Al Fateh Sports Club (Arabic: نادي الفتح الرياضي, romanized: nādī al-fataḥ ar-riyāḍiyy, lit. 'Conquest Sports Club') is a Saudi Arabian multi-sports club based in Al-Mubarraz, Al-Ahsa. It is mainly known for its professional football club. The club derives its nickname from the fact that almost all of its sections play in the national top flights.
Full name | Al Fateh Sports Club | ||
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Nickname(s) | Al Namothji (The Role Model) Abna Al Nakhil (Sons of the Palm) | ||
Founded | 1958 | ||
Ground | Al-Fateh Stadium | ||
Capacity | 12,000[1] | ||
Chairman | Mansour Al-Afaliq | ||
Head coach | Jens Gustafsson | ||
League | Saudi Pro League | ||
2023–24 | Pro League, 7th of 18 | ||
Website | fatehclub | ||
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Al Fateh active departments | |
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Football (men's) |
Basketball (men's) |
History
editAl Fateh have played in the lower divisions for most of their existence, unlike rivals and city neighbours Hajer FC who played in the top flight when they achieved promotions in the 80's, 90's and 2000's. Al Fateh hired Tunisian head coach Fathi Al-Jabal in the middle of the 2007-08 Saudi First Division League, in the 2008–09 season Al-Jabal finished as runners-up to guide Al Fateh to their first ever promotion to the Saudi Professional League. The club managed to stay up in the Saudi Professional League in their first ever top flight season. In the following two seasons the club set out to build a formidable squad, with Al Fateh already possessing talented home grown players such as Hamdan Al-Hamdan and Mohammed Al-Fuhaid, they also acquired the services of Congolese forward Doris Fuakumputu and former Al-Nassr Attacking midfielder Élton.
Saudi League Champions (2012–2013)
editAl Fateh pulled off a surprise when on 14 April 2013, they won their first League title, with 2 games to spare, following a 1–0 home win over Al-Ahli. Al Fateh became the seventh club to win the Pro League. This is considered by many to be one of the greatest shocks in Saudi football history, especially considering that Al Fateh were promoted to the Pro League for the first time only four years earlier.[2] This was the first time a club outside the Riyadh and Jeddah clubs to win the Saudi Professional League since the 1986–87 season. Élton won the Player of the Season award by scoring 11 goals and bagging 10 assists, as well as Doris Fuakumputu scoring 17 goals to lead Al Fateh to the title.
Later, they played in the inaugural edition of the Saudi Super Cup to face Al-Ittihad, after 90 minutes the score was a 2–2 draw and the game went into extra time. Élton scored the winning goal of the game in the 111th minute, Al Fateh defeated Al-Ittihad 3–2 after extra time to become the inaugural champions of the Saudi Super Cup.[3]
Al Fateh advanced to the 2014 AFC Champions League group stage in their debut campaign as 2012–13 Saudi Professional League champions, but crashed out of the group stage with a (2D,4L) record and without winning a single match. Al Fateh qualified again to the 2017 AFC Champions League due to Al-Ittihad, the 2015–16 Saudi Professional League 3rd place, could not participate in the AFC Champions League because of club licensing requirements problems. As a result, Al-Taawoun, the league 4th place, entered the group stage instead of the qualifying play-offs, while Al Fateh, the league 5th place, entered the qualifying play-offs.[4] Al Fateh defeated Nasaf Qarshi 1–0 in the Qualifying play-offs to advance to the group stage (Group B).[5]
Honours
editLeague
edit- Saudi Professional League (Level 1)
- Winners (1): 2012–13
- Saudi First Division (Level 2)
- Runners-up (1): 2008–09
- Second Division (Level 3)
- Winners (3): 1982–83, 1996–97, 1998–99
- Runners-up (1): 2002–03
Cup
edit- Saudi Super Cup
- Winners (1): 2013
Current squad
edit- As of 1 June 2024
Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.
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Other players under contract
editNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.
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Out on loan
editNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.
