Mauritania national football team

Mauritania
Nickname(s) Les Mourabitones
Association Fédération de Football de la République Islamique de Mauritanie
Confederation CAF (Africa)
Sub-confederation WAFU (West Africa)
Head coach Corentin Martins
Home stadium Stade Olympique
FIFA code MTN
First colours
Second colours
FIFA ranking
Current 107 Increase 8 (24 November 2016)
Highest 85 (December 1995)
Lowest 206 (November 2012 – January 2013)
Elo ranking
Current 129 (29 June 2016)
Highest 127 (28 May 2016)
Lowest 175 (27 November 1993)
First international
 Malagasy Republic 5–1 Mauritania Mauritania
(Abidjan, Côte d'Ivoire; 25 December 1961)
Biggest win
 Mauritania 8–2 Somalia 
(Beirut, Lebanon; 27 December 2006)
Biggest defeat
 Guinea 14–0 Mauritania Mauritania
(Guinea; 20 May 1972)

The Mauritania national football team (French: Équipe de Mauritanie de football; Arabic: منتخب موريتانيا لكرة القدم) nicknamed Les Mourabitones, is the national team of Mauritania and is controlled by the Fédération de Football de la République Islamique de Mauritanie and is a member of the Confederation of African Football. They have not qualified for the FIFA World Cup or Africa Cup of Nations. However, in the Amilcar Cabral Cup, a regional tournament for West Africa, Mauritania came fourth in 1980 on hosting the competition. The national football team of Mauritania were later runners-up in 1995, losing on penalties to Sierra Leone after the final finished 0–0.

History

1963–80

Mauritania played its first match after independence from France on 11 April 1963, against Congo Kinshasa (also making their debut) and lost 6–0.[1] The match was held in Dakar, Senegal as part of the L'Amitié tournament between African sides. It also saw the debuts of Chad, Liberia and Niger. Mauritania lost its three other matches in the tournament: 2–0 to the Ivory Coast, 4–0 to Tunisia and 7–0 to Congo Brazzaville.

Mauritania's first goal and avoidance of defeat came four years after their debut, in 1967 with a 1–1 draw away in Tanzania. This was their first match since the L'Amitié tournament in 1963.

Mauritania entered their first African Games qualification campaign, in an aim to reach the 1973 finals in Nigeria. They were drawn in a group against Mali and Guinea in Guinea. The first game was lost 11–0 to Mali, and on 20 May Mauritania lost 14–0 to Guinea. Mauritania did not qualify.

In May 1976 Mauritania entered qualification for the football at the 1976 Summer Olympics in Canada. They were drawn against neighbouring Mali in a two-legged qualifier. The first leg was lost 6–0 away on 1 May, and the second leg was lost 1–0 at home on 18 May. Mali did not qualify for the finals.

Mauritania's first entrance into World Cup qualification was an attempt to reach the 1978 FIFA World Cup in Argentina. In March 1976 they were one of four countries put into two preliminary matches at the start of the African qualification campaign. Mauritania's preliminary was a two-legged match against the Upper Volta (now Burkina Faso) and they drew the first match 1–1 away in Ouagadougou on 13 March. This was their first competitive avoidance of defeat, and their first avoidance of defeat since 1967. On 28 March, Mauritania lost their home leg in Nouakchott 2–0 and the Upper Volta advanced 3–1 on aggregate.

On 12 October 1980, seventeen years after their first game, Mauritania won for the first time by beating Mali 2–1 at home in a qualifier for the African Cup of Nations.[2] Mali won 3–2 on aggregate having won the first leg 2–0.

1998 FIFA World Cup qualification

Mauritania entered qualification for the 1998 FIFA World Cup in France, which was their first entry in twenty years and second overall. Again, they were drawn to face Burkina Faso in a two-legged preliminary. The first leg was played at home in Nouakchott in front of 15,000 people on 31 May 1996, one day before any other matches in the round. The match finished 0–0.[3] The second leg was played at the Stade du 4-Aout in Ouagadougou on 16 June 1996 in front of 13,000 people. Burkina Faso won 2–0 to advance to the final group phase.

2002 FIFA World Cup qualification

Mauritania entered the qualification for the 2002 FIFA World Cup and were placed in a preliminary against Tunisia, who had qualified for the previous tournament. On 7 April 2000 they hosted Tunisia at the Stade Olympique in Nouakchott. A crowd of 10,000 saw Tunisia win 2–1 with second-half goals from Radhi Jaidi and Hassen Gabsi.[4] In the second leg on 22 April 2000, Mauritania were beaten 3–0 at the Stade El Menzah in Tunis. The match was watched by only 3,000, despite a capacity of 45,000 in the ground.[5] Tunisia won 5–1 on aggregate and later qualified for the finals in South Korea and Japan.

