Austria national football team

The Austria national football team (Austrian German: Österreichische Fußballnationalmannschaft) represents Austria in men's international football competitions, and is controlled by the Austrian Football Association, the governing body for football in Austria.

Austria
Shirt badge/Association crest
Nickname(s)Das Team (The Team)
Burschen (The Boys)
Unsere Burschen (Our Boys)
AssociationÖsterreichischer Fußball-Bund (ÖFB)
ConfederationUEFA (Europe)
Head coachRalf Rangnick
CaptainDavid Alaba
Most capsMarko Arnautović (111)
Top scorerToni Polster (44)
Home stadiumVarious
FIFA codeAUT
First colours
Second colours
FIFA ranking
Current 25 Steady (4 April 2024)[1]
Highest10 (March–June 2016)
Lowest105 (July 2008)
First international
 Austria 5–0 Hungary 
(Vienna, Austria; 12 October 1902)
Biggest win
 Austria 9–0 Malta 
(Salzburg, Austria; 30 April 1977)
Biggest defeat
 Austria 1–11 England 
(Vienna, Austria; 8 June 1908)
World Cup
Appearances7 (first in 1934)
Best resultThird place (1954)
European Championship
Appearances4 (first in 2008)
Best resultRound of 16 (2020)
Websiteoefb.at

Austria has qualified for seven FIFA World Cup, most recently in 1998. The country played in the UEFA European Championship for the first time in 2008, when it co-hosted the event with Switzerland, and most recently qualified in 2024.

History

Pre-World War II

The Austrian Football Association ("ÖFB") was founded on 18 March 1904 in the Austro-Hungarian Empire. Max Scheuer, a Jewish defender who played for the Austria national football team in 1923, was subsequently killed during the Holocaust in Auschwitz concentration camp.[3][4][5] The team enjoyed success in the 1930s under coach Hugo Meisl, becoming a dominant side in Europe and earning the nickname "Wunderteam". The team's star was Matthias Sindelar. On 16 May 1931, they were the first continental European side to defeat Scotland. In the 1934 FIFA World Cup, Austria finished fourth after losing 0–1 to Italy in the semi-finals and 2–3 to Germany in the third place play-off.

A moment of the Austria v Peru match at the 1936 Olympic

They were runners-up in the 1936 Olympic in Germany, again losing to Italy 1–2, despite having been beaten in the quarter-finals by Peru, following the Peruvians' withdrawal. However, according to an investigation, the surprise victory by Peru was deliberately annulled by Adolf Hitler to favour the Austrians.

The team then qualified for the 1938 World Cup finals, but Austria was annexed to Germany in the Anschluss on 12 March of that year. On 28 March, FIFA was notified that the ÖFB had been abolished, resulting in the nation's withdrawal from the World Cup.[6] Instead, the German team would represent the former Austrian territory. Theoretically, a united team could have been an even stronger force than each of the separate ones, but German coach Sepp Herberger had little time and very few matches to prepare and merge the very different styles of play and attitude. The former Austrian professionals outplayed the rather athletic yet amateur players of the "Old Empire" in a "reunification" derby that was supposed to finish as a draw, yet in the waning minutes, the Austrians scored twice, with Matthias Sindelar also demonstratively missing the German goal, and subsequently declining to be capped for Germany.

In a later rematch, the Germans took revenge, winning 9–1. In early April, Herberger inquired whether two separate teams could enter anyway, but "Reichssportführer" Hans von Tschammer und Osten made clear that he expected to see a 5:6 or 6:5 ratio of players from the two hitherto teams. As a result, five players from Austria Wien, Rapid Wien and Vienna Wien were part of the team that only managed a 1–1 draw in Round 1 against Switzerland, which required a rematch. With Rapid Wien's forward Hans Pesser having been sent off, and not satisfied with two others, Herberger had to alter the line-up on six positions to fulfill the 6:5 quota again. The all-German team led the Swiss 2–0 after 15 minutes, but eventually lost 2–4 in Paris in front of a rather anti-German French and Swiss crowd, as few German supporters were able to travel to France due to German restrictions on foreign currency exchange.

After World War II

Austria national football team in 1958 with the following players – from left to right, standing; Walter Horak, Ernst Happel, Karl Koller, Alfred Körner, Paul Halla, Walter Schleger; crouched: Helmut Senekowitsch, Gerhard Hanappi, Rudolf Szanwald, Franz Swoboda and Johann Buzek.

