before their match against Yugoslavia Bolivia debuted in international football in 1926, one year after the
Bolivian Football Federation was founded, and joined FIFA that same year. As participants at the
1926 South American Championship in
Chile, Bolivia played their first match against
the hosts on 12 October 1926, and even ended up scoring first against them, but wound up being defeated by the Chileans 7–1. Bolivia also lost their following three matches: 0–5 against
Argentina, 1–6 against
Paraguay and 0–6 against
Uruguay. In 1930, Bolivia was one of the teams invited to the inaugural edition of the
World Cup, held in
Uruguay. Drawn in
Group 2 of the
1930 World Cup, Bolivia lost both its games 4–0, first to
Yugoslavia at the
Estadio Parque Central, and then to
Brazil in the
Estadio Centenario. The match versus the Yugoslavs would be the last match against non-South American opposition for Bolivia until 1972 – when they again met Yugoslavia. They returned for the
1950 World Cup, where Argentina's withdrawal from the qualifiers gave Bolivia an automatic berth. With three teams declining to play in
Brazil, Bolivia was put in a group of two along with Uruguay. The Bolivians' only game was an 8–0 defeat to Uruguay at the
Estádio Independência in
Belo Horizonte. Bolivia's greatest football achievement was the
1963 South American Championship title, which they hosted and won after placing first out of 7 countries, including being undefeated, with five wins and one draw. The only draw for Bolivia in the tournament was a 4–4 draw against Ecuador in the opening match. They also had the advantage of being better accustomed to
higher altitudes. In the following edition, the
1967 South American Championship, held in Uruguay, Bolivia finished last out of six teams, with one draw and four losses, which was far below what the public expected, as Bolivia had been the defending champion. Afterwards, the country only started to resurge at an international level with the creation of the
Academia Tahuichi Aguilera in
Santa Cruz de la Sierra in 1978, a football school that developed players such as
Marco Etcheverry,
Erwin Sánchez and
Luis Cristaldo. Under Spanish coach
Xabier Azkargorta and featuring nine players from Tahuichi, Bolivia surprisingly became the first team to beat Brazil in the
1994 World Cup qualifiers while playing them in
La Paz, with a 2–0 win, and qualified for the
1994 World Cup by finishing second in Group B behind the Brazilians themselves, which included record 7–0 and 7–1 wins over Venezuela during their qualification campaign. Bolivia was drawn into the tournament's
Group C, and played defending champions
Germany in the tournament's opening match at
Soldier Field. Bolivia outplayed Germany in the first half. In the second half,
Lothar Matthäus took a 40-yard run and struck Marco "El Diablo" Etcheverry with a high elbow to his jaw. Etcheverry retaliated by fouling Matthäus and was sent off. Eventually, Bolivia lost on a controversial offside goal by
Jürgen Klinsmann. Following a goalless draw with
South Korea at
Foxboro Stadium, where Bolivia was forced to play with ten men again after Cristaldo's red card, Bolivia returned to Chicago and lost 3–1 to
Spain, with Sánchez scoring the first ever Bolivian goal in a World Cup. Following the World Cup, Bolivia participated in the
1995 Copa América held in Uruguay, with
Antonio Lopez Habas as manager, where they made the quarter-finals for the first time since winning the competition in 1963, with one win, one draw, and one loss. In the quarter-finals, the nation lost to hosts Uruguay 2–1. Despite the decent performance the team displayed during the tournament, Lopez Habas left his post after the
1997 Copa America, being replaced by
Dušan Drašković. The 1997 edition was the second time Bolivia held the tournament. The team reached the
final, as had happened last time Bolivia was the host, but this time they finished runner-up to reigning world champion Brazil after losing 3–1 in
the final. Bolivia were defeated by
Peru 1–3 in the
quarter-finals of the tournament, and Bolivia's only goal of the game was a
penalty in the last minutes of the match scored by Marcelo Moreno. In the next three Copa América editions, Bolivia performed poorly, losing all games in these tournaments. In 2021, Bolivian Football Federation's new President, Fernando Costa Sarmiento, lamented the deteriorating condition of football in Bolivia and vowed to rebuild the country's football system. He accused the previous Presidents of mismanaging football as he aimed to reconstruct Bolivian football into a more professional manner. ==Stadium==