2006 FIFA World Cup qualification

Mauritania were drawn with Zimbabwe in the preliminary of the African section of the 2006 FIFA World Cup qualification. On 12 October 2003 they lost the away leg 3–0 at the National Sports Stadium in Harare in front of 55,000 people.[6] In the home return at the Stade Olympique on 14 November 2003, Mauritania scored twice in the opening ten minutes to win 2–1, their first victory in a World Cup match. However, Zimbabwe advanced 4–2 on aggregate.

2010 FIFA World Cup qualification

The African qualification process was altered for the 2010 FIFA World Cup. Only the six lowest-ranked nations played a preliminary, a selection which for the first time did not include Mauritania. Mauritania played in Group 8 of the second qualifying round against Rwanda, Morocco and Ethiopia, and started with an away match at the Stade Regional Nyamirambo in Kigali, Rwanda on 31 May 2008. They lost 3–0 in front of 12,000 people.[7] The first home match was on 7 June at the Stade Nacional in Nouakchott against Morocco. The Moroccans scored two in each half before a late penalty by Dominique da Silva of Mauritania made the game 4–1.

On 13 June 2008 Mauritania hosted Ethiopia at the Stade Nacional and lost 1–0 after an injury-time winner from Saladin Said. On 22 June Mauritania lost 6–1 in the away match versus Ethiopia at the Addis Ababa Stadium. The Ethiopian forwards Fikru Tefera and Andualem Nigussie scored two goals each in a match which also saw Ba Yaoub of Mauritania sent off after 37 minutes, conceding a penalty to Fikru. The game was 1–1 at half time.[8] In September 2008 Ethiopia were expelled from the tournament due to government interferences in their football association and all of their results annulled.

Only 1,000 people saw Mauritania's next game at the Stade Nacional as they were beaten 1–0 by Rwanda on 6 September with a late goal by Bobo Bola. Mauritania finished their group campaign at the Stade Moulay Abdellah in Rabat, Morocco. Like the home game against the Moroccans, Mauritania were 4–0 down but scored the last goal, this time by Dahmed Ould Teguedi. Although the Moroccan stadium had a capacity of 52,000, only 1,472 saw the match. [9]

2015 Africa Cup of Nations qualification

Mauritania beat Mauritius 1–0 in the first leg of a preliminary round qualifier for the 2015 Africa Cup of Nations in Nouakchott. SC Bastia's midfielder Adama Ba scored the only goal midway through the first half.[10] The return leg in Curepipe ended 2–0 in favour of Mauritania. Scorers were Demba Sow and Moulaye Ahmed Bessam.[11]

In the first round, first leg match, Mauritania beat visitors Equatorial Guinea 1–0 in Nouakchott. The two sides headed into the break scoreless in their match played at Office du Complexe Olympique de Nouakchott. Hosts Mauritania broke the deadlock in the 76th minute through their Tunisian-based striker Ismaël Diakité. In the return match Equatorial Guinea beat Mauritania 3–0 in Malabo.[12] Equatorial Guinea won 3–1 on aggregate. However, on 3 July 2014, the CAF announced that Equatorial Guinea were disqualified for fielding the ineligible player Thierry Fidjeu in the tie, and as a result, Mauritania advanced to the second round.[13] Equatorial Guinea later qualified for the final tournament as replacement hosts.

2017 Africa Cup of Nations qualification

The draw put Mauritania in group M with South Africa, Cameroon and Gambia. The team lost their first match against Cameroon 0–1 thanks to a last minute goal by Vincent Aboubakar. They won their next game home in a 3–1 victory against the South African team in Nouakchott.

In the 26th of March 2016, Mauritania won 2–1 against Gambia in Nouakchott before drawing 0–0 against the same team four days late in Banjul, the Gambian capital. Mauritania will next face Cameroon in Nouakchott in June 2016 before playing their last qualification match away against South Africa in September of the same year.

Competitive record

World Cup record

FIFA World Cup
Appearances: 0
Year Round Position Pld W D L GF GA
Uruguay 1930 Part of  France
Italy 1934
France 1938
Brazil 1950
Switzerland 1954
Sweden 1958
Chile 1962Did not enter
England 1966
Mexico 1970
West Germany 1974
Argentina 1978Did not qualify
Spain 1982Did not enter
Mexico 1986
Italy 1990
United States 1994
France 1998Did not qualify
South Korea Japan 2002
Germany 2006
South Africa 2010
Brazil 2014Did not enter
Russia 2018Did not qualify
Qatar 2022To be determined
Total 0/20

Olympic Games record

Olympic Games
Appearances: 0
Year Round Position Pld W D L GF GA
1896 1960Part of  France (FRA)
Japan 1964Did not enter
Mexico 1968
Germany 1972
Canada 1976Did not qualify
Soviet Union 1980Did not enter
United States 1984Did not qualify
South Korea 1988Did not enter
Spain 1992Did not qualify
United States 1996Did not enter
Australia 2000
Greece 2004
China 2008
United Kingdom 2012
Brazil 2016Did not qualify
Japan 2020To be determined
Total0/25
  • Football at the Summer Olympics has been an under-23 tournament since the 1992 edition.

