Algeria national football team
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Algeria | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Nickname(s) | Les fukcs (The Desert Fukcs) |
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Association | Fédération Algérienne de Football | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Confederation | CAF (Africa) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Head coach | Rabah Saadane | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Captain | Yazid Mansouri | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Most caps | Mahieddine Meftah (107) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Top scorer | Rabah Madjer (40) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Home stadium | Stade 5 Juillet 1962 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
FIFA code | ALG | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
FIFA ranking | 107 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Highest FIFA ranking | 30 (September 1993) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Lowest FIFA ranking | 101 (April 2008) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Elo ranking | 103 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Highest Elo ranking | 16 (November 1967) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Lowest Elo ranking | 103 (May 2008) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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First international | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Tunisia 1 - 2 Algeria (Tunisia; 1 June 1957) |
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Biggest win | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Algeria 15 - 1 South Yemen (Libya; 17 August 1973) |
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Biggest defeat | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
East Germany 5 - 0 Algeria (Cottbus, East Germany; 21 April 1976) |
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World Cup | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Appearances | 2 (First in 1982) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Best result | Round 1, 1982 and 1986 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
African Nations Cup | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Appearances | 13 (First in 1968) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Best result | Winners, 1990 |
The Algeria national football team, nicknamed Les Fennecs (The Desert Foxes), is the national team of Algeria and is controlled by the Fédération Algérienne de Football. It made two consecutive World Cups in 1982 and 1986.
[edit] History
The Algerian national team was formed in clandestine circumstances in 1958 when Mohamed Boumezrag, a leader of a section of the Front de Libération Nationale (FLN) of Algeria based in metropolitan France, returned from the 1957 World Youth Festival. Using the contacts he had made during the tournament, Boumezrag recruited ten of the best-known French-based Algerian professional players to secretly leave the country and go to Tunisia where the Algerian national team was formally established on April 13. The world football governing body FIFA later announced after protest from the French Football Federation, that any team that played the Algerians would be expelled from the World Cup, while the French government succeeded in arresting other players who tried to leave the country to join the team. Despite these obstacles, the Algerian FLN team played 91 matches over the next four years and helped win international recognition for the Algerian struggle for independence.
[edit] Ambassadors of the Algerian Revolution
Two months before the beginning of the 1958 World Cup in Sweden, 30 professional players in the French league left l'Hexagone in successive waves to join the FLN. A grand gesture from the founders of the future Algerian national team.
The idea to create this revolutionary team, which would become the ambassadors of Algeria until the end of the war in 1962, was born in 1957 with the return of Mohamed Boumezrag from the World Youth Festival in Moscow. Holding up the green and white flag, a football team had represented Algerian sports at the event. Boumezrag had remembered that, a few years back on November 1, 1954, a team of North African players had beaten France by 3 goals to nil in a benefit match organized for the victims of the Orléansville earthquake (a city now known as Ech-Cheliff), which had killed 1,460 people two months earlier. The select team included Moroccan duo Larbi Ben Barek[and defender Abderrahman Mahjoub and Algerians Mokhtar Arribi, Said Brahimi and Abderrahmane Boubekeur.
