Skip to content
Surf Wiki
Save to docs
sports

From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base

Zambia women's national football team

Association football team


Summary

Association football team

FieldValue
NameZambia
BadgeFlag of Zambia.svg
Badge_size180px
NicknameCopper Queens
AssociationFAZ
Sub-confederationCOSAFA (Southern Africa)
ConfederationCAF (Africa)
CoachNora Häuptle
CaptainBarbra Banda
FIFA TrigrammeZAM
FIFA Rank
FIFA max62
FIFA max dateAugust – December 2024
FIFA min131
FIFA min dateOctober – December 2007
pattern_la1_zam23Hpattern_b1=_zam23Hpattern_ra1=_zam23Hpattern_sh1=_zam23Hpattern_so1=
leftarm1FF9900body1=FF9900rightarm1=FF9900shorts1=000000socks1=FF9900
pattern_la2_zam23Apattern_b2=_zam23Apattern_ra2=_zam23Apattern_sh2=_zam23Apattern_so2=
leftarm2008A2Bbody2=008A2Brightarm2=008A2Bshorts2=008A2Bsocks2=008A2B
pattern_la3_zam23Tpattern_b3=_zam23Tpattern_ra3=_zam23Tpattern_sh3=_zam23T
leftarm3FFFFFFbody3=FFFFFFrightarm3=FFFFFFshorts3=FFFFFFsocks3=FFFFFF
First game5–3
(South Africa; 5 November 1994)
Largest win15–0
(Ibhayi, South Africa; 1 August 2019)
Largest loss3–10
(Rifu, Japan; 21 July 2021)
World cup apps1
World cup first2023
World cup bestGroup stage (2023)
2ndRegional nameSummer Olympics
2ndRegional cup apps2
2ndRegional cup first2020
2ndRegional cup bestGroup stage (2020, 2024)
Regional nameAfrica Cup of Nations
Regional cup apps5
Regional cup first1995
Regional cup bestThird place (2022)
typewomen

| Sub-confederation = COSAFA (Southern Africa) (South Africa; 5 November 1994) (Ibhayi, South Africa; 1 August 2019) (Rifu, Japan; 21 July 2021) The Zambia women's national association football team represents Zambia in association football, participating in qualifying tournaments for the FIFA Women's World Cup and other African-based competitions. Nicknamed Copper Queens. It made its debut in the 2023 FIFA Women's World Cup, becoming the first landlocked nation in Africa to qualify for a senior World Cup in either men's or women's soccer.

History

Zambia became an official women's national team in 1983, and was one of the first African women's national football teams to exist on the continent.

In 2003, the kit for the team was provided as a result of a sponsorship deal with Umbro who first agreed to sponsor the Zambia national football team. The team's official kit colours include green shorts, a green jersey and green socks.

Some matches were played in 1994, for qualification for 1995 FIFA Women's World Cup. Zambia played in a 5 November 1994 World Cup qualifier against South Africa in South Africa, where Zambia lost 3–5. In the return match in Lusaka, Zambia on 17 November 1994, Zambia lost with a score of 2–6.

Between these games and 2001, it did not play in any FIFA sanctioned matches. Later that year, in a regional qualifying match for a different tournament, on 21 September in Lusaka, Zambia against South Africa, the team lost 1–4 after being down 0–2 at the half. In the return match in South Africa on 12 October 2002, it lost 0–4. By 2003, it was ranked the 106th best women's national team by FIFA.

In 2004, its rank dropped to 113. In 2004, Zimbabwe women's national football team had committed to play a match against Zambia before Zimbabwe took on Tanzania in Dar e Salaam and this did not happen because of organizational problems by Zimbabwe Football Association.

In 2005, the team's FIFA ranking was unchanged and remained at 113, In March 2006, the team played a home and away set of against Congo DR. On Saturday, 11 March 2006 in a game played in Lubumbashi, Congo DR won 3–0 against Zambia. Congo DR led 1–0 at the half. On Saturday, 25 March 2006 in a game played in Chingola, Zambia lost 2–3, a score that remained the same from half time, against Congo DR.

In 2006, Zambia hosted a regional COSAFA women's football tournament. Originally nine countries were scheduled to participate but Mozambique withdrew and the number was cut to eight. South Africa won the tournament and Zambia came out as third place winner.

