San Marino national football team

San Marino
Nickname(s)La Serenissima
AssociationFederazione Sammarinese Giuoco Calcio
ConfederationUEFA (Europe)
Head coachFabrizio Costantini
CaptainDavide Simoncini
Most capsAndy Selva
Matteo Vitaioli (73)[1]
Top scorerAndy Selva (8)
Home stadiumStadio Olimpico di Serravalle
FIFA codeSMR
First colours
Second colours
Third colours
FIFA ranking
Current 211 1 (31 March 2022)[2]
Highest118 (September 1993)
Lowest211 (November 2018 – July 2019, March 2022)
First international
Unofficial
 San Marino 0–1 Canada U23 
(Serravalle, San Marino; 28 March 1986)
Official
 San Marino 0–4 Switzerland  
(Serravalle, San Marino; 14 November 1990)
Biggest win
 San Marino 1–0 Liechtenstein 
(Serravalle, San Marino; 28 April 2004)
Biggest defeat
 San Marino 0–13 Germany 
(Serravalle, San Marino; 6 September 2006)

The San Marino national football team (Italian: Nazionale di calcio di San Marino) represents San Marino in men's international football competitions and it is controlled by the San Marino Football Federation (FSGC). The team represents the smallest population of any UEFA member.

The first official game played by a San Marino team was a 4–0 defeat in a European Championships qualifier by Switzerland in 1990. Previously, a San Marino side played an unofficial match against a Canadian Olympic team in 1986, losing 1–0. Since making their competitive debut, San Marino have competed in the qualifiers of every European Championship and World Cup, but have never won a match in either competition. They have only ever won one game, beating Liechtenstein 1–0 in a friendly match on 28 April 2004.

Until November 2014, San Marino were tied in last place in the FIFA World Rankings, a run that lasted since the rankings were given a new calculation methodology. They were tied for last with Bhutan (208th) in the October 2014 rankings,[3] but a 0–0 draw with Estonia during the Euro 2016 qualifying rounds ended their tenure at the bottom of the rankings. The national side scored their first away goal in fourteen years against another Baltic side, Lithuania, during the same qualifying rounds. When the ranking methodology got revised again, the team fell back to the bottom, following a 1–0 loss to Moldova in the Nations League.

San Marino's national team is sometimes considered the worst national side in the history of the sport, as they have only ever won a single match and conceded an average of 4.2 goals per game, although as a member of UEFA they face stronger competition than many other low-ranked sides.[4]

History

Though the San Marino Football Federation formed in 1931, the federation did not establish a national team until 1986, when a team representing the Federation played Canada's Olympic team in an unofficial international, finished 1-0 for the Canadian. San Marino gained affiliation to bodies FIFA and UEFA in 1988,[5] allowing the team to participate in major championships. Prior to this, Sammarinese players had been considered Italian in international football contexts.[6]

San Marino's first match in a FIFA sanctioned competition was against Switzerland on 14 November 1990 in a qualifier for the 1992 European Championships. San Marino lost 4–0, and would go on to lose all eight of their tournament qualifiers. The team particularly struggled in away matches, losing every one by at least four goals. San Marino scored only one goal, which was a penalty in a 3–1 defeat at home by Romania,[7] and conceded 33 goals in total.[8]

For their first World Cup qualifying campaign, San Marino were drawn in a group with England, the Netherlands, Norway, Poland and Turkey. The opening match resulted in a 10–0 hammering at the hands of Norway. The return match was less one-sided, finishing 2–0 to the Norwegians. A 4–1 defeat in Turkey saw San Marino score their first World Cup goal, and a 0–0 draw against the same opposition on 10 March 1993 gave them their first ever point. In their final qualifier, against England, Davide Gualtieri scored the then-fastest goal in World Cup Qualifying history—after 8.3 seconds—though the team went on to lose 7–1.[9] San Marino finished the campaign with one point, and conceded 46 goals in 10 matches.[10]

The team's qualification campaign for Euro 1996 followed a similar pattern to that of the previous European championships, as they lost every game. A match away to Finland gave San Marino their first goal away from home in the European championships, but the team lost 4–1.[11] Their only other goal came in a 3–1 home defeat by the Faroe Islands; the two wins over San Marino were the only points gained by the Faroe Islands in the group. In the first match, a 3–0 scoreline in Toftir, is the Faroe Islands record competitive win.[12]

Even by Sammarinese standards, qualification for the 1998 World Cup was disappointing. Losing every game by three goals or more, San Marino failed to score a single goal.[13] This is the only World Cup qualifying tournament in which they have failed to score. Qualification for Euro 2000 again resulted in defeats in every game. The closest game was against Cyprus, a 1–0 defeat on 18 November 1998.[14]

