Nickname(s) | La Azul y Blanco (The Blue and White) Los Pinoleros (The Pinoleros) | ||
---|---|---|---|
Association | Federación Nicaragüense de Fútbol (FENIFUT) | ||
Confederation | CONCACAF (North America) | ||
Sub-confederation | UNCAF (Central America) | ||
Head coach | Marco Antonio Figueroa | ||
Captain | Juan Barrera | ||
Most caps | Josué Quijano (99) | ||
Top scorer | Juan Barrera (25) | ||
Home stadium | Estadio Nacional de Fútbol | ||
FIFA code | NCA | ||
| |||
FIFA ranking | |||
Current | 132 1 (24 October 2024)[1] | ||
Highest | 92 (December 2015) | ||
Lowest | 193 (May 2001) | ||
First international | |||
El Salvador 9–0 Nicaragua (San Salvador, El Salvador; 1 May 1929) | |||
Biggest win | |||
Turks and Caicos Islands 0–7 Nicaragua (San Cristóbal, Dominican Republic; 27 March 2021) | |||
Biggest defeat | |||
Honduras 10–0 Nicaragua (San José, Costa Rica; 13 March 1946) Curaçao 11–1 Nicaragua (Guatemala City, Guatemala; 2 March 1950) | |||
CONCACAF Championship / Gold Cup | |||
Appearances | 5 (first in 1963) | ||
Best result | Sixth place (1967) | ||
Medal record |
The Nicaragua national football team (Spanish: Selección de fútbol de Nicaragua) represents Nicaragua in men's international football and is controlled by the Nicaraguan Football Federation. Nicaragua achieved their first qualification into a major international competition in 2009, as they qualified for the 2009 Gold Cup as the last entrant from Central America, after a 2–0 victory against Guatemala in the fifth place match in the 2009 Nations Cup.[3] However, the team has never qualified for the FIFA World Cup.
Due to American influence throughout the country's history, baseball has more of a following as both a pursuit and spectator event in Nicaragua than football.