After World War II, Austria was again separated from Germany. Austria's best result came in 1954 with a team starring midfielder Ernst Ocwirk. They lost in the semi-finals 1–6 to eventual champions Germany, but finished third after beating defending champions Uruguay 3–1. Over the years, a strong yet mainly lopsided rivalry with Germany developed.

At the 1958 World Cup in Sweden, the Austrian suffered defeats to eventual champions Brazil, the emerging Soviet Union and a draw against England (who were rebuilding after the loss of several of their key players due to the Munich air disaster), preventing the team from reaching the next round.

Due to lack of money, Austria decided not to participate at the 1962 World Cup in Chile.

On 20 October 1965, Austria became the third European team to defeat England at home. Two goals in a 3–2 victory were scored by Toni Fritsch, who was then nicknamed "Wembley Toni". However, in the same year, Austria failed to qualify for the World Cup for the 1966 edition, ending third against Hungary and East Germany; they only earned a draw. In the summer of 1968, Leopold Šťastný, the Slovak coach of Wacker Innsbruck, took over the national team. Despite failing to qualify for the 1970 World Cup, the new coach emphasized developing new players rather than relying on the old guard. Austria came very close to qualifying for the 1974 World Cup in Germany. The qualifying round was tied for first place between Austria and Sweden, despite tiebreakers based on points and goal difference, therefore a playoff was needed for qualifying, held in Gelsenkirchen. In order to have enough time to prepare, the championship round was suspended[clarification needed] and the stadium in Gelsenkirchen was prepared five days before the playoff. On snow-covered ground, Austria lost 1–2.

1970s and 1980s

Anchored by Herbert Prohaska and striker Hans Krankl, and backed up by Bruno Pezzey, Austria reached the World Cup in 1978 and 1982 and both times reached the second round, held in team group matches that replaced the knockout quarter-finals. This Austria team, coached by Helmut Senekowitsch, is widely regarded as the best post-World War II Austrian football team of all-time.[citation needed]

In the 1978 World Cup in Argentina, the Austrians lost their first two matches but defeated defending champions West Germany 3–2 with goals from Hans Krankl, and an own goal. The celebrating report of the radio commentator Edi Finger ("I werd narrisch!") became famous in Austria, where it is considered the "Miracle of Cordoba", while the West Germans regard the game and the Austrian behaviour as a disgrace.[citation needed]

During the 1982 World Cup in Spain, Austria and West Germany met again, in the last match of the group stage. Because the other two teams in the group had played their last match the previous day, both teams knew that a West German win by one goal would see both through, while all other results would eliminate one team or the other. After ten minutes of furious attack, Horst Hrubesch scored for West Germany and the two teams mainly kicked the ball around for 80 minutes with few attempts to attack. The match became known as the "non-aggression pact of Gijón". Algeria had also won two matches, including a shocking surprise over West Germany in the opener, but among the three teams that had won two matches, was eliminated based on goal difference, having conceded two late goals in their 3–2 win over Chile. This match caused outrage between supporters of multiple national teams; as a result, all future tournaments would see the last group matches played simultaneously. Austria and Northern Ireland were eliminated by losing to France in the second round group stage of three teams.[7]

1990s

Led by striker Toni Polster, Austria qualified for the 1990 World Cup but were eliminated in the first round, despite defeating the United States 2–1. Much worse was the stunning 1–0 loss against the Faroe Islands, a team made of amateurs, in the qualifying campaign for the 1992 European Championship, considered [by whom?] the worst embarrassment in any Austrian team sport ever, and one of the biggest upsets in footballing history. The game was played in Landskrona, Sweden, as there were no grass fields on the Faroe Islands. It was a sign for things to come, as Austria suffered another couple of years of botched qualifying campaigns, despite playing some entertaining football in the closing stages of UEFA Euro 1996 qualification.

In the 1998 World Cup, Austria were drawn in Group B alongside Italy, Cameroon and Chile. Their appearance was brief, and they achieved the feat of only scoring in stoppage time in each of their matches. Against Cameroon, Pierre Njanka's goal was cancelled out by Toni Polster's late strike. In their second match, it was Ivica Vastić who curled a last minute equalizer, cancelling out Marcelo Salas' disputed opener. In their last match, Italy scored twice after half-time: a header from Christian Vieri and a tap-in from Roberto Baggio. Despite Andi Herzog's stoppage time penalty, Austria finished third in the group, behind the Italians and Chileans.

