Al Faisaly FC

Al-Faisaly FC (Arabic: نادي الفيصلي) is a Saudi Arabian football club based in Harmah.[1] Founded in 1954, the club currently competes in the Saudi First Division League, the second tier of Saudi football.[2] Al-Faisaly play their home games at the Al Majma'ah Sports City in Al Majma'ah.[3]

Al Faisaly
Full nameAl Faisaly Football Club
Nickname(s)Al Annabi (The Burgundy)
Annabi Sudair (The Burgundy of Sudair)
Founded1954 (1954)
GroundAl Majma'ah Sports City
Al Majma'ah
Capacity7,000
ChairmanAbdulmajeed Al-Omaim
ManagerFilipe Gouveia
LeagueFirst Division League
2023–24FDL, 6th of 18
WebsiteClub website

The club is named after King Faisal (r. 1964–75), who was crown prince at the time of the club's founding.[4]

History

Al Faisaly finished as the runner-up in the 2005–06 first division season, thus becoming the first club from the Sudair region to achieve promotion to the top flight but went straight back down after just one season. Al Faisaly achieved promotion for the second time to the top flight by winning the 2009–10 first division title, and have been competing in the Saudi Professional League until they were relegated in the 2021–22 season after twelve consecutive seasons in the top flight.

During the 2017–18 season, Al Faisaly managed to reach the 2018 King Cup Finalfor the first time in their history, but fell short to Al Ittihad, losing 3–1 in extra time. Al Faisaly reached their second King Cup Final in four years, but this time they managed to win 3–2 against Al Taawon in the 2020–21 King Cup edition with Júlio Tavares scoring a hat-trick to secure their first ever top flight title, as well as their first AFC Champions League qualification. Al Faisaly also qualified to the 2021 Saudi Super Cup after winning their first ever King Cup title on 27 May 2021.[5] Al-Faisaly was defeated in the super cup by Al-Hilal (4–3) on penalties after 2–2 draw.

AFC Champions League debut

The club's debut campaign in the 2022 AFC Champions League was a massive success against all odds, Al Faisaly pulled off a surprising upset by winning 2–1 over Qatari giants and two-times AFC Champions League winners Al Sadd. Al Faisaly managed to top their group in Group E with 2 wins, 3 draw and 1 lost which by doing so, the club advanced to the Round of 16 facing against Iranian side, Foolad, However the club lost 1–0 on aggregate and bowed out from the AFC Champions League.

Current squad

As of 1 July 2022:[6][7]

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Pos. Nation Player
1 GK  KSA Mohammed Al-Hassawi
2 DF  KSA Abdullah Al-Hassan
3 DF  KSA Hani Al-Sebyani
4 DF  KSA Yassin Barnawi
6 MF  TUN Larry Azouni
8 MF  BRA Lucas Souza
10 MF  KSA Abdullah Al-Dossari
11 DF  KSA Abdulaziz Al-Jamaan
16 MF  KSA Hassan Al-Shamrani
17 DF  KSA Abdullah Subayt
18 MF  KSA Ahmed Al-Baddah
19 FW  KSA Yazid Jawshan
20 MF  BRA Morato
22 GK  KSA Taher Al-Hajji
No. Pos. Nation Player
25 FW  KSA Ahmed Al-Shamrani
27 FW  KSA Saleh Al-Rahmani
31 GK  KSA Sultan Al-Qahtani
44 DF  KSA Hatim Belal
55 DF  KSA Mohammed Al-Nukhylan
66 DF  KSA Ali Al-Sultan
70 MF  KSA Ahmed Al-Anzi
73 DF  KSA Hassan Al-Harbi
77 MF  KSA Ahmed Fallatah
86 MF  KSA Aseel Al-Harbi
87 DF  KSA Meshal Al-Sebyani
90 FW  KSA Khalid Al Jubaya
97 DF  MAR Mohamed Cheikhi
99 GK  POR Vladimir Stojković
MF  KSA Jaber Issa

Club staff

Role Name
Manager Yves Vanderhaeghe
Assistant manager Fahd Al-Warqa
Assistant manager Al-Hamidi Abdullah Al-Otaibi
Assistant manager Eugenio Sina
First Team coach Khalil Kamal Issa
Goalkeeper Coach Claudio Pozzini
Fitness Coach Sacconi Corrado
Performance analyst Mairo Savoy
General manager Muhammad Abdullah Al-Mutairi
General Supervisor Medlej Abdul Mohsen Al-Madelj
Team secretary Alaa El Din Saleh Mohamed Ahmed
Team coordinator Muhammad Abdul Karim Al-Olayan

