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Eswatini national football team

Men's association football team


Men's association football team

FieldValue
NameEswatini
NicknameSihlangu Semnikati (King's Shield)
AssociationEswatini Football Association (EFA)
Sub-confederationCOSAFA (Southern Africa)
ConfederationCAF (Africa)
CaptainMthunzi Mkhontfo
Most capsSabelo Ndzinisa (78)
Top scorerSabelo Ndzinisa (17)
Home StadiumSomhlolo National Stadium
FIFA TrigrammeSWZ
FIFA Rank
FIFA max88
FIFA max dateApril–May 2017
FIFA min190
FIFA min dateSeptember–October 2012
Elo Rank
Elo max117
Elo max date25 June 2016
Elo min181
Elo min date2013
pattern_la1_eswatini2021h
pattern_b1_eswatini2021h
pattern_ra1_eswatini2021h
pattern_sh1_eswatini2021h
pattern_so1_eswatini2021h
leftarm10000FF
body10000FF
rightarm10000FF
socks1FFCC00
pattern_la2_eswatini2021a
pattern_b2_eswatini2021a
pattern_ra2_eswatini2021a
pattern_sh2_eswatini2021a
pattern_so2_eswatini2021a
leftarm2FFCC00
rightarm2FFCC00
socks20000FF
pattern_b3_eswatini2021t
pattern_la3_eswatini2021t
pattern_ra3_eswatini2021t
pattern_sh3_eswatini2021t
pattern_so3_eswatini2021t
First gameUnited Kingdom Swaziland 2–0
(Swaziland; 1 May 1968)
Largest win0–6
(Djibouti City, Djibouti; 9 October 2015)
Largest loss10–0
(Alexandria, Egypt; 22 March 2013)
3rdRegional nameCOSAFA Cup
3rdRegional cup apps19
3rdRegional cup first1997
3rdRegional cup bestThird place
(2016, 2021)
Note

the men's team

| Sub-confederation = COSAFA (Southern Africa) (Swaziland; 1 May 1968) (Djibouti City, Djibouti; 9 October 2015) (Alexandria, Egypt; 22 March 2013) (2016, 2021)

Semi-finals (1999, 2002, 2003)

The Eswatini national football team, nicknamed Sihlangu Semnikati (King's Shield), represents Eswatini, formerly known as Swaziland, in international football and is controlled by the Eswatini Football Association. It has never qualified for the World Cup or the Africa Cup of Nations finals. Swaziland's best performance in an international tournament is a semi-final finish in the COSAFA Cup.

On 8 June 2008, they achieved their first win in a World Cup qualifier since 1992, beating 2006 finalists Togo 2–1 on home soil. The team's best recent performance came in 2017 Africa Cup of Nations qualification where Eswatini finished second in Group L above Guinea and Malawi.

History

Beginnings

The team played its first international match against Malawi, winning 2–0. For the first decade, the national team only played Malawi and Zambia, failing to register a single win from 1969 until 1984, when they beat Lesotho 3–1 in a friendly at home. Following the Lesotho win, Eswatini entered the 1986 African Cup of Nations qualifiers for the first time, losing 1–8 on aggregate to Zimbabwe. The team then entered the 1987 All-Africa Games qualifiers however they lost 2–9 on aggregate against Malawi.

The first time that Eswatini progressed past the first round of a qualifying competition was for the 1990 African Cup of Nations qualifiers, beating Tanzania 3–1 on penalties after drawing the tie 2–2. In the second round they faced Malawi who knocked them out again, 1–3 after two legs. Eswatini next entered the 1990 SADCC Tournament, advancing past the group stage on goal difference ahead of Malawi, before losing to Zimbabwe on penalties (5–3) in the semi-finals following a 4–4 draw after extra-time. In the 1992 African Cup of Nations qualifiers, Eswatini beat Zambia (2–1) during the preliminary group stage but finished in third and failed to progress.

Eswatini entered the 1994 FIFA World Cup qualifiers for the first time, but ended up in second place behind Cameroon thereby not advancing to the final round. For the 1998 World Cup first qualification round, Eswatini lost twice to Gabon (0–1 and 0–2) and were eliminated. They failed to make it past the first qualifying round for the inaugural 1997 COSAFA Cup, where they lost 0–4 to Mozambique, and in the 1998 COSAFA Cup where they lost to an own-goal in extra-time against Angola (0–1). Eswatini returned to the 2000 African Cup of Nations qualification matches after missing the previous three tournaments but they fell 2–3 against Madagascar and were eliminated. They managed to qualify for the 1999 COSAFA Cup after beating Mozambique 3–1 in the qualifiers, then beat Zimbabwe in the quarter-finals 4–3 on penalties after drawing 1–1 in regular time, with Bongani Mdluli having scored the equaliser for Eswatini in the 89th minute. In the semi-finals they lost to Namibia on penalties, 2–4.

21st century

Eswatini were eliminated by Angola in the 2002 World Cup qualifiers, losing 1–8 on aggregate. They then lost to Kenya in the 2002 African Cup of Nations qualification round 3–5. Their next success in a competition came in the 2002 COSAFA Cup where they qualified ahead of Namibia (2–1) and beat Zimbabwe (2–0) to advance to the semis. There they lost to South Africa (1–4) who would go on to win the tournament. In the 2004 AFCON qualifiers, Eswatini finished third in their group, two points behind Libya and three behind DR Congo therefore missing out on qualification.

In the following tournaments, Eswatini failed to progress past the first qualifying round. They finished bottom of their qualifying groups until 2017 Africa Cup of Nations qualification where they finished in second on goal-difference ahead of Guinea but were three points off of qualifying, behind Zimbabwe. In the 2018 World Cup qualifying, Eswatini thrashed Djibouti 8–1 over two legs, but were beaten 0–2 by Nigeria to end their hopes of qualification.

