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India Wins SAFF Women’s Championship 2026: Record 6th Title

India beat Bangladesh 3-1 in the SAFF Women's Championship 2026 final at Fatorda Stadium, Goa on 6 June. Record 6th title after 7-year wait. Full SSC, Banking & UPSC analysis.

⏱️ 12 min read
📊 2,400 words
📅 June 2026
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“The Blue Tigresses have made every Indian proud. Their victory is an inspiration for young girls across the country to pursue sports.” — PM Narendra Modi, June 2026

The Indian Women’s Football Team clinched the SAFF Women’s Championship 2026 on 6 June 2026, defeating defending champions Bangladesh 3–1 in the final at the Pandit Jawaharlal Nehru Stadium (Fatorda Stadium), Margao, Goa. The victory gave India a record sixth title in the tournament’s history and ended a seven-year drought — Bangladesh had won the last two consecutive editions (2022 and 2024). Coached by Crispin Chettri and nicknamed the Blue Tigresses, India scored 18 goals and conceded just 1 across the entire tournament — one of the most dominant campaigns in the championship’s history.

6th India’s Record Title Count
3–1 Final Score vs Bangladesh
18 Goals Scored in 4 Matches
69 India’s FIFA World Ranking
📊 Quick Reference
Tournament SAFF Women’s Championship 2026 (8th Edition)
Final Date 6 June 2026
Venue Fatorda Stadium, Margao, Goa
Head Coach Crispin Chettri
Tournament Ran 25 May – 6 June 2026
Teams Participated 6 (Pakistan absent)

📜 About the SAFF Women’s Championship

The SAFF Women’s Championship is the premier international women’s football tournament for national teams across South Asia. It is governed by the South Asian Football Federation (SAFF), established in 1997 and headquartered in Dhaka, Bangladesh. SAFF is a regional sub-confederation of the Asian Football Confederation (AFC), which is one of the six continental confederations under FIFA.

SAFF has seven member associations: Bangladesh, Bhutan, India, Maldives, Nepal, Pakistan, and Sri Lanka (Bhutan joined in 2000). The women’s championship was launched in 2010 and is held approximately every two years. Only two nations have won the title across all eight editions: India (6 times) and Bangladesh (2 times). Nepal has been runner-up six times without ever winning — the most runner-up finishes by any team in the tournament’s history.

🎯 Simple Explanation

Think of SAFF Women’s Championship as the “South Asian version of the Women’s Euro” — a regional tournament contested by the 7 South Asian countries every two years. India is the Brazil of this tournament — dominant from the start (5 consecutive titles) but briefly dethroned (2022 and 2024 by Bangladesh) before reclaiming the crown in 2026 at home.

📌 Tournament History & Road to 2026

India dominated the tournament from its inception, winning the first five consecutive editions (2010–2019). The 2022 edition — held in Nepal — marked a watershed: Bangladesh beat India 3–0 in the group stage and went on to win the title, defeating Nepal 3–1 in the final. They retained it in 2024 (also in Nepal), defeating Nepal 2–1. India was eliminated in the semi-finals in both 2022 and 2024 — the only two editions they had ever failed to win.

Edition Year Host Winner Runner-Up
1st 2010 Bangladesh India Nepal
2nd 2012 India Nepal
3rd 2014 India Nepal
4th 2016 India (Siliguri) India Nepal
5th 2019 Nepal (Biratnagar) India Nepal
6th 2022 Nepal Bangladesh Nepal
7th 2024 Nepal Bangladesh Nepal
8th 2026 India (Goa) India Bangladesh
✓ Quick Recall

Nepal’s Painful Record: Nepal has been runner-up SIX times across 8 editions — the most runner-up appearances by any team — without ever winning the title. In 2026, they were eliminated in the semi-finals by Bangladesh.

✨ India’s 2026 Campaign: Match by Match

The tournament featured 6 teams in two groups. India was placed in Group B alongside Bangladesh and Maldives. Group A contained Nepal, Sri Lanka, and Bhutan.

