowa

203MFNurhadfina Mohd Firdaus (2004-09-02)2 September 2004 (age 21)110Football Association of MalaysiaSelangor
83MFNur Najwa Irdina Zaidi (2006-09-26)26 September 2006 (age 19)91Football Association of MalaysiaSelangor
73MFJaciah Jumilis (1991-07-23)23 July 1991 (age 34)725Football Association of MalaysiaSabah
63MFHaindee Mosroh (1993-04-17)17 April 1993 (age 32)406Football Association of MalaysiaSabah
173MFNur Syafiqah Zainal Abidin (2001-12-27)27 December 2001 (age 24)190Football Association of MalaysiaMBSJ
93MFNur Lyana Soberi (1999-06-18)18 June 1999 (age 26)300Football Association of MalaysiaKelana United

214FWHenrietta Justine (2002-08-19)19 August 2002 (age 23)191Football Association of MalaysiaSabah
114FWNur Adrienna Zamzaihiri (2004-08-13)13 August 2004 (age 21)133Football Association of MalaysiaMBSJ
144FWDian Aqilah Mohammed Imran (2007-10-10)10 October 2007 (age 18)50Football Association of MalaysiaMBSJ
224FWNur Ainsyah Murad (2003-10-22)22 October 2003 (age 22)152Football Association of MalaysiaSelangor
154FWIntan Sarah (1999-07-10)10 July 1999 (age 26)133Football Association of MalaysiaMBSJ
194FWNur Laila Syamila A Rahim (2010-06-07)7 June 2010 (age 15)00Football Association of MalaysiaKuala Lumpur FA
134FWNurfazira Muhammad Sani (2001-11-13)13 November 2001 (age 24)162Football Association of MalaysiaSelangor

Recent call ups

[edit]

The following players have been called up in the past 12 months.

Pos.PlayerDate of birth (age)CapsGoalsClubLatest call-up
GKNurdiana Syafiqah Mohd Rostam(age 17)--MalaysiaKelana Unitedv. Hong Kong, 25 October 2025
GKDaliea Eliesa Mohd Hafiz (2008-10-22)22 October 2008 (age 17)--MalaysiaSelangor2026 AFC Women's Asian Cup qualification
GKDaiyana Wardina Mohd Rosdi (2005-01-23)23 January 2005 (age 21)--MalaysiaSSM Pahang

DFLauren Hoh Ruyi (2006-01-27)27 January 2006 (age 20)--United StatesTrinity Bantamsv. Hong Kong, 25 October 2025
DFNurfarisya Hanim Muhamad Zaki (2004-02-13)13 February 2004 (age 22)--MalaysiaUPSI2026 AFC Women's Asian Cup qualification
DFAzzlyeanieh Kinuli (2005-02-03)3 February 2005 (age 21)--MalaysiaSabah2026 AFC Women's Asian Cup qualification
DFPutri Arissa Balqis Ab Llah (2000-08-26)26 August 2000 (age 25)--MalaysiaUiTM2026 AFC Women's Asian Cup qualification
DFEva Oliviannie Antinus (2001-04-03)3 April 2001 (age 24)--MalaysiaSabah
DFNorfiralisna Sulaiman (1997-01-02)2 January 1997 (age 29)--MalaysiaKelana United
DFShereilynn Elly Pius (1991-08-20)20 August 1991 (age 34)--MalaysiaSabahv. Cambodia, 29 November 2024

MFWaitie Taming (2003-04-12)12 April 2003 (age 22)--MalaysiaKelana United2025 Bangladesh Tri-Nations Cup
MFFarahiyah Ridzuan (1993-12-20)20 December 1993 (age 32)--MalaysiaMBSJ2026 AFC Women's Asian Cup qualification
MFNurul Arliana Nabila Mohamad Ramadhan (2003-04-10)10 April 2003 (age 22)--MalaysiaUPNM
MFNurul Nadia Roslan (2001-03-13)13 March 2001 (age 24)--MalaysiaKelana United
MFSiti Nurkhaleeda Ismail (2001-05-18)18 May 2001 (age 24)--MalaysiaKelana Unitedv. Cambodia, 29 November 2024

FWS. Thivashini (2006-01-05)5 January 2006 (age 20)--MalaysiaMBPJv. Hong Kong, 25 October 2025
FWAyuna Anjani Lamsin (2003-10-01)1 October 2003 (age 22)--MalaysiaSelangor2026 AFC Women's Asian Cup qualification
FWRocillyeka Lole (2008-04-17)17 April 2008 (age 17)--MalaysiaSabah
FWUsliza Usman (1995-05-20)20 May 1995 (age 30)--MalaysiaSabahv. Cambodia, 29 November 2024

Records

[edit]
Main article:List of Malaysia women's international footballers
See also:Category:Malaysia women's international footballers
As of 29 November 2025

*Players inbold are still active, at least at club level.

