Association | Federación Costarricense de Fútbol |
---|---|
Confederation | CONCACAF (North America, Central America and the Caribbean) |
Sub-confederation | Central American Football Union (Central America) |
Head coach | Amelia Valverde |
Captain | Shirley Cruz Traña |
Home stadium | Estadio Nacional de Costa Rica |
FIFA code | CRC |
FIFA ranking | |
Current | 30 4 (25 March 2016) |
Highest | 30 (March 2016) |
Lowest | 106 (March 2010) |
World Cup | |
Appearances | 1 (first in 2015) |
Best result | Group Stage (2015) |
CONCACAF Championship | |
Appearances | 6 (first in 1991) |
Best result | Runners-up (2014) |
Medal record
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The Costa Rica women's national football team is the national women's team of Costa Rica and is controlled by the Costa Rican Football Federation. They are one of the top women's national football teams in the Central American region along with Guatemala.
The Costa Rican team just started to play an international match in 1990, when Central America was on struggle about developing women's football. The success of men's team helped the FCF to believe on the women's team. Their first tournament, was the 1991 CONCACAF Women's Championship when Costa Rica finished third and was out from the group stage.
Despite of this, Costa Rica started gaining success in 1998 CONCACAF Women's Championship and 1999 Pan American Games when Costa Rica won bronze both. But later, Costa Rica did not gain much successful achievement, as the national team was still on struggle under the shadow of men's team.
However, in 2014 CONCACAF Women's Championship, Costa Rica surprisingly won silver, after losing 0-6 to the USA in the final. This losses, still, marking for the first time Costa Rica would play in a FIFA Women's World Cup held in Canada 2015. Therefore, it wrote history for Costa Rica women's team, making them more popular, after the men's team's successful Brazil 2014 campaign. Costa Rica women's, later, was drawn with Brazil, South Korea and Spain, in which Costa Rica was considered as the weakest team. Costa Rica almost rewrote history, after two shocking draws over Spain (1-1) and South Korea (2-2), but the 0-1 lost to Brazil had eliminated Costa Rica from the tournament as South Korea beat Spain 2-1.