Skip to content
Surf Wiki
Save to docs
sports

From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base

Eritrea national football team

Men's association football team


Men's association football team

FieldValue
NameEritrea
Badgeflag of Eritrea.svg
Badge_size150px
Nickname() Red Sea Camels
AssociationEritrean National Football Federation (ENFF)
Sub-confederationCECAFA
(East & Central Africa)
ConfederationCAF (Africa)
CoachErmias Tewelde
CaptainRobel Teklemichael
Most capsYidnekachew Shimangus (23)
Top scorerYidnekachew Shimangus (6)
Home StadiumCicero Stadium
FIFA TrigrammeERI
FIFA Rank
FIFA max121
FIFA max dateAugust 2007
FIFA min207
FIFA min dateApril–May 2018, September 2019
Elo Rank
Elo max140
Elo max date1992
Elo min185
Elo min date2018
pattern_la1_eritrea1618a
pattern_b1_eritrea1618a
pattern_ra1_eritrea1618a
pattern_sh1_eritrea1618a
pattern_so1_eritrea1618a
leftarm1FFFFFF
body1FFFFFF
rightarm1FFFFFF
shorts1FFFFFF
socks1FFFFFF
pattern_la2_eritrea1618h
pattern_b2_eritrea1618h
pattern_ra2_eritrea1618h
pattern_sh2_eritrea1618h
pattern_so2_eritrea1618h
leftarm23C96FF
body23C96FF
rightarm23C96FF
shorts23C96FF
socks23C96FF
First game*Pre-independence*
1–1 **Eritrea** ETH
(Khartoum, Sudan; 26 June 1992)
*Post-independence*
0–1
(Mumias, Kenya; 29 November 1994)
Largest win0–3
(Kampala, Uganda; 13 December 2019)
1–4
(Kampala, Uganda; 17 December 2019)
Largest loss5–0
(Accra, Ghana; 28 February 1999)
6–1
(Luanda, Angola; 25 March 2007)
Regional nameCECAFA Cup
Regional cup apps12
Regional cup first[1994](1994-cecafa-cup)
Regional cup bestRunners-up ([2019](2019-cecafa-cup))
Note

the men's team

| Sub-confederation = CECAFA (East & Central Africa) 1–1 Eritrea ETH (Khartoum, Sudan; 26 June 1992) Post-independence 0–1 (Mumias, Kenya; 29 November 1994) (Kampala, Uganda; 13 December 2019) 1–4 (Kampala, Uganda; 17 December 2019) (Accra, Ghana; 28 February 1999) 6–1
(Luanda, Angola; 25 March 2007) The Eritrea national football team () represents Eritrea in men's international football and it is controlled by the Eritrean National Football Federation (ENFF). It is nicknamed the Red Sea Camels. It has never qualified for the finals of the FIFA World Cup or the Africa Cup of Nations. Asmara side Red Sea FC are the main supplier for the national team and the team represents both FIFA and Confederation of African Football (CAF). Out of 211 national teams in the FIFA men's team world rankings, they are the only one that is unranked.

History

An Eritrean team participated in a friendly tournament in Sudan in 1992, the year before Eritrea achieved independence. Eritrea participated in the 1994 CECAFA Cup, organised by the Council for East and Central Africa Football Association, even though the ENFF was not founded until 1996. The first full international was in the 1999 CECAFA Cup, the year after the ENFF joined the CAF and FIFA. They participated in the qualifying rounds of the 2000 African Cup of Nations and the 2002 World Cup, and subsequent editions until 2008. They have also appeared intermittently in the CECAFA Cup.

In the 2000 Africa Cup of Nations qualifiers, Eritrea managed a scoreless home draw versus Cameroon and a 1–0 home win over Mozambique. They finished second in their three team group, and advanced to a playoff round where they faced Senegal and Zimbabwe, but ultimately lost all four matches in that final stage.

In the first round of the qualifiers for the 2002 World Cup, they were drawn against Nigeria, and were defeated 4–0 in the away leg, after a goalless draw at home. The coach was Yilmaz Yuceturk.

In the first round of the 2006 World Cup qualifiers, Sudan was Eritrea's first round opponent. Eritrea lost the first leg 3–0, before another goalless draw in Asmara. The coach was Eritrean Tekie Abraha.

