Côte d'Ivoire national football team

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Côte d'Ivoire
Shirt badge/Association crest
Nickname(s) Les Éléphants
(The Elephants)
Association Fédération Ivoirienne
de Football
Confederation CAF (Africa)
Head coach Flag of Bosnia and Herzegovina Vahid Halilhodžić
Captain Didier Drogba
Most caps Didier Zokora (72)
Top scorer Didier Drogba (33)
Home stadium Stade Félix Houphouët-Boigny
FIFA code CIV
FIFA ranking 23
Highest FIFA ranking 18 (August 2006[1])
Lowest FIFA ranking 75 (March 2004)
Elo ranking 37
Highest Elo ranking 12 (February 6, 2008)
Lowest Elo ranking 69 (October 1996)
Team colours Team colours Team colours
Team colours
Team colours
Home colours
Team colours Team colours Team colours
Team colours
Team colours
Away colours
First international
Flag of Côte d'Ivoire Ivory Coast 3 - 2 Dahomey Flag of Benin
(Madagascar; 13 April 1960)
Biggest win
Flag of Côte d'Ivoire Ivory Coast 6 - 0 Mali Flag of Mali
(Abidjan, Côte d'Ivoire; 13 March 1985)
Flag of Côte d'Ivoire Côte d'Ivoire 6 - 0 Botswana Flag of Botswana
(Abidjan, Côte d'Ivoire; 11 October 1992)
Flag of Côte d'Ivoire Côte d'Ivoire 6 - 0 Niger Flag of Niger
(Abidjan, Côte d'Ivoire; 15 July 2000)
Flag of Côte d'Ivoire Côte d'Ivoire 6 - 0 Madagascar Flag of Madagascar
(Abidjan, Côte d'Ivoire; 1 July 2001)
Biggest defeat
Flag of Côte d'Ivoire Ivory Coast 2 - 6 Ghana Flag of Ghana
(Côte d'Ivoire; 2 May 1971)
Flag of Malawi Malawi 5 - 1 Ivory Coast Flag of Côte d'Ivoire
(Malawi; 6 July 1974)
World Cup
Appearances 1 (First in 2006)
Best result Round 1, 2006
African Cup of Nations
Appearances 17 (First in 1965)
Best result Winners, 1992
Confederations Cup
Appearances 1 (First in 1992)
Best result 4th, 1992

The Côte d'Ivoire national football team (sometimes written "Ivory Coast" in English), nicknamed Les Éléphants (The Elephants), is the national team of Côte d'Ivoire and is controlled by the Fédération Ivoirienne de Football. Until 2005, their greatest accomplishment was winning the 1992 African Cup of Nations against Ghana on penalties at the Stade de l'Amitie in Dakar, Senegal.

On October 8, 2005, they qualified for the 2006 FIFA World Cup, marking their first appearance on the sport's greatest stage. They were unable to qualify for the second round after losing to experienced teams such as Argentina and Netherlands in the so-called Group of death. They did manage to win one game in Germany, against Serbia and Montenegro, coming back from down 0-2 to win 3-2 on a late penalty kick by Bonaventure Kalou. Many observers of that year's tournament said the team would have gone far, if they were not drawn in such a difficult group.

Contents

[edit] Honours

Afro-Asian Cup of Nations :
  • 1 Time Runners-up
CEDEAO Cup :
  • 4 Times Champion (1983, 1987, 1999)
  • 1 Time Runners-up

[edit] World Cup record

[edit] African Nations Cup record

 

[edit] Coaches

[edit] Notable players

[edit] Players

[edit] Current squad

Squad for the friendly match against Guinea on August 20, 2008.

No. Pos. Player DoB (Age) Caps Goals Club
GK Boubacar Barry Copa 30 December 1979 12 0 Flag of Belgium Lokeren
GK Aristide Benoit Zogbo 30 December 1981 2 0 Flag of Egypt Ittihad El-Shorta
DF Arthur Boka 2 April 1983 28 1 Flag of Germany VfB Stuttgart
DF Kolo Touré 19 March 1981 Flag of England Arsenal
DF Igor Lolo 22 July 1982 4 0 Flag of Ukraine Dnipro
DF Guy Demel 13 June 1981 Flag of Germany Hamburger SV
DF Abdoulaye Méïté 6 October 1980 Flag of England West Brom
DF Emmanuel Eboué 4 June 1983 Flag of England Arsenal
DF Marc Zoro 27 November 1983 Flag of Portugal Benfica
MF Gilles Yapi Yapo 30 January 1982 Flag of Switzerland Young Boys
MF Felix Dja Ettien 26 September 1979 Flag of Spain Levante
MF Yaya Touré 13 May 1983 25 3 Flag of Spain Barcelona
MF Christian Manfredini May 1, 1975 0 0 Flag of Italy S.S. Lazio
MF Emerse Faé 24 January 1984 Flag of France OGC Nice
MF Kanga Akalé 7 March 1981 Flag of Spain Recreativo Huelva
MF Didier Zokora 14 December 1980 Flag of England Tottenham
MF Siaka Tiéné 22 February 1982 37 Flag of France Valenciennes FC
FW Kandia Traoré 5 July 1980 Flag of France Sochaux
FW Boubacar Sanogo 17 December 1982 5 Flag of Germany Werder Bremen
FW Bakari Koné 17 September 1981 32 8 Flag of France Marseille
FW Aruna Dindane 26 November 1980 Flag of France Lens
FW Arouna Koné November 11, 1983 Flag of Spain Sevilla


