Bulgaria national football team

Bulgaria
Nickname(s) Лъвовете (The Lions)
Association Bulgarian Football Union
Confederation UEFA (Europe)
Head coach Petar Hubchev
Captain Svetoslav Dyakov
Most caps Stiliyan Petrov (105)
Top scorer Dimitar Berbatov, Hristo Bonev (48)
FIFA code BUL
First colours
Second colours
FIFA ranking
Current 72 Increase 17 (24 November 2016)
Highest 3 [1] (August 1994)
Lowest 96 [1] (August 2012)
Elo ranking
Current 70 (12 October 2016)
Highest 7 [2] (August 1969)
Lowest 70 [3] (12 October 2016)
First international
 Bulgaria 0–6 Austria Austria
(Vienna, Austria; 21 May 1924)
Biggest win
Bulgaria Bulgaria 10–0 Ghana 
(Leon, Mexico; 14 October 1968)
Biggest defeat
 Spain 13–0 Bulgaria 
(Madrid, Spain; 21 May 1933)[4]
World Cup
Appearances 7 (first in 1962)
Best result Semi-Final: 1994[5]
European Championship
Appearances 2 (first in 1996)
Best result Quarter-Final: 1968
Olympic medal record
Men’s Football
1968 Mexico City Team
1956 Melbourne Team

The Bulgaria national football team (Bulgarian: Български национален отбор по футбол) represents Bulgaria in international association football and is controlled by the Bulgarian Football Union, the nation's governing body of football and a member association of UEFA.

The Bulgarian team's home ground is the Vasil Levski National Stadium in Sofia and Petar Hubchev is the current national manager.[6] A previous bronze medal winner at the 1956 Summer Olympics and a runner-up at the 1968 Olympic football tournament, Bulgaria has appeared in seven editions of the FIFA World Cup and has participated in two UEFA European Championships.

The country's finest hour came in the 1994 FIFA World Cup in the United States, in which they overcame defending champions Germany to advance to the semi-finals of the tournament. Despite losing to Italy and Sweden in an eventual fourth-place finish, Bulgaria's major 1994 World Cup campaign provided the tournament's top scorer and future Ballon d'Or recipient Hristo Stoichkov.

Despite these achievements, the team's strength has slowly diminished in the last decade, with them failing to qualify for any major tournament since UEFA Euro 2004.

History

Bulgaria's national football team roster in 1924

The beginning

The Bulgaria national team was founded in 1922. In 1923, the Bulgarian Football Union was established and the team's first match was held in Vienna on 21 May 1924, with a 6–0 defeat to Austria.[7][8]

Bulgaria was invited to participate in the 1930 FIFA World Cup in Uruguay, but eventually rejected the invitation because the players were incapable of having an extended leave of absence from work.[9]

Years in international wilderness

The Bulgarian side at this time could not progress in qualifying to any major tournaments from the time of 1930 to 1960. This period of time was the international wilderness for Bulgaria. They would end up finishing, on many occasions, in second or third place in their qualifying group and proceeding to the play-offs, but in the end, failing to qualify. Bulgaria, however, did defeat many strong teams in international friendlies during those years. The only tournaments they were able to qualify for were smaller tournaments, such as the Balkan Cup, of which they have won four times. Success arrived when they qualified for the World Cup for the second time in 1962

1960s and 1970s

Bulgaria qualified for the World Cup for the first time in 1962 and followed that up with consecutive appearances in 1966, 1970 and 1974. The team, however, did not have much success and finished third in their group three out of the four times.

The team qualified for its first UEFA European Championship in 1968 and went on to win their group with wins over Norway (4–2), Sweden (3–0) and Portugal (1–0) before losing to the eventual champion and host Italy in a two-legged quarterfinal. Bulgaria won the first leg 3–2, but lost the second by a 2–0 score to lose 4–3 on aggregate.

At the 1968 Summer Olympics, the team won the silver medal. They finished first in Group D by beating Thailand 7–0, Guatemala 2–1, and drawing 2–2 against Czechoslovakia. They advanced to the quarterfinals by beating Israel and the semifinals by beating host Mexico. In the final, the team was defeated by Hungary.

In 1976, the team won the Balkan Cup by beating Romania in the two-legged final 1–0 and 3–2.

1962 World Cup

Bulgaria finally qualified to their first international tournament, the 1962 world cup, and this would be the first time that they qualified, after not doing so for 32 years. Bulgaria was drawn in a tough group alongside England, Argentina and Hungary. Bulgaria would open up their campaign with a narrow 0–1 loss to Argentina then would lose their second match 1–6 to Hungary. Mathematically eliminated from progressing to the next round, Bulgaria drew England 0–0 to finish fourth in the group with only one point.

1966 World Cup

Bulgaria would qualify for their second-straight World Cup in 1966. They were drawn into an even more challenging group than 1962, alongside superpowers Hungary, Portugal and a Pelé-led Brazil. Bulgaria would open their campaign match with a 0–2 loss to Brazil thanks to two free-kick goals by Pelé and Garrincha. Later on, Bulgaria would lose 0–3 to the Eusébio-led Portugal, then lost again to Hungary (1–3). They would finish fourth in their group zero points earned, their worst ever World Cup performance.

