The following is a list of the Syria national football team's competitive records and statistics. Their first international match was played on 19 April 1942 in Beirut against Lebanon, winning 2–1. The team they have played the most is Jordan, with a total of 40 matches played.[1]

Individual records

Player records

As of 16 November 2023[2]
Players in bold are still active with Syria.

Most capped players

Mosab Balhous is Syria's fourth most-capped player with 86 caps.
Rank Player Caps Goals Career
1 Maher Al-Sayed 109 29 1999–2013
2 Ali Diab 97 4 2004–2013
3 Mahmoud Al-Mawas 92 15 2012–present
4 Mosab Balhous 86 0 2006–2016
5 Raja Rafe 84 32 2002–2015
6 Tarek Jabban 83 5 1996–2007
7 Ibrahim Alma 78 0 2012–present
8 Nizar Mahrous 76 12 1985–1993
9 George Khouri 74 8 1982–1989
10 Firas Al-Khatib 72 36 2001–2019

Top goalscorers

Firas Al-Khatib is Syria's all-time record goalscorer with 36 goals.
Rank Player Goals Caps Ratio Career
1 Firas Al-Khatib 36 72 0.5 2001–2019
2 Raja Rafe 32 84 0.38 2006–2016
3 Maher Al-Sayed 29 109 0.27 1999–2013
4 Said Bayazid 24 24 1 1997–2001
5 Zyad Chaabo 22 49 0.45 2001–2010
6 Omar Khribin 21 55 0.38 2012–present
Omar Al Somah 21 39 0.54 2012–present
8 Mohamed Al-Zeno 15 48 0.31 2004–2011
Mahmoud Al-Mawas 15 92 0.16 2012–present
10 Avedis Kavlakian 14 1953–1966

Age records

Manager records

Team records

Wins

Largest win
Largest home win
Largest away win
Largest win at the Asian Cup

Draws

Highest scoring draw
  • 3–3 vs  Lebanon on 17 October 1998
  • 3–3 vs  Oman on 18 May 2001
Highest scoring draw at the Asian Cup
  • 1–1 vs  Qatar on 1 December 1984

Defeats

Largest defeat
  • 8–0 vs  Greece on 25 November 1949
  • 8–0 vs  Egypt on 16 October 1951
  • 7–0 vs  Turkey on 20 November 1949
Largest defeat at home
  • 1–7 vs  Iran on 21 June 2004
Largest defeat away
  • 8–0 vs  Greece on 25 November 1949
  • 8–0 vs  Egypt on 16 October 1951
Largest defeat at the Asian Cup
  • 3–0 vs  China on 9 December 1996
  • 3–0 vs  China on 4 December 1988

Attendance

Highest home attendance
Highest away attendance
  • 100,000, vs  Iran, 13 June 1997

World rankings

FIFA

Source: FIFA.com[3]

Highest FIFA ranking
68th (July 2018)
Lowest FIFA ranking
152nd (September 2014, March 2015)

Elo

Source: Eloratings.net[4]

Highest Elo ranking
53rd (October 1974)
Lowest Elo ranking
125th (September 1984)

Goal records

General

First goal
Mudhafar Al-Aqqad vs  Jordan on 1 August 1953
Most goals
Firas Al-Khatib (2001–2019), 36 goals
Rank Player Goals Caps Ratio Career
1 Firas Al-Khatib 36 72 0.5 2001–2019
2 Raja Rafe 32 84 0.38 2006–2016
3 Maher Al-Sayed 29 109 0.27 1999–2013
4 Said Bayazid 24 24 1 1997–2001
5 Zyad Chaabo 22 49 0.45 2001–2010
6 Omar Khribin 21 55 0.38 2012–present
Omar Al Somah 21 39 0.54 2012–present
8 Mohamed Al-Zeno 15 48 0.31 2004–2011
Mahmoud Al-Mawas 15 92 0.16 2012–present
10 Avedis Kavlakian 14 1953–1966

As of 28 June 2023. Highlighted names denote a player still playing or available for selection.

