Nickname(s) | Twiga Stars | |||
---|---|---|---|---|
Association | Tanzania Football Federation | |||
Confederation | CAF (Africa) | |||
Sub-confederation | CECAFA (East & Central Africa) | |||
Head coach | Oscar Mirambo | |||
Captain | Amina Bilali | |||
FIFA code | TAN | |||
| ||||
FIFA ranking | ||||
Current | 145 (13 December 2024)[1] | |||
Highest | 98 (June 2009) | |||
Lowest | 155 (August 2022) | |||
First international | ||||
Eritrea 2–3 Tanzania (Asmara, Eritrea; 10 August 2002) | ||||
Biggest win | ||||
Tanzania 12–0 Zanzibar (Njeru, Uganda; 6 June 2022) | ||||
Biggest defeat | ||||
South Africa 6–0 Tanzania (Johannesburg, South Africa; 24 July 2010) | ||||
African Women's Championship | ||||
Appearances | 1 (first in 2010) | |||
Best result | Group Stage (2010) |
The Tanzania national women's football team, is the national team of Tanzania and is controlled by the Tanzania Football Federation. They are nicknamed the Twiga Stars.
The Twiga Stars qualified for their first CAF Women's Championship finals on 5 June 2010, after defeating Eritrea 11–4 on aggregate.[2]