Jump to content

Croatia national under-17 football team

From Simple English Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Croatia U17
Nickname(s)Mali Vatreni (The Young Blazers)
AssociationCroatian Football Federation (HNS)
ConfederationUEFA (Europe)
Head coachMarijan Budimir
Most capsMilan Badelj (28)
Top scorerNikola Kalinić (15)
FIFA codeCRO
First colours
Second colours
First international
 Croatia 1–0 Hungary 
(Donji Miholjac, Croatia; 26 April 1993)
Biggest win
 Croatia 11–0 Andorra 
(Donji Tavankut, Serbia; 29 September 2004)
Biggest defeat
 Croatia 0–5 Norway 
(Tallinn, Estonia; 25 October 2006)
 Croatia 0–5 England 
(Pula, Croatia; 28 September 2016)
European Championship
Appearances10 (first in 1996)
Best resultThird place (2001)
World Cup
Appearances3 (first in 2001)
Best resultQuarter-finals (2015)
Websitehns-cff.hr

The Croatia national under-17 football team represents Croatia in youth international football. They have been to the FIFA U-17 World Cup and the UEFA European Under-17 Championship.

Competitive record

[change | change source]

  Champions  
  Runners-up  
  Third place  
  Fourth place  
  Tournament played fully or partially on home soil  

UEFA European Under-17 Championship record

[change | change source]

Until the 1997 tournament, players born on or after 1 August the year they turned 17 years were eligible to compete. Since the 1998 tournament, the date limit has been moved back to 1 January.[1] In 2001/2002 the competition was renamed the European Under-17 Championship, but the eligibility rules did not change.

UEFA European Under-17 Championship record Qualifications record
Year Round Position Pld W D L GF GA Squad GP W D L GF GA Year
Italy 1982 Part of  Yugoslavia
West Germany 1984
Hungary 1985
Greece 1986
France 1987
Spain 1988
Denmark 1989
East Germany 1990
Switzerland 1991
Cyprus 1992 Not a UEFA member
Turkey 1993
Republic of Ireland 1994 Did not qualify 4121761994
Belgium 1995 2101311995
Austria 1996 Quarter-finals8/16420248Squad 3300701996
Germany 1997 Did not qualify 2110211997
Scotland 1998 Quarter-finals7/16411234Squad 3210911998
Czech Republic 1999 Group stage15/16301214Squad 22001101999
Israel 2000 Did not qualify 3111342023
England 2001 Third place3/16640297Squad 2200712000
Denmark 2002 Did not qualify 3210832002
Portugal 2003 64021472003
France 2004 3111342004
Italy 2005 Fourth place4/852121311Squad 64112082005
Luxembourg 2006 Did not qualify 3111212006
Belgium 2007 31028112007
Turkey 2008 64111312008
Germany 2009 65011142009
Liechtenstein 2010 6411952010
Serbia 2011 6240632011
Slovenia 2012 3102562012
Slovakia 2013 Group stage5/8312021Squad 65101582013
Malta 2014 Did not qualify 3102132014
Bulgaria 2015 Quarter-finals7/16532051Squad 65101822015
Azerbaijan 2016 Did not qualify 621311112016
Croatia 2017 Group stage14/16301226Squad Qualified as hosts
England 2018 Did not qualify 62311042018
Republic of Ireland 2019 63211062019
Estonia 2020 Tournament and elite qualifying round cancelled due to COVID-19 pandemic 3300932020
Cyprus 2021 Tournament and qualifying round cancelled due to COVID-19 pandemic
Israel 2022 Did not qualify 3102322022
Hungary 2023 Group stage12/16301224Squad 6321652023
Cyprus 2024 Group stage9/16303033 631219112024
Albania 2025 To be determined To be determined2025
Estonia 2026 2026
Latvia 2027 2027
Total Third place 10/41 39 13 12 14 44 49 123 70 26 27 250 122

Draws include knockout matches decided via penalty shoot-out; correct as of 9 November 2023 after the match against  England.

Matches
First match  France 2–0 Croatia 
(Scheibbs, Austria; 29 April 1996)
Biggest win   Switzerland 2–5 Croatia 
(Santa Croce sull'Arno, Italy; 8 May 2005)
Biggest defeat  Portugal 5–1 Croatia 
(Krems an der Donau, Austria; 6 May 1996)

FIFA U-17 World Cup record

[change | change source]
FIFA U-17 World Cup record Qualifications record
Year Round Position GP W D* L GF GA Squad
China 1985 Part of  Yugoslavia
Canada 1987
Scotland 1989
Italy 1991
Japan 1993 Not a FIFA member
Ecuador 1995 Did not qualify UEFA European Under-17 Championship1995
Egypt 1997 1997
New Zealand 1999 1999
Trinidad and Tobago 2001 Group stage10/16310238Squad 2001
Finland 2003 Did not qualify 2003
Peru 2005 2005
South Korea 2007 2007
Nigeria 2009 2009
Mexico 2011 2011
United Arab Emirates 2013 Group stage17/24310235Squad 2013
Chile 2015 Quarter-finals7/24522175Squad 2015
India 2017 Did not qualify 2017
Brazil 2019 2019
Indonesia 2023 2023
Qatar 2025 to be determined 2025
Total Quarter-finals 3/20 11 4 2 5 13 18

Draws include knockout matches decided via penalty shoot-out; correct as of 1 November 2015 after the match against  Mali.

Matches
First match  Trinidad and Tobago 1–2 Croatia 
(Port of Spain, Trinidad and Tobago; 13 September 2001)
Biggest win  Croatia 2–0 Germany 
(Concepción, Chile; 29 October 2015)
Biggest defeat  Croatia 0–4 Australia 
(Port of Spain, Trinidad and Tobago; 19 September 2001)
Year Round Position Pld W D L GF GA
Hungary 2001 Telki CupThird3rd413074
Hungary 2002 Telki CupChampions1st4310103
Hungary 2003 Telki CupGroup stage5th310235
Hungary 2004 Telki CupGroup stage6th311143
Hungary 2005 Telki CupRunners-up2nd422074
Hungary 2006 Telki CupSixth6th301217
Hungary 2007 Telki CupChampions1st330030
Hungary 2008 Telki CupRunners-up2nd321062
Hungary 2009 Telki CupSeventh7th311164
Hungary 2010 Telki CupSixth6th310244
Hungary 2011 Telki CupSemi-finals4th321043
Hungary 2012 Telki CupRunners-up2nd311164
Hungary 2013 Telki CupThird3rd320143
Hungary 2015 Telki CupRunners-up2nd320124
Hungary 2017 Telki CupChampions1st312063
Hungary 2018 Telki CupChampions1st330081
Hungary 2019 Telki CupChampions1st3300145
Hungary 2022 Telki CupRunners-up2nd3120105
Hungary 2023 Telki CupChampions1st330082
Total 6 titles 19/19 60 33 16 11 113 66

Draws include knockout matches decided via penalty shoot-out; correct as of 19 August 2023 after the match against  Uzbekistan.

References

[change | change source]
  1. "European U-16/U-17 Championship". Rec.Sport.Soccer Statistics Foundation. Retrieved 11 October 2017.