A | B | C | D | E | F | G | H | CH | I | J | K | L | M | N | O | P | Q | R | S | T | U | V | W | X | Y | Z | 0 | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9
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Nickname(s) | The Warriors | |||
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Association | Zimbabwe Football Association (ZIFA) | |||
Confederation | CAF (Africa) | |||
Sub-confederation | COSAFA (Southern Africa) | |||
Head coach | Jairos Tapera (interim) | |||
Captain | Marvelous Nakamba | |||
Most caps | Peter Ndlovu (81) | |||
Top scorer | Peter Ndlovu (37) | |||
Home stadium | National Sports Stadium | |||
FIFA code | ZIM | |||
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FIFA ranking | ||||
Current | 129 ![]() | |||
Highest | 39 (April 1994) | |||
Lowest | 131 (October 2009, February–March 2016) | |||
First international | ||||
![]() ![]() (Southern Rhodesia; 1946) | ||||
Biggest win | ||||
![]() ![]() (Gaborone, Botswana; 26 August 1990) | ||||
Biggest defeat | ||||
![]() ![]() (South Africa; 9 April 1977) | ||||
Africa Cup of Nations | ||||
Appearances | 5 (first in 2004) | |||
Best result | Group stage (2004, 2006, 2017, 2019, 2021) | |||
African Nations Championship | ||||
Appearances | 5 (first in 2009) | |||
Best result | Fourth place (2014) | |||
COSAFA Cup | ||||
Appearances | 20 (first in 1997) | |||
Best result | Champions (2000, 2003, 2005, 2009, 2017, 2018) | |||
Four Nations Football Tournament | ||||
Appearances | 1 (first in 2024) | |||
Best result | Runner-up (2024) | |||
The Zimbabwe national football team (nicknamed The Warriors) represents Zimbabwe in men's international football and is controlled by the Zimbabwe Football Association (ZIFA), formerly known as the Football Association of Rhodesia. The team has never qualified for the FIFA World Cup finals, but has qualified for the Africa Cup of Nations five times. Zimbabwe has also won the COSAFA Cup a record six times. The team represents both FIFA and Confederation of African Football (CAF).
History
Southern Rhodesia played their first official match against the England Amateur national football team as part of the latter's tour of South Africa and Rhodesia in June 1929. Southern Rhodesia lost their first two matches against England 4–0 and 6–1, respectively.[3] In 1965, following Southern Rhodesia's Unilateral Declaration of Independence as Rhodesia, FIFA requested that the Football Association of Rhodesia reform to be a multi-racial organisation. Prior to this, only white Rhodesians were selected for the national football team but after 1965 the team became multi-racial.[4] In 1969, Rhodesia took part in the Oceanic 1970 FIFA World Cup qualification tournament. This was their first attempt to qualify for the FIFA World Cup. Contrary to the team being viewed as the representative team of white Rhodesians, the team was multi-racial including black players.[5] They were drawn against the Australia national football team. Both legs were held in Lourenço Marques, Portuguese Mozambique as the Rhodesian team were unable to get Australian visas. Rhodesia drew the first leg 1–1 but lost the second leg 3–1 thus eliminating Rhodesia from qualification.[5]
In 1980, following the country's reconstitution as Zimbabwe, they played their first FIFA World Cup qualifying match for 11 years against the Cameroon national football team. However they lost 2–1 on aggregate after a 1–0 win in the first leg in Salisbury and a 2–0 loss in the second leg.[6][7] Following this, the country passed a law that people who held British passports would not be permitted to hold a Zimbabwean passport, which mean that players such as goalkeeper Bruce Grobbelaar, who is considered to be Zimbabwe's greatest goalkeeper, [8]were not selected for the national team for 10 years.[9] Following a change in policy that allowed Grobbelaar to play for Zimbabwe, who entered the country on his British passport, Zimbabwe under manager Reinhard Fabisch were one match away from qualifying for the 1994 FIFA World Cup. However, they lost their final qualifying match to Cameroon.[9][10]
In 2004, Zimbabwe qualified for their first Africa Cup of Nations. During their first match against Egypt, their former anthem "Ishe Komborera Africa" was accidentally played instead of "Simudzai Mureza wedu weZimbabwe", an act which Information Minister Jonathan Moyo called "a cheap attempt by the organisers to demoralise our boys".[11]
In 2015, the Zimbabwe national football team were banned from participating in 2018 FIFA World Cup qualifying due to an unpaid debt to former coach, José Claudinei.[12] At the time, the team was experiencing its strongest period for many years, qualifying for both the 2017 and 2019 Africa Cup of Nations.
