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Myanmar national football team

National football team representing Myanmar


National football team representing Myanmar

FieldValue
NameMyanmar
BadgeMyanmar national football team crest.svg
Badge_size150px
NicknameChinthe
AssociationMyanmar Football Federation (MFF)
ConfederationAFC (Asia)
Sub-confederationAFF (Southeast Asia)
CoachMyo Hlaing Win
CaptainMaung Maung Lwin
Most capsMaung Maung Lwin (78)
Top scorerWin Maung (37)
Home StadiumThuwunna Stadium
FIFA TrigrammeMYA
FIFA Rank
FIFA max96
FIFA max dateApril 1996
FIFA min182
FIFA min dateAugust 2012, October 2012
Elo Rank
Elo max32
Elo max date5 August 1973
Elo min191
Elo min date4 March 2013
pattern_la1_mya25h
pattern_b1_mya25h
pattern_ra1_mya25h
pattern_sh1_arm_mya25h
pattern_so1_Vietnam_2024_HOME
leftarm1DF1010
body1DF1010
rightarm1DF1010
shorts1DF1010
socks1DF1010
pattern_la2_mya25a
pattern_b2_mya25a
pattern_ra2_mya25a
pattern_so2_Vietnam_2024_AWAY
leftarm2ffffff
body2ffffff
rightarm2ffffff
shorts2ffffff
socks2ffffff
First game5–2
(Hong Kong; 17 February 1950)
Largest win
Largest loss10–0
(Chiba, Japan; 28 May 2021)
Regional nameAsian Cup
Regional cup apps1
Regional cup first1968
Regional cup bestRunners-up (1968)
2ndRegional nameAFC Challenge Cup
2ndRegional cup apps3
2ndRegional cup first2008
2ndRegional cup bestFourth place (2008, 2010)
3rdRegional nameAFF Championship
3rdRegional cup apps13
3rdRegional cup first1996
3rdRegional cup bestFourth place (2004)
Semi-finals (2016)
Note

the men's team

| Sub-confederation = AFF (Southeast Asia) (Hong Kong; 17 February 1950) (Chiba, Japan; 28 May 2021) Semi-finals (2016)

The Myanmar national football team () represents Myanmar in men's international association football and is governed by the Myanmar Football Federation. Affiliated with FIFA since 1952 and also a member of AFC since 1954.

History

The Golden Era (1948–1970s)

In 1952, Burma played in the 1st Asian Quadrangular Football Tournament, held at Colombo, Ceylon. In the tournament, the team played their first match against India, losing 0–4, then facing off against Pakistan, where they lost by a goal. The third match against hosts Ceylon was cancelled due to the death of Ceylon's Prime Minister Mr. Don Stephen Senanayake. The team finished third place in the tournament behind Pakistan and India. Burma also played at the 1953, 1954, and 1955 editions of the tournament.

In 1954, Burma participated at the 1954 Asian Games and won a bronze medal, standing behind Taiwan and South Korea. On the other hand, the nation was not expected to contend for a medal in the Olympic-type Asian Games. In the meantime, this delegation became the first male Burmese team to win a continental medal. Against all odds, the Burma team bettered their 1954 effort by winning the gold medal in the Asian Games, which was held at Bangkok in the mid-1960s. In that tournament, Burma beat Iran in the gold-medal game.

The 1966 Asian Games gold medal-winning squad established itself as one of the two best teams in the region as it finished as runner-up to Iran at the 1968 AFC Asian Cup after losing against Iran and drawing against Republic of China. Having won a silver medal in 1968, the men's soccer team had a strong performance in the early 1970s as it qualified to compete in the 1972 Summer Olympics, which was held at Munich (West Germany), upon being one of the three finalists in the Asian tournament. Despite only winning against Sudan with 2–0, the Burmese players won the Fair Play Award. The following year, the nation earned its fifth consecutive Southeast Asian Games gold medal in Singapore (Kuala Lumpur 1965, Bangkok 1967, Rangoon 1969, and Kuala Lumpur 1971).

Three years before that, the national team wrote perhaps their most important chapter: they captured the continental title for the second time in a row, after the Burmese Olympic Committee sent footballers to Thailand for the 1970 Asian Games. Burma thus became the third football squad to win the Asian tournament twice. They were declared national heroes in Rangoon, the then capital of Burma, with their second consecutive gold medal in men's soccer.

