China national football team

The China national football team (simplified Chinese: 中国国家足球队; traditional Chinese: 中國國家足球隊; pinyin: Zhōngguó guójiā zúqiú duì, recognised as China PR by FIFA) represents the People's Republic of China in international association football and is governed by the Chinese Football Association.

China
Shirt badge/Association crest
Nickname(s)龙之队 (Dragon's Team)
AssociationChinese Football Association (CFA)
ConfederationAFC (Asia)
Sub-confederationEAFF (East Asia)
Head coachAleksandar Janković
CaptainWu Xi
Most capsLi Weifeng (112)
Top scorerHao Haidong (39)
Home stadiumVarious
FIFA codeCHN
First colours
Second colours
FIFA ranking
Current 80 Steady (21 September 2023)[1]
Highest37 (December 1998)
Lowest109 (March 2013)
First international
 Philippines 2–1 China 
(Manila, Philippines; 1 February 1913)[2]
Biggest win
 China 19–0 Guam 
(Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam; 26 January 2000)
Biggest defeat
 Brazil 8–0 China 
(Recife, Brazil; 10 September 2012)
World Cup
Appearances1 (first in 2002)
Best resultGroup stage (2002)
Asian Cup
Appearances12 (first in 1976)
Best resultRunners-up (1984, 2004)
EAFF Championship
Appearances9 (first in 2003)
Best resultChampions (2005, 2010)
China Cup
Appearances3 (first in 2017)
Best resultThird place (2017)

China won the EAFF East Asian Cup in 2005 and 2010, was runner-up at the AFC Asian Cup in 1984 and 2004 and made its sole FIFA World Cup appearance in 2002, losing all matches without scoring a goal.

History

History (1913–1949)

Chinese Olympic football team in 1936

China's first-ever international representative match was arranged by Elwood Brown, president of the Philippine Athletic Association, who proposed the creation of the Far Eastern Championship Games, a multi-sport event considered to be a precursor to the Asian Games.[3] He invited China to participate in the inaugural 1913 Far Eastern Championship Games held in the Philippines, which included association football within the schedule. To represent them, it was decided that the winner of the football at the Chinese National Games in 1910 should have the honour to represent the country, where it was won by South China Football Club.[4] The club's founder and coach Mok Hing (Chinese: 莫慶) would become China's first coach and on 4 February 1913 in a one-off tournament game held in the Manila he led China to a 2–1 defeat against the Philippines national football team.[5]

The political unrest of the Xinhai Revolution that mired China's participation in the first tournament, especially in renaming the team as Republic of China national football team, did not stop Shanghai being awarded the 1915 Far Eastern Championship Games. Once again South China Football Club, now known as South China Athletic Association won the right to represent the nation. This time in a two legged play-off against the Philippines, China won the first game 1–0 and then drew the second 0–0 to win their first ever tournament.[6] With the games being the first and only regional football tournament for national teams outside Britain, China looked to establish themselves as a regional powerhouse by winning a total of nine championships.[7]

The Chinese Football Association was founded in 1924 and then was first affiliated with FIFA in 1931.[8] With these foundations in place China looked to establish themselves within the international arena and along with Japan were the first Asian sides to participate in the Football at the Summer Olympics when they competed within the 1936 Summer Olympics held in Germany. At the tournament China were knocked out within their first game at the round of 16 when they were beaten by Great Britain Olympic football team 2–0 on 6 August 1936.[9]

On 7 July 1937 the Second Sino-Japanese War officially erupted, which saw the relations between China and Japan completely eroded especially once it was announced that Japan would hold the 1938 Far Eastern Championship Games.[10] The tournament would be officially cancelled while Japan held their own tournament called the 2600th Anniversary of the Japanese Empire, which included the Japanese puppet states Manchukuo and the collaborationist National Reorganised Government of China based in occupied Nanjing. But none of the top Chinese players competed in the Japanese Empire anniversary games.[11] None of the games during the Second Sino-Japanese War are officially recognized and once the war ended on 9 September 1945 China looked to the Olympics once again for international recognition. On 2 August 1948 China competed in the Football at the 1948 Summer Olympics where they were once again knocked out in the last sixteen, this time by Turkey national football team in a 4–0 defeat.[12] When the players returned they found the country in the midst of the Chinese Civil War. When it ended, the team had been split into two, one called the People's Republic of China national football team and the other called Republic of China national football team (later renamed Chinese Taipei national football team).[13]

Early People's Republic (1950–1976)