Africa Cup of Nations Record

Africa Cup of Nations
Appearances: 0
Year Round Position Pld W D L GF GA
Sudan 1957Part of  France
Egypt 1959
Ethiopia 1962Did not enter
Ghana 1963
Tunisia 1965
Ethiopia 1968
Sudan 1970
Cameroon 1972
Egypt 1974
Ethiopia 1976
Ghana 1978
Nigeria 1980Did not qualify
Libya 1982
Ivory Coast 1984Did not enter
Egypt 1986Did not qualify
Morocco 1988Did not enter
Algeria 1990Withdrew
Senegal 1992Did not qualify
Tunisia 1994Withdrew
South Africa 1996Did not qualify
Burkina Faso 1998
GhanaNigeria 2000Withdrew
Mali 2002Did not qualify
Tunisia 2004
Egypt 2006
Ghana 2008
Angola 2010
GabonEquatorial Guinea 2012Withdrew
South Africa 2013Did not enter
Equatorial Guinea 2015Did not qualify
Gabon 2017To be determined
Cameroon 2019
Ivory Coast 2021
Guinea 2023
Total 0/29

All-Africa Games Record

All-Africa Games
Appearances: 0
Year Round Position Pld W D L GF GA
Republic of the Congo 1965Did not enter
Nigeria 1973Did not qualify
Algeria 1978Did not enter
Kenya 1987
Egypt 1991
Zimbabwe 1995
South Africa 1999
Nigeria 2003Withdrew
Algeria 2007Did not enter
Mozambique 2011
Republic of the Congo 2015
Angola 2019To be determined
All Total 0/10

African Nations Championship record

African Nations Championship
Appearances: 1
Year Round Position Pld W D L GF GA
Ivory Coast 2009Did not qualify
Sudan 2011Withdrew
South Africa 2014Group Stage14th300348
Rwanda 2016To be determined
Kenya 2018
TotalGroup Stage1/3300348

WAFU Nations Cup record

WAFU Nations Cup
Appearances: 0
Year Round Position Pld W D L GF GA
Nigeria 2010Did not enter
Nigeria 2011
Ghana 2013
Total 0/3

Amílcar Cabral Cup

Amílcar Cabral Cup
Appearances: 16
Year Round Position Pld W D L GF GA
Guinea-Bissau 1979Group Stage7th3003411
The Gambia 1980Fourth Place4th411246
Mali 1981Group Stage5th310224
Cape Verde 19828th310238
Mauritania 1983Fourth Place4th520344
Sierra Leone 1984Group Stage8th300319
The Gambia 19858th300306
Senegal 19867th300315
Guinea 19876th301213
Guinea-Bissau 19887th302156
Mali 19897th200225
Senegal 1991Did not enter
Sierra Leone 1993Group Stage7th301205
Mauritania 1995Runners-up2nd532073
The Gambia 1997Group Stage6th302145
Cape Verde 20007th302134
Mali 20016th200224
Guinea 2005Did not enter
Guinea-Bissau 2007Withdrew
TotalRunners-up16/1951811323888

CEDEAO Cup record

CEDEAO Cup
Appearances: 1
Year Round Position Pld W D L GF GA
Nigeria 1977Unknown
Ivory Coast 1983Did not qualify
Senegal 1985Did not enter
Liberia 1987
Nigeria 1990
Ivory Coast 1991
TotalGroup Stage1/3300348

Arab Nations Cup record

Arab Nations Cup
Appearances: 1
Year Round Position Pld W D L GF GA
Lebanon 1963Did not enter
Kuwait 1964
Iraq 1966
Saudi Arabia 1985Group Stage5th200204
Jordan 1988Did not qualify
Syria 1992Withdrew
Qatar 1998Did not enter
Kuwait 2002
Saudi Arabia 2012
TotalGroup Stage1/9200204

Pan Arab Games record

Pan Arab Games
Appearances: 3
Year Round Position Pld W D L GF GA
Egypt 1953Part of  France (FRA)
Lebanon 1957
Morocco 1961Did not enter
United Arab Republic 1965
Syria 1976Group Stage7th6006213
Morocco 198511th3003212
Syria 1992Did not enter
Lebanon 1997Group Stage8th300326
Jordan 1999Did not enter
Algeria 2004No tournament
Egypt 2007Did not enter
Qatar 2011
TotalGroup Stage3/11120012631