During this golden era, Burma produced many talented footballers. One among them is Suk Bahadur who is now considered as the greatest Burmese footballer of all time for his outstanding contribution to Burmese football.

Over the following years, mainly due to political problems within the country, the national side's ability to defend its Asian title slowly faded away.

Decline and struggle (1970s–2010s)

In the later years, Burma were unable to achieve similar results like in the golden era, due to many factors. The collapse of whole Burmese football system during the rule of Ne Win and later, the junta, had a negative impact on Burmese football team. Lack of funding and poor infrastructure prevented many Burmese players to play abroad, thus leading to retirement. At the same time, the rise of Malaysia, Indonesia, Vietnam and Thailand made Myanmar's golden era fade away.

Despite this, Myanmar did win 2 medals: a silver medal in the 1993 Southeast Asian Games, in a loss to Thailand, and a bronze in the 2004 AFF Championship.

Resurgence (2010–2019)

Myanmar's 2011 reforms had been a major point of turning Myanmar's football, which had declined since 1970s. During this era, a new wave of Burmese football had arrived with the change of Myanmar's political climate, after many years under junta's rule.

The arrival of the German manager Gerd Zeise has been the crucial turning point in Myanmar football. The Myanmar U20 team qualified to Myanmar's first ever FIFA tournament, the 2015 FIFA U20 World Cup after progressing to the semi-finals in the 2014 AFC U19 Championship as host. In the 2016 AFF Championship, Myanmar, once again as host, went to semi-finals, only losing to the eventual champions, Thailand.

Despite these successes, problems remain. Myanmar's football capability has been questioned after their disastrous 2018 FIFA World Cup qualification; while at the same time, many teams in Asia have developed after many years in the shadows. Once again, Myanmar failed to qualify for 2019 AFC Asian Cup, when they suffered a tremendous 1–5 loss to Kyrgyzstan. In an effort to prepare the team for the 2018 AFF Championship, on 13 October 2018, Myanmar played an unsuccessful friendly match against Bolivia at the Thuwunna Stadium, losing 3–0.https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rmsni1wqo1E Under Antoine Hey, Myanmar also had an unsuccessful 2018 AFF Championship, when the team was knocked out at the group stage, and Hey would resign after the tournament.

Myanmar began their 2022 FIFA World Cup qualification grouping with old rival Kyrgyzstan, as well as Tajikistan, Mongolia and especially powerhouse Japan. Under the guidance of the new manager Miodrag Radulović, Myanmar had a disastrous beginning when the team fell 0–1 to Mongolia away, 0–2 to Japan at home and especially a 0–7 away defeat to the Kyrgyz, causing the Montenegrin to be fired. After the defeat to Kyrgyzstan, old coach Antoine Hey returned, where he helped Myanmar to gain a shock home win 4–3 over Tajikistan before beating Mongolia 1–0 also at home to boost morale.

Descent (2020–2022)

The COVID-19 pandemic in Myanmar and subsequent 2021 Myanmar coup d'état depleted greatly the national team when many key players refused to represent Myanmar in international football citing the junta's involvement. As for the result, Myanmar brought to Japan with half of its squad members weren't regular starters, and suffered its worst defeat in modern era to the host 0–10, forcing Antoine Hey's men to win their 2 remaining matches against Tajikistan and Kyrgyzstan while hoping for defeats from their 2 main opponents in the same time against Japan (and even a draw or a defeat against Mongolia for Kyrgyzstan) to be among the 4 best runners-up. Having lost to Kyrgyzstan 1–8 the next match, Myanmar were officially eliminated from the World Cup and the top 2 spots in the group. Eventually, Myanmar confirmed its bottom place in the group, losing 0–4 to Tajikistan, and have to play the 2023 AFC Asian Cup qualification.

During the 2020 AFF Championship, Singapore defeated Myanmar 3–0, with Ikhsan Fandi scoring a brace. However in the next match, Myanmar bounced back from that defeat with Than Paing and Maung Maung Lwin both scoring a goal to earn a 2–0 victory over Timor-Leste which give the team the hope of qualifying to the semi-finals. However, those hopes were made impossible after Thailand won 4–0 against Myanmar which ended a disastrous tournament after failing to defeat the Philippines in the final matchday.