21st century

2000: Decline

Austria national team before a match against Spain, November 2009

After 1998, Austria began to decline. They failed to qualify for the 2002 World Cup and Euro 2000, and suffered embarrassment (similar to the Faroe Islands loss) when they lost 9–0 to Spain and 5–0 to Israel in 1999. In 2006, Josef Hickersberger became coach of the Austria national team, which included some respectable results such as a 1–0 victory against Switzerland in 2006.

Austria qualified automatically for Euro 2008 as co-hosts. Their first major tournaments in a decade, most commentators regarded them as outsiders for Germany, Croatia and Poland in the group stage. Many of their home supporters were in agreement and 10,000 Austrians signed a petition demanding Austria withdraw from the tournaments to spare the nation's embarrassment.[8] However, Austria managed a 1–1 draw with Poland and lost 1–0 to both Croatia and Germany.

Shortly after Austria's first-round exit from the tournaments, Hickersberger resigned as the national team coach. Karel Brückner, who had resigned as head coach of the Czech Republic after that country's first round exit from Euro 2008, was soon named as his replacement. After only eight months, Brückner was released in March 2009 and the position was subsequently taken by Didi Constantini.

2010s: Revival and decline

Austria vs. Germany in 2014 World Cup qualification, 11 September 2012

In the qualifying campaign for Euro 2012, the Austrians played against Kazakhstan, Azerbaijan, Belgium, Turkey and Germany.

A number of players from the 2007 U-20 team that finished fourth in the World Cup that year ended up developing and becoming full starters for the senior squad, including Sebastian Prödl, Markus Suttner, Martin Harnik, Veli Kavlak, Erwin Hoffer, Zlatko Junuzović and Rubin Okotie.

The team failed to qualify for the 2014 World Cup in Brazil, but finished in third place with a 5–2–3 record with 17 points and a +10 goal difference in their qualifying group. Notable results include home victories over the Republic of Ireland and Sweden, as well as a narrow home defeat to Germany and a 2–2 draw in Ireland away.

After Austria co-hosted the 2008 European Championship with Switzerland and automatically qualified, Marcel Koller's team managed to qualify for the 2016 European Championship on their own for the first time. This celebration photo was taken on 12 October 2015 after a victory against Liechtenstein.

The Euro 2016 qualifying campaign was a success; Austria drew with the Swedes 1–1, before beating them 4–1 in Sweden. Austria also beat Russia twice both home and away, 1–0. Austria also recorded a pair of victories over Moldova (2–1 in Chișinău) and Montenegro (1–0 in Vienna). Rubin Okotie scored the deciding goal in the closing 20 minutes of the match after a previous Austrian goal a minute before was controversially disallowed. A week later, the team played a friendly away game against Brazil, losing 2–1. Austria finished its Euro 2016 qualifying campaign by topping the group undefeated.

Despite this successful performance in qualification, the tournaments itself turned out to be a nightmare for the Austrians. Placed in group F with Hungary, Portugal and Iceland, Austria opened their campaign with a 0–2 loss to neighbour Hungary, in which defender Aleksandar Dragović was sent off.[9] This was followed up by an 0–0 draw to Portugal, in which Cristiano Ronaldo missed a penalty.[10] Nonetheless, Austria ended up losing 1–2 to debutant Iceland and were eliminated with just a point.[11]

Austria would later participate in Group D of 2018 World Cup qualification along with Wales, Serbia, Ireland, Georgia and Moldova, ending up fourth, thus failing to qualify for the World Cup.

2020s: European Championship knockout stages

Austria was drawn into UEFA Euro 2020 qualifying Group G alongside Poland, North Macedonia, Slovenia, Israel, and Latvia. Austria struggled in the first few games after a loss to Poland at home, a loss to Israel, and another to Latvia. Austria then won six of the last nine game matches and finished second in the group with 19 points. Marko Arnautović led the team in most goals and tied Poland's Robert Lewandowski with nine goals. Austria qualified for their third European Championship finals, the second time Austria qualified for a major tournaments consecutively since the 1954 and 1958 World Cup.

