While most matches between national teams are competitive, there are moments in qualifying campaigns and regional tournaments where the gap between two sides becomes glaringly obvious – the kind of mismatches that tend to draw attention from fans and platforms such as LiveScore Bet UK when fixtures first appear.
Some countries arrive with full-time professionals, strong domestic leagues and decades of experience. Others are still developing with smaller player pools and limited resources. When those extremes meet, the result becomes part of football folklore – for all the wrong reasons.
Here are some of the biggest wins ever recorded in men's international football.
China 19–0 Guam (2000)
China beat Guam 19–0 during qualification for the 2000 AFC Asian Cup. At the time, China were ranked 112 places above Guam, showing just how wide the gulf was between the two teams.
For Guam, this was part of a difficult period where they faced several heavy defeats against stronger nations. For China, it showed how dominant a well-organised side can be when facing an opponent without the same depth of professional players or competitive league experience.
Iran 19–0 Guam (2000)
Iran matched China's scoreline later that year, beating Guam 19–0 in qualification for the 2002 World Cup. Guam, with a population of only around 150,000, faced a huge challenge competing against one of Asia's strongest sides.
Iran used the game to strengthen their goal difference, and the scoring was spread across several players. Karim Bagheri scored six goals, while three other Iranian players added four goals each. It's one of the most dominant attacking performances in international football history.
Kuwait 20–0 Bhutan (2000)
Kuwait recorded a 20–0 victory over Bhutan in AFC Asian Cup qualification. The big talking point was Bashar Abdullah's haul of eight goals – one of the highest individual tallies in a senior international fixture.
Kuwait were a nation with World Cup experience. Bhutan were still in the early stages of international football. It remains one of the most lopsided results ever seen in Asian qualification history.
North Korea 21–0 Guam (2005)
Just when things couldn't get worse for Guam, they were beaten 21–0 by North Korea in a qualifier for the East Asian Championship in 2005. North Korea knew goal difference could still decide the final standings, so they didn't hold back. They scored at a relentless rate – averaging a goal every 252 seconds across ninety minutes.
The result proved decisive in the table. North Korea finished above their regional rivals, Hong Kong, despite Hong Kong having held an 18-goal advantage before kick-off.
Australia 22–0 Tonga (2001)
Australia's 22–0 win over Tonga came during qualification for the 2002 World Cup in Oceania. They reached double figures before half-time as the score quickly moved beyond control.
At the time, it was one of the biggest wins in international football history and set a new record margin in World Cup qualifying. Australia's squad contained fully professional players, while Tonga's side was made up largely of amateurs. The scoreline reflected that difference.
Tahiti 30–0 Cook Islands (1971)
One of the earliest extreme scorelines came at the 1971 South Pacific Games, when Tahiti defeated the Cook Islands 30–0. Matches in this region often involved teams at very different stages of football development, and Tahiti's dominance was clear.
Only six teams took part in the entire football competition, and the Cook Islands were by far the weakest side in the field. They managed to score only one goal throughout the tournament, which came in a defeat against Papua New Guinea the following day.
Australia 31–0 American Samoa (2001)
The biggest win in international football history came on 11 April 2001, when Australia defeated American Samoa 31–0 in a World Cup qualifier in Coffs Harbour.
Archie Thompson scored 13 goals – still the record for the most by a player in a senior international game. Australia's total remains the largest victory ever recorded at this level. The result later inspired the film Next Goal Wins, which followed American Samoa's efforts to recover and rebuild after the heaviest defeat in football history.
Comments powered by CComment