Uruguay
Uruguay complete FIFA World Cup 2026 football schedule and results — every group-stage fixture and knockout match, with kick-off times and final scores.
Football Honours
Club & Football History
Uruguay, nicknamed La Celeste, are one of football's most historically decorated nations — two-time World Cup winners, record 15-time Copa América champions, and back-to-back Olympic champions in 1924 and 1928, which FIFA recognises as world titles. They are managed by Marcelo Bielsa and captained by José María Giménez.
Uruguay played their first international on 20 July 1902, losing 0–6 to Argentina in Montevideo. Despite that debut, they rapidly became a global force, winning the 1924 Paris Olympics and 1928 Amsterdam Olympics — titles FIFA counts as world championships — before hosting and winning the inaugural FIFA World Cup in 1930, defeating Argentina 4–2 in the final.
Their second World Cup came in 1950 in Brazil. The decisive match, now known as the Maracanazo, saw Uruguay overturn a 1–0 deficit to beat Brazil 2–1 in front of nearly 200,000 spectators at the Maracanã, stunning the football world and cementing Uruguayan football mythology.
Uruguay have won the Copa América a record-equalling 15 times, with their most recent triumph in 2011. Despite their small population, they remain a consistent force in South American football, producing globally recognised talents and qualifying for every major tournament cycle.
Source: Wikipedia · CC BY-SA 4.0