Myanmar were also drawn in the group of death in the 2023 AFC Asian Cup qualification, being drawn with Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan and also Singapore. The team failed to secure a points in the 2023 AFC Asian Cup qualification being humiliated by Singapore 6–2, Tajikistan 4–0 and Kyrgyzstan 2–0.

The 2022 AFF Championship took place with Myanmar having friendly matches in Thailand as preparation fixtures. They won two matches against club teams, Chonburi and Samut Prakan. Despite this, they lost 6–0 to old rivals Thailand, although the opponents fielded a weaker squad. Myanmar then played their opening match against Malaysia, but although counter-attacking play was good, they lost 1–0 due to Faisal Halim's goal and a late penalty from Win Naing Tun being saved from Malaysia's Syihan Hazmi. In the next match, Myanmar played Singapore at the Jalan Besar Stadium, an artificial grass which cost them in addition to poor performances as the final result was 3–2 in Singapore's favour conceding the last goal from a goalkeeper punt kick which assisted Shawal Anuar to secure the 3 points for Singapore. However, Maung Maung Lwin did score two goals in this match: one being a composed right top corner finish while the other was a first-time volley. The team's chances of qualifying had been ruined, as they played Laos on home soil, going down 1–0 early on through Soukaphone Vongchiengkham but Kyaw Min Oo, who was having an excellent tournament scored a header, completely unmarked. Laos scored back to take the lead up to 2–1 however in the 90+6 minutes, Myanmar captain Maung Maung Lwin secured a point for Myanmar as the match ended at 2–2 which also mean that this draw confirmed the team's elimination from the tournament. They lost 3–0 against Vietnam in their final match and they failed to registered a single win in the group stage of the AFF Championship for the first time since the 2014 edition. On 31 January 2023, Antoine Hey resigned from his position as head coach. Despite the poor results, the team can take positives away from this tournament as the playing style was praised by many fans.

Glimpses of hope (2023–''present'')

In March 2023, Germany head coach Michael Feichtenbeiner was tasked to lead Myanmar with positive results. With the domestic league being more active compared to last year's competition, Myanmar fans had no reason not to be optimistic when they participated in the 2023 Tri-Nation Series tournament hosted by India. This tournament saw the big returns of Aung Thu and Nyein Chan Aung after boycotting call-ups over the coup earlier, which was seen as a surprise. Players such as Lwin Moe Aung, Hein Htet Aung and Win Naing Tun were also called up to the national squad. In the first match, the finishing cost Myanmar against a tough India side, losing 1–0 with a goal in first half stoppage time by Anirudh Thapa. In the second match against Kyrgyzstan, Myanmar midfielder Kyaw Min Oo blew a big leading chance with a penalty miss in the first half. Despite this miss, Myanmar continued to press and trouble the Kyrgyzstan defence and were eventually rewarded with a goal from Aung Thu in the 82' minute. However, they gave away a goal in the 90+6' minute from a corner kick. Despite it being a draw, this result showed the return of the winning spirit that Myanmar desperately needed during the last year. The Myanmar team had shown a significant improvement throughout the last 6 months, and it showed in the match against Kyrgyzstan.

In June 2023, Myanmar travelled to Dalian to face China and Macau in the international friendly window in which Myanmar played their first match against China but came out with a 4–0 defeat despite a strong showing in the first half. On 19 June 2023, Macau was Myanmar's next opponent and goals from Lwin Moe Aung and Maung Maung Lwin secured a 2–0 win, Myanmar's first win in over two years since their last win over Timor-Leste on 8 December 2021. In September 2023, Myanmar played both of their friendly match at home against Nepal which the first match resulted in a disappointing 0–0 draw, with Myanmar goalkeeper Kyaw Zin Phyo saving Anjan Bista's penalty. In the second match, the performance significantly improved and Myanmar won 1–0 to an 86' minute goal by striker Win Naing Tun. In October 2023, Myanmar played against Macau in the 2026 FIFA World Cup qualification first round match at home which see them thrashing Macau 5–1 at home on 12 October 2023. Myanmar failed to produce the same performance in the second leg however, as Macau put up a strong resistance to end the game in a disappointing goalless draw; still, due to having won 5–1 in the first leg, Myanmar advanced to the second round of the qualification, where Myanmar will have to face sterner oppositions in group B, which are Syria, North Korea and Asian hegemon Japan, which had impressed greatly in the 2022 FIFA World Cup.