The 2006 team had 20 players. The regional COSAFA championship team was announced on 18 August 2006. The 2006 Confederation of Southern African Football Associations women's tournament was held in Lusaka. It was in Group A. On 22 August, it tied Namibia 2–2 with Noria Sosala scoring in the 15th minute and Charity Mpongo scoring in the 30th minute for Zambia. It beat Swaziland 7–0 on 24 August, with Charity Mpongo scoring in the 23rd, 43rd, 64th and 67th minutes, Susan Banda scoring in the 37th minute, Gift Lishika scoring in the 41st minute, and Martha Kapombo scoring in the 56th minute for Zambia. It finished in the top of its group. On 25 August in a semifinal against Namibia, it tied 1–1 with Martha Kapombo scoring its only goal in the 90th minute. It lost the game in an overtime shoot out by 4–5. On 26 August, it beat Zimbabwe 2–1 to finish third with Noria Sosala scoring both goals in the 67th and 75th minutes.

2007 saw an improvement in rank for Zambia, moving up 9 sports to 117 best team in the world. Later that year, on Sunday, 2 December 2007 in a game played in Harare, Zimbabwe won 3–1 against Zambia. The game was part of the 2008 African Women Championship. In the return match on Sunday, 16 December 2007 in a game played in Lusaka, Zambia won 2–1 against Zimbabwe.

In 2008, the team's ranking again went up, this time to 110. The played 1 FIFA recognised match on Sunday, 4 May 2008 in a game played in Benguela against Botswana. Zambia won 4–2, holding on from a 3–1 score at the half. In 2009, FIFA ranked the country as the 92 in the world. That year, it did not play any FIFA recognised matches. The team's world ranking fell in 2010 to 122. That year, it played in 2 FIFA recognised matches. The first was on Saturday, 2 October 2010 in a game played in Lobatse against Botswana, which Zambia won 4–1, holding on to a 3–0 half time lead. The second game was on Saturday, 23 October 2010 in a game played in Lusaka. Zambia won 2–1 against Botswana holding on to a 1–0 half time lead.

Zambia team's rank fell in 2011, this time to 125th best in the world. It did not make it into the final group qualification round for the CAF region that fought it out to represent Africa in the World Cup. In January, the team played a pair of games against South Africa. It lost the 15 January game in Lusaka 1–2, going down with a score of 0–0 at the half. It lost the 29 January game in Umlazi 0–3 after being down 0–1 at the half. Going into the 2012 season, the team coach is Enala Phiri-Simbeye, a woman On 14 January 2012, it played a game against Malawi that it won 7–0 after being ahead 4–0 at the half. The game was part of the CAF African Women's Championship and was played in the first round and played in Lusaka. Prior to the start of the game, the team danced on the field and sang Chikokishi music. Malawi beat Zambia 4–2 following a 1–0 lead at halftime in the return leg played in Blantyre, Malawi on 29 January 2012. Suzan Banda scored the second goal of the game, and the first for Zambia in the match. Mupopa Kawange scored Zambia's second goal. Zambia had a number of fans, most women, who attended the game in Malawi. In March 2012, the team was ranked the 126th best in the world and the 19th best in CAF.

In the African qualifiers for the 2020 Olympics, it defeated Cameroon in the final round and qualified for the Olympics for the first time. In its Olympics debut, it experienced a 3–10 loss to the Netherlands, the highest-scoring women's soccer match in Olympics history.

Olympic team

For the 2012 Summer Olympics, there are no age restrictions for players, and Zambia has opted to qualify with a U20/U23 side. Zambia competed in the qualifying tournament in an effort to represent the country at the 2012 Summer Olympics. The qualification tournament started in 2010. The team was coached by Enala Phiri-Simbeye. During its campaign, it beat the Botswana women's national football team 4–1 in Gaborone and beat it 2–1 in Lusaka. The performance of the team earned praise from women's groups inside the country. In January 2011, Zambia had to face South Africa in the qualifying tournament for the Olympics. The squad named to play against South Africa included goalkeepers Mirriam Katamanda, Ennie Matukuta, Defenders Meya Banda, Verocia Chiluba, Jessica Chabota, Mulai Wilombe, Deborah Chisenga, Veronica Chisala, Midfielders Misozi Zulu, Susan Banda, Etas Banda, Fostina Sakala, Kabange Mupopo, Rachel Chisha, Chisala Musonda, and Strikers Mwila Bowa, Noria Sosala, Gift Lisaka and Ednasha Mambwe. Chiluba is the second daughter of Zambia's president.

Coached by Enala Simbeya, Zambia's U23 team participated in the 2011 All-Africa Games qualifiers. They played a pair of games against Zimbabwe. On Sunday, 13 February 2011 in a game played at the Rufaro Stadium in Harare, Zimbabwe won 1–0 against Zambia, overcoming a half time score of 0–0. On the return leg played on Sunday, 27 February 2011 in a game played at Nkoloma Stadium in Lusaka, Zambia lost 1–3 to Zimbabwe, scoring a goal in the second half with the first half ending with Zambia down 0–3. Simbeya did not name their 18-woman team until a day before the game. The loss eliminated them, with Zimbabwe going on to play Angola.

