Chile national under-20 football team

Chile national under-20 football team, also known as Chile Sub-20 or La Rojita, is part of the Federación de Fútbol de Chile. The U-20 team is considered to be the breeding ground for future Chile national football team players. The Chile U-20 national team has participated in seven U-20 World Cups Chile 1987, Qatar 1995, Argentina 2001, Netherlands 2005, Canada 2007 and Turkey 2013. they will participate in Chile 2025.

Chile
Shirt badge/Association crest
Nickname(s)La Rojita (The Little Red One)
AssociationFederación de Fútbol de Chile
ConfederationCONMEBOL (South America)
Head coachNicolás Córdova
FIFA codeCHI
First colours
Second colours
First international
 Chile 4–1 Bolivia 
(Santiago, Chile; 14 March 1951)
Biggest win
 Chile 7–0 Honduras 
(Doetinchem, Netherlands; 11 June 2005)
Biggest defeat
 Chile 0–7 Spain 
(Doetinchem, Netherlands; 15 June 2005)
FIFA U-20 World Cup
Appearances7 (first in 1987)
Best resultThird place (2007)
South American Youth Championship
Appearances30 (first in 1954)
Best resultRunners-up (1975)
Chile national under-20 football team
Medal record
U-20 World Cup
Bronze medal – third place 2007 Canada Team
Chile national under-20 football team
Medal record
U-20 South American Youth Championship
Bronze medal – third place South American Youth Championship|1971 Paraguay NA
Silver medal – second place South American Youth Championship|1975 Peru NA
Bronze medal – third place South American Youth Championship|1995 Bolivia NA
Chile national under-20 football team
Medal record
Premier Under-20 Milk Cup
Gold medal – first place 2000 Elite NA
Bronze medal – third place 2007 Elite NA
Silver medal – second place 2008 Elite NA
Chile national under-20 football team
Medal record
Toulon Tournament
Silver medal – second place 2008 Toulon Tournament Team
Gold medal – first place 2009 Toulon Tournament Team

One of the best and earliest U-20 World Cup campaigns was when Chile hosted the tournament in 1987, finishing in fourth place. In the most recent 2007 U-20 World Cup the team earned a third-place position, making it Chile's most successful U-20 campaign to date.

The Chile national U-20 football team also participates in the South American Youth Championship which act as qualifier for the U-20 World Cup.[citation needed]

Chile National U-20 Football Team: World Cups

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U-20 World Cup: Chile 1987

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The first World Cup the U-20 national team gained entry came in 1987 when Chile was granted the right to host. Chile headed Group A which included Australia, Togo, and Yugoslavia. October 10, 1987 Chile faced eventual tournament winners Yugoslavia in Santiago in the presence of a crowd totaling 67,000 spectators. All of Chile's early group matches were held in Santiago at the Estadio Nacional. Chile lost the opening game by a score of 2–4, with Lukas Tudor and Camilo Pino scoring for the squad.

The second match against Togo, had Chile winning by a score of 3–0, with Pino scoring through a penalty kick in the '8 minute of the match. Tudor would also respond by scoring two goals in the 32nd and 75th minute of the match and securing victory.

The next game against Australia was staged in front of 75,000 people. Chile using the advantage of having support from its crowd, defeated Australia 2–0 with both goals coming from Pino in the 22nd and 52nd minutes of the match.

Chile advanced to the Quarter-Finals in second place, and later played Italy in the city of Concepción, Chile. Chile's margin of victory came with the minimum difference of a 1–0 score. The result in effect would lead ti a face-off against West Germany in the Semi-Finals. The match featured West Germany ultimately winning 4–0. The third place spot was to be played against East Germany where Chile fell on penalty kicks 3–1 after a game that had both sides drawn 1–1.[1]

Date Venue Opponents Result Score
October 10, 1987 Santiago, Chile   Yugoslavia L 2 - 4
October 13, 1987 Santiago, Chile   Togo W 3 - 0
October 17, 1987 Santiago, Chile   Australia W 2 - 0
October 21, 1987 Concepción, Chile   Italy W 1 - 0
October 23, 1987 Concepción, Chile   West Germany L 0 - 4
October 25, 1987 Santiago, Chile   East Germany D 1(1) - 1(3)