The newly instated People's Republic of China reformed CFA before having FIFA acknowledge their 1931 membership on 14 June 1952.[14] Finland, who were one of the first nations to hold diplomatic relations with China's new government, invited the country to take part in the 1952 Summer Olympics. Li Fenglou would become the country's first permanent manager to lead them in the tournament, however the Chinese delegation was delayed and they missed the entire competition, nevertheless the Finland national football team would still greet Li and the Chinese team with a friendly game on 4 August 1952 making it People's Republic of China's official first game, which ended in a 4–0 defeat.[15][16] In preparation for entering their first FIFA competition, China sent a young squad to train in Hungary in 1954.[17] However, when they entered the 1958 FIFA World Cup qualification process China were knocked out by Indonesia.[18]

On 7 June 1958, China stopped participating within any FIFA recognised football events when FIFA officially started to recognise the Republic of China as a different country.[14] This sparked a diplomatic argument that had already seen China withdraw from the 1956 Summer Olympics for the same reasons.[19] For years the People's Republic of China would only play in friendlies with nations who recognized them as the sole heir to the China name.[18] On 25 October 1971 the United Nations would recognise the People's Republic country as the sole heir to the China name in their General Assembly Resolution 2758 act.[20][21][22] Due to this hearing in 1973, the Nationalist Chinese team, which had been using the name "Republic of China", would stop using that name and would eventually rename themselves as "Chinese Taipei" in 1980.[23] These acts would see China rejoin the international sporting community, first by becoming a member of the Asian Football Confederation in 1974 and by rejoining FIFA again in 1979.[24][25]

Asian underdogs (1980–2009)

The 1974 Asian Games reintroduced the team back into international football while the 1976 AFC Asian Cup saw them came third.[26]

Chinese players in a match against Saudi Arabia at the 1984 AFC Asian Cup

In 1980, China participated in the 1982 FIFA World Cup qualifiers for a berth in the 1982 World Cup, but they lost a play-off game against New Zealand.[27] During the 1986 FIFA World Cup qualifiers for the 1986 World Cup, China faced Hong Kong at home in the final match of the first qualifying round on 19 May 1985 where China only needed a draw to advance. However, Hong Kong produced a 2–1 upset win which resulted in riots inside and outside the stadium in Beijing.[28] During the 1990 FIFA World Cup qualifiers, China again reached the final round. They just missed out on qualifying as they conceded two goals in the final three minutes against Qatar in their final group match.[29] During the 1994 FIFA World Cup qualifiers – when they were led by their first ever foreign manager, Klaus Schlapner – China failed to reach the final round of qualifying, coming second behind Iraq.[30]

In 1987, the first Chinese footballers moved abroad when future national team player Xie Yuxin joined FC Zwolle (Netherlands) and ex-national teamer Gu Guangming joined SV Darmstadt 98 (Germany). In 1988, national team captain Jia Xiuquan and striker Liu Haiguang both joined FK Partizan (Yugoslavia).[31][32]

After failing to reach the 1998 FIFA World Cup, China appointed Serbian manager Bora Milutinović as coach of the national team, and China saw its fortune increased. The country managed to take fourth-place finish in the 2000 AFC Asian Cup where the Chinese side performed well, and only fell to heavyweights Japan and South Korea by one goal margin.[33] The good performance in Lebanon boosted the confidence of Chinese side, and in 2002 FIFA World Cup qualifiers, China lost only one and drew only one, winning all the remaining games, most notably an important 1–0 win over Oman, to finally reach the 2002 FIFA World Cup, its first and only World Cup up to date.[34] In the 2002 World Cup, China was eliminated after three matches without gaining a single point nor even scoring a goal during their participation in the tournament.[35]

China hosted the 2004 AFC Asian Cup, ultimately fell 1–3 to Japan in a final match. The match's outcome sparked anger among Chinese supporters, who rioted in response to bad refereeing.[36] There were an estimated 250 million viewers for the match, the largest single-event sports audience in the country's history at that time.[37]

After winning the 2005 East Asian Football Championship following a 2–0 win against North Korea,[38] they started qualification for the 2007 AFC Asian Cup. During this time, the team became the subject of immense criticism and national embarrassment in the media when they had managed to score only one goal, Shao Jiayi's penalty kick during injury time, against Singapore at home and only managed a draw with Singapore in the away game. During preparations for the 2007 AFC Asian Cup, the team spent the weeks leading up to the tournament on a tour of the United States. While the 4–1 loss to the United States was unexpected,[39] a 1–0 loss to Major League Soccer side Real Salt Lake which finished bottom of the league in the 2007 season caused serious concern.[40][41]

