Beginning Led by manager
Pavel Sadyrin, Russia were in
Group 5 for the
qualification campaign for the
1994 FIFA World Cup held in the
United States which consisted of
Greece,
Iceland,
Hungary and
Luxembourg. The
suspension of
FR Yugoslavia reduced the group to five teams. Russia qualified alongside Greece with five wins, one draw and one defeat. Russia went to the US as an independent country. The Russian squad consisted of veterans like goalkeeper
Stanislav Cherchesov,
Aleksandr Borodyuk and players like
Viktor Onopko,
Oleg Salenko,
Dmitri Cheryshev,
Aleksandr Mostovoi,
Vladimir Beschastnykh, and
Valery Karpin (some of these Russian players could have chosen to play for the
Ukraine national football team but the
Ukrainian Association of Football had not secured recognition in time to compete in the 1994 FIFA World Cup qualification). In the final tournament, Russia was drawn into
Group B with
Cameroon,
Sweden, and
Brazil. Russia was eliminated from the tournament with three points. Sadyrin was sacked following what was a poor performance.
Euro 1996 match against Italy on a
stamp of Azerbaijan After Sadyrin was sacked,
Oleg Romantsev was appointed coach to lead Russia to
UEFA Euro 1996. During
qualifying, Russia overcame
Scotland, Greece,
Finland,
San Marino, and the
Faroe Islands to finish in first place with eight wins and two draws. In the final tournament, Russia was in
Group C with
Germany, the
Czech Republic and
Italy. They were eliminated after losing 2–1 to Italy and 3–0 to Germany. Russia's last game against the Czech Republic ended 3–3. Germany and Czech Republic went on to meet in the
final.
1997–1999 managed Russia in their unsuccessful qualification campaign for the
1998 FIFA World Cup. After Euro 96,
Boris Ignatyev was appointed manager for the campaign to
qualify for the
1998 FIFA World Cup in France. In the qualifying stage, Russia was in
Group 5 with
Bulgaria,
Israel,
Cyprus, and Luxembourg. Russia and Bulgaria were considered the two main contenders to qualify from the group with Israel considered a minor threat. Russia began the campaign with two victories against Cyprus and Luxembourg and two draws against Israel and Cyprus. They continued with victories against Luxembourg and Israel. Russia suffered their only defeat of the campaign with a 1–0 loss to Bulgaria. They ended the campaign with a 4–2 victory in the return game over Bulgaria and qualify for the
play-off spot. In the play-offs, Russia was drawn with Italy. In the first leg Russia drew 1–1. In the away leg, Russia were defeated 1–0 and failed to qualify for the World Cup. After failing to qualify for the World Cup in France, Russia played to qualify for the
UEFA Euro 2000 co-hosted by Belgium and the Netherlands.
Anatoliy Byshovets was appointed as Russia manager. Russia were drawn in
Group 4 for the qualifying round with
France,
Ukraine, Iceland,
Armenia, and
Andorra. Russia and France were considered as favorites for the top two spots with Ukraine being an outside contender. Russia began their campaign with three straight defeats to Ukraine, France, and Iceland. Outraged by this result, the
Russian Football Union immediately sacked Byshovets and reappointed Oleg Romantsev as manager. Russia went on to win their next six games including a 3–2 victory over
eventual champions France at the
Stade de France. In their
last game against Ukraine, a win for Russia would have resulted in outright qualification as the winners of the group, having an identical head-to-head record with France (a 3–2 win and a 3–2 loss), while possessing a superior goal difference. The game finished 1–1 after an error by the goalkeeper
Aleksandr Filimonov late in the game. Russia finished third in the group, failing to qualify for their second consecutive major tournament.
