Movatterモバイル変換


[0]ホーム

URL:


Jump to content
WikipediaThe Free Encyclopedia
Search

Abha Club

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Association football club in Abha, Saudi Arabia
Football club
Abha
Full nameAbha Club
NicknameZaeem Al-Janoub (The Leaders of the South)
Founded1966; 59 years ago (1966), asAl-Farouk
1972; 53 years ago (1972), asAl-Wadiea
1999; 26 years ago (1999), asAbha.[1]
GroundPrince Sultan bin Abdulaziz Sports City
Abha,Saudi Arabia
Capacity25,000[2]
OwnerAbdulaziz bin Turki bin Talal Al-Saud
ChairmanSaad Al-Ahmari[3]
Head coachDamir Burić
LeagueSaudi First Division League
2024–25FDL, 8th out of 18
Websiteabhafc.sa
Current season

Abha Football Club (Arabic:نادي أبها) is a professionalSaudifootball club based inAbha that is currently playing in theSaudi First Division League, the second tier ofSaudi football.

They were first promoted to thetop flight in 2005 when they finished as runners up in the First Division. However, they were relegated after just one season. They achieved their second promotion in 2008 when they also finished as runners up. During the2018–19 season Abha won their first First Division title as well as promotion to the Pro League for the third in the club's history.[4] Abha have won theSaudi Third Division League once, during the 1998–99 season and theSaudi Second Division League once, during the 1999–2000 season.

The club play their home games atPrince Sultan bin Abdulaziz Sports City (also known as Al-Mahalah) in Abha. They share the stadium with rivalsDamac, with whom they contest the Asir derby.[5]

History

[edit]

The idea of establishing a sports club inAbha started with the personal initiative of Abdullah Al-Muallami in 1947. His reasons for establishing a sports club was so that the youth of Abha had a place to practice and play football. The youth of Abha continued practicing without an official sports club until the year of 1960. Then the idea of establishing a sports club was put in motion. The aim of establishing a sports club wasn't only a sport-related one; it was also aimed to be an educational and sociable club. A meeting was held on this topic, and the attendees agreed to establish a sports club in Abha. However, a problem arose in the meeting which caused a split between the attendees. The cause of the split was the naming of the club. One half wanted the club's name to beAl-Ahli Club inAsir the other half wanted the name to beIttihad Shabab Asir. An agreement was not reached and eventually, two clubs were established in Abha.[6] And in the year 1966, the club was officially registered with theGSA under the name of Al-Farouk Sports Club in Abha. The club's first official president was Mohammed bin Ibrahim Al-Nuaami who changed the club's name from Al-Ahli Sports Club to Al-Farouk Sports Club.[7]

During the same time, Al-Ittihad Sports Club in Abha was formed and the first official president was Aziz bin Mustafa. Under directives from the GSA, Al-Ittihad Sports Club changed their name to Abha Sports Club in 1962.[8] This was due to a club already namedAl-Ittihad Sports Club inJeddah. And in the year of 1968, Abha Sports Club once again changed their name but this time to Al-Siddiq Sports Club, in commemoration toAbu Bakr, first of theRashidun Caliphates. In early 1969, the GSA decided to merge both clubs, Al-Farouk and Al-Siddiq, to form one club under the name of Al-Farouk Sports Club. Sheikh Suleiman bin Ahmed Mimish was the first president of the newly merged club.[9]

