Bhutan women's national football team explained

Type:Women
Bhutan
Badge Size:200px
Fifa Trigramme:BHU
Nickname:Dragon Ladies
Association:Bhutan Football Federation
Sub-Confederation:SAFF (South Asia)
Confederation:AFC (Asia)
Coach:Nicola Demaine
Top Scorer:Deki Lhazom (5)
Home Stadium:Changlimithang Stadium
Fifa Max:113
Fifa Max Date:March 2017; March 2018
Fifa Min:178
Fifa Min Date:March 2023
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First Game: 7–0
(Dhaka, Bangladesh; 6 December 2010)
Largest Win: 5–0
(Kathmandu, Nepal; 9 September 2022)
Largest Loss: 18–0
(Cox's Bazar, Bangladesh; 13 December 2010)
2Ndregional Name:SAFF Championship
2Ndregional Cup Apps:6
2Ndregional Cup First:2010
2Ndregional Cup Best:Semi-finals (2022)

The Bhutan women's national football team represents Bhutan in international women's football. The team is controlled by the governing body for football in Bhutan, the Bhutan Football Federation, which is currently a member of the Asian Football Federation and the regional body the South Asian Football Federation.

Bhutan play their home games at the national stadium, Changlimithang. It is one of the younger national teams in the world having played its first match in 2010.

History

Introduction to Bhutanese Football

Bhutanese football in general came to the international stage comparatively late in the day with the men's national team only playing their first competitive international match in 1982[1] and the only junior team to compete internationally, the Under-17s making their debut in 2003.[2]

The women's team did not enter any form of international competition until 2010.[3] Prior to their entry into international football, a formal women's competition was established in Bhutan for the first time, supported by a grant from FIFA and run by the Bhutan Football Federation.[4] Because of the very under-developed state of women's football in Bhutan at this time, club teams did not exist and so the tournament consisted of teams representing individual Dzongkhags. This competition was used not only to increase the popularity of football amongst women in the country, but also to act as means of identifying and coaching players who would form the first ever Bhutan women's national football squad.

Competitive debut

Their first ever competitive game was a friendly match against Bangladesh in Dhaka on 6 December 2010 as a warm up for their appearance at the inaugural SAFF Women's Championships a week later. Unfortunately, their debut was one to forget as, having travelled to Cox's Bazar where all of the group matches were scheduled to take place, they succumbed 7–0 to their hosts. Their competition proper got off to an even worse start as they lost 18–0 to India, one of the strongest teams in the region. Bangladesh then repeated their performance in the pre-competition friendly running out 9–0 victors and eliminating Bhutan from the competition. The team were able to salvage some pride in their final game, drawing 1–1 with Sri Lanka, which marks their only positive result of any kind as well as their first competitive goal (one of two times they have scored a goal in a competitive match).

Their performance at the SAFF Championships saw them gain 889 ranking points.[5] Although they were at this stage only provisionally ranked in 127th and last place as they had not played the required number of five competitive matches against officially ranked teams, their performance saw them achieve a higher points total than four other provisionally ranked teams: the U.S. Virgin Islands, Liberia, Qatar and Afghanistan. Had they been officially ranked, their points tally would have placed them in 122nd place ahead of ranked nations Tanzania, Belize, Antigua and Barbuda and Botswana.

Withdrawal and return to international football

The women's team then withdrew from international football for the next two years, re-emerging to play in the 2012 SAFF Women's Championship. Prior to the tournament in Sri Lanka, the team of twenty five, including two referees and physiotherapists, but with the playing squad consisting entirely of students, flew to Bangkok for two weeks training to get accustomed to warmer weather.[6] They entered the tournament provisionally ranked 34th out of 35 in the Asian Football Confederation, with only Afghanistan ranked below them, and unranked on the global listing because they had been inactive for more than eighteen months. At this point, with their points total of 889, they had a higher technical rating than twelve teams who were either unranked due to inactivity or provisionally ranked in last place due to insufficient competition and had more ranking points than five officially ranked teams: Iraq, Mozambique, Malawi, Antigua and Barbuda and Bostswana.