Revival Oleg Romantsev remained as manager of the national team to supervise their
qualification campaign to the
2002 FIFA World Cup in South Korea and Japan. In the preliminary stage, Russia was in
Group 1 with
Slovenia, FR Yugoslavia, and
Switzerland, Faroe Islands, and Luxembourg. Russia finished in first place to qualify directly managing seven wins, two draws, and a loss. Russia was drawn into
Group H with
Belgium,
Tunisia, and
Japan. In their first game, Russia achieved a 2–0 victory over Tunisia, but lost their next match to Japan 1–0, causing riots to erupt in Moscow. For their last game against Belgium, Russia needed a draw to take them to the second round, but lost 3–2 and was eliminated. managed Russia at
Euro 2004. Romantsev was sacked immediately following the tournament and replaced with
CSKA's
Valery Gazzaev. His task looked difficult as
Russia's group consisted of Switzerland,
Republic of Ireland,
Albania, and
Georgia with the Irish considered favourites and an improving Swiss side as an increasing threat. Russia began their campaign with home victories against Ireland and Albania, but lost their next two games away to Albania and Georgia. Gazzaev was sacked after a disappointing draw with Switzerland in
Basel, and Georgi Yartsev was then appointed manager. He managed to qualify Russia for a
play-off against
Wales after home victories to Switzerland and Georgia. In the first play-off leg, Russia drew 0–0 with Wales in Moscow, but a
Vadim Evseev header gave Russia a 1–0 victory in the away leg in
Cardiff to qualify for
Euro 2004. The victory was overshadowed when Russian midfielder
Yegor Titov tested
positive for drugs; amidst calls for Russia to be disqualified, Titov was given a one-year ban on 15 February 2004. Russia were drawn in
Group A with hosts
Portugal,
Spain, and Greece. They were not among the favourites to progress and tournament preparations were hampered by injuries to defenders
Sergei Ignashevich and Viktor Onopko. Russia started their tournament against Spain but a late goal from
Juan Carlos Valerón put Russia on the brink of another group stage elimination. Four days later, Russia became the first team eliminated after a 0–2 defeat to Portugal. The final game of the group resulted in a surprising 2–1 victory over
eventual champions Greece with
Dmitri Kirichenko scoring one of the fastest goals of the tournament. In the
2006 World Cup qualifying tournament, Russia was drawn into
Group 3 with Portugal,
Slovakia,
Estonia,
Latvia, Luxembourg, and
Liechtenstein. Russia began qualification with a 1–1 draw against Slovakia on 4 September 2004 in Moscow and then beat Luxembourg 4–0, but suffered a 7–1 defeat against Portugal in
Lisbon, which remains Russia's worst defeat. Victories against Estonia and Liechtenstein seemed to put them back on track, but a 1–1 draw with Estonia on 30 March 2005 in
Tallinn was a major disappointment which saw the end of Georgi Yartsev's reign. Under new manager
Yury Syomin, Russia were able to rekindle their hopes with a 2–0 win against Latvia before a 1–1 draw in
Riga on 17 August 2005. Russia then had victories against Liechtenstein, Luxembourg and a 0–0 draw against Portugal. In their final game, Russia needed to win against Slovakia in
Bratislava. After a 0–0 draw, Slovakia advanced to the
play-offs above Russia on goal difference.
