List of world association football records
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This article features a list of men's professional FIFA records in association football, in any football league, cup or other official competition around the world, unless otherwise stated. This statistics does not include friendly, promotional or regional matches and tournaments. These records are divided based on whether they relate to players, coaches or clubs.
This article contains the most prominent records in the world, without taking into account the classification of leagues or championships.
Players
Players in bold are still active.
Goals and goalscoring records
Record | Player | Nationality | Year(s) | Details | Ref |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Player with most goals of all time | Cristiano Ronaldo | Portugal | 2002–present | Cristiano scored 862 goals in his career. | [1] |
Player with most club goals | Josef Bican | Austria Czechoslovakia |
1931–1957 | Bican scored 781 goals in 493 matches with ten different clubs during his 27-year long career. | [2] |
Player with most international goals | Cristiano Ronaldo | Portugal | 2003–present | 127 goals International goals in 203 games. | |
Player with the most goals scored in a calendar year | Lionel Messi | Argentina | 2012 | Messi scored 91 goals in 69 matches in 2012 for Barcelona and Argentina | [3][4] |
Player with most club-goals scored in a football season | Lionel Messi | Argentina | 2011–12 | Messi scored 73 goals with Barcelona during the 2011-12 season. | [5][6][7][8] |
Player with most international goals in a calendar year | Sándor Kocsis | Hungary | 1954 | Kocsis scored 23 goals in 14 games in 1954 with the Hungary national football team. | |
Player with most goals scored for a single club | Lionel Messi | Argentina | 2004–2021 | Messi scored 672 goals for Barcelona during 17 seasons. | |
Player with most goals scored in an international match | Archie Thompson | Australia | 2001 | On 11 April 2001, Thompson scored 13 goals, in the Australia 31–0 American Samoa match during the 2002 FIFA World Cup qualification. | [9] |
Player with most goals scored in a league match | Yanick Manzizila | Democratic Republic of the Congo | 2014 | Scored 21 goals in the match Kongo United 30–0 Balrog Botkyrka. | [10][11][12] |
Player with most goals scored in a domestic cup match | Stefan Dembicki | France | 1942 | In the preliminary round of the 1942–43 French Cup, Dembicki scored 16 goals in the RC Lens - Auby Asturies match (32–0). | [13] |
Player with most penalty kick goals | Cristiano Ronaldo | Portugal | 2002–present | Cristiano scored 158 penalties goals. | [14] |
Player with most free kick goals | Juninho | Brazil | 1993–2013 | Juninho scored 77 free kicks goals. | [15] |
Highest goal-scoring goalkeeper of all time | Rogério Ceni | Brazil | 1990–2015 | Ceni scored 129 goals in 1,236 games. | [16] |
Youngest international goalscorer | Aung Kyaw Tun | Myanmar | 2000 | On 6 November 2000, Aung Kyaw Tun scored for Myanmar in the 2000 AFF Championship match against Thailand (3–1 defeat) at 14 years and 93 days. | [17] |
Oldest international goalscorer | Billy Meredith | Wales | 1919 | On 11 October 1919, Billy Meredith scored for Wales in the 1919–20 British Home Championship match against England (6–1 win) at 45 years and 73 days.[note 1] | [18] |
Longest distance goal scored | Tom King | Wales | 2021 | On 21 January 2021, goalkeeper King scored from own six-yard box, a distance of 96.01 meters (105 yds) for Newport County in the 1–1 draw with Cheltenham Town, in League Two. | [19] |
Appearances records
Record | Player | Nationality | Year(s) | Details | Ref |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Player with most matches of all time | Peter Shilton | England | 1966–1997 | 1,390 games over 31 seasons | |
Player with most international caps | Soh Chin Ann (men) | Malaysia | 1969–1984 | 219 caps. | [20] |
Kristine Lilly (women) | United States | 1987–2010 | 354 caps. | [21] | |
Player with most matches for one club | Rogério Ceni | Brazil | 1992–2015 | 1,197 games with São Paulo | [22][23] |
Player with most matches as captain for one club | Rogério Ceni | Brazil | 2001–2015 | 978 games: captained São Paulo from 2001 until 2015 | [22][23] |
Player with most international club competition appearances in history | Iker Casillas | Spain | 1999–2019 | 192 appearances: 188 in UEFA club competitions, 2 in Intercontinental Cup, 2 in FIFA Club World Cup. | [24] |
