Rwanda kok-ka kha-kiû-tūi

Rwanda kok-ka kha-kiû-tūi sī tī kok-chè kha-kiû pí-sài tāi-piáu Rwanda ê kiû-tūi.

Rwanda kok-ka kha-kiû-tūi
Rwanda national football team
Goā-hōAmavubi (The Wasps)
Hia̍p-hoēRwanda Football Federation
Tāi-lio̍k Liân-bêngCAF (Africa)
Tē-khu Liân-bêngCECAFA (East Africa)
Chú kàu-liānCarlos Alós[1]
Tūi-tiúⁿHaruna Niyonzima
Chhut-tiûⁿ siōng chēHaruna Niyonzima (110)
Ji̍p kiû siōng chēOlivier Karekezi (24)
Chú-tiûⁿStade Amahoro, Nyamirambo Regional Stadium
FIFA tāi-béRWA
Chú-tiûⁿ saⁿ
Kheh-tiûⁿ saⁿ
FIFA pâi-miâ
Taⁿ 137 Steady (2022 nî 12 goe̍h 22 ji̍t)[2]
Siōng koân64 (2015 nî 3 goe̍h)
Siōng kē178 (1999 nî 7 goe̍h)
Thâu tiûⁿ kok-chè pí-sài
 Burundi 6–2 Rwanda 
(Gabon Libreville; 1976 nî 6 goe̍h 29 ji̍t)
Siōng toā pí-hun iâⁿ
 Rwanda 9–0 Djibouti 
(Tanzania Dar es Salaam; 2007 nî 12 goe̍h 13 ji̍t)
Siōng toā pí-hun su
 Cameroon 5–0 Rwanda 
(Gabon Libreville; 1976 nî 7 goe̍h 7 ji̍t)
 Zaire 6–1 Rwanda 
(Gabon; 1976 nî 7 goe̍h 12 ji̍t)
 Tunisia 5–0 Rwanda 
(Tunisia Tunis; 1983 nî 4 goe̍h 10 ji̍t)
 Uganda 5–0 Rwanda 
(Uganda Kampala; 1998 nî 8 goe̍h 1 ji̍t)
Hui-chiu Kok-ka Poe
Thâu-tiûⁿ1 (2004 nî thâu-hoê chham-ka)
Siōng chánGroup stage, 2004

Chham-khó chū-liāu