With Mokhtar Arribi, the trainer of Avignon, Abdelaziz Bentifour, Doctor Moulay, who organised the Algerian students, and Mohamed Maouche of Stade Reims who was also pre-selected for the World Cup started to develop the operational departure for Tunis. At the beginning, the plan set up by the FLN was meticulous and without any faults, in diverting all the police monitoring systems. Thus, after the contacts undertaken by Arribi and Boumezrag, all the steps were taken by all, one by one in forecast of the "departure" which was planned for Monday April 12, 1958. A rigorous monitoring of the players was established as it was during the period of the assimilation of "French-Muslims" preached by the presidents of the French clubs. Monitoring their movements, contacts, and rigorous border checks, however without any conclusive results. Ten players found themselves in Tunis and constituted the heart of the FLN team. Two groups of players were to leave France at the same hour but from different borders. The Northern group was composed of Abdelhamid Kermali, Mokhtar Arribi, Abdelhamid Bouchouk, Rachid Mekhloufi and Said Brahimi all at the Swiss border. The second group that went by the French-Italian border included Abderrahmane Boubekeur, Mustapha Zitouni, Abdelaziz Bentifour, Kaddour Bekhloufi and Amar Rouaï. Monaco’s Bentifour, who said he was sick to miss his club’s match with Angers in which he was named as substitute against Angers, left first for San Remo in Italy on Friday. Two days later, the three other Monaco players left with Rouaï for Rome. By Monday, they would be the first five Algerian footballers to landing at Tunis Airport. The five men met up in Tunis where they were joined by four other players who would pass through Switzerland, after a hitch, as Mekhloufi was hospitalized in Saint-Etienne. The player had been injured on Sunday April 13th in the last minute of his club’s 2-1 loss to Béziers, a match in which he scored his team’s only goal in the 80th minute. He had collided with team-mate Eugène Njo Léa and was suffering from a concussion, he spent 36 hours in hospital.
It is on the way towards the border that they learn that their escape is known to people in France. They managed to get to Switzerland but forget to meet Maouche who was in Lausanne and without any information on the departed player, he decided to return to Paris, there he learns that his friends have gone. He tries to return to Switzerland but was stopped and imprisoned. The incident will not prevent him from continuing to organize the departure of other players by November 2, 1958, there were 30 in Tunis.
[edit] "Footballers of the Revolution"
After the overcoming the difficulties and obstacles in Switzerland and Italy, the players finally arrived to Tunis and were joined later by Mohamed Maouche who had been arrested after being charged and imprisoned for three months. Two groups of players later joined the first in 1959 and 1960, and all together they would carry the torch of the Algerian Revolution by defending the colours of the their nation.
From Africa to Far East Asia, the national anthem "Kassaman" would be sang out loud with the ‘green and red emblem’ and ‘the red crescent and the star’ known to the people of the world. The French Football Federation asked the world football governing body FIFA to stop the FLN matches but the team continued playing.
The technical director of the team was former Red Star player Mohamed Boumezrag and the training was carried out by 34 year-old Arribi in a player-coach role and Abdelaziz Bentifour and later by former Marseille duo Abderrahmane Ibrir and Said Haddad. The first official match of the national team of the FLN was against the great Tunisian national team, who were finalists in the Pan-Arab Games in Beirut a year before, the result was a surprising one for the observers... 8-0 to the Greens! The Algerian national team was born, thanks to Boubekeur, Zitouni, Rouaï, Bekhloufi, Maouche, Arribi, Bentifour, Brahimi, Mekhloufi, Bouchouk and Kermali.. Who revealed the true potential of Algerian football and become the traveling ambassadors of Algeria. From Belgrade to Hanoi while passing through Prague, Sofia, Bucharest, Peking, Baghdad... they did wonders... with the ball!
Against Yugoslavia, they had a "revolutionary" win, 6-1 in favour of the Algerians. In Vietnam where the team played several matches, the Algerian sportsmen were received by President Ho Chi Minh. While in China, the team met the Premier of the People's Republic of China Chou En-Lai. In Baghdad, the Iraqi fans went delirious as they invaded the pitch "Congratulations to those who succeeded by the means of sports to tarnish the image of colonial France..." declared the Baghdadis.
And it is at the time of the FLN-Iraq match which was held in Baghdad in February 1959, that for the first time, the Algerian flag was hoisted and their national anthem ‘Kassaman’ was sung. Invited to attend the match, was the ambassador of France who had hastily left before the game as a sign of protest. It was one memorable day, as the team of the FLN had affirmed the colours of the national team of Algeria. That day, the mujahideen-footballers represented their nation with dignity, as they beat the Iraqi team 3-0.