Amidst the backdrop of ongoing security crisis on home soil, notably with the kickstarting of the Operation 1027 that led to war and destruction in the country's borderlands and glimpse of war closer to Yangon, where Myanmar team chose to base themselves, the Burmese started their campaign with a predictable 5–0 thumping in the hands of Japan, the highest-ranked team in Asia at the time, before suffering an agonising 6–1 loss to North Korea on home soil, in which Win Naing Tun scored Myanmar's solitary goal. On 21 March 2024, Myanmar shockingly held Syria to a 1–1 draw after Soe Moe Kyaw scored the only goal for the team during the 2026 FIFA World Cup qualification match, which was a surprise after Syria's decent performance in the 2023 AFC Asian Cup earlier. Unfortunately, Myanmar could not keep up with the tempo in the return leg, losing 7–0 to Syria in a match where the Burmese were reduced to ten men after Hein Phyo Win was sent off.

On September 9, 2024, the Myanmar Football Federation appointed former national team player and football legend Myo Hlaing Win as the head coach of the national team.

On 10 October 2024, Myanmar won 2–0 in a friendly against Sri Lanka.

As part of preparations for the AFF Mitsubishi Cup 2024, the Myanmar national team played two friendly against Singapore and Lebanon.Both matches ended in 3–2 defeats for Myanmar, with the games taking place on November 14 and November 19, respectively.

On 9 December, Myanmar played their first match of the 2024 ASEAN Championship at Thuwunna Stadium but lost unexpectedly to Indonesia. After the loss, they traveled to the Philippines to play on 12 December. That match ended in a draw. Although there was still hope to reach the semi-finals, the chances were very low. On December 18, Myanmar returned home to play against Laos in their third match. They needed a win to avoid finishing the tournament without a victory. In a dramatic game, Myanmar won 3–2, with Win Naing Tun scoring in the 87th and 90+3rd minutes to secure the win. Then, on 21 December, Myanmar played their final group match against Vietnam. Unfortunately, it ended in a heavy 5–0 lost thus Myanmar was knocked out of the tournament.

Myanmar had been missing success for a long time, so qualifying for the 2027 AFC Asian Cup was very important. They needed to finish first in their group in the third round of the 2027 AFC Asian Cup qualification. On 25 March 2025, they played their first match against Afghanistan and won 2–1 at home. Afghanistan scored first in the 14th minute through Omid Popalzay, but Myanmar came back with goals from Than Paing in the 28th minute and Maung Maung Lwin in the 75th minute. On 10 June, Myanmar played against Pakistan and won 1–0 at home with Than Paing scoring the only goal to secure the 3 points. However, Myanmar failed to qualify for the 2027 AFC Asian Cup in the end, after suffering two heavy losses to Syria 5–1 away and 3–0 home.

Kits

The Myanmar national team kit was made by FBT in a contract in effect until 2018.

In November 2018, the Myanmar national team signed a six-year contract with Warrix Sports. The sports kit sponsorship contract was valued at US$5.67 million and it will run from 1 November 2018 to 31 December 2024.

On 6 November 2018, Warrix introduced a new Myanmar home and away kit. The home kit is a red shirt with red shorts and red socks. The away kit is a shirt, shorts and socks that is all white. In 2025, MFF formally ended its 6-year contract with the Thailand provider and announced a four-year partnership with Japanese brand Jogarbola, which is directly represented, sponsored and distributed by the Vietnamese firm Dong Luc Sport.

Myanmar national football team kitsKit ProviderPeriod
FRG Adidas2011–2013
Italy Lotto2013–2015
Thailand FBT2015–2018
Thailand Warrix2018–2024
Japan Jogarbola2025–

Stadium

Myanmar plays most of its home matches in Thuwunna Stadium in Yangon, Myanmar. The stadium is larger and more up-to-date than the older Bogyoke Aung San Stadium. In 2013, the stadium was upgraded to a seating capacity of 50,000 spectators from the previous capacity of 32,000. It also hosted the 2016 AFF Championship Group B matches .

