Jordan national football team

Jordanian association football team for men From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Jordan national football team (Arabic: منتخب الأردن لكرة القدم), nicknamed Al Nashama (lit.'The Chivalrous Ones'), represents Jordan in men's international football. It is under the jurisdiction of the Jordan Football Association.

Nickname(s)النشامى (The Chivalrous Ones)
[1]
ConfederationAFC (Asia)
Sub-confederationWAFF (West Asia)
Quick facts Nickname(s), Association ...
Jordan
Shirt badge/Association crest
Nickname(s)النشامى (The Chivalrous Ones)
[1]
AssociationJordan Football Association (JFA)
ConfederationAFC (Asia)
Sub-confederationWAFF (West Asia)
Head coachJamal Sellami
CaptainIhsan Haddad
Most capsAmer Shafi (171)[2][3]
Top scorerHamza Al-Dardour (33)
Home stadiumAmman International Stadium
King Abdullah II Stadium
FIFA codeJOR
First colours
Second colours
Third colours
FIFA ranking
Current 63 Increase 1 (1 April 2026)[4][5]
Highest37 (August – September 2004)
Lowest152 (July 1996)
First international
 Syria 3–1 Jordan 
(Alexandria, Egypt; 1 August 1953)
Biggest win
 Jordan 9–0 Nepal   
(Amman, Jordan; 23 July 2011)
Biggest defeat
 Lebanon 6–0 Jordan 
(Beirut, Lebanon; 22 October 1957)
 Iraq 7–1 Jordan 
(Iraq; 19 February 1982)
 China 6–0 Jordan 
(Guangzhou, China; 15 September 1984)
 Japan 6–0 Jordan 
(Saitama, Japan; 8 June 2012)
 Norway 6–0 Jordan 
(Oslo, Norway; 7 September 2023)
World Cup
Appearances1 (first in 2026)
Best resultTBD (2026)
Asian Cup
Appearances6 (first in 2004)
Best resultRunners-up (2023)
WAFF Championship
Appearances9 (first in 2000)
Best resultRunners-up (2002, 2008, 2013)
FIFA Arab Cup
Appearances10 (first in 1963)
Best resultRunners-up (2025)
Websitejfa.jo (in Arabic)
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Jordan has played in five AFC Asian Cup tournaments, appearing in the final of a major tournament for the first time in the 2023 edition, finishing as runners-up. They also finished runners-up of the FIFA Arab Cup in 2025, and have won the Arab Games twice, in 1997 and 1999. The team reached the WAFF Championship final on three occasions but never won it. The country qualified for their first FIFA World Cup in 2026.

History

Early history (1953–1996)

The Jordanian national football team's first international match was played in 1953 in Egypt where the team were defeated by Syria 3–1. The first FIFA World Cup qualifiers Jordan took part in were for the 1986 tournament. They failed to qualify for the World Cup in 1986.

Development era (1997–2007)

Mohammad Awad coached Jordan to two Arab Games championships, in 1997 in Beirut, and 1999 in Amman. The country then hired Serbian head coach Branko Smiljanić, who won two matches in the first round of 2002 World Cup qualifiers. Jordan failed to qualify for the next round. Jordan also reached the semi-finals of the 2002 Arab Cup.[6]

Under the leadership of Egyptian Mahmoud El-Gohary, the Jordan national team was able to qualify for their first AFC Asian Cup tournament, in 2004, and reach the quarter-finals, where they lost to eventual winners Japan in a penalty shoot-out. Despite this, Jordan reached their highest-ever FIFA world ranking, at 37th place; they would eventually fail to qualify for the 2006 FIFA World Cup in Germany.

In the 2004 and 2007 WAFF Championships, Jordan finished in third place in the former and made another semi-final in the latter. Five matches into 2007 AFC Asian Cup qualification, El-Gohary retired as a football coach, and the Jordan Football Association hired the Portuguese Nelo Vingada to take over as the head coach of Jordan; they still missed the finals.