  • Match 1 (25 May) — India 11–0 Maldives: Dominant opening. Aveka Singh scored 4 goals; Priyangka Devi Naorem, Grace Dangmei, and Karishma Shirvoikar also among scorers. India’s biggest-ever win in the tournament.
  • Match 2 (30 May) — India 3–0 Bangladesh (Group Stage): India’s first win over Bangladesh since 2019. Goals by Pyari Xaxa (36′), Lynda Kom (78′ pen), and Malavika P (90+1′). India topped Group B with a perfect record, conceding zero goals.
  • Semi-Final (3 June) — India 1–0 Bhutan: Sanfida Nongrum (58′) scored the only goal. India’s first final appearance in six years.
  • Final (6 June) — India 3–1 Bangladesh: India wins the championship.
💭 Think About This

Pakistan did not participate in the 2026 edition due to strained bilateral relations with India. This is a recurring pattern in South Asian sports — political tensions between neighbouring nations frequently spill into sporting contexts, reducing the representativeness of regional tournaments. Should international sports bodies like SAFF have mechanisms to insulate tournaments from bilateral diplomatic disputes?

🌍 The Final: India 3–1 Bangladesh (6 June 2026)

FIFA Rankings: India (World No. 69) vs Bangladesh (World No. 112).

India’s head coach Crispin Chettri fielded an attacking line-up with Manisha Kalyan leading the charge and Pyari Xaxa in the no. 10 role.

  • 42′ — Pyari Xaxa (India 1–0): Composed finish despite a deflection — India took the lead just before half-time.
  • 45+1′ — Ritu Porna Chakma (India 1–1): Bangladesh equalised in first-half stoppage time — the only goal India conceded in the entire tournament.
  • 46′ — Sanfida Nongrum (India 2–1): Just 40 seconds after the restart, Nongrum headed home to restore the lead — a decisive, momentum-changing intervention.
  • 82′ — Lynda Kom Serto (India 3–1): Substitute Lynda Kom pounced on a Bangladesh defensive error to seal the title.

Final score: India 3–1 Bangladesh.

42′
Pyari Xaxa scores — India 1–0 Bangladesh
45+1′
Ritu Porna Chakma equalises — India 1–1 (only goal conceded in the tournament)
46′
Sanfida Nongrum heads home 40 seconds after restart — India 2–1
82′
Substitute Lynda Kom Serto seals the title — India 3–1 Bangladesh
FT
India win the SAFF Women’s Championship 2026 — record 6th title, first since 2019

🏆 Tournament Awards & Statistics

All four individual awards went to Indian players or India’s opponents:

Award Winner Country Details
Most Valuable Player (MVP) Sanfida Nongrum India Decisive goals in semi-final & final; PoM both games
Top Scorer Aveka Singh India 4 goals (all vs Maldives); plays for Næstved HG, Denmark
Best Goalkeeper Panthoi Chanu Elangbam India Clean sheet in all matches except final’s first half
Fair Play Award Nepal Highest disciplinary record across the tournament

Tournament Statistics: 6 teams · 9 matches · 35 total goals · 3.89 goals per match average. India scored 18 goals and conceded just 1 across 4 matches.

⚠️ Exam Trap

Don’t mix up the awards: MVP = Sanfida Nongrum (goals in semi-final + final). Top Scorer = Aveka Singh (4 goals — but all vs Maldives in group stage, not the final). Best Goalkeeper = Panthoi Chanu Elangbam. Fair Play = Nepal (not India). Also: this is India’s 6th title, 8th edition of the championship — these two numbers are commonly confused.

👤 Key Players, Coach & India’s Football Legacy

Head Coach: Crispin Chettri — born 20 January 1975 in Kurseong, West Bengal. Former professional footballer from Northeast India; previously led Odisha FC Women to the Indian Women’s League (IWL) title in 2023–24.

Captain: Sweety Devi Ngangbam. The squad drew heavily from Northeast India — Sanfida Nongrum (Manipur), Lynda Kom Serto (Manipur), and Panthoi Chanu Elangbam (Manipur) reflect the region’s disproportionately high contribution to Indian women’s football.

Players with professional contracts abroad:

  • Manisha Kalyan — plays for Alianza Lima, Peru
  • Aveka Singh — plays for Næstved HG, Denmark

India’s all-time records:

  • Top scorer of all time: Bala Devi Ngangom — 48 goals
  • Most caps: Ashalata Devi Loitongbam — 100 appearances
  • Highest FIFA ranking: No. 49 (December 2013)
  • Current FIFA ranking: No. 69 (April 2026)
💭 For GDPI / Essay Prep

Northeast India contributes a disproportionately high number of players to the national women’s football team — Manipur in particular has become a nursery for elite women footballers. This raises important questions about regional talent development, sports infrastructure investment, and how central sporting bodies like AIFF can replicate the “Northeast model” in other states. What structural factors explain Manipur’s dominance in Indian women’s football?