Austria was drawn into UEFA Euro 2020 Group C alongside the Netherlands, Ukraine, and debutants North Macedonia. Austria kicked off the opener with a 3–1 victory against North Macedonia, their first win at a European Championship and the first time scoring more than one goal in a group stage game. In the finals group stage match, Austria only needed a draw against Ukraine to advance as one of the best third-place teams while a win guaranteed second place. They beat Ukraine 1–0 to secure their first knockout stages at the European Championship in second place in Group C, in addition to it being their first time advancing past the first round of a tournaments since the 1982 World Cup. They faced Italy in the round of 16 at Wembley Stadium and lost 2–1 after extra time with Saša Kalajdžić scoring their only goal of the game in the 114th minute.

Rivalry

The match-up between Austria and Hungary is the second most-played international match in football; only Argentina and Uruguay, another two neighboring countries, have met each other in more matches. It is also notable in which both countries are the first European, non-British countries to play international matches, three full decades after the first ever international football match.

Results and fixtures

The following is a list of match results in the last 12 months, as well as any future matches that have been scheduled.

  Win  Draw  Loss  Fixture

2023

v  Austria
17 June 2023 UEFA Euro 2024 qualifying Belgium  1–1  Austria Brussels, Belgium
20:45
  • Lukaku 62'
ReportStadium: King Baudouin Stadium
Attendance: 39,237
Referee: Jérôme Brisard (France)
v  Sweden
20 June 2023 UEFA Euro 2024 qualifying Austria  2–0  Sweden Vienna, Austria
20:45
ReportStadium: Ernst-Happel-Stadion
Attendance: 46,300
Referee: Marco Guida (Italy)
v  Moldova
7 September 2023 (2023-09-07) Friendly Austria  1–1  Moldova Linz, Austria
20:30 UTC+2Gregoritsch 50'ReportDamașcan 3'Stadium: Raiffeisen Arena
Referee: Robert Jones (England)
v  Austria
12 September 2023 UEFA Euro 2024 qualifying Sweden  1–3  Austria Solna, Sweden
20:45Holm 90'ReportStadium: Friends Arena
Attendance: 43,228
Referee: Serdar Gözübüyük (Netherlands)
v  Belgium
13 October 2023 UEFA Euro 2024 qualifying Austria  2–3  Belgium Vienna, Austria
20:45
Report
Stadium: Ernst-Happel-Stadion
Attendance: 47,000
Referee: Jesús Gil Manzano (Spain)
v  Austria
16 October 2023 UEFA Euro 2024 qualifying Azerbaijan  0–1  Austria Baku, Azerbaijan
18:00Report
Stadium: Tofiq Bahramov Republican Stadium
Attendance: 4,446
Referee: Aristotelis Diamantopoulos (Greece)
v  Austria
16 November 2023 UEFA Euro 2024 qualifying Estonia  0–2  Austria Tallinn, Estonia
18:00ReportStadium: A. Le Coq Arena
Attendance: 4,488
Referee: Nikola Dabanović (Montenegro)
v  Germany
21 November 2023 Friendly Austria  2–0  Germany Vienna, Austria
20:45ReportStadium: Ernst-Happel-Stadion
Referee: Slavko Vinčić (Slovenia)

2024

v  Austria
23 March 2024 Friendly Slovakia  0–2  Austria Bratislava, Slovakia
18:00ReportStadium: Tehelné Pole
Referee: Trustin Farrugia Cann (Malta)
v  Turkey
26 March 2024 Friendly Austria  6–1  Turkey Vienna, Austria
21:45
Stadium: Ernst Happel Stadion
Referee: Daniele Chiffi (Italy)
v  Serbia
4 June 2024 Friendly Austria  v  Serbia Vienna, Austria
20:45Stadium: Ernst Happel Stadion
v  Austria
8 June 2024 Friendly Switzerland  v  Austria St. Gallen, Switzerland
18:00Stadium: Kybunpark
v  France
17 June 2024 UEFA Euro 2024 Austria  v  France Düsseldorf, Germany
21:00ReportStadium: Merkur Spiel-Arena
v  Austria
21 June 2024 UEFA Euro 2024 Poland  v  Austria Berlin, Germany
18:00ReportStadium: Olympiastadion
v  Austria
25 June 2024 UEFA Euro 2024 Netherlands  v  Austria Berlin, Germany
18:00ReportStadium: Olympiastadion
v  Austria
6 September 2024 2024–25 Nations League Slovenia  v  Austria Ljubljana, Slovenia
20:45 UTC+2Stadium: Stožice Stadium
v  Austria
9 September 2024 2024–25 Nations League Norway  v  Austria Oslo, Norway
20:45 UTC+2Stadium: Ullevaal Stadion
v  Kazakhstan
10 October 2024 2024–25 Nations League Austria  v  Kazakhstan Austria
20:45 UTC+2
v  Norway
13 October 2024 2024–25 Nations League Austria  v  Norway Austria
20:45 UTC+2
v  Austria
14 November 2024 2024–25 Nations League Kazakhstan  v  Austria Kazakstan
21:00 UTC+6
v  Slovenia
17 November 2024 2024–25 Nations League Austria  v  Slovenia Austria
18:00 UTC+1