In April 2001, San Marino gained their first ever away point, drawing 1–1 with Latvia in Riga.[15] The team ended the 2002 World Cup qualifying group with a new best of three goals, though one of these came in a 10–1 defeat by Belgium. In Euro 2004 qualifying San Marino lost all eight matches, failing to score. The closest result was a 1–0 home defeat by Latvia, with the winner scored in the last minute.[16]

In April 2004, San Marino gained their first win after more than 70 attempts, a 1–0 victory over Liechtenstein in a friendly on 28 April 2004 courtesy of a fifth-minute goal by Andy Selva. The match was Martin Andermatt's debut as Liechtenstein manager.[17] Results during qualification for the 2006 World Cup followed a similar vein to previous qualifying groups. Matches were generally one-sided defeats, with the exception of single goal defeats at home by Lithuania and Belgium.[18]

San Marino's opening Euro 2008 qualifying match resulted in a record 13–0 defeat at home by Germany on 6 September 2006.[19] They scored only twice and conceded fifty-seven goals in losing all twelve matches, although the home matches against Ireland, Cyprus and Wales were each lost by a single goal.[20]

In the qualification campaign for the 2010 World Cup, they lost all ten matches played and failed to qualify. They conceded 47 goals in those fixtures, including 10 in a defeat by Poland, which became Poland's highest scoring victory of all time,[21] and scored just once, in a 3–1 defeat by Slovakia.[22] The Qualifiers for UEFA Euro 2012 started in a similar way, the first nine matches all being defeats with an aggregate of 49 goals conceded and none scored, their best result being a one-goal loss to Finland at home, with the worst being a heavy 11–0 loss to the Netherlands, which became the Netherlands' highest scoring victory of all time and San Marino's worst-ever away defeat.[23] This was then followed up by two lighter defeats, a 5–0 home loss against Sweden, before completing the campaign with a 4–0 away loss to Moldova.

On 10 September 2013, Alessandro Della Valle scored San Marino's first competitive goal in five years. With the score 1–0 to Poland in the Serravalle stadium, he headed in a free-kick in the 22nd minute, beating AFC Bournemouth goalkeeper Artur Boruc at his front post. Poland then regained the lead a minute later, eventually winning 5–1. It was the first international goal of any kind scored by San Marino since the national team lost 3–2 at home to Malta, the second time (after a 2–2 friendly draw against Liechtenstein away in 2003) the national team has scored more than once in any given international at senior level.

On 15 November 2014, San Marino drew 0–0 at home against Estonia.[24] It was the first time in ten years that the team had not lost a game, ending a 61–match losing streak,[24] and securing the country's first ever point in a European Championship qualifier.[24]

In October 2016, Mattia Stefanelli scored for San Marino in their 4–1 loss to Norway.[25]

On 16 November 2019, Filippo Berardi scored a goal in a 3–1 loss to Kazakhstan in a Euro 2020 qualifying match, which was the first goal for San Marino in two years (5–1 vs. Azerbaijan on 4 September 2017), and their first home goal in six years (5–1 vs. Poland on 10 September 2013).[26]

On 13 October 2020, San Marino recorded their 4th competitive draw and their first since 2014, after their Nations League match with Liechtenstein ended 0–0.[27] A month later they made history by holding Gibraltar to a goalless draw, surviving with 10 men after Davide Simoncini was sent off. This heralded several firsts for them: the first major tournament in which they had gained more than one point, the first time they had gained more than one point in a calendar year, and the first time they had gone unbeaten in two consecutive competitive games without any goal conceded.

On December 7, 2020, after the draw for the 2022 World Cup qualifiers, San Marino was given an opportunity to pick up one or more points and/or get a historic first win in official competition as it was placed in Group I where it would meet Andorra, the lowest placed team in the 5-pot, among its five opponents and which it had faced only once before in a friendly match (at home on February 22, 2017 for a 0-2 defeat). However, the team failed to get a single point and lost all their games (including a 0-10 home loss on the last day against England, their 2nd heaviest home defeat after the 0-13 defeat by Germany 15 years earlier), with a record of one goal scored (at home against Poland in a 1-7 loss) against 46 conceded.

On March 28, 2022, San Marino played the first official match in its history against a non-European team, in a friendly match against Cape Verde played on neutral venue in Spain (0-2 loss).

