Al-Faisaly SC

(Redirected from Al-Faisaly Amman)

Al-Faisaly Sports Club (Arabic: نادي الفيصلي الرياضي) is a Jordanian professional football club based in Amman. Founded in 1932, the club competes in Jordanian Pro League, the top flight of Jordanian football. Nicknamed "the Blue Eagles", they were founded as Al-Ashbal Club in 1932.

Al-Faisaly
Full nameAl-Faisaly Sports Club
Nickname(s)النسر الأزرق[1]
(lit.'The Blue Eagle')
Founded10 August 1932; 91 years ago (1932-08-10) (as Al-Ashbal Club)
GroundAmman International Stadium
Capacity17,619
ChairmanNidal al-Hadid
ManagerAhmad Hayel
LeagueJordanian Pro League
2023-24Jordanian Pro League, 2nd of 12
WebsiteClub website

They won 84 official titles, 35 league titles, 21 Jordan FA Cups and 17 Jordan Super Cups, being the record holder for all these competitions, 9 Jordan FA Shields and 2 AFC Cups. Their main rival is Al-Wehdat, a club formed by a Palestinian refugee camp in Amman.

History

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Foundation and first years

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The club was founded in 1932 under the name Al-Ashbal Club. Football was not the only sport they played. However, because of a lack of financial resources, they focused on the most popular sport in Jordan, football.[citation needed]

In 1941, Al-Faisaly restarted, but they realized that they need a large budget. They decided to issue a charity lottery and set up a committee to meet with the Jordanian army chief John Bagot Glubb to obtain official approval to sell the lottery tickets to Jordanian army units. The cultural committee was active in distributing the Lottery, which resulted in the collection of 3,700 Jordanian dinars, and this amount was enough to get a piece of land next to the Islamic Scientific College "currently" in Jabal Amman near "first" circle and "rainbow" street, and intend to rebuild the club and to raise the declaration again, they had what they wanted The club returned under the name of Al-Faisaly this time.[2]

Colours

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Al-Faisaly's home kit is all sky blue shirts and white shorts, while their away kit is all white shirts and black shorts.[citation needed]

Stadium

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Al-Faisaly plays their home games at Amman International Stadium in Amman. The stadium was built in 1964 and opened in 1968, it is owned by The Jordanian government and operated by The higher council of youth. It is also the home stadium of Jordan national football team and Al-Jazeera. It has a current capacity of 17,619 spectators.[citation needed]

Support

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The heads of the Al-Faisaly fan club (ultras) are currently Mazin Al-Binni and Khaled Al-Zarqawi.[citation needed]

Riots

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Riots have repeatedly broken out for the past years between supporters and fans of Jordan's top rival clubs Al-Faisaly and Al-Wehdat, which is also a Palestinian refugee camp in Amman. The riots are regarded as reflecting tensions between the Palestinian fans of Al-Wehdat and the Jordanian fans of Al-Faisaly.[3]

The Derby of Jordan is a football traditional game which combines clubs Al-Faisaly and Al-Wehdat.[4]

Players

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Current squad

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As of 8 June 2024[5]

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

No.Pos. NationPlayer
1GK  JORNour Bani Attiah
3DF  ENGNathan Mavila
4DF  JORBara' Marei (captain)
5DF  JORHossam Abu Al-Dahab
6MF  JORObieda Al-Samarneh
7FW  JORAmin Al-Shanaineh
8MF  JORKhaled Zakaria
9FW  JORBaker Kalbouneh
10FW  JORSisa
11FW  JORArif Al-Haj
14DF  JORFaisal Abu Shanab
16DF  JORSamad Jaarah
17DF  JORSalem Al-Ajalin
18DF  CMRRonald Ngah
19DF  JORAnas Bani Yaseen
21GK  SYRAhmad Madanieh
No.Pos. NationPlayer
22MF  JORMohammad Abu Hazeem
23DF  JORIhsan Haddad
24FW  JORHussein Aref
27MF  JORAdham Al-Rifaei
28FW  JORAbdallah Awad
30DF  JORMohannad Khairullah
31GK  JORAbdel Rahman Al-Talalga
37DF  PLEMus'ab Al-Batat
45GK  JORMohammad Al-Emwasi
70DF  JORAhmad Abu Sha'ireh
77MF  JORMohammad Al-Kloub
80MF  JORKarim Lafi
90FW  JORQusay Al-Mansoori
91MF  OMAHatem Al-Rushadi
97MF  JORSuhaib Abu Hashhah

Former players

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Captains

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Name[6]No.PositionFromTo
Mustafa Sedo Al-Kurdi19321940
Rashad Al-Mufti19401945
Abd Rabo Abu Jassar19451950
Shahada Musa19501965
Sultan Al-Odwan19591965
Mohammad Awad19651972
Mustafa Al-Odwan19721974
Nader Srour1GK19741977
Adnan Massoud19771979
Ibrahim Mustafa19791991
Milad Abasi1GK19911994
Anis Shafiq1GK19941995
Jamal Abu-Abed16MF19952001
Subhi Sulaiman8MF20012003
Adnan Al-Shuaibat5DF20032005
Mohannad Mahadeen19DF20052005
Hassouneh Al-Sheikh6MF20052006
Hatem Aqel17DF20062009
Lo'ai Al-Amaireh1GK20092011
Hassouneh Al-Sheikh6MF20112014
Mohammad Khamees7DF20142015
Shareef Adnan15DF20152016
Baha' Abdel-Rahman8MF20162020
Bara' Marei4DF2020Present