Renaissance of Jordan football (2008–2015)

Under Vingada, Jordan were runners-up in the 2008 West Asian Football Federation Championship, but failed to qualify for the 2010 World Cup in South Africa. He was replaced by Iraq's Adnan Hamad, a coach in Asia known for his successes with his national team in Iraq as head coach as well as Iraq U-23 and other Iraq youth teams and clubs.[citation needed] Jordan qualified for their second Asian Cup tournament in 2011, where they made the quarter-finals before losing to Uzbekistan 2–1. Jordan also finished runner-up at the 2011 Arab Games in Qatar. In 2013, Jordan ended up third in their qualifying group for the World Cup the following year.

Another Egyptian, Hossam Hassan, led Jordan to the play-off against Uzbekistan to determine the AFC participant in the inter-confederation play-offs. With the two teams still evenly matched at full-time in the second leg, Jordan eventually progressed to the intercontinental playoff after winning 9–8 on penalties. The Jordanians missed their first FIFA World Cup debut after losing 5–0 on aggregate to Uruguay.

Jordan qualified to the 2015 AFC Asian Cup. On 3 September 2014, Ray Wilkins was appointed as the new head coach. Wilkins led Jordan to a group stage exit at the Asian Cup after losses to Iraq and Japan and a win over Palestine.

Stagnation (2016–2023)

Jordan failed to make the final round of 2018 FIFA World Cup qualification, losing 0–1 to Kyrgyzstan and 1–5 to Australia. They would qualify for the 2019 Asian Cup where Jordan defeated Australia 1–0 and Syria 2–0, along with a draw against Palestine in the group stage. They were knocked out by Vietnam, losing in a penalty shootout 2–4.

In the 2022 World Cup qualification second round, Jordan finished third in their group. Subsequently, they clinched the top spot in their group during the 2023 Asian Cup qualification, earning themselves a berth in the main tournament.

Re-emergence (2024–present)

Jordan's starting 11 against South Korea in the 2023 Asian Cup.

In June 2023, Hussein Ammouta was appointed as the Jordan national team coach.[7] In early 2024, he led his squad to their first ever Asian Cup final, after defeating Iraq 3–2 after scoring two goals during stoppage time, and beating Tajikistan 1–0 and South Korea 2–0 during the knockout stages. In the final, Jordan lost 3–1 to the host nation Qatar.[8] Following the national team's historic run to the Asian Cup final, Jordan's FIFA ranking rose to 70th, the nation's highest since September 2014.[9][10]

In June 2024, Ammouta requested to leave Jordan due to family reasons and was replaced by Jamal Sellami, who signed a three-year contract.[11][12] On 5 June 2025, Jordan secured a berth at the 2026 FIFA World Cup, their first ever, with a 3–0 away victory over Oman.[13][14][15]

In December 2025, Sellami led Jordan to their first ever FIFA Arab Cup final. Jordan went unbeaten up until the final, beating the United Arab Emirates 2–1, Kuwait 3–1, Egypt 3–0, Iraq 1–0 and Saudi Arabia 1–0. In the final, Jordan lost 3–2 to Morocco.[16] Following the historic run in the Arab Cup, His Majesty Abdullah II granted Sellami with Jordanian citizenship.[17]

Home stadiums

Jordan's primary home stadium is the Amman International Stadium in Amman, where the national team plays majority of its home matches. The stadium is also home to Al-Faisaly.[18] Other stadiums that Jordan occasionally plays at include King Abdullah II Stadium in Amman, home to Al-Wehdat and Petra Stadium in Amman, home to the women's national team.[19][20]

In late 2025, plans were announced for a new home stadium named Al Hussein bin Abdallah II in the new Amra City as part of Jordan's new urban and sports development initiatives. Construction is set to start in 2026 and to be completed by 2029.[21][22]

Kit suppliers

Jordan's home colours are usually white shirts with white shorts. Away colours are usually all red.

