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India women's national football team

Women's national football team representing India

India women's national football team

Summary

Women's national football team representing India

FieldValue
typewomen
NameIndia
BadgeIndian Football 2020.svg
Badge_size190px
NicknameThe Blue Tigresses
AssociationAll India Football Federation (AIFF)
ConfederationAFC (Asia)
Sub-confederationSAFF (South Asia)
FIFA TrigrammeIND
CoachAmelia Valverde
CaptainSweety Devi Ngangbam
Most capsAshalata Devi Loitongbam (100)
Top scorerBala Devi Ngangom (48)
FIFA Rank
FIFA max49
FIFA max dateDecember 2013
FIFA min70
FIFA min dateJune 2025
pattern_la1_ind2425h
pattern_b1_ind2425h
pattern_ra1_ind2425h
pattern_sh1_ind2425h
leftarm100A9FF
body100A9FF
rightarm100A9FF
shorts100A9FF
socks100A9FF
pattern_la2_ind2425a
pattern_b2_ind2425a
pattern_ra2_ind24a
pattern_sh2_ind2425a
leftarm2FF6607
body2FF6607
rightarm2FF6607
shorts2FF6607
socks2FF6607
First gameAs India S:
2–0
(Calicut, India; 12 January 1980)
As India:
5–0
(Hong Kong; 7 June 1981)
Largest win18–0
(Cox's Bazar, Bangladesh; 13 December 2010)
Largest loss0–16
(Bangkok, Thailand; 11 December 1998)
Regional nameAsian Cup
Regional cup apps10
Regional cup first1980
Regional cup bestRunners-up (1980, 1983)
2ndRegional nameAsian Games
2ndRegional cup apps3
2ndRegional cup first1998
2ndRegional cup bestGroup stage (1998, 2014, 2022)
3rdRegional nameSAFF Championship
3rdRegional cup apps7
3rdRegional cup first2010
3rdRegional cup bestChampions (2010, 2012, 2014, 2016, 2019)

the women's team

| Sub-confederation = SAFF (South Asia) 2–0 (Calicut, India; 12 January 1980) As India: 5–0 (Hong Kong; 7 June 1981) (Cox's Bazar, Bangladesh; 13 December 2010) (Bangkok, Thailand; 11 December 1998)

The India women's national football team represents India in women's international football and is governed by the All India Football Federation. Under the global jurisdiction of FIFA and governed in Asia by the AFC. India is also part of the South Asian Football Federation. The team was one of the best in Asia in the mid-1970s to early 1980s, when they became runners-up in the 1979 and the 1983 AFC Women's Asian Cup. The Indian women's national team is yet to participate in the FIFA Women's World Cup and the Olympic Games.

History

Golden years (1975–1991)

Football for women in Asia started later compared to their male counterparts. The seed of women's football in India was planted in the early 1970s. The first manager was Sushil Bhattacharya, in 1975 and from 1975 until 1991, the administration of the game was in the hands of the Women's Football Federation of India (WFFI), which comes under the Asian Ladies' Football Confederation (ALFC) that had recognition from neither FIFA nor AFC. Both organizations continuously tried to dissuade Asian countries from sending teams to these tournaments, for which the first few editions of AFC Women's Asian Cup seen very few teams. Thus, the 1980 featured two Indian teams (India N & India S), Western Australia, Taiwan, Hong Kong and Malaysia. India did well enough in all these tournaments under Sushil Bhattacharya. In the next edition of 1981 India achieved third position, defeated by Thailand, and became runners-up in the 1983, edition losing to Thailand again. This was the best chapter for the Indian women team in the Asian platform as since 1983 the performance declined along with mismanagement in the federation. The game was administered by WFFI from 1975 until the early 1990s, when they were absorbed into the AIFF.

Decline (1991–2009)

The AIFF did very less to lift the women's football from their meager condition. It was the time when FIFA conceptualized and organised FIFA Women's World Cup in 1991 and International Olympic Committee started the women's competition at 1996 Summer Olympics. Time and again, the AIFF officials stated that lifting the standard of women's football to the level of their Asian counterparts was their chief aim. The AIFF failed to sponsor the team's first foreign trip in 1997 to Germany before the Asian Championships. Eventually, the trip was made possibly with the help of the German Football Association and NRI's living in Germany.

