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Mauritania national football team

Men's national association football team representing Mauritania


Men's national association football team representing Mauritania

FieldValue
NameMauritania
Badge_size180px
NicknameAl-Murabitun (الْمُرَابِطُون)
Lions of Chinguetti
AssociationFédération de Football de la République Islamique de Mauritanie (FFRIM)
Sub-confederationUNAF (North Africa)
ConfederationCAF (Africa)
CoachAritz López Garai
CaptainAly Abeid
Most capsSouleymane Diallo (76)
Top scorerBessam (13)
Home StadiumStade Olympique de Nouakchott
FIFA TrigrammeMTN
FIFA Rank
FIFA max81
FIFA max dateJuly 2017
FIFA min206
FIFA min dateNovember 2012 – January 2013
Elo Rank
Elo max116
Elo max date29 January 2019
Elo min182
Elo min datebef. 22 November 1993
pattern_la1_mtn24h
pattern_b1_mtn24h
pattern_ra1_mtn24h
pattern_sh1_mtn24h
leftarm101924d
body101924d
rightarm101924d
shorts101924d
socks101924d
pattern_la2_mtn24a
pattern_b2_mtn24a
pattern_ra2_mtn24a
pattern_sh2_mtn24a
leftarm2FFFFFF
body2FFFFFF
rightarm2FFFFFF
shorts2FFFFFF
socks2FFFFFF
First game5–1
(Abidjan, Côte d'Ivoire; 25 December 1961)
Largest win2–8
(Beirut, Lebanon; 27 December 2006)
Largest loss14–0
(Guinea; 20 May 1972)
Regional nameAfrica Cup of Nations
Regional cup apps3
Regional cup first2019
Regional cup bestRound of 16 (2023)
2ndRegional nameFIFA Arab Cup
2ndRegional cup bestGroup stage (1985, 2021)
2ndRegional cup apps2
2ndRegional cup first1985
Note

the men's team

Lions of Chinguetti | Sub-confederation = UNAF (North Africa) (Abidjan, Côte d'Ivoire; 25 December 1961) (Beirut, Lebanon; 27 December 2006) (Guinea; 20 May 1972) The Mauritania national football team (), nicknamed Al-Murabitun represents Mauritania in men's international football. It is controlled by the Féderation de Football de la République Islamique de Mauritanie, and is a member of the Confederation of African Football. They have not qualified for the FIFA World Cup. However, in the Amílcar Cabral Cup, a regional tournament for West Africa, Mauritania came fourth in 1980 on hosting the competition. The national football team of Mauritania was later runners-up in 1995, losing on penalties to Sierra Leone after the final finished 0–0.

On 18 November 2018, Mauritania qualified for the Africa Cup of Nations for the first time in history, after they won 2–1 against Botswana to seal a spot in the 2019 tournament.

History

1963–1980

Mauritania played its first match after independence from France on 11 April 1963, against Congo Kinshasa (also making their debut) and lost 6–0. The match was held in Dakar, Senegal as part of the L'Amitié tournament between African sides. It also saw the debuts of Chad, Liberia and Niger. Mauritania lost its three other matches in the tournament: 2–0 to the Ivory Coast, 4–0 to Tunisia and 7–0 to Congo Brazzaville.

Mauritania's first goal and avoidance of defeat came four years after their debut, in 1967 with a 1–1 draw away in Tanzania. This was their first match since the L'Amitié tournament in 1963.

Mauritania entered their first African Games qualification campaign, in an aim to reach the 1973 finals in Nigeria. They were drawn in a group against Mali and Guinea in Guinea. The first game was lost 11–0 to Mali, and on 20 May Mauritania lost 14–0 to Guinea. Mauritania did not qualify.

In May 1976 Mauritania entered qualification for the football at the 1976 Summer Olympics in Canada. They were drawn against neighbouring Mali in a two-legged qualifier. The first leg was lost 6–0 away on 1 May, and the second leg was lost 1–0 at home on 18 May. Mali did not qualify for the finals.

Mauritania's first entrance into World Cup qualification was an attempt to reach the 1978 FIFA World Cup in Argentina. In March 1976 they were one of four countries put into two preliminary matches at the start of the African qualification campaign. Mauritania's preliminary was a two-legged match against the Upper Volta (now Burkina Faso) and they drew the first match 1–1 away in Ouagadougou on 13 March. This was their first competitive avoidance of defeat, and their first avoidance of defeat since 1967. On 28 March, Mauritania lost their home leg in Nouakchott 2–0 and the Upper Volta advanced 3–1 on aggregate.

On 12 October 1980, seventeen years after their first game, Mauritania won for the first time by beating Mali 2–1 at home in a qualifier for the African Cup of Nations. Mali won 3–2 on aggregate having won the first leg 2–0.