In 1972, Al-Farouk Sports Club held a ceremony in honor of PrinceKhalid bin Faisal Al Saud on the occasion of his appointment as the governor ofAsir. The ceremony was held at the club's headquarters and a number of matters which concern the club were discussed. One of the matters that were discussed was a name change proposed by the Prince to members of the club's board. It was unanimously agreed by members of the board and fans of the club to change the club's name to Al-Wadiea Sports Club. Al-Wadiea achieved promotion to theSaudi First Division for the first time in 1977. They spent two seasons in the First Division before being relegated to the regional leagues. In 1983, the club once again achieved promotion to the First Division and spent two seasons before being relegated at the end of the 1984–85 season. Al-Wadiea were once again promoted in 1994 before being relegated after a season. In 1999, the club changed their name from Al-Wadiea Sports Club to Abha Sports Club.[10] That same year, the club was promoted to theSecond Division under the guidance of Saad Saleh Al-Bishri as manager. A year later the club achieved promotion once again but this time to theFirst Division with the Algerian, Elias Bou Zaid, as manager. In 2005, Abha were promoted to thePro League, the top tier of Saudi football, for the first time after finishing second in the 2004–05 season.[11] The club were relegated after just a season in the top tier. Abha once again reached the Pro League after finishing second in the 2007–08 season. They were relegated after a season following their loss toAl-Raed in the relegation play-offs.[12] Abha then spent six consecutive seasons in theSaudi First Division before getting relegated to theSecond Division for the first time since 2000.[13] On 4 May 2018, Abha defeatedAl-Watani 2–1 on aggregate in the promotion play-offs to earn promotion to the second tier.[14] On 30 April 2019, Abha were promoted to the top flight for the third time after a 2–2 draw away toAl-Nojoom.[15] This was their second promotion in two seasons, becoming the sixth Saudi team to achieve this feat. On 11 May 2019, Abha won their firstMS League title despite losing toAl-Qaisumah.[16] The2019–20 season was Abha's most successful season in the Pro League. They achieved their highest finish in the top flight after finishing ninth. The club also reached the semi-finals of theKing Cup for the first time.[17]

Recent seasons

[edit]
SeasonPos.Pl.WDLGSGAPKing CupCrown Prince CupFederation CupNotes
2001–022D5th18846272528Round of 16Group stage
2002–032D5th22985383435Round of 16Group stage
2003–042D6th227783427283rd qualifying roundWinners
2004–052D2nd2613855431471st qualifying roundSemi-finalsPromoted
2005–061D11th223415245713Round of 16Semi-finalsRelegated
2006–072D10th2687113546312nd qualifying roundQuarter-finals
2007–082D2nd2613674737452nd qualifying roundSemi-finalsPromoted
2008–091D11th224711194019Round of 16Group stageRelegated
2009–102D4th2612593936412nd qualifying roundQuarter-finals
2010–112D4th30131255943513rd qualifying round
2011–122D4th3014793628491st qualifying round
2012–132D8th3011811414541Play-off round
2013–142D10th309129414039Round of 16Round of 32
2014–152D15th3051015365625Round of 16Round of 32Relegated
2015–163D7th18486192420Round of 32
2016–173D7th184861415201st qualifying round
2017–183D4th187652022271st qualifying roundPromoted
2018–192D1st3819127523869Round of 16Promoted
2019–201D9th3011514415238Semi-finals
2020–211D13th3010614425036Round of 16
2021–221D9th309813274335Round of 16
2022–231D12th3010317335233Quarter-finals
2023–241D16th349520388732Quarter-finalsRelegated
2024–252D


Honours

[edit]

Current squad

[edit]

As of 1 February 2025

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined underFIFA eligibility rules; some limited exceptions apply. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No.Pos.NationPlayer
3DF CUWJuriën Gaari
4DF KSAManaf Abo Yabes
6MF PORAfonso Taira
7MF TUNAhmed Jafeli(on loan fromEgyptZamalek)
8MF KSANasser Al-Daajani(on loan fromSaudi ArabiaAl-Ula)
10FW KSAMeshal Al-Mutairi
11MF BRAMuralha
12DF KSAYasser Yaqoub
14MF KSAFiras Al-Ghamdi(on loan fromSaudi ArabiaAl-Ahli)
17DF KSAMuaiad Bunayan
18MF KSAMohammed Al Hamsal
19DF KSAAbdullah Al-Fahad
20FW KSAHumood Al-Shammari
No.Pos.NationPlayer
21GK KSAAbdulrahman Al-Bouq
23DF KSAMohammed Al-Oufi
24DF KSAHazim Al-Zahrani
25FW KSAWaleed Asiri
28MF KSABader Al-Mutairi
30GK KSAAbdullah Al-Jadaani
45GK KSAMoataz Akjah
66DF KSAHamed Al-Mousa
79MF KSAFahad Al-Jizani(on loan fromSaudi ArabiaAl-Riyadh)
80DF KSADawood Al-Taref
88FW NEDSylla Sow
93DF KSASuwailem Al-Menhali(on loan fromSaudi ArabiaAl-Riyadh)
95MF KSAAli Mubarki

Coaching staff

[edit]
PositionName
Head CoachCroatiaDamir Burić
Assistant head coachCroatia Mario Jelavić
Goalkeeper coachPortugalPaulo Cunha
Fitness coachSaudi Arabia Faisal Al-Marzouq
Video analystSaudi Arabia Mohammed Al-Hussin
Match analystSaudi Arabia Hussein Al-Kheybari
DoctorSaudi Arabia Faisal Al-Mussalam
PhysiotherapistSaudi Arabia Isa Al-Hahbrani
Director of footballSaudi Arabia Fawzi Al-Marzouq
Technical DirectorSaudi Arabia Turki Al-Hussein