U-20 World Cup: Netherlands 2005

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June 11, 2005, Chile faced CONCACAF opponents Honduras at the De Vijverberg stadium in Doetinchem, Netherlands, in what was to be the first match pertaining to group C. Massimo Busacca from Switzerland was the referee of the match. Chile, in front of 6,800 spectators, opened the scoring in the first-half with goals from forward Parada in the 11th minute and midfielder José Pedro Fuenzalida in the 30th minute. The scoring momentum continued onto the second-half, where Fuenzalida added another goal onto his personal tally in the 53rd minute, while Matías Fernández followed with a goal of his own in the 67th. Two minutes later, in the 69th, Gonzalo Jara would also score which was followed by another strike from Parada in the 71st. Pedro Morales concluded with the last goal of the day in the 77th minute, making the final score 7–0, an impressive start for "La Rojita.[2]

Four days later, on June 15, 2005, Chile experienced a crushing blow against Spain. The match was again held at De Vijverberg, and the referee in charge was Benito Archundia from Mexico. An estimate of 6,600 spectators were in attendance with Spaniard Fernando Llorente scoring four goals. Chile, playing with ten men witnessed, fell 0–7, bringing their goal differential to zero.[3]

On June 17, 2005, at Galgenwaard Stadion in Utrecht (city), Chile competed against Morocco amid a crowd of 11,000. The referee was Australian Mark Shield. The only goal was scored by Moroccan forward Tarik Bendamou in the 47th minute.[4]

A total of three points was enough for Chile to qualify in a best third place spot for the second round and on June 22, 2005, Chile played hosts Netherlands at De Vijverberg stadium. Dutch forwards Ryan Babel, Quincy Owusu-Abeyie and Collins John would each score for the Dutch in a game finishing 3–0, thus eliminating Chile from the World Cup.[5]

Date Venue Opponents Result Score
June 11, 2005 Doetinchem, Netherlands   Honduras W 7 - 0
June 15, 2005 Doetinchem, Netherlands   Spain L 0 - 7
June 17, 2005 Utrecht, Netherlands   Morocco L 0 - 1
June 22, 2005 Doetinchem, Netherlands   Netherlands L 0 - 3

U-20 World Cup: Canada 2007

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Canada 2007 was Chile's fifth overall participation in the U-20 world youth championship. Chile opened Group A against the host nation of Canada in Toronto, with Chile winning 3–0. The game featured a Chilean side with adequate possession of the ball and attentive striking from forwards Medina, team captain Carlos Carmona, and late game substitute Jaime Grondona.[6]

The second match was against the African youth champions the Republic of Congo in Edmonton. Chile soundly defeated a ten-man squad with a score of 3–0, goals coming from striker Alexis Sánchez, Nicolás Medina and Arturo Vidal.[7]

The third game was against Austria where after 90 minutes the game ended in scoreless 0–0, the result was enough for Chile to clinch the first spot of the group.[8] In the second round, Chile went up against Portugal, who had qualified as third of their group. Chile with a goal from Vidal in the 45th minute of first half secured a pass onto the quarter-final.[9]

The quarter-final included Nigeria, where after a scoreless 90 minutes the game was to be decided in extra time. Within the next final 30 minutes of the match, Chile would win 4–0 with finishes coming off a header from Jaime Grondona, a penalty kick by Mauricio Isla after Chilean player Mathías Vidangossy was brought down in the box, a deadly counter strike finish from Isla in the 117th minute and a late finish from Vidangossy after rounding the goalkeeper in injury time.[10]

The semi-final against Argentina proved controversial where referee Wolfgang Stark would send off two Chilean players, Dagoberto Currimilla and Gary Medel. Playing with nine men proved drastic, as Chile would go on to lose 3–0.[11]

The third place spot brought a familiar opponent group A, rivals Austria. The match was a consolation prize for the teams in dispute and a meritable reward after a hard-fought campaign. Both countries would initiate great plays. One goal was enough with Chile's defender Hans Martínez hitting the ball past the goalkeeper and onto the net from a free kick cross, ending the match 1–0.[12]

Goalkeeper Christopher Toselli set a record after going 492 minutes without conceding a goal, breaking the old record of 484 minutes held by under-20 Brazilian goalkeeper Cláudio Taffarel since the 1985 World Cup.[11][13]