1998 FIFA World Cup qualification

Mauritania entered qualification for the 1998 FIFA World Cup in France, which was their first entry in twenty years and second overall. Again, they were drawn to face Burkina Faso in a two-legged preliminary. The first leg was played at home in Nouakchott in front of 15,000 people on 31 May 1996, one day before any other matches in the round. The match finished 0–0. The second leg was played at the Stade du 4-Aout in Ouagadougou on 16 June 1996 in front of 13,000 people. Burkina Faso won 2–0 to advance to the final group phase.

2002 FIFA World Cup qualification

Mauritania entered the qualification for the 2002 FIFA World Cup and were placed in a preliminary against Tunisia, who had qualified for the previous tournament. On 7 April 2000 they hosted Tunisia at the Stade Olympique in Nouakchott. A crowd of 10,000 saw Tunisia win 2–1 with second-half goals from Radhi Jaidi and Hassen Gabsi. In the second leg on 22 April 2000, Mauritania were beaten 3–0 at the Stade El Menzah in Tunis. The match was watched by only 3,000, despite a capacity of 45,000 in the ground. Tunisia won 5–1 on aggregate and later qualified for the finals in South Korea and Japan.

2006 FIFA World Cup qualification

Mauritania were drawn with Zimbabwe in the preliminary of the African section of the 2006 FIFA World Cup qualification. On 12 October 2003 they lost the away leg 3–0 at the National Sports Stadium in Harare in front of 55,000 people. In the home return at the Stade Olympique on 14 November 2003, Mauritania scored twice in the opening ten minutes to win 2–1, their first victory in a World Cup match. However, Zimbabwe advanced 4–2 on aggregate.

2010 FIFA World Cup qualification

The African qualification process was altered for the 2010 FIFA World Cup. Only the six lowest-ranked nations played a preliminary, a selection which for the first time did not include Mauritania. Mauritania played in Group 8 of the second qualifying round against Rwanda, Morocco and Ethiopia, and started with an away match at the Stade Regional Nyamirambo in Kigali, Rwanda on 31 May 2008. They lost 3–0 in front of 12,000 people. The first home match was on 7 June at the Stade Nacional in Nouakchott against Morocco. The Moroccans scored two in each half before a late penalty by Dominique da Silva of Mauritania made the game 4–1.

On 13 June 2008 Mauritania hosted Ethiopia at the Stade Nacional and lost 1–0 after an injury-time winner from Saladin Said. On 22 June Mauritania lost 6–1 in the away match versus Ethiopia at the Addis Ababa Stadium. The Ethiopian forwards Fikru Tefera and Andualem Nigussie scored two goals each in a match which also saw Ba Yaoub of Mauritania sent off after 37 minutes, conceding a penalty to Fikru. The game was 1–1 at half time. In September 2008 Ethiopia were expelled from the tournament due to government interferences in their football association and all of their results annulled.

Only 1,000 people saw Mauritania's next game at the Stade Nacional as they were beaten 1–0 by Rwanda on 6 September with a late goal by Bobo Bola. Mauritania finished their group campaign at the Stade Moulay Abdellah in Rabat, Morocco. Like the home game against the Moroccans, Mauritania were 4–0 down but scored the last goal, this time by Dahmed Ould Teguedi. Although the Moroccan stadium had a capacity of 52,000, only 1,472 saw the match.

2015 Africa Cup of Nations qualification

Mauritania beat Mauritius 1–0 in the first leg of a preliminary round qualifier for the 2015 Africa Cup of Nations in Nouakchott. SC Bastia's midfielder Adama Ba scored the only goal midway through the first half. The return leg in Curepipe ended 2–0 in favour of Mauritania. Scorers were Demba Sow and Moulaye Ahmed Bessam.

In the first round, first leg match, Mauritania beat visitors Equatorial Guinea 1–0 in Nouakchott. The two sides headed into the break scoreless in their match played at Office du Complexe Olympique de Nouakchott. Hosts Mauritania broke the deadlock in the 76th minute through their Tunisian-based striker Ismaël Diakité. In the return match Equatorial Guinea beat Mauritania 3–0 in Malabo. Equatorial Guinea won 3–1 on aggregate. However, on 3 July 2014, the CAF announced that Equatorial Guinea were disqualified for fielding the ineligible player Thierry Fidjeu in the tie, and as a result, Mauritania advanced to the second round. Equatorial Guinea later qualified for the final tournament as replacement hosts.

2019 Africa Cup of Nations

On 18 November 2018, Mauritania qualified to the 2019 Africa Cup of Nations for the first time in their history, after they won 2–1 against Botswana, coming second in qualification Group I.

Team image

The Mauritania national team home kit is all green yellow red trim, and the away kit is all white with green trim.

