Honduras national football team

Honduras
Nickname(s) Los Catrachos
La Bicolor
La H
La Garra Catracha
Association Federación Nacional Autónoma de Fútbol de Honduras
Sub-confederation UNCAF (Central America)
Confederation CONCACAF
Head coach Jorge Luis Pinto
Captain Maynor Figueroa
Most caps Amado Guevara (138)[1]
Top scorer Carlos Pavón (57)[1]
Home stadium Estadio Olímpico Metropolitano
FIFA code HON
First colours
Second colours
FIFA ranking
Current 86 Steady (5 May 2016)
Highest 20 (September 2001)
Lowest 101 (December 2015)
Elo ranking
Current 85 (July 2015)
Highest 23 (September 2001)
Lowest 104 (November 1971)
First international
 Guatemala 10–1 Honduras 
(Guatemala City, Guatemala; 14 September 1921)
Biggest win
 Honduras 13–0 Nicaragua 
(San José, Costa Rica; 13 March 1946)
Biggest defeat
 Guatemala 10–1 Honduras 
(Guatemala City, Guatemala; 14 September 1921)
World Cup
Appearances 3 (First in 1982)
Best result Group Stage, 1982, 2010 and 2014
CONCACAF Championship
& Gold Cup
Appearances 17 (First in 1963)
Best result Champions, 1981
Copa América
Appearances 1 (First in 2001)
Best result Third Place, 2001

The Honduras national football team, (Spanish: Selección de fútbol de Honduras) nicknamed Los Catrachos, La Bicolor or La H, is the national team of Honduras and is controlled by the Federación Nacional Autónoma de Fútbol de Honduras (FENAFUTH). To date, the team has qualified three times for the FIFA World Cup, in 1982, 2010 and 2014 but has not won a single match.

History

The national team made its debut in the Independence Centenary Games held in Guatemala City in September 1921, losing 10–1 to Guatemala.[2]

During their first appearance at the Central American and Caribbean Games in 1930, Honduras posted a record of two wins and three losses. Their only wins came against Jamaica (5–1) and El Salvador (4–1), while they lost two games to Cuba and Costa Rica.

Honduras won the 1981 CONCACAF Championship and qualified for the World Cup for the first time in 1982. They finished second in the 1985 CONCACAF Championship losing their final match 2 to 1 against Canada, who would eventually qualify to the 1986 FIFA World Cup. Their next major accomplishment was being runners-up at the 1991 CONCACAF Gold Cup losing against host nation, United States. For the 1998 FIFA World Cup, Jamaica's merits left Honduras out of the final round of qualification. Despite Honduras' overwhelming victory 11 to 3 against St.Vincent & the Grenadines, Jamaica defeated Mexico in Kingston. The scoreless draw from Jamaica's visit to Honduras ultimately allowed the Reggae Boys to advance to the next round. Hopes changed for 2002 as Honduras advanced to the hexagonal round. Despite Honduras' effort, they were left at the edge of the 2002 FIFA World Cup losing at home against Trinidad & Tobago, and at the Azteca against Mexico, in their final two games of the qualifiers. The match against Trinidad saw Honduras hit the goal post seven times, but despite their effort they lost by the minimum amount. The second World Cup appearance was in the 2010 FIFA World Cup when Honduras strikingly qualified by their victory away at El Salvador and Costa Rica's tie against the USA. Their third and most recent World Cup appearance was the 2014 FIFA World Cup, where they defeated Mexico at Azteca on their way on qualifying. Honduras has won the UNCAF Nations Cup three times in 1993, 1995 and 2011.

1982 FIFA World Cup

Main article: 1982 FIFA World Cup

Honduras qualified for the World Cup finals for the first time in 1982. Despite getting draws against host Spain, 1–1, and Northern Ireland, 1–1, they could not come up with a win against Yugoslavia losing 0–1.

Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts
 Northern Ireland 312021+14
 Spain 31113303
 Yugoslavia 31112203
 Honduras 302123−12

2001 Copa América

Main article: 2001 Copa América

Since 1993, CONMEBOL has invited teams from other confederations to participate in their confederation championship, Copa América. Honduras took part as one of the last minute teams added for 2001 Copa América. (Argentina dropped out one day before kickoff.) The team arrived only a few hours before the tournament's first game and with barely enough players. Despite the odds, Honduras progressed onto the quarter-final stage where they faced and defeated Brazil 2–0. In the semi-finals however, it was Colombia that knocked out Honduras, 0–2.

2010 FIFA World Cup

Main article: 2010 FIFA World Cup

On October 14, 2009, Honduras qualified to the 2010 FIFA World Cup, after a 1–0 win against El Salvador gave them the third automatic qualifying spot from the Fourth Round of CONCACAF Qualifying.[3]

Honduras faced Chile, Spain, and Switzerland, respectively.[4] In their first match they lost to Chile 0–1 by a goal from Jean Beausejour. They faced Spain in the second match and lost 0–2 by 2 goals from David Villa. In their last match against Switzerland they got a draw and finished the World Cup with 1 point.

Group H

Team
Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts
 Spain 3 2 0 1 4 2 +26
 Chile 3 2 0 1 3 2 +16
  Switzerland 3 1 1 1 1 1 04
 Honduras 3 0 1 2 0 3 31

2014 World Cup Qualification

Honduras' World Cup journey began with an automatic bye to the third round of the qualification because of their third-place position in the FIFA World Ranking. The Honduras team qualified for the final round by finishing first in their third-round group, which included Panama, Canada, and Cuba. The first game began with an upsetting loss against Panama at home. Honduras managed to keep composure despite their tie in the second game in Canada. They went ahead to win both of their matches against Cuba and left with a tie from Panama. In their last match, Honduras recorded an 8–1 win over Canada, allowing them to finish first in their group ahead of Panama.

Honduras disputed the fourth and final round of CONCACAF qualification for the 2014 World Cup in Brazil. The final round, sometimes referred as the hexagonal, is composed of six teams in which each team faces every opponent in a home-and-away format. In their first two games, Honduras faced regional giants USA and Mexico at home. Honduras successfully defeated USA 2 to 1 in their opening hexagonal match. Following the USA match, Honduras hosted Mexico only to comeback from a 0-2 trail to a 2-2 draw. Los Catrachos would then travel to Panama losing to the host team 2-0. Honduras would then lose to Costa Rica and United States 1-0. Following the 2-0 Jamaica win and the 1-0 USA loss, Honduras traveled to Mexico City to face Mexico. Honduras came back from a 1-0 trail to a stunning 1-2 win in the Azteca. They returned to Tegucigalpa only to draw 2-2 due to a last minute goal from Chen. In the final two games Honduras beat Costa Rica 1-0 and qualified by means of a tie at Kingston against Jamaica.

Team
Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts
 United States 10 7 1 2 15 8 +722
 Costa Rica 10 5 3 2 13 7 +618
 Honduras 10 4 3 3 13 12 +115
 Mexico 10 2 5 3 7 9 211
 Panama 10 1 5 4 10 14 48
 Jamaica 10 0 5 5 5 13 85
  Costa Rica Honduras Jamaica Mexico Panama United States
Costa Rica  1–0 2–0 2–1 2–0 3–1
Honduras  1–0 2–0 2–2 2–2 2–1
Jamaica  1–1 2–2 0–1 1–1 1–2
Mexico  0–0 1–2 0–0 2–1 0–0
Panama  2–2 2–0 0–0 0–0 2–3
United States  1–0 1–0 2–0 2–0 2–0

2014 World Cup

Team Pld
W
D
L
GF
GA
GD
Pts
 France 3 2 1 0 8 2 +6 7
  Switzerland 3 2 0 1 7 6 +1 6
 Ecuador 3 1 1 1 3 3 0 4
 Honduras 3 0 0 3 1 8 7 0

Stadium

Honduras plays the majority of its home games at Estadio Olímpico Metropolitano in San Pedro Sula.