Alexis Sánchez, Mathías Vidangossy, Arturo Vidal, Cristián Suárez and Christopher Toselli all listed as candidates for top player of the tournament.[14]

Date Venue Opponents Result Score
July 1, 2007 Toronto, Canada   Canada W 3 - 0
July 5, 2007 Edmonton, Canada   Congo W 3 - 0
July 8, 2007 Toronto, Canada   Austria D 0 - 0
July 12, 2007 Edmonton, Canada   Portugal W 1 - 0
July 15, 2007 Montreal, Canada   Nigeria W 4 - 0
July 19, 2007 Toronto, Canada   Argentina L 0 - 3
July 22, 2007 Toronto, Canada   Austria W 1 - 0

U-20 World Cup: Turkey 2013

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Turkey 2013 marks the sixth time the Chilean U-20 team has participated in the U-20 world youth championship. The Chilean team ended the first stage of the championship in second position with 4 points, with a victory against Egypt (2-1), a draw against England (1-1), and a final defeat against Iraq (1-2). Despite the mixed results, the team advanced to the knockout stages, defeating Croatia (2-1).

Date Venue Opponents Result Score
June 23, 2013 Antalya, Turkey   Egypt W 2 - 1
June 26, 2013 Antalya, Turkey   England D 1 - 1
June 29, 2013 Antalya, Turkey   Iraq L 1 - 2
July 3, 2013 Bursa, Turkey   Croatia W 2 - 0
July 7, 2013 Istanbul, Turkey   Ghana L 3- - 4

U-20 World Cup: Chile 2025

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Chile 2025 will mark the seventh time the Chilean U-20 team has participated in the U-20 world youth championship. It will also mark second time Chile has hosted it having do it in 1987.

Competitive record

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FIFA World Youth Championship Record

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Year Round GP W D L GS GA
  1977 Did not qualify
  1979
  1981
  1983
  1985
  1987 Fourth place 6 3 1 2 9 9
  1989 Did not qualify
  1991
  1993
  1995 Round 1 3 0 2 1 6 9
  1997 Did not qualify
  1999
  2001 Round 1 3 1 0 2 4 8
  2003 Did not qualify
  2005 Second round 4 1 0 3 7 11
  2007 Third place 7 5 1 1 12 3
  2009 Did not qualify
  2011
  2013 Quarterfinals 5 2 1 2 9 8
  2015 Did not qualify
  2017
  2019
  2023
  2025 Qualified as hosts
Total 7/24 28 12 5 11 47 48

Honours

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  • Third place (1): 2007
  • Fourth place (1): 1987

List of FIFA U-20 World Cup matches

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FIFA World Youth Championship U20 History
Year Round Score Result
1987
Round 1   Chile 2 – 4   Yugoslavia Lose
Round 1   Chile 3 – 0   Togo Win
Round 1   Chile 2 – 0   Australia Win
Quarterfinals   Chile 1 – 0   Italy Win
Semifinals   Chile 0 – 4   West Germany Lose
3rd Place   Chile 1 – 1 (a.e.t.)(pen 1-3)   East Germany Draw
1995
Round 1   Chile 2 – 2   Japan Draw
Round 1   Chile 1 – 1   Burundi Draw
Round 1   Chile 3 – 6   Spain Lose
2001
Round 1   Chile 2 – 4   Ukraine Lose
Round 1   Chile 1 – 4   United States Lose
Round 1   Chile 1 – 0   China Win
2005
Round 1   Chile 7 – 0   Honduras Win
Round 1   Chile 0 – 7   Spain Lose
Round 1   Chile 0 – 1   Morocco Lose
Round of 16   Chile 0 – 3   Netherlands Lose
2007
Round 1   Chile 3 – 0   Canada Win
Round 1   Chile 3 – 0   Congo Win
Round 1   Chile 0 – 0   Austria Draw
Round of 16   Chile 1 – 0   Portugal Win
Quarterfinals   Chile 4 – 0 (a.e.t.)   Nigeria Win
Semifinals   Chile 0 – 3   Argentina Lose
3rd Place   Chile 1 – 0   Austria Win
2013
Round 1   Chile 2 – 1   Egypt Win
Round 1   Chile 1 – 1   England Draw
Round 1   Chile 1 – 2   Iraq Lose
Round of 16   Chile 2 – 0   Croatia Win
Quarterfinals   Chile 3 – 4 (a.e.t.)   Ghana Lose