Coaching staff

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PositionStaff
Head coachAhmad Hayel
Assistant coachMo'ayyad Abu Keshek
Goalkeeping coachAmer Shafi
Fitness coachHashem Kurdaghli

Managerial history

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Name[6]FromTo
Rashad Al-Mufti19441954
Shahada Musa19541970
Nabil Hamarneh19701972
Mohammad Awad19721981
Math'har Al-Saeed19811985
Ahmed Hassan19851986
Adnan Massoud19861986
Mohammad Awad19861987
Math'har Al-Saeed19871989
Adnan Massoud19891990
Math'har Al-Saeed19901997
Nihad Souqar19971998
Mohammad Al-Yamani19981998
Khaled Awad19982003
Branko Smiljanić20032006
Adnan Hamad20062008
Alaa Nabiel20082008
Nizar Mahrous20082009
Thair Jassam20092009
Math'har Al-Saeed20092010
Akram Salman20102010
 
Name[6]FromTo
Mohammad Al-Yamani20102011
Rateb Al-Awadat20112011
Thair Jassam20112011
Math'har Al-Saeed20122012
Rateb Al-Awadat20122012
Valeriu Tița20122013
Ayman Hakeem20132013
Ali Kmeikh20132013
Mohammad Al-YamaniNovember 2013March 2014
Mohamed AzimaMarch 2014August 2014
Rateb Al-AwadatAugust 2014October 2014
Nizar MahrousFebruary 2015April 2015
Rateb Al-AwadatApril 2015October 2015
Ahmed Abdel-Qader2 October 201524 October 2015
Rateb Al-AwadatNovember 2015February 2016
Mohammad Al-YamaniFebruary 2016April 2016
Rateb Al-AwadatApril 2016May 2016
 
Name[6]FromTo
Jamal Abu-AbedJune 2016July 2016
Thair JassamAugust 2016November 2016
Branko SmiljanićNovember 2016March 2017
Nebojša JovovićMarch 2017July 2017
FiscoJuly 2017September 2017
Dragan TalajićSeptember 2017December 2017
Nebojša JovovićJanuary 2018May 2018
Nabil KoukiJune 2018September 2018
Tarik JeraeaSeptember 2018February 2019
Rateb Al-AwadatFebruary 2019December 2019
Chiheb ElliliJanuary 2020March 2020
Haitham Al-ShboulJune 2020August 2020
Rateb Al-AwadatAugust 2020November 2020
Adnan AwadNovember 2020January 2021
Hussam Al SayedFebruary 2021August 2021
Hakeem ShakerAugust 2021August 2021
Mohammed AqeelAugust 2021September 2021
Mahmoud Al-HadidSeptember 2021April

2022

Jamal Abu-AbedApril 2022July 2023
Ghazi GhrairiAugust 2023October 2023
Ahmad HayelOctober 2023present

Presidential history

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The management of the club from 1970 to 2021 has always been run by Al-Odwan family.[6]

NameFromTo
Fawaz Ibn Sharaf AL Muhana19321935
Qasem Al-Malhas19351953
Suleiman Al-Nabulsi19531956
Nasser Ibn Jamil19561970
Sultan Majed Al-Odwan19701978
Mustafa Majed Al-Odwan19781992
Sultan Majed Al-Odwan19922008
Bakr Sultan Al-Odwan20082008
Sultan Majed Al-Odwan20082018
Bakr Sultan Al-Odwan20182021
temporary committee20212022
Nidal al-Hadid2022present

Honours

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The club holds 84 official titles.

Domestic (82 titles)

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TypeCompetitionTitlesSeasons
DomesticPremier League35 1944,
1945,
1959,
1960,
1961,
1962,
1963,
1964,
1965,
1966,
1970,
1971,
1972,
1973,
1974,
1976,
1977,
1983,
1985,
1986,
1988,
1989,
1990,
1992,
1993,
1999,
2000,
2001,
2002–03,
2003–04,
2009–10,
2011–12,
2016–17,
2018–19,
2022
FA Cup211980,
1981,
1983,
1987,
1989,
1992,
1993,
1994,
1995,
1998,
1999,
2001,
2002–03,
2003–04,
2004–05,
2007–08,
2011–12,
2014–15,
2016–17,
2018–19,
2021
FA Shield91987,
1991,
1992,
1997,
2000,
2009,
2011,
2022
2023
Super Cup171981,
1982,
1984,
1986,
1987,
1991,
1993,
1994,
1995,
1996,
2002,
2004,
2006,
2012,
2015,
2017,
2020
  •   record
  • s shared record

