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Pakistan's national team debuted in 1950 and has yet to qualify for the FIFA World Cup finals. Pakistan has never qualified for any major tournament outside the South Asian region, although on regional level the team has won the 1952 Asian Quadrangular Football Tournament, and has achieved gold at the South Asian Games in 1989 and 1991 ...
The era also saw one of the finest players to ever grace the field in Pakistan football history, such as Abdul Ghafoor, nicknamed the "Pakistani Pelé" and "Black Pearl of Pakistan", [21] Moosa Ghazi, Abid Ghazi, Muhammad Umer Baloch, Turab Ali, Murad Bakhsh, Qadir Bakhsh, Maula Bakhsh, Ayub Dar, Ghulam Rabbani, Mohammad Amin, Ali Nawaz Baloch ...
This category is for footballers who have appeared for the senior Pakistan national football team (but not players who have only been capped at Under-21 or other junior levels). Players in this category should also be left in category:Pakistani footballers
This article lists all the captains of the Pakistan national football team. The first captain to lead Pakistan in their international debut in October 1950 was the goalkeeper Osman Jan , [ 1 ] [ 2 ] who captained Pakistan in their first international match against Iran on 27 October 1950.
Abdul Jabbar is the first Pakistani player to surpass the hat trick barrier As of 8 December 2009, ten players have scored a hat-trick for the national team and two have scored more than three goals in a single match. Only FIFA-recognized international matches by the Pakistan national football team have been considered in the following list.
Pakistan fielded the under-21 side which previously featured at the 2012 Summer Olympics qualifiers, resulting in FIFA not regarding the games as full ‘A’ international matches. [ 13 ] [ 14 ] Palestine reportedly played only with the West Bank based players, as players from Gaza couldn’t get clearance from the government and the ...
Jamil Akhtar (Urdu: جمیل اختر) was a Pakistani footballer who played as an inside left forward.Considered as one of the earliest pioneering footballers in Pakistan history, [1] he was the fifth captain in the history of the Pakistan national football team after Osman Jan, Abdul Wahid Durrani, Muhammad Sharif and Moideen Kutty. [2]
On 10 October 1957, Pakistan first foreign coach John McBride was signed as coach for the Pakistan national team on a two-year contract. [4] Although he served as selector of the team for the 1958 Asian Games where Sharif Khan acted as manager, [5] [6] McBride coached the national team during an unofficial tour to Burma in April 1959.