By match

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FIFA World Youth Championship/U-20 World Cup Round Opponent Score Result Venue Chile scorers
1987 Group stage   Yugoslavia 2–4 L Santiago de Chile Tudor   17', Pino   67'
  Togo 3–0 W Santiago de Chile Pino   8' (pen.), Tudor   32', 75'
  Australia 2–0 W Santiago de Chile Pino   22', 52'
Quarter-finals   Italy 1–0 W Concepción Pino   73' (pen.)
Semi-finals   West Germany 0–4 L Concepción
Third place match   East Germany 1–1 (a.e.t.)
(1-3 pen.)
D Santiago de Chile González   84'
1995 Group stage   Japan 2-2 D Doha Rozental   11' (pen.), 67'
  Burundi 1–1 D Doha Rozental   14'
  Spain 3–6 L Doha Rozental   52', Poli   77', Lobos   83'
2001 Group stage   Ukraine 2–4 L Mendoza Millar   38', Pardo   92+'
  United States 1–4 L Mendoza Valdés   28'
  China 1–0 W Mendoza Berríos   87'
2005 Group stage   Honduras 7–0 W Doetinchem Parada   11', 71', Fuenzalida   20', 53', Fernández   67', Jara   69', Morales   77'
  Spain 0–7 L Doetinchem
  Morocco 0–1 L Utrecht
Round of 16   Netherlands 0–3 L Doetinchem
2007 Group stage   Canada 3–0 W Toronto Medina   25', Carmona   54', Grondona   81'
  Congo 3–0 W Edmonton Sánchez   49', Medina   75', Vidal   82'
  Austria 0–0 D Toronto
Round of 16   Portugal 1–0 W Edmonton Vidal   45'
Quarter-finals   Nigeria 4–0 (a.e.t.) W Montreal Grondona   96', Isla   114' (pen.), 117', Vidangossy   122+'
Semi-finals   Argentina 0–3 L Toronto
Third place match   Austria 1–0 W Toronto Martínez   46+'
2013 Group stage   Egypt 2–1 W Antalya Castillo   25', Bravo   76'
  England 1–1 D Antalya Castillo   32' (pen.)
  Iraq 1–2 L Antalya Mora   28'
Round of 16   Croatia 2–0 W Bursa Castillo   81', Šimunović   85' (o.g)
Quarter-finals   Ghana 3–4 (a.e.t.) L Istanbul Castillo   23', Henríquez   27', 98'

Record by opponent

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FIFA World Cup matches (by team)
Opponent Wins Draws Losses Total Goals Scored Goals Conceded
  Australia 1 0 0 1 2 0
  Austria 1 1 0 2 1 0
  Argentina 0 0 1 1 0 3
  Burundi 0 1 0 1 1 1
  Canada 1 0 0 1 3 0
  China 1 0 0 1 1 0
  Congo 1 0 0 1 3 0
  Croatia 1 0 0 1 2 0
  East Germany 0 1 0 1 1 1
  England 0 1 0 1 1 1
  Egypt 1 0 0 1 2 1
  Germany 0 0 1 1 0 4
  Ghana 0 0 1 1 3 4
  Honduras 1 0 0 1 7 0
  Iraq 0 0 1 1 1 2
  Italy 1 0 0 1 1 0
  Japan 0 1 0 1 2 2
  Morocco 0 0 1 1 0 1
  Netherlands 0 0 1 1 0 3
  Nigeria 1 0 0 1 4 0
  Portugal 1 0 0 1 1 0
  Spain 0 0 2 2 3 13
  Togo 1 0 0 1 3 0
  Ukraine 0 0 1 1 2 4
  United States 0 0 1 1 1 4
  Yugoslavia 0 0 1 1 2 4

Players

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Current squad

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The following 24 players were called up for the friendly matches against Qatar in December 2024.[15]

No. Pos. Player Date of birth (age) Club
1GK Martín Contreras (2005-05-18)18 May 2005 (aged 19)   Universidad Católica
1GK Sebastián Mella (2005-07-31)31 July 2005 (aged 19)   Huachipato
1GK Ignacio Sáez (2005-09-04)4 September 2005 (aged 19)   Universidad de Chile