More information Kit provider, Period ...
Kit provider Period
Jordan Unknown 1953–1997
Germany Puma 1997–1999
Germany Adidas 1999–2005
Germany Jako 2005–2009
Germany Uhlsport 2009–2010
Germany Adidas 2010–2012
Germany Jako 2012–2015[23]
Germany Adidas 2015–2018[24]
Spain Joma 2018–2021
England Umbro 2021–2022
Germany Jako 2022–2024
Spain Kelme 2024–2030[25]
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Results and fixtures

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

  Win   Draw   Loss   Fixture

2025

30 May Friendly Saudi Arabia  2–0  Jordan Dammam, Saudi Arabia
18:40 UTC+3
Report Stadium: Al-Ettifaq Club Stadium
Attendance: 0
Note: The match was held behind closed doors.
5 June 2026 World Cup qualification third round Oman  0–3  Jordan Muscat, Oman
20:00 UTC+4 Report (FIFA)
Report (AFC)
Stadium: Sultan Qaboos Sports Complex
Attendance: 13,878
Referee: Khalid Saleh Al-Turais (Saudi Arabia)
Note: Jordan officially qualified for the 2026 FIFA World Cup after defeating Oman, marking their first entery into the FIFA World Cup series.
10 June 2026 World Cup qualification third round Jordan  0–1  Iraq Amman, Jordan
21:15 UTC+3 Report (FIFA)
Report (AFC)
Stadium: Amman International Stadium
Attendance: 15,502
Referee: Omar Mohamed Al Ali (United Arab Emirates)
4 September Friendly Russia  0–0  Jordan Moscow, Russia
20:00 UTC+3 Report Stadium: Otkrytie Arena
Attendance: 24,915
Referee: Ilgiz Tantashev (Uzbekistan)
9 September Friendly Jordan  3–0  Dominican Republic Amman, Jordan
20:00 UTC+3
Report Stadium: Amman International Stadium
Attendance: 2,405
Referee: Feras Taweel (Syria)
10 October Friendly Jordan  0–1  Bolivia Istanbul, Turkey
19:00 UTC+3 Report
Stadium: Recep Tayyip Erdoğan Stadium
Referee: Mehmet Türkmen (Turkey)
14 October Friendly Albania  4–2  Jordan Tirana, Albania
19:00 UTC+2
Report
Stadium: Arena Kombëtare
Attendance: 9,265
Referee: Lukas Fähndrich (Switzerland)
14 November Friendly Tunisia  3–2  Jordan Tunis, Tunisia
17:45 UTC+1
Report
Stadium: Hammadi Agrebi Stadium
Attendance: 13,000
Referee: Samir Guezzaz (Morocco)
18 November Friendly Jordan  0–0  Mali Tunis, Tunisia
20:30 UTC+1 Report Stadium: Hammadi Agrebi Stadium
Referee: Nidhal Letaief (Tunisia)
3 December 2025 Arab Cup Group C Jordan  2–1  United Arab Emirates Al Khor, Qatar
20:00 UTC+3
Report
Stadium: Al Bayt Stadium
Attendance: 30,759
Referee: Ahmed Al-Kaf (Oman)
6 December 2025 Arab Cup Group C Kuwait  1–3  Jordan Al Rayyan, Qatar
14:00 UTC+3
Report
Stadium: Ahmad bin Ali Stadium
Attendance: 35,933
Referee: Cristián Garay (Chile)
9 December 2025 Arab Cup Group C Egypt  0–3  Jordan Al Khor, Qatar
17:30 UTC+3 Report
Stadium: Al Bayt Stadium
Attendance: 55,658
Referee: Ismail Elfath (United States)
12 December 2025 Arab Cup quarter-finals Jordan  1–0  Iraq Al Rayyan, Qatar
17:30 UTC+3
Report Stadium: Education City Stadium
Attendance: 43,486
Referee: Espen Eskås (Norway)
15 December 2025 Arab Cup semi-finals Saudi Arabia  0–1  Jordan Al Khor, Qatar
20:30 UTC+3 Report Stadium: Al Bayt Stadium
Attendance: 62,825
Referee: Juan Gabriel Benítez (Paraguay)
18 December 2025 Arab Cup final Jordan  2–3 (a.e.t.)  Morocco Lusail, Qatar
19:00 UTC+3
Stadium: Lusail Stadium
Attendance: 84,517
Referee: Glenn Nyberg (Sweden)

