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 |
FIFA ranking | |
Current | 72 1 (12 January 2017) |
Highest | 3 (August 1994) |
Lowest | 96 (August 2012) |
Elo ranking | |
Current | 68 (23 January 2017) |
Highest | 7 (August 1969) |
Lowest | 70 (12 October 2016) |
First international | |
Bulgaria 0–6 Austria (Vienna, Austria; 21 May 1924) |
|
Biggest win | |
Bulgaria 10–0 Ghana (Leon, Mexico; 14 October 1968) |
|
Biggest defeat | |
Spain 9–0 Bulgaria (Madrid, Spain; 21 May 1933) |
|
World Cup | |
Appearances | 7 (first in 1962) |
Best result | Fourth place, 1994 |
European Championship | |
Appearances | 2 (first in 1996) |
Best result | Quarter-final |
Olympic medal record | ||
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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. 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 Bulgarian team faced a severe drought starting from their elimination at the UEFA Euro 2004, failing to qualify to a major tournament and reaching their lowest FIFA ranking (96) in 2012 as well as finishing fifth in their group of Euro 2012 qualifiers.