Euro 2008 and midfielder
Sergei Semak meet the
President of Russia,
Dmitry Medvedev, after reaching the semi-finals of
UEFA Euro 2008. Having failed to qualify Russia for the 2006 World Cup, Yury Syomin stepped down several weeks later and Russia began looking for a new manager. It was clear that a foreign manager would be needed as most of the high-profile Russian coaches were not successful with the national team. On 10 April 2006, it was announced that then-
Australia manager
Guus Hiddink would lead Russia in the
Euro 2008 qualification campaign. For the Euro 2008 qualifying campaign, Russia were drawn into
Group E with
England,
Croatia, Israel,
Macedonia, Estonia, and Andorra. For much of the campaign, it was between Russia and England to obtain the final qualifying place behind Croatia. Russia lost 3–0 away to England, and in the return game in Moscow, fell to an early goal from
Wayne Rooney. During the second half Russia came from behind to win 2–1 with
Roman Pavlyuchenko scoring both goals. On 17 November 2007, Russia suffered a 2–1 defeat to Israel to put qualification hopes in jeopardy, but Russia still managed to qualify one point ahead of England by beating Andorra 1–0 while England lost 3–2 to Croatia. In the
Euro 2008 tournament, Russia were drawn into
Group D with Sweden and Euro 2004 group rivals Spain and Greece. In a preparation friendly against
Serbia, leading striker
Pavel Pogrebnyak was injured and would miss the tournament. Russia lost their opening match 4–1 to Spain in
Innsbruck but then beat Greece 1–0 with a goal by
Konstantin Zyryanov. The third game saw Russia defeat Sweden 2–0 through goals by Roman Pavlyuchenko and
Andrey Arshavin, resulting in Russia advancing to the
quarter-finals in second place behind Spain. This was the first time ever since the fall of USSR, that saw Russia qualified from the group stage of a major tournament. In the quarter-final against the
Netherlands, Roman Pavlyuchenko scored a volley ten minutes after half-time. With four minutes left in the match,
Ruud van Nistelrooy scored, to make it 1–1 and put the game into extra time. But Russia regained the lead when Andrey Arshavin raced down the left flank and sent across towards substitute
Dmitri Torbinski, who tapped the ball into the net. Arshavin then beat
Edwin van der Sar, ending the match 3–1, and sent Russia through to their first major semi-final since the breakup of the USSR. In the
semi-finals, Russia was once again matched up against Spain, and lost 3–0.
2010 FIFA World Cup qualification in 2010 FIFA World Cup qualification in October 2009 Russia was drawn to
Group 4 in
qualification for
2010 FIFA World Cup, competing with
Germany, Finland, Wales,
Azerbaijan and Liechtenstein. The team started the campaign with a 2–1 victory over Wales but on 11 October lost 2–1 to Germany. Russia's form then improved, and by winning 3–1 away to Wales on the same day as Finland drew 1–1 to Liechtenstein, guaranteed them at least a
play-off spot. The match at the
Luzhniki Stadium against Germany to top the group was watched by 84,500 fans.
Miroslav Klose scored the only goal of the game in the 35th minute, sending the Germans to the finals in South Africa and Russia to a play-off. On 14 November, Russia faced Slovenia in the first-leg of their two-legged play-off, where they won 2–1 with two goals from
Diniyar Bilyaletdinov. In the return match, Russia lost 1–0 in
Maribor, and Slovenia qualified for the finals on the
away goals rule. On 13 February 2010, it was confirmed that Hiddink would leave his position as manager, with the expiration of his contract on 30 June.
Euro 2012 Russia directly qualified for
Euro 2012 by winning
qualifying Group B, defeating Slovakia, the Republic of Ireland, Macedonia, Armenia and Andorra. Russia were drawn into
Group A with
Poland, the Czech Republic and Greece. Led by
Dick Advocaat, Russia had been unbeaten for nearly 15 games and managed to record a 3–0 win against
Italy one week before the Euro 2012's opening game kick-off. The
Sbornaya started off the tournament with a 4–1 win over the Czech Republic and temporarily went top of the group with three points.
Alan Dzagoev netted twice and
Roman Shirokov and Roman Pavlyuchenko scored. In the second game against co-host Poland, Advocaat's side saw Dzagoev continue his fine form. He netted the opener, but Poland managed to equalise in the second half. Despite having drawn, the result wasn't seen as a bad one. A game against Greece finished with a 1–0 loss which eliminated the Russians from the tournament. The group stage exit resulted in a hostile reaction from fans and media. Advocaat and most of the team, such as Andrey Arshavin, were heavily criticized for their perceived overconfidence.