1998 Asian Games was first participation for the national team. They were defeated by Chinese Taipei 1–13, before facing the biggest defeat in the history by China PR with an embarrassing scoreline of 0–16.

The women's game reached a new low in June 2009 when FIFA delisted the side from its world rankings, for being out of action for more than 18 months. From 1991 to 2010 the performance of the Indian team was very poor, participating in just 5 editions.

Resurgence (2010–2021)

[[Ngangom Bala Devi]], all-time leading goalscorer for India.
[[Nongmaithem Ratanbala Devi]], one of the most capped midfielders for India.

After 2009 sanction by FIFA, the AIFF started to better the condition of the national team and women's football, which led to commencing SAFF Women's Championship and also including women's football in the South Asian Games. The women's team resumed playing on 29 January 2010 after nearly a year-long hiatus. Indian team earn massive success in SAFF competitions, winning the SAFF Women's Championship four times in a row without losing a single game. Additionally, they won two gold medals at South Asian Games.

They participated in the qualifiers for the 2012 Summer Olympics in March 2011. In their first match India has beaten group hosts Bangladesh 3–0. In the second round India played Uzbekistan, where they tied the first match 1–1, but lost the second leg 1–5.

India participated for the second time at the Asian games in 2014, but the condition was not better than the previous participation, 16 years back in 1998. Though India defeated Maldives easily with 15–0 score, a similar fate was faced by them in the next two matches, being defeated by South Korea and Thailand with the same score of 0–10.

In August 2018, Indian women national team was invited to participate in Cotif Tournament where clubs and national and autonomous teams participate every year since 1984, held at Valencia, Spain. 2018 Cotif was 35th Anniversary of the tournament. At this tournament they faced 3 Spanish club teams and Morocco. First lost to Fundación Albacete, 1–4, then to Levante UD, 0–5, then the Moroccan side defeated India with a score 5–1, but on the last match India played with maturity, though lost to Madrid CFF with 0–1 score.

In November 2018, India qualified to the second round of 2020 AFC Women's Olympic Qualifying Tournament for the first time since the qualifying tournament started for the 2008 Summer Olympics.

For preparation of 2020 Olympics 2nd round qualifiers India played two matches each against Hong Kong and Indonesia winning all four of them 5–2 & 1–0 against Hong Kong and 3–0 & 2–0 against Indonesia respectively. Following these matches India played at the 2019 Gold Cup organised at home, where they won their first match against Iran by 1–0 but lost next two matches to Nepal and Myanmar by 1–2 and 0–2 respectively and failed to reach the final.

2022 onwards

India returned to the AFC Women's Championship, now known as the AFC Women's Asian Cup, when it hosted the 2022 edition. They last appeared in 2003, before qualifiers was introduced since the 2006 edition. However India was forced to withdraw from the 2022 tournament it is hosting due to a COVID-19 outbreak within the team.

At the 2022 SAFF Women's Championship, India lost a match at the regional tournament for the first time. They lost against Bangladesh 0–3 in the group stage. The team also lost the semifinal against Nepal 0–1. Thus failing to win the SAFF title for the first time ever.

In July 2025, India secured a berth at the AFC Women's Asian Cup for the first time via qualification. India defeated group qualifiers host Thailand 2–1 to earn a berth at the 2026 edition set to be hosted in Australia. Head coach Crispin Chettri noted the distinct challenges in managing a women’s team, emphasizing injury risks and physiological considerations.

Results and fixtures

Main article: India women's national football team results (2020–present), India women's 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.

;Legend

2025

  • Priyangka Devi
  • Manisha Kalyan
  • Zhukova
  • Smirnova
  • Choi Yoo-jung
  • Choi Dak-yeong
  • Moon Eun-ju
  • Basfore
  • Guguloth
  • Xaxa
  • Haldar
  • Prasad
  • Selladurai
  • Dangmei
  • Kalyan
  • Tamang
  • Kom
  • Basfore
  • Kalyan
  • Angamuthu
  • Phanjoubam
  • Nongmaithem
  • Chatchawan
  • Basfore
  • Shirvoikar
  • Bhandari
  • Priyadharshini
  • Santosh
  • Oraon
  • S. Magar
  • Ghising
  • Basnet
  • Thokar

