Colombia

Colombia complete FIFA World Cup 2026 football schedule and results — every group-stage fixture and knockout match, with kick-off times and final scores.

ConfederationCONMEBOL
NicknameLos Cafeteros, La Tricolor, La Sele
Head coachNéstor Lorenzo
Founded1924
ColoursYellow / Red / Blue
Squad size26 players
CaptainJames Rodríguez
FIFA ranking#13
Home stadiumEstadio Metropolitano Roberto Meléndez
First match1926-02-17 vs Costa Rica
Most capsDavid Ospina (130)
Top scorerRadamel Falcao (36)
Silverware

Football Honours

1Copa América2001
The story

Club & Football History

Colombia, nicknamed Los Cafeteros, are CONMEBOL's bright yellow ambassadors — Copa América champions in 2001 and World Cup quarter-finalists in 2014 — currently guided by coach Néstor Lorenzo after narrowly finishing as runners-up at Copa América 2024. The team has established itself as one of South America's most consistent qualifiers through the modern era.

Football arrived in Colombia in the early 1900s, brought by British workers, and the national federation was established in 1924. Colombia played their first international in 1926, defeating Costa Rica 4–1 in Barranquilla. Their Copa América debut came in 1945, though participation was sporadic in the mid-20th century due to administrative upheaval — most notably the unofficial 'El Dorado' era in the early 1950s when the domestic league attracted foreign stars outside FIFA's framework. Colombia's World Cup debut arrived at Chile 1962, but the team failed to progress past the group stage.

The 1990s marked a turning point. An exciting generation led by Carlos Valderrama, Freddy Rincón, and Faustino Asprilla qualified for consecutive World Cups in 1990, 1994, and 1998, with the 1994 qualification campaign producing a stunning 5–0 away win over Argentina. Hosting the 2001 Copa América, Colombia went unbeaten throughout the tournament to claim their first — and to date only — continental title.

Under José Pékerman from 2012, a new golden generation emerged: James Rodríguez's Golden Boot at the 2014 World Cup captivated the world as Colombia reached the quarter-finals. Current coach Néstor Lorenzo has continued to build on that foundation, guiding the team to the 2026 World Cup and the 2024 Copa América final, where they lost to Argentina in a tense final.

Source: Wikipedia · CC BY-SA 4.0