The first Somali football teams were established in the 1940s. The competitions were basic in structure and were associated with the anti-colonial movement. The
Somali Youth League (SYL), the nation's first political party, had put together a team of local youth to play against the Italian expatriate teams. The soccer team the FYL had assembled, which would later change its name to Bondhere, won the first several competitions. In 1951, the
Somali Football Federation (SFF) was founded. The first Somali commissioner for sport was later established in 1958. Although the Somali national football team took part in preliminary matches, it has never qualified for the
World Cup. For many years after the outbreak of the
civil war in the early 1990s, FIFA-sanctioned games could not be played within the country. Qualifying matches for the
Africa Cup of Nations and the World Cup were instead contested away from home. However, following the pacification of the capital
Mogadishu in 2011, the SFF began preparations for the first major sporting event to be held in years at the
Mogadishu Stadium, in December 2012. Prior to 2019, the Somali FA decided they would admit to all their young and upcoming youth talents and put out local trials to fortify both Olympic and national football teams. In addition, many from the Somali diaspora in the past have produced quality football players such as
Islam Feruz and
Mukhtar Ali. On 5 September 2019, Somalia won their first qualifying match since 1984 (against
Kenya - AFCON Qualifying) and their first-ever FIFA World Cup qualifying match, beating
Zimbabwe by 1–0. They nearly advanced to the second round but lost 3–1 in Zimbabwe after two late goals for the warriors, consigning the Ocean Stars to an early exit. ==Team image==