Team image

Kit suppliers

Period Kit manufacturer
1990–1994 Admiral
1994–2010 Virma
2011–2017 Adidas
2018– Macron

Home stadium

San Marino play home matches at the San Marino Stadium, a municipally owned stadium in Serravalle which also hosts the matches of club side San Marino Calcio.[28] It has a capacity of 7,000.[29] Crowds are low but there is always a fan group called "Brigata Mai 1 Gioia", mainly composed by Italians (in particular from the near region Emilia Romagna). On occasion travelling supporters outnumber the Sammarinese support. For example, in the fixture against the Republic of Ireland in February 2007, 2,500 of the 3,294 crowd were Irish supporters.[30][31]

San Marino have played three "home" matches outside their borders. For World Cup qualifiers against England and the Netherlands in 1993 the Stadio Renato Dall'Ara in Bologna was used, and for UEFA Nations League match against Liechtenstein in 2020 at the Stadio Romeo Neri in Rimini.

Reputation

San Marino once had the smallest population of any UEFA country,[29] until the May 2013 election of Gibraltar.[32] The republic has never won a competitive fixture. A 2004 1–0 friendly win against Liechtenstein remains their sole victory to date.

The national side is mainly composed of amateur players. Only a small number of players are professionals, with many holding second jobs outside of the sport. Their 13–0 defeat at home by Germany is a European Championship record,[19] and they have conceded ten goals on four other separate occasions.

In the FIFA World Rankings, San Marino traditionally have the lowest rank of any UEFA country. Since the creation of FIFA rankings in 1992, San Marino's average position has been 176th.[33]

In 2001, Latvia manager Gary Johnson resigned after failing to beat San Marino in a World Cup qualifier.[34] The Republic of Ireland's 2–1 win over San Marino in February 2007 (due to a last-second goal) resulted in scathing press criticism for the Irish team.[35]

San Marino held the record for the fastest goal in FIFA World Cup qualifying history for 22 years when they stunned England with a goal after only 8.3 seconds in 1993. England went on to win the match 7-1. San Marino do however still hold the record as far as scoring against professional opponents is concerned, as Christian Benteke scored against Gibraltar.

San Marino set a European record when they went over 20 games without scoring between October 2008 and August 2012.[36] On 8 September 2015, San Marino scored its first away goal in 14 years when Matteo Vitaioli scored against Lithuania in Euro 2016 qualification.[37][38]

Results and fixtures

Legend

  Win   Draw   Lose

2021

28 May 2021 Friendly Italy  7–0  San Marino Cagliari, Italy
20:45 CEST (UTC+02:00)
Report Stadium: Sardegna Arena
Referee: Trustin Farrugia Cann (Malta)
1 June 2021 Friendly Kosovo  4–1  San Marino Pristina, Kosovo
18:00 Muriqi 28', 45+1', 46', 76' (pen.) Report D. Tomassini 85' Stadium: Fadil Vokrri Stadium
Referee: Yaşar Kemal Uğurlu (Turkey)
5 September 2021 2022 FIFA World Cup qualification San Marino  1–7  Poland Serravalle, San Marino
20:45
Report
Stadium: Stadio Olimpico de Serravalle
Referee: Mattias Gestranius (Finland)
8 September 2021 2022 FIFA World Cup qualification Albania  5–0  San Marino Elbasan, Albania
20:45
Report Stadium: Elbasan Arena
Referee: Lukas Fähndrich (Switzerland)
9 October 2021 2022 FIFA World Cup qualification Poland  5–0  San Marino Warsaw, Poland
20:45
Report Stadium: PGE Narodowy
Referee: Fran Jović (Croatia)
12 November 2021 2022 FIFA World Cup qualification Hungary  4–0  San Marino Budapest , Hungary
20:45
Report (FIFA)
Report (UEFA)
Stadium: Puskás Aréna
Referee: Filip Glova (Slovakia)
15 November 2021 2022 FIFA World Cup qualification San Marino  0–10  England Serravalle, San Marino
Rossi  26'  67' Report (FIFA)
Report (UEFA)
Stadium: Stadio Olimpico de Serravalle
Referee: Rade Obrenovič (Slovenia)

2022

Coaching staff

Current technical staff:[39]

Head coachFabrizio Costantini
Technical assistantStefano Ceci
Fitness coachTomaso Mazzoli
Goalkeeping coachMarcello Teodorani
Team doctorPietro Bugli
PhysiotherapistLoris Balzani
MasseurTiziano Giacobbi
Official accompanyingCesare Vitaioli
Match analystLorenzo Vagnini
WarehousemanBenito Ballato
Marco Crescentini
Mauro Montanari