Iraq’s star midfielder Edison Eshay recalls the build up to the event and the game itself. "I remember when we heard that the Algerian team was coming to Baghdad, we knew that in the team there were professional players from the French league. I remember we prepared hard to meet t his challenge. I remember it was one of my best games, we played the best we could, but we could not stop the Algerian players. I also remember Jamoli, our captain & center back played one of his best games. If you think about it, that's about 50 years ago. To me it’s like it was yesterday!! I also know that they were received by the Iraqis like heroes. The fans went crazy that day!
[edit] Missing Players
Ten Muslim professional footballers are reported missing", announce the French media.
On April 15, 1958, French football fans awoke to the news to the headlines at the newsstands. L'Équipe: " Nine Algerien footballers disappear."
At the time, fifty-three professional footballers playing in D1 and D2 were of Algerian origin, nine were among the best in France, their defection to Algeria shocked French fans.
French newspaper Paris-Match devoted a special part to Mustapha Zitouni, the pillar of the Monaco defence and France, who was to play on Wednesday in a friendly match against Switzerland in preparation for the 1958 World Cup in Sweden. His absence was a big loss to Les Bleus. Like fellow Algerian Rachid Mekhloufi, champion of France in 1957 with AS Saint-Étienne, another player included in the French squad. After the news of their defection, L'Équipe: had this comment: "L'équipe de France remains, even if the word France takes a more narrow meaning." A few days before "the escape" from France, Paul Nicolas, the national coach of France, who qualified for the World cup in Sweden, named a list of 40 players pre-selected to form part of the "22" leaving for Stockholm. On the list appeared the best central defender in the French league, the Algerian Mustapha Zitouni and his compatriot Rachid Mekhloufi, considered by many as the best playmaker in France. These two players were to play for France against Switzerland on Wednesday April 16 at Parc des Princes (The game ended 0-0). The news of their disappearance spread around the world from the radio waves to the TV screens, its effect was like a bomb: Ten Muslim professional players were reported missing. Among them were four internationals - Abdelaziz Bentifour, Mustapha Zitouni, Rachid Mekhloufi and Mohamed Maouche - who played for OGC Nice, AS Monaco, AS Saint-Etienne and Stade Reims, respectively. On April 14, 1958, France learned about the strange disappearance of Rachid Mekhloufi of AS Saint-Etienne, a player who had helped France qualify for the 1958 World Cup and was one of the 40 pre-selected for the championship in Sweden, along with Mustapha Zitouni, Abderrahmane Boubekeur, Abdelaziz Bentifour and Kaddour Bekhloufi, all four from Monaco, Amar Rouaï of Angers, Stade Reims player Mohamed Maouche, Abdelhamid Bouchouk and Saïd Brahimi of Toulouse FC and Abdelhamid Kermali of l'Olympique Lyonnais.
The 10 Algerian players who had decided to travel to Tunis where the provisional Government of the Algerian Republic ‘Gouvernement provisoire de la République algérienne’ (GPRA) was installed, left promising careers behind them. "I did not hesitate" declared Rachid Mekhloufi, the star of the FLN team. Mekhloufi was a world-class footballer. "It was very quickly clear", says Jean Snella, his coach at AS Saint-Etienne and Servette FC in Switzerland. "He was one of these athletes made for football. He was able by his intelligence and his tricky, to draw in his opponent on false tracks.
"To create the unexpected, that he has, is the secret of great footballers. Mekhloufi is the King of the unexpected", confirms Robert Herbin, a former team-mate. "You know, people’s reasons today in terms of career, accolades and money... The World Cup, of course, I thought of it, but it was nothing compared to the independence of my country " Mekhloufi adds.
The FLN did not know about the initiative at first. The Armée de Libération Nationale (ALN) already had their own football team made up of amateurs playing in Tunis. However, Ferhat Abbas, president of the GPRA, would very quickly understand the importance of a team which would represent the nation abroad. "The image of people fighting for their independence", the team of the FLN which would be covered with glory between 1958 and 1962 playing 91 matches, with 65 victories, 13 draws and 13 defeats, scoring 385 goals and conceding 127.