During the 2007 AFC Asian Cup, the team played three group matches, winning against Malaysia, drawing with Iran after leading 2–1, and losing 3–0 to Uzbekistan. After high expectations, China's performance at the tournament drew criticism online which condemned the team's members and even the association. Zhu was later replaced as manager by Vladimir Petrović after these performances.[42] Some commented that China's reliance on foreign managers for the past decade had been an indicator of its poor domestic manager development.[43]

In June 2008, China failed to qualify for the 2010 FIFA World Cup, losing against Qatar and Iraq at home. After the 2008 Summer Olympics, Petrović was sacked as the manager and Yin Tiesheng was announced as the team's caretaker.

Stagnation (2010–present)

In April 2009, China appointed Gao Hongbo as the new manager, replacing Yin Tiesheng. His arrival saw China opt for a new strategy, turning towards ground passing tactics and adopting the 4–2–3–1 formation. It was noted that Chinese footballers had relied too heavily on the long ball tactic for almost a decade. Wei Di, the chief of the Chinese Football Association, stressed that, "Anytime, no matter win or loss, they must show their team spirit and courage. I hope, after one year's effort, the national team can give the public a new image."[44] Gao was knocked out of the 2011 AFC Asian Cup's group stage. His winning percentage (65%), the highest for a Chinese manager since Nian Weisi (67.86%), did not defer the Chinese Football Association from replacing him with José Antonio Camacho in August 2011, less than a month before the qualification process for the 2014 FIFA World Cup.

Appointment of José Antonio Camacho

On 13 August 2011, José Antonio Camacho was appointed as the new manager of the team, signing a three-year deal for a reported annual salary of $8 million.[45] Wei Di, CFA chief, explained the decision as being part of a long-term plan to help the country catch up with rivals Japan and South Korea. He noted that, "Compared with their neighbours Japan and South Korea, Chinese football is lagging far behind, we need to work with a long-term view and start to catch up with a pragmatic approach. The citizens expects heavily for China to qualify for the 2014 FIFA World Cup held in Brazil. They are afraid that changing the coach at the last moment may cause bad effect to the team's qualifying prospect. I can totally understand that. But we do not have any time to waste."[46]

Yu Hongchen, the vice-president of the Chinese Football Administrative Centre, also stated, "The qualifying stage of 2014 World Cup is just a temporary task for him. Even if the task is failed, Camacho will not lose the job. When we started to find a new coach for the national team, we mainly focus on European countries such as Germany, the Netherlands and Spain. First of all, they have advanced football concepts, and secondly they have a productive youth training system, which we can learn from. We hope he can help us to find a suitable style."[46]

Camacho managed the team to an 8–0 lost against Brazil in a friendly match on 10 September 2012 which would go on record as China's biggest ever international defeat. This massive loss also succumbed China to their worst ever FIFA ranking (109th).[47]

Camacho then led China during their qualification process for the 2015 AFC Asian Cup whereby losing the first group match 2–1 to Saudi Arabia.[48] After a 5–1 lost against Thailand in a friendly match, Camacho was sacked a week later and with Fu Bo assigned as the caretaker. In light of continued struggles, in 2015, General Secretary of the Chinese Communist Party Xi Jinping expressed the goal of having China's men's national team be the top team in Asia by 2030 and the following year China revealed its ambitious blueprint to be the best in the world by 2050.[49]

Alain Perrin and Gao Hongbo returns

The Chinese national team in Tehran before a 2018 FIFA World Cup qualification match against Iran

After Camacho, there was Alain Perrin, who finally led China to qualify for the 2015 AFC Asian Cup, which also included luck from the Thailand–Lebanon encounter, in which Thailand lost but salvaged an important goal by Adisak Kraisorn to help improve China's goal difference with the Lebanese.[50] Soon after that, Perrin led China into a series of friendlies, where some positive results against Macedonia, Kuwait, Paraguay and Thailand boosted some optimism.

In the 2015 AFC Asian Cup, Perrin's China was placed in a group with Saudi Arabia, Uzbekistan and North Korea. China emerged victoriously in all three games, qualified for the knockout stage for the first time since the 2004 edition.[51][52] The Chinese Dragons then lost to host Australia 0–2 with Tim Cahill scoring a brace.[53]

Despite this, China's 2018 FIFA World Cup qualifiers immediately represented a huge problem for the Chinese side; they were held goalless by Hong Kong at home twice, and lost to Qatar. Perrin was sacked for the team's poor performance at the middle of the second round following another goalless draw to Hong Kong,[54] and former coach Gao Hongbo returned to the role on 3 February 2016, where he had to face a task of guiding China in at the expense of North Korea which had a better second-place ranking than China. Gao's first two matches were consecutive wins against Maldives and Qatar, and with North Korea suddenly slipping out against the Philippines, these results secured the team's passage to the 2019 AFC Asian Cup and entering the final qualifying stage for the World Cup.

