Association football team
Laos Association Lao Football Federation Confederation AFC (Asia)Sub-confederation AFF (Southeast Asia)Head coach Ha Hyeok-jun[ 1] Captain Bounphachan Bounkong Most caps Soukaphone Vongchiengkham (57)Top scorer Visay Phaphouvanin (18)[ 2] Home stadium New Laos National Stadium FIFA code LAO
Current 186 (19 December 2024)[ 3] Highest 134 (September 1998) Lowest 210 (August 2012) South Vietnam 7–0 Laos (Rangoon , Burma ; 12 December 1961)[ 4] Laos 6–1 Timor-Leste (Vientiane , Laos ; 26 October 2010) United Arab Republic 15–0 Laos (Jakarta , Indonesia ; 15 November 1963)Appearances 14 (first in 1996 ) Best result Group stage (1996 , 1998 , 2000 , 2002 , 2004 , 2007 , 2008 , 2010 , 2012 , 2014 , 2018 , 2020 , 2022 , 2024 ) Appearances 1 (first in 1998 ) Best result Twenty-first place (1998 ) Appearances 1 (first in 2014 ) Best result Group stage (2014 ) Appearances 1 (first in 2016 ) Best result Third place (2016 )
The Laos national association football team represents Laos in association football and is governed by the Lao Football Federation .
History
As of 2020, Laos has not qualified for the FIFA World Cup , AFC Asian Cup or Asian Games .[ 6] [ 7] Since making its appearance at the 1995 Southeast Asian Games , it has competed in the inaugural 1996 AFF Championship , drawing against Vietnam 1–1 and winning against Cambodia 1–0. In 1995, it beat Brunei and Philippines and 2 years later in the 1997 Southeast Asian Games held in Jakarta, it beat Malaysia 1–0 and Philippines 4–1. In the qualifying preliminary rounds for the 2004 Asian Cup , it beat Bangladesh 2–1. In the 2006 FIFA World Cup qualification , it qualified for the second round as a “lucky loser” after Guam and Nepal withdrew from the tournament, and proceeded to lose all its games (against Qatar , Iran and Jordan ).[ 8] It advanced to the second round of the 2014 FIFA World Cup qualification for the 2014 FIFA World Cup , after defeating Cambodia 8–6 on aggregate. In the second round, it lost to China 13–3 on aggregate. Its first appearance in a continental tournament was in 2014 when it played at the 2014 AFC Challenge Cup .[ 9] [ 10]
Fixtures
Win
Draw
Loss
Fixture
2024
2025
2026
Coaching staff
Position
Name
Team manager
Khonesamai Chanthavongsay
Head coach
Ha Hyeok-jun
Assistant coach
Lee Yong-kyo
Lee Sang-hyuk
Kanlaya Sysomvang
Goalkeeper coach
Kim Beom-soo
Team doctor
Kittisay Oudomphon
Khamsy Khounnivath
Interpreter
Issac Kim
Equipment manager
Chanthaboun Minsy
Souksomphone Vongkhamphoui
Media manager
Thipphakone Phakasy
Coaching history
As of 20 September 2023
Name
Period
Matches
Wins
Draws
Losses
Win %
Songphu Phongsa
January 1996 – December 1999
Outhensackda Vatthana
July 1999 – June 2002
Vangchay Muangmany
February 2000 – May 2000
Boris Zhuravlyov
January 2001 – June 2001
1
0
0
1
0.00
Soutsakhone Oudomphet
March 2002 – April 2003
Dominique Fernandez
March 2003 – September 2003
Saythong Syphasay
October 2003 – October 2004
7
0
1
6
0.00
Bounlap Khenkitisack
October 2004 – September 2006
5
1
0
4
20.00
Saythong Syphasay (2)
October 2006 – January 2008
7
3
1
3
42.86
Valeriy Vdovin
February 2008 – November 2008
4
3
0
1
75.00
Saysana Savatdy
December 2008 – July 2009
3
0
0
3
0.00
Alfred Riedl
July 2009 – July 2010
5
1
2
2
20.00
David Booth
July 2010 – December 2010
6
1
3
2
16.67
Bounlap Khenkitisack (2)
January 2011 – February 2011
2
0
1
1
0.00
Hans-Peter Schaller
February 2011 – December 2011
4
1
0
3
25.00
Kokichi Kimura
May 2012 – January 2014
18
4
5
9
22.22
Norio Tsukitate
January 2014 – July 2014
5
0
1
4
0.00
David Booth
August 2014 – May 2015
10
4
1
5
40.00
Steve Darby
June 2015 – May 2016
6
0
1
5
0.00
Valakone Phomphakdy (interim)
May 2016 – December 2016
2
0
1
1
0.00
Vernsavanh Sivisay (interim)
12–21 October 2016
2
1
0
1
50.00
Mike Wong
June 2017 – August 2018
3
1
0
2
33.33
V. Sundramoorthy
15 October 2018 – 2019
8
1
3
4
12.50
V. Selvaraj
December 2021
4
0
0
4
0.00
Michael Weiß
7 January 2022 – 5 June 2023
13
3
1
9
23.07
Kanlaya Sysomvang (interim)
20 September 2023 – 13 August 2024
2
0
1
1
0
Ha Hyeok-jun
14 August 2024 –
6
0
3
3
0
Players
Current squad
The following 26 players were called up for the 2024 ASEAN Championship .[ 11]
Caps and goals as of 18 December 2024, after the match against Myanmar .
Recent call-ups
The following players have been called up to the squad within 12 months preceding the above draft.
Individual records
As of 9 December 2024 [ 12]
Most appearances
Soukaphone Vongchiengkham is Laos' most capped player with 57 appearances.
Top goalscorers
Competitive record
FIFA World Cup
AFC Asian Cup
Asian Games
AFC Challenge Cup
AFC Solidarity Cup
ASEAN Championship
ASEAN Championship record
Qualification record
Year
Round
1996
Group stage
7th
4
1
1
2
5
10
No qualification
1998
7th
3
0
1
2
2
8
2
1
0
1
2
4
2000
9th
4
0
0
4
0
16
No qualification
2002
8th
3
0
1
2
3
8
2004
8th
4
1
0
3
4
16
2007
8th
3
0
0
3
1
23
4
3
1
0
11
6
2008
8th
3
0
0
3
0
13
4
3
0
1
9
7
2010
8th
3
0
1
2
3
13
3
1
2
0
8
3
2012
7th
3
0
1
2
6
10
4
2
1
1
5
4
2014
8th
3
0
0
3
2
12
4
3
0
1
10
6
2016
Did not qualify
3
2
0
1
7
6
2018
Group stage
9th
4
0
0
4
3
12
Qualified automatically
2020
9th
4
0
0
4
1
14
2022
9th
4
0
1
3
2
15
2024
9th
4
0
2
2
7
11
Total
49
2
8
39
39
181
24
15
4
5
52
36
Head-to-head record
Last match updated was against Indonesia on 12 December 2024 [ 15]
Key
More wins
Equal wins/losses ratio
More losses
References
External links
General Venues Statistics Players Tournaments Other teams
Links to related articles
West Asia (WAFF ) Central Asia (CAFA ) South Asia (SAFF ) East Asia (EAFF ) Southeast Asia (AFF ) Defunct Former