Results and fixtures

Main article: Mauritania national football team results (2020–present)

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

2024

  • Soueid

2025

  • Klidjé
  • Denkey
  • Koïta
  • Mahmoud Report (CAF)
  • Yade
  • Abeid
  • Mané
  • Ndiaye
  • Diallo
  • Daham

Coaches

  • MTN Mohamed Harouna (1982–1983)
  • FRG Gerhard Schmidt (1985)
  • MTN Birama Gaye (2000)
  • FRA Noël Tosi (2003–2004)
  • MTN Moustapha Sall (2006–2007)
  • MTN Birama Gaye (2007)
  • FRA Alain Moizan (2008)
  • MTN Mohamed Harouna (2008)
  • MTN Omar Hassan (2010)
  • MTN Moustapha Sall (2010–2012)
  • FRA Patrice Neveu (2012–2014)
  • FRA Corentin Martins (2014–2021)
  • FRA Gérard Buscher (2021)
  • FRA Didier Gomes Da Rosa (2021–2022)
  • COM Amir Abdou (2022–2024)
  • ESP Aritz López Garai (2025–present)

Players

Current squad

The following players were called up for the 2025 FIFA Arab Cup qualification match against Kuwait on 25 November 2025.

Caps and goals correct as of 5 September 2025, after the match against Togo.

Recent call-ups

The following players have been called up for Mauritania in the last 12 months. DEC Player refused to join the team after the call-up.

INJ Player withdrew from the squad due to an injury.

PRE Preliminary squad.

RET Player has retired from international football.

SUS Suspended from the national team.

Records

!W !D !L !GF !GA !Pld !W !D !L !GF !GA |-

1930 to 1958
1962 to 1970
-
West Germany 1974
-
Argentina 1978
2
-
Spain 1982
-
Mexico 1986
-
Italy 1990
-
United States of America 1994
-
France 1998
2
-
South Korea Japan 2002
2
-
Germany 2006
2
-
South Africa 2010
4
-
Brazil 2014
-
Russia 2018
4
-
Qatar 2022
6
-
Canada Mexico United States of America 2026
10
-
Morocco Portugal Spain 2030
-
Saudi Arabia 2034
-
!Total
}

Olympic Games

Olympic Games recordAppearances: 0YearRoundPositionPldWDLGFGATotal0/28
1896 – 1960Part of France
Japan 1964Did not enter
Mexico 1968
West Germany 1972
Canada 1976Did not qualify
Soviet Union 1980Did not enter
United States 1984Did not qualify
South Korea 1988Did not enter
Spain 1992Did not qualify
United States 1996Did not enter
Australia 2000
Greece 2004
China 2008
United Kingdom 2012
Brazil 2016Did not qualify
Japan 2020
France 2024
  • Football at the Summer Olympics has been an under-23 tournament since the 1992 edition.

Africa Cup of Nations

Main article: Mauritania at the Africa Cup of Nations

Africa Cup of Nations recordQualificationAppearances: 3YearRoundPositionPldWD*LGFGAPldWD*LGFGATotalRound of 163/35101274167819174261116
Sudan 1957Part of FrancePart of **
United Arab Republic 1959
Ethiopia 1962Not affiliated to CAFNot affiliated to CAF
Ghana 1963
Tunisia 1965
Ethiopia 1968
Sudan 1970
Cameroon 1972
Egypt 1974
Ethiopia 1976Did not enterDid not enter
Ghana 1978
Nigeria 1980Did not qualify200236
Libya 1982200232
Ivory Coast 1984Did not enterDid not enter
Egypt 1986Did not qualify4112410
Morocco 1988Did not enterDid not enter
Algeria 1990WithdrewWithdrew
Senegal 1992Did not qualify6006118
Tunisia 1994WithdrewWithdrew
South Africa 1996Did not qualify814336
Burkina Faso 1998201114
Ghana Nigeria 2000WithdrewWithdrew
Mali 2002Did not qualify201103
Tunisia 20046024010
Egypt 2006200224
Ghana 20086213910
Angola 20104004212
Equatorial Guinea Gabon 2012WithdrewWithdrew
South Africa 2013Did not enterDid not enter
Equatorial Guinea 2015Did not qualify420233
Gabon 2017622265
Egypt 2019Group stage19th302114640276
Cameroon 202124th300307623154
Ivory Coast 2023Round of 1616th410335631297
Morocco 2025Did not qualify621336
Kenya Tanzania Uganda 2027To be determinedTo be determined
2029

African Games

African Games recordAppearances: 0YearRoundPositionPldWDLGFGATotal0/13
Congo 1965Did not enter
Nigeria 1973Did not qualify
Algeria 1978Did not enter
Kenya 1987
Egypt 1991
Zimbabwe 1995
South Africa 1999
Nigeria 2003Withdrew
Algeria 2007Did not enter
MOZ 2011
Congo 2015
Morocco 2019Did not qualify
Ghana 2023
  • Prior to the Cairo 1991 campaign, the Football at the African Games was open to full senior national teams.