Managerial history

[edit]

Presidential history

[edit]

As of 17 November 2023.[18]

NoNameFromTo
1Saudi Arabia Mohammed Al-Nuaami19661968
2Saudi Arabia Ahmed Mottain19681968
3Saudi Arabia Suleiman Habtar19691970
4Saudi Arabia Aziz bin Mustafa Aziz19701972
5Saudi Arabia Suleiman Mimish19721973
6Saudi Arabia Dhafer Al-Obaidi19731974
7Saudi Arabia Mohammed bin Rashed Salamah19771977
8Saudi Arabia Khaled Mohammed Sheikho19781978
9Saudi Arabia Mohammed Al-Fawaz19791979
10Saudi Arabia Abdulrahman Abo Melha19811984
11Saudi Arabia Hani Abu Ghazaleh19851987
12Saudi Arabia Saleh Qadeh19881990
13Saudi Arabia Mustafa bin Abdullah Aziz19911993
14Saudi Arabia Hamad Shabib Al-Dossari19931996
15Saudi Arabia Abdulwahab Al Mojathel19972002
16Saudi Arabia Hamad Shabib Al-Dossari20022005
17Saudi Arabia Abdulwahab Al Mojathel20052006
18Saudi Arabia Meshafi Al-Maqrafi20062006
19Saudi Arabia Ali Al-Shehri20062006
20Saudi Arabia Abdulrahman bin Mohammed Faisal20062008
21Saudi Arabia Saad Al-Ahmari20082008
22Saudi Arabia Abdulwahab Al Mojathel20092009
23Saudi Arabia Saad Al-Ahmari20102013
24Saudi Arabia Ahmed Al-Hodithy20132025
25Saudi Arabia Saad Al-Ahmari2025

See also

[edit]

External links

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^"الأندية الرياضية". Archived fromthe original on 2020-02-24. Retrieved2020-01-08.
  2. ^"Prince Sultan Sport City Stadium (Mahalah)".
  3. ^"مجلس الإدارة". Archived fromthe original on 2021-01-26. Retrieved2020-01-08.
  4. ^"بعد غياب 12 عاماً.. أبها يصعد إلى دوري المحترفين". 30 April 2019.
  5. ^"ديربي عسير التاريخي بين زعيم وفارس". 28 December 2019.
  6. ^"من هو نادي أبها". Archived fromthe original on 2008-12-03. Retrieved2020-01-08.
  7. ^"تاريخ النادي". Archived fromthe original on 2023-07-15. Retrieved2020-01-08.
  8. ^"حكاية نادي .. أبها فارس عسير والنادي الأول في المنطقة الجنوبية".
  9. ^""ميمش" أول رؤساء أبها.. و"ابن مجثل" حقق الحلم".
  10. ^"الأمير خالد الفيصل يبارك تغيير مسمى الوديعة الى أبها".
  11. ^"لجنة الحكام تهنئ الأندية بمناسبة الصعود".
  12. ^""رائد التحدي" يعلن البقاء في دوري الأضواء".
  13. ^"نائب رئيس أبها السابق: 14 سببا عرقلت النادي". 27 April 2015.
  14. ^"رياضي / فريق أبها يصعد لدوري الأمير محمد بن سلمان لأندية الدرجة الأولى بفوزه على الوطني".
  15. ^"أبها يعود إلى دوري المحترفين بعد غياب 10 أعوام". 30 April 2019.
  16. ^"أبها بطلا لدوري الأمير محمد بن سلمان للدرجة الأولى". 11 May 2019.
  17. ^"ابها يحجز مقعده في نصف نهائي كاس الملك على حساب الفتح".
  18. ^"رؤوساء النادي في تاريخه". Archived fromthe original on 2021-03-06. Retrieved2021-02-15.
Abha Club – current squad
Saudi Arabian football leagues
Pro League
Clubs
Seasons
1970s
1980s
1990s
2000s
2010s
2020s
First Division
Second
Division
Third
Division
Fourth
Division
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Abha_Club&oldid=1324221840"
Categories:
Hidden categories:

[8]ページ先頭

©2009-2025 Movatter.jp