1968 Euro Cup

After their poor World Cup performance, Bulgaria qualified for Euro 1968, where they were drawn in a group with Norway, Sweden and again Portugal. Bulgaria started off very well with a 4–2 win over Norway, followed by a 3–0 destruction of Sweden. Their final match, against Portugal would determine who would win the group, where Bulgaria defeated Portugal 1–0, securing a first-place group finish and a shot at the two-legged quarter-final. Here, they were drawn with hosts Italy. They started off well with a 3–2 victory over the Italians, but fell 2–0 in the second leg, resulting in aggregate 4–3 aggregate loss and elimination from the tournament. Italy would go on to win the European Championship, while Bulgaria would finish in fifth-place, being the only team in the tournament able to defeat champions Italy in a match.

1968 Summer Olympics

A month-and-a-half after the Euro came the Olympics, which Bulgaria had qualified for the fifth time in their history. They were drawn in a simple group with Thailand, Guatemala and Czechoslovakia. Bulgaria would start off with a 7–0 win over Thailand. They would later go on and draw with Czechoslovakia 2–2 to increase their point standards. Their final match would determine if they would go on to the quarterfinals. As the time came Bulgaria would defeat Guatemala 2–1 and win their first round Olympic group. They would pass on to the Quarterfinals to face underdogs Israel. That game would remain 1–1 for most of the match until a drawing of lots would determine who would go to the semi-finals of the tournament. Bulgaria would with the draw and advance to play Mexico. They would have a hard fought match, but overtime they would come out on top with a 3–2 victory. Bulgaria would advance to the finals for the first time in their Olympic history. They were determined to win the gold medal, but would fall short badly with a 1–4 loss to Hungary. Bulgaria won the silver medal in the end. It was a good performance but not enough for the final and most important game of the tournament.

1970 World Cup

Bulgaria qualified for their third-straight World Cup in 1970, held in Mexico. They were drawn in a medially tough group with Wester Germany, Peru and Morocco. Playing their first match against Peru, Bulgaria were leading 2–0 until near the end when the Peruvians came back to win Peru 2–3. In the second match, Bulgaria would fall to West Germany 5–2, ensuring Bulgaria would need to at least defeat Morocco to progress to the next round. A 1–1 draw, however, resulted in a third-place group finish and elimination from the tournament.

1974 World Cup

Four years later, in Germany, Bulgaria would qualify for their fourth-straight World Cup. They were drawn in a decently tough group, with the Netherlands, Sweden and Uruguay. Bulgaria would start off with Sweden and after 90 minutes the game would remain goalless in a 0–0 draw. Although no goals, Bulgaria were down set from the disallowed goal they scored, that was ruled offside by the side ref. Later on though Bulgaria would tie with Uruguay 1–1 after a hard fought match. Bulgaria remained in good qualifying contention; all they needed to do was tie against the Netherlands. As the final match came, Bulgaria would fall by a 1–4 score. The ironic thing though was that Netherlands scored all the goals including an own goal for Bulgaria. Bulgaria would remain in 3rd place in the group and sadly fall short of the next round once again. The good thing was that this was their best performance at a world cup since 1930; with 2 draws and 1 loss. Though, their best performances were soon to come.

The 1980s and 1990s

1986 World Cup: The knockout rounds

Bulgaria qualified for the World Cup in Mexico by finishing second in Group Four, behind France with 11 points, but worse goal difference, ahead of the teams of Yugoslavia, East Germany, and Luxembourg. This was their fifth World Cup appearance. They were drawn in Group A with Italy, Argentina, and South Korea. In the opening match of the World Cup, the Bulgarians held the defending champions Italy to a 1–1 draw. Alessandro Altobelli gave the Italians the lead, but an 85th minute equalizer by Nasko Sirakov gave the Bulgarians the point. The next match was another 1–1 draw against South Korea with the goal for Bulgaria coming from Plamen Getov in the 11th minute. They lost the final match of the group 2–0 against Argentina, who ended up winning the tournament. Despite not recording a win, the Bulgarians advanced to the knockout stage by being the third-best third placed team. That way, Bulgaria and also Uruguay became the first nations to qualify for the knockout stage without winning a game in the first round. In the Round of 16, they faced World Cup hosts Mexico and lost the match 2–0. Ivan Vutsov was the manager of the team.