China continued their World Cup hunt by a 2–3 defeat to South Korea;[55] and a goalless draw to AFC's then highest ranked Iran at home.[56] However, China followed that with a 0–1 loss at home to Syria and 0–2 away to Uzbekistan next month. Gao Hongbo resigned. His team had been winless in the first four matches of the final qualifying stage for the World Cup, including a home loss to Syria which was criticised by a number of fans.[57]

Marcello Lippi's tenure

Chinese players after win against Thailand at 2019 AFC Asian Cup Round of 16

On 22 October 2016, Marcello Lippi was appointed manager of the team ahead for the last remaining matches.[58] A match saw China defeat South Korea for the first time in a FIFA-sanctioned tournament, amidst the heat of tensions over South Korea's deployment of THAAD.[59] However, China's away loss to Iran and a 2–2 draw to Syria meant China was unable to compete with and dragged behind by Syria who managed a 2–2 draw with Iran and not to be qualified for the 2018 World Cup under Lippi's tenure, but improvements could be seen following two late wins over Uzbekistan and Qatar.[60]

Lippi led the side during the final stage of the 2019 AFC Asian Cup, where China won 2–1 to Kyrgyzstan and 3–0 to Philippines, before losing 2–0 to group leaders South Korea on 16 January.[61] China then beat Thailand 2–1 to earn a place in the quarter-finals, where it was knocked 3–0 out by Iran; Lippi subsequently confirmed his departure from the team.[62]


Another Italian and former Ballon d'Or winner, Fabio Cannavaro was appointed as the next China's manager in conjunction with coaching Guangzhou Evergrande but he stepped down after only two matches.[63]

Lacked of option in searching for a new coach, CFA re-appointed Marcello Lippi.[64] To improve the team, China had begun a series of naturalization on foreign-based players, with Nico Yennaris, an English-born Cypriot,[65] and Tyias Browning, another English-born player, being naturalized.[66] Subsequently, Elkeson, a Brazilian player with no Chinese ancestry, was naturalized.[67] Despite the process of naturalization, the 2022 FIFA World Cup qualification for China proved to be rockier than expected, the team could only beat the Maldives and Guam, before being held goalless in the Philippines and followed with a denting 1–2 away lost to Syria, and Lippi resigned as coach.[68]

2002 FIFA World Cup ace Li Tie was appointed as China's head coach on 2 January 2020.[69] Trailing behind Syria by five points before Li took charge, China were still unable to reclaim their first place but nonetheless managed to win all of their remaining fixtures, including an important 2–0 win over the Philippines and notably a 3–1 win over Syria to guarantee them as the best second-placed team, thus reaching the third round.[70][71]

In the third round, China shared Group B with Asian powerhouses Japan, Australia and Saudi Arabia, alongside Oman and Vietnam. The Chinese started poorly with two losses to Australia and Japan in Doha due to the COVID-19 pandemic at home preventing the country from hosting.[72][73] After this poor start, China salvaged five points in the next four matches, including a hard-fought 3–2 win over Vietnam and two 1–1 draws to Oman and especially Australia, all occurring in Sharjah, the UAE.[74][75] However, despite these improvements, Li Tie was sacked on 2 December 2021 amidst heavy criticism.[76]

After Li Tie's resignation, his World Cup teammate Li Xiaopeng took the head coach position with immense pressure.[77] China's first game under Li Xiaopeng, however, was a 0–2 away loss to Japan in Saitama, effectively ending China's hopes of finishing in the top two and could only rely on the play-offs.[78] Yet, on 1 February 2022, coinciding with the traditional Lunar New Year in China, the Chinese stumbled to a shock 1–3 away loss to Vietnam in Hanoi, officially extending China's hunt for a second World Cup appearance to 24 years.[79] This agonising defeat, the first in Chinese football history to its southern neighbour on a special day for both nations, triggered widespread public criticism and condemnation among Chinese fans.[80] With their World Cup hopes completely lost, China grabbed a solitary point coming from a 1–1 draw with the Saudis before losing to Oman 0–2 in Muscat, finishing fifth with two more points than Vietnam.

