Qatar SC

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Qatar SC
نادي قطر الرياضي
File:QatarSC.png
Full name Qatar Sports Club
Nickname(s) The King
Founded 1961; 63 years ago (1961)
Ground Suheim bin Hamad Stadium
Ground Capacity 15,000
Chairman Sheikh Hamad bin Suhaim Al Thani
Manager Youssef Safri
League Qatar Stars League
2021–22 Qatar Stars League, 9th of 12
Website Club home page

Qatar Sports Club (Arabic: نادي قطر الرياضي‎‎) is a sports club based in Doha, Qatar. It is best known for its football team which competes in the Qatar Stars League. The club was founded in 1961 as a merger of two Qatari football clubs Al-Oruba and Al-Nasour.[1]

They play their home games in the Qatar SC Stadium, which has a capacity of 15,000 It has recently diversified into sports other than football. An athletics group has been established, and this department competes in javelin throwing, long jumps, and sprinting. The club adopted its current name, Qatar SC, in 1981.[1]

History

Formation (1972)

In 1972, Al-Oruba merged with Al-Nasour to forma new football club named Al-Esteqlal. Former player Saad Mohammed Saleh was selected as the first coach.[2] Al Esteqlal was one of the strongest clubs since its establishment, winning its first official Q-League season in 1972–73. The next year, in 1974, Al Sadd hired head coach Hassan Othman from the club in addition to 14 of its players, including Hassan Mattar and Mubarak Anber, much to the dismay of club president Hamad bin Suhaim. During this period, transfers could be made unconditionally in Qatari football. Despite the resounding difficulties arising from the transfer fiasco, it continued with its success, winning the 1976–77 season and supplying the national team with some of its most prominent players.

1981–present: Qatar SC

Al Esteqlal was renamed Qatar SC in 1981. However, it gradually faded into obscurity for the next 2 decades, with the league being dominated by Al Arabi, Al Sadd, and Al Rayyan. The club won the Qatar Crown Prince Cup in 2002 and also won the 2002–03 league season by three points. They won the Crown Prince Cup the same year, and again in 2009. The club was relegated to Qatari Second Division after the 2015-16 season, but were promoted back to the top division the next season.

Name history

  • 1972: The club was founded by a merger of Al-Oruba and Al Nasour, and was named Al Esteqlal
  • 1981: The club was renamed Qatar Sports Club

Stadium

Qatar SC play their matches at Suheim bin Hamad Stadium, which is located in Al Dafna. It is a multi-purpose stadium, featuring an athletics field, a gym, a shopping centre and a mosque, among other facilities. The stadium has a capacity of 15,000 seats. Besides local football matches, the stadium also hosts a number of tournaments such as Qatar Athletic Super Grand Prix and some of the 2011 AFC Asian Cup matches.

Players

As of Qatar Stars League:

No Position Player Nation
1 Goalkeeper Jasem Al-Hail      Qatar
2 Defender Mohammed Al-Rabiei      Qatar
3 Defender Yousef Ayman      Qatar
5 Midfielder Matheus Jussa      Brazil
6 Midfielder Mohammed Al Yazeedi      Qatar
7 Forward Anthony Okpotu      Nigeria
8 Midfielder Javi Martínez      Spain
9 Forward Abdulrahman Al-Jassem      Qatar
10 Midfielder Salaah Al-Yahyaei      Oman
12 Defender Nasir Peer      Qatar
13 Midfielder Bashar Resan      Iraq
14 Midfielder Moataz Bostami      Qatar
15 Defender Bahaa Ellethy      Qatar
16 Midfielder Jassim Al-Mehairi      Qatar
17 Defender Khaled Mahmoudi      Qatar
19 Midfielder Saif Aboutrika U19      Egypt
20 Forward Eisa Palangi      Qatar
22 Midfielder Ahmad Al-Khuwailid      Indonesia
23 Forward Sebastián Soria      Qatar
24 Midfielder Abdulaziz Adel      Qatar
25 Defender Adam Hamdi      Qatar
27 Midfielder Youssef Mohammed      Qatar
28 Midfielder Saoud Al-Mulla U19      Qatar
29 Defender Manaf Al-Adwan U19      Qatar
30 Goalkeeper Mohammed Kadik      Qatar
31 Goalkeeper Motasem Al Bustami      Qatar
33 Goalkeeper Adnan Saleh U19      Qatar
66 Midfielder Hamzah Yasser      Qatar
70 Midfielder Ahmed Al Saadi      Qatar
Defender Badr Benoun      Morocco
77 Midfielder Salmin Atiq      Qatar
89 Goalkeeper Fouad Ali U19      Qatar
96 Defender Husam Kamal      Qatar
99 Midfielder Khaled Waleed      Qatar
Midfielder Omar Al-Amadi      Qatar

Out on loan

No Position Player Nation
Midfielder Ibrahim Jamal (on loan to Al-Shahania)     Qatar

Achievements

Qatar Stars League

Qatari Second Division

  • Champions: 2016–17

Emir of Qatar Cup

  • Champions (2): 1973–74, 1975–76

Qatar Crown Prince Cup

  • Champions (3): 2002, 2004, 2009

Qatar Sheikh Jassem Cup

  • Champions (4): 1983, 1984, 1987, 1995

Qatari Stars Cup/QNB Cup

  • Champions: 2014

Records and statistics

Last update: 15 March 2023.
Players whose names are in bold are still active with the club.