2026

27 March Friendly Jordan  2–2  Costa Rica Antalya, Türkiye[a]
20:30 UTC+3
Report
Stadium: Mardan Sports Complex
Referee: Kadir Sağlam (Turkey)
31 March Friendly Jordan  2–2  Nigeria Antalya, Türkiye[a]
20:30 UTC+3 Report Stadium: Mardan Sports Complex
Referee: Atilla Karaoğlan (Turkey)
31 May Friendly Switzerland  v  Jordan St. Gallen, Switzerland
Report Stadium: Kybunpark
7 June Friendly Colombia  v  Jordan San Diego, United States
Report Stadium: Snapdragon Stadium
16 June 2026 World Cup Group J Austria  v  Jordan Santa Clara, United States
21:00 UTC−7 Report Stadium: Levi's Stadium
22 June 2026 World Cup Group J Jordan  v  Algeria Santa Clara, United States
20:00 UTC−7 Report Stadium: Levi's Stadium
27 June 2026 World Cup Group J Jordan  v  Argentina Arlington, United States
21:00 UTC−5 Report Stadium: AT&T Stadium
November 2026 WAFF Championship Jordan  v Oman
--:-- 
November 2026 WAFF Championship Jordan  v Oman
--:-- 

2027

13 January 2027 Asian Cup GS Jordan  v  Bahrain Jeddah, Saudi Arabia
--:--  Stadium: King Abdullah Sports City Stadium

Coaching staff

More information Position, Name ...
Position Name Ref.
Technical director Tunisia Abdelhay Ben Soltane
Head coach Morocco Jamal Sellami
Assistant coach Morocco Mustapha Khalfi
Morocco Omar Najhi
Goalkeeping coach Jordan Ibrahim Ayed
Physiotherapist Jordan Amer Al-Tamari
Doctor Jordan Youssef Al-Aramsheh
Team manager Jordan Mohammed Mango
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Coaching history

[27]

Players

Current squad

The following players were named in the preliminary squad for the 2026 FIFA World Cup.[28] On 27 May 2026, Ahmad Al-Jaidi and Ahmad Assaf were cut from the roster ahead of their friendlies against Switzerland and Colombia.[29]
Caps and goals correct as of 31 March 2026, after the match against Nigeria.

More information No., Pos. ...
No. Pos. Player Date of birth (age) Caps Goals Club
1GK Yazeed Abulaila (1993-01-08) 8 January 1993 (age 33) 74 0 Jordan Football Association Al-Hussein
1GK Abdallah Al-Fakhouri (2000-01-22) 22 January 2000 (age 26) 11 0 Jordan Football Association Al-Wehdat
1GK Nour Bani Attiah (1993-01-25) 25 January 1993 (age 33) 4 0 Jordan Football Association Al-Faisaly

2DF Ihsan Haddad (1994-02-05) 5 February 1994 (age 32) 90 2 Jordan Football Association Al-Hussein
2DF Yazan Al-Arab (1996-01-31) 31 January 1996 (age 30) 78 3 Korea Football Association FC Seoul
2DF Abdallah Nasib (1994-02-25) 25 February 1994 (age 32) 64 3 Iraq Football Association Al-Zawraa
2DF Saed Al-Rosan (1997-02-01) 1 February 1997 (age 29) 19 2 Jordan Football Association Al-Hussein
2DF Husam Abu Dahab (2000-05-13) 13 May 2000 (age 26) 16 0 Jordan Football Association Al-Faisaly
2DF Mohammad Abualnadi (2001-02-08) 8 February 2001 (age 25) 16 0 Football Association of Malaysia Selangor
2DF Salim Obaid (1992-01-17) 17 January 1992 (age 34) 9 0 Jordan Football Association Al-Hussein
2DF Anas Badawi (1997-09-13) 13 September 1997 (age 28) 0 0 Jordan Football Association Al-Faisaly