Results and fixtures

2015

Players

Current squad

The following 24 players were called up for the friendly match against Tunisia on 15 November 2016.[14]
Caps and goals updated as of 6 October 2016 after the game against Canada.[15]

0#0 Pos. Player Date of birth (age) Caps Goals Club
1GK Boubacar Saleck Saladihne (1997-12-31) 31 December 1997 2 0 Mauritania Tevragh-Zeina
1GK Mohamed Abdellahi Jeddou (1990-04-10) 10 April 1990 0 0 Mauritania ASC Tidjikja
1GK Ahmed Belkeir 0 0 Mauritania ACS Ksar

2DF Mohamed Wade (1985-12-31) 31 December 1985 24 0 Mauritania FC Nouadhibou
2DF Abdoul Ba (1994-02-08) 8 February 1994 19 0 France Lens
2DF Aly Abeid (1997-12-11) 11 December 1997 14 2 Spain Levante Youth
2DF Moustapha Diaw (1996-12-31) 31 December 1996 14 0 Mauritania ASAC Concorde
2DF Sally Sarr (1986-05-06) 6 May 1986 2 0 Switzerland Luzern
2DF Bakary N'Diaye (1998-11-26) 26 November 1998 2 0 Mauritania Tevragh-Zeina
2DF Harouna Sy (1991-12-31) 31 December 1991 1 0 France Marseille Consolat
2DF Ahmed Ahmedou (1993-08-27) 27 August 1993 1 0 Spain CD Tháder
2DF Diadié Diarra (1993-01-23) 23 January 1993 0 0 France Gueugnon

3MF Taghiyoulla Denna (1986-06-15) 15 June 1986 25 4 Mauritania Tevragh-Zeina
3MF Abdoulaye Sileye Gaye (1991-09-13) 13 September 1991 22 0 Mauritania Tevragh-Zeina
3MF Khassa Camara (1992-10-22) 22 October 1992 21 0 Greece Xanthi
3MF Hacen (1997-12-31) 31 December 1997 20 0 Spain Atlético Levante
3MF Diallo Guidileye (1989-12-30) 30 December 1989 14 1 France Nancy
3MF Mohamed Yaly Dellahi (1997-11-01) 1 November 1997 13 1 Mauritania Tevragh-Zeina
3MF Moussa Samba (1988-12-30) 30 December 1988 11 1 Mauritania Tevragh-Zeina

4FW Ismaël Diakité (1991-12-13) 13 December 1991 29 3 Saudi Arabia Al-Feiha
4FW Boubacar Bagili (1994-12-07) 7 December 1994 16 5 Mauritania ACS Ksar
4FW Mamadou Niass (1994-06-04) 4 June 1994 14 2 Lebanon Al-Salam
4FW Mohamed Soudani (1995-09-17) 17 September 1995 2 0 Tunisia US Tataouine
4FW Mohamed M'Bareck 0 0 Mauritania ASAC Concorde

Recent call-ups

The following players have been called up for Mauritania within the past 12 months.

Pos. Player Date of birth (age) Caps Goals Club Latest call-up
GK Brahim Souleymane (1986-12-30) 30 December 1986 5 0 Mauritania ACS Ksar v.  South Africa, 2 September 2016
GK Sikhou Sylla 0 0 France FC Gobelins v.  Gambia, 29 March 2016

DF Oumar N'Diaye (1985-07-22) 22 July 1985 21 1 France Vannes v.  South Africa, 2 September 2016
DF Demba Sow (1993-07-03) 3 July 1993 9 1 France Gonfreville v.  Gabon, 28 May 2016
DF Hamza Ould Jawar (1995-07-11) 11 July 1995 2 0 France Caen v.  Gabon, 28 May 2016

MF El Hassen Teguedi 1 0 Mauritania ASC Tidjikja v.  Canada, 6 October 2016
MF Houssen Abderrahmane (1995-02-03) 3 February 1995 1 0 France Raon-Étape v.  Canada, 6 October 2016

FW Moulaye Ahmed (1987-12-04) 4 December 1987 28 9 Algeria CS Constantine v.  South Africa, 2 September 2016
FW Ely Cheikh Voulany (1988-12-31) 31 December 1988 17 2 Oman Al-Nahda v.  South Africa, 2 September 2016
FW Sidi Moctar Salem (1989-12-31) 31 December 1989 2 0 Mauritania ASAC Concorde v.  Canada, 6 October 2016
Notes

References

External sources

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