Most goals
# Nat. Name League Goals
1 South Korea Sebastián Soria 116
2 Angola Akwá 43
3 Oman Amad Al-Hosni 36
4 Qatar Abdulaziz Hassan Jalouf 31
5 Brazil Marcinho (footballer, born 1984) 25
6 Tunisia Hamdi Harbaoui 21
7 Qatar Yasser Nazmi 18
8 Qatar Mousa Al Allaq 18

Recent seasons

Season Division Pos. Pl. W D L GS GA P Emir Cup
1996–97 1D 7 16 4 3 9 19 19 15 Round 1
1997–98 1D 6 16 5 4 7 17 22 19 Round 1
1998–99 1D 6 16 5 2 9 16 27 17 Round 1
1999–2000 1D 7 16 4 6 6 14 24 18 Quarter-finals
2000–01 1D 8 16 4 2 10 18 27 14 Round 2
2001–02 1D 2 16 9 2 5 30 17 29 Semifinals
2002–03 1D 1 18 10 5 3 24 10 34 Semifinals
2003–04 1D 2 18 10 4 4 31 17 34 Runners-up
2004–05 1D 4 27 14 3 10 40 34 45 Quarter-finals
2005–06 1D 2 27 14 7 6 49 34 49 Semifinals
2006–07 1D 6 27 10 4 13 35 36 34 Quarter-finals
2007–08 1D 4 27 14 4 9 53 38 46 Semifinals
2008–09 1D 4 27 11 10 6 42 36 43 Semifinals
2009–10 1D 4 22 11 5 6 32 23 38 Semifinals
2010–11 1D 5 22 11 7 4 40 26 40 Quarter-finals
2011–12 1D 10 22 6 6 10 32 46 24 Round 3

Technical staff

Senior team

As of July 2020
Coaching staff
Head coach Brazil Zé Ricardo
Fitness coach Brazil Diego Pereira
Goalkeeper coach Brazil Wisner Soares
Director of football Qatar Mohammed Khalifa Al-Suwaidi

Youth team

As of 6 June 2014[3]
Coaching staff
Head coach Yousef alnoubi
Technical director France David Giguel
Goalkeeping coach Egypt Abdel Fattah Nassef
Fitness coach Egypt Abdulziz Al Kahlawi

Managerial history

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Manager Period
Sudan Hamad Neel Mohammed Ali c. 1962
Sudan Saad Mohammed Saleh c. 1972
Egypt Helmi Hussein 1973–74
Egypt Wagdi Jamal 1974
Sudan Hassan Othman
Egypt Helmi Hussein
1974–75
Sudan Mohammed Kheiri 1975–76
Slovakia Jozef Jankech
Slovakia Jozef Vengloš[4]
1976–77
Brazil Jorvan Vieira 1980
South Korea Park Byung-suk c. 1980–81[5]
Brazil Paulo Massa 1988
Germany Uli Maslo July 1, 1988–90
Brazil Sérgio Cosme 1990
Bosnia and Herzegovina Džemaludin Mušović 1990–91
Germany Uli Maslo 1991 – April 30, 1992
Iraq Ammo Baba 1992–93
Slovakia Jozef Jankech 1993–94
Iraq Hazem Jassam[6] 1994
Sweden Roland Andersson July 1, 1995 – June 30, 1997
Czech Republic Ján Pivarník[7] 1997
Germany Reinhard Fabisch[8] 1998–00
Qatar Eid Mubarak[9] 2000
Czech Republic Verner Lička July 1, 2000 – June 15, 2001
Serbia Zoran Đorđević 2001–02
 
Manager Period
Bosnia and Herzegovina Džemaludin Mušović 2002–04
Qatar Adel Abu Karbal
Qatar Salman Abdulaziz
2004
Portugal Carlos Alhinho 2004 – June 30, 2005
Belgium Dimitri Davidovic July 1, 2005 – June 30, 2006
Bosnia and Herzegovina Džemal Hadžiabdić 2006
France Yannick Stopyra Nov 2006 – Jan 07
Croatia Srećko Juričić 2007
Belgium Dimitri Davidovic 2007
Bosnia and Herzegovina Džemaludin Mušović 2007–08
Morocco Hameed Bremel 2008
Brazil Sebastião Lazaroni July 24, 2008 – Aug 11
Morocco Saïd Chiba Aug 12, 2011 – July 8, 2012
Brazil Sebastião Lazaroni July 9, 2012 – June 1, 2014
Czech Republic Ivan Hašek June 1, 2014 – September 11, 2014
Iraq Radhi Shenaishil September 11, 2014 – October 26, 2015
Brazil Sebastião Lazaroni October 26, 2015– June 27, 2016
Romania Aurel Țicleanu June 28, 2016– December 26, 2016
Netherlands Erik van der Meer[10] December 29, 2016 – May 31, 2017
Argentina Gabriel Calderón[10] July 1, 2017 – June 30, 2018
Qatar Abdullah Mubarak[10] November 25, 2017 – September 19, 2018
Argentina Sergio Batista[10] October 10, 2018 – June 30, 2019
Spain Carlos Alós[10] July 1, 2019 – October 20, 2019
Qatar Wesam Rizik[10] October 21, – June 30, 2021

Performance in AFC competitions

2003–04: Group Stage

References

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External links

Basketball team