The first match of the team was played on 17 March 1972 against
Qatar at
Prince Faisal bin Fahd Stadium and won with the only goal scored by Ahmed Chowbi. Then, the team faced three other Arabian countries, losing 4–0 and 7–0 to
Saudi Arabia and
Kuwait respectively and beating
Bahrain 3 to nothing. After participating in four
Gulf Cup tournaments since 1972, United Arab Emirates (UAE) hosted the
1982 edition. It again finished third as did in the two previous tournaments. In
1980, United Arab Emirates first-time qualified for the
AFC Asian Cup which was held in
Kuwait and were drawn with eventual winners, Kuwait, runner-up
South Korea,
Malaysia and
Qatar in Group B. It drew 1–1 with Kuwait and lost the three other matches and finished in fifth place in the group and ninth (out of ten teams) overall. It also qualified for the next two tournaments,
1984 in
Singapore and
1988 in
Qatar and was again eliminated in the group stages in both. Its first victory of the tournament occurred against
India on 7 December 1984, under manager
Heshmat Mohajerani. In 1984, Mohajerani resigned and was replaced with
Carlos Alberto Parreira. Parreira led the team at the 1988 Asian Cup and left his position after the tournament. He was succeeded by
Mário Zagallo. Zagallo led the team to the qualification for the
1990 FIFA World Cup in
Italy. However, Zagallo resigned before the tournament and Parreira returned. The team finished fourth at the 1990 World Cup's final tournament with no points, scoring two goals and conceding 11 goals. The journey was put into a 2016 documentary titled
Lights of Rome. After the tournament, Parreira was sacked. At the
1992 and
1996 AFC Asian Cups, United Arab Emirates finished fourth and runners-up respectively for the first times. United Arab Emirates appeared in the
1997 FIFA Confederations Cup after being awarded a spot because Saudi Arabia was hosting the games. United Arab Emirates missed the
qualification for the
2000 AFC Asian Cup in
Lebanon and finished in last place at the
2002 Arabian Gulf Cup in
Saudi Arabia. It was eliminated in the next three Asian Cup tournaments at the group stage. In
2004 and
2007 editions, UAE was all eliminated by the hand to debutants
Jordan and
Vietnam. In
2011, it finished the tournament goalless. At this time, United Arab Emirates appointed world class coaches like
Carlos Queiroz,
Roy Hodgson and
Dick Advocaat. In 2006, UAE appointed
Bruno Metsu as the new manager. He led the Emirates to carry the
2007 Arabian Gulf Cup title. After hiring foreign coaches, in 2012, United Arab Emirates appointed the
Olympic team coach
Mahdi Ali as the manager of the senior team. Ali began creating a squad inviting players that he had worked with at the youth level. He led the Emirates to their second
Arabian Gulf Cup title in
2013. At the
2015 AFC Asian Cup, United Arab Emirates defeated
Qatar 4–1 and
Bahrain 2–1 but lost to
Iran by a goal. As group runners-up, it faced the defending champions
Japan in the quarter-final and earned a victory on penalties to advance to the last four. In the semi-finals, United Arab Emirates lost 2–0 to the host
Australia. In the third-place play-off, United Arab Emirates defeated
Iraq 3–2. United Arab Emirates qualified through the
2018 FIFA World Cup qualification where it finished fourth in
Group B thus failing to qualify for the
2018 FIFA World Cup.
Ahmed Khalil was a top scorer in the qualification. Around this time Mahdi Ali resigned from his position. United Arab Emirates then hosted the
2019 AFC Asian Cup, this marked the second time they hosted an
AFC Asian Cup. The team had Italian
Alberto Zaccheroni as their coach. In the AFC Asian Cup tournament, UAE proceeded to the quarter-finals where it scored its first-ever goal against
Australia to gain its first-ever win against this opponent. The semi-finals was between the host and Qatar. Some audiences threw footwear in the pitch after Qatar scored its second goal. UAE lost 0–4 marking its first defeat to Qatar since 2001. United Arab Emirates joined the
second round of 2022 FIFA World Cup qualifiers and was placed with all-out
Southeast Asian opponents. The team had already appointed the
Dutch guider
Bert van Marwijk. Bert was sacked after his start undergoing two away losses to Thailand and Vietnam in the qualifiers along his group stage exit in the
24th Arabian Gulf Cup. After this, the Emirates decided to naturalize Argentine
Sebastián Tagliabúe, Brazilian
Caio Canedo Corrêa and
Fábio Virginio de Lima, the three South American players, having never done so since the foundation of the national team. The team then experienced a period of coaching instabilities, with three different coaches, before van Marwijk resumed his duty due to crisis in option. With the
COVID-19 pandemic however, the AFC decided the remaining games of the second round would be played in one country, and with the UAE chosen to host Group G, they were able to utilize the home-field advantage as the host nation, ultimately u-turned the earlier misery into four consecutive wins to break through into the
third round, where they faced its neighbours and the powerhouses
Iran and
South Korea. In the third round, the UAE failed to produce a promising performance after winning just one out of six first games, a 1–0 away win over Lebanon, drew three and lost two, adding with the UAE's below average performance in the
2021 FIFA Arab Cup despite reaching the quarter-finals, that was enough to sack the Dutch manager van Marwijk yet again. After inconsistency in performance, the UAE appointed Argentine manager
Rodolfo Arruabarrena as coach, and the team's result improved, winning two out of four games, notably an impressive 1–0 home win over already-qualified South Korea, to reach the
fourth round, increased hope for the country to qualify for the first-ever World Cup since 1990, where they would face the old foe Australia, whom the UAE defeated in the latest meeting. However, the UAE was unable to utilise their geographical advantage in the playoff in neighbouring Qatar, losing 1–2 to Australia by a thunderous strike at 84' by
Ajdin Hrustic and by mistake of
Ali Salmeen to deny the UAE's its potential second appearance; they later stunned South America's rising power
Peru to qualify for the edition. ==Rivalries==