Most capped players

[edit]
#PlayerYear(s)CapsGoals
1Jaciah Jumilis2009–725
2Malini Nordin2007–2021672
3Nurul Azurin Mazlan2016–500
4Eslilah Esar2007–2023450
5Dadree Rofinus2009–20214410
6Shereilynn Elly Pius2009–2024428
7Haindee Mosroh2012–406
Masturah Majid2008–20171
9Angela Kais2007–2017378
10Steffi Sarge Kaur2007–354

Top goalscorers

[edit]
#PlayerYear(s)GoalsCaps
1Dadree Rofinus2009–20211044
2Angela Kais2007–2017837
Shereilynn Elly Pius2009–202442
4Norhanisa Yahya2009-2019729
5
Nur Haniza Saarani2016–2019612
Norlelawati Ngah1999–200317
Normala Rashid1980–198518
Sihaya Ajad2011–201923
Haindee Mosroh2012–40
10Norsuriani Mazli2011–2019524
Jaciah Jumilis2009–72

Competitive record

[edit]

 Champions   Runners-up   Third place   Fourth place  

FIFA Women's World Cup

[edit]
FIFA Women's World Cup record
YearResultPositionGPWD*LGFGAGD
China1991Did not qualify
Sweden1995Did not enter
United States1999
United States2003
China2007
Germany2011
Canada2015
France2019
AustraliaNew Zealand2023Did not qualify
Brazil2027
Costa RicaJamaicaMexicoUnited States2031To be determined
United Kingdom2035To be determined
Total0/12--------
*Draws include knockout matches decided onpenalty kicks.

Olympic Games

[edit]
Olympic Games record
YearRoundPositionGPWDLGSGA
United States1996 toFrance2024Did not enter
United States2028Did not qualify
Total0/0

*Draws include knockout matches decided onpenalty kicks.

AFC Women's Asian Cup

[edit]
AFC Women's Asian Cup record
YearResultGPWD*LGFGAGD
Hong Kong1975Fourth Place4103311−8
Chinese Taipei1977Did not enter
India1980Sixth Place511345−1
Hong Kong1981Did not enter
Thailand1983Third Place6213716−9
Hong Kong1986Group Stage2002020−20
Hong Kong1989Did not enter
Japan1991Group Stage4112124−23
Malaysia19933003323−20
Malaysia19952002111−10
China1997Did not enter
Philippines1999Group Stage4004127−26
Chinese Taipei20014004024−24
Thailand2003Did not enter
Australia2006
Vietnam2008Did not qualify
China2010Did not enter
Vietnam2014
Jordan2018
India2022Did not qualify
Australia2026
Total9/2134532620161−141
*Draws include knockout matches decided onpenalty kicks.

Notes:

  • Red border colour indicates tournament was held on home soil.

Asian Games

[edit]
Asian Games record
YearResultGPWDLGFGAGD
1990 to2022Did not enter
*Draws include knockout matches decided onpenalty kicks.

AFF Women's Championship

[edit]
AFF Women's Championship record
YearResultGPWD*LGFGAGD
Vietnam2004Did not enter
Vietnam2006
Myanmar2007Fourth Place4203421−17
Vietnam2008Group Stage4004124−23
Laos20113012318−15
Vietnam2012200227−5
Myanmar2013400409−9
Vietnam20153003014−14
Myanmar20163102146+8
Indonesia20184202815−7
Thailand20194202910−1
Philippines20225023115−14
Vietnam2025Did not qualify
Total10/1336732742139−97
*Draws include knockout matches decided onpenalty kicks.