In group 6 of the qualifiers for the 2008 Africa Cup of Nations, under the guidance of Romanian Dorian Marin, Eritrea finished second behind Angola, failing to qualify for the final tournament. They beat Kenya twice and drew at home to Angola.

In the first round of the 2014 World Cup qualifiers, Eritrea faced Rwanda. The first leg in Asmara ended in a 1–1 draw (and saw Eritrea's first ever goal in a World Cup qualification match), but Rwanda took the second leg by a score of 3–1.

In the first round of the 2018 World Cup qualifiers, Eritrea faced Botswana. The first leg in Asmara saw Botswana win 2–0, and the second leg in Francistown saw Botswana win 3–1, with Botswana winning 5–1 on aggregate.

In the first round of the 2022 World Cup qualifiers, Eritrea faced Namibia. The first leg in Asmara saw Namibia win 2–1, and the second leg saw Namibia win 2–0; Namibia won 4–1 on aggregate.

Eritrea withdrew from the 2023 Africa Cup of Nations qualifiers and the 2026 World Cup qualifiers, and would not play a match for six years until May 2025, when they played two matches against the Niger A' team.

Withdrawals from major tournament qualifying

On 30 March 2014, Eritrea withdrew from the preliminary round of the 2015 Africa Cup of Nations qualifiers, likely due to a rising number of the Eritrean national team players defecting from Eritrea during away matches. They were intended to play against South Sudan, who were awarded a walkover.

On 2 March 2022, Eritrea withdrew from the preliminary round of the 2023 Africa Cup of Nations qualifiers due to the lack of a stadium that meets the requirements set by CAF to host its international matches. They were intended to play against Botswana. Botswana were also awarded a walkover.

In November 2023, Eritrea, who were drawn into Group E alongside Morocco, Zambia, Tanzania, Congo and Niger, pulled out of the 2026 World Cup qualifiers, citing the reason as being the refusal of Zemede Tekle, who is the Eritrean Commissioner for Sports and Culture, to participate in the playoffs.

Defections

Recent years have seen a high number of refugees leaving Eritrea, and some athletes travelling to competitions abroad have taken the opportunity to abscond. In December 2012, 17 Eritrean footballers and the team's doctor vanished after the CECAFA championship tournament in Uganda and all applied for asylum in the country. Four players of Red Sea FC defected after a CAF Champions League 2006 match in Nairobi, Kenya, and up to 12 members of the national side after the 2007 CECAFA Cup in Tanzania. Another 6 players sought asylum in Angola in March 2007 after a group 6 qualifying game for the 2008 Africa Cup of Nations. Three more players from the national team sought asylum in Sudan.

Eritrea withdrew from the 2008 CECAFA Cup, and from the common qualifying tournament shared by the 2010 World Cup and the 2010 Africa Cup of Nations. Given the number of players seeking asylum, the Eritrean government began requiring athletes to pay a 100,000 nakfa surety before traveling abroad.

Eritrea returned to the 2009 CECAFA Cup in Nairobi. A young squad was assembled with just 12 days' training. In Group B, they gained a surprise draw with Zimbabwe, lost narrowly to Rwanda, and beat Somalia 3–1. They were easily beaten 4–0 in the quarter-finals by Tanzania. Twelve squad members failed to report for the return flight, and sought the assistance of the Refugee Consortium of Kenya. They were believed to be in hiding in Eastleigh, an eastern suburb of Nairobi home to many immigrants. Nicholas Musonye, the secretary-general of CECAFA, feared that the government might react by refusing to let the team travel abroad in future. The twelve players were later granted interim asylum by the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees in Kenya. Eleven of these players have since travelled to Adelaide in Australia with two of them, Samuel Ghebrehiwet and Ambes Sium, signing for Gold Coast United in the A-League in August 2011.

In the first round of the qualifiers for the 2018 World Cup, ten players from the Eritrean football team refused to return home after playing a World Cup qualifying match in Botswana and were granted asylum there.

In September 2019, four members of the national Under-20 team sought asylum in Uganda after the team qualified for the semi-finals of a competition. A few months later in December, a further seven players selected for the international team refused to return home and sought asylum in Uganda after a tournament. In October 2021, five footballers from the country's under-20 women's team also disappeared when on international duty in Uganda.