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.

2024

  • Touré
  • Nene
  • Doumbia

2025

2026

Coaches

:Caretakers are listed in italics.

  • ROM Ted Dumitru (1983–85)
  • SWZ Dumisa Mahlalela (1992–93)
  • SWZ Scara Thindwa (1996)
  • ZAM Jan Simulambo (1997)
  • ZAM Francis Banda (1998–2000)
  • SWZ Dumisa Mahlalela (2001–02)
  • SWZ Mandla Dlamini (2003)
  • ZAM Francis Banda (2003)
  • GER Werner Bicklehaput (2003)
  • SWZ Dumisa Mahlalela (2004)
  • ZAM Francis Banda (2005)
  • BEL Jan Van Winckel (2006)
  • EGY Ayman El Yamani (2006–07)
  • SWZ Martin Chabangu (2007)
  • SUI Raoul Savoy (2007–08)
  • RSA Ephraim Mashaba (2008–10)
  • SWZ Musa Zwane (2010–11)
  • SWZ Obed Mlotsa (2011)
  • SWZ Caleb Ngwenya (2011–12)
  • BEL Valere Billen (2012–13)
  • SWZ Harris Bulunga (2013–14)
  • SWZ Harris Bulunga (2014–16)
  • SWZ Anthony Mdluli (2017)
  • NED Hendrik Pieter de Jongh (2017–18)
  • SWZ Anthony Mdluli (2018)
  • SRB Kosta Papić (2018–19)
  • SWZ Dominic Kunene (2020–22)
  • SWZ Dominic Kunene (2023–24)
  • CRO Zdravko Logarušić (2024–25)
  • SWZ Sifiso Ntibane (2024–25)

Players

Current squad

The following players were called up for the 2025 COSAFA Cup to be played 4–15 June 2025.

Caps and goals correct as of 9 June 2025, after the match against Madagascar

a

Recent call-ups

The following players were called up for Eswatini in the last 12 months.

Player records

2012–present
2
15
48

|

2008–present
9
35

|

1998–2009
9
39

|

1997–2010
8
44

|

2018–present
8
71

|

2003–2018
7
6
46

|

2018–present
5
48

|

2001–2018
5
58

|

2017–present
4
8

|

2011–2014
4
15

|

2014–2017
4
24

|

2019–present
4
28

|

2022–present
}

Competitive record

FIFA World Cup

FIFA World Cup recordQualification recordYearRoundPositionPldWD*LGFGAPldWDLGFGAas ****as ****Total0/113148192260
1930 to 1966Part of UK United KingdomPart of UK United Kingdom
1970 to 1978Not a FIFA memberNot a FIFA member
1982 to 1990Did not enterDid not enter
United States 1994Did not qualify311115
France 1998200203
South Korea Japan 2002200218
Germany 2006201114
South Africa 2010411228
Brazil 2014200228
Russia 2018421183
Qatar 2022Did not qualify201112
Canada Mexico United States 202610037619
Morocco Portugal Spain 2030To be determinedTo be determined
Saudi Arabia 2034

Africa Cup of Nations

Africa Cup of Nations recordQualification recordYearRoundPositionPldWDLGFGAPldWDLGFGATotal0/357310243951133
Sudan 1957 to Ethiopia 1968Part of United KingdomPart of United Kingdom
Sudan 1970 to Ethiopia 1976Not affiliated to CAFNot affiliated to CAF
Ghana 1978Did not enterDid not enter
Nigeria 1980
Libya 1982
Ivory Coast 1984WithdrewWithdrew
Egypt 1986Did not qualify200218
Morocco 1988Did not enterDid not enter
Algeria 1990Did not qualify403135
Senegal 1992512249
Tunisia 1994Did not enterDid not enter
South Africa 1996WithdrewWithdrew
Burkina Faso 1998Did not enterDid not enter
Ghana Nigeria 2000Did not qualify201123
Mali 2002210135
Tunisia 20046222812
Egypt 2006201114
Ghana 2008603307
Angola 2010411228
Equatorial Guinea Gabon 20126006214
South Africa 2013WithdrewWithdrew
Equatorial Guinea 2015Did not qualify201112
Gabon 2017622269
Egypt 20196015214
Cameroon 2021401319
Ivory Coast 2023823389
Morocco 20258134715
Kenya Tanzania Uganda 2027To be determinedTo be determined
2029

COSAFA Cup

Main article: COSAFA Cup

YearCOSAFA Cup recordResultPldWDLGFGATotal21/21531817185759
1997First round100101
1998Quarter-finals100101
1999Semi-finals312053
2000Quarter-finals100102
2001Quarter-finals201112
2002Semi-finals320155
2003Semi-finals210122
2004Quarter-finals100105
2005First round100103
2006First round210121
2007First round211010
RSA 2008First round312032
ZIM 2009First round320152
ZAM 2013First round301204
RSA 2015First round321041
NAM 2016Third place632197
RSA 2017Quarter-finals200213
RSA 2018Quarter-finals200203
RSA 2019First round202044
RSA 2020Cancelled
RSA 2021Third place623186
RSA 2022Quarter-finals422072

Honours

Regional

  • COSAFA Cup
    • Third place (2): 2016, 2021

References

References

  1. (18 July 2021). "Mozambique vs. Eswatini – 18 July 2021 – Soccerway".
  2. link. (25 September 2006)
  3. "Swaziland (eSwatini) — List of International Matches".
  4. (8 May 2025). "The Senior Men's National Team (Sihlangu SeMnikati) Head Coach has named a 27- players tentative squad that is scheduled to commence a full-time camp as from 24th May 2025 at the Technical Centre in Lobamba".
  5. "Eswatini".
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