Coaching staff

As of April 2024.[12]
PositionName
Head coach Ralf Rangnick
Assistant coaches Lars Kornetka
Peter Perchtold
Onur Cinel
Goalkeeping coach Michael Gspurning
Match analyst Stefan Oesen

Manager history

As of 27 March 2024, after the match against  Turkey.

1912–1945

1945–1999

2000–present

NameNationalityFromToPWDLGFGAWin%[b]Notes
Otto Barić  Austria
 Croatia
13 April 199921 November 200122769313531.82
Hans Krankl  Austria21 January 200228 September 200531101011474632.26
Vacant
Willibald Ruttensteiner (caretaker)
 Austria30 September 200531 December 200521012150.00
Josef Hickersberger  Austria1 January 200623 June 2008275913293918.52Austria co-hosted the UEFA Euro 2008
Karel Brückner  Czech Republic25 July 20082 March 2009712491514.29
Dietmar Constantini  Austria4 March 200913 September 2011237313294230.43
Willibald Ruttensteiner
 Austria13 September 201111 October 201121104150.00
Marcel Koller   Switzerland1 November 20111 November 201754251316815846.3 Y Qualified for the UEFA Euro 2016
Franco Foda[13]  Germany1 January 201830 March 20224827615775256.25 Y Qualified for the UEFA Euro 2020
Ralf Rangnick[14]  Germany29 April 2022211335331861.9 Y Qualified for the UEFA Euro 2024

Players

Current squad

The following players were called up for the friendly match against Slovakia and Turkey on 23 and 27 March 2024, respectively.[15]

Caps and goals as of 27 March 2024, after match against  Turkey.[16][17]

No.Pos.PlayerDate of birth (age)CapsGoalsClub
11GKAlexander Schlager (1996-02-01) 1 February 1996 (age 28)150 Red Bull Salzburg
121GKTobias Lawal (2000-06-07) 7 June 2000 (age 23)00 LASK
131GKPatrick Pentz (1997-01-02) 2 January 1997 (age 27)50 Brøndby

22DFMaximilian Wöber (1998-02-04) 4 February 1998 (age 26)230 Borussia Mönchengladbach
32DFKevin Danso (1998-09-19) 19 September 1998 (age 25)180 Lens
52DFStefan Posch (1997-05-14) 14 May 1997 (age 26)301 Bologna
142DFLeopold Querfeld (2003-12-20) 20 December 2003 (age 20)10 Rapid Wien
162DFPhillipp Mwene (1994-01-29) 29 January 1994 (age 30)110 Mainz 05
212DFStefan Lainer (1992-08-27) 27 August 1992 (age 31)392 Borussia Mönchengladbach
242DFFlavius Daniliuc (2001-04-27) 27 April 2001 (age 23)20 Red Bull Salzburg

43MFXaver Schlager (1997-09-28) 28 September 1997 (age 26)434 RB Leipzig
63MFNicolas Seiwald (2001-05-04) 4 May 2001 (age 22)220 RB Leipzig
83MFAlexander Prass (2001-05-26) 26 May 2001 (age 22)40 Sturm Graz
93MFMarcel Sabitzer (1994-03-17) 17 March 1994 (age 30)7817 Borussia Dortmund
103MFFlorian Grillitsch (1995-08-07) 7 August 1995 (age 28)411 1899 Hoffenheim
173MFPatrick Wimmer (2001-05-30) 30 May 2001 (age 22)100 VfL Wolfsburg
183MFRomano Schmid (2000-01-27) 27 January 2000 (age 24)90 Werder Bremen
193MFChristoph Baumgartner (1999-08-01) 1 August 1999 (age 24)3613 RB Leipzig
203MFKonrad Laimer (1997-05-27) 27 May 1997 (age 26)344 Bayern Munich
223MFMatthias Seidl (2001-01-24) 24 January 2001 (age 23)30 Rapid Wien
263MFChristoph Lang (2002-01-07) 7 January 2002 (age 22)00 Rapid Wien

