Al-Hilal FC

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Al Hilal FC
Al-Hilal newlogo.png
Full name Al-Hilal Saudi Football Club
Nickname(s) Al-Za'eem (The Leader)
Founded 1957
(as the Olympic Club)
Ground King Fahd Stadium,
Riyadh
(Capacity: 70,000)
Chairman Saudi Arabia Abdulrahman bin Musa'ad
Manager Czech Republic Ivan Hašek
League Saudi Premier League
2010-11 Champion
Website Club home page
Home colours
Away colours
Third colours

Al-Hilal Saudi Football Club (Arabic: نادي الهلال‎; The Crescent), also known simply as Al-Hilal, is a Saudi Arabian professional football team based in the country's capital of Riyadh. It holds 53 official championship since its founding in 1957[1] (a record 36 national championships, as well as six Asian championships, and seven Arab and Gulf Championships). Al-Hilal has a reputation for being the most widely supported club in Saudi Arabia, according to polls: Zogby, Daihatsu, Mobily.[2]

Among the club's most famous players were The Great Yousuf Al-Thunayan Also, Sami Al-Jaber; of the Saudi Arabian national football team, and goalkeepers octopus in the past Mohamed Al-Deayea is the current world record holder for most international appearances by a male football player.[3][4] The very well known Brazilian, Rivelino, also played for Al-Hilal from 1978 to 1981.

The nickname "Al-Zaeem", which means "The Boss", came from the club's leading position in Saudi Arabia.[5] With this clear lead, the IFFHS has decided to determine Al-Hilal as Asia's Club of the 20th Century.[6]

Contents

[edit] History

Club crest

Al-Hilal Club was originally known as the Olympic Club during its founding by Abdul Rahman Bin Said on 16 October, 1957. The club's name was changed on 3 December, 1958 by decree from the then-King Saud after he attended a tournament that was contested between the Olympic Club, Al-Shabab, Al-Riyadh and El-Kawkab clubs.[7]

[edit] Honours

[edit] Domestic

Al-Hilal champion 2010
  • Saudi King's cup
    • Winners (6) : 1961, 1964, 1980, 1982, 1984, 1989
    • Runners-up (6) : 1963, 1968, 1977, 1981, 1985, 1987
  • Crown Prince Cup
    • Winners (11) : 1964, 1995, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012
    • Runners-up (1) : 1998
  • Saudi Federation cup
    • Winners (7) : 1987, 1990, 1993, 1996, 2000, 2005, 2006
    • Runners-up (5) : 1986, 2002, 2003, 2008, 2010

Note: on the 2010/2011 zain Saudi league al hilal made history by finishing the season undefeated and became the 2nd Saudi team who won the league without any defeat

[edit] Asian

[edit] Gulf

[edit] Arab

[edit] Other

[edit] Players

Saudi's teams are limited to four players without Saudi citizenship.

[edit] First-team squad

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

No. Position Player
1 Saudi Arabia GK Khalid Sharahili
2 Saudi Arabia DF Sultan Al-Bishi
3 Saudi Arabia DF Osama Hawsawi (captain)
4 Saudi Arabia DF Abdullah Al-Zori
5 Saudi Arabia MF Abdulatif Al-Ghanam
6 Saudi Arabia MF Mohammed Al-Qarni
7 South Korea FW Yoo Byung-Soo
8 Sweden MF Christian Wilhelmsson
9 Morocco FW Youssef El-Arabi
10 Saudi Arabia MF Mohammad Al-Shalhoub (vice-captain)
11 Saudi Arabia MF Abdullaziz Al-Dosari
12 Saudi Arabia DF Shafi Al Dossari
13 Saudi Arabia MF Salman Al-Faraj
15 Saudi Arabia MF Ahmed Al-Fraidi
No. Position Player
16 Saudi Arabia FW Essa Al-Mehyani
17 Saudi Arabia DF Abduallh Al Dossari
18 Saudi Arabia MF Bandar Al-Bishi
19 Saudi Arabia DF Mohammad Nami
21 Morocco MF Adil Hermach
22 Saudi Arabia GK Fahad Al-Shamri
23 Saudi Arabia DF Hassan Khairat
24 Saudi Arabia MF Nawaf Al Abed
25 Saudi Arabia DF Majed Al-Marshedi
26 Saudi Arabia DF Fahad Al-Sbeiay
28 Saudi Arabia GK Bader Al-Deayea
30 Saudi Arabia GK Hassan Al-Otaibi
33 Saudi Arabia MF Hosam Al-Harthi
77 Saudi Arabia FW Saad Al-Harthi