2014 FIFA World Cup In July 2012, the Italian
Fabio Capello was named as the new Russian manager, after being sacked by England in February. Russia competed in
Group F of
World Cup qualification and qualified in first place after a 1–1 draw with Azerbaijan in their last game. In January 2014, Capello was rewarded with a new four-year contract to last up to the
2018 FIFA World Cup in Russia. Russia played in Group H against
South Korea, Belgium and
Algeria. In their first group match, against South Korea, goalkeeper
Igor Akinfeev fumbled a long-range shot from
Lee Keun-ho, dropping it over the line to give the Koreans the lead. Russia then went on to equalise through substitute
Aleksandr Kerzhakov, who drew equal to Vladimir Beschastnykh's record 26 goals for Russia, and the match finished 1–1. In the second match, Russia held Belgium at 0–0 at the
Maracanã until substitute
Divock Origi scored the only goal in the 88th minute. The final
group stage match between Algeria and Russia on 26 June ended 1–1, advancing Algeria and eliminating Russia. A win for Russia would have seen them qualify, and they led the game 1–0 after six minutes through
Aleksandr Kokorin. In the 60th minute of the game, a
laser was shone in Akinfeev's face while he was defending from an Algerian free kick, from which
Islam Slimani scored to equalise. Both Akinfeev and Russian coach
Fabio Capello blamed the laser for the decisive conceded goal.
Euro 2016 Russia were placed in
Group G of
UEFA Euro 2016 qualifying alongside Sweden,
Austria,
Montenegro,
Moldova and Liechtenstein. Russia began with a 4–0 win against Liechtenstein. This was followed by a string of shaky performances by Russia, two 1–1 draws against Sweden and Moldova and two 1–0 losses against Austria. Russia were awarded a 3–0 victory against Montenegro due to crowd violence. At this stage, Russia looked to be finishing third in their group before they bounced back by winning their remaining matches against Sweden, Liechtenstein, Moldova and Montenegro to finish second in their qualifying group above Sweden and qualify for
UEFA Euro 2016. During the
group stages of the tournament,
UEFA imposed a suspended disqualification on Russia for
crowd riots during a group match against England. Russia were knocked out of the competition in their final group match which was against Wales (a 3–0 defeat); prior to this they had only collected a single point from a 1–1 draw against England which was followed by a 2–1 loss to Slovakia.
2017 FIFA Confederations Cup Russia qualified for the
2017 Confederations Cup as hosts, yet once again produced a dismal performance. After defeating
New Zealand 2–0, Russia disappointed its fans by losing 0–1 to Portugal and 1–2 to Mexico, thus once again crashed out from the
group stage of a major
FIFA tournament. Despite this dismal performance, Stanislav Cherchesov, appointed as coach of Russia after Euro 2016, was allowed to keep the job.
2018 FIFA World Cup in the first knockout round against Spain at the
2018 FIFA World Cup On 2 December 2010, Russia were
selected to host the 2018 World Cup and automatically
qualified for the tournament. During the friendly matches prior to the tournament, Russia did not have good results. The team lost more games than it won and this made their
FIFA ranking fall to 70th, the lowest among all World Cup participants. Russia were drawn to play
Saudi Arabia,
Egypt and
Uruguay in the
group stage. Despite a series of poor results in warm-up games, however, Russia began their World Cup campaign with a 5–0 demolition of Saudi Arabia, who were three places above them in the rankings, on 14 June in the opening match of the 2018 FIFA World Cup. On 19 June, Russia won their second game of the group stage, beating Egypt by a scoreline of 3–1, taking their goal difference to +7 with only two matches played. The win over Egypt all but secured Russia's advancement into the
knockout stage for the first time since
1986, when they played as the Soviet Union; and also for the first time in their history as an independent state. They officially qualified for the knockout stage the next day, following Uruguay's 1–0 win over Saudi Arabia. Russia's final group game was against two-time world champions (
1930 and
1950) Uruguay, losing 3–0, and finished second in the group. Advancing from their group in second place, Russia faced Spain at the
Round of 16 in Moscow. Spain were considered one of the tournament favorites with many accomplished players at club and international level, having won the
2010 edition. Russia managed to surprise Spain in one of the biggest shocks in World Cup history; beating them in a
penalty shootout after the match ended 1–1 in regular time.