Hat-tricks

As of 25 March 2023

Keys
Player scored 5 goals
Player Competition Against Home/Away Result Goals Date
Said Bayazid 2002 FIFA World Cup qualification  Philippines Home 12–0 5 30 April 2001
Nader Joukhadar 1998 FIFA World Cup qualification  Maldives Away 12–0 3 4 June 1997
Said Bayazid 2002 FIFA World Cup qualification  Laos Home 11–0 3 7 May 2001
Said Bayazid 2002 FIFA World Cup qualification  Laos Away 9–0 3 11 May 2001
Raja Rafe 2002 Arab Nations Cup  Lebanon Home 4–1 3 21 December 2002
Firas Al-Khatib 2004 AFC Asian Cup qualification  Sri Lanka Away 8–0 3 18 October 2003
Zyad Chaabo 2010 FIFA World Cup qualification  Indonesia Home 7–0 3 18 November 2007
Raja Rafe 2010 FIFA World Cup qualification  Indonesia Home 7–0 3 18 November 2007
Osama Omari 2018 FIFA World Cup qualification  Afghanistan Home 5–2 3 13 October 2015
Omar Al Somah 2022 FIFA World Cup qualification  Guam Home 4–0 3 15 October 2019
Mahmoud Al-Mawas 2022 FIFA World Cup qualification  Maldives Away 4–0 3 4 June 2021

In major tournaments

AFC Asian Cup

Syria shock Saudi Arabia at Asian Cup

 CNN on Abdulrazak Al Husein's brace against Saudi Arabia at the 2011 Asian Cup[5]

Most goals in a single Asian Cup tournament
Jamal Keshek (in 1980), 2 goals
Nader Joukhadar (in 1996), 2 goals
Abdelrazaq Al-Hussain (in 2011), 2 goals
Most goals in total at Asian Cup tournaments
Walid Abu Al-Sel (in 1984, 1988), 2 goals
Jamal Keshek (in 1980), 2 goals
Nader Joukhadar (in 1996), 2 goals
Abdelrazaq Al-Hussain (in 2011), 2 goals
Most goals in a single Asian Cup finals match
A. Al-Hussain, 2 goals vs  Saudi Arabia on 9 January 2011
First goal in an Asian Cup finals match
Jamal Keshek, vs  Bangladesh on 19 September 1980

Competition records

Syria national football team in Tehran – 2015 AFC Asian Cup qualification
Overview
Event 1st place 2nd place 3rd place 4th place
World Cup 0 0 0 0
Asian Cup 0 0 0 0
WAFF Championship 1 2 0 1
Arab Cup 0 3 0 1
Pan Arab Games 1 2 1 1
West Asian Games 0 2 1 0
Mediterranean Games 1 0 1 1

FIFA World Cup

FIFA World Cup record FIFA World Cup qualification record
Year Round Pld W D* L GF GA Pld W D L GF GA
Uruguay 1930 Did not enter Did not enter
Italy 1934
France 1938
Brazil 1950 Withdrew 1 0 0 1 0 7
Switzerland 1954 Did not enter Did not enter
Sweden 1958 Did not qualify 2 0 1 1 1 2
Chile 1962 Withdrew Withdrew
England 1966
Mexico 1970 Did not enter Did not enter
West Germany 1974 Did not qualify 6 3 1 2 6 6
Argentina 1978 Withdrew 4 1 0 3 2 6
Spain 1982 Did not qualify 4 0 0 4 2 7
Mexico 1986 8 4 3 1 8 4
Italy 1990 4 2 1 1 7 5
United States 1994 6 3 3 0 14 4
France 1998 5 2 1 2 27 5
South Korea Japan 2002 6 4 1 1 40 6
Germany 2006 6 2 2 2 7 7
South Africa 2010 10 6 2 2 23 10
Brazil 2014 Disqualified 2 0 0 2 0 6
Russia 2018 Did not qualify 20 9 5 6 36 22
Qatar 2022 18 8 3 7 31 23
Canada Mexico United States 2026 To be determined To be determined
Total 0/22 102 44 23 35 205 120
*Denotes draws include knockout matches decided via penalty shoot-out.