[edit] Out on loan

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

No. Position Player
Cameroon MF Achille Emana (at Al-Ahli Dubai)
Saudi Arabia FW Yasser Al-Qahtani (at Al Ain)

[edit] Reserve squad

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

No. Position Player
Saudi Arabia GK Abdullah Al-Ghamdi
Saudi Arabia GK Faris Al-Shammari
Saudi Arabia GK Abdullah Al-Sudairy
Saudi Arabia DF Mohammed Al-Shaman
Saudi Arabia DF Mohammed Qassim
Saudi Arabia DF Sweed Al-Bishi
Saudi Arabia DF Radhwan Al-Mousa
Saudi Arabia DF Firas Al-Hoiml
Saudi Arabia DF AbdulIlah Al-Qahtani
Saudi Arabia DF Sulaiman Al-Abdullah
Saudi Arabia DF Mohanad Al-Rasheed
Saudi Arabia MF Saad Al-Otaian
No. Position Player
Saudi Arabia MF Abdulelah Al-Fadhl
Saudi Arabia MF Abdulaziz Al-Swailem
Saudi Arabia MF Bandar Al-Bishi
Saudi Arabia MF Fahad Al-Subaie
Saudi Arabia MF Salem Al-Dossari
Saudi Arabia MF Khalid Al-Kaabi
Saudi Arabia MF Abdulwahab Al-Fridi
Saudi Arabia FW Abdulilah Ibrahim
Saudi Arabia FW Saleh Al-Rayes
Saudi Arabia FW Abdulaziz Al-sultan
Saudi Arabia FW Fahad Al-Juhani

[edit] Club Facilities

In 2009, a new indoor camp was opened. It contains 25 rooms, meeting rooms, smart room for lectures, library, eating room, living rooms, a big salon and a medical clinic. It also has entertainment corners for video games, table tennis, Billards, table football and many others. There are 2 training fields for the senior team.

[edit] Personnel

[edit] Current Technical Staff

Position Name
Manager Czech Republic Ivan Hašek
Assistant Manager TBD
Technical Assistant TBD
Physical Fitness Coach TBD
Goalkeeping Coach Republic of Ireland Des McAleenan
Mental Coach TBD
Medical Director Germany Nina Fibich
Physiotherapist Portugal Philipe
Reserve Team Coach Germany Heiko Bonan

[edit] Management

[edit] Current Board of Directors and Administrators

Abdulrahman bin Musa'ad is the current President.
Office Name
President Abdulrahman Bin Musa'ad
Vice-president Nawaf Bin Saad Al Saud
Member of the Board,Investment Officer Abdullah Bin Musa'ad
Member of the Board,Director of Football Sami Al Jaber
Member of the Board,Secretary-General Ahmed Al Khameis
Assistant Secretary-General Fahd Al Hamidi
Member of the Board, Director of the Media Center Abdul Kareem Al Jasser
Member of the Board,Treasurer Sami Abu Khudair
Member of the Board Hassan Naqor
Member of the Board Ahmed Mahjoub
Member of the Board Waled Alhokair
Public Relations Officer Fahd Al-Ghosn
Official professional Dr. Abdullah Al Burgan
Accountant Abdullah Al Zeer
Secretary Morjaan