1994 World Cup: Semi-final triumph

One of the most important dates in Bulgarian football history is 17 November 1993, when Emil Kostadinov scored two goals to beat France in Paris, thus allowing Bulgaria to qualify for the World Cup in the United States in 1994, and disallowing France to qualify for that tournament.[10] Under the management of Dimitar Penev, the team led by players such as Hristo Stoichkov, Yordan Lechkov and Krasimir Balakov was referred to as the "Golden Generation".[11] They entered Group D with Argentina, Nigeria and Greece.[12] Prior to 1994, the Bulgarians had not won a single match in the previous five World Cup finals appearances. The first match ended with a 3–0 defeat by Nigeria in Dallas.[13] Despite the bad start, the team won 4–0 against World Cup-debuting Greece in Chicago[14] and 2–0 against Argentina in Dallas.[15] Bulgaria continued to the next round, where they faced Mexico at Giants Stadium just outside New York City. The match ended 1–1 and after no goals were scored in extra time, penalties would decide which team would go through. Team captain Borislav Mihaylov saved two penalty kicks and Bulgaria won 3–1 on penalties.[16] In their quarter-final match again in New York City, Bulgaria faced defending World Cup champions Germany. Lothar Matthäus scored from a penalty. The Bulgarians, however, managed to turn the game over with two goals by Stoichkov and Yordan Lechkov, giving them a 2–1 win.[17] Millions of Bulgarians celebrated this win in the Bulgarian capital city of Sofia and other Bulgarian cities. Having reached the semi-finals, this was the best Bulgarian performance in the World Cup. In their semi-final match again in New York, they lost 2–1 to Italy.[18] Bulgaria then traveled across the country and three time zones to the Pasadena Rose Bowl just outside Los Angeles to play Sweden, who did not have to travel because their and semi-final match against Brazil was held in the Rose Bowl.[19] Sweden beat Bulgaria 4–0, so the team finished the tournament in 4th place.[20] Stoichkov was awarded the Golden Boot (along with Russia's Oleg Salenko) for scoring six goals and finishing as joint top goal scorer of the tournament.[21] Later in December, Stoitchkov was awarded the FIFA Ballon d'Or, becoming the first ever Bulgarian to win it.[22] Krasimir Balakov was named in the all-star team along with Stoichkov.

Euro 1996: Group stage

In 1996, the team qualified for the European Football Championship for the first time, after some good results in the qualifying group, including a stunning 3–2 turnaround win against future Euro 1996 champions Germany. They were drawn in Group B with France, Spain and Romania. Bulgaria started with a 1–1 draw against the Spanish. They would score a second with a volley by Stoitchkov but it would be ruled offsides even though the cameras showed it clearly was not. After losing against Spain, Bulgaria went on to a 1–0 win against Romania. Stoitchkov scoring in the third minute adding a second goal to the list. In the final group match, they lost 3–1 against France, Stoitchkov scoring from an freekick to give Bulgaria there only goal of the game. At the same time, Spain defeated Romania 2–1 with the winner coming in the 84th minute, and the Bulgarians subsequently failed to qualify and robbed of the quarter-finals.

1998 World Cup: The last stand of the "Golden Team"

Bulgaria qualified for the World Cup in France by finishing first in the Group 5, followed by Russia. They entered the competition with a new manager Hristo Bonev. Bulgaria drew Spain, Nigeria and Paraguay in Group D. The first match ended in a 0–0 goalless draw against Paraguay. In the second match, the Bulgarians lost 1–0 for a second-straight World Cup to Nigeria. The final match ended with a disappointing 6–1 defeat to Spain, even though two offside goals were ruled out. Following the bad results, Bulgaria finished fourth in the group, with only one point, and didn't go through the next round. This was the last major appearance at World Cup level for Bulgaria.

2000 Euro Cup qualification: The end of a legendary era

Bulgaria was drawn in a tough qualifying group with teams like England, Sweden and Poland. The campaign started bad with a draw and a defeat by Poland and Sweden. The most memorable match for Bulgaria in the group was the 1–1 draw against England, which was also the last one for Bulgarian legend Hristo Stoichkov before his international retirement. Bulgaria finished third with eight points and failed to make the final stages of Euro 2000.

New millennium

Berbatov training with the Bulgaria national football team

2002 World Cup qualification: Beginning of a drought

Bulgaria, Denmark, and Czech Republic were among the main contenders for the qualifying spots. This is also the debut of Bulgaria's top scoring legend Dimitar Berbatov. Bulgaria won the matches against the weaker teams, but lost 2–0 to Denmark and one match with the Czech Republic. That way, Bulgaria finished third with 17 points and three points behind second-placed Czech Republic, thus failing to make the World Cup in South Korea and Japan.

Euro 2004

Bulgaria managed to qualify for the Euro 2004 in Portugal by finishing first in the group ahead of teams like Croatia and Belgium with 17 points. They drew Sweden, Italy and Denmark in Group C. They started off with a disappointing defeat to Sweden, followed by a 2–0 defeat to Denmark. The last match against Italy was a reasonable 2–1 defeat. The match was looking to end 1–1 after goals from Bulgarian winger Martin Petrov and Simone Perrotta, but a last minute goal by Antonio Cassano gave the Italians the win. They finished fourth with zero points and were sent home without reaching the knockout round.

2006 World Cup qualification: Failure

Bulgaria failed to qualify for the World Cup in Germany after a run of poor results. They started off good with a win over Hungary and "weaker" teams in the group. They tied with Sweden and Croatia the first run but lost the other meetings to the two sides. Although Berbatov scored many key goals in the qualifier including a last minute equaliser against Croatia, Bulgaria still finished third in Group Eight, behind Sweden and Croatia with 15 points.

2006 Kirin Cup

Although not making it to the 2006 FIFA World Cup, Bulgaria found themselves in a minor tournament in Japan. Known as the Kirin Cup, Bulgaria entered for the first time. They started off well with a 2–1 victory over the hosts Japan. Later on though, things went downhill as they lost 5–1 to Scotland, the eventual champions of the Kirin Cup. Bulgaria became the Runners Up and received the silver medal.