The national team also plays at Estadio Tiburcio Carías Andino in Tegucigalpa. In the past, Honduras played their games in San Pedro Sula at Estadio Francisco Morazán.

Estadio Nilmo Edwards in La Ceiba has also hosted friendly exhibition matches since 2007.

Results and fixtures

      Win       Draw       Loss

2015

2016

Competitive record

FIFA World Cup

FIFA World Cup record
Year Round Position GP Won Drawn* Lost GF GA
Uruguay 1930 Did Not Enter
Italy 1934
France 1938
Brazil 1950
Switzerland 1954
Sweden 1958
Chile 1962 Did Not Qualify
England 1966
Mexico 1970
West Germany 1974
Argentina 1978 Withdrew
Spain 1982 Group Stage 18th 3 0 2 1 2 3
Mexico 1986 Did Not Qualify
Italy 1990
United States 1994
France 1998
South Korea Japan 2002
Germany 2006
South Africa 2010 Group Stage 30th 3 0 1 2 0 3
Brazil 2014 Group Stage 31st 3 0 0 3 1 8
Russia 2018 To be determined
Qatar 2022
Total Group Stage 3/20 9 0 3 6 3 14

FIFA World Cup matches

World Cup matches (By team)
Total: 8 games played – 0 Wins – 3 Draws – 5 Losses – 3 Goals for – 14 Goals against
Team GP W D L GF GA Team GP W D L GF GA Team GP W D L GF GA
 Spain201113 Ecuador100112 Northern Ireland101011
  Switzerland201103 France100103 Yugoslavia100101
 Chile100101--------------

All Time World Cup Results

Year Location Opponent Result Score
1930 Uruguay Did not qualify N/A N/A
1934 Italy
1950 Brazil
1954 Switzerland
1958 Sweden
1962 Chile
1966 England
1970 Mexico
1974 Germany
1978 Argentina Withdrew N/A N/A
1982 Spain  Spain T 1-1
 Northern Ireland T 1-1
 Yugoslavia L 1-0
1986 Mexico Did not qualify N/A N/A
1990 Italy
1994 United States
1998 France
2002 Korea/Japan
2006 Germany
2010 South Africa  Chile L 1-0
 Spain L 2-0
  Switzerland T 0-0
2014 Brazil  France L 3-0
 Ecuador L 2-1
  Switzerland L 3-0

CONCACAF Championship / CONCACAF Gold Cup

CONCACAF Championship / CONCACAF Gold Cup record
Year Result Position Pld W D L GF GA
El Salvador 1963Fourth Place4th7313812
Guatemala 1965Did Not Qualify
Honduras 1967Third Place3rd522142
Costa Rica 1969Did Not Qualify
Trinidad and Tobago 1971Sixth Place6th5014511
Haiti 1973Fourth Place4th513166
Mexico 1977Did Not Qualify
Honduras 1981Champions1st532081
1985Runners-up2nd8332119
1989Did Not Qualify
United States 1991Runners-up2nd5320123
Mexico United States1993Group Stage5th310265
United States 1996Group Stage8th200218
United States 1998Group Stage9th200215
United States 2000Quarter-Finals6th320175
United States 2002Did Not Qualify
Mexico United States2003Group Stage10th201112
United States 2005Semi-Final3rd531186
United States 2007Quarter-Final5th4202106
United States 2009Semi-Final3rd530264
United States 2011Semi-Final4th512285
United States 2013Semi-Final4th530255
Canada United States 2015Group Stage11th301224
Total1 Title18/237930193010999