Homeless World Cup team

In 2008, a team represented the country at the Homeless World Cup. In round robin play, it won every game and were Crowned Champions. The tournament was held in Australia Melbourne. It beat Paraguay 6–1, Uganda 6–1, Kyrgyzstan 5–4, Liberia 4–1, Cameroon 17–0, Australia 18–1 and Colombia 10–1. In the half finals, it beat Kyrgyzstan 10–0. In the final, it beat Liberia 7–1.

2023 World Cup

Zambia qualified for the 2023 FIFA Women's World Cup, making the country the first landlocked nation in Africa to qualify for a senior World Cup in either gender. By reaching the semi-finals of the 2022 Women's Africa Cup of Nations it secured qualification. It was in Group C along with Spain, Japan and Costa Rica. Its opening match against Japan ended in a 5-0 defeat. Its second match was a loss to Spain by the same 5-0 score, leading to their elimination from the Group Stage alongside Costa Rica. Their final game, which was played against Costa Rica, ended with a 3-1 win to Zambia as they placed third within Group C on three points. In this game Barbra Banda scored Zambia's first World Cup goal, which was also the 1,000th goal in Women's World Cup history.

Fixtures

Main article: Zambia women's national football team results

;Legend

2025

  • Chitundu
  • Kundananji
  • Kundananji
  • Nachula
  • Kadzere
  • Chinzimu
  • Thom
  • Nachula
  • Lubandji
  • Promthongmee
  • Phomsri
  • Peng-ngam
  • Seopesenwe
  • Jraïdi
  • Chebbak
  • Banda
  • Kundananji
  • Banda
  • Kundananji
  • N. Ndiaye
  • Ohale
  • Okoronkwo
  • Ihezuo
  • Demehin
  • Ijamilusi
  • Kooper
  • Coleman
  • Kundananji
  • Nachula
  • E. Phiri
  • Chuilufya
  • Nanyangwe

2026

Coaching staff

Current coaching staff

PositionName
Head coachNora Häuptle
Assistant coachPhilippe Hasler
Goalkeeping coach
Physical coach
Video analyst

Manager history

  • ZAM Charles Bwale (2014)
  • ZAM Albert Kachinga (2014–2018)
  • ZAM Bruce Mwape (2018–2025)
  • SUI Nora Häuptle(2025-)

Players

Main article: List of Zambia women's international footballers

Current squad

  • These 26 players were named for the 3 Nation Tournament in Malawi (vs Malawi on 30 Nov and Zimbabwe on 2 Dec 2025).

Caps and goals accurate up to and including 13 July 2025.

Recent call-ups

The following players had been called up to a squad in 12 months preceding the above draft.

INJ Injured player.

PRE Preliminary squad.

RET Retired from international football.

SUS Suspended for the next match.

WD Withdrew from the squad due to non-injury issue.

QUA Placed in quarantine after a contact with COVID-19.

Previous squads

;FIFA Women's World Cup

;Africa Women Cup of Nations

;COSAFA Women's Championship

Competitive record

FIFA Women's World Cup

Main article: Zambia at the FIFA Women's World Cup

Zambia made its World Cup debut on 22 July 2023.

YearRoundPldWDLGFGATotal1/123102311
CHN 1991Did not enter
SWE 1995Did not qualify
USA 1999Did not enter
USA 2003Did not qualify
CHN 2007
GER 2011Did not enter
CAN 2015Did not qualify
FRA 2019
AUSNZL 2023Group stage3102311
BRA 2027To be determined
MEXUSA 2031
UK 2035

Olympic Games

YearRoundPldWDLGFGATotal2/560151328
USA 1996Did not qualify
AUS 2000Did not enter
GRE 2004
CHN 2008
GBR 2012Did not qualify
BRA 2016
JPN 2020Group stage3012715
FRA 2024Group stage3003613
USA 2028To be determined
AUS 2032

Africa Cup

YearRoundPldWDLGFGATotal5/15186572537
1991Withdrew
1995Quarter-finals2002511
NGA 1998Did not enter
ZAF 2000
NGA 2002Did not qualify
ZAF 2004Did not enter
NGA 2006Did not qualify
EQG 2008
RSA 2010Did not enter
EQG 2012Did not qualify
NAM 2014Group stage301219
CMR 2016Did not qualify
GHA 2018Group stage311165
MAR 2022Third place632173
MAR 2024Quarter-finals421169

African Games

YearRoundPldWDLGFGATotal
NGA 2003Did not enter
ALG 2007
MOZ 2011Did not qualify
CGO 2015Did not qualify
MAR 2019
GHA 2023See U-20 team

COSAFA Championship

YearRoundPldWD*LGFGAGDTotal3116788130+43
ZIM 20023rd
ZAM 20063rd
ANG 2008
ZIM 2011Group stage310257−1
ZIM 20173rd5230189+2
RSA 20184th530262+2
RSA 2019Runners-up5311223+19
RSA 20203rd310293+6
RSA 20213rd5320112+9
RSA 2023Runners-up5311104+6

:*Draws include knockout matches decided via penalty shoot-out.