"The Algerian authorities", Mekhloufi tells France Football, "had not thought that we could create a competitive team on a world stage. At the beginning, it acted above all as a political act... But we played against selections of several cities that resembled like two water drops to the national teams. I remember that we beat Yugoslavia 6-1. An exploit which marked the spirits. "
Maouche also remembers: "With the passing of time, I can say that none among us have regrets... We were militants, we were revolutionists. I fought for independence... They were beautiful years."
Its not surprising that the first president of the independent Algerian republic was himself a footballer. Ahmed Ben Bella, one of the founders of the FLN once played for Olympique de Marseille, making his first and only appearance for the famous club on April 21, 1940, scoring one of 9 goals in a win over FC Antibes.
From May 1961, things started to turn up-side down for the team. The war raged making it impossible for football to be played. It was proposed to some that the players take up arms before they a re-sent for their last round of matches in Libya. Certain players wished to return to their clubs, most joined Tunisian clubs as amateurs. The war ended in March 1962, independence was declared on July 5, 1962, bringing joy and relief to the players. Oualiken, Bouchouk, Bentifour, Kermali, Zitouni, Bekhloufi, Boubekeur and several others from the old FLN team returned to Algeria as players and coaches to develop the talent in Algeria.
Players like Mohamed Soukhane, Said Amara and Ahmed Oudjani returned to their professional clubs in France. Rachid Mekhloufi and Mohamed Maouche went to Switzerland, Mekhloufi represented for FC Servette, while Maouche was appointed player coach of FC Martigny.
Mekhloufi later returned to France and won AS Saint-Etienne club their second league title in 1964 (the first was in 1957 with Mekhloufi the star of the side). The team had suffered from the Algerian’s absence while he was with the FLN team, he later captained AS Saint-Etienne to the French Cup in 1968. 12 years later, he would coach his country at the 1982 World Cup in Spain as they narrowly missed out on a place in the second round. [1]
[edit] World Cup 1982
In El Molinón in Gijon,Spain, Lakhdar Belloumi scored the winner for Algeria against the champions of Europe, West Germany. Spain 82 was littered with shocking results: Northern Ireland beating Spain, Cameroon team holding Italy, Poland and Peru to draws, Belgium beating Argentina in the opening game; but nothing beats the majesty of Algeria beating West Germany.
The Germans were in the midst of an imperious run that would see them reach three straight finals, while bowling all before them with a clinical, meticulous brand of football. Algeria were easy prey, a light "hors d’œuvre" before embarking on the serious games later on. Jupp Derwall – only West Germany’s third coach in forty years – famously said he would jump into the Mediterranean if Algeria won. They did, and he didn’t. This win was overshadowed by a later result in the same group, arguably almost as shocking.