2008 European qualification: Near miss

Group G had Netherlands, Romania, and Bulgaria as the main contestants for a qualifying spot for the Euro 2008 in Switzerland and Austria. Bulgaria performed well after a run of good results from Romania that gave them the first place. Bulgaria would go on to the playoffs but draw the first match 1–1 with a goal by Petrov in the tenth minute and lose the second 2–0. Bulgaria failed to qualify to the competition, finishing with 25 points, after Romania and the Netherlands, with only one lost match against the Dutch.

2010 World Cup qualification: Close call

Bulgaria National Football Team in 2010.

Bulgaria were drawn against Italy and the Republic of Ireland in qualifying Group Eight. Bulgaria started the campaign with a series of draws in the 2010 qualifiers. After the unconvincing start, the manager Plamen Markov was replaced by Stanimir Stoilov in January 2009. The Bulgarians then recorded their first win in the group against Cyprus, and also won against Montenegro and Georgia. They finished in third place in the group with 14 points, therefore failing to qualify directly or for a play-off place. Bulgarian top scorer Berbatov resigned from the national side after this result.

Era of Decline

2012 European qualification: Upset

The Bulgaria National Team in 2012

Bulgaria were drawn in Group G along with England, Switzerland, Wales and Montenegro. Bulgaria started off horribly with an opening away loss to England. They later on drew level with Switzerland along with defeating Wales and Montenegro. However, Bulgaria finished fifth in their group reaching their nadir in their football history, marking the fourth instance during 2000s that the nation had failed to finish in third (or better).

2014 World Cup Qualification: World Cup near miss

In the qualification phase for the 2014 FIFA World Cup Bulgaria were placed in Group B together with the teams of Italy, Denmark, Czech Republic, Armenia and Malta. Under the guidance of former player Lyuboslav Penev as head coach, Bulgaria enjoyed a revival and put up an incredible performance in many friendly matches before the start of the qualification stage, most notably a 2–1 victory over 2010 World Cup runners-up Netherlands in Amsterdam. The qualifications started with a well-earned 2–2 draw against the Euro 2012 runners-up Italy. Bulgaria then edged a tight match against Armenia, which ended 1–0. Later on Bulgaria narrowly drew 1–1 against Denmark. Another good performance followed four days later, Bulgaria earning a hard-fought 0–0 draw away to the Czech Republic. As a result of these performances, the team climbed from 96th in the FIFA Ranking, their lowest position in history, to 40th in November 2012, earning FIFA best mover of the year. Nevertheless, Penev's players hosted and defeated Malta 6–0 under heavy snowfall. Four days later, Bulgaria once again set a draw with Denmark 1–1 in Copenhagen. This result left Bulgaria second in the group with ten points and still undefeated. Bulgaria traveled to Italy, a game where they narrowly lost 1–0. Further on, the lions secured three more points with a 2–0 away win against Malta, leaving them hopeful of securing their second place in the group and a spot in the play-offs. However, after Bulgaria was defeated by Armenia 2–1 and the Czech Republic 1–0 at home.

2016 Euro Cup Qualification: Continuation of the drought

Bulgaria were placed in a group with Italy, Croatia, Norway, Azerbaijan and Malta.[23] Bulgaria opened up their first match with a 2–1 victory over Azerbaijan.[24] They were defeated 1–0 by Croatia,[25] which was followed by a 2–1 defeat to Norway.[26] Bulgaria then drew with Malta 1–1 at home,[27] but this cost Head Coach Lyuboslav Penev his position and he was replaced by former Ludogorets Razgrad Coach Ivaylo Petev.[28] In his debut match in February 2015, Petev's squad drew Romania 0–0 in a friendly,[29] which was then followed at the end of March by a 2–2 qualifier match draw with Italy, a match which Bulgaria had led till the 84th minute.[30] In June, Bulgaria defeated Malta 1–0 to move within 2 points of the third place playoff position.[31] They then, however, lost their next three matches against Norway,[32] Italy[33] and Croatia[34] before winning their final match 2–0 over Azerbaijan, thus failing to qualify for the finals tournament.[35]

2018 World Cup qualification

Bulgaria have been drawn in a World Cup qualification group with Netherlands, France and Sweden, Belarus and Luxembourg. Bulgaria has already had a recent meeting with the Netherlands within the year 2013 in which Bulgaria came out on top with a 2–1 victory. Bulgaria has also had a 100 percent record history against Luxembourg while recently defeating Belarus 2–1 in a friendly in 2014. To add to this aspect, the last time Bulgaria was drawn within a world cup qualification group with Sweden and France was in 1994. Bulgaria drew level with Sweden once, and defeated France twice, decisively, to reach the 1994 World Cup in the U.S. where Bulgaria reached its all-time high of going to the Semi-Finals. Bulgaria has luckily drawn Luxembourg at home for their first match in September. This will give them the brief opportunity to re-group hoping to earn an early victory. This can lead the team on to starting off their qualifying campaign on a very positive level at the top of the group while building momentum overtime for when the time comes to face the stronger and tougher opponents. In the beginning, Bulgaria earned a hard-fought 4-3 win against Luxembourg at home, a frustrating scoreline despite the victory.[36] It was followed by two heavy 1-4 and 0-3 losses to France and Sweden, respectively.[37][38] In November 2016, the Lions secured the three points against Belarus in Sofia with a narrow 1-0 win.[39] Currently, Bulgaria is 4th in the group, just a point away from the 2nd place and 4 points ahead of 5th placed Belarus.