Turkish Cup

YearRoundPldWDLGFGAGDTotal
2021Withdrew

Honours

Major competitions

  • Women's Africa Cup of Nations : [[File:Med 3.png]] Third place: (1) 2022

References

References

  1. Robert. (February 21, 2022). "Copper Queens ready for against Namibia".
  2. "Zambia's Copper Queens aiming to shine in Tokyo". BBC Sport.
  3. Nowakowski, Wojciech. (2023-08-08). "Morocco, Ireland, Portugal: All 8 Women's World Cup debutants and how far they made it".
  4. (21 April 2009). "Goal! Football: Zambia". FIFA.
  5. Bose, Soumitra. (17 October 2022). "Zambian Women's Football: How She-polopolo Are Riding The Crest Of Success".
  6. (1 August 2003). "The Post (Zambia) – AAGM: Faz Calls Urgent Ordinary Meeting". The Post.
  7. "Football Association of Zambia (FAZ) – Information – Zambia – CAF". Cafonline.com.
  8. (16 January 2012). "Celebrating Women's National Football Team". Nowspar.org.
  9. Sébastien Duret (seduret@aol.com). (5 November 2003). "South Africa — Women — International Results".
  10. "Zambia: Fixtures and Results". FIFA.
  11. "Previous Tournaments". FIFA.com.
  12. (7 September 2006). "COSAFA Women Tournaments". Rsssf.com.
  13. Lubasi, Chris. (11 June 2004). "The Post (Zambia) – AAGM: Kashimoto to Coach Roan United". The Post.
  14. Mutungamiri, Lloyd. (18 July 2004). "Zimbabwe Standard — AAGM: Mighty Warriors: Local Soccer's Poor Relations". Zimbabwe Standard.
  15. (6 October 2024). "History of the HOLLYWOODBETS COSAFA Women's Championship".
  16. Mukoka, Augustine. (16 August 2005). "The Post (Zambia) – AAGM: Zambia to Host Cosafa Women's Soccer Tourney". The Post.
  17. "Zambia: FIFA/Coca-Cola World Ranking". FIFA.com.
  18. "FIFA Women's World Cup". FIFA.com.
  19. "She-polopolo refuses to write off Malawi | Malawi news, Malawi — NyasaTimes breaking online news source from Malawi". Nyasatimes.com.
  20. Sports. "Malawi, Zambia women skippers in mind games- report | Malawi news, Malawi – NyasaTimes breaking online news source from Malawi". Nyasatimes.com.
  21. "Fixtures — African Women Championship 2010 – CAF". Cafonline.com.
  22. (25 September 2009). "The FIFA Women's World Ranking". FIFA.com.
  23. (10 March 2020). "Zambia stun Cameroon for Tokyo 2020 slot". [[Confederation of African Football]].
  24. Young, Ryan. (21 July 2021). "Netherlands women's soccer blows out Zambia in historic win to open Olympics". [[Yahoo! News]].
  25. "Football". London 2012.
  26. (16 December 2010). "AAGM: Handbags on the Pitch". Daily Nation.
  27. (23 October 2010). "The Post Newspapers Zambia – Latest News, Politics, Business, Sports, Photos, Videos » Sports News » U-20 women face Botswana". Postzambia.com.
  28. "She-polopolo team manager: Its David v Goliath". Zambianfootball.net.
  29. "Homeless Football World Cup". Rsssf.com.
  30. "Zambia's joy and Senegal's despair on a dramatic night in Casablanca".
  31. (27 July 2023). "World Cup Preview - Zambia".
  32. (27 July 2023). "Spain cruise into World Cup last 16 with ruthless 5-0 victory over Zambia".
  33. "World Cup NOW: Zambia finishes on a high note with first World Cup win".
  34. (24 January 2025). "Nora Häuptle: A New Era for the Copper Queens". FAF.
  35. (6 January 2014). "FAZ names Coaches for all National Teams, appoints Chintu as Assistant to Beaumelle". Zambian Eye.
  36. (20 July 2023). "Zambia Women's Team Makes Cup Debut".
  37. (9 February 2021). "Zambia pull out of 2021 Turkish Women's Cup". Goal.com.
  38. "Africa – Women's Championship".
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

Want to explore this topic further?

Ask Mako anything about Zambia women's national football team — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.

Research with Mako

Free with your Surf account

Content sourced from Wikipedia, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

This content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.

Report