3MF Rajaei Ayed (1993-07-25) 25 July 1993 (age 32) 72 0 Jordan Football Association Al-Hussein
3MF Noor Al-Rawabdeh (1997-02-24) 24 February 1997 (age 29) 66 3 Football Association of Malaysia Selangor
3MF Ibrahim Sa'deh (2000-04-27) 27 April 2000 (age 26) 55 3 Iraq Football Association Al-Karma
3MF Mohammad Abu Hashish (1995-05-09) 9 May 1995 (age 31) 54 1 Iraq Football Association Al-Karma
3MF Nizar Al-Rashdan (1999-03-23) 23 March 1999 (age 27) 45 4 Qatar Football Association Qatar
3MF Mohannad Abu Taha (2003-02-02) 2 February 2003 (age 23) 27 1 Iraq Football Association Al-Quwa Al-Jawiya
3MF Amer Jamous (2002-07-03) 3 July 2002 (age 23) 18 1 Iraq Football Association Al-Zawraa
3MF Mohammad Al-Dawoud (1992-12-04) 4 December 1992 (age 33) 11 1 Jordan Football Association Al-Wehdat
3MF Yousef Qashi (2005-04-15) 15 April 2005 (age 21) 0 0 Jordan Football Association Al-Hussein
3MF Mohammad Taha (2005-07-13) 13 July 2005 (age 20) 0 0 Jordan Football Association Al-Hussein

4FW Mahmoud Al-Mardi (1993-10-06) 6 October 1993 (age 32) 87 9 Jordan Football Association Al-Hussein
4FW Musa Al-Taamari (captain) (1997-06-10) 10 June 1997 (age 28) 90 24 French Football Federation Rennes
4FW Ali Olwan (2000-03-26) 26 March 2000 (age 26) 64 29 Qatar Football Association Al-Sailiya
4FW Mohammad Abu Zrayq (1997-12-30) 30 December 1997 (age 28) 39 5 Royal Moroccan Football Federation Raja Casablanca
4FW Ibrahim Sabra (2006-02-01) 1 February 2006 (age 20) 9 1 Croatian Football Federation Lokomotiva Zagreb
4FW Odeh Al-Fakhouri (2005-11-22) 22 November 2005 (age 20) 8 0 Egyptian Football Association Pyramids
4FW Ali Azaizeh (2004-04-13) 13 April 2004 (age 22) 2 0 Saudi Arabian Football Federation Al-Shabab
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Recent call-ups

The following players have been called up for the team within the last 12 months and are still available for selection.

More information Pos., Player ...
Pos. Player Date of birth (age) Caps Goals Club Latest call-up
GK Ahmad Al-Jaidi (2001-04-09) 9 April 2001 (age 25) 0 0 Jordan Shabab Al-Ordon 2026 FIFA World CupPRE
GK Abdel Rahman Al-Talalga (2003-04-12) 12 April 2003 (age 23) 0 0 Jordan Al-Faisaly v.  Nigeria, 31 March 2026
GK Malek Shalabiya (1988-02-20) 20 February 1988 (age 38) 1 0 Jordan Al-Ramtha 2025 FIFA Arab Cup
GK Mohammad Al-Emwasi (1996-08-08) 8 August 1996 (age 29) 2 0 Iraq Al-Najaf v.  Iraq, 10 June 2025

DF Ahmad Assaf (1999-07-21) 21 July 1999 (age 26) 6 0 Jordan Al-Hussein 2026 FIFA World CupPRE
DF Yousef Abu Al-Jazar (1999-10-25) 25 October 1999 (age 26) 15 0 Jordan Al-Hussein v.  Nigeria, 31 March 2026
DF Hadi Al-Hourani (2000-03-14) 14 March 2000 (age 26) 9 0 Jordan Al-Faisaly 2025 FIFA Arab Cup
DF Ali Hajabi (2004-05-02) 2 May 2004 (age 22) 9 0 Jordan Al-Hussein 2025 FIFA Arab Cup
DF Ja'far Samara (2004-06-08) 8 June 2004 (age 21) 0 0 Jordan Al-Ramtha v.  Mali, 18 November 2025
DF Mohannad Khairullah (1993-07-25) 25 July 1993 (age 32) 20 2 Jordan Al-Faisaly Amman training camp, 25 August 2025 PRE