Results and fixtures

Main article: Eritrea national football team results

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

2025

2026

Coaching history

  • Eritrea Tekie Abraha (1991–1996)
  • Egypt Mushir Osman (1998–1999)
  • Eritrea Tekie Abraha (1999–2000)
  • Turkey Yılmaz Yücetürk (2000–2002)
  • Eritrea Negash Teklit (2002, caretaker)
  • FR Yugoslavia Vojo Gardašević (2002)
  • Eritrea Tekie Abraha (2003)
  • Eritrea Mrad Abdul Tesfay (2004)
  • Romania Dorian Marin (2006–2007)
  • Netherlands René Feller (2007–2008)
  • Eritrea Negash Teklit (2009–2012)
  • Eritrea Omar Ahmed Hussein (2013–2015)
  • Eritrea Alemseged Efrem (2015–2019)
  • Eritrea Ermias Tewelde (2024-2025)

Players

Latest squad

The following players were selected for the 2022 FIFA World Cup qualifiers against Namibia on 10 September 2019.

Caps and goals correct as of 10 September 2019, after the match against Namibia.

Player records

1998–2007
5
11

|

2002–2007
5
19

|

1999–2007
3
8

|

2003–2009
3
9

|

2019–present
3
11

|

1999–2003
2
1

|

2007
2
7

|

2015–present
2
7

|

2003–2007
2
8

|

2019–present
}

Competition records

FIFA World Cup

FIFA World CupQualificationYearRoundPositionPldWDLGFGAPldWDLGFGATotal0/710037420
[1930](1930-fifa-world-cup) to [1938](1938-fifa-world-cup)*Part of **Part of *
[1950](1950-fifa-world-cup) to [1990](1990-fifa-world-cup)*Part of **Part of *
[1994](1994-fifa-world-cup) to [1998](1998-fifa-world-cup)*Not a FIFA member**Not a FIFA member*
South Korea Japan [2002](2002-fifa-world-cup)*Did not qualify*201104
Germany [2006](2006-fifa-world-cup)201103
South Africa [2010](2010-fifa-world-cup)*Did not enter**Did not enter*
Brazil [2014](2014-fifa-world-cup)*Did not qualify*201124
Russia [2018](2018-fifa-world-cup)200215
Qatar [2022](2022-fifa-world-cup)200214
Canada Mexico United States [2026](2026-fifa-world-cup)*Withdrew**Withdrew*
Morocco Portugal Spain [2030](2030-fifa-world-cup)*To be determined**To be determined*
Saudi Arabia [2034](2034-fifa-world-cup)

Africa Cup of Nations

Africa Cup of Nations recordQualification recordYearRoundPositionPldWDLGFGAPldWDLGFGA**Total****–****0/35****–****–****–****–****–****–**2555151346
Sudan [1957](1957-africa-cup-of-nations)*Part of **Part of *
United Arab Republic [1959](1959-africa-cup-of-nations)
Ethiopia [1962](1962-africa-cup-of-nations)
Ghana [1963](1963-africa-cup-of-nations)
Tunisia [1965](1965-africa-cup-of-nations)
Ethiopia [1968](1968-africa-cup-of-nations)
Sudan [1970](1970-africa-cup-of-nations)
Egypt [1974](1974-africa-cup-of-nations)
Ethiopia [1976](1976-africa-cup-of-nations)
Ghana [1978](1978-africa-cup-of-nations)
Nigeria [1980](1980-african-cup-of-nations)
Libya [1982](1982-african-cup-of-nations)
Ivory Coast [1984](1984-african-cup-of-nations)
Egypt [1986](1986-african-cup-of-nations)
Morocco [1988](1988-african-cup-of-nations)
Algeria [1990](1990-african-cup-of-nations)
Senegal [1992](1992-african-cup-of-nations)
Tunisia [1994](1994-african-cup-of-nations)*Not affiliated with CAF**Not affiliated with CAF*
South Africa [1996](1996-african-cup-of-nations)
Burkina Faso [1998](1998-african-cup-of-nations)
Ghana Nigeria [2000](2000-african-cup-of-nations)*Withdrew*9117422
Mali [2002](2002-africa-cup-of-nations)*Did not qualify*210136
Tunisia [2004](2004-africa-cup-of-nations)610517
Egypt [2006](2006-africa-cup-of-nations)201103
Ghana [2008](2008-african-cup-of-nations)623158
Angola [2010](2010-africa-cup-of-nations)*Withdrew**Withdrew*
Equatorial Guinea Gabon [2012](2012-africa-cup-of-nations)*Did not enter**Did not enter*
South Africa [2013](2013-africa-cup-of-nations)
Equatorial Guinea [2015](2015-africa-cup-of-nations)*Withdrew**Withdrew*
Gabon [2017](2017-africa-cup-of-nations)*Did not enter**Did not enter*
Egypt [2019](2019-africa-cup-of-nations)
Cameroon [2021](2021-africa-cup-of-nations)
Ivory Coast [2023](2023-africa-cup-of-nations)*Withdrew**Withdrew*
Morocco [2025](2025-africa-cup-of-nations)*Excluded**Excluded*
Kenya Tanzania Uganda [2027](2027-africa-cup-of-nations)*To be determined**To be determined*