After poor forms in the 2022 FIFA World Cup qualifications, China took part in the 2022 EAFF E-1 Football Championship under interim manager Aleksandar Janković. Within the leadership of the Serbian, China won four points, finishing third after a 1–0 win over Hong Kong, though for the first time in 12 years, China did not lose to Japan away.[81] Because of this impressive result, Janković was named the permanent coach of the China national team in 2023, with the aim to guide China to qualify for the 2026 FIFA World Cup.[82]

Team image

The team is colloquially termed "Dragon's Team" (Chinese: 龙之队; pinyin: Lóng zhī duì),[83] "Team China" (Chinese: 中国队), the "National Team" (Chinese: 国家队) or "Guózú" (Chinese: 国足, short for Chinese: 国家足球队; pinyin: Guójiā Zúqiú Duì; lit. 'national football team').[84]

China's home kit is traditionally all-red with a white or yellow trim while their away kit is traditionally an inverted version of the home kit, fully white with a red trim. During the 1996 AFC Asian Cup, China employed a third kit which was all blue with a white trim and was used against Saudi Arabia during the tournament.[85] The team has also started to use cooling vests in certain warmer climates.[86] After decades of having Adidas producing the team's kits, China's current kit has been produced and manufactured by Nike since 2015.

Kit supplierPeriodContract
announcement
Contract
duration
ValueNotes
Germany Adidas 1991–2014
United States Nike 2015–present
2015-01-03
2015–2026 (11 years) $16 million per year [87][88]

Japan

China's rivalry with Japan was exemplified after their 3–1 defeat in the 2004 AFC Asian Cup Final on home soil.[89] The subsequent rioting by Chinese fans at the Workers' Stadium was said to be provoked by controversial officiating during the tournament and the heightened anti-Japanese sentiment at the time.

South Korea

Another rivalry is with neighbour South Korea who China played 27 matches against between 1978 and 2010, without winning a single match. The media coined the term "Koreaphobia" to describe this phenomenon, but China finally registered its first win against South Korea on 10 February 2010, winning 3–0 during the 2010 East Asian Football Championship and eventually going on to win the tournament.

Hong Kong

A rivalry with Hong Kong has been created due to political tensions as well as issues during 2018 World Cup qualification. With Hong Kong fans booing the Chinese national anthem, which Hong Kong share with China, 2018 World Cup qualifier matches were also very tense with both matches resulting in 0–0 draws.

Uzbekistan

The rivalry with Uzbekistan is a recent development, but also stemmed from previous results which saw China suffered shock defeats to the hand of Uzbekistan in several competitive football games. The two nations first met each other in the final for the 1994 Asian Games, where Uzbekistan, with a squad depleted due to the collapse of the Soviet Union, stunned China with a 4–2 win to claim gold in Uzbekistan's debut in any major football tournament; the game had been accused of match-fixing, though evidence have yet to emerge.[90]

This was soon repeated again in the 1996 AFC Asian Cup, which was Uzbekistan's debut in a major competitive football tournament, which China suffered a blowing 0–2 defeat to the Uzbeks, with both goals scored in the dying times right in what would be Uzbekistan's first-ever Asian Cup fixture. Since then, Uzbekistan has frequently become a problematic opponent for China, with China often lost more than won in competitive games against the Uzbeks.[91] China has never beaten Uzbekistan in Uzbek soil, with all two visiting trips ended in defeats for the Chinese.