Manager history

As of 28 March 2022[40]
Manager Nat. Start End Games Won Drawn Lost
Giulio Casali 28 March 198620 September 19876024
Giorgio Leoni 14 November 199015 November 1995290128
Massimo Bonini 2 June 199610 September 19978008
Giampaolo Mazza 10 October 199815 October 2013851282
Pierangelo Manzaroli 8 June 20148 October 2017280127
Franco Varrella 8 September 201828 November 2021340232
Fabrizio Costantini 28 November 2021present2002

Players

Current squad

The following players were called up for the friendlies against Lithuania and Cape Verde on 25 and 28 March 2022 respectively.[41]

Caps and goals correct as of 28 March 2022, after the match against Cape Verde.'[42]

No. Pos. Player Date of birth (age) Caps Goals Club
1GK Aldo Junior Simoncini (1986-08-30) 30 August 1986 61 0 Tre Fiori
1GK Elia Benedettini (1995-06-22) 22 June 1995 33 0 Cesena
1GK Simone Benedettini (1997-01-21) 21 January 1997 9 0 Murata
1GK Mattia Manzaroli (1991-10-03) 3 October 1991 0 0 Cerignone

2DF Mirko Palazzi (Captain) (1987-03-21) 21 March 1987 64 1 Marignanese
2DF Manuel Battistini (1994-07-11) 11 July 1994 42 0 Juvenes
2DF Andrea Grandoni (1997-03-23) 23 March 1997 30 0 La Fiorita
2DF Dante Rossi (1987-07-12) 12 July 1987 16 0 Foligno
2DF Alessandro D'Addario (1997-09-09) 9 September 1997 15 0 Tre Fiori
2DF Davide Cesarini (1995-02-16) 16 February 1995 15 0 Tre Penne
2DF Filippo Fabbri (2002-01-07) 7 January 2002 13 1 Forlì

3MF Danilo Rinaldi (1986-04-18) 18 April 1986 42 1 La Fiorita
3MF Enrico Golinucci (1991-07-16) 16 July 1991 36 0 Libertas
3MF Alessandro Golinucci (1994-10-10) 10 October 1994 31 0 Virtus
3MF Marcello Mularoni (1998-09-08) 8 September 1998 28 0 La Fiorita
3MF Fabio Tomassini (1996-02-05) 5 February 1996 27 0 Pennarossa
3MF Maicol Berretti (1989-05-01) 1 May 1989 26 0 Libertas
3MF Michael Battistini (1996-10-08) 8 October 1996 13 0 Tre Penne
3MF Tommaso Zafferani (1996-02-19) 19 February 1996 13 0 La Fiorita
3MF Luca Ceccaroli (1995-07-05) 5 July 1995 12 0 Tre Penne
3MF Luca Censoni (1996-07-18) 18 July 1996 8 0 Tre Fiori

4FW Matteo Vitaioli (1989-10-27) 27 October 1989 73 1 Pennarossa
4FW Adolfo Hirsch (1986-01-31) 31 January 1986 52 0 Pennarossa
4FW Nicola Nanni (2000-05-02) 2 May 2000 24 1 Lucchese
4FW Mattia Stefanelli (1993-03-12) 12 March 1993 16 1 Pennarossa
4FW David Tomassini (2000-03-14) 14 March 2000 9 1 Murata
4FW Jacopo Raschi (1998-04-28) 28 April 1998 2 0 Virtus

Recent call-ups

The following players have been called up within the last 12 months and are still eligible to represent.

Pos. Player Date of birth (age) Caps Goals Club Latest call-up
GK Matteo Zavoli (1996-07-06) 6 July 1996 0 0 Libertas v.  Hungary, 12 November 2021 PRE
GK Davide Colonna (2000-11-10) 10 November 2000 0 0 Domagnano v.  Andorra, 2 September 2021
GK Alex Stimac (1996-06-22) 22 June 1996 0 0 Virtus Training Camp, 20 August 2021

DF Giacomo Conti (1998-07-22) 22 July 1998 5 0 San Giovanni v.  England, 15 November 2021
DF Filippo Quaranta (1998-09-11) 11 September 1998 0 0 Juvenes-Dogana v.  Hungary, 12 November 2021
DF Davide Simoncini (captain) (1986-08-30) 30 August 1986 69 0 Tre Fiori v.  Andorra, 12 October 2021
DF Cristian Brolli (1992-02-28) 28 February 1992 41 0 Folgore v.  Andorra, 12 October 2021
DF Michele Cevoli (1999-07-21) 21 July 1999 10 0 Juvenes-Dogana v.  Albania, 8 September 2021