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International competitions
editOverview
edit- As of 13 August 2019
Competition | Pld | W | D | L | GF | GA |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
AFC Champions League Elite | 13 | 2 | 5 | 6 | 11 | 20 |
Arab Club Champions Cup | 4 | 2 | 1 | 1 | 7 | 6 |
TOTAL | 17 | 4 | 6 | 7 | 18 | 26 |
International record
editMatches
editSeason | Competition | Round | Club | Home | Away | Aggregate |
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2012–13 | Arab Club Champions Cup | 1R | Al-Jahra | 1–0 | 2–1 | 3–1 |
2R | Al-Arabi | 2–2 | 2–3 | 4–5 | ||
2014 | AFC Champions League | Group B | Bunyodkor | 0–0 | 2−3 | 4th |
Foolad | 1–5 | 0−1 | ||||
El Jaish | 0–0 | 0−2 | ||||
2017 | AFC Champions League | PO | Nasaf Qarshi | 1–0 | – | 1–0 |
Group B | Esteghlal Khuzestan | 1–1 | 0−1 | 3rd | ||
Lekhwiya | 2–2 | 1−4 | ||||
Al Jazira | 3–1 | 0−0 |
Coaching staff
editPosition | Name |
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Head coach | Jens Gustafsson |
Assistant head coach | Jörgen Lennartsson Vítor Gazimba |
Goalkeeping Coach | Stefan Remnér |
Fitness Coach | Yaqoob Al-Ghanim |
Performance Analyst | Omar Al-Amri |
Head of Performance | James Purdue |
Head of Medical | Hussein Al-Jaffar |
Doctor | Dr. Ihab Al-Hamid |
Physiotherapist | Thamer Al-Ghannad |
Director of football | Abdulkader Al-Aqdi |
Managers
edit- Ahmed Al-Saud (1997 – 1998)
- Moustafa Younis (1998 – 1999)
- Hocine Belhassen (July 1, 1999 – December 15, 2000)
- Senad Kreso (December 15, 2000 – August 1, 2001)
- Faruk Jusić (September 5, 2001 – December 30, 2001)
- Ahmed Al-Saud (caretaker) (December 30, 2001 – January 21, 2002)
- Ali Boushlaibi (January 21, 2002 – May 30, 2002)
- Mondher Ladhari (July 1, 2002 – May 30, 2004)
- Fahad Al-Shurfa (caretaker) (July 12, 2004 – September 6, 2004)
- Zouhair Louati (September 6, 2004 – May 30, 2005)
- Najib Hemimo (August 1, 2005 – November 1, 2005)
- Ali Bo Saleh (caretaker) (November 1, 2005 – December 23, 2005)
- Rachid Ben Ammar (December 23, 2005 – March 6, 2006)
- Bahaaeddine Qebisi (March 9, 2006 – January 12, 2007)
- Ali Bo Saleh (caretaker) (January 12, 2007 – February 2, 2007)
- Omar Meziane (February 2, 2007 – June 1, 2007)
- Senad Kreso (July 31, 2007 – December 31, 2007)
- Yousef Al-Sarouj (caretaker) (December 31, 2007 – January 24, 2008)
- Fathi Al-Jabal (January 24, 2008 – May 26, 2014)
- Juan José Maqueda (May 27, 2014 – September 25, 2014)
- Nacif Beyaoui (October 1, 2014 – May 29, 2016)
- Ricardo Sá Pinto (May 29, 2016 – September 23, 2016)
- Fathi Al-Jabal (October 11, 2016 – October 14, 2019)
- Yannick Ferrera (October 14, 2019 – January 9, 2022)
- Georgios Donis (January 9, 2022 – May 31, 2023)
- Slaven Bilić (July 8, 2023 – August 16, 2024)
- Jens Gustafsson (August 22, 2024 – )
Ground
editAl-Fateh used to play in Prince Abdullah bin Jalawi Sport City before their own stadium "Al-Fateh Stadium" got completely revonted by removing the running track and increasing the capacity from 5000 to 11,000 and redeveloping the gym and every facility.
Location | Al-Mubarraz, Saudi Arabia |
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Owner | Ministry of Sport |
Operator | Al-Fateh SC management |
Capacity | 12,000[6] |
Record attendance | 11,150 (Saudi Arabia NT vs Pakistan NT, 16 November 2023) |
Surface | Grass |
Construction | |
Opened | 2004 |
Renovated | 2021-2023 |
Construction cost | SAR90 million |
Tenants | |
Al-Fateh SC (2023–present) Al-Fateh SC (women) (2024–present) Saudi Arabia national football team (selected matches) |
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ "رياضي / محافظ الأحساء يرعى حفل افتتاح ملعب نادي الفتح الجديد" (in Arabic). spa.gov.sa. 25 November 2023.
- ^ "رياضي / محافظ الأحساء يرعى حفل افتتاح ملعب نادي الفتح الجديد". www.albayan.ae (in Arabic). 15 April 2013. Retrieved 2022-06-19.
- ^ "الفتح يطيح بالاتحاد ويتوج بلقب السوبر السعودي".
- ^ "التعاون إلى دوري آسيا مباشرة والفتح يخوض الملحق".
- ^ "AFC Champions League 2017 draw concluded". the-AFC. Retrieved 2022-06-19.
- ^ "رياضي / محافظ الأحساء يرعى حفل افتتاح ملعب نادي الفتح الجديد" (in Arabic). spa.gov.sa. 25 November 2023.