74FWAndreas Weimann (1991-08-05) 5 August 1991 (age 32)232 West Bromwich Albion
114FWMichael Gregoritsch (1994-04-18) 18 April 1994 (age 30)5315 SC Freiburg
234FWMaximilian Entrup (1997-09-15) 15 September 1997 (age 26)21 TSV Hartberg
254FWMuhammed Cham (2000-09-26) 26 September 2000 (age 23)30 Clermont

Recent call-ups

The following players have also been called up to the Austria squad in the last twelve months and are still eligible for selection.[18]

Pos.PlayerDate of birth (age)CapsGoalsClubLatest call-up
GKNiklas Hedl (2001-03-17) 17 March 2001 (age 23)10 Rapid Wienv.  Azerbaijan, 16 October 2023
GKDaniel Bachmann (1994-07-09) 9 July 1994 (age 29)140 Watfordv.  Sweden, 12 September 2023

DFPhilipp Lienhart (1996-07-11) 11 July 1996 (age 27)191 SC Freiburgv.  Slovakia, 23 March 2024INJ
DFDavid Alaba (captain) (1992-06-24) 24 June 1992 (age 31)10515 Real Madridv.  Germany, 21 November 2023INJ
DFSamson Baidoo (2004-03-31) 31 March 2004 (age 20)10 Red Bull Salzburgv.  Estonia, 16 November 2023INJ
DFGernot Trauner (1992-03-25) 25 March 1992 (age 32)101 Feyenoordv.  Belgium, 13 October 2023INJ
DFDavid Schnegg (1998-09-29) 29 September 1998 (age 25)10 Sturm Grazv.  Sweden, 12 September 2023

MFFlorian Kainz (1992-10-24) 24 October 1992 (age 31)271 1. FC Kölnv.  Germany, 21 November 2023
MFDejan Ljubičić (1997-10-08) 8 October 1997 (age 26)91 1. FC Kölnv.  Azerbaijan, 26 October 2023
MFMarco Grüll (1998-07-06) 6 July 1998 (age 25)40 Rapid Wienv.  Azerbaijan, 26 October 2023

FWMarko Arnautović (1989-04-19) 19 April 1989 (age 35)11136 Internazionalev.  Germany, 21 November 2023
FWSaša Kalajdžić (1997-07-07) 7 July 1997 (age 26)194 Eintracht Frankfurtv.  Germany, 21 November 2023
FWManprit Sarkaria (1996-08-26) 26 August 1996 (age 27)10 Sturm Grazv.  Germany, 21 November 2023
FWGuido Burgstaller (1989-04-29) 29 April 1989 (age 35)262 Rapid Wienv.  Azerbaijan, 26 October 2023
FWKarim Onisiwo RET (1992-03-17) 17 March 1992 (age 32)241 Mainz 05v.  Sweden, 12 September 2023
FWJunior Adamu (2001-06-06) 6 June 2001 (age 22)60 SC Freiburgv.  Sweden, 20 June 2023

PRE Player was named to the preliminary squad
COV Player withdrew from the squad due to COVID-19
INJ Player withdrew from the squad due to an injury
WD Player withdrew from the squad due to non-injury issue
RET Retired from international football
SUS Suspended in official matches

Player statistics

As of 21 November 2023 after the match against  Germany.[19]
Players in bold are still active in the national team.

Most capped players

Marko Arnautović is Austria's most capped players
RankPlayerCapsGoalsPeriod
1Marko Arnautović111362009–present
2David Alaba105152009–present
3Andreas Herzog103261988–2003
4Aleksandar Dragović10022009–2022
5Toni Polster95441982–2000
6Gerhard Hanappi93121948–1964
7Karl Koller8651952–1965
8Julian Baumgartlinger8412009–2021
Friedrich Koncilia8401970–1985
Bruno Pezzey8491975–1990

