This is a record of the Czech Republic's results at the FIFA World Cup, including those of Czechoslovakia which is considered as the Czech Republic's predecessor by FIFA. The FIFA World Cup is an international association football competition contested by the men's national teams of the members of Fédération Internationale de Football Association (FIFA), the sport's global governing body. The championship has been awarded every four years since the first tournament in 1930, except in 1942 and 1946, due to World War II.

The tournament consists of two parts, the qualification phase and the final phase (officially called the World Cup Finals). The qualification phase, which currently take place over the three years preceding the Finals, is used to determine which teams qualify for the Finals. The current format of the Finals involves 32 teams competing for the title, at venues within the host nation (or nations) over a period of about a month. The World Cup Finals is the most widely viewed sporting event in the world, with an estimated 715.1 million people watching the 2006 tournament final.[1]

Czechoslovakia have been one of the better performing national teams in the history of the World Cup, having ended twice as runners-up, in 1934 and in 1962. Between 1930 and 1994 they qualified for 8 out of 13 World Cups they played qualifiers for, and did not enter in two other World Cups.

After the political split-up into Czech Republic and Slovakia, the official successor football team Czech Republic has been less successful at the World Cup than Czechoslovakia, qualifying only for one out of the seven tournaments held since (the 2006 FIFA World Cup) without surviving the group phase.

Throughout the World Cup history, Brazil became the team's historical rival. The two countries have met each other five times but the Czechs (always as Czechoslovakia) never managed to win, with three victories for the Brazilian side and two draws.[2] Two other historical opponents in the finals were (West) Germany and Italy with three encounters each: Czechoslovakia won, drew and lost once against the Germans[3] and the matches against Italy all ended in a defeat.[4]

Record at the FIFA World Cup

In their first World Cup participation in 1934, Czechoslovakia (white) reached the final where they lost the title to Italy (blue)
Czechoslovakia (white) and Brazil (yellow) teams for the 1962 FIFA World Cup Final
YearRoundPositionPldWD*LGFGA
as  Czechoslovakia
Uruguay 1930Did not enter
Italy 1934Runners-up2nd430196
France 1938Quarter-finals5th311153
Brazil 1950Did not qualify
Switzerland 1954Group stage14th200207
Sweden 1958Group stage9th411296
Chile 1962Runners-up2nd631277
England 1966Did not qualify
Mexico 1970Group stage15th300327
West Germany 1974Did not qualify
Argentina 1978
Spain 1982Group stage19th302124
Mexico 1986Did not qualify
Italy 1990Quarter-finals6th5302105
United States 1994Did not qualify
as  Czech Republic
France 1998Did not qualify
South Korea Japan 2002
Germany 2006Group stage20th310234
South Africa 2010Did not qualify
Brazil 2014
Russia 2018
Qatar 2022
Canada Mexico United States 2026To be determined
Morocco Portugal Spain 2030
Saudi Arabia 2034
Total9/25-33125164749
*Draws include knockout matches decided via penalty shoot-out

By Match

World Cup Round Opponent Score Result Venue Scorers
1934Round of 16 Romania2–1WTriesteA. Puč, O. Nejedlý
Quarter-finals  Switzerland3–2WTurinF. Svoboda, J. Sobotka, O. Nejedlý
Semi-finals Germany3–1WRomeO. Nejedlý (3)
Final Italy1–2 (a.e.t.)LRomeA. Puč
1938Round of 16 Netherlands3–0 (a.e.t.)WLe HavreJ. Košťálek, J. Zeman, O. Nejedlý
Quarter-finals Brazil1–1 (a.e.t.)DBordeauxO. Nejedlý
 Brazil1–2LBordeauxV. Kopecký
1954Group stage Uruguay0–2LBern
 Austria0–5LZürich
1958Group stage Northern Ireland0–1LHalmstad
 West Germany2–2DHelsingborgM. Dvořák, Z. Zikán
 Argentina6–1WHelsingborgZ. Zikán (2), V. Hovorka (2), M. Dvořák, J. Feureisl
 Northern Ireland1–2 (a.e.t.)LMalmöZ. Zikán
1962Group stage Spain1–0WViña del MarJ. Štibrányi
 Brazil0–0DViña del Mar
 Mexico1–3LViña del MarV. Mašek
Quarter-finals Hungary1–0WRancaguaA. Scherer
Semi-finals Yugoslavia3–1WViña del MarA. Scherer (2), J. Kadraba
Final Brazil1–3LSantiagoJ. Masopust
1970Group stage Brazil1–4LGuadalajaraL. Petráš
 Romania1–2LGuadalajaraL. Petráš
 England0–1LGuadalajara
1982Group stage Kuwait1–1DValladolidA. Panenka
 England0–2LBilbao
 France1–1DValladolidA. Panenka
1990Group stage United States5–1WFlorenceT. Skuhravý (2), M. Bílek, I. Hašek, M. Luhový
 Austria1–0WFlorenceM. Bílek
 Italy0–2LRome
Round of 16 Costa Rica4–1WBariT. Skuhravý (3), L. Kubík
Quarter-finals West Germany0–1LMilan
2006Group stage United States3–0WGelsenkirchenT. Rosický (2), J. Koller
 Ghana0–2LCologne
 Italy0–2LHamburg

Record by Opponent

FIFA World Cup matches (by team)
Opponent Wins Draws Losses Total Goals Scored Goals Conceded
 Argentina100161
 Austria101215
 Brazil0235410
 Costa Rica100141
 England002203
 France010111
 Germany111354
 Ghana001102
 Hungary100110
 Italy003316
 Kuwait010111
 Mexico001113
 Netherlands100130
 Northern Ireland002213
 Romania101233
 Serbia100131
 Spain100110
  Switzerland100132
 United States200281
 Uruguay001102

Record players

Rank Player Matches World Cups
1Ladislav Novák121954, 1958 and 1962
2Josef Masopust101958 and 1962
3 Svatopluk Pluskal91954, 1958 and 1962
Ján Popluhár91958 and 1962
5Andrej Kvašňák81962 and 1970
6Josef Košťálek71934 and 1938
7 Oldřich Nejedlý61934 and 1938
František Plánička61934 and 1938
Adolf Scherer61962
Viliam Schrojf61962
Jozef Adamec61962 and 1970

Top goalscorers

Oldřich Nejedlý was Czechoslovakia/ Czech Republic's all-time top scorer at the World Cup.
Rank Player Goals World Cups
1Oldřich Nejedlý71934 (5) and 1938 (2)
2Tomáš Skuhravý51990
3 Zdeněk Zikán31958
Adolf Scherer31962
5 Antonín Puč21934
Milan Dvořák21958
Václav Hovorka21958
Ladislav Petráš21970
Antonín Panenka21982
Michal Bílek21990
Tomáš Rosický22006

Awards

Team Awards

  • Second Place 1934
  • Second Place 1962

Individual Awards

See also

References

  1. 2006 FIFA World Cup TV Coverage Archived June 14, 2007, at the Wayback Machine (PDF), FIFA.com. Retrieved on 6 June 2007.
  2. "Czech Republic - Brazil". FIFA.com. Archived from the original on July 16, 2014.
  3. "Czech Republic - Germany". FIFA.com. Archived from the original on July 16, 2014.
  4. "Czech Republic - Italy". FIFA.com. Archived from the original on July 16, 2014.
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