[edit] Records

Season Div. Pos. Pl. W D L GS GA GD P Domestic cups AFC Other Competitions Top scorer Manager
2000/01 SPL 3 22 14 5 3 35 15 +20 47 CPC ASC Quarterfinals ARWC ASC Romania Ilie Balaci
2001/02 SPL 1 22 14 7 1 54 17 +37 49 PFC ACWC Winner ARWC Portugal Artur Jorge
2002/03 SPL 5 22 11 8 3 28 18 +10 41 CPC PFC ACL Group Stage ASC H.Al-Ali 13 Romania Ilie Balaci
2003/04 SPL 3 22 12 4 6 40 18 +22 40 CPC PFC ACL Group Stage Ceesay 16 Netherlands Aad de Mos
2004/05 SPL 2 22 13 6 3 41 21 +20 45 CPC PFC ARCL Al-Jaber 12 Brazil Marcos Paquetá
2005/06 SPL 2 22 13 5 4 41 21 +20 44 CPC PFC ACL Group Stage Camacho 14 Brazil Marcos Paquetá
2006/07 SPL 2 22 17 2 3 38 15 +23 53 CPC ACL Quarter-final Al-Qahtani 13 Portugal José Peseiro
2007/08 SPL 1 22 14 6 2 36 13 +23 48 SCC CPC PFC GCC Al-Qahtani 16 Romania Cosmin Olăroiu
2008/09 SPL 2 22 15 5 2 41 9 +32 50 SCC CPC PFC ACL Round of 16 Al-Qahtani 13 Romania Cosmin Olăroiu
2009–10 ZPL 1 22 18 2 2 56 18 +38 56 SCC CPC PFC ACL Semi-finals Al-Qahtani 19 Belgium Eric Gerets
2010/11 ZPL 1 26 19 7 0 52 18 +34 64 SCC CPC ACL Round of 16 Al-Qahtani 11 Argentina Gabriel Calderon


Div. = Division; SPL = Saudi Premier League; ZPL = Zain Professional League; Pos. = Position; Pl = Match played; W = Win; D = Draw; L = Lost
GS = Goal Scored; GA = Goal Against; GD = Goal difference P = Points
SCC = Champions Cup; CPC = Crown Prince Cup; PFC = Prince Faisal Cup
ARCL = Arab Champions League; ARWC = Arab Cup Winners' Cup; ACL = AFC Champions League; GCC = Gulf Club Champions Cup;ASC = Asian Super Cup
Colors: Gold = winner; Silver = runner-up; Bronze = third,Semi-final .

[edit] Asian Football Clubs (by IFFHS)

Rankings are calculated by the IFFHS.[8]

AFC IFFHS Club Points
1 80 South Korea Jeonbuk Hyundai Motors 130,5
2 82 Iran Zob Ahan Isfahan FC 128,0
3 90 Japan Kashima Antlers 123,5
4 94 South Korea Suwon Samsung Bluewings 121,0
5 100 Japan Gamba Osaka 119,5
6 113 Thailand Muangthong United F.C. 113,5
7 116 Saudi Arabia Al-Hilal FC 108,0
8 145 Japan Cerezo Osaka 108,0
9 131 Jordan Al-Wahdat Club 105,0
10 136 Iran Sepahan Esfahan FC 103,5
11 148 Japan Nagoya Grampus 100,0
12 156 South Korea FC Seoul 98,5
13 158 KuwaitAl-Qadsia (Kuwait) 97,5
14 176 Indonesia Persipura Jayapura 93,5
15 185 South Korea Jeju United 91,0
16 200 Uzbekistan FC Bunyodkor 87,5
17 201 Saudi Arabia Al-Shabab Riyadh 87,0
= 201 Saudi Arabia Al-Ittihad Jeddah 87,0
19 204 Uzbekistan Nasaf Qarshi 86,0
= 204 Qatar Al-Sadd Club 86,0

[edit] Famous players

Roberto Rivelino from left and right Najeeb Al Imam in 1979.

[edit] Saudi Arabia

[edit] Asia

[edit] Europe

[edit] Africa

[edit] South America

 

[edit] Award winners

Asian Footballer of the Year
Asia‘s best Goalkeeper of the Century by IFFHS
Arabian Footballer of the Year

[edit] Managerial history

Brazil Zagallo is one of the best coaches that went through the history of Al Hilal
Czech Republic Ivan Hašek is the current coach of Al Hillal
 

[edit] Presidents

Name From To Championships (official)
Saudi Arabia Mr. Abdul Rahman Bin Said 1957 1965 3
Saudi Arabia Mr. Abdulrahman Al-Hamdan 1965 1966 ×
Saudi Arabia Mr. Abdul Rahman Bin Said 1966 1970 ×
Saudi Arabia Mr. Faisal Al-Shehail 1970 1972 ×
Saudi Arabia Prince Abdullah Bin Nasser 1972 1976 ×
Saudi Arabia Prince Hathloul Bin Abdul Aziz 1976 1978 1
Saudi Arabia Prince Abdullah Bin Nasser 1978 1982 2
Saudi Arabia Prince Hathloul Bin Abdul Aziz 1982 1983 1
Saudi Arabia Prince Abdullah Bin Saad 1983 1990 9
Saudi Arabia Mr. Abdul Rahman Bin Said 1990 1992 1
Saudi Arabia MR. Mohammed Mufti 1992 1993 1
Saudi Arabia Prince Abdullah Bin Saad 1993 1994 ×
Saudi Arabia Prince Khalid Bin Mohammed 1994 1996 4
Saudi Arabia Prince Bandar Bin Mohammad 1997 2000 9
Saudi Arabia Prince Saud Bin Turki 2000 2003 6
Saudi Arabia Prince Abdullah Bin Musa'ad 2003 2004 1
Saudi Arabia Prince Mohammed Bin Faisal 2004 2008 7
Saudi Arabia Abdulrahman Bin Musa'ad 2008 5