Myanmar national football team home stadiumsImageStadiumCapacityLocationLast match
[[File:Thuwunna Stadium.JPGframeless145x145px]]Thuwunna Stadium50,000Yangonv (10 June 2025; 2027 AFC Asian Cup qualification)
[[File:Mandalarthiri Stadium at night.jpgframeless145x145px]]Mandalar Thiri Stadium31,270Mandalayv (7 November 2019; Friendly)

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

  • Thiha Zaw
  • Maung Maung Lwin
  • Fakhro
  • Merheg
  • Zin Nyi Nyi Aung
  • Kristensen
  • Maung Maung Lwin

2025

Report (AFC)

2026

Coaching staff

PositionName
Technical DirectorJPN Michiteru Mita
Head CoachMYA Myo Hlaing Win
Assistant CoachMYA Min Thu
MYA Aung Kyaw Moe
Goalkeeping CoachGER Mike Kost
Fitness CoachSCT Richard Horlock
Match AnalystMYA Hlaing Min Tun
Team DoctorMYA Kyaw Thant Zin
Media OfficerMYA Zaw Minn Htike
VideographerMYA Saw Ye Mon
ScoutingMYA Kyi Lwin
PhysiotheropistMYA Thura Toe
Kit ManagerMYA Aung Kyaw Lin

Coaching history

NamePeriodMatchesWinsDrawsLossesWin %Honours
SCO Alex Weir19541954 Asian Games (Bronze)
YUG Milorad Mitrović1955–1959
YUG Marko Valok1959–1961
URS Mikhail Bozenenkov1961–19631961 SEAP Games (Sliver)
MYA Sein Hlaing1964–1965Merdeka Cup Champions (1964)
URS German Zonin1965–1967Asian Games Champions (1966)
Southeast Asian Games Champions (1965, 1967)
Merdeka Cup Champions (1967)
MYA Sein Hlaing1968–1979Asian Games Champions (1970)
Southeast Asian Games Champions (1969, 1971, 1973)
Merdeka Cup Champions (1971)
West Germany Bert Trautmann1972–19741972 President's Cup Football Tournament Champions
Netherlands Ger Blok1993–1996
Serbia and Montenegro Ratomir Dujković1996–1997
ENG David Booth2000–2003
BUL Ivan Venkov KolevNov 2004 – 20052004 Tiger Cup Semi-finalists
MYA Sann Win2006–20072006 Merdeka Tournament Champions
2007 Merdeka Tournament Runners-up
BRA Marcos FalopaApr 2007 – Dec 2008
MYA Tim Myint AungApr – Oct 2009
CRO Drago MamićOct 2009 – Feb 2010
MYA Tin Myint AungFeb – Dec 2010
SER Milan ŽivadinovićJan – Jul 2011
MYA Sann Win*Jul 2011
KOR Park Sung-HwaDec 2011 – Dec 2013
MYA Sann Win*Sep 2013
SER Radojko AvramovicFeb 2014 – Oct 20152014 Philippine Peace Cup Champions
MYA Tin Myint Aung*Aug 2017
GER Gerd ZeiseOct 2015 – March 20182016 AFF Championship Semi-final
MYA Zaw Win Tun*March 2018
GER Antoine Hey16 May – 13 December 2018
MYA Myo Min Tun*March 2019
MNE Miodrag Radulović20 April – 20 October 2019
GER Antoine Hey21 October 2019 – 31 January 2023
GER Michael Feichtenbeiner1 March 2023 – 13 August 2024
MYA Myo Hlaing Win10 September 2024 – present

*** As caretaker

Players

Current squad

The following 23 players were called up for the AFC match against Syria on October 2025.

Caps and goals updated as of 10 October 2025, after the game against Syria.

Recent call-ups

The following players have also been called up to the Myanmar squad within the last twelve months.

