Generated by GPT-5-mini| Armenia national football team | |
|---|---|
| Name | Armenia |
| Nickname | Hetqakan (The Reds) |
| Association | Football Federation of Armenia |
| Confederation | UEFA (Europe) |
| Coach | Yegishe Melikyan |
| Captain | Henrikh Mkhitaryan |
| Most caps | Sargis Hovsepyan (132) |
| Top scorer | Henrikh Mkhitaryan (32) |
| Fifa max | 30 (March 2014) |
| Fifa min | 159 (July 1994) |
| Home stadium | Republican Stadium (Yerevan) |
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| Body1 | FF0000 |
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| Shorts1 | FF0000 |
| Socks1 | FF0000 |
| Pattern la2 | _arm22a |
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Armenia national football team represents Armenia in international football and is governed by the Football Federation of Armenia. Competing under the auspices of FIFA and UEFA, the side features players drawn from domestic clubs such as Pyunik FC, FC Ararat Yerevan and European teams including AS Roma, FC Dynamo Kyiv and Shakhtar Donetsk. Since its debut following the dissolution of the Soviet Union, the team has pursued qualification for the UEFA European Championship and the FIFA World Cup, producing notable figures who have played across competitions like the UEFA Nations League and the European Championship qualifying campaigns.
The national side emerged after Armenia declared independence following the collapse of the Soviet Union and the dissolution of the Soviet Top League, organizing its first official fixtures under the Football Federation of Armenia in the early 1990s. Early encounters involved matches against teams such as Moldova national football team, Belarus national football team and Georgia national football team as Armenia integrated into UEFA qualifying for FIFA World Cup qualification and EURO qualifying. The team achieved incremental progress under coaches including Benny Johansson and Vazgen Manukyan before enjoying a peak period in the 2010s with qualification pushes driven by players at clubs like Manchester United, Arsenal F.C., AS Roma and FC Basel. Landmark moments include competitive results versus Italy national football team, Portugal national football team, Denmark national football team and high-profile fixtures in Yerevan and across Europe that improved FIFA World Rankings standing to a historic high in March 2014.
Traditional colors reference the Armenian national flag and are closely associated with home kits produced by manufacturers connected to clubs such as Adidas, Nike, Inc. and kit suppliers used by FC Pyunik and FC Ararat Yerevan. The badge and crest draw on motifs present in institutions like the Coat of arms of Armenia and cultural symbols celebrated in places such as Mount Ararat and the Matenadaran. Fan identity is reinforced by supporters organized similarly to groups following FC Zenit Saint Petersburg or Celtic F.C., and matchday rituals echo Armenian cultural practices observed at venues like the Republican Stadium (Yerevan) and regional arenas used by FC Alashkert and FC Noah.
Armenia has contested qualification for FIFA World Cup tournaments and UEFA European Championship cycles while participating in the UEFA Nations League. Notable qualifying campaigns involved fixtures against Germany national football team, Spain national football team, Switzerland national football team and Northern Ireland national football team. The squad registered competitive wins over sides such as Croatia national football team and draws versus Poland national football team in memorable qualifiers. Results in UEFA competition have been shaped by players active in leagues like the English Football League, Serie A, La Liga and the Russian Premier League.
The roster has featured internationals who have competed at club level for Manchester United, Arsenal F.C., AS Roma, Shakhtar Donetsk, Dynamo Kyiv, FC Basel, Real Madrid Castilla and FC Barcelona Atlètic. Captain Henrikh Mkhitaryan stands as the leading goalscorer, having played at Borussia Dortmund, Manchester United, Arsenal F.C. and Inter Milan. Veteran defender Sargis Hovsepyan holds the caps record and represented sides in the Soviet Top League and Armenian domestic competition. Emerging talents have progressed from youth systems linked to FC Pyunik, FC Banants (now FC Urartu) and academies influenced by UEFA coaching standards, appearing in under-age tournaments coordinated by UEFA Youth structures and the FIFA U-21 World Cup qualifying process.
Management is overseen by the Football Federation of Armenia, with coaching appointments drawing attention from figures with experience in UEFA competitions, UEFA Champions League and domestic leagues across Europe. Past and present head coaches include professionals who worked in national setups alongside assistants with resumes in clubs like FC Krasnodar, FC Zenit Saint Petersburg, Olympiacos F.C. and FK Partizan. Technical staff responsibilities cover scouting networks that reach the Armenian diaspora in countries such as France, United States, Russia and Lebanon, while sports science support interfaces with institutions like national training centers and university programs collaborating with UEFA coaching education courses.
Primary home matches are staged at the Republican Stadium (Yerevan), with alternative venues including regional grounds used by FC Banants/FC Urartu, FC Ararat Yerevan and Mika Stadium. Training infrastructure has been developed in partnership with clubs such as FC Pyunik and academies modeled on systems in Spain, Germany and France. The Football Federation of Armenia coordinates facility upgrades, pitch management and youth development programs often benchmarked against stadia standards seen in UEFA stadium categories and investments undertaken in other national associations like Scotland national football team and Wales national football team.
Category:European national association football teams