This article is about the men's team. For the women's team, see Liechtenstein women's national football team.
Liechtenstein
Nickname(s)
The Blue-Reds
Association
Liechtenstein Football Association (Liechtensteiner Fussballverband)
Confederation
UEFA (Europe)
Head coach
Konrad Fünfstück
Captain
Nicolas Hasler
Most caps
Peter Jehle (132)
Top scorer
Mario Frick (16)
Home stadium
Rheinpark Stadion
FIFA code
LIE
First colours
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Second colours
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Third colours
FIFA ranking
Current
202 1 (4 April 2024)[1]
Highest
118 (January 2008, July 2011, September 2011)
Lowest
204 (June 2023)
First international
Liechtenstein 1–1 Malta (Daejeon, South Korea; 14 June 1981)
Biggest win
Luxembourg 0–4 Liechtenstein (Luxembourg, Luxembourg; 13 October 2004)
Biggest defeat
Liechtenstein 1–11 Macedonia (Eschen, Liechtenstein; 9 November 1996)
Website
lfv.li
The Liechtenstein national football team (German: Liechtensteinische Fussballnationalmannschaft) is the national football team of the Principality of Liechtenstein and is controlled by the Liechtenstein Football Association. The organisation is known as the Liechtensteiner Fussballverband in German. The team's first match was an unofficial match against Malta in Seoul, a 1–1 draw in 1981. Their first official match came two years later, a 0–1 defeat from Switzerland. Liechtenstein's largest win, a 4–0 win over Luxembourg in a 2006 FIFA World Cup qualifier on 13 October 2004, was both its first ever away win and its first win in any FIFA World Cup qualifier. Conversely, Liechtenstein is the only country that lost an official match against San Marino, albeit in a friendly match. Liechtenstein suffered its biggest ever loss in 1996, during qualification for the 1998 FIFA World Cup, losing 1–11 to Macedonia (now North Macedonia), the result also being Macedonia's largest ever win to date. The team's head coach is currently Konrad Fünfstück.[3]
^"The FIFA/Coca-Cola World Ranking". FIFA. 4 April 2024. Retrieved 4 April 2024.
^Elo rankings change compared to one year ago. "World Football Elo Ratings". eloratings.net. 27 March 2024. Retrieved 27 March 2024.
^"Konrad Fünfstück neuer Nationaltrainer" (in German). Archived from the original on 24 May 2023. Retrieved 23 May 2023.
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