Youngest footballer to ever play at senior level | Eric Godpower Marshall | Liberia | 2021 | On 7 April 2021, Marshall debuted for Gar'ou in their win over Haifa 4–1 in Liberia's fourth division, at 10 years and 11 months. | [25][26][27] [28] |
Youngest footballer to play in first division | Mauricio Baldivieso | Bolivia | 2009 | On 19 July 2009, Baldivieso aged 12, debuted as a substitute in the Bolivian first division for Aurora in their away match against La Paz. Aurora lost 1–0. | [29] |
Oldest professional football player | Kazuyoshi Miura | Japan | 1986–present | Striker Miura continues playing football for Oliveirense having surpassed the age of 56. | [30] |
Other records
Record | Player | Nationality | Year(s) | Details | Ref |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Most decorated player | Lionel Messi | Argentina | 2004–present | 44 titles won | [31] |
Player with most matches wins | Cristiano Ronaldo | Portugal | 2002–present | 783 matches wins in his career | [32] |
Goalkeeper with most clean sheets | Gianluigi Buffon | Italy | 1995–2023 | 501 matches without a goal | [citation needed] |
Goalkeeper with most consecutive minutes without conceding a goal | Mazaropi | Brazil | 1977–1978 | 1,816 minutes without a goal | [33] |
Goalkeeper who saved most penalties | Lev Yashin | Soviet Union | 1949–1971 | Yashin saved a world-record 150-plus penalties for Dynamo Moscow and Soviet Union. | [34] |
Player with most sent-off | Gerardo Bedoya | Colombia | 1995–2015 | 46 red cards in total during his career | [35] |
Player with most own goals in a match[note 2] | Meikayla Moore (women) | New Zealand | 2022 | Moore scored three own goals against USA | [36] |
Coaches
Coaches in bold are still active.
Record | Manager | Nationality | Details | Ref |
---|---|---|---|---|
Manager with most international games in charge | Bora Milutinovic | Serbia | 287 matches for national teams from 1983 until 2009: Mexico (104 games), USA (96), China (46), Nigeria (11), Honduras (10), Costa Rica (9), Jamaica (7) and Iraq (4). | [37] |
Longest-serving manager in history | Amadeu Teixeira | Brazil | Teixeira was in charge of América de Manaus for 53 years (1955–2008), and he was also one of the founders of the club in 1939. | [38] |
Most decorated manager | Alex Ferguson | Scotland | He won 49 titles, including 13 Premier League, 2 UEFA Champions League, 1 Intercontinental Cup and 1 FIFA Club World Cup. | [39] |
Manager who won the most first division league titles | Bill Struth | Scotland | 18 league titles: he won the Scottish first division with Rangers in 1921, 1923, 1924, 1925, 1927, 1928, 1929, 1930, 1931, 1933, 1934, 1935, 1937, 1939, 1947, 1949, 1950, and 1953. | |
Manager with most major international titles (national team) | Guillermo Stábile | Argentina | 9 titles: Stábile won with Argentina the Copa America (1941, 1945, 1946, 1947, 1955, 1957), the Pan American Games (1951, 1955) and the Panamerican Championship (1960). | |
Manager who won most finals | Bill Struth | Scotland | 64 winning finals: Struth won 10 Scottish FA Cups, 2 Scottish League Cups, 23 Glasgow Cups, 20 Glasgow Merchants Charity Cups , 4 Southern League Cups, 1 Emergency War Cup, 1 Victory Cup, 1 Summer Cup and also 1 Sir Archibald Sinclair Cup, and 1 British Champions' Challenge. | |
Manager with most international club titles | Carlo Ancelotti | Italy | 12 titles: Ancelotti won the UEFA Intertoto Cup (1999), the Champions League (2003, 2007, 2014, 2022), the UEFA Super Cup (2003, 2014, 2007, 2022), and the FIFA Club World Cup (2007, 2014, 2022) | |
Manager with the highest fee paid for his transfer | Julian Nagelsmann | Germany | Bayern Munich paid RB Leipzig €25million to release Nagelsmann's clause in the summer of 2021. | [40] |
Clubs
Record | Club | Nationality | Year(s) | Details | Ref |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Club that has scored the most goals in history | Santos | Brazil | 12,894 (up to 18 August 2023) | [41] | |
Club that has scored the most goals in history in top level competitions | Liverpool | England | 9,219 (up to 2023) | [42] | |
Club with most international major trophies won | Real Madrid | Spain | 32 trophies: | [43] | |
Club with most trophies won in top level competitions | Al Ahly | Egypt | 126 trophies | ||
Club with most titles in the same competition | ABC | Brazil | 57 Campeonato Potiguar titles. | [44] | |
Club with most national championships won in a row | Tafea | Vanuatu | 1994 to 2008–09 | 15 Port Vila Football League consecutive titles. | [45] |