SEA Games

[edit]
SEA Games record
YearResultGPWD*LGFGAGD
Thailand1985Did not enter
Thailand1995Silver Medal521275+2
Indonesia1997Group Stage201112−1
Malaysia2001310237−4
Vietnam2003Fourth Place5023419−15
Philippines2005Did not enter
Thailand2007Group Stage2002011−11
Laos20094004134−33
Myanmar2013Fourth Place4103417−13
Malaysia2017Fifth Place4004119−18
Philippines2019Group Stage2002010−10
Vietnam2021Did not enter
Cambodia2023Group Stage300319−8
Thailand2025
Total10/1334442622133−111
*Draws include knockout matches decided onpenalty kicks.

Notes:

  • Red border colour indicates tournament was held on home soil.
  • These matches are not regarded as part of the national team's record, nor are caps awarded.

Honours and achievements

[edit]

Continental

[edit]
AFC Women's Championship
HonoursYearsHead coachTeam
Third place1983MalaysiaShamdin Yusoff[25]

Regional

[edit]
Football at the Southeast Asian Games
HonoursYearsHead coachTeam
Silver medal1995MalaysiaParamsivam Manickam[26]

Summary

[edit]
Overview
Event1st place2nd place3rd place4th place
FIFA Women's World Cup0000
Summer Olympic Games0000
AFC Women's Asian Cup0011
Asian Games0000
AFF Women's Cup0001
SEA Games0102
Total0112

See also

[edit]
Wikimedia Commons has media related toMalaysia national football team.

References

[edit]
  1. ^abOoi Kin Fai (3 April 2017)."FAM reverts team name back to Harimau Malaya". Goal.com. Retrieved4 April 2017.
  2. ^"The FIFA/Coca-Cola Women's World Ranking".FIFA. 11 December 2025. Retrieved11 December 2025.
  3. ^abcdBirth of our women's football team – New Straits Times, 30 September 2018.
  4. ^abPassing The Torch For The Love Of Malaysian Women’s Football – Leaderonomics, 18 August 2017.
  5. ^Silver but girls walk tall – New Straits Times, 14 December 1995.
  6. ^Wanita negara tunai janji ke separuh akhir – Berita Harian, 7 December 2003.
  7. ^Gawang kita banjir lagi – Berita Harian, 12 December 2003.
  8. ^Edson C. Tandoc Jr. (13 April 2005)."Tourism boost for Marikina".Philippine Daily Inquirer. Retrieved11 June 2012.
  9. ^SASARAN 55 EMAS MAMPU DICAPAI, KATA KOK CHI – BERNAMA, 11 October 2005.
  10. ^FAM gantung sementara skuad wanita – Berita Harian, 8 December 2009.
  11. ^Bola sepak wanita kini digeruni – Berita Minggu, 22 December 2013.
  12. ^Asyraaf Appointed as National Women Football Coach – Universiti Malaysia Sabah Media and Citra Division, 2 December 2015.
  13. ^MALAYSIA JUARA KEJOHANAN PEMBANGUNAN BOLA SEPAK WANITA SINGAPURA 2017 – Football Association of Malaysia, 18 February 2017.
  14. ^Pemain saran wujud liga bola sepak wanita di Malaysia – Berita Harian, 23 September 2021.
  15. ^abFAM to prioritise competitions for women's football – New Straits Times, 17 December 2022.
  16. ^Captain Steffi sinks Saudi Arabia – New Straits Times, 1 October 2023.
  17. ^A Brazilian touch for Malayan Tigress – New Straits Times, 14 May 2025.
  18. ^"Nike Malaysia 2014–2015 Kits Released". Footy Headlines. 31 October 2014. Archived fromthe original on 29 March 2016. Retrieved29 March 2016.
  19. ^"Ultras Malaya". MalaysiaKini. 23 November 2011. Archived fromthe original on 10 September 2012. Retrieved13 November 2014.
  20. ^"FAM Sponsors". Retrieved25 November 2023.See at the bottom of the website.
  21. ^HKFA, Facebook - 23 October 2025.
  22. ^"AFC Women's Football Day 2025".Football Association of Malaysia. Retrieved12 March 2025.
  23. ^"Soleen out to improve women's football 2".The Star. 17 December 2022. Retrieved12 March 2025.
  24. ^"SIARAN MEDIA: SENARAI AKHIR 23 PEMAIN MALAYAN TIGRESS BAGI KEMPEN SUKAN SEA 2025 DI CHONBURI, THAILAND".Football Association of Malaysia (in Malay). Retrieved2 December 2025.
  25. ^Persatuan Pemain BolaSepak Wanita Malaysia – Facebook, 4 January 2021.
  26. ^New Straits Times – 28 November 1995.

External links

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