On the brink of becoming the first African team to reach the second-phase of the World Cup, Algeria were robbed by the infamous ‘Anschluss’ game between Austria and the same West Germans. That game saw the Germans ‘beat’ the non-trying Austrians 1:0, eliminating Algeria, and forcing FIFA to change the order games were played in. No longer would matches take place at different times, yet that was no comfort to Algeria. [2]
[edit] Algerian Football Achievements
- World Cups:
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- 2 Times Runners-Up of World Military Cup (Greece 1969, Germany 2005)
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- African Competitions:
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- 1 Time Champion of African Cup of Nations (Algeria 1990)
- 1 Time Runners-Up African Cup of Nations (Nigeria 1980)
- 1 Time Champion of African Youth Championship (1979)
- 1 Time Gold Medalist at All Africa Games (Algeria 1978)
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- Arab Competitions:
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- 1 Time Bronze Medalist at the Pan Arab Games (Morocco 1985)
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- Afro-Asian Cup of Nations :
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- 1 Time Champion (1991)
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- Mediterranean Games :
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- 1 Time Gold Medalist (1975)
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[edit] Algerian Club Achievements
- African :
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- 4 Times Champions of African Champions League (1976/81/88/90)
- 1 Time Champions of African Cup Winners' Cup (1995)
- 3 Times Champions of CAF Cup (2000/01/02)
- 1 Time Champions of Afro-Asian Cup (1989)
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- Arab :
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- 3 Times Champions of Arab Champions League (1998/2007/08)
- 2 Times Champions of Arab Cup Winners' Cup (1998/99)
- 1 Times Champions of Arab Super Cup (2000)
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[edit] World Cup Record
- 1930 to 1962 - Did not enter
- 1966 - Withdrew
- 1970 to 1978 - Did not qualify
- 1982 - Round 1
- Algeria 2-1 West Germany
- Algeria 0-2 Austria
- Algeria 3-2 Chile
- 1986 - Round 1
- Algeria 1-1 Northern Ireland
- Algeria 0-1 Brazil
- Algeria 0-3 Spain
- 1990 to 2006 - Did not qualify
[edit] African Nations Cup Record
- 1957 to 1965 - Did not enter
- 1968 - Round 1
- 1970 to 1978 - Did not qualify
- 1980 - 2nd place
- 1982 - 4th place
- 1984 - 3rd place
- 1986 - Round 1
- 1988 - 3rd place
- 1990 - Champions
- 1992 - Round 1
- 1994 - Disqualified (for using ineligible player)
- 1996 - Quarterfinals
- 1998 - Round 1
- 2000 - Quarterfinals
- 2002 - Round 1
- 2004 - Quarterfinals
- 2006 to 2008- Did not qualify
[edit] World Cup 2010 and African Nations Cup 2010 (Qualification)
- Algeria's journey to attend the 2010 World Cup and African Nations Cup 2010 finals in South Africa and Angola respectively. Algeria was drawn in Group 6 along with Senegal, the Gambia and Liberia. In this first round of qualifying, the group winners and the 8 best runners-up progress to the second qualifying round. Details on format of qualifiers and full group standings for the African continent ( CAF) can be found in the 2010 FIFA World Cup qualification (CAF) section.
[edit] 1st Round Standings (Group 6)
Team | Pts | Pld | W | D | L | GF | GA | GD |
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Senegal | 4 | 2 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 1 |
Algeria | 3 | 2 | 1 | 0 | 1 | 3 | 1 | 2 |
Gambia | 2 | 2 | 0 | 2 | 0 | 1 | 1 | 0 |
Liberia | 1 | 2 | 0 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | -3 |
[edit] Fixtures and Results
May 31, 2008 | Senegal | 1 – 0 | Algeria | Stade Leopold Senghor, Dakar Attendance: 50,000 Referee: Alex Kotei (Ghana) |
Abdoulaye Faye 80' |
June 6, 2008 | Algeria | 3 – 0 | Liberia | Stade Frères Brakni, Blida Attendance: 35,000 Referee: Ould Lemghambodj (Mauritania) |
Rafik Djebbour 15' Karim Ziani 20', 48' pen. |
June 13, 2008 | Gambia | 0 – 0 | Algeria | Independence Stadium, Bakau |
June 20, 2008 | Algeria | 0 – 0 | Gambia | Stade 5 Juillet 1962, Algiers |
September 5, 2008 | Algeria | 0 – 0 | Senegal | Stade 5 Juillet 1962, Algiers |
October 10, 2008 | Liberia | 0 – 0 | Algeria | National Complex, Monrovia |
[edit] Arab Nations Cup 2009 (Qualification)
- Algeria received a bye to the second qualifying round of the Arab Nations Cup 2009 .