MF Adham Al-Quraishi (1995-03-07) 7 March 1995 (age 31) 11 0 Jordan Al-Hussein 2025 FIFA Arab Cup INJ
MF Issam Smeeri (1999-05-30) 30 May 1999 (age 26) 7 0 Jordan Al-Salt 2025 FIFA Arab Cup INJ
MF Ahmad Al-Salman (2002-07-02) 2 July 2002 (age 23) 1 0 Jordan Al-Ramtha v.  Mali, 18 November 2025
MF Khaled Zakaria (2000-09-08) 8 September 2000 (age 25) 2 0 Jordan Al-Faisaly Amman training camp, 25 August 2025 PRE

FW Baha' Faisal (1995-05-30) 30 May 1995 (age 30) 57 18 Qatar Al-Waab v.  Nigeria, 31 March 2026
FW Yazan Al-Naimat (1999-06-04) 4 June 1999 (age 26) 70 26 Qatar Al-Arabi 2025 FIFA Arab Cup INJ
FW Ahmad Ersan (1995-09-28) 28 September 1995 (age 30) 44 4 Jordan Al-Faisaly 2025 FIFA Arab Cup
FW Aref Al-Haj (2001-05-28) 28 May 2001 (age 25) 4 0 Jordan Al-Hussein v.  Mali, 18 November 2025
FW Abdallah Awad (2000-02-19) 19 February 2000 (age 26) 1 0 Jordan Al-Wehdat v.  Mali, 18 November 2025
FW Tammer Bany Odeh (2003-10-19) 19 October 2003 (age 22) 1 0 England West Bromwich Albion v.  Mali, 18 November 2025
FW Reziq Bani Hani (2002-01-28) 28 January 2002 (age 24) 6 0 Jordan Al-Hussein v.  Albania, 14 October 2025
FW Mohannad Semreen (2002-01-08) 8 January 2002 (age 24) 2 0 Jordan Al-Wehdat v.  Iraq, 10 June 2025

Notes
  • INJ = It is not part of the current squad due to injury.
  • PRE = Preliminary squad.
  • WD = Player withdrew from the current squad due to non-injury issue.
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Past squads

AFC Asian Cup
WAFF Championship
FIFA Arab Cup

Player records

As of 27 March 2026[30]
Statistics include official FIFA-recognised matches only
Players in bold are still active at international level.

Most capped players

More information Rank, Name ...
Rank Name Caps Goals Position Career
1 Amer Shafi 171 1 GK 2002–2021
2 Baha' Abdel-Rahman 152 6 MF 2007–2022
3 Hatem Aqel 137 10 DF 1998–2014
4 Amer Deeb 130 21 MF 2002–2014
5 Hassouneh Al-Sheikh 120 12 MF 1997–2010
6 Odai Al-Saify 118 15 MF 2007–2023
7 Hamza Al-Dardour 116 33 FW 2011–2024
8 Abdallah Deeb 115 19 FW 2007–2016
9 Anas Bani Yaseen 113 6 DF 2008–2024
10 Hassan Abdel-Fattah 110 29 FW 2002–2015
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Top goalscorers

More information Rank, Name ...
Rank Name Goals Caps Ratio Career
1 Hamza Al-Dardour 33 116 0.28 2011–2024
2 Ali Olwan 29 64 0.45 2020–present
Hassan Abdel-Fattah 29 110 0.26 2002–2015
4 Badran Al-Shaqran 28 81 0.35 1996–2006
5 Yazan Al-Naimat 26 70 0.37 2021–present
6 Musa Al-Taamari 23 88 0.26 2016–present
7 Mahmoud Shelbaieh 21 79 0.27 2000–2011
Amer Deeb 21 130 0.16 2002–2014
9 Abdallah Deeb 19 115 0.17 2007–2016
10 Baha' Faisal 18 58 0.31 2016–present
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Competitive record