2026

  • Lydia Zaborovets
  • Lesia Olkhova
  • Stefanie Raschle
  • Tamang
  • Dangmei

Team staff

PositionNameRef
Head coachCRC Amelia Valverde
Assistant coachesIND Priya P. V.
IND Crispin Chettri
Goalkeeper coachCRC Eli Ávila
IND Mario Aguiar
Strength and Conditioning CoachCRC José Sánchez
PhysiotherapistIND Sayli Shinde
IND Lalthutiamngheti Renthlei
DoctorIND Sobhasini Devi Laimujam
Team analystIND Joy Gabriel M
MasseuseIND Ankita Pawar
Team managerIND Anjali Devi Mekala
Media managerIND Akhil Rawat
Team DirectorIND Subrata Paul

Manager history

|- | 1981 | 5 | 3 | 1 | 1 | |- | 1983 | 6 | 4 | 0 | 2 | |- | 1986 | 2 | 1 | 0 | 1 | |- | 1994 | 3 | 0 | 0 | 3 | |- | 1995 | 3 | 0 | 0 | 3 | |- | 1997 | 3 | 2 | 0 | 1 | |- | 1998 | 3 | 0 | 0 | 3 | |- |1999 | 4 | 1 | 0 | 3 | |- |2001 | 4 | 1 | 0 | 3 | |- | 2003 | 3 | 1 | 0 | 2 | |- |2005−2007 | 7 | 1 | 0 | 6 | |- |2007 | 2 | 1 | 0 | 1 | |- | 2009–2012 | 21 | 18 | 1 | 2 | |- | 2013 | 5 | 2 | 1 | 2 | |- class="sortbottom" | 2014 | 8 | 6 | 0 | 2 | |- class="sortbottom" | 2015–2017 | 15 | 8 | 3 | 4 | |- class="sortbottom" | 2017–2021 | 34 | 18 | 5 | 11 | |- | 2021–2023 | 21 | 7 | 3 | 11 | |- | 2022 (interim) | 4 | 2 | 0 | 2 | |- | 2024 | 7 | 2 | 2 | 3 | |- | 2024 | 3 | 1 | 1 | 1 | |- | 2024–2025 (interim) | 2 | 2 | 0 | 0 | |- | 2025–2026 | 11 | 5 | 0 | 6 | |- | 2026– | | | | | |- class="sortbottom" ! colspan="2"| Total !! 181 !! 88 !! 19 !! 74 !! |} Note: Only International A matches considered.

Players

Current squad

The following players were called up for the friendlies against Iran and Nepal on 21 and 27 October 2025.

Caps and goals are correct as of 27 October 2025, after the match against Iran.

Recent call-ups

:The following footballers were part of a national selection in the past twelve months, but are not part of the current squad.

INJ Withdrew due to injury

PRE Preliminary squad / standby

RET Retired from the national team

SUS Serving suspension

WD Player withdrew from the squad due to non-injury issue.

Previous squads

; AFC Women's Asian Cup

Records

:Players in bold are still active, at least at club level.

Most capped players

#PlayerYear(s)CapsGoals
1Ashalata Devi Loitongbam2011–1004
2Grace Dangmei2013–9223
3Bembem Devi Oinam1995–20168218
4Sangita Basfore2016–729
5Anju Tamang2016–6915
6Sweety Devi Ngangbam2018–671
7Sanju Yadav2016–6211
8Indumathi Kathiresan2014–5917
9Bala Devi Ngangom2007–5848
10Aditi Chauhan2011–2023570

Top goalscorers

#PlayerYear(s)GoalsCaps
1Bala Devi Ngangom2007–4858
2Sasmita Mallik2007–20173642
3Kamala Devi Yumnam2011–20223651
4Grace Dangmei2013–2392
5Tababi Devi Thongam1995–201119
6Bembem Devi Oinam1995–20161882
7Pyari Xaxa2015–1839
8Indumathi Kathiresan2014–1759
9Anju Tamang2016–1569
10Manisha Kalyan2019–1448