Club with more tier level titles | Arsenal de Sarandí | Argentina | Arsenal de Sarandi won four Argentinian football tier levels | [46] | |
Oldest football club that is still active | Sheffield F.C. | England | Since 1848 | [47] | |
Longest winning streak for a first division club | FC Barcelona Femení | Spain | 2021–22 | 45 consecutive wins | [48] |
Longest streak for a club scoring at least 1 goal | River Plate | Argentina | 1936–1939 | 96 consecutive games | [49] |
Longest losing streak for a club | Corintians de Casa Branca | Brazil | 1980–1984 | 62 consecutive losses at Paulista third level | [50] |
Other world records
Record | Name | Nationality | Year(s) | Details | Ref |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Highest score in a single match | AS Adema 149–0 SO l'Emyrne | Madagascar | 2002 | On 31 October 2002, arch-rivals AS Adema and SO Emyrne played each other. In a pre-planned protest, SO Emyrne scored 149 own goals against the referees decisions in their four-team playoff tournament. | |
Highest score in a single match (youth international) | Vanuatu 46–0 Micronesia (U–23) | Vanuatu | 2015 | On 7 July 2015, Vanuatu beat Micronesia by 46–0 in a match in the 2015 Pacific Games. Micronesia also lost by 0–30 and 0–38 against Tahiti and Fiji, respectively.[52] | |
Highest score in a penalty shootout in history | Washington 3–3 Bedlington, penalties 25–24. | England | 2022 | On 9 March 2022, at the end of the Ernest Armstrong Memorial Cup tie 2021/22, Washington played Bedlington in England's North-East and the match finished in a 3–3 draw. A total of 54 penalties were taken with Washington winning 25–24. | [53] |
Longest penalty shootout in history | Washington 3–3 Bedlington, 54 penalties taken | ||||
Most red cards given in a match | Claypole – Victoriano Arenas | Argentina | 2011 | On 3 March 2011, 36 players were shown a red card by referee Damian Rubino in a match between Victoriano Arenas and Claypole, in the Argentine fifth division. All 22 players on the pitch and a combination of 14 subs and coaches received red cards. The match was eventually abandoned. | [54] |
Competition with most clubs participated in total | Copa Perú | Peru | More than 20,000 at the District stage | [55] | |
Shortest National Championship | Greenlandic Football Championship | Greenland | 7 days | [56] | |
Football League with less clubs | Isles of Scilly Football League | Isles of Scilly | Only two clubs contests the league: Woolpack Wanderers and the Garrison Gunners, playing each other eighteen times every season. | [57] | |
Longest football match | Stockport County 3–2 Doncaster Rovers, 3 hours and 23 minutes | England | 1946 | On 30 March 1946. It was a Division Three North Cup replay, after the first game ended 2–2 and, as it would turn out, 203 more minutes could not yield a victor. Tied once more at 2–2 after 90 minutes, the game between Stockport and Doncaster then went into extra time, but 30 more minutes were insufficient, with the two teams unable to score in that time period. The 'play to win' rule was commonplace in English football during the wartime period of the 1940s and it was a form of 'golden goal' – in essence, 'next goal wins'. Stockport thought they had clinched the winner on the 173rd minute. | [58][59] |
Team that played most games on the same day | Grêmio | Brazil | 1994 | On 11 December 1994, Grêmio played three matches on a single day during the 1994 Campeonato Gaúcho, with kick-off times of 2PM, 4PM, and 6PM, due to their extensive schedule. They won two and drew the third match, using a total of 34 different players. | [60] |
See also
- Fastest goals in association football
- List of men's footballers with 1,000 or more official appearances
- List of footballers with 500 or more goals
- List of players with the most goals in an association football game
- List of most expensive association football transfers
- Lists of hat-tricks
- List of footballers who achieved hat-trick records
- Progression of association football caps record
- European association football club records and statistics
- List of longest managerial reigns in association football
- List of world champion football club winning managers
Notes
- ^ This match was not a full international (instead termed a "Victory international").
- ^ Not include own goals that were deliberately scored by defenders, for example, as happened in the AS Adema 149–0 SO l'Emyrne.
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