Results and fixtures

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

2023

23 March 2023 (2023-03-23) Friendly New Zealand  0–0  China Auckland, New Zealand
19:00 UTC+13 Report Stadium: Mount Smart Stadium
Attendance: 12,049
Referee: Sivakorn Pu-udom (Thailand)
26 March 2023 (2023-03-26) Friendly New Zealand  2–1  China Wellington, New Zealand
16:00 UTC+13
Report
Stadium: Sky Stadium
Referee: Kim Woo-sung (South Korea)
16 June 2023 (2023-06-16) Friendly China  4–0  Myanmar Dalian, China
18:30 UTC+8 Report Stadium: Dalian Barracuda Bay Football Stadium
Attendance: 27,651
Referee: Ryo Tanimoto (Japan)
20 June 2023 (2023-06-20) Friendly China  2–0  Palestine Dalian, China
19:35 UTC+8 Report Stadium: Dalian Barracuda Bay Football Stadium
Attendance: 16,151
Referee: Yudai Yamamoto (Japan)
9 September 2023 (2023-09-09) Friendly China  1–1  Malaysia Chengdu, China
19:35 UTC+8 Report
Stadium: Chengdu Phoenix Hill Football Stadium
Attendance: 26,138
Referee: Abdulhadi Al-Ruaile (Qatar)
12 September 2023 (2023-09-12) Friendly China  0–1  Syria Chengdu, China
19:35 UTC+8 Report
Stadium: Chengdu Phoenix Hill Football Stadium
Attendance: 12,367
Referee: Sami Al-Jires (Saudi Arabia)
10 October 2023 (2023-10-10) Friendly China  2–0  Vietnam Dalian, China
19:35 UTC+8
Report Stadium: Dalian Sports Centre Stadium
Attendance: 9,219
Referee: Woo Chun Sing (Hong Kong)
16 October 2023 (2023-10-16) Friendly China  1–2  Uzbekistan Dalian, China
19:35 UTC+8 Report Stadium: Dalian Sports Centre Stadium
Attendance: 12,868
Referee: Tam Ping Wun (Hong Kong)
16 November 2023 (2023-11-16) World Cup qualification Thailand  v  China Bangkok, Thailand
19:30 UTC+7 Stadium: Rajamangala Stadium
21 November 2023 (2023-11-21) World Cup qualification China  v  South Korea Shenzhen, China
20:00 UTC+8 Stadium: Shenzhen Universiade Sports Centre Stadium

2024

5 January 2024 (2024-01-05) Friendly China  v  Sweden TBD, United Arab Emirates
--:-- UTC+8 Stadium: TBD
13 January 2024 (2024-01-13) AFC Asian Cup China  v  Tajikistan Doha, Qatar
17:30 UTC+3 Stadium: Abdullah bin Khalifa Stadium
17 January 2024 (2024-01-17) AFC Asian Cup Lebanon  v  China Doha, Qatar
14:30 UTC+3 Stadium: Al Thumama Stadium
22 January 2024 (2024-01-22) AFC Asian Cup Qatar  v  China Al Rayyan, Qatar
18:00 UTC+3 Stadium: Khalifa International Stadium
21 March 2024 (2024-03-21) World Cup qualification Singapore  v  China Kallang, Singapore
--:--  Stadium: National Stadium
26 March 2024 (2024-03-26) World Cup qualification China  v  Singapore China
--:-- UTC+8
6 June 2024 (2024-06-06) World Cup qualification China  v  Thailand China
--:-- UTC+8
11 June 2024 (2024-06-11) World Cup qualification South Korea  v  China South Korea
--:-- UTC+9
  • 1 : Non FIFA 'A' international match

Coaching staff

Source[92]
Position Name
Technical director China Li Jianxiao
Head coach Serbia Aleksandar Janković
Team manager China Qi Jun
Assistant coach Serbia Marko Perovic
China Shao Jiayi
China Zhi Zheng
Goalkeeper coach China Ou Chuliang
China Li Leilei
Conditioning coach Brazil Irwing De Freitas
Fitness coach China Hu Yu
Video analyst China Jiang Yong
China Zhang Bin
Match analyst China Sui Han
Therapists China Jin Ri
China Gao Jianguo
China Hang Yanrui
Manager China Wang Yue
Logistics China Guo Rui
China Chen Xi
China Che Hengzhi
Doctor China Wang Shucheng
Team coordinator China Yuan Jiayang

1930–1948

1951–present

As of 13.October 2023

Players

Current squad

The following 26 players were called up for the friendly matches in October 2023.[93]

Caps and goals are correct as of 16 October 2023, after the match against  Uzbekistan.

No. Pos. Player Date of birth (age) Caps Goals Club
1 1GK Yan Junling (1991-01-28) 28 January 1991 51 0 China Shanghai Port
23 1GK Wang Dalei (1989-01-10) 10 January 1989 28 0 China Shandong Taishan
30 1GK Ma Zhen (1998-06-01) 1 June 1998 0 0 China Shanghai Shenhua

2 2DF Jiang Guangtai (1994-05-30) 30 May 1994 20 1 China Shanghai Port
3 2DF Zhu Chenjie (2000-08-23) 23 August 2000 20 1 China Shanghai Shenhua
4 2DF Li Lei (1992-05-30) 30 May 1992 10 0 China Beijing Guoan
18 2DF Yeljan Shinar (1999-06-09) 9 June 1999 1 0 China Nantong Zhiyun
19 2DF Liu Yang (1995-06-17) 17 June 1995 19 0 China Shandong Taishan
24 2DF Wu Shaocong (2000-03-20) 20 March 2000 5 0 Turkey Gençlerbirliği
26 2DF Jiang Shenglong (2000-12-24) 24 December 2000 2 0 China Shanghai Shenhua
27 2DF He Yupeng (1999-12-05) 5 December 1999 5 0 China Dalian Pro