Copa Centroamericana

Year G W D L F A Pts +/– Finish
Costa Rica 1991 5 2 1 2 5 5 5 0 2nd
Honduras 1993 3 3 0 0 7 0 6 +7 Champions
El Salvador 1995 4 3 1 0 8 1 10 +7 Champions
Guatemala 1997 5 2 1 2 8 5 7 +3 4th
Costa Rica 1999 5 4 0 1 11 5 12 +6 3rd
Honduras 2001 3 1 1 1 12 5 4 +7 Group phase
Panama 2003 5 1 1 3 4 5 4 –1 4th
Guatemala 2005 5 3 2 0 12 3 11 +9 2nd
El Salvador 2007 3 1 1 1 11 5 4 +6 5th
Honduras 2009 5 4 0 1 9 3 12 +6 3rd
Panama 2011 4 3 1 0 8 3 10 +5 Champions
Costa Rica 2013 4 1 2 1 3 3 5 0 2nd
United States 2014 4 2 0 2 3 3 6 0 5th
TOTALS 55 30 11 14 101 46 96 +55 3 Titles

Copa América

Since 1993, the South American Football Confederation (CONMEBOL) has invited two non-CONMEBOL nations to each Copa América tournament.

Year G W D L F A Pts +/– Finish
Ecuador 1993

Paraguay 1999
non-invitee
Colombia 2001 6 3 1 2 7 5 7 +2 3rd
Peru 2004

Chile 2015
non-invitee
TOTALS 6 3 1 2 7 5 7 +2 Third Place

Pan American Games

Year G W D L F A Pts +/– Finish
Argentina 1951

United States 1987
Did not qualify
Cuba 1991 5 1 1 3 6 11 3 –5 4th
Argentina 1995 6 1 2 3 8 10 5 –2 4th
Canada 1999 6 5 0 1 13 6 15 +7 2nd
Dominican Republic 2003
Did not qualify
Brazil 2007 3 1 0 2 4 7 3 –3 Group phase
Mexico 2011

Canada 2015
Did not qualify
TOTALS 20 8 3 9 31 34 26 –3 Runners-up

Central American and Caribbean Games

Year G W D L F A Pts +/– Finish
Cuba 1930 5 2 0 3 9 22 4 –13 3rd
El Salvador 1935 5 1 1 3 6 20 3 –14 5th
Panama 1938

Colombia 1946
Did not participate
Guatemala 1950 6 3 0 3 7 6 6 +1 3rd
Mexico 1954

Cuba 1982
Did not participate
Dominican Republic 1986 5 4 1 0 7 1 9 +6 2nd
Mexico 1990

Venezuela 1998
Did not participate
El Salvador 2002 3 1 0 2 4 5 3 –1 Quarterfinals
Colombia 2006 7 5 0 2 16 8 15 +8 4th
Puerto Rico 2010 2 0 1 1 0 1 1 –1 Preliminary Round
Mexico 2014 5 2 0 3 8 11 6 –3 4th
TOTALS 38 18 3 17 57 74 47 –17 Runners-up

Central American Games

Year G W D L F A Pts +/– Finish
Guatemala 1973

El Salvador 1977
Did not qualify
Guatemala 1986 3 2 0 1 6 1 4 +5 2nd
Honduras 1990 4 3 0 1 8 2 6 +6 Champions
El Salvador 1994 3 3 0 0 16 4 9 +12 Champions
Honduras 1997 4 2 1 1 6 3 7 +3 3rd
Guatemala 2001 6 4 1 1 9 5 13 +4 2nd
Honduras 2006

Panama 2010
Not Held
Costa Rica 2013 4 3 1 0 6 1 10 +5 Champions
TOTALS 24 17 3 4 51 16 49 +35 3 Titles

Youth team records

Honours

  • Third place (1): 2001
  • Winners (3): 1990, 1994 , 2013
  • Winners (1): 2002

Players

Current squad

The following 24 players were called in for an 2018 FIFA World Cup qualification matches against El Salvador on March 25 and 29, 2016.[5]
Caps and goals current as of March 29, 2016, after the match against El Salvador.