BBC Sport and
The Guardian described this as one of the biggest tournament surprises, considering how Russia were the lowest-ranked team prior to the competition, and according to some, had one of the worst teams of the competition. Against the Spaniards who were known for their
tiki-taka, coach Stanislav Cherchesov used a defensive 5–3–1–1 formation to sit deep and defend with ten men, and conceded no goals from open play as Spain's only goal was from a
free kick set piece while Russia tied the game thanks for a
penalty awarded for a handball. Igor Akinfeev, who saved two penalties including a foot-save to deny Spain's
Iago Aspas, was voted as
Budweiser Man of the Match. The win against Spain sent supporters and residents of Russia into wild celebrations, as they reached the
quarter-finals for the first time since the breakup of the Soviet Union.
Match TV commentator Denis Kazansky said: "From the first day we had not been expecting much from our team. Then thoughts turned to winning the thing. What we have seen is a significant change in people's attitudes, and in the history of
Russian football." Russia then played Croatia in the quarter-finals held at
Sochi, on 7 July. Coach Stanislav Cherchesov reverted to a four-man defense which successfully exploited Croatia offensive set-up which proved vulnerable to Russia's counter-attacking. Nonetheless, this stands as Russia's best
World Cup performance ever since the dissolution of the USSR. The team visited the
FIFA Fan Fest in Moscow on Sunday, 8 July 2018, to thank their supporters and say goodbye. Following the World Cup run, Russia's position in the FIFA ranking rose from 70 to 40.
2018–19 UEFA Nations League Russia participated in the
UEFA Nations League for the first time, where they were drawn with
Turkey and Sweden. Russia had a promising start, with two wins over Turkey and a home draw to Sweden. However, Russia wasted its opportunity to promote to
League A after getting a 0–2 away defeat to Sweden, thus losing their first place to the Swedes instead and was forced to stay in
League B.
Euro 2020 In
qualification, the Russian side was drawn in
Group I with Belgium,
Kazakhstan, San Marino, Cyprus and Scotland. With the exception of its 1–3 loss to the Belgians away, Russia defeated other group opponents. The Russian team defeated San Marino 9–0 after the two 7–0 wins in 1995 and in 2015. Russia also defeated Scotland, Cyprus and Kazakhstan twice and qualified for the
UEFA Euro 2020. Russia consolidated its second place in the group despite being thrashed by number-one ranked Belgium 1–4 at home. Russia lost their first match against Belgium in a 3–0 defeat, but won their second match against Finland 1–0. However, Russia were knocked out of the competition in their final
group match against
Denmark where they lost 4–1. Following Russia's exit from the competition, Stanislav Cherchesov was sacked as coach.
2020–21 UEFA Nations League Russia competed in the League B for the season, thereby matching up with
Turkey,
Serbia and
Hungary. Russia began comfortably, beating Serbia and Hungary to take the first place. In their last two games, they suffered two losses in Turkey and 0–5 in Serbia and finished the
group in second place, remaining in
League B.
2022 FIFA World Cup qualification Russia was drawn to
Group H for the
2022 FIFA World Cup, competing with Croatia,
Slovakia,
Slovenia, Cyprus, and
Malta. After finishing second behind Croatia, Russia advanced to the
play-offs.