6 3MF Wang Shangyuan (1993-06-02) 2 June 1993 8 0 China Henan
8 3MF Li Ke (1993-05-24) 24 May 1993 10 0 China Beijing Guoan
10 3MF Xie Pengfei (1993-06-29) 29 June 1993 11 0 China Wuhan Three Towns
13 3MF Wang Qiuming (1993-01-09) 9 January 1993 4 1 China Tianjin Jinmen Tiger
14 3MF Chen Pu (1997-01-15) 15 January 1997 6 0 China Shandong Taishan
15 3MF Wu Xi (1989-02-19) 19 February 1989 85 9 China Shanghai Shenhua
21 3MF Dai Wai Tsun (1999-07-25) 25 July 1999 8 0 China Shanghai Shenhua
22 3MF Gao Tianyi (1998-07-01) 1 July 1998 3 0 China Beijing Guoan

7 4FW Wu Lei (1991-11-19) 19 November 1991 87 31 China Shanghai Port
9 4FW Ai Kesen (1989-07-13) 13 July 1989 18 4 China Chengdu Rongcheng
11 4FW Wei Shihao (1995-04-08) 8 April 1995 22 3 China Wuhan Three Towns
20 4FW Fang Hao (2000-01-03) 3 January 2000 5 0 China Beijing Guoan
28 4FW Xie Weijun (1997-11-14) 14 November 1997 1 0 China Tianjin Jinmen Tiger
29 4FW Tan Long (1988-04-01) 1 April 1988 13 2 China Changchun Yatai

Recent call-ups

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

Pos. Player Date of birth (age) Caps Goals Club Latest call-up
GK Liu Dianzuo (1990-06-25) 25 June 1990 3 0 China Wuhan Three Towns v.  Syria, 12 September 2023

DF Zhang Linpeng (1989-05-09) 9 May 1989 98 6 China Shanghai Port v.  Syria, 12 September 2023
DF Wang Shenchao (1989-02-08) 8 February 1989 21 0 China Shanghai Port v.  Syria, 12 September 2023
DF Deng Hanwen (1995-01-08) 8 January 1995 15 0 China Wuhan Three Towns v.  Syria, 12 September 2023
DF Gao Zhunyi (1995-08-21) 21 August 1995 14 0 China Wuhan Three Towns v.  Syria, 12 September 2023
DF Li Shuai (1995-06-18) 18 June 1995 2 0 China Shanghai Port v.  Syria, 12 September 2023
DF Ming Tian (1995-04-08) 8 April 1995 5 0 China Tianjin Jinmen Tiger v.  Palestine, 20 June 2023
DF Ren Hang (1989-02-23) 23 February 1989 32 1 China Wuhan Three Towns v.  New Zealand, 23 March 2023INJ
DF Liu Yiming (1995-02-28) 28 February 1995 13 0 China Wuhan Three Towns v.  New Zealand, 23 March 2023
DF Li Ang (1993-09-15) 15 September 1993 8 0 China Shanghai Port v.  New Zealand, 23 March 2023

MF Xu Xin (1994-04-19) 19 April 1994 12 1 China Shanghai Port v.  Syria, 12 September 2023
MF Zhang Jiaqi (1991-12-09) 9 December 1991 7 0 China Zhejiang v.  Syria, 12 September 2023
MF Lin Liangming (1997-06-04) 4 June 1997 5 2 China Dalian Pro v.  Syria, 12 September 2023
MF Sun Guowen (1993-09-30) 30 September 1993 4 0 China Shandong Taishan v.  Syria, 12 September 2023
MF Liu Binbin (1993-06-16) 16 June 1993 14 1 China Shandong Taishan v.  Palestine, 20 June 2023
MF He Chao (1995-04-19) 19 April 1995 7 0 China Wuhan Three Towns v.  New Zealand, 23 March 2023

FW Wang Ziming (1996-08-05) 5 August 1996 5 0 China Beijing Guoan v.  Syria, 12 September 2023
FW Ba Dun (1995-09-16) 16 September 1995 3 1 China Tianjin Jinmen Tiger v.  Syria, 12 September 2023

INJ Withdrew due to injury
PRE Preliminary squad
RET Retired from the national team
SUS Serving suspension

Individual records

As of 16 October 2023.[94]
Players in bold are still active with China.