Managers

  • Youssef Baati (1989 – 1990)
  • Skander Baklouti (1993 – 1996, 6 July 2001 – 1 May 2002)
  • Tariq El Mrabet (1998)
  • Taher Lamine (1 July 1999 – 6 December 1999)
  • Al Nasser Abou Zaid (6 December 1999 – 1 May 2000)
  • Mohammed Khalil (1 August 2000 – 1 May 2001)
  • Zouhair Louati (1 August 2002 – 1 May 2003)
  • Hassine Menestiri (25 July 2003 – 15 April 2004)
  • Bolbol Bayoumy (caretaker) (15 April 2004 – 30 May 2004)
  • Mohammed El Sayed (8 July 2004 – 30 March 2005, 29 March 2008 – 19 April 2008)
  • Mondher Ladhari (30 March 2005 – 31 May 2005)
  • Lotfi El Hashmi (25 June 2005 – 28 November 2005)
  • Adlène bin Abderrahmane (28 November 2005 – 2 March 2006)
  • Nasser Nefzi (2 March 2006 – 1 May 2006)
  • José Morais (17 July 2006 – 16 December 2006)
  • Mamdouh Ouka (caretaker) (16 December 2006 – 6 January 2007)
  • Bernard Simondi (6 January 2007 – 30 May 2007)
  • Carlos Dante (30 June 2007 – 10 November 2007)
  • Abderrazek Chebbi (10 November 2007 – 16 February 2008)
  • Mourad Ajmi (16 February 2008 – 29 March 2008)
  • Nouri Rouatbi (19 April 2008 – 1 June 2008)
  • Hadi Ben Mokhtar (23 July 2008 – 9 May 2010)
  • Zlatko Dalić (19 May 2010 – 30 April 2012)
  • Marc Brys (2 June 2012 – 7 December 2013)
  • Issame Charaï (caretaker) (7 December 2013 – 15 December 2013)
  • Mohammed El Sayed (caretaker) (15 December 2013 – 27 December 2013)
  • Giovanni Solinas (27 December 2013 – 1 May 2014)
  • Stéphane Demol (21 May 2014 – 14 March 2015)
  • Toni Conceição (14 March 2015 – 22 May 2015)
  • Liviu Ciobotariu (6 June 2015 – 17 May 2016)
  • Hélio dos Anjos (23 May 2016 – 9 November 2016)
  • Fahd Elouarga (caretaker) (9 November 2016 – 19 November 2016)
  • Tomislav Ivković (19 November 2016 – 19 February 2017)
  • Giovanni Solinas (20 February 2017 – 5 May 2017)
  • Vuk Rašović (29 May 2017 – 3 May 2018)
  • Mircea Rednic (2 July 2018 – 8 October 2018)
  • Péricles Chamusca (14 October 2018 – 1 June 2021)
  • Paolo Tramezzani (18 June 2021 – 7 October 2021)
  • Daniel Ramos (7 October 2021 – 24 February 2022)
  • Fahd Elouarga (caretaker) (24 February 2022 – 27 February 2022)
  • Marinos Ouzounidis (27 February 2022 – 30 June 2022)
  • Ante Miše (12 July 2022 – 19 January 2023)
  • Marinos Ouzounidis (21 January 2023 – 16 March 2023)
  • Giovanni Solinas (16 March 2023 – 31 May 2023)
  • Yves Vanderhaeghe (15 June 2023 – 15 November 2023)
  • Marcelo Chamusca (16 November 2023 – 31 May 2024)
  • Filipe Gouveia (6 June 2024 – )

International competitions

Overview

As of 20 February 2023
Competition Pld W D L GF GA
AFC Champions League 7 2 3 2 5 5
Arab Club Champions Cup 3 0 1 2 4 7
GCC Champions League 9 3 2 4 9 11
TOTAL 19 5 6 8 18 23

Record by country

Country Pld W D L GF GA GD Win%
 Bahrain 411223−1025.00
 Iran 100101−1000.00
 Jordan 202022+0000.00
 Kuwait 210122+0050.00
 Lebanon 100112−1000.00
 Mauritania 100113−2000.00
 Qatar 210122+0050.00
 Saudi Arabia 100102−2000.00
 Tunisia 101022+0000.00
 United Arab Emirates 211054+1050.00
 Uzbekistan 211010+1050.00
TOTAL 195681823−5026.32

Matches

Season Competition Round Club Home Away Aggregate
2012–13 GCC Champions League Group D Al-Busaiteen 0–0 1−0 1st
Baniyas 4–3 1–1
Quarter-finals Najran 0–2 0–2
2015 GCC Champions League Group D Al-Jahra 0–1 2−1 3rd
East Riffa 1–2 0–1
2018–19 Arab Club Champions Cup Play-off round Club Africain 2–2 4th
Al-Nejmeh 1–2
ASAC Concorde 1–3
2022 AFC Champions League Group E Al-Wehdat 1–1 1–1 1st
Al-Sadd 2–1 0–1
Nasaf Qarshi 0–0 1–0
Round of 16 Foolad 0–1 0–1

Honours

Saudi First Division (Level 2)

  • Winners (1): 2009–10
  • Runners-up (1): 2005–06

Saudi Second Division (Level 3)

  • Winners (1): 2002–03

Saudi Third Division (Level 4)

  • Runners-up (1): 2000–01

Prince Faisal bin Fahd Cup for Division 1 and 2 Teams

  • Winners (1): 2005–06

King Cup

Super Cup

  • Runners-up (1): 2021

See also

References

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