Standings

{{2018 FIFA World Cup qualification – UEFA Group A table |show_matches=yes}}

Team image

Colours

Traditionally the Bulgarian squad plays at home entirely in the colours of the Bulgarian tricolore. Their nickname is The Lions, in tribute of the lions represented in the Bulgarian coat of arms.

Kit suppliers

Kit Provider Period
1922–1956
Germany Adidas 1956–1996
Germany Puma 1996–2010
Italy Kappa 2010–2015
Spain Joma 2015–

Historical Kits

Throughout the nation's football history, the national players wore the following color patterns of white, green or red signifying the Bulgarian flag on their kits.

Home Kits
1922–1950
1950–1985
1985–1993
1993–1995
1995–1998
1998–2000
2000–2005
2005–2008
2008–2009
2009–2011
2011–2014
Away Kits
1922–1950
1950–1985
1985–1993
1993–1995
1995–1998
1998–2000
2000–2005
2005–2008
2008–2009
2009–2011
2011–2014

National stadium

Vasil Levski National Stadium in Sofia, the capital of Bulgaria.

The Bulgaria national football team's traditional home stadium has been the multi-purpose Vasil Levski National Stadium in Sofia, which has a capacity of 43,230 people. The venue was officially opened in 1953 and was reconstructed in 1966 and 2002, with its most recent renovation dating back to 2015. A principle host of the Bulgarian Cup final match, the stadium was also used by Levski Sofia for their domestic group stage matches during the 2006–07 UEFA Champions League season. Ludogorets Razgrad also used the stadium for their Champions League campaigns in 2014 and 2016. The Bulgarian national football team's home matches have been held regularly at the venue since its reconstruction in 2002, as well as athletics competitions and major concerts. The stadium also offers judo, artistic gymnastics, basketball, boxing, aerobics, fencing and table tennis halls, as well as a general physical training hall, two conference halls, and three restaurants.

Competition history

     Champions       Runners-up       Third place      Fourth place       Other Top Results  

World Cup record

FIFA World Cup record FIFA World Cup qualification record
Year Round Position Pld W D L GF GA Position Pld W D L GF GA
Uruguay 1930 Did not enter Was not invited
Kingdom of Italy 1934 Did not qualify 3rd 3 0 0 3 3 14
France 1938 2nd 2 0 1 1 1 7
Brazil 1950 Did not enter -
Switzerland 1954 Did not qualify 3rd 4 0 1 3 3 7
Sweden 1958 2nd 4 2 0 2 11 7
Chile 1962 Group stage 13th 3 0 1 2 1 7 1st 5 4 0 1 7 4
England 1966 12th 3 0 0 3 1 8 1st 5 4 0 1 11 7
Mexico 1970 12th 3 0 1 2 5 9 1st 6 4 1 1 12 7
West Germany 1974 11th 3 0 2 1 1 2 1st 6 4 2 0 13 3
Argentina 1978 Did not qualify 2nd 4 1 2 1 5 6
Spain 1982 3rd 8 4 1 3 11 10
Mexico 1986 Round of 16 10th 4 0 2 2 2 6 2nd 8 5 1 2 13 5
Italy 1990 Did not qualify 4th 6 1 1 4 6 8
United States 1994 Fourth Place 4th 7 3 1 3 10 11 4th 10 6 2 2 19 10
France 1998 Group stage 22nd 3 0 1 2 1 7 1st 8 6 0 2 18 9
South KoreaJapan 2002 Did not qualify 3rd 10 5 2 3 14 15
Germany 2006 3rd 10 4 3 3 17 17
South Africa 2010 3rd 10 3 5 2 17 13
Brazil 2014 4th 10 3 4 3 14 9
Russia 2018 To be determined To be determined
Qatar 2022 To be determined To be determined
Total Fourth Place 7/22 26 3 7 15 20 53 Total 119 56 26 37 195 158

European Championship

UEFA Euro Cup Record
Year Result Position Pld W D L GF GA
Italy 1968 Quarter-Finals 5th 5 4 0 1 8 6
England 1996 Group Stage 11th 3 1 1 1 3 4
Portugal 2004 Group Stage 16th 3 0 0 3 1 9
Europe 2020 To Be Determined
Total Quarter-Final 2/15 10 5 1 5 16 19

Olympic record

Olympic Record
Year Result Position Pld W D L GF GA
France 1924Round of 1612th100101
Finland 1952Round of 1613th100112
Australia 1956Semi-Finals3rd3201103
Italy 1960Group Stage8th321083
Mexico 1968Runners-Up2nd63211610
Japan 2020 To Be Determined
Total Runners-Up 5/23 14 7 3 4 35 19