[edit] Recent call-up

Other played notable in qualifying and friendly since World Cup

No. Pos. Player DoB (Age) Caps Goals Club
8 FW Salomon Kalou 15 August 1985 Flag of England Chelsea (v. Botswana on June 22)
10 FW Sekou Cissé 23 May 1985 6 5 Flag of the Netherlands Roda JC (v. Botswana on June 22)
11 MF Kafoumba Coulibaly 26 October 1985 0 0 Flag of France OGC Nice (v. Botswana on June 22)
14 MF Emmanuel Kone 31 December 1986 3 0 Flag of Romania CFR Cluj (v. Botswana on June 22)
16 GK Vincent de Paul Angban 2 February 1985 1 0 Flag of Côte d'Ivoire ASEC Mimosas (v. Botswana on June 22)
8 MF Abdou Razack Traoré 28 December 1988 0 0 Flag of Norway Rosenborg B.K. (v. Botswana on June 14)
11 DF Benjamin Angoua 28 November 1986 0 0 Flag of Hungary Honved Budapest (v. Botswana on June 14)
18 MF Didier Ya Konan 25 February 1984 3 0 Flag of Norway Rosenborg B.K. (v. Madagascar on June 8)
14 DF Souleymane Bamba 13 January 1985 0 0 Flag of Scotland Hibernian (v. Mozambique on June 1)
FW Doumbia Seydou 31 December 1987 1 0 Flag of Switzerland Young Boys (v. Japan on May 24)
GK Stéphane Dimy 12 November 1980 0 0 Flag of Côte d'Ivoire Africa Sports (v. Tunisia on March 26)
MF Thierry Doubai 1 July 1988 1 0 Flag of Switzerland Young Boys (v. Tunisia on March 26)
FW Abdul Kader Keïta 6 August 1981 Flag of France Lyon (v. Tunisia on March 26)
GK Tiassé Koné 17 October 1987 1 0 Flag of Russia Spartak Nalchik (v. Ghana on February 9)
MF Koffi Ndri Romaric 4 June 1983 Flag of France Le Mans (v. Ghana on February 9)
FW Gervais Yao Kouassi 27 May 1987 3 0 Flag of France Le Mans (v. Ghana on February 9)
11 FW Didier Drogba 11 March 1978 Flag of England Chelsea (v. Ghana on February 9)
16 GK Stephan Loboué 23 August 1981 3 0 Flag of Germany Greuther Fürth
20 DF Constant Djakpa 17 October 1986 3 0 Flag of Germany Bayer Leverkusen
6 DF Steve Gohouri 8 February 1981 2 3 Flag of Germany Mönchengladbach
FW Amara Diané 19 August 1982 1 1 Flag of France PSG
GK Gérard Gnanhouan 12 February 1979 6 0 Flag of France Montepellier
DF Bakary Soro 5 December 1985 0 0 Flag of Belgium Germinal Beerschot
DF Mamadou Doumbia 3 December 1980 23 5 Flag of France FC Istres
MF Lionel Bah February 2, 1980 0 0 Flag of France US Créteil-Lusitanos
FW Bonaventure Kalou 12 January 1978 51 12 Flag of the Netherlands SC Heerenveen
FW Guillaume Dah Zadi 1 July 1978 1 0 Flag of Bulgaria PFC CSKA Sofia
DF Serge Wawa 0 0 Flag of Côte d'Ivoire ASEC Mimosas
DF Diarrasouba Viera 0 0 Flag of Romania CFR Cluj


[edit] Previous Squad

[edit] 2006 World Cup Squad

Main Article: 2006 FIFA World Cup squads (Côte d'Ivoire)

Côte d'Ivoire was the only nation to name a 23-man World Cup squad comprised entirely of players who play their club football outside their home country.

[edit] 2006 World Cup Information

Côte d'Ivoire lost their opening game 2-1 in the World Cup in Germany to an Argentine side. The goals for Argentina came from Hernán Crespo and Javier Saviola. Ivory Coast's goal came from another Chelsea striker, Didier Drogba. They lost their second match to Holland by the same scoreline and were thus eliminated from the tournament. Holland's goals came from a Robin van Persie free-kick in the 23rd minute and a Ruud van Nistelrooy strike in the 27th minute. Bakari Koné scored in the 38th minute for the Africans to pull the score to 2-1. Côte d'Ivoire's final game was against Serbia and Montenegro. The Serbian team scored two quick goals and it appeared that the Ivory Coast was destined for a three-loss World Cup campaign. However, the Africans came back, led by two goals from Aruna Dindane and won the game 3-2 to finish in third place.

[edit] Trivia

The Côte d'Ivoire team is notable for having participated in (and won) the two highest-scoring penalty shoot-outs in international football competition - the 24-shot shoot-out in the final of the 1992 African Cup of Nations when Ghana was defeated 11-10, and the 24-shot shoot-out in the quarter-final of the 2006 African Cup of Nations, when Cameroon was defeated 12-11.

After the leave of Uli Stielike before the Africa Cup 2008, because of his son's unclear health situation, Gerard Gili, the co-trainer, is in his position. In lack of another co-coach, Didier Drogba acts as an "players trainer" (player + coach). This is the first time, that a player also acts as coach in the Africa Cup.

[edit] Footnotes

  1. ^ August, October and November 2006

[edit] External links

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