2DF Felipe Faúndez (2006-03-27)27 March 2006 (aged 18)   O'Higgins
2DF Ian Garguez (2005-02-03)3 February 2005 (aged 19)   Palestino
2DF Ignacio Pérez (2006-06-06)6 June 2006 (aged 18)   Universidad Católica
2DF Matías Pérez (2005-04-13)13 April 2005 (aged 19)   Curicó Unido
2DF Iván Román (2006-07-12)12 July 2006 (aged 18)   Palestino
2DF Patricio Romero (2005-05-25)25 May 2005 (aged 19)   Cobreloa
2DF Yahir Salazar (2005-01-19)19 January 2005 (aged 19)   Universidad de Chile
2DF Nicolás Suárez (2005-07-31)31 July 2005 (aged 19)   Colo-Colo

3MF Benjamín Aravena (2005-11-17)17 November 2005 (aged 19)   Universidad de Chile
3MF Agustín Arce (2005-01-24)24 January 2005 (aged 19)   Universidad de Chile
3MF Leandro Hernández (2005-06-13)13 June 2005 (aged 19)   Colo-Colo
3MF Gabriel Pinto (2005-02-25)25 February 2005 (aged 19)   Limache
3MF Joaquín Silva (2005-05-27)27 May 2005 (aged 19)   Santiago Wanderers
3MF Rodrigo Vásquez (2005-05-06)6 May 2005 (aged 19)   Unión Española

4FW Willy Chatiliez (2005-03-26)26 March 2005 (aged 19)   Huesca
4FW Favian Loyola (2005-05-18)18 May 2005 (aged 19)   Orlando City
4FW Diego Opazo (2006-06-13)13 June 2006 (aged 18)   Santiago Wanderers
4FW Damián Pizarro (2005-03-28)28 March 2005 (aged 18)   Udinese
4FW Emiliano Ramos (2005-03-08)8 March 2005 (aged 19)   Everton
4FW Juan Rossel (2005-03-17)17 March 2005 (aged 19)   Universidad Católica
4FW Ignacio Vásquez (2006-05-22)22 May 2006 (aged 18)   Universidad de Chile

Former squads

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Coach: Luis Ibarra  

 # 

Name

Pos

DOB

Club

1 Guillermo Velasco GK 02.06.1968 Santiago Wanderers  
2 Mauricio Soto DF 21.02.1969 Puerto Montt  
3 Carlos Ramírez DF 26.02.1968 Huachipato  
4 Hugo Cortéz DF 03.06.1968 Cobreandino  
5 Javier Margas DF 10.05.1969 Colo-Colo  
6 Luis Musrri MF 24.12.1969 Universidad de Chile  
7 Raimundo Tupper FW 07.01.1969 Universidad Católica  
8 Sandro Navarrete MF 16.11.1968 Huachipato  
9 Lukas Tudor FW 21.02.1969 Universidad Católica  
10 Fabián Estay MF 05.10.1968 Universidad Católica  
11 Pedro González FW 17.10.1967 Club Deportivo Valdivia  
12 Gerhard Reiher GK 21.04.1968 Provincial Osorno  
13 Miguel Latín DF 27.07.1968 Santiago Wanderers  
14 Juan Carreño FW 16.11.1968 Colo-Colo  
15 Reinaldo Hoffmann DF 18.03.1968 Cobresal  
16 Héctor Cabello MF 14.01.1968 La Serena  
17 Camilo Pino MF 04.03.1968 Cobreloa  
18 Juan Reyes FW 31.08.1967 O'Higgins  

