Nickname(s) | ჯვაროსნები Jvarosnebi (Crusaders) | |||
---|---|---|---|---|
Association | Georgian Football Federation | |||
Confederation | UEFA | |||
Head coach | Ramaz Svanadze | |||
Captain | Saba Khvadagiani | |||
Most caps | Nika Kvekveskiri (20 games) | |||
Top scorer | Beka Gotsiridze (9 goals) | |||
FIFA code | GEO | |||
| ||||
First international | ||||
Georgia 3–0 Moldova (Tbilisi, 27 May 1994) | ||||
Biggest win | ||||
Georgia 7–1 Malaysia (Vienna, 26 March 2013) | ||||
Biggest defeat | ||||
Ukraine 6–0 Georgia (Chervonohrad, 12 October 2004) | ||||
UEFA U-21 Championship | ||||
Appearances | 1 (first in 2023) | |||
Best result | Quarter-finals (2023) | |||
Website | nakrebi.ge |
The Georgia national under-21 football team is the national under-21 football team of Georgia and is controlled by the Georgian Football Federation. It is considered to be the feeder team for the senior Georgian national football team. The team competes in the European Under-21 Championship, held every two years.
The current team is for Georgian players aged under 21 at the start of the calendar year in which a two-year European Championship campaign begins, so some players can remain with the squad until the age of 23. As long as they are eligible, players can play for Georgia at any level, making it possible to play for the U21s, senior side, and again for the U21s. This has been the case for several senior team players like Jano Ananidze and Levan Kakubava.
Although the breakup of the Soviet Union occurred officially on 25 December 1991, the under-21 team continued as Soviet Union until the 1992 UEFA European Under-21 Football Championship. After that, Georgia and the other countries who split from the Soviet Union like Armenia, Azerbaijan, Belarus, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Moldova and Ukraine became separate footballing entities.
Georgia held its first official game in a 1996 UEFA European U21 Championship qualification campaign against Moldova. They made a debut in the final tournament of the UEFA European Under-21 Championship in 2023 for which they automatically qualified as a co-host nation.
Despite the lowest rating points among the 2023 Championship teams, Georgia produced a main surprise on the tournament. They finished the group on top of the table and remained unbeaten after 120 minutes of a quarter-final clash with Israel as well, before eventually losing on penalties.[1]
Georgia fought hard to qualify for the 2025 Championship. As runners-up of Group C, they beat Croatia after a dramatic penalty shoot-out in play-offs.[2]
Georgia U21s do not have a permanent home ground and play in stadiums of Erovnuli Liga clubs across the country. The record attendance for their match was set on 1 July 2023 when Georgia played Israel in quarter-final of the European Championship in front of 44,338 spectators.[3]