Balkan Cup record

Balkan Cup Record
Year Result Position Pld W D L GF GA
Romania 1930 Group stage 4th62041019
Bulgaria 1931 Champions 1st220083
Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia 1932 Champions 1st330072
Romania 1933 Semi-Finals 3rd3102211
Greece 1934 Group Stage 4th310278
Bulgaria 1935 Runners-Up 2nd3210125
Romania 1936 Runners-Up 2nd210268
Albania 1946 Group Stage 4th201247
Hungary 1947 Group Stage 4th4103514
Bulgaria 1948 Competition abandoned -------
Bulgaria 1976 Champions 1st420299
Turkey 1980 Semi-Finals 3rd411248
Total Champions 12/12 41 19 4 19 80 101

Honours

Competition 1st, gold medalist(s) 2nd, silver medalist(s) 3rd, bronze medalist(s) Total
World Cup 0 0 0 0
European Championship 0 0 0 0
Olympic Games 0 1 1 2
Balkan Cup 3 2 2 7
Total 3 3 3 9

Recent results

Ranking history

Rank Date
Best Rank 3 June 1995
Current Rank 72 November 2016
Worst Rank 96 May 2012

Players

The following players were called-up for the preliminary squad against Belarus on November 13, 2016.
Caps and goals updated as of 13 November 2016 after the match against Belarus.

0#0 Pos. Player Date of birth (age) Caps Goals Club
13 1GK Nikolay Mihaylov (1987-03-31) 31 March 1987 31 0 Turkey Mersin İdmanyurdu
23 1GK Vladislav Stoyanov (1988-06-28) 28 June 1988 19 0 Bulgaria Ludogorets Razgrad
1 1GK Georgi Kitanov (1995-03-06) March 6, 1995 0 0 Bulgaria CSKA Sofia

4 2DF Petar Zanev (1985-10-18) 18 October 1985 27 0 Russia Amkar Perm
3 2DF Aleksandar Aleksandrov (1986-04-13) 13 April 1986 16 0 Bulgaria Levski Sofia
2 2DF Strahil Popov (1990-08-31) 31 August 1990 10 0 Turkey Kasımpaşa
14 2DF Vasil Bozhikov (1988-06-02) 2 June 1988 5 0 Turkey Kasımpaşa
22 2DF Anton Nedyalkov (1993-04-30) 30 April 1993 2 0 Bulgaria CSKA Sofia
5 2DF Bozhidar Chorbadzhiyski (1995-08-01) 1 August 1995 1 0 Bulgaria CSKA Sofia
16 2DF Atanas Zehirov (1989-02-13) 13 February 1989 0 0 Bulgaria Beroe Stara Zagora
15 2DF Daniel Zlatkov (1989-03-06) 6 March 1989 0 0 Bulgaria Botev Plovdiv

21 3MF Svetoslav Dyakov () (1984-05-31) 31 May 1984 35 0 Bulgaria Ludogorets Razgrad
17 3MF Georgi Milanov (1992-02-19) 19 February 1992 34 2 Russia CSKA Moscow
20 3MF Aleksandar Tonev (1990-02-02) 2 February 1990 25 5 Italy Crotone
18 3MF Ivaylo Chochev (1993-02-18) 18 February 1993 11 1 Italy Palermo
8 3MF Todor Nedelev (1993-02-07) 7 February 1993 11 0 Bulgaria Botev Plovdiv
19 3MF Nikolay Dimitrov (1987-10-15) 15 October 1987 7 0 Bulgaria Slavia Sofia
6 3MF Simeon Slavchev (1993-09-25) 25 September 1993 9 0 Poland Lechia Gdańsk
12 3MF Bozhidar Kraev (1997-06-27) June 27, 1997 0 0 Bulgaria Levski Sofia

10 4FW Ivelin Popov (1987-10-26) 26 October 1987 66 12 Russia Spartak Moscow
7 4FW Spas Delev (1989-09-22) 22 September 1989 13 0 Poland Pogoń Szczecin
11 4FW Radoslav Kirilov (1992-06-29) 29 June 1992 1 0 Bulgaria Beroe Stara Zagora
9 4FW Preslav Yordanov (1989-07-21) 21 July 1989 1 0 Bulgaria CSKA Sofia

Recent call-ups

The following players have also been called up to the Bulgarian squad within the last 12 months and are still available for selection.

Pos. Player Date of birth (age) Caps Goals Club Latest call-up
GK Blagoy Makendzhiev (1988-07-11) 11 July 1988 0 0 Bulgaria Beroe Stara Zagora v.  Belarus, 13 November 2016
GK Bozhidar Mitrev (1987-03-31) 31 March 1987 9 0 Moldova Sheriff Tiraspol v.  Sweden, 11 October 2016
GK Plamen Iliev (1991-11-30) 30 November 1991 2 0 Romania Botoșani 2016 Kirin Cup Squad