FIFA World Cup

More information FIFA World Cup record, Qualification record ...
FIFA World Cup record Qualification record
Year Result Position Pld W D L GF GA Pld W D L GF GA
1930 to 1954Not a FIFA member Not a FIFA member
1958 to 1982Did not enter Did not enter
Mexico 1986Did not qualify 410337
Italy 1990 621357
United States 1994 82331215
France 1998 411244
South Korea Japan 2002 6222127
Germany 2006 6402106
South Africa 2010 831488
Brazil 2014 208573031
Russia 2018 8512217
Qatar 2022 8422133
Canada Mexico United States 2026 Group stage TBD 0 0 0 0 0 0 Squad 168533212
Morocco Portugal Spain 2030 TBD TBD
Saudi Arabia 2034
Total:1/17TBDTBD000000 94402133150107
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AFC Asian Cup

More information AFC Asian Cup record, Qualification record ...
AFC Asian Cup record Qualification record
Year Round Position Pld W D* L GF GA Pld W D L GF GA
Hong Kong 1956 Not an AFC member Not an AFC member
South Korea 1960
Israel 1964
Iran 1968
Thailand 1972 Did not qualify 6 2 1 3 5 9
Iran 1976 Did not enter Did not enter
Kuwait 1980
Singapore 1984 Did not qualify 4 1 1 2 7 10
Qatar 1988 4 1 3 0 2 1
Japan 1992 Did not enter Did not enter
United Arab Emirates 1996 Did not qualify 2 1 0 1 4 1
Lebanon 2000 4 2 1 1 12 4
China 2004 Quarter-finals 7th 4 1 3 0 3 1 6 5 0 1 13 6
Indonesia Malaysia Thailand Vietnam 2007 Did not qualify 6 3 1 2 10 5
Qatar 2011 Quarter-finals 6th 4 2 1 1 5 4 6 2 2 2 4 4
Australia 2015 Group stage 9th 3 1 0 2 5 4 6 3 3 0 10 3
United Arab Emirates 2019 Round of 16 4 2 2 0 4 1 14 8 4 2 37 12
Qatar 2023 Runners-up 2nd 7 4 1 2 13 8 11 7 2 2 19 3
Saudi Arabia 2027 Qualified 6 4 1 1 16 4
Total Runners-up 6/19 22 10 7 5 30 18 75 39 19 17 139 62
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*Denotes draws include knockout matches decided via penalty shoot-out.

West Asian Championship

More information West Asian Football Federation Championship record, Year ...
West Asian Football Federation Championship record
Year Result Pld W D L GF GA GD
Jordan 2000Fourth place512235−2
Syria 2002Runners-up4301642
Iran 2004Third place4220734
Jordan 2007Semi-finals3102321
Iran 2008Runners-up4211734
Jordan 2010Group stage2020330
Kuwait 2012Group stage200213−2
Qatar 2013Runners-up4211330
Iraq 2019Group stage3111422
Oman 2026QualifiedTBD
Total9/931129103728+9
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FIFA Arab Cup

More information FIFA Arab Cup record, Year ...
FIFA Arab Cup record
Year Result Position W D L GF GA GD
Lebanon 1963Group stage5th004017−17
Kuwait 1964Group stage5th013310−7
Iraq 1966Round 16th11267−1
Saudi Arabia 1985Round 16th10238−5
Jordan 1988Fourth place4th21347−3
Syria 1992Round 16th01125−3
Qatar 1998Round 16th21257−2
Kuwait 2002Semi-finals3rd221761
Saudi Arabia 2012Did not enter
Qatar 2021Quarter-finals6th202108+2
Qatar 2025Runners-up2nd501125+7
TotalFinalists10/11147214978−29
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Arab Games

More information Arab Games record, Year ...
Arab Games record
Year Result Position W D L GF GA GD
Egypt 1953Fourth place4th102770
Lebanon 1957Group stage6th102410−6
Syria 1976Group stage5th30379−2
Lebanon 1997Champions1st320954
Jordan 1999Champions1st5111899
Qatar 2011Runners-up2nd221624
Total2 Titles6/1215595142+9
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Asian Games

More information Asian Games record, Year ...
Asian Games record
YearResultMWDLGFGA
1951-1994Did not participate
2002–present See Jordan national under-23 football team
Total0/13000000
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Head-to-head record

Australia & Jordan Group B match, 2019 AFC Asian Cup

The following table shows Jordan's all-time international record.

