Bangladesh’s women’s football team is heading into the 2026 Asian Cup with a clear concern: how to minimise goals conceded. Rajshahi Stars’ goalkeeper Rupna Chakma kept nine clean sheets in ten matches during the recently concluded domestic league, giving the impression of a reliable last line of defence. However, in the lead-up to the Asian Cup, Bangladesh conceded 11 goals in four preparatory friendly matches, highlighting the gap between domestic dominance and international competition.
Bangladesh’s group for the tournament, starting 1 March in Australia, includes China, North Korea, and Uzbekistan—teams known for prolific scoring. In recent preparatory games, these sides demonstrated their attacking prowess, reflecting their historical records in the Asian Cup.
Asian Cup Historical Performance
| Team | Matches Played | Goals Scored | Goals Conceded | Notable Record |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| China | 75 | 367 | – | 2022 group stage: 11 goals in 2 matches, 0 conceded |
| North Korea | 53 | 241 | – | Known for high-scoring tournaments |
| Uzbekistan | 16 | 15 | 65 | Strong preparation wins against regional teams |
| Bangladesh | 75 | 149 | 149 | 24 countries faced; first Asian Cup appearance |
Bangladesh has historically struggled to score in international matches despite domestic leagues featuring frequent high-scoring games. In 75 international matches against 24 countries, they have scored and conceded 149 goals each, underlining the defensive challenges they face against Asia’s elite sides.
Defensive Concerns and Experience Gap
Minimising goals conceded is the primary objective for Bangladesh, particularly against China and North Korea, teams with whom they have no prior senior-level encounters. Experienced defender Shiumli Azim commented, “We have never played against China or North Korea at the senior level, only age-group matches against North Korea. We cannot promise victory, but we will try to avoid disasters.”
Bangladesh’s FIFA ranking of 112 highlights the disparity: China is 17th, North Korea 9th, and Uzbekistan 49th, emphasising both experience and skill gaps.
Tactical Preparation
Coach Peter Butler has experimented with a high-line defence in preparation matches against Thailand and Malaysia. Whether this strategy will hold against stronger opponents remains uncertain. Defender Afida Khandakar stated, “We cannot focus only on defence; our priority is to fight and compete at our best.”
The Asian Cup fixtures are as follows:
| Date | Opponent | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| 3 March | China | Nine-time champions |
| 6 March | North Korea | Three-time champions |
| 9 March | Uzbekistan | Five-time Asian Cup participants |
Preparatory constraints have also affected the team. Although Bangladesh Football Federation planned a camp in Japan and a preparatory match in the Philippines, these did not materialise. Instead, the team played two friendlies in Thailand (October) and a tri-nation tournament in Dhaka (December), plus a planned friendly in Sydney.
As the tournament approaches, the team’s primary focus is solidifying defence while seeking competitive experience to face Asia’s top sides. With historical scoring power of opponents, Bangladesh’s path in their first Asian Cup will test resilience as much as skill.