🧠 Memory Tricks
India’s Title Years — “FIVE then SKIP then BACK”:
2010, 2012, 2014, 2016, 2019 (five straight) → 2022 Bangladesh → 2024 Bangladesh → 2026 India BACK. Remember: “5 in a row, 2 lost, then home glory.” The gap between 2016 and 2019 (3 years) is also unusual — no tournament in 2018.
Final Goalscorers — “X-N-K”:
Xaxa (42′), Nongrum (46′), Kom (82′) — India’s three goals. “XNK = Xaxa-Nongrum-Kom.” Bangladesh’s only goal: Ritu Porna Chakma (45+1′). The 46′ goal came just 40 seconds after the 45+1′ equaliser — fastest response in final history.
SAFF Structure:
FIFA → AFC (Asian Football Confederation) → SAFF. SAFF established 1997, HQ Dhaka. 7 members: Bangladesh, Bhutan, India, Maldives, Nepal, Pakistan, Sri Lanka. Women’s championship since 2010.
The “18-1” Number:
India scored 18 goals and conceded just 1 in the 2026 tournament (4 matches). The single conceded goal came in the final’s first half (45+1′). “18-1 is not a scoreline — it’s India’s tournament record.”
📚 Quick Revision Flashcards

Click to flip • Master key facts

Question
When and where was the SAFF Women’s Championship 2026 final played, and what was the result?
Click to flip
Answer
The final was played on 6 June 2026 at Pandit Jawaharlal Nehru Stadium (Fatorda Stadium), Margao, Goa. India defeated Bangladesh 3–1 to win a record sixth title.
Card 1 of 5
🧠 Think Deeper

For GDPI, Essay Writing & Critical Analysis

⚖️
Bangladesh won back-to-back SAFF Women’s Championships in 2022 and 2024, challenging India’s dominance. What does this shift tell us about the changing landscape of women’s football in South Asia, and what must India do to stay competitive at the next level?
Consider: AIFF’s Indian Women’s League investment; Bangladesh’s federation development model; players like Manisha Kalyan (Peru) and Aveka Singh (Denmark) as indicators of India’s upward trajectory; AFC Women’s Asian Cup performance as a benchmark; the role of grassroots development in states beyond Northeast India.
🌍
Manipur and Northeast India produce a disproportionate share of India’s top women footballers. Is this a success story of targeted regional investment or an indictment of the rest of India’s sports ecosystem?
Think about: cultural factors in Northeast India that support women in sports; infrastructure investment in the region; AIFF talent development pipelines; the role of professional clubs like Gokulam Kerala in women’s football; how national sports policy can replicate pockets of excellence at scale.
🎯 Test Your Knowledge

5 questions • Instant feedback

Question 1 of 5
How many times has India won the SAFF Women’s Championship, and what was the 2026 final score?
A) 5 times; 2–0 vs Bangladesh
B) 7 times; 3–0 vs Bangladesh
C) 6 times; 3–1 vs Bangladesh
D) 6 times; 2–1 vs Nepal
Explanation

India won their record 6th SAFF Women’s Championship title on 6 June 2026, defeating Bangladesh 3–1 in the final at Fatorda Stadium, Margao, Goa. This was the 8th edition of the tournament.

Question 2 of 5
Who won the Most Valuable Player (MVP) award at the SAFF Women’s Championship 2026?
A) Sanfida Nongrum (India)
B) Aveka Singh (India)
C) Manisha Kalyan (India)
D) Pyari Xaxa (India)
Explanation

Sanfida Nongrum was named Most Valuable Player (MVP). She scored in both the semi-final against Bhutan and the crucial 46th-minute goal in the final. Aveka Singh was the Top Scorer (4 goals, all vs Maldives).

Question 3 of 5
India won the first five consecutive editions of the SAFF Women’s Championship. In which year did they first win it?
A) 2008
B) 2012
C) 2006
D) 2010
Explanation

India first won the SAFF Women’s Championship in 2010 (the inaugural edition) and won the next four consecutive editions — 2012, 2014, 2016, and 2019 — before Bangladesh won in 2022 and 2024.