AFC Asian Cup

*Denotes draws include knockout matches decided via penalty shoot-out.
AFC Asian Cup history
YearRoundScoreResult
1980
Round 1 Syria 0–0  IranDraw
Round 1 Syria 1–0  BangladeshWin
Round 1 Syria 1–2  North KoreaLoss
Round 1 Syria 1–0  ChinaWin
1984
Round 1 Syria 1–1  QatarDraw
Round 1 Syria 0–1  Saudi ArabiaLoss
Round 1 Syria 1–0  South KoreaWin
Round 1 Syria 1–3  KuwaitLoss
1988
Round 1 Syria 0–2  Saudi ArabiaLoss
Round 1 Syria 0–3  ChinaLoss
Round 1 Syria 1–0  KuwaitWin
Round 1 Syria 1–0  BahrainWin
1996
Round 1 Syria 1–2  JapanLoss
Round 1 Syria 0–3  ChinaLoss
Round 1 Syria 2–1  UzbekistanWin
2011
Round 1 Syria 2–1  Saudi ArabiaWin
Round 1 Syria 1–2  JapanLoss
Round 1 Syria 1–2  JordanLoss
2019
Round 1 Syria 0–0  PalestineDraw
Round 1 Syria 0–2  JordanLoss
Round 1 Syria 2–3  AustraliaLoss
2023
Round 1 Syria 0–0  UzbekistanDraw
Round 1 Syria v  Australia
Round 1 Syria v  India

Olympic Games

Olympic Games record Olympic Games qualification record
Year Result Pld W D* L GF GA Pld W D* L GF GA
France 1900 to 1968 MexicoDid not enter
West Germany 1972Did not qualify201101
Canada 1976Did not enter
Soviet Union 1980Round 1301208420231
United States 1984Did not qualify6213610
South Korea 1988200205
Spain 1992 to present See Syria national under-23 team See Syria national under-23 team
Total0 Titles30120814428917
*Denotes draws include knockout matches decided via penalty shoot-out.

WAFF Championship

WAFF Championship record
Year Round Pld W D* L GF GA
Jordan 2000Runners-up521252
Syria 2002Fourth place411256
Iran 2004Runners-up4112613
Jordan 2007Semi-finals320123
Iran 2008Semi-finals311123
Jordan 2010Group stage201123
Kuwait 2012Champions422053
Qatar 2014Withdrew
Iraq 2019Group stage402257
United Arab Emirates 2023Qualified
Total1 Title2999113240
*Denotes draws include knockout matches decided via penalty shoot-out.

FIFA Arab Cup

FIFA Arab Cup record
Year Round Pld W D* L GF GA
Lebanon 1963Runners-up430194
Kuwait 1964Did not enter
Iraq 1966Runners-up531194
Saudi Arabia 1985Did not enter
Jordan 1988Runners-up622255
Syria 1992Fourth place403123
Qatar 1998Group stage200216
Kuwait 2002Group stage420286
Saudi Arabia 2012Did not enter
Qatar 2021Group stage310244
Total0 Titles28116113832
*Denotes draws include knockout matches decided via penalty shoot-out.

Arab Games

Pan Arab Games record
Year Round Pld W D* L GF GA
Egypt 1953Runners-up311135
Lebanon 1957Champions5221126
Morocco 1961Did not enter
Egypt 1965Group stage4202208
Syria 1976Third place631264
Morocco 1985Group stage200204
Syria 1992Fourth place403123
Lebanon 1997Runners-up540195
Jordan 1999Group stage404055
Egypt 2007Did not enter
Qatar 2011Withdrew
Algeria 2023See Syria national under-23 team
Total1 Title331211105740
*Denotes draws include knockout matches decided via penalty shoot-out.

Mediterranean Games

Mediterranean Games record
Year Round Pld W D L GF GA
Egypt 1951Third place2002012
Spain 1955Fourth place3003010
Lebanon 1959Did not enter
Italy 1963Group stage3003110
Tunisia 1967Did not enter
Turkey 1971Group stage300314
Algeria1975Did not enter
Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia 1979
Morocco 1983Group stage200202
Syria 1987Champions5410133
Italy 1991 to present See Syria national under-20 team
Total1 Title1841131541

Asian Games

Asian Games record
Year Round Pld W D* L GF GA
India 1951Did not enter
Philippines 1954
Japan 1958
Indonesia 1962
Thailand 1966
Thailand 1970
Iran1974
Thailand 1978
India 1982Group stage302135
South Korea 1986Did not enter
China 1990
Japan 1994
Thailand 1998
South Korea 2002 to present See Syria national under-23 team
Total0 Titles301235
*Denotes draws include knockout matches decided via penalty shoot-out.

West Asian Games

West Asian Games record
Year Round Pld W D* L GF GA
Iran 1997Runners-up
Kuwait 2002Third place[6]413054
Qatar 2005Runners-up413075
Total0 Titles8260129
*Denotes draws include knockout matches decided via penalty shoot-out.