0#0 Pos. Player Date of birth (age) Caps Goals Club
1GK Donis Escober (1980-02-03) February 3, 1980 41 0 Honduras Olimpia
2DF Ricardo Canales (1982-04-30) April 30, 1982 6 0 Honduras Vida
1GK Luis López (1993-09-13) September 13, 1993 1 0 Honduras Real España

2DF Maynor Figueroa (Captain) (1983-05-02) May 2, 1983 129 4 United States FC Dallas
2DF Emilio Izaguirre (1986-05-10) May 10, 1986 84 2 Scotland Celtic
2DF Brayan Beckeles (1985-11-28) November 28, 1985 42 1 Mexico Necaxa
2DF Johnny Leverón (1990-02-07) February 7, 1990 31 3 Mexico UAT
2DF Johnny Palacios (1986-12-20) December 20, 1986 30 0 Honduras Olimpia
2DF Wilmer Crisanto (1989-06-24) June 24, 1989 24 0 Honduras Motagua
2DF Henry Figueroa (1992-12-28) December 28, 1992 13 0 Honduras Motagua
2DF Éver Alvarado (1992-01-30) January 30, 1992 5 1 Honduras Olimpia

3MF Óscar Boniek García (1984-09-04) September 4, 1984 114 3 United States Houston Dynamo
3MF Jorge Claros (1986-01-08) January 8, 1986 62 3 Costa Rica Alajuelense
3MF Mario Martínez (1989-07-30) July 30, 1989 60 4 Egypt ENPPI
3MF Roger Espinoza (1986-10-25) October 25, 1986 49 5 United States Sporting Kansas City
3MF Andy Najar (1993-03-16) March 16, 1993 33 4 Belgium Anderlecht
3MF Alfredo Mejía (1990-04-03) April 3, 1990 25 1 Greece Panthrakikos
3MF Carlos Discua (1984-09-20) September 20, 1984 22 1 Costa Rica Alajuelense
3MF Romell Quioto (1991-08-09) August 9, 1991 19 2 Honduras Olimpia
3MF Óliver Morazán (1988-01-05) January 5, 1988 4 0 Honduras Olimpia

4FW Carlos Costly (1988-01-05) January 5, 1988 75 32 Honduras Olimpia
4FW Anthony Lozano (1993-04-25) April 25, 1993 20 6 Spain Tenerife
4FW Alberth Elis (1996-02-16) February 16, 1996 9 3 Honduras Olimpia
4FW Diego Reyes (1990-01-11) January 11, 1990 7 0 Honduras Marathón

Recent call-ups

The following players have been called up to the Honduran squad in the last 12 months.

Pos. Player Date of birth (age) Caps Goals Club Latest call-up
GK Noel Valladares (1977-05-03) May 3, 1977 135 0 Honduras Olimpia v.  Mexico; November 17, 2015
GK Orlin Vallecillo (1983-07-01) July 1, 1983 8 0 Honduras Honduras Progreso 2015 CONCACAF Gold Cup

DF David Velásquez (1989-12-01) December 1, 1989 13 0 Honduras Real España v.  Nicaragua; January 27, 2016
DF Dilmer Gutiérrez (1986-05-24) May 24, 1986 0 0 Honduras Honduras Progreso v.  Nicaragua; January 27, 2016
DF Brayan García (1994-10-19) October 19, 1994 3 0 Honduras Vida v.  Cuba; December 16, 2015
DF Kevin Álvarez (1996-08-03) August 3, 1996 1 0 Honduras Olimpia v.  Cuba; December 16, 2015
DF José Danery Barralaga (1994-12-22) December 22, 1994 0 0 Honduras Real Sociedad v.  Cuba; December 16, 2015
DF Carlos Palacios (1982-01-30) January 30, 1982 8 0 Honduras Marathón v.  French Guiana; March 29, 2015
DF Henry Clark (1985-06-10) June 10, 1985 0 0 Honduras Real Sociedad v.  French Guiana; March 29, 2015