Question 4 of 5
Where is SAFF (South Asian Football Federation) headquartered, and when was it established?
A) New Delhi, India — 2000
B) Dhaka, Bangladesh — 1997
C) Kathmandu, Nepal — 1997
D) Colombo, Sri Lanka — 2000
Explanation

SAFF was established in 1997 and is headquartered in Dhaka, Bangladesh. It is a sub-confederation of the AFC (Asian Football Confederation), which is one of six continental confederations under FIFA.

Question 5 of 5
Which team has been runner-up the most times in the SAFF Women’s Championship without ever winning?
A) Bangladesh
B) Sri Lanka
C) Bhutan
D) Nepal
Explanation

Nepal has been runner-up six times in the SAFF Women’s Championship across eight editions without ever winning the title — the most runner-up finishes by any team in the tournament’s history.

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📌 Key Takeaways for Exams
1
Result: India won SAFF Women’s Championship 2026 (8th edition) on 6 June 2026 at Fatorda Stadium, Margao, Goa — defeating Bangladesh 3–1. Record 6th title; first since 2019.
2
Goalscorers (Final): India — Pyari Xaxa (42′), Sanfida Nongrum (46′), Lynda Kom Serto (82′). Bangladesh — Ritu Porna Chakma (45+1′). Nongrum’s 46′ goal came just 40 seconds after the equaliser.
3
Awards: MVP — Sanfida Nongrum; Top Scorer — Aveka Singh (4 goals vs Maldives; plays for Næstved HG, Denmark); Best GK — Panthoi Chanu Elangbam; Fair Play — Nepal.
4
India’s Campaign: 18 goals scored, 1 conceded across 4 matches. Beat Maldives 11–0, Bangladesh 3–0 (group), Bhutan 1–0 (semi). Pakistan absent due to bilateral tensions. Head coach: Crispin Chettri.
5
SAFF Facts: Established 1997, HQ Dhaka. Sub-confederation of AFC → FIFA. 7 members. Women’s championship since 2010. Only India (6) and Bangladesh (2) have won. Nepal: 6 runner-up finishes, 0 wins.
6
India’s All-Time Records: FIFA ranking No. 69 (April 2026); highest No. 49 (Dec 2013). Top scorer: Bala Devi Ngangom (48 goals). Most caps: Ashalata Devi Loitongbam (100). Manisha Kalyan plays for Alianza Lima, Peru.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

How many times has India won the SAFF Women’s Championship, and in which years?
India has won the SAFF Women’s Championship a record six times: 2010 (inaugural edition), 2012, 2014, 2016, 2019, and 2026. They won the first five consecutive editions before losing to Bangladesh in 2022 and 2024, then reclaimed the title in 2026 on home soil in Goa.
Why did Pakistan not participate in the 2026 SAFF Women’s Championship?
Pakistan did not participate in the 2026 edition due to strained bilateral relations with India, the host country. Pakistan’s absence reduced the tournament to six participating teams instead of the full seven-member SAFF contingent. This follows a pattern seen across South Asian sports where Indo-Pakistan political tensions affect participation in bilateral and regional tournaments.
What is the structure of SAFF and its relationship to FIFA?
SAFF (South Asian Football Federation) was established in 1997 and is headquartered in Dhaka, Bangladesh. It is a sub-confederation of the AFC (Asian Football Confederation), which is one of the six continental confederations under FIFA. SAFF has seven member associations: Bangladesh, Bhutan, India, Maldives, Nepal, Pakistan, and Sri Lanka. Bhutan joined in 2000; Afghanistan, which participated in the 2010 inaugural women’s championship, has since exited SAFF.
Who are India’s all-time leading scorer and most-capped player in women’s football?
India’s all-time top scorer in women’s football is Bala Devi Ngangom with 48 goals. The most-capped player is Ashalata Devi Loitongbam with 100 international appearances. Both players are from Manipur in Northeast India, reflecting the region’s exceptional contribution to Indian women’s football.
What does India’s SAFF 2026 win mean for the future of women’s football in India?
The win reaffirms India’s regional supremacy after a seven-year gap and provides a platform to push for better performance at the AFC Women’s Asian Cup and broader international competitions. With players like Manisha Kalyan (Alianza Lima, Peru) and Aveka Singh (Næstved HG, Denmark) now competing professionally abroad, Indian women footballers are gaining international exposure. The AIFF’s Indian Women’s League (IWL) ecosystem and the political goodwill demonstrated by PM Modi’s congratulations signal continued institutional support — though further investment in grassroots development beyond Northeast India remains essential for sustained growth.
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