Team Overview

The Uruguay national football team (Spanish: Selección de fútbol de Uruguay), nicknamed La Celeste ("The Sky Blue") and Los Charrúas ("The Charrúas"), have represented Uruguay in international men's football since their first international match in 1902 and is administered by the Asociación Uruguaya de Fútbol (English: Uruguayan Football Association), the governing body of football in Uruguay, which is a founding member of CONMEBOL since 1916 and a member of FIFA since 1923. It was also a member of PFC, which was the attempt at a unified confederation of the Americas from 1946 to 1961. Uruguay's home stadium is the Estadio Centenario, and they have been coached by Marcelo Bielsa since 2023. Considered one of the most successful national teams in international competitions and by FIFA as "football's first global powerhouse," Uruguay has won four world FIFA–organized championships, two Olympic titles and two FIFA World Cups. Their first two senior world titles came at the Olympic tournaments of Paris 1924 and Amsterdam 1928, two events that were directly organized by FIFA as open tournaments that included professionals. In the former, Uruguay beat Switzerland 3–0 in the final, whereas in the latter, Uruguay defeated Argentina 2–1. They then secured a third consecutive title at the inaugural FIFA World Cup in Montevideo, where they beat Argentina 4–2 in the decisive match. Uruguay's fourth title came in 1950 after beating hosts Brazil in the final match 2–1, a match that still holds the record for the highest official attendance for a football match ever (173,850 people at the gate). On account of these achievements, the Uruguayan national team displays four five-pointed stars approved by FIFA on its football crest. Uruguay were unbeaten in world championship matches from the 1924 Olympics until their semi-final loss in the 1954 World Cup marking a 30-year unbeaten streak and winning four consecutive world titles in tournaments they participated in, having chosen to opt out of the 1934 and 1938 World Cups. In regional competitions, Uruguay has won the Copa América 15 times, having also won the inaugural edition in 1916, second only to Argentina for the most titles in the tournament's history, with their most recent title in 2011. As of 2025, based on international senior official titles, Uruguay have won the second most major trophies, behind Argentina.

Current Squad

NoPosNameClub
11GK Sergio Rochet0
121GK Santiago Mele0
231GK Fernando Muslera0
22DF José María Giménez8
32DF Sebastián Cáceres0
42DF Ronald Araújo1
132DF Guillermo Varela0
162DF Mathías Olivera2
172DF Matías Viña1
222DF Joaquín Piquerez0
242DF Santiago Bueno0
53MF Manuel Ugarte1
63MF Rodrigo Bentancur3
73MF Nicolás de la Cruz5
83MF Federico Valverde9
103MF Giorgian de Arrascaeta13
113MF Facundo Pellistri2
143MF Agustín Canobbio1
153MF Emiliano Martínez0
183MF Brian Rodríguez4
203MF Maximiliano Araújo3
253MF Juan Manuel Sanabria1
263MF Rodrigo Zalazar2
94FW Darwin Núñez13
194FW Rodrigo Aguirre3
214FW Federico Viñas2