CECAFA Cup

Main article: CECAFA Cup

CECAFA Cup recordAppearances: 12YearRoundPositionPldWDLGFGATotal0 Titles12/4044743334127
Uganda [1973](1973-cecafa-cup) to Tanzania [1992](1992-cecafa-cup)*Part of *
Kenya [1994](1994-cecafa-cup)**Fourth place****4th****5****2****1****2****3****2**
Uganda [1995](1995-cecafa-cup)*Did not enter*
Sudan [1996](1996-cecafa-cup)
Rwanda [1999](1999-cecafa-cup)Group stage11th200226
Uganda [2000](2000-cecafa-cup)8th4013415
Rwanda [2001](2001-cecafa-cup)11th3003317
Tanzania [2002](2002-cecafa-cup)*Did not enter*
Sudan [2003](2003-cecafa-cup)
Ethiopia [2004](2004-cecafa-cup)
Rwanda [2005](2005-cecafa-cup)Group stage10th4004218
Ethiopia [2006](2006-cecafa-cup)11th3003010
Tanzania [2007](2007-cecafa-cup)Quarter-finals8th420288
Uganda [2008](2008-cecafa-cup)Group stage10th4013213
Kenya [2009](2009-cecafa-cup)12th3003013
Tanzania [2010](2010-cecafa-cup)*Did not enter*
Tanzania [2011](2011-cecafa-cup)Group stage11th3003210
Uganda [2012](2012-cecafa-cup)*Did not enter*
Kenya [2013](2013-cecafa-cup)
Rwanda [2015](2015-cecafa-cup)Group stage11th300309
Kenya [2017](2017-cecafa-cup)*Did not enter*
Uganda [2019](2019-cecafa-cup)**Runners-up****2nd****6****3****1****2****8****6**

All-time record

;Key

  • Pld = Matches played
  • W = Matches won
  • D = Matches drawn
  • L = Matches lost
  • GF = Goals for
  • GA = Goals against
  • GD = Goal differential
  • Countries are listed in alphabetical order

As of 28 May 2025

Opponent
Pld
W
D
L
GF
GA
GDTotal8614205257140−83
201127−5
200215−4
412133+0
201101−1
220062+4
2020000
100105−5
103161114−3
200203−3
100123−1
210123−1
200214−3
201101−1
201104−4
10028716−9
200228−6
320121+1
312031+2
12327720−13
401317−6
8125617−11
100114−3
201103−3
501408−8