The team travelled to Sri Lanka to play their fixtures at the Ceylonese Rugby & Football Club Grounds and were drawn in a group with the same teams as the previous edition of the tournament. Sri Lanka took advantage of their status as hosts in the first match, beating Bhutan 4–0, taking the lead after just four minutes through Nilushika Kumari, with Praveena Perera wrapping up the scoring at the end of the game following two goals either side of half time from Erandi Kumudumala.[7] Bhutan performed better in their next game, a narrow 1–0 loss to Bangladesh, but this eliminated them from the tournament.[8] Their final match against India was very one-sided, though not as great a defeat as last time, India still ran out victors 11–0 sending Bhutan home without a point or a goal.[9]

Rankings, performance, and current status

Having now played the required five games against already ranked teams, Bhutan received their first official ranking position: 128th, ahead of Antigua and Barbuda and Botswana. Bhutan have not played a competitive match since the 2014 SAFF Championships, but due to movements around them, did climb to a high ranking of 115th in December 2013.

Bhutan took part in the 2014 SAFF Women's Championship in Pakistan, losing all three games, including a 4–1 loss to host Pakistan in which Tshering Yangdon scored just the second official goal in the team's history.

Team image

Home stadium

The Bhutan women's national football team plays their home matches on the Changlimithang Stadium.

Results and fixtures

See main article: Bhutan women's national football team results.

See also: 2021 in association football, 2021 in sports and FIFA International Match Calendar.

The following is a list of match results in the last 12 months, as well as any future matches that have been scheduled.

Legend

2024

Head-to-head record

As of October 2023:

KeyThe following table shows Bhutan' all-time official international record per opponent:
OpponentConfederation
5005027–270.00AFC
2002029–290.00AFC
110021+1100.00AFC
100113–20.00AFC
5005027–270.00AFC
100114–30.00AFC
321085+377.00AFC
101000033.00AFC
200224–20.00AFC
51131211+137.50AFC
110031+2100.00AFC
100109–90.00AFC
Total28732027113–8617.86

Coaching staff

Current coaching staff

PositionName
Head coach Nicola Demaine
Media officer Cheki wangmo
Assistant coach Tanka Maya
Goalkeeping coach Mon Bhattrai
Physiotherapist Chhador Zangmo
Team manager Tashi Wangmo

Manager history

NamePeriodTournament
Kota Namgay2010–20122010 SAFF Women's Championship

Eighth Place (Last)
2012 SAFF Women's Championship: Eighth Place (Last)

Dorji Khandu20142012 SAFF Women's Championship

Seventh Place

Lee Sung-jea2016–20192016 SAFF Women's Championship

Seventh Place (Last)
2019 SAFF Women's Championship: Sixth Place

Denka Na[10] 2019
Hong Kyung-suk[11] 2022–20232022 SAFF Women's Championship

Semi-finalist

Karma Choden20232023 SAFF Women's Friendly Tournament

Finalist

2024–Present

Players

Current squad

Caps and goals are updated as of 9 September 2022 after the match against Sri Lanka.

Recent call-ups

Records

Active players in bold, statistics correct as of 2020.

Most capped players

width=width=Playerwidth=Year(s)width=Caps
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10-->

Top goalscorers

PlayerYear(s)GoalsCaps
1Deki Lhazom??–Present5??
2Namgyel Dema??–Present4??
3Tshering Yangden??–Present3??
4Deki Yangdom??–Present1??
4Galey Wangmo??–Present1??
4Pema Choden Tshering??–Present1??
4Tshering Lhaden??–Present1??
4Sunita Rai??–Present1??
4Sonam Choden??–Present1??
4Jamyang Choden??–Present1??
4Yesney Bidha??–Present1??

