Wales national under-18 football team
Nickname(s) | Young Dragons (Welsh: Dreigiau Ifanc) | ||
---|---|---|---|
Association | Football Association of Wales | ||
Head coach | Rob Edwards | ||
| |||
The Wales national under-18 football team is the national under-18 football team of Wales and is controlled by the Football Association of Wales.
Current squad
- The following players were called up for the friendly matches.[1][2]
- Match dates: 15 and 18 June 2023
- Opposition: Sweden
Name | Club |
---|---|
Oliver Camis | Bournemouth |
James Pradic | Preston North End |
Josey Casa-Grande | Bristol City |
Alex Williams | West Bromwich Albion |
Will Spiers | Cardiff City |
Scott Godden | Leeds United |
Theo Robinson | Nottingham Forest |
Thierry Katsunkunya | Aston Villa |
George Abbott | Watford |
William Andiyapan | Tottenham Hotspur |
Max Edwards | Bristol Rovers |
Jonathan Bland | Barnsley |
Daniel Watts | Swansea City |
Dan Barton | Cardiff City |
Calum Agius | Crewe Alexandra |
Lewis Koumas | Liverpool |
Cole Fleming | Cardiff City |
Tanatswa Nyakuhwa | Cardiff City |
Omari Benjamin | Arsenal |
Japhet Matondo | Cardiff City |
Isaac Jefferies | Cardiff City |
Zachary Willis | Birmingham City |
See also
- Football Association of Wales
- Wales national football team
- Wales national under-21 football team
- Wales national under-20 football team
- Wales national under-19 football team
- Wales national under-17 football team
References
- v
- t
- e
Wales national football team
- Home venues
- Cardiff City Stadium
- Aberdare Athletic Ground
- Anfield
- Millennium Stadium
- Ninian Park
- Old Racecourse Ground
- Parc y Scarlets
- Penrhyn Park
- Racecourse Ground
- St. Helen's
- Swansea.com Stadium
- The Arms Park
- The National Stadium
- The Oval
- Vetch Field
- 1876–1899
- 1900–1914
- 1920–1939
- 1946–1959
- 1960–1979
- 1980–1999
- 2000–2019
- 2020–present
- Unofficial matches
- Matches v Home Nations
- 25+ caps
- World Cup & Euro Championship squads
- Born outside Wales
- Other categories
- British Home Championship (1884–1984)
- 2011 Nations Cup
- First international match (Scotland v Wales) (1876)
- 1958 World Cup play-off (1958)
- 1986 World Cup qualifier (death of Jock Stein) (1985)
- The Barry Horns
- When Pelé Broke Our Hearts
- "Together Stronger (C'mon Wales)"