On 1 March 2022, Zimbabwe, along with Kenya, was suspended again from international sport due to the interference of the government. Earlier in November 2021, Harare and Nairobi dissolved their federations and were replaced with government-officials. On 31 March, the suspension was made indefinitely and was ratified by FIFA. Suspension is set until Zimbabwe and Kenya meet the demands given by FIFA. The team has produced some of the finest footballers the likes of the legendary Peter Ndlovu who played for Zimbabwe 100 times. He featured in the English premier for Coventry City, Birmingham City, Sheffield United and Huddersfield. Peter Ndlovu is well remembered for the hatrick he scored at Anfield against Liverpool, Bruce Grobelaar former Liverpool Goalkeeper, Norman Mapeza former Galatasary defender, Benjan Mwaruwaru former Man city player. Knowledge Musona former Anderletch and Bundesliga player. Khama Billiat former Mamelodi Sundowns and Kaizer Chiefs player.
Kit provider
Kit provider | Period |
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2004–2005 |
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2006–2009 |
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2010–2012 |
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2013–2014 |
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2015–2016 |
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2017–2018 |
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2019–2022 |
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2023–present |
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
4 September Friendly | Zimbabwe ![]() | 2–2 (5–4 p) | ![]() | Harare, Zimbabwe |
Report | Stadium: National Sports Stadium |
30 September Friendly | Botswana ![]() | 1–1 (4–3 p) | ![]() | Gaborone, Botswana |
16:00 UTC+2 |
|
Report |
|
Stadium: Botswana National Stadium |
15 November 2026 World Cup qualification | Rwanda ![]() | 0–0 | ![]() | Butare, Rwanda |
15:00 UTC+2 | Report | Stadium: Stade Huye Referee: Mohamed Ali Moussa (Niger) |
19 November 2026 World Cup qualification | Zimbabwe ![]() | 1–1 | ![]() | Butare, Rwanda |
15:00 UTC+2 |
|
Report |
|
Stadium: Stade Huye Attendance: 2,876 Referee: Souleiman Ahmed Djama (Djibouti) |
2024
23 March Friendly | Zambia ![]() | 2–2 (5–6 p) | ![]() | Lilongwe, Malawi |
Report | Stadium: Bingu National Stadium |
7 June 2026 World Cup qualification | Zimbabwe ![]() | 0–2 | ![]() | Johannesburg, South Africa |
15:00 UTC+2 | Report |
|
Stadium: Orlando Stadium Referee: Thulani Sibandze (Eswatini) |
11 June 2026 World Cup qualification | South Africa ![]() | 3–1 | ![]() | Bloemfontein, South Africa |
18:00 UTC+2 | Report |
|
Stadium: Free State Stadium Referee: Mohamed Maarouf Eid Mansour (Egypt) |
Coaching history
- Caretaker managers are listed in italics.
Danny McLennan (1965–1969)
Bill Asprey (1975–1977)
John Rugg (1980-1981)
Shepherd Murape (1981–1983)
Mick Poole (1985)
Ben Koufie (1988–1992)
Reinhard Fabisch (1992–1995)
Rudi Gutendorf (1995–1996)
Bruce Grobbelaar (1996)
Ian Porterfield (1996–1997)
Sunday Chidzambwa (1997)
Bruce Grobbelaar (1997)
Roy Barreto (1997–1998)
Bruce Grobbelaar (1998)
Clemens Westerhof (1998–2000)
Misheck Chidzambwa (2000)
Sunday Chidzambwa (2000–2002)
Wiesław Grabowski (2002)
Sunday Chidzambwa (2003–2004)
Rahman Gumbo (2004)
Charles Mhlauri (2004–2007)
Sunday Chidzambwa (2007)
Norman Mapeza (2007)
Luke Masomore (2007-2008)
José Claudinei (2008)
Sunday Chidzambwa (2008–2009)
Norman Mapeza (2009–2010)
Tom Saintfiet (2010)
Madinda Ndlovu (2010–2011)
Norman Mapeza (2011–2012)
Rahman Gumbo (2012)
Klaus Dieter Pagels (2012–2013)
Ian Gorowa (2013–2014)
Callisto Pasuwa (2015–2017)
Wilson Mutekede (2017)
Sunday Chidzambwa (2017–2019)
Joey Antipas (2019–2020)
Zdravko Logarušić (2020–2021)
Norman Mapeza (2021–2022)
Wilson Mutekede (2022)
Shepherd Murape (2022-2023)
Sunday Chidzambwa (2023)
Baltemar Brito (2023-2024)
Norman Mapeza (2024)
Jairos Tapera (2024-)
Players
Current squad
The following players were selected for the 2026 FIFA World Cup qualification matches against Lesotho and South Africa on 7 and 11 June 2024.[13]
Caps and goals are correct as of 11 June 2024, after the match against South Africa.