1994 in Estonian football

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1994 in Estonian football
Flag of Estonia.svg
Soccerball.svg
Meistriliiga champions
FC Flora Tallinn
Esiliiga champions
JK Pärnu Kalev
Estonian Cup winners
FC Norma Tallinn
Teams in Europe
FC Norma Tallinn, FC Flora Tallinn
Estonian national team
1994 Baltic Cup
1996 UEFA Euro qualifying
Estonian Footballer of the Year
Mart Poom

The 1994 season was the third full year of competitive football (soccer) in Estonia since gaining independence from the Soviet Union on 20 August 1991.

Contents

National Leagues

Meistriliiga

Esiliiga

Estonian FA Cup

Quarterfinals

Semifinals

Final

National team

Senior team

DateVenueOpponentsScoreCompEstonia scorersFixture
1994-03-09 Paralimni Stadium
Paralimni
Flag of Cyprus.svg  Cyprus 2 – 0 F [1]
1994-05-07 Titan Stadium
Fullerton
Flag of the United States.svg  United States 4 – 0 F
1994-05-23 Kadrioru Stadium
Tallinn
Flag of Wales (1959-present).svg  Wales 1 – 2 F Reim Soccerball shade.svg86' [2]
1994-06-01 City Stadium
Skopje
Flag of North Macedonia.svg  North Macedonia 2 – 0 F
1994-07-29 Žalgiris Stadium
Vilnius
Flag of Lithuania.svg  Lithuania 3- 0 BC94 [3]
1994-07-30 Žalgiris Stadium
Vilnius
Flag of Latvia.svg  Latvia 0 – 2 BC94
1994-08-16 Akureyrarvöllur
Akureyri
Flag of Iceland.svg  Iceland 4 – 0 F
1994-09-04 Kadrioru Stadium
Tallinn
Flag of Croatia.svg  Croatia 0 – 2 EC96 [4]
1994-10-08 Kadrioru Stadium
Tallinn
Flag of Italy.svg  Italy 0 – 2 EC96
1994-10-26 Kadrioru Stadium
Tallinn
Flag of Finland.svg  Finland 0 – 7 F
1994-11-06 FK Ozolnieki Stadium
Ozolnieki
Flag of Latvia.svg  Latvia 0 – 0 F
1994-11-13 Olimpiysky National Sports Complex
Kyiv
Flag of Ukraine.svg  Ukraine 3 – 0 EC96

Notes

  1. F = Friendly match
  2. First goal of Martin Reim in 18 international matches for Estonia.
  3. BC94 = Baltic Cup 1994 match
  4. UEFA Euro 1996 qualifying for the Euro 1996 tournament in England.

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<span class="mw-page-title-main">1996 in Estonian football</span>

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<span class="mw-page-title-main">1997 in Estonian football</span>

The 1997 season was the sixth full year of competitive football (soccer) in Estonia since gaining independence from the Soviet Union on 20 August 1991.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">1998 in Estonian football</span>

The 1998 season was the seventh full year of competitive football (soccer) in Estonia since gaining independence from the Soviet Union on 20 August 1991.

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The 1993 season was the second year of competitive football (soccer) in Lithuania as an independent nation since regaining independence from the Soviet Union in 1991.

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The 1994 season was the third full year of competitive football in the Baltic country as an independent nation. After having failed to qualify for the 1994 FIFA World Cup the Estonia national football team for the first time in history competed at the qualifying tournament for the European Championship. Manager Uno Piir was replaced by Roman Ubakivi after the 4-0 loss against the United States on 7 May 1994. In twelve games Estonia only managed to get one draw.

The 1995 season was the fourth full year of competitive football in Estonia as an independent nation. After having changed managers in 1994 — Roman Ubakivi replaced Uno Piir — the Estonia national football team continued in the qualifying tournament for the European Championship. Estonia performed worse in 1995 with twelve defeats in twelve games including four major losses. At the Baltic Cup the Estonian U-23 team competed, led by coach Aavo Sarap.

The 1996 season was the fifth full year of competitive football in the Baltic country as an independent nation. After having a poor run in 1995 the Estonia national football team started in the qualifying tournament for the 1998 FIFA World Cup in France. The team had a new coach: Teitur Thordarson from Iceland.

The 1997 season was the sixth full year of competitive football in the Baltic country as an independent nation. The Estonia national football team continued in the qualifying tournament for the 1998 FIFA World Cup in France. The team ended up in fifth place in the final ranking of group 4, with one win, one draw and eight losses.

The 1998 season was the seventh full year of competitive football in the Baltic country as an independent nation. The Estonia national football team failed to qualify for the 1998 FIFA World Cup in France. The team ended up in fifth place in the final ranking of group 4, with one win, one draw and eight losses.

The 2002 season was the 11th full year of competitive football in the Baltic country as an independent nation. The Estonia national football team played a total number of eleven matches in 2002, and did not qualify for the 2002 FIFA World Cup in Japan and South Korea.

The 2003 season was the 12th full year of competitive football in the Baltic country as an independent nation. The Estonia national football team played a total number of seventeen international matches in 2003. The team ended up in fourth place in European Qualification Group 8 for Euro 2004, with two wins, two draws and four defeats.