Coach: Leonardo Véliz  

 # 

Name

Pos

DOB

Club

1 Carlos Toro GK 02.04.1976 Santiago Wanderers  
2 Francisco Fernández DF 19.08.1975 Colo-Colo  
3 Mauricio Donoso MF 30.04.1976 Cobreloa  
4 Nelson Garrido DF 02.12.1977 Universidad Católica  
5 Jorge Vargas DF 08.02.1976 Huachipato  
6 Dion Valle DF 22.07.1977 Colo-Colo  
7 Rodrigo Valenzuela FW 27.11.1975 Unión Española  
8 Carlos Barraza MF 12.03.1976 La Serena  
9 Alejandro Osorio MF 24.09.1976 O'Higgins  
10 Frank Lobos MF 25.09.1976 Colo-Colo  
11 Sebastián Rozental FW 01.09.1976 Universidad Católica  
12 Ariel Salas GK 19.10.1976 Colo-Colo  
13 Héctor Tapia FW 30.09.1977 Colo-Colo  
14 Cristian Uribe MF 01.08.1976 Huachipato  
15 Fernando Martel MF 02.10.1975 Unión San Felipe  
16 Mauricio Aros DF 09.03.1976 Deportes Concepción  
17 Juan Carlos Madrid FW 20.10.1975 Universidad Católica  
18 Dante Poli DF 15.08.1976 Universidad Católica  

Coach: Hector Pinto  

 # 

Name

Pos

DOB

Club

1 Johnny Herrera GK 09.05.1981 Universidad de Chile  
2 Sergio Fernández DF 14.06.1981 Colo-Colo  
3 Daniel Campos MF 17.07.1981 Universidad de Concepción  
4 Hugo Droguett DF 02.09.1982 Universidad Católica  
5 Luis Oyarzún DF 24.05.1982 Palestino  
6 Nelson Pinto MF 01.02.1981 Universidad de Chile  
7 Gonzalo Villagra MF 17.09.1981 Universidad Católica  
8 Sebastián Pardo MF 01.01.1982 Universidad de Chile  
9 Mario Cáceres FW 17.03.1981 Sporting Club de Portugal  
10 Jaime Valdés MF 11.01.1981 AS Bari  
11 Mario Salgado FW 03.07.1981 Club Deportivo Huachipato  
12 Gino Reyes DF 23.02.1981 Colo-Colo  
13 Joel Soto FW 09.04.1982 Santiago Wanderers  
14 Adán Vergara DF 09.05.1981 Cobreloa  
15 Mario Berríos MF 20.08.1981 Palestino  
16 Roberto Órdenes MF 05.01.1981 Unión Española  
17 Rodrigo Millar MF 03.11.1981 Club Deportivo Huachipato  
18 Eduardo Lobos GK 30.07.1981 Colo-Colo  

Coach: José Sulantay  

 # 

Name

Pos

DOB

Club

1 Carlos Espinoza GK 23.02.1985 Deportes Puerto Montt  
2 Edzon Riquelme DF 29.08.1985 Deportes Concepción  
3 Sebastián Páez MF 13.08.1986 Deportes La Serena  
4 Sebastián Montecinos DF 12.03.1986 Colo-Colo  
5 Hugo Bascuñán DF 11.01.1985 Deportivo Maracaibo  
6 Marcelo Díaz MF 30.12.1986 Universidad de Chile  
7 Fernando Meneses MF 27.09.1985 Colo-Colo  
8 Iván Vásquez MF 13.08.1985 Universidad Católica  
9 Nicolás Canales FW 27.06.1985 Universidad de Chile  
10 Pedro Morales MF 25.05.1985 Huachipato  
11 Eduardo Tudela FW 03.03.1986 Cobreloa  
12 Carlos Arias GK 04.09.1986 Universidad Católica  
13 Felipe Muñoz DF 04.04.1985 Colo-Colo  
14 Matías Fernández MF 15.05.1986 Colo-Colo  
15 Carlos Carmona MF 21.02.1987 Coquimbo Unido  
16 Francisco Sánchez DF 06.02.1985 Everton  
17 Carlos Villanueva FW 05.02.1986 Audax Italiano  
18 Gonzalo Jara DF 29.08.1985 Huachipato  
19 José Fuenzalida MF 22.02.1985 Universidad Católica  
20 Ricardo Parada FW 02.01.1985 Universidad de Concepción  
21 José Rosales GK 20.09.1985 O'Higgins  
22 Juan Gonzalo Lorca FW 15.01.1985 Colo-Colo  