African Nations Championship

African Nations Championship recordAppearances: 3YearRoundPositionPldWDLGFGATotalQuarter-finals3/79117515
CIV 2009Did not qualify
SUD 2011Withdrew
RSA 2014Group stage14th300348
RWA 2016Did not qualify
MAR 2018Group stage16th300306
ETH 2020Did not qualify
ALG 2022Quarter-finals7th311111
KENTAN UGA 2024To be determined

WAFU Nations Cup

WAFU Nations Cup recordAppearances: 2YearRoundPositionPldWDLGFGATotalRound 12/5202124
NGA 2010Did not enter
NGA 2011
GHA 2013
GHA 2017Round 111th100113
SEN 2019Round 19th202011
NGA 2021Cancelled

Amílcar Cabral Cup

Amílcar Cabral Cup recordAppearances: 16YearRoundPositionPldWDLGFGATotalRunners-up16/1951811323888
GNB 1979Group stage7th3003411
GAM 1980Fourth place4th411246
MLI 1981Group stage5th310224
CPV 19828th310238
MTN 1983Fourth place4th520344
SLE 1984Group stage8th300319
GAM 19858th300306
SEN 19867th300315
GUI 19876th301213
GNB 19887th302156
MLI 19897th200225
SEN 1991Did not enter
SLE 1993Group stage7th301205
MTN 1995Runners-up2nd532073
GAM 1997Group stage6th302145
CPV 20007th302134
MLI 20016th200224
GUI 2005Did not enter
GNB 2007Withdrew

CEDEAO Cup

CEDEAO Cup recordAppearances: 1YearRoundPositionPldWDLGFGATotalGroup stage1/3300348
NGA 1977Unknown
CIV 1983Did not qualify
SEN 1985Did not enter
LBR 1987
NGA 1990
CIV 1991

FIFA Arab Cup

FIFA Arab Cup recordAppearances: 2YearRoundPositionPldWDLGFGATotalGroup stage2/105104311
Lebanon 1963Did not enter
Kuwait 1964
Iraq 1966
Saudi Arabia 1985Group stage5th200204
Jordan 1988Did not qualify
Syria 1992Withdrew
Qatar 1998Did not enter
Kuwait 2002
Saudi Arabia 2012
Qatar 2021Group stage11th310237
Qatar 2025Did not qualify

Arab Games

Arab Games recordAppearances: 4YearRoundPositionPldWDLGFGATotalGroup stage4/121502131037
Egypt 1953Part of France
Lebanon 1957
Morocco 1961Did not enter
UAR 1965
Syria 1976Group stage7th6006213
Morocco 198511th3003212
Syria 1992Did not enter
Lebanon 1997Group stage8th300326
Jordan 1999Did not enter
Algeria 2004No tournament
Egypt 2007Did not enter
Qatar 2011
Algeria 2023Group stage7th302146
  • Prior to the Doha 2011 campaign, the Football at the Arab Games was open to full senior national teams.

Other records

YearStagePositionTotal0 titles
TUN 7th November Cup 1995Group stage3rd
Senegal Jeux de l’Amitié 1963Group stage16th

Honours

Regional

  • Amílcar Cabral Cup
    • Runners-up (1): 1995

Awards

  • African National Team of the Year (1): 2018

References

References

  1. "DR Congo (Zaire, Congo-Kinshasa) – List of International Matches".
  2. "Mauritania – List of International Matches".
  3. (1996-05-31). "CAF – 1998 FIFA WORLD CUP PRELIMINARIES". Allworldcup.narod.ru.
  4. "2002 FIFA World Cup Korea/Japan ™". FIFA.com.
  5. "2002 FIFA World Cup Korea/Japan ™". FIFA.com.
  6. "2006 FIFA World Cup Germany". FIFA.com.
  7. "2010 Fifa World Cup South Africa". FIFA.com.
  8. "2010 Fifa World Cup South Africa". FIFA.com.
  9. (11 October 2008). "2010 Fifa World Cup South Africa". FIFA.
  10. (12 April 2014). "Mauritania beat Mauritius in first leg of 2015 qualifier". BBC.
  11. (21 April 2014). "Mauritania pass Mauritius' test". Star Africa.
  12. (1 June 2014). "Equatorial Guinea eject Mauritania". African Football.
  13. (3 July 2014). "Equatorial Guinea disqualified from Orange Africa Cup of Nations Morocco 2015". Confédération Africaine de Football.
  14. (24 November 2025). "الأرقـَـــام الــــرّســــمــــيـــة لــقـــائــمــة المنتخب الوطني 🇲🇷 الــمُــرابـــطـــون، في ملحق كأس العرب 2025". [[Football Federation of the Islamic Republic of Mauritania]].
  15. "Mauritania".
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