Uzbekistan Football Association
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Uzbekistan Football Association
Summary
Uzbekistan Football Association is an association football federation[1]. It draws 85 Wikipedia views per month (association_football_federation category, ranking #62 of 249).[2]
Key Facts
- Uzbekistan Football Association was a member of Asian Football Confederation[3].
- Uzbekistan Football Association was a member of FIFA[4].
- Uzbekistan Football Association was a member of Central Asian Football Association[5].
- Uzbekistan Football Association is in the country of Uzbekistan[6].
- Uzbekistan Football Association's instance of is recorded as association football federation[7].
- Uzbekistan Football Association's instance of is recorded as nonprofit organization[8].
- Uzbekistan Football Association's logo image is recorded as Uzbekistan Football Federation.svg[9].
- Uzbekistan Football Association's headquarters location is recorded as Tashkent[10].
- Uzbekistan Football Association's head coach is recorded as Timur Kapadze[11].
- Uzbekistan Football Association's Commons category is recorded as Uzbekistan football[12].
- Uzbekistan Football Association's chairperson is recorded as Bakhodir Kurbanov[13].
- Uzbekistan Football Association's chairperson is recorded as Abdulhashim Mutalov[14].
- Uzbekistan Football Association's chairperson is recorded as Zokir Almatov[15].
- Uzbekistan Football Association's chairperson is recorded as Mirabror Usmanov[16].
- Uzbekistan Football Association's chairperson is recorded as Achilbay Ramatov[17].
- +1946-00-00T00:00:00Z marks the founding of Uzbekistan Football Association[18].
- Uzbekistan Football Association's sport is recorded as association football[19].
- Uzbekistan Football Association's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/0d3jgr[20].
- Uzbekistan Football Association's parent organization or unit is recorded as Central Asian Football Association[21].
- Uzbekistan Football Association's parent organization or unit is recorded as Asian Football Confederation[22].
- Uzbekistan Football Association's official website is recorded as http://www.ufa.uz/oz[23].
- Uzbekistan Football Association's official website is recorded as https://pfl.uz/[24].
- Uzbekistan Football Association's official name is recorded as {'lang': 'uz', 'text': 'Oʻzbekiston Futbol Assotsiatsiyasi'}[25].
- Uzbekistan Football Association's official name is recorded as {'lang': 'en', 'text': 'Uzbekistan Football Association'}[26].
- Uzbekistan Football Association's native label is recorded as {'lang': 'uz', 'text': 'Oʻzbekiston futbol assotsiatsiyasi (OʻFA)Ўзбекистон футбол ассоциацияси (ЎФА)'}[27].
Body
Founding
+1946-00-00T00:00:00Z marks the founding of Uzbekistan Football Association[18].
Identity
Official names include {'lang': 'uz', 'text': 'Oʻzbekiston Futbol Assotsiatsiyasi'}[25] and {'lang': 'en', 'text': 'Uzbekistan Football Association'}[26].
Leadership
Chairpersons include Bakhodir Kurbanov[13], a politician[28], b. 1969[29], of Uzbekistan[30], awarded the Shon-Sharaf Order[31]; Abdulhashim Mutalov[14], a politician[32], b. 1947[33], of Soviet Union[34], awarded the Medal "For Distinguished Labour"[35], specialised in politician[36]; Zokir Almatov[15], a politician[37], b. 1949[38], of Uzbekistan[39], awarded the Order of Outstanding Merit[40]; Mirabror Usmanov[16], a statesperson[41], 1947–2019[42], of Soviet Union[43], awarded the Order of El-yurt hurmati[44]; and Achilbay Ramatov[17], b. 1962[45], awarded the Hero of Uzbekistan[46].
Operations
Uzbekistan Football Association's headquarters location is recorded as Tashkent[10]. Parent organizations include Central Asian Football Association[21], an international sport governing body[47], in Uzbekistan[48], founded in 2014[49], headquartered in Tashkent[50] and Asian Football Confederation[22], an international sport governing body[51], in Malaysia[52], founded in 1954[53], headquartered in Kuala Lumpur[54].
Why It Matters
Uzbekistan Football Association draws 85 Wikipedia views per month (association_football_federation category, ranking #62 of 249).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 24 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[55] It is known by 26 alternative names across languages and contexts.[56]