MF Lorenzo Lunadei (1997-07-11) 11 July 1997 26 0 San Giovanni v.  England, 15 November 2021
MF Kevin Zonzini (1997-08-01) 1 August 1997 6 0 Cosmos v.  England, 15 November 2021
MF Mattia Ceccaroli (1999-02-03) 3 February 1999 0 0 Domagnano v.  England, 15 November 2021

FW Marco Bernardi (1994-01-02) 2 January 1994 9 0 Folgore v.  Andorra, 12 October 2021
FW Samuel Pancotti (2000-10-31) 31 October 2000 0 0 La Fiorita v.  Poland, 9 October 2021 PRE
FW Pietro Sopranzi (1998-01-29) 29 January 1998 0 0 Libertas v.  Albania, 8 September 2021
FW Filippo Berardi (1997-05-18) 18 May 1997 21 1 Ancona-Matelica v.  Kosovo, 1 June 2021

INJ Withdrew due to injury
PRE Preliminary squad / standby
RET Retired from the national team
SUS Serving suspension
WD Player withdrew from the squad due to non-injury issue.

Records

As of 28 March 2022[43]
Players in bold are still active with San Marino.

Most capped players

Andy Selva, San Marino's most capped player, as well as all-time top scorer.
Rank Player Caps Goals Years
1 Andy Selva 73 8 1998–2016
Matteo Vitaioli 73 1 2007–present
3 Damiano Vannucci 69 0 1996–2012
Davide Simoncini 69 0 2006–present
5 Alessandro Della Valle 65 1 2002–2017
6 Mirko Palazzi 64 1 2005–present
7 Aldo Junior Simoncini 61 0 2006–present
8 Simone Bacciocchi 60 0 1998–2013
9 Fabio Vitaioli 55 0 2005–present
10 Adolfo Hirsch 52 0 2011–present

Top goalscorers

Rank Player Goals Caps Ratio Years
1 Andy Selva 8 73 0.11 1998–2016
2 Manuel Marani 2 32 0.06 2003–2012

Competitive record

FIFA World Cup

FIFA World Cup record Qualification record
Year Round Position Pld W D L GF GA Pld W D L GF GA
1930 to 1990 Did not enter Declined participation
1994 Did not qualify 10 0 1 9 2 46
1998 8 0 0 8 0 42
2002 8 0 1 7 3 30
2006 10 0 0 10 2 40
2010 10 0 0 10 1 47
2014 10 0 0 10 1 54
2018 10 0 0 10 2 51
2022 10 0 0 10 1 45
2026 To be determined To be determined
Total 0/22 76 0 2 74 12 356

UEFA European Championship

UEFA European Championship record Qualification record
Year Round Position Pld W D* L GF GA Pld W D L GF GA
1960 to 1988 Did not enter Declined participation
1992 Did not qualify 8008133
1996 100010236
2000 8008144
2004 8008030
2008 120012257
2012 100010053
2016 10019136
2020 100010151
2024 To be determined To be determined
Total0/167601758340

UEFA Nations League

UEFA Nations League record
Year Division Group Pos Pld W D L GF GA P/R RK
2018–19 D 2 4th600601655th
2020–21 D 2 3rd40220354th
2022–23 D 2 To be determined
Total2/21002801954th

Mediterranean Games

Mediterranean Games record
Year Round Pld W D L GF GA
19511983 Did not enter
1987Group stage001207
1991–present See San Marino national under-20 team
Total1/1001207

San Marino's all-time record

Official matches

As of 28 March 2022

Unofficial matches

As of 15 October 2013
Opponent P W D L GF GA GD Win %
 Lebanon 10100000%
 Syria 100103−30%
 Turkey 100104−40%
  Vatican City[44] 10100000%
Total402207−70%

List of matches not lost by San Marino


Latvia 1–1 San Marino
Pahars 1' Report
(FIFA)
Albani 59'
Attendance: 4,000
Referee: Karen Nalbandyan (Armenia)

Liechtenstein 2–2 San Marino
Frick 16'
Burgmeier 23'
Report
(Footballdatabase)
B. Gasperoni 39'
Ciacci 45'
Attendance: 850
Referee: Guido Wildhaber (Switzerland)

San Marino 1–0 Liechtenstein
Selva 5' Report
(Footballdatabase)
Attendance: 700
Referee: Ruaidhri Laird (Scotland)


Liechtenstein 0–0 San Marino
Report
(UEFA)
Referee: Jørgen Daugbjerg Burchardt (Denmark)

See also

References

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