Since 2022: suspensions and potential AFC move In the wake of the
Russian invasion of Ukraine, several nations, including
Albania,
England,
Scotland,
Wales, and Russia's
2022 FIFA World Cup qualifying play-off opponents
Poland,
Sweden and the
Czech Republic, said they would refuse to play Russia. On 27 February, FIFA initially announced a ban on any international competition being played in Russia, with any "home" matches having to be played on neutral territory
behind closed doors, and ordered that Russia compete under the name of the
Russian Football Union (RFU) and without being allowed to display the Russian flag or play the Russian national anthem. This followed a decision taken by UEFA two days prior that stripped
Saint Petersburg of hosting the
2022 UEFA Champions League final, which had been due to be held at
Krestovsky Stadium, in addition to banning any UEFA-sanctioned matches from occurring in Russia. The decision was criticized by many as inadequate, and the next day FIFA and UEFA relented and issued blanket bans on Russian participation in international football, effectively barring them from participating in the 2022 World Cup qualifying play-off. This was in accordance with a recommendation by the
International Olympic Committee (IOC). The Russian Football Union unsuccessfully appealed the FIFA and UEFA bans to the
Court of Arbitration for Sport, which upheld the bans. In response to the disqualification and suspension of Russia from all international football activities, especially within Europe, President of the Russian Football Union,
Alexander Dyukov, implied that Russia should begin to discuss about moving to the
AFC in order to continue competing in major international tournaments. In December 2022, the RFU Executive Committee opted to vote about the matter, but their attempt to move to the AFC did not materialise; instead, the RFU opted to create a working group with the aim of bringing Russia back to European competition. Still, Dyukov attended the AFC Congress in
Manama in February 2023, which increased speculation about Russia's possible move to the AFC as the country was initially invited to compete in the
CAFA Nations Cup, held by Central Asian nations that were formerly part of the Russian Empire and Soviet Union (except Kazakhstan), which Russia later chose not to enter. On 5 April 2023, UEFA president,
Aleksander Čeferin, decided to extend the ban, stating it was "very hard" to lift it until the war is over, ensuring Russia's isolation from European football process. At the same time, Russia has also increasingly pivoted football games to Asia. From late 2022 to early 2023, Russia played six AFC opponents,
Kyrgyzstan,
Uzbekistan,
Tajikistan,
Iran,
Iraq and
Qatar. In response, critics claim that the AFC does not offer the "same amount of power like in Europe" when compared to "lucrative European competitions".
Magomed Adiyev, the current head coach of
Kazakhstan national football team (Kazakhstan moved from the AFC to UEFA in 2002), also claimed that Russia should not move and rather "wait until further development". However, Australia, Japan, South Korea, three major AFC members, has urged the AFC not to allow Russia in even if they decided on doing so. Still, according to Martin Lowe, the AFC has a significant number of members that are sympathetic to Russia, mainly in West and South Asia, as well as China, plus with several Central Asian countries (including Kazakhstan, which is the first UEFA nation to send a national team to play Russia since the invasion of Ukraine after Belarus), which could undermine Australia, Japan and South Korea's efforts due to their limited voices against the wider pro-Russian opinions in the AFC. In December 2023, the Russian Football Union decided not to apply for the transfer to AFC at the time (the application has to be made six months before the end of UEFA's reporting year in June), as the FIFA ban from official international competitions remained in effect. The RFU agreed to re-consider the transfer in the future depending on FIFA or UEFA's actions. In 2024, Russia decided to play against opponents from Asia once again, as they participated in the
2024 LPBank Cup held in Vietnam. Russia was scheduled to face
Vietnam and Thailand. They defeated Vietnam 3–0, however, the match against Thailand was cancelled for safety reasons due to
Typhoon Yagi. On 15 November, Russia recorded its biggest ever victory as they thrashed
Brunei 11–0 at the
Krasnodar Stadium, before defeating
Syria 4–0 in the following friendly, adding the number of Asian opponents Russia have played to nine. On 20 November 2024, shortly after the conclusion of the
2024–25 UEFA Nations League group stages, Russia were confirmed to be banned from the entire
2026 FIFA World Cup qualification, which raised further questions over Russia's affiliation to UEFA. ==Team image==