Competitive record

FIFA Women's World Cup

FIFA Women's World Cup record
Hosts / YearResultwidth=20width=20width=20width=20width=20width=20
1991 to 2023did not enter
2027to be determined
Total0/10

AFC Women's Asian Cup

AFC Women's Asian Cup record
Hosts / YearResultwidth=20width=20width=20width=20width=20width=20
1975 to 2022did not enter
Total0/20

SAFF Women's Championship

SAFF Women's Championship record
Hosts / YearResultwidth=20width=20width=20width=20width=20width=20
2010Group stage3012128
20123003016
20143003115
20163003113
2019200205
2022Semi-finals3102512
Total6/6171115889
SAFF Women's Championship history
YearRoundScoreResult
2010Group stage India 18–0 Bhutan Loss
Group stage Bangladesh 9–0 Bhutan Loss
Group stage Bhutan 1–1 Sri Lanka Draw
2012Group stage Bhutan 0–4 Sri Lanka Loss
Group stage Bangladesh 1–0 Bhutan Loss
Group stage Bhutan 0–11 India Loss
2014Group stage Bhutan 0–4 Nepal Loss
Group stage Bhutan 0–3 Sri Lanka Loss
Group stage Bhutan 1–4 Pakistan Loss
2016Group stage Bhutan 0–8 Nepal Loss
Group stage Bhutan 0–2 Sri Lanka Loss
Group stage Bhutan 1–3 Maldives Loss
2019
Group stage Bhutan 0–3 Nepal Loss
Group stage Bangladesh 2–0 Bhutan Loss
2022
Group stage Bhutan 0–4 Nepal Loss
Group stage Sri Lanka 0–5 Bhutan Won
Semi-finals Bangladesh 8–0 Bhutan Loss

See also

National teams
  • Men's
  • Women's

    External links

    Notes and References

    1. Web site: World Football Elo Ratings: Bhutan. eloratings.net. World Football Elo Ratingsand Advanced Satellite Consulting. 29 July 2014.
    2. Web site: Asian U-17 Championship 2004. Diaz Rubio. Julian. Hashim. Refel. Zea. Antonio. Lee. Seungsoo. 11 February 2006. Rec.Sport.Soccer Statistics Foundation. 23 July 2014.
    3. Web site: Bhutan Women's Fixtures and Results. https://web.archive.org/web/20110622184103/http://www.fifa.com/associations/association=bhu/fixturesresults/gender=f/index.html. dead. 22 June 2011. 31 July 2014. FIFA. 23 July 2014.
    4. Web site: Sarpang wins inter-dzongkhag women's football. 8 January 2010. Bhutan Observer. 1 August 2014. https://web.archive.org/web/20140726020715/http://bhutanobserver.bt/2309-bo-news-about-sarpang_wins_interdzongkhag_womens_football.aspx. 26 July 2014. dead.
    5. Web site: FIFA/Coca-Cola Women's World Ranking . https://web.archive.org/web/20111008164448/http://www.fifa.com/worldranking/rankingtable/women/index.html. dead. 8 October 2011. 18 March 2011. FIFA. 1 August 2014.
    6. Web site: Women's national football team in Bangkok. Phuntsho. Tashi. September 2012. Kuensel. 1 August 2014.
    7. Web site: Sri Lanka vs Bhutan – 2014 SAFF Women's Championship. 7 September 2012. goalnepal.com. 1 August 2014. 10 July 2017. https://web.archive.org/web/20170710040941/http://www.goalnepal.com/matchinfo.php?id=878. dead.
    8. Web site: Bangladesh vs Bhutan – 2014 SAFF Women's Championship. 9 September 2012. goalnepal.com. 1 August 2014.
    9. Web site: Bhutan vs India – 2014 SAFF Women's Championship. 9 September 2012. goalnepal.com. 1 August 2014. 10 July 2017. https://web.archive.org/web/20170710045310/http://www.goalnepal.com/matchinfo.php?id=891. dead.
    10. Web site: FIFA.com. Member Association - Bhutan . https://web.archive.org/web/20190306043345/https://www.fifa.com/associations/association/bhu/about. dead. 6 March 2019. 2020-07-23. www.fifa.com. en-GB.
    11. Web site: National women's team preparing for SAFF championship .