Coach: José Sulantay  

 # 

Name

Pos

DOB

Club

1 Cristopher Toselli GK 15.06.1988 Club Deportivo Universidad Católica  
2 Cristián Suárez DF 06.02.1987 Unión San Felipe  
3 Mauricio Isla MF 12.06.1988 Club Deportivo Universidad Católica  
4 Eric Godoy DF 26.03.1987 Santiago Wanderers  
5 Nicolás Larrondo DF 04.10.1987 Universidad de Chile  
6 Gary Medel MF 03.08.1987 Club Deportivo Universidad Católica  
7 Alexis Sánchez FW 19.12.1988 Udinese  
8 Dagoberto Currimilla MF 26.12.1987 Huachipato  
9 Nicolás Medina FW 28.03.1987 Universidad de Chile  
10 Juan Pablo Arenas MF 22.04.1987 Colo-Colo  
11 Jaime Grondona FW 15.04.1987 Santiago Wanderers  
12 Nery Veloso GK 02.03.1987 Huachipato  
13 Christian Sepúlveda DF 23.05.1987 Unión Española  
14 Arturo Vidal DF 22.05.1987 Colo-Colo  
15 Carlos Carmona MF 21.02.1987 Club Deportivo O'Higgins  
16 Gerardo Cortés MF 17.05.1988 Colo-Colo  
17 Hans Martínez DF 04.01.1987 Club Deportivo Universidad Católica  
18 Mathías Vidangossy FW 25.05.1987 Unión Española  
19 Michael Silva FW 12.03.1988 Santiago Wanderers  
20 Isaías Peralta MF 21.08.1987 Unión Española  

Coach: Mario Salas  

 # 

Name

Pos

DOB

Club

1 Dario Melo GK 24.03.1993 CD Palestino  
2 Felipe Campos DF 08.11.1993 CD Palestino  
3 Alejandro Contreras DF 03.03.1993 CD Palestino  
4 Valber Huerta DF 26.8.1993 Universidad de Chile  
5 Igor Lichnovsky DF 07.03.1994 Universidad de Chile  
6 Sebastian Martínez MF 06.06.1983 Universidad de Chile  
7 Christian Bravo FW 01.10.1993 Granada CF  
8 Andrés Robles DF 07.05.1994 Santiago Wanderers  
9 Felipe Mora FW 02.08.1993 Audax Italiano  
10 Nicolás Maturana MF 08.06.1993 Universidad de Chile  
11 Angelo Henriquez FW 13.04.1994 Real Zaragoza  
12 Brayan Cortés GK 29.05.1995 Deportes Iquique  
13 Óscar Hernández MF 03.07.1994 Unión Española  
14 Bryan Rabello MF 16.05.1994 Sevilla FC  
15 Cristián Cuevas FW 02.04.1995 Vitesse Arnhem  
16 César Fuentes MF 12.04.1993 O'Higgins F.C.  
18 Nicolás Castillo FW 14.02.1993 Universidad Católica  
19 Mario Larenas DF 27.06.1994 Union Española  
20 Claudio Baeza DF 23.12.1993 Colo-Colo  
21 Álvaro Salazar GK 24.03.1993 A.C. Barnechea  

See also

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References

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  1. ^ FIFA.com - Chile 1987: Yugoslavian fireworks
  2. ^ FIFA.com - Chile in seventh heaven after Honduran romp (7:0)
  3. ^ FIFA.com - Spain reign supreme against chastened Chile (7:0)
  4. ^ FIFA.com - Morocco through after Chilean bombardment (1:0)
  5. ^ FIFA.com - Dutch down Chile to Doetinchem delight (3:0)
  6. ^ FIFA.com - Spicy Chile sink Canucks
  7. ^ FIFA.com - Chile through as Congo succumb
  8. ^ FIFA.com - Austria and Chile draw through
  9. ^ FIFA.com - Vidal off after sinking Portugal
  10. ^ FIFA.com - Four-star Chile leave it late
  11. ^ a b Argentina advances to FIFA U-20 final - FIFA U-20 - Sports - CBC.ca
  12. ^ FIFA.com - Chile grab bronze
  13. ^ El arquero chileno Toselli bate record de tiempo invicto en Mundiales Sub-20 | terra
  14. ^ FIFA reveals nominees for MVP award
  15. ^ @laroja (8 December 2024). "Estos son los 2️⃣4️⃣ jugadores que representarán a Chile en Madrid, donde enfrentaremos a @qfa en dos oportunidades ⚔️" (in Spanish). Retrieved 9 December 2024 – via Instagram.
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