Manager records

Most manager appearances
China Gao Fengwen: 56 (1986-1990)

Team records

Biggest victory
19–0 vs. Guam, 26 January 2000

Competitive record

FIFA World Cup

China has only appeared at one World Cup with the appearance being in the 2002 FIFA World Cup where they finished bottom of the group which included a 4–0 loss to Brazil.[95]

Qualification record
Year Round Position Pld W D* L GF GA Pld W D L GF GA
Uruguay 1930 Did not enter Declined participation
Italy 1934
France 1938
Brazil 1950
Switzerland 1954
Sweden 1958 Did not qualify 3 1 1 1 4 5
Chile 1962 Did not enter Declined participation
England 1966
Mexico 1970
Germany 1974
Argentina 1978
Spain 1982 Did not qualify 12 7 2 3 19 8
Mexico 1986 6 4 1 1 23 2
Italy 1990 11 7 0 4 18 9
United States 1994 8 6 0 2 18 4
France 1998 14 8 3 3 24 16
South Korea Japan 2002 Group stage 31st 3 0 0 3 0 9 14 12 1 1 38 5
Germany 2006 Did not qualify 6 5 0 1 14 1
South Africa 2010 8 3 3 2 14 4
Brazil 2014 8 5 0 3 23 9
Russia 2018 18 8 5 5 35 11
Qatar 2022 18 7 4 7 39 22
Canada Mexico United States 2026 To be determined To be determined
Total Group stage 1/22 3 0 0 3 0 9 126 73 20 33 269 96

AFC Asian Cup

Qualification record
Year Round Position Pld W D L GF GA Pld W D L GF GA
Hong Kong 1956Did not enter Did not enter
South Korea 1960Did not enter Did not enter
Israel 1964Did not enter Did not enter
Iran 1968Did not enter Did not enter
Thailand 1972Did not enter Did not enter
Iran 1976Third place3rd411224 5401144
Kuwait 1980Group stage7th411295 320152
Singapore 1984Runners-up2nd6402114 4400150
Qatar 1988Fourth place4th622275 5230101
Japan 1992Third place3rd513166 330070
United Arab Emirates 1996Quarter-finals8th410367 3300161
Lebanon 2000Fourth place4th6222117 3300290
China 2004Runners-up2nd6321136 Qualified as hosts
Indonesia Malaysia Thailand Vietnam 2007Group stage9th311176 632173
Qatar 20119th311144 6411135
Australia 2015Quarter-finals7th430154 622256
United Arab Emirates 20196th530277 8521271
Qatar 2023Qualified 8611303
Saudi Arabia 2027To be determined To be determined
Total 13/180 Titles562313208865 583911816626

Summer Olympics

Year Result Pos Pld W D L GF GA
France 1900 to Netherlands 1928Did not enter
Germany 1936First round12100102
United Kingdom 194814100104
Finland 1952 to Australia 1956Withdrew after qualifying
Italy 1960 to Canada 1976Not an IOC member
Soviet Union 1980 to United States 1984Did not qualify
South Korea 1988First round14301205
Total3/25-5014011

For 1992 to 2016, see China national under-23 football team

Asian Games

Year Result Rank Pld W D L GF GA
India 1951Did not enter
1954Did not enter
Japan 1958Did not enter
1962Did not enter
1966Did not enter
1970Did not enter
Iran 1974First round10310274
Thailand 1978Third place37502165
India 1982Quarter-finals7421143
South Korea 198684211107
China 19906420284
Japan 1994Runners-up27511168
Thailand 1998Third place38602247
Total*7/13-37233118538

* Including 1998 onwards (until 2010)

For 2002 to 2018, see China national under-23 football team

EAFF East Asian Cup

Year Result Pld W D* L GF GA
Japan 2003Third place310234
South Korea 2005Champions312053
China 2008Third place310255
Japan 2010Champions321050
South Korea 2013Runners-up312076
China 2015Runners-up311133
Japan 2017Third place302145
South Korea 2019Third place310233
Japan 2022Third place311113
Total9/9279993632

Head-to-head record

As of 16 October 2023 after match against  Uzbekistan

  Positive Record   Neutral Record   Negative Record

1913–1923

All matches before the founding of Chinese Football Association in 1924 are not counted as A-level match by FIFA:

Honours

Continental

Regional

Minor tournaments

See also

Notes

  1. Also as a player.
  2. The Great Britain Olympic football team's matches at the 1936 Summer Olympics are counted as England's FIFA A-level match.
  3. Includes North Vietnam and South Vietnam before 1975.

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