Top goalscorers

Toni Polster is Austria's highest goalscorers with 44 international goals
RankPlayerGoalsCapsRatioPeriod
1Toni Polster44950.461982–2000
2Marko Arnautović361110.322009–present
3Hans Krankl34690.491973–1985
4Johann Horvath29460.631924–1934
5Erich Hof28370.761957–1968
Marc Janko28700.402006–2019
7Anton Schall27280.961927–1934
8Matthias Sindelar26430.601926–1937
Andreas Herzog261030.251988–2003
10Karl Zischek24400.601931–1945

Competitive record

FIFA World Cup

FIFA World Cup recordQualification record
YearResultPositionPldWDLGFGASquadPldWDLGFGA
1930Did not enterDid not enter
1934Fourth place4th420277Squad110061
1938Did not enterDid not enter
1950
1954Third place3rd54011712Squad211091
1958Group stage15th301227Squad4310143
1962Did not enterDid not enter
1966Did not qualify401316
19706303127
19747322159
1978Second group stage7th6303710Squad6420142
19828th521254Squad8512166
1986Did not qualify631298
1990Group stage18th310223Squad833299
1994Did not qualify103251516
1998Group stage23rd302134Squad10811174
2002Did not qualify104331014
2006104331512
2010104241415
2014105232010
2018104331412
2022115152019
2026To be determinedTo be determined
2030
2034
TotalThird place7/2229124134347134642941232155

UEFA European Championship

UEFA European Championship recordQualifying record
YearResultPositionPldWDLGFGASquadPldWDLGFGA
1960Did not qualify42021011
1964201123
1968521279
19726312146
19766312117
19808431147
198484131510
1988621369
19928116614
1996105142914
200084131920
200483051214
2008Group stage13th301213SquadQualified as hosts
2012Did not qualify103341617
2016Group stage22nd301214Squad10910225
2020Round of 1612th420255Squad10613199
2024Qualified8611177
2028To be determinedTo be determined
2032
TotalRound of 164/1710226712117571842219162

UEFA Nations League

UEFA Nations League record
SeasonDivisionGroupResultPldWDLGFGAP/RRK
2018–19B3Group stage421132 18th
2020–21B1Group stage641196 18th
2022–23A1Group stage6114610 13th
2024–25B3To be determined
TotalGroup stage16736181813th

All-time head-to-head record

As of 26 March 2024, after the match against  Turkey.

  Positive Record  Neutral Record  Negative Record

AgainstPlayedWonDrawnLostGFGAGD
Total826348176306000
AgainstMWDLGFGAGD
 Albania7700192+17
 Algeria110020+2
 Andorra110010+1
 Argentina201126-4
 Azerbaijan6510142+12
 Belarus4400120+12
 Belgium169434423+22
 Bosnia and Herzegovina513143+1
 Brazil10037517-12
 Bulgaria8521217+14
 Cameroon302113-2
 Canada100102-2
 Chile311123-1
 Costa Rica211042+2
 Croatia7106612-6
 Cyprus7610225+17
 Czech Republic[c]411012195978-19
 Denmark134181525-10
 East Germany614175+2
 Egypt311132+1
 England1944112759-32
 Estonia440091+8
 Faroe Islands8611214+17
 Finland118212411+13
 France2593134142-1
 Georgia211032+1
 Germany[d]41106255990-31
 Ghana1010110
 Greece134541820-2
 Hungary137403067252299-47
 Iceland4121440
 Iran110051+4
 Israel136432625+1
 Italy38138185951+8
 Ivory Coast210135-2
 Japan1010000
 Kazakhstan422060+6
 Latvia9612249+15
 Liechtenstein8800301+29
 Lithuania320163+3
 Luxembourg7700294+25
 Malta9810295+24
 Moldova9711154+11
 Montenegro220042+2
 Netherlands2064102438-14
 Nigeria1010110
 North Macedonia330093+6
 Northern Ireland126342119+2
 Norway128222410+14
 Paraguay1010000
 Poland103251719-2
 Portugal113621911+8
 Republic of Ireland169433719+18
 Romania1035212120
 Russia[e]197481622-6
 San Marino2200111+10
 Scotland238873730+7
 Serbia[f]2164114148-7
 Slovakia623163+3
 Slovenia430152+3
 Spain164392243-21
 Sweden38206146153+8
  Switzerland422551210560+45
 Trinidad and Tobago110041+3
 Tunisia211021+1
 Turkey179172423-1
 Ukraine320154+1
 United States320134-1
 Uruguay421165+1
 Venezuela100101-1
 Wales115241411+3
Total82634817630600+0

Honours

See also

Notes

References

External links