Continental (2 titles)

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TypeCompetitionTitlesWinning SeasonsRunners Up
AFCAFC Cup 2 (Jordanian record)2005,
2006
2007

Regional

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TypeCompetitionTitlesWinning SeasonsRunners Up
UAFAArab Club Champions Cup--2006–07,
2017
Arab Cup Winners' Cup--1996
Arab Super Cup--2000

Asian record

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AFC competitions

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SeasonCompetitionRoundClubHomeAwayAggregate
1990–91Asian Cup Winners' CupFirst round Qadisiyaw/o
Second round Al Shabab0–10–10–2
1994–95Asian Cup Winners' CupFirst round Al-Tilalw/o
2002–03AFC Champions League2nd Qualifying Round West Al Ansar3–00–13–1
3rd Qualifying Round West Esteghlal0–10–20–3
2005AFC CupGroup stage Nebitçi Balkanabat1–13–31st
East Bengal5–01–0
Muktijoddha Sangsad2–13–0
Quarter-final Tampines Rovers1–01–02–0
Semi-final New Radiant4–11–15–2
Final Nejmeh1–03–24–2
2006AFC CupGroup stage HTTU4–31–11st
Nejmeh2–01–2
Quarter-final Sun Hei1–11–12–2 (5–4 pen.)
Semi-final Al-Wehdat1–01–12–1
Final Al-Muharraq3–02–45–4
2007AFC CupGroup stage Dhofar2–10–11st
Al Ansar1–10–2
Nebitçi Balkanabat2–00–0
Quarter-final Tampines Rovers5–22–17–3
Semi-final Al-Wehdat1–12–13–2
Final Shabab Al-Ordon0–11–11–2
2009AFC CupGroup stage Al-Majd1–23–44th
Dempo3–41–3
Al-Muharraq3–20–0
2011AFC CupGroup stage Duhok0–02–42nd
Al-Jaish2–01–1
Al-Nasr2–11–0
Round of 16 Nasaf1–2
2012AFC CupGroup stage Qadisiya1–12–13rd
Suwaiq2–30–0
Al-Ittihad1–14–1
2013AFC CupGroup stage Duhok1–01–01st
Dhofar2–31–1
Shaab Ibb2–12–0
Round of 16 Riffa3–1
Quarter-final Kitchee2–12–14–2
Semi-final Qadisiya0–11–21–3
2016AFC CupGroup stage Naft Al-Wasat2–10–12nd
Istiklol0–04–2
Tripoli3–11–1
Round of 16 Al-Muharraq0–1
2018AFC Champions LeaguePlay-off round Nasaf1–5
2018AFC CupGroup stage Al-Wahda2–22–11st
Al Ansar1–03–1
Dhofar2–00–1
Semi-final (West) Al-Jazeera0–11–11–2
2020AFC Champions LeaguePreliminary round 1 Kuwait1–2
2020AFC CupGroup stage Al-Wathba0–0
Al Ansar3–4
2021AFC CupGroup stage Markaz Shabab Al-Am'ari2–0
Tishreen1–0
Kuwait0–1
2023-24AFC Champions LeagueGroup stage Nasaf0-11-31st
Sharjah 2-10-1
Al Sadd 2-00-6
  •   Champion
  •   Runner-up

UAFA competitions

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1986: Preliminary round
1987: Preliminary round
1992: Semi-finals
2000: Semi-finals
2001: Group stage
2003: Group stage
2003–04: Group stage
2004–05: Group stage
2006–07: Runner-up
2007–08: Semi-finals
2008–09: Quarter-finals
2017: Runner-up
1993: Group stage
1994: Group stage
1995: Group stage
1996: Runner-up
1999: Semi-finals
1997: Third place
2000: Runner-up

References

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  1. ^ مدرب الفيصلي:النسر الازرق سيحلق من جديد [Al-Faisaly coach: The Blue Eagles will fly again]. gerasanews.com. 12 July 2016. Archived from the original on 1 February 2023. Retrieved 25 February 2021.
  2. ^ Al Atiyat, Omar (4 April 2017). أول نادي لكرة القدم [The first football club]. Jordan Heritage. Archived from the original on 1 March 2021. Retrieved 25 February 2021.
  3. ^ "Rival Jordan football fans clash". Al Jazeera. Archived from the original on 13 December 2010. Retrieved 1 March 2017.
  4. ^ كلاسيكو الأردن (وحدات وفيصلي) بلغة الأرقام [Jordan Classico (Al-Wehdat and Al-Faisaly) in the language of numbers]. gitsport (in Arabic). 7 March 2016. Archived from the original on 14 April 2023. Retrieved 25 February 2021.
  5. ^ "The Team". Al-Faisaly SC (in Arabic). Archived from the original on 15 May 2023. Retrieved 15 May 2023.
  6. ^ a b c d e عشاق الفيصلي [Al-Faisaly Lovers]. faisalyfans.com. Archived from the original on 1 October 2019. Retrieved 25 February 2021.
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