Captains

Bold indicates current captain

TenureIncumbentReserve captainsTournamentsRef
1980Judy D'SilvaChitra Gangadharan, Yolanda D'Souza1980 AFC Women's Championship
1981Kuntala Ghosh Dastidar1981 AFC Women's Championship
1981 Women's World Invitational Tournament
1983Shanti Mullick1983 AFC Women's Championship
1994–1997unknown
1998–2001Maria RebelloTababi Devi Thongam1998 Asian Games
2001 AFC Women's Championship
1999Chaoba Devi Langam1999 AFC Women's Championship
2003
2007
2011–2016Bembem Devi OinamSradhanjali Samantaray,
Madhu Kumari, Sujata Kar,
Sasmita Mallik, Tuli Goon,
Romi Devi Ashem, Bala Devi Ngangom2003 AFC Women's Championship
2012 SAFF Women's Championship
2014 Asian Games
2014 SAFF Women's Championship
2016 South Asian Games
2005Sradhanjali Samantaray
2007Sujata Kar
2010Robita Devi Wangkhem2010 South Asian Games
2010Tababi Devi Thongam2010 SAFF Women's Championship
2013Tuli Goon
2016–2018Bala Devi NgangomAshalata Devi Loitongbam2016 SAFF Women's Championshipurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20210923051555/https://www.thehindu.com/sport/football/bala-devi-signs-up-for-scottish-giant-rangers-fc/article30686712.ecedate=23 September 2021 }} The Hindu
2018–2024Ashalata Devi LoitongbamAditi Chauhan, Sangita Basfore,
Indumathi Kathiresan, Dalima Chhibber,
Grace Dangmei, Bala Devi Ngangom,
Sweety Devi Ngangbam, Sandhiya Ranganathan,
Manisha Kalyan, Panthoi Chanu Elangbam2019 SAFF Women's Championship
2019 South Asian Games
2022 AFC Women's Asian Cup
2022 SAFF Women's Championship
2024 SAFF Women's Championship
2025–presentSweety Devi NgangbamSangita Basfore

Competitive record

FIFA Women's World Cup

FIFA Women's World Cup recordQualification recordYearResultPositionPldWDLGFGAGDPldWDLGFGAGDTotal0/9
China 1991Did not enterDid not enter
Sweden 1995
USA 1999Did not qualifyVia AFC Women's Asian Cup
USA 2003
China 2007
Germany 2011Did not enterDid not enter
Canada 2015Did not qualifyVia AFC Women's Asian Cup
France 2019
AustraliaNew Zealand 2023Withdrew from qualification
Brazil 2027To be determined
Costa RicaJamaicaMexicoUSA 2031To be determined
UK 2035

Olympic Games

Summer Olympics recordQualification recordYearRoundPldWD*LGFGAGDPldWD*LGFGAGDTotal0/8187383642−6
USA 1996Did not enterDid not enter
AUS 2000Did not qualifyVia FIFA Women's World Cup
GRE 2004Did not enterDid not enter
China 2008Did not qualify200208−8
Great Britain 2012311156−1
Brazil 2016210147−3
Japan 20206321178+9
France 202452031013−3
United States 2028To be determinedTo be determined
Australia 2032

:*Draws include knockout matches decided on penalty kicks.

AFC Women's Asian Cup

AFC Women's Asian Cup recordQualification recordYearResultPositionPldWD*LGFGAGDPldWD*LGFGAGDTotal10/210 Titles35163166361+2167184641+5
Hong Kong 1975Did not enterNo Qualification
Taiwan 1977
India 1980Runners-up2nd742183+5
Hong Kong 1981Third Place3rd5311151+14
Thailand 1983Runners-up2nd6402115+6
Hong Kong 1986Did not enter
Hong Kong 1989
Japan 1991
Malaysia 1993
Malaysia 1995Group stage10th3003312−9
China 1997Group stage5th3201131+12
Philippines 1999Group stage11th4103312−9
Chinese Taipei 2001Group stage9th4103313−10
Thailand 2003Group stage9th3102714−7
Australia 2006Did not qualify3102135+8
Vietnam 2008210145−1
China 2010Did not enterDid not enter
Vietnam 2014Did not qualify301225−3
Jordan 20184103325−22
India 2022Participated in the Group stage, but withdrew due to COVID-19 outbreak inside the teamQualified as hosts
Australia 2026Qualified4400241+23
Uzbekistan 2029To be determinedTo be determined

Notes:

AFC Women's Asian Cup historyYearRoundScoreResult
1980Round 12–0 Western AustraliaWon
2–0Won
0–0Draw
1–0Won
0–0Draw
Semi-final3–1Won
Final0–2Loss
1981Round 15–0Won
8–0Won
0–0Draw
Semi-final0–1Loss
3rd Place2–0Won
1983Round 15–0Won
1–0Won
3–0Won
1–2Loss
1–0Won
Final0–2Loss
1995Round 10–1Loss
0–6Loss
0–5Loss
1997Round 13–0Won
0–1Loss
10–0Won
1999Round 10–7Loss
3–0Won
0–3Loss
0–3Loss
2001Round 10–7Loss
0–5Loss
0–1Loss
3–0Won
2003Round 16–0Won
0–12Loss
1–2Loss
2022Round 10–0Voided
n/aCancelled
n/aCancelled

:*Draws include knockout matches decided on penalty kicks. :At 1980 AFC Asia Cup India placed two teams, India Senior (India S) and India Novice (India N), other version called as India North and India South.

Asian Games

Asian Games recordYearResultPositionPldWD*LGFGAGDTotal3/90 Titles81071759−42
CHN 1990Did not enter
JPN 1994
THA 1998Group stage8th3003136−35
KOR 2002Did not enter
QAT 2006
CHN 2010
KOR 2014Group stage9th31021520−5
INA 2018Did not enter
CHN 2022Group stage13th200213−2
JPN 2026To be determined
Asian Games HistoryYearRound#0000FF;Score#0000FF;Result
1998Round 10–7Loss
1–13Loss
0–16Loss
2014Round 115–0Won
0–10Loss
0–10Loss
2022Round 11–2Loss
0–1Loss

:*Draws include knockout matches decided on penalty kicks.

SAFF Women's Championship

India has won the SAFF Women's Championship five times in a row.

SAFF Women's Championship recordYearResultPositionPldWD*LGFGAGDTotal7/75 Titles30252315716+141
Bangladesh 2010Winners5500400+40
Sri Lanka 2012Winners5500331+32
Pakistan 2014Winners5500361+35
India 2016Winners4310113+8
Nepal 2019Winners4400181+17
Nepal 2022Semi-final4202124+8
Nepal 2024Semi-final311176+1

:*Draws include knockout matches decided on penalty kicks.

South Asian Games

India has won the South Asian Games three times.

South Asian Games recordYearResultPositionPldWD*LGFGAGDTotal3/33 Titles141220573+54
BAN 2010Winners5500292+27
IND 2016Winners5320141+13
NEP 2019Winners4400140+14

:*Draws include knockout matches decided on penalty kicks.

Other tournaments

Other TournamentsGold CupTurkish Women's CupTorneio Internacional de Futebol FemininoPink Ladies Cup

:Bold Positions show best finish in the tournaments. :Red border indicates, India had hosted the games.

Honours

Continental

  • AFC Women's Asian Cup:

Regional

  • SAFF Women's Championship:
  • South Asian Games
    • Gold medal (3): 2010, 2016, 2019

FIFA World Ranking

|- | 52 || 2012 || 5 || 5 || 0 || 0 | 52 || align=left| 2 || 54 || align="left" | 1 |- | 53|| 2011 || 6 || 3 || 1 || 2 | 53 || align=left| 1 || 54 || align="left" | 2 |- | 56 || 2010 || 10 || 10 || 0 || 0 | 55 || align=left| || 56 || style="border: 3px solid red" align="left" | 5 |- | 50 || 2009 || 0 || 0 || 0 || 0 | 50 || align=left| 2 || 50 || align="left" | 2 |- | 52 || 2008 || 0 || 0 || 0 || 0 | 52 || align=left| 2 || 55 || align="left" | |- | 56 || 2007 || 4 || 1 || 0 || 3 | 55 || align=left| 2 || 57 || align="left" | 1 |- | 55 || 2006 || 0 || 0 || 0 || 0 | 55 || align=left| 1 || 56 || align="left" | 1 |- | 56 || 2005 || 3 || 1 || 0 || 2 | 56 || align=left| 2 || 58 || align="left" | 1 |- | 58 || 2004 || 0 || 0 || 0 || 0 | 58 || align=left| || 58 || align="left" | 1 |- | 57 || 2003 || 3 || 1 || 0 || 2 | 56 || align=left| || 57 || align="left" | 3 |}

References

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