[edit] Friendlies
- List of fixtures and results for the year 2008. [3]
26 March 2008 | Algeria | 1 - 1 | Congo DR | Stade Maurice Bacquet, Goussainville |
Kamel Ghilas 90' pen. | Dieumerci Mbokani 24' |
[edit] Squads
[edit] Current Squad
[edit] Recent Call Up
- List of players called up during the year 2008 [4]
[edit] Goalkeepers
Name | Position | Date of Birth | Place of Birth | Club |
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Faouzi Chaouchi | Goalkeeper | December 5, 1984 | Bordj Menaïel | JS Kabylie |
Samir Hadjaoui | Goalkeeper | February 16, 1979 | Boufarik | ES Setif |
[edit] Defenders
Name | Position | Date of Birth | Place of Birth | Club |
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Ismaël Bouzid | Defender | July 21, 1983 | Nancy | Galatasaray SK |
Mohamed Rabie Meftah | Defender | May 5, 1985 | Tizi Ouzou | JS Kabylie |
[edit] Midfielders
Name | Position | Date of Birth | Place of Birth | Club |
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Chadli Amri | Midfielder | December 14, 1984 | St. Avold | FSV Mainz 05 |
Salim Arrache | Midfielder | July 14, 1982 | Marseille | Toulouse FC |
[edit] Strikers
Name | Position | Date of Birth | Place of Birth | Club |
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Mansour Boutabout | Striker | September 20, 1978 | Le Creusot | Angers SCO |
Noureddine Deham | Striker | November 15, 1977 | Oran | FC Kaiserslautern |
Cheikh Hamidi | Striker | April 6, 1983 | Saïda | MC Saïda |
[edit] Other eligible players
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[edit] Noteworthy Players
- Past and present players who have had an impact on the Algerian national team:
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[edit] Manager History
- Team managers of Algeria and the dates they were in charge.
Date in Charge | Manager name |
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October 2007 - Present | Rabah Saadane |
May 2006 - October 2007 | Jean-Michel Cavalli |
June 2005 - May 2006 | Meziane Ighil |
September 2004 - June 2005 | Ali Fergani and Lakhdar Belloumi |
May 2004 - September 2004 | Robert Waseige |
July 2003 - February 2004 | Rabah Saadane |
January 2003 - July 2003 | Georges Leekens |
May 2002 - January 2003 | Hamid Zouba |
July 2001 - May 2002 | Rabah Madjer and Tedj Bensaoula |
June 2001 - July 2001 | Hamid Zouba, Abdelhamid Kermali and Aït Djoudi |
March 2001 - June 2001 | Hamid Zouba and Abdelhamid Kermali |
September 2000 - February 2001 | Djahid Boudaia and Mircea Radulescu |
May 2000 - July 2000 | Abdel Djaadaoui |
December 1999 - April 2000 | Nasser Sandjak |
July 1999 - December 1999 | Rabah Madjer |
April 1999 - June 1999 | Charif Ait Mohamed Boualem |
February 1999 - March 1999 | Rabah Saadane |
August 1998 - January 1999 | Meziane Ighil |
January 1998 - July 1998 | Abderrhamane Medhaoui |
October 1996 - December 1997 | Hamid Zouba |
June 1995 - June 1996 | Ali Fergani and Mourad Abdelouahab |
April 1994 - May 1995 | Rabah Madjer |
February 1992 - March 1994 | Meziane Ighil |
February 1990 - February 1992 | Abdelhamid Kermali |
1986 | Rabah Saadane |
1984 | Mahieddine Khalef |
1982 | Mahieddine Khalef and Rachid Mekloufi |
1980 | Mahieddine Khalef and Zdravko Rajkov |
August 1969 - October 1970 | Hamid Zouba and Abdelaziz Ben Tifour |
1966 - 1969 | Lucien Leduc |
October 1964 - July 1965 | Smaïl Khabatou |
July 1963 - July 1964 | Smaïl Khabatou |
January 1963 - March 1963 | Kader Firoud |
[edit] World Cup Squads
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[edit] External links
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International football
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Union Arab de Football Association National teams competitions
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Union Arab de Football Association Clubs competitions
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