DF Georgi Terziev (1992-04-18) 18 April 1992 9 0 Bulgaria Ludogorets Razgrad v.  Belarus, 13 November 2016
DF Radoslav Terziev (1994-08-06) 6 August 1994 0 0 Bulgaria Botev Plovdiv v.  Belarus, 13 November 2016
DF Zhivko Milanov (1984-07-15) 15 July 1984 28 0 Cyprus APOEL v.  Sweden, 11 October 2016
DF Dimitar Pirgov (1989-10-23) 23 October 1989 1 0 Bulgaria Levski Sofia v.  Sweden, 11 October 2016
DF Yordan Minev INJ (1980-10-14) 14 October 1980 24 0 Bulgaria Ludogorets Razgrad v.  France, 7 October 2016
DF Ivan Ivanov (1988-02-25) 25 February 1988 40 3 Greece Panathinaikos v.  Luxembourg, 6 September 2016
DF Iliya Milanov (1992-02-19) 19 February 1992 6 0 Bulgaria Beroe Stara Zagora v.  Luxembourg, 6 September 2016
DF Ventsislav Vasilev (1988-07-08) 8 July 1988 3 0 Bulgaria Beroe Stara Zagora 2016 Kirin Cup Squad
DF Ivo Ivanov (1985-03-11) 11 March 1985 6 0 Bulgaria Beroe Stara Zagora 2016 Kirin Cup Squad
DF Plamen Galabov INJ (1995-11-02) 2 November 1995 0 0 Bulgaria CSKA Sofia 2016 Kirin Cup Squad
DF Nikolay Bodurov (1986-05-30) 30 May 1986 35 1 Unattached v.  Macedonia, 29 March 2016

MF Georgi Kostadinov (1990-09-07) 7 September 1990 2 0 Bulgaria Levski Sofia v.  Belarus, 13 November 2016
MF Martin Raynov (1992-04-25) 25 April 1992 1 0 Bulgaria Lokomotiv Plovdiv v.  Belarus, 13 November 2016
MF Milen Zhelev (1993-07-17) July 17, 1993 0 0 Bulgaria Lokomotiv Gorna Oryahovitsa v.  Belarus, 13 November 2016
MF Marcelinho (1984-08-24) 24 August 1984 7 2 Bulgaria Ludogorets Razgrad v.  Sweden, 11 October 2016
MF Mihail Aleksandrov (1989-06-11) 11 June 1989 18 3 Poland Legia Warsaw v.  Sweden, 11 October 2016
MF Galin Ivanov (1988-03-15) 15 March 1988 1 0 Bulgaria Levski Sofia 2016 Kirin Cup Squad
MF Stefan Velev (1989-05-02) 2 May 1989 5 0 Georgia (country) Dinamo Tbilisi 2016 Kirin Cup Squad
MF Yanis Karabelyov (1996-01-23) 23 January 1996 0 0 Bulgaria Slavia Sofia v.  Macedonia, 29 March 2016
MF Kristiyan Malinov (1994-03-30) 30 March 1994 1 0 Bulgaria CSKA Sofia v.  Portugal, 25 March 2016

FW Dimitar Rangelov (1983-02-09) 9 February 1983 40 6 Turkey Konyaspor v.  Belarus, 13 November 2016
FW Andrey Galabinov (1988-11-27) 27 November 1988 6 2 Italy Novara v.  Belarus, 13 November 2016
FW Georgi Bozhilov (1987-02-12) 12 February 1987 2 0 Bulgaria Beroe Stara Zagora v.  Luxembourg, 6 September 2016
FW Ventsislav Hristov (1988-11-09) 9 November 1988 8 1 Bulgaria Neftochimic 2016 Kirin Cup Squad
FW Toni Tasev (1994-03-25) 25 March 1994 0 0 Bulgaria Pirin Blagoevgrad v.  Macedonia, 29 March 2016

Current technical staff

Head coach Bulgaria Petar Hubchev
Assistant coach Bulgaria Georgi Donkov
Assistant coach Bulgaria Levon Apkaryan
Goalkeepers coach Armenia Armen Ambartsumyan
BFU president Bulgaria Borislav Mikhailov
Team captain Bulgaria Svetoslav Dyakov

Previous squads

FIFA World Cup Squads
UEFA European Football Championship Squads
Summer Olympics Football Tournament Squads

Player records

Most appearances

Stiliyan Petrov is Bulgaria's most capped player with 105 appearances
# Player Career Caps Goals Average
1 Stiliyan Petrov 1998–2013 105 8 0.08
2 Borislav Mihaylov 1983–1998 102 0 0.00
3 Hristo Bonev 1967–1979 96 47 0.49
4 Krasimir Balakov 1988–2003 92 16 0.17
5 Dimitar Penev 1965–1974 90 2 0.02
6 Martin Petrov 1999–2013 89 19 0.21
7 Radostin Kishishev 1996–2009 88 1 0.01
8 Hristo Stoichkov 1986–1999 83 37 0.45
9 Nasko Sirakov 1983–1996 82 23 0.28
10 Zlatko Yankov 1989–1999 80 4 0.05
11 Ayan Sadakov 1981–1991 79 9 0.11
12 Dimitar Berbatov 1999–2010 78 48 0.62