INJ Withdrew due to injury

PRE Preliminary squad

RET Retired from the national team

SUS Serving suspension

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

Player records

!W !D !L !GF !GA !Pld !W !D !L !GF !GA |- |1930 to 1938||rowspan="1" colspan="7" |*Part of * |- !colspan=15|as **** |- |Brazil 1950 !rowspan=2| |- |1954 to 1986||colspan="7" |Did not enter |- !colspan=15|as ** / ** |- |Italy 1990 !rowspan=13| |- |United States of America 1994|| colspan="7" |Withdrew |- |France 1998 || colspan="7" |Did not enter |- |South Korea Japan 2002 || colspan="7" |Withdrew |- |Germany 2006 || colspan="7" |Banned |- |South Africa 2010 || rowspan="5" colspan="7" |Did not qualify ||2||0||0||2||0||11 |- |Brazil 2014 ||4||1||0||3||2||6 |- |Russia 2018 ||8||2||2||4||9||21 |- |Qatar 2022 ||8||2||0||6||6||35 |- |Canada Mexico United States of America 2026 ||8||1||2||5||8||29 |-

Morocco Portugal Spain 2030
Saudi Arabia 2034
-
!Total
!30
}

Olympic Games

Olympic Games recordYearResultPositionPldWDLGFGASquadTotalRound 1310222
FRA 1900 to FIN 1952Did not participate
AUS 1956 to MEX 1968Did not qualify
FRG 1972Round 19/16310222Squad
CAN 1976 to KOR 1988Did not qualify
ESP 1992 to presentSee Myanmar national under-23 team

AFC Asian Cup

Main article: Myanmar at the AFC Asian Cup

AFC Asian Cup recordQualification recordYearRoundPldWDLGFGAPldWDLGFGATotalRunners-up421154531772968149
HKG 1956WithdrewWithdrew
KOR 1960
ISR 1964
IRN 1968Runners-up421154330050
THA 1972WithdrewWithdrew
IRN 1976
KUW 1980
SIN 1984
QAT 1988
JPN 1992Did not enterDid not enter
UAE 1996Did not qualify62131120
LBN 2000320164
CHN 200483051118
IDN MAS THA VIE 2007BannedBanned
QAT 2011Did not enterAFC Challenge Cup
AUS 2015
UAE 2019Did not qualify144461931
QAT 202311209847
KSA 20278125829

Asian Games

Asian Games recordYearRoundPldWDLGFGATotalChampions34136144960
India 1951Quarter-finals100102
Philippines 1954Third place4201108
Japan 1958Group stage200236
Indonesia 1962Withdrew
Thailand 1966Champions642083
Thailand 1970742195
Iran 1974Second round62131414
Thailand 1978Group stage200215
India 1982310238
South Korea 1986did not qualify
China 1990
Japan 1994Group stage301229
Thailand 1998Withdrew
2002–presentSee Myanmar under-23 football team

AFC Challenge Cup

AFC Challenge Cup recordQualification recordYearRoundPldWDLGFGAPldWDLGFGATotalBest: Fourth place1350815219522168
Bangladesh 2006BannedBanned
India 2008Fourth place520366
Sri Lanka 20105203610330071
Nepal 2012Did not qualify301226
Maldives 2014Group stage310235321071

ASEAN Championship

ASEAN Championship recordQualification recordYearRoundPosPldWDLGFGASquadPldWDLGFGATotalFourth place15/15561612288211910820194
Singapore 1996Group stage6th42021112SquadNo qualification
Vietnam 19985th311189Squad220071
Thailand 20006th310248SquadNo qualification
Indonesia Singapore 20025th4211135Squad
Malaysia Vietnam 2004Fourth place4th73131212Squad
Singapore Thailand 2007Group stage6th303011SquadQualified automatically
Indonesia Thailand 20086th310248Squad
Indonesia Vietnam 20107th301229Squad
Malaysia Thailand 20128th301217Squad431061
Singapore Vietnam 20147th301226Squad431062
Myanmar Philippines 2016Semi-finals4th420259SquadQualified automatically
ASEAN 2018Group stage5th421175Squad
Singapore 20208th4103410Squad
ASEAN 20228th401349Squad
ASEAN 2024411249Squad

Southeast Asian Games

Southeast Asian Games recordYearRoundPldWDLGFGATotal5 tiles6432928130126
Thailand 1959Group stage3003310
Burma 1961Runners-up420275
Cambodia 1963Cancelled
Malaysia 1965Champions321052
Thailand 1967440072
Burma 1969330081
Malaysia 19714310133
Singapore 19734400154
Thailand 1975Third place311133
Malaysia 19774301129
Indonesia 1979Group stage401325
Philippines 1981201134
Singapore 1983310234
Thailand 1985Withdrew
Indonesia 1987Fourth place4022314
Malaysia 1989Group stage200207
Philippines 1991200216
Singapore 1993Runners-up64022111
Thailand 1995Fourth place6303108
Indonesia 1997Group stage4112108
Brunei 19994112410
2001–presentSee Myanmar national under-23 team