[edit] Finance and sponsorship

[edit] Sponsorship

Mobily is the main sponsor of Al-Hilal FC, and as part of the sponsorship deal, their logo is displayed on the front of the club's shirts and a plethora of other merchandise. The Mobily deal was announced by Al-Hilal FC President prince Abdul-Rahman Bin Musaid Al-Saud on 14 October, 2008, and is worth a Saudi record SAR 517 million, to be paid over six years (SAR 69.1 million per year).

If the team wins any trophy, they will get SAR 3 million for each one (USD 800,000). Al-Hilal will get 60% of any other sponsor that want to sponsor the team, with Mobily's agreement, 20% of football match tickets sold, 50% of Mobily Al-Hilal txt message service profit. Al-Hilal will get SAR 10 million if the number of subscribers in Mobily's Al-Hilal service reaches 200,000 and another 10 million if they reach 400,000 subscribers. Al-Hilal will get 10% of each mobile package sold under the Al-Hilal name (such as blue wave package) and 40% of the club membership fees. The minimum net income from Mobily deal is SAR 75 million per year (USD 20 million/year).

[edit] Membership

Like most professional teams all over the world, Al-Hilal and Mobily have introduced a membership card (Hilali) for fans to connect with their club. Fans are now able to join the Hilal membership scheme for the clubs 2012-2013 season. Hilali membership benefits include VIP tickets to all Al-Hilal home matches and discounts at Al-Hilal Mobili stores.

[edit] Al-Hilal stores

Al-Hilal has a chain of luxury retail stores that sell the club's products. The first branch opened in February 2011 on the most expensive commercial street in Riyadh at a cost of SAR 15 million (USD 4 million). It is the first store from any Saudi club, and the biggest club store in the Middle East. In the first week of opening, sales surpassed SAR 1 million (USD 266,000). Mobily plans to cover the kingdom's main cities with seven branches by the end of 2012. Khobar's branch is under development and expected to be opened in late August 2011 while Jeddah's branch is scheduled to open in September 2011. The stores offer thousands of high quality products including clothes, accessories, children toys and many other products.

The stores' profits currently go to Mobily only. After the investment cost is covered they will share the profit with the club.

[edit] Television match broadcasting rights

Al-Hilal receives SR 4.5 million per year (USD 1.2 million/year) from the Saudi Arabia Football Federation as the federation sell the complete matches' right in one package and all the clubs in the Saudi Professional League share the revenue equally. The income may increase dramatically in near future as clubs will have the rights to sell their own matches' broadcasting rights.

[edit] Other income sources

The club's president and other board members pay any extra money required to run the club as the total expenses of the club in recent seasons surpassed SR 140 million (USD 38 million). This increase in expenses is due to the high level foreign and national players the club signed with such as Thiago Neves, Mirel Rădoi , Christian Wilhelmsson, Osama Hawsawi, Youssef El-Arabi and others.

[edit] Charity and philanthropy

Special seats have been allocated for disabled to see the training. Twenty-five percent of the income of tickets sold goes to charities. Players and board members arrange and attend social activities for charities during Eid and other holidays.

[edit] References

[edit] External links

Achievements
Preceded by
Esteghlal
Iran
Champions of Asia
1991–92
Succeeded by
PAS Tehran
Iran
Preceded by
Júbilo Iwata
Japan
Champions of Asia
1999–2000
Succeeded by
Suwon Samsung Bluewings
South Korea
Preceded by
Shonan Bellmare
Japan
Asian Cup Winners' Cup
Runner up: Nagoya Grampus

1997
Succeeded by
Al Nassr
Saudi Arabia
Preceded by
Al-Shabab
Saudi Arabia
Asian Cup Winners' Cup
Runner up: Jeonbuk Hyundai

2002
Succeeded by
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