MF Bryan Acosta (1993-11-24) November 24, 1993 17 0 Honduras Real España v.  Nicaragua; January 27, 2016
MF Bayron Méndez (1988-07-04) July 4, 1988 8 1 Honduras Olimpia v.  Nicaragua; January 27, 2016
MF Ángel Tejeda (1991-06-01) June 1, 1991 7 0 Honduras Honduras Progreso v.  Nicaragua; January 27, 2016
MF Carlos Will Mejía (1983-09-29) September 29, 1983 23 1 Honduras Olimpia v.  Nicaragua; January 27, 2016
MF César Oseguera (1990-07-20) July 20, 1990 6 0 Honduras Motagua {{{latest}}}
MF Deybi Flores (1996-06-16) June 16, 1996 1 0 Canada Vancouver Whitecaps v.  Cuba; December 16, 2015
MF Jairo Puerto (1988-12-28) December 28, 1988 1 0 Honduras Marathón v.  Cuba; December 16, 2015
MF Luis Garrido (1990-11-05) November 5, 1990 35 0 Unattached v.  Mexico; November 17, 2015

FW Eddie Hernández (1991-02-27) February 27, 1991 10 0 China Qingdao Jonoon v.  Nicaragua; January 27, 2016
FW Erick Andino (1989-07-21) July 21, 1989 11 2 Honduras Victoria v.  Nicaragua; January 27, 2016
FW Bryan Róchez (1995-01-01) January 1, 1995 7 0 United States Orlando City v.  Cuba; December 16, 2015
FW Jerry Bengtson (1987-04-08) April 8, 1987 54 21 Iran Persepolis v.  Mexico; November 17, 2015
FW Rubilio Castillo (1991-11-26) November 26, 1991 12 2 Mexico UAT v.  Mexico; November 17, 2015
FW Jonathan Mejía (1989-01-07) January 7, 1989 6 0 Spain Albacete Balompie v.  South Africa; October 13, 2015

Records

Most caps (as of March 29, 2016)
# Name Career Caps Goals
1 Amado Guevara 1994–2010 138 27
2 Noel Valladares 2000– 135 0
3 Maynor Figueroa 2003– 129 4
4 Oscar Boniek García 2005– 114 3
5 Carlos Pavón 1993–2010 101 57
6 Wilson Palacios 2003–2014 97 6
7 Milton Núñez 1994–2008 86 34
8 Danilo Turcios 1999–2010 85 7
Víctor Bernárdez 2004–2014 85 4
10 Iván Guerrero 1999–2010 84 4
Emilio Izaguirre 2007– 84 2

Top goalscorers (as of March 29, 2016)
# Player Career Goals Caps
1 Carlos Pavón 1993–2010 57 101
2 Wilmer Velásquez 1994–2007 35 47
3 Milton Núñez 1994–2008 34 86
4 Carlo Costly 2007–2014 32 75
5 Nicolás Suazo 1991–1998 28 51
6 Amado Guevara 1994–2010 27 138
7 Jerry Bengtson 2010– 21 54
8 Eduardo Bennett 1991–2000 19 36
9 David Suazo 1999–2012 17 57
10 Saul Martínez 2001–2008 16 35

Previous Squads

Coaches

Manager Years
Honduras Carlos Padilla 1960
Brazil Elsy Núñez Gonzales 1962
Honduras Marinho Rodríguez 1966
Chile Sergio Lecea Fernández 1967
Honduras Carlos Padilla 1968-1973
Honduras José de la Paz Herrera 1980–1986
Netherlands Gerck Block 1987
Honduras José de la Paz Herrera 1988
Brazil Honduras Flavio Ortega 1991–1992
Uruguay Estanislao Malinowski 1992–1993
Uruguay Julio Gonzalez Montemurro 1993
Honduras Carlos Cruz Carranza 1995
Brazil Ernesto Rosa Guedes 1996
Honduras Ramón Maradiaga 1996
Peru Miguel Company 1997–1998
Honduras Ramón Maradiaga 1998–2002
Honduras Edwin Pavon 2003
Honduras José de la Paz Herrera 2003
Brazil René Simões 2003
Serbia Bora Milutinović 2003–2004
Honduras José de la Paz Herrera 2005
Honduras Raúl Martínez Sambulá 2006
Brazil Honduras Flavio Ortega 2006
Colombia Reinaldo Rueda 2007–2010
Mexico Juan de Dios Castillo 2010–2011
Colombia Luis Fernando Suárez 2011–2014
Costa Rica Hernán Medford 2014
Colombia Jorge Luis Pinto 2014-2015