References

References

  1. "Eritrea Red Sea Boys hold Zanzibar Heroes {{!}} EastAFRO.com".
  2. "Team Eritrea: The Red Sea Boys Are Back".
  3. (15 May 2025). "Eritrea, Niger, South Sudan Eritrean national team back on the pitch after five-year hiatus". Africa Intelligence.
  4. (21 December 2019). "History Makers: The Red Sea Camels win Silver at the Cecafa Seniors Challenge Cup". shabait.com.
  5. "FIFA World Ranking". FIFA.
  6. Courtney, Barrie. (31 January 2008). "Eritrea International Matches".
  7. "Eritrea on FIFA.com". FIFA.
  8. "Eritrea Matches From 01.01.1872 To 30.11.2010". FIFA.
  9. "Eritrean National Football Federation (ENFF)". CAF.
  10. Stokkermans, Karel. (11 December 2009). "East and Central African Championship (CECAFA)".
  11. "First stage: Nigeria – Eritrea 4:0 (2:0)". FIFA.
  12. "First stage: Eritrea – Nigeria 0:0". FIFA.
  13. "Play-off: Sudan – Eritrea 3:0 (0:0)". FIFA.
  14. "Play-off: Eritrea – Sudan 0:0". FIFA.
  15. "Botswana through as Eritrea pull out of Afcon 2023". BBC Sport.
  16. (31 March 2014). "Eritrea Withdraws from CAN 2015".
  17. (31 March 2014). "2015 Africa Cup of Nations: Eritrea withdraw from qualifiers".
  18. (24 February 2014). "Decisions of CAF Executive Committee on 21.02.2014". Cafonline.com.
  19. (4 March 2022). "Botswana through as Eritrea pull out of Afcon 2023". BBC Sport.
  20. (21 January 2022). "Road to Cote d'Ivoire 2023 kicks off with Preliminary Draw conducted".
  21. (19 May 2023). "CAF Executive Committee approves FIFA World Cup 2026 Qualifiers calendar and announces TotalEnergies Africa Cup of Nations Côte d'Ivoire 2023 Final Draw date". [[Confederation of African Football.
  22. "Eritrea Pull Out Of 2026 World Cup Qualifier".
  23. (10 November 2023). "Eritrea withdraw from 2026 World Cup qualifiers". BBC Sport.
  24. (23 November 2023). "The country that does not play international football". BBC Sport.
  25. Pflanz, Mike. (15 December 2009). "Eritrean football team missing after match in Kenya". The Daily Telegraph.
  26. Oryada, Andrew Jackson. (5 December 2012). "Eritrean players seek asylum in Uganda". BBC.
  27. Nakiyimba, Gloria. (6 December 2012). "Eritrea's football team seek asylum in Uganda, citing persecution". RFI English.
  28. Oryada, Andrew Jackson. (4 December 2012). "Eritrea players missing in Uganda after regional championship". BBC.
  29. (14 December 2009). "Eritrea players go missing in Kenya". AFP.
  30. Wyatt, Ben. (15 December 2009). "Kenyan police search for missing footballers". CNN.
  31. (16 December 2009). "Official: Players say death awaits them in Eritrea".
  32. (27 March 2007). "Eritrean footballers join row of asylum seekers".
  33. (28 March 2007). "Angola considers asylum claims". BBC.
  34. (25 November 2009). "Three Eritrean Players Seek Asylum in Sudan".
  35. Pilipili, Oscar. (12 December 2009). "Zimbabwe held 0–0 by Eritrea". The Standard.
  36. Toskin, Robin. (4 December 2009). "Eritrean goalkeeper's effort not good enough". The Standard.
  37. (6 December 2009). "Eritrea crush Somalia as Rwanda pip Zims". The Standard.
  38. Wandera, Gilbert. (9 December 2009). "Tanzania hit Eritrea to make semi-final". The Standard.
  39. Xinhua. (16 December 2009). "Kenya Searches for 12 "Missing" Eritrean Players". CRI.
  40. Odula, Tom. (15 December 2009). "12 Eritrea soccer players defect during tournament in Kenya; UN will hear case". Canadian Press.
  41. Ombati, Cyrus. (18 December 2009). "12 Eritrean footballers granted asylum". The Standard.
  42. "Assenna.com – Politics, Culture, Religion".
  43. Sportal Australia. (26 August 2011). "Gold Coast Sign Refugee Pair". Australian FourFourTwo.
  44. (15 October 2015). "Eritrean football players seek asylum in Botswana". BBC News.
  45. (10 January 2020). "'If they find us it's death or kidnap': the Eritrean footballers on the run". The Guardian.
  46. (10 January 2020). "Seven Members of the Eritrean National Football Team Have Sought Asylum in Uganda". Human Rights Concern Eritrea.
  47. (3 November 2021). "news Absconded from a Ugandan hotel: fresh case of Eritrean footballers". africanews.com.
  48. FIFA.com. "Eritrea – Association Information".
  49. "Eritrea".
  50. "Elo List of Matches". Elo Ratings.
Info: Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

Want to explore this topic further?

Ask Mako anything about Eritrea national football team — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.

Research with Mako

Free with your Surf account

Content sourced from Wikipedia, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

This content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.

Report