Head-to-head record

The list shown below shows the Syria national football team all-time international record against opposing nations.

As of 13 January 2024 after match against  Uzbekistan[7]
Key
  Positive Record (more wins than losses)
  Neutral Record (as many wins as losses)
  Negative Record (more losses than wins)
Opponent Confederation GP W D L GF GA GD
 AfghanistanAFC4400163+13
 AlgeriaCAF611439−6
 AustraliaAFC301246−2
 BahrainAFC2512853125+6
 BangladeshAFC330051+4
 BelarusUEFA100101−1
 CambodiaAFC3300171+16
 ChadCAF110020+2
 ChinaAFC155281429−15
 Chinese TaipeiAFC4400171+16
 CyprusUEFA100101−1
 East GermanyaUEFA100105−5
 EgyptCAF10127523−18
 GreeceUEFA2002012−12
 GuamAFC220070+7
 HaitiCONCACAF110021+1
 Hong KongAFC110020+2
 IndiaAFC6213770
 IndonesiaAFC5401153+12
 IranAFC29111171550−35
 IraqAFC33511172546−21
 JapanAFC120210932−18
 JordanAFC40159163739−2
 KazakhstanUEFA431081+7
 KuwaitAFC37129164356−13
 KyrgyzstanAFC7223108+2
 LaosAFC2200200+20
 LebanonAFC2515555028+22
 LibyaAFC103341317−4
 MalaysiaAFC732215150
 MaldivesAFC7601394+35
 MaliCAF1010110
 MauritaniaCAF320142+2
 MoroccoCAF703429−7
   NepalAFC220050+5
 NigeriaCAF100101−1
 North KoreaAFC124531814+4
 OmanAFC269893928+11
 PalestineAFC158522513+12
 PhilippinesAFC5500253+22
 QatarAFC165472022−2
 San MarinoUEFA110030+3
 Saudi ArabiaAFC2829172253−31
 Sierra LeoneCAF110060+6
 SingaporeAFC6402117+4
 South KoreaAFC10136512−7
 South YemenaAFC320143+1
 Soviet UnionaUEFA100102−2
 Sri LankaAFC3300170+17
 SpainUEFA1010000
 SudanCAF1042410100
 SwedenUEFA1010110
 TajikistanAFC8611136+7
 ThailandAFC51231013−3
 TunisiaCAF115151416−2
 TurkeyUEFA100107−7
 TurkmenistanAFC211062+4
 United Arab EmiratesAFC2438131836−18
 UzbekistanAFC7322550
 VenezuelaCONMEBOL200226−4
 VietnamAFC411213−2
 YemenbAFC1411124210+32
 ZimbabweCAF110060+6
Total533195125212759697+62

(a) Denotes defunct national football team.
(b) Including North Yemen

Unofficial matches

This is a list of the Syria national football team results from 1939 to the present day that, for various reasons, are not accorded the status of official International A Matches.

1930s

29 October 1939 Non-FIFA friendly Beirut XI  4–5 Damascus XI Beirut, Lebanon
Majdalani
Sidani
Nassar
Stadium: Sika Stadium
Referee: Khalil Hilmi (Lebanon)
14 November 1939 Non-FIFA friendly Damascus XI 1–6  Beirut XI Damascus, Syria
Majdalani
Nassar
Jumaa
Stadium: Barada Stadium
Referee: Adham Machnouk (Syria)

1940s

1947 Non-FIFA friendly Damascus XI 1–3 Beirut XI Damascus, Syria
  • Abou Nader

1950s

1960s

2020s

13 November 2022 Unofficial Friendly Syria  0–1  Algeria A' Sharjah, UAE
Stadium: Sharjah Stadium

References

  1. "Syria–Head-to-head record". 11v11.com. Retrieved 22 October 2022.
  2. Mamrud, Roberto. "Syria - Record International Players". RSSSF.
  3. "FIFA/Coca-Cola World Ranking". FIFA.
  4. "World Football Elo Ratings: Syria". World Football Elo Ratings web site and Advanced Satellite Consulting. Retrieved 22 October 2022.
  5. "Syria shock Saudi Arabia at Asian Cup; Japan snatch draw". edition.cnn.com.
  6. "Second West Asian Games". West Asian Games Federation. Archived from the original on 15 September 2009. Retrieved 10 June 2019.
  7. "World Football Elo Ratings: Syria". Elo Ratings. Retrieved 9 July 2017.
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