Record versus other nations

As of 16 December 2015
Opponent Record Goals
 Antigua and Barbuda 1–0–0 1:0
 Argentina 0–0–1 1:3
 Aruba 0–1–0 1:1
 Azerbaijan 0–1–0 0:0
 Barbados 1–0–0 1:0
 Belarus 0–1–0 2:2
 Belize 6–0–0 16:2
 Bolivia 1–2–2 3:4
 Brazil 1–1–5 6:22
 Canada 10–5–7 38:27
 Chile 2–0–4 10:12
 China PR 1–3–1 1:3
 Colombia 6–4–4 13:11
 Costa Rica 18–19–20 72:97
 Cuba 8–2–5 27:23
 Curaçao[6] 5–3–3 20:24
 Denmark 1–1–1 2:4
 Dominican Republic 1–0–0 2:0
 Ecuador 2–7–5 13:17
 El Salvador 32–16–12 98:57
 England 0–1–0 0:0
 Finland 0–0–1 1:2
 France 0–0–1 0:3
 French Guiana 1–0–1 4:3
 Grenada 2–0–0 11:1
 Guadeloupe 0–0–1 1:2
 Guatemala 14–18–8 49:46
 Haiti 10–1–5 31:13
 Hong Kong 2–0–0 2:0
 Israel 0–0–2 2:6
 Jamaica 12–5–6 44:21
 Japan 0–1–1 7:14
 Latvia 1–0–0 2:1
 Martinique 1–0–0 4:2
 Mexico 7–7–20 26:64
 New Zealand 0–1–1 1:2
 Nicaragua 12–1–0 47:6
 Northern Ireland 0–1–0 1:1
 Norway 0–0–1 1:3
 Panama 24–9–10 70:29
 Paraguay 1–3–3 5:10
 Peru 2–4–2 10:10
 Puerto Rico 1–1–0 6:2
 Romania 0–2–1 1:4
 Saint Vincent and the Grenadines 6–0–0 36:4
 Slovenia 1–0–0 5:1
 South Africa 0–1–0 1:1
 South Korea 0–0–2 0:7
 Spain 0–1–1 1:3
  Switzerland 0–1–1 0:3
 Serbia[7] 1–0–1 2:1
 Suriname 1–2–0 4:3
 Trinidad and Tobago 7–6–3 24:17
 Turkey 0–0–3 0:5
 Uruguay 1–1–0 3:2
 United Arab Emirates 1–1–0 2:1
 United States 5–4–15 28:42
 Venezuela 5–2–6 17:14
 Zambia 1–0–0 7:1
Totals 205–125–162 755:630

See also

References

  1. 1 2 Mamrud, Roberto; Stokkermans, Karel. "Players with 100+ Caps and 30+ International Goals". RSSSF. Retrieved 29 January 2011.
  2. Courtney, Barrie (13 November 2006). "Honduras International Soccer Matches Since 1920". RSSSF. Retrieved 2 November 2010.
  3. "Pavon puts visitors through". ESPN. 2009-10-14. Retrieved 2009-10-15.
  4. "England enjoy kind World Cup draw". BBC News. December 4, 2009. Retrieved May 4, 2010.
  5. Includes Netherlands Antilles
  6. Includes Yugoslavia

External links

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