As of 31 March 2026 after the match against Nigeria.[31]

  Positive Record   Neutral Record   Negative Record

All friendly and international matches except the Olympics are included.

More information Against, Played ...
Against Played Won Drawn Lost GF GA GD
 Afghanistan3210135+8
 Albania201124-2
 Algeria211032+1
 Argentina0000000
 Armenia1010000
 Australia8305714−7
 Austria0000000
 Azerbaijan201225−3
 Bahrain32137123431+3
 Bangladesh2200120+12
 Belarus2101110
 Bolivia100101−1
 Bosnia and Herzegovina201112−1
 Bulgaria100102−2
 Cambodia220080+8
 Chad110010+1
 China112451418−4
 Colombia100103−3
 Congo110010+1
 Costa Rica1010220
 Croatia100112−1
 Cyprus522163+3
 Denmark110032+1
 Dominican Republic110030+3
 Ecuador110030+3
 Egypt6213611−5
 Estonia100101−1
 Finland100112−1
 Georgia2101330
 Haiti100102–2
 Hong Kong422071+6
 Hungary1010110
 India220041+3
 Indonesia6600173+14
 Iran144371118−7
 Iraq541214285383−30
 Ivory Coast100102−2
 Jamaica110021+1
 Japan6132512−7
 Kazakhstan210121+1
 Kenya1010110
 Kosovo110020+2
 Kuwait31813103641−5
 Kyrgyzstan521243+1
 Laos220082+6
 Lebanon32101393133−2
 Libya103431012−2
 Lithuania110030+3
 Malaysia6420100+10
 Mali1010000
 Malta310245−1
 Mauritania110021+1
 Mexico1010000
 Moldova210112−1
 Morocco6024515−10
   Nepal5410181+17
 New Zealand320154+1
 Nigeria311134−1
 North Korea731386+2
 Norway201106–6
 Oman2815844215+27
 Pakistan9900341+33
 Palestine1710614414+30
 Paraguay100124−2
 Philippines110040+4
 Qatar2474132336−13
 Romania110010+1
 Russia1010000
 Saudi Arabia209382022–2
 Serbia100123−1
 Sierra Leone210152+3
 Singapore9711206+14
 Slovakia100115−4
 South Korea9144710−3
 South Sudan220051+4
 South Yemen110032+1
 Spain100113–2
 Sri Lanka110021+1
 Sudan321051+4
 Sweden1010000
  Switzerland0000000
 Syria431514144447−3
 Chinese Taipei4400151+14
 Tajikistan7511133+10
 Thailand715134−1
 Trinidad and Tobago110030+3
 Tunisia3013515−10
 Turkmenistan420254+1
 Ukraine1010000
 United Arab Emirates1944111831–13
 Uruguay201105−5
 Uzbekistan142571521−6
 Vietnam4040330
 Yemen312062+4
 Zambia110010+1
 Zimbabwe110020+2
Total554210152191720628+92
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Honours

Continental

Subregional

Summary

Only official honours are included, according to FIFA statutes (competitions organized/recognized by FIFA or an affiliated confederation).

More information Competition, Total ...
Competition1st place, gold medalist(s)2nd place, silver medalist(s)3rd place, bronze medalist(s)Total
AFC Asian Cup 0101
FIFA Arab Cup 0101
Total0202
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Notes
  1. Official subregional competition organized and recognized by FIFA since 2021. Previous editions were organized by UAFA.

See also

Notes

  1. The four mini tournament between Jordan, Iran, Nigeria, and Costa Rica were moved from Amman, Jordan to Antalya, Turkey due to the travel restrictions from the 2026 Iran war.[26]

References

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