Regional record

OpponentsScoreYearOutcomeMatch type
16 October 20143−1Won2014 AFF Championship
12 November 20184−1Won2018 AFF Championship
18 December 20243−2Won2024 ASEAN Championship
9 December 20240−1Lost2024 ASEAN Championship
21 December 20220−1Lost2022 AFF Championship
12 December 20241−1Draw2024 ASEAN Championship
14 November 20242−3LostFriendly
11 December 20220−6LostFriendly
8 December 20212−0Won2020 AFF Championship
21 December 20240−5Lost2024 ASEAN Championship

Honours

Continental

  • AFC Asian Cup
    • Runners-up (1): 1968
  • Asian Games****1
    • Gold medal (2): 1966, 1970
    • Bronze medal (1): 1954

Regional

  • Southeast Asian Games
    • Gold medal (5): 1965, 1967, 1969, 1971, 1973
    • Silver medal (2): 1961, 1993
    • Bronze medal (2): 1975, 1977

Friendly

  • Merdeka Tournament (4): 1964, 1967, 1971, 2006
  • Jakarta Anniversary Tournament (4): 1971, 1973, 1974, 1975
  • Marah Halim Cup (2): 1978, 1979
  • Korea Cup (3): 1971, 1972, 1973
  • Myanmar Grand Royal Challenge Cup (2): 2006, 2008
  • Philippine Peace Cup (1): 2014

Summary

Only official honours are included, according to FIFA statutes (competitions organized/recognized by FIFA or an affiliated confederation).

CompetitionTotalTotal0101
AFC Asian Cup0101

;Notes:

  1. Competition organized by OCA, officially not recognized by FIFA.
  • Shared titles.

Notes

References

References

  1. "Myanmar matches, ratings and points exchanged". World Football Elo Ratings: Myanmar.
  2. "Member Association – Myanmar – FIFA.com". FIFA.
  3. "Times of Ceylon 1952.03.17 — South Asian Newspapers".
  4. "Times of Ceylon 1952.03.21 — South Asian Newspapers".
  5. "Asian Quadrangular Tournament (Colombo Cup) 1952-1955".
  6. Roebuck, Matt. (27 December 2016). "Myanmar's Golden Age". Medium.
  7. (10 February 2020). "Did you know there was a golden age of Myanmar soccer?".
  8. "2022 World Cup Qualifiers: Myanmar beat Tajikistan 4-3".
  9. (13 May 2021). "Myanmar hopes hit as footballers pull out over coup {{!}} Dhaka Tribune".
  10. (29 May 2021). "Japan beats Myanmar 10-0 after protests on and off pitch".
  11. (6 November 2018). "MFF signs sponsorship contract with Warrix Sports Companyn".
  12. "မြန်မာ့လက်ရွေးစင် အသင်းများ ဝတ်စုံစပွန်ဆာ အဖြစ် နှစ်ဖက်သဘောတူညီမှု MoU လက်မှတ်ရေးထိုး".
  13. "| Myanmar Times".
  14. (9 October 2025). "Syria v Myanmar, 09 October 2025". 11.11.com.
  15. (12 June 2023). "Myanmar National Team".
  16. Haverkort, Jeroen. (9 February 2011). "Werken op twijfelachtig grondgebied". metronieuws.nl.
  17. "Myanmar urgently needs foreign coach for national soccer team". news.xinhuanet.com.
  18. (13 December 2018). "MFF part way with National Team Head coach Antonie Hey by mutual agreement". Myanmar Football Federation.
  19. (20 October 2019). "Myanmar sack head coach Miodrag Radulovic and bring back former boss Antoine Hey". foxsportsasia.
  20. (31 January 2023). "Hey takes up Myanmar role". FIFA.
  21. "Myanmar".
  22. (30 September 2011). "Myanmar disciplinary sanctions confirmed". FIFA.
  23. (7 November 2011). "Myanmar appeal partially upheld".
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