Most goals

Dimitar Berbatov is the top goalscorer in the history of Bulgaria, with 48 goals.
# Player Career Goals Caps Average
1 Dimitar Berbatov 1999–2010 48 78 0.60
2 Hristo Bonev 1967–1979 47 96 0.49
3 Hristo Stoichkov 1987–1999 37 83 0.45
4 Emil Kostadinov 1988–1998 26 70 0.37
5 Petar Zhekov 1963–1972 25 44 0.57
6 Ivan Kolev 1950–1963 25 75 0.33
7 Atanas Mihaylov 1970–1981 23 45 0.51
8 Nasko Sirakov 1983–1996 23 82 0.28
9 Dimitar Milanov 1948–1959 20 39 0.51
10 Georgi Asparuhov 1962–1970 19 50 0.38
11 Dinko Dermendzhiev 1966–1977 19 58 0.33
12 Martin Petrov 1999–2013 19 89 0.21

International match records

  • As of November 13, 2016

  Positive Record   Neutral Record   Negative Record

Opponents Played Won Drawn Lost
 Albania 11 5 4 2
 Algeria 6 3 2 1
 Andorra 2 2 0 0
 Argentina 9 3 0 6
 Armenia 2 1 0 1
 Australia 4 2 2 0
 Austria 8 2 2 4
 Azerbaijan 2 2 0 0
 Belarus 6 5 0 1
 Belgium 14 6 2 6
 Bosnia and Herzegovina 1 1 0 0
 Brazil 8 2 0 6
 Bolivia 1 1 0 0
 Cameroon 1 1 0 0
 Chile 2 1 0 1
 Croatia 7 1 2 4
 Cyprus 13 12 0 1
 Czech Republic 18 6 5 7
 Denmark 17 4 9 4
 Ecuador 2 1 0 1
 Egypt 6 1 2 3
 England 9 2 2 5
 Estonia 2 1 1 0
 Finland 8 7 1 0
 France 21 8 4 9
 Georgia 5 3 1 1
 Germany 19 4 2 13
 Ghana 1 1 0 0
 Greece 21 12 2 7
 Guatemala 1 1 0 0
 Hungary 18 4 4 10
 Iceland 5 4 1 0
 India 1 1 0 0
 Northern Ireland 7 4 1 2
 Republic of Ireland 8 5 1 2
 Israel 6 4 1 1
 Italy 18 2 8 8
 Jamaica 1 0 1 0
 Japan 5 3 1 1
 Kazakhstan 1 1 0 0
 South Korea 2 1 1 0
 Kuwait 4 2 2 0
 Latvia 3 3 0 0
 Lebanon 1 1 0 0
 Luxembourg 13 13 0 0
 Lithuania 1 1 0 0
 Macedonia 7 4 1 2
 Malta 10 8 2 0
 Mexico 12 4 5 3
 Moldova 2 2 0 0
 Montenegro 4 1 2 1
 Morocco 5 1 2 2
 Netherlands 10 4 2 4
 Nigeria 3 1 0 2
 Norway 13 6 4 3
 Oman 1 0 1 0
 Paraguay 1 0 1 0
 Peru 5 2 1 2
 Poland 16 5 7 4
 Portugal 13 6 3 4
 Romania 29 13 10 6
 Russia 19 4 5 10
 San Marino 2 2 0 0
 Saudi Arabia 2 1 0 1
 Scotland 6 2 2 2
 Serbia 5 2 1 2
 Slovakia 7 3 1 3
 Slovenia 2 2 0 0
 South Africa 1 0 1 0
 Spain 5 1 1 3
 Sweden 11 3 2 6
  Switzerland 10 3 4 3
 Thailand 1 1 0 0
 Tunisia 3 1 1 1
 Turkey 21 8 7 6
 United States 1 1 0 0
 Ukraine 6 2 2 2
 United Arab Emirates 6 5 0 1
 Uruguay 1 0 1 0
 Wales 8 4 1 3

Head coaches

See also

Sources

  1. 1 2 FIFA World Ranking: Bulgaria
  2. World Football Elo Ratings
  3. World Football Elo Ratings: Bulgaria
  4. "Bulgaria - Matches - FIFA.com". FIFA.com.
  5. "Bulgaria – Association Information". FIFA.com. 2016-07-01. Retrieved 2016-08-20.
  6. Bulgaria team profile, UEFA, Retrieved 11 November 2016.
  7. Павлов, Стоимен (2014-06-24). "Българският футбол чества исторически годишнини на фона на нерадостна реалност". Radio Bulgaria (in Bulgarian). София: Българско национално радио. Retrieved 1 August 2015.
  8. Austria vs Bulgaria match report at EU-Football.info
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  10. "Classic Qualifier: Les Bleus' American nightmare". FIFA. 10 September 2015. Retrieved 26 March 2016.
  11. "Three Footballers from Bulgaria's Golden Generation to Join Stoichkov's Birthday Show". Novinite. 8 December 2015. Retrieved 26 March 2016.
  12. "1994 FIFA World Cup USA: Groups". FIFA. Retrieved 26 March 2016.
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  22. Molinaro, John F. (5 January 2011). "History of the Ballon d'Or". CBC Sports. Retrieved 26 March 2016.
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  26. Tjærnås, Jørgen (13 October 2014). "Ødegaard breaks record as Norway beat Bulgaria". UEFA. Retrieved 11 July 2016.
  27. Georgiev, Stoyan (16 November 2014). "Malta make their mark in Sofia". UEFA. Retrieved 11 July 2016.
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