Ismail Abdullatif

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected from Ismail Abdul-Latif)
Ismail Abdullatif
Abdullatif with Bahrain in 2009
Personal information
Full name Ismail Abdullatif Ismail Hassan[1]
Date of birth (1986-09-11) 11 September 1986 (age 37)[1]
Place of birth Al-Muharraq, Bahrain
Height 1.82 m (6 ft 0 in)[1]
Position(s) Forward
Team information
Current team
Al-Khalidiya
Number 11
Youth career
1999–2004 Al-Hala
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
2004–2010 Al-Hala 53 (41)
2007–2009 Al-Arabi 24 (7)
2009–2011 Riffa 12 (8)
2011 Al-Nasr 8 (3)
2011–2012 Al-Muharraq 12 (6)
2012–2013 Al Ahli 17 (3)
2013 Al-Nahda 11 (3)
2014 Al-Salmiya SC 18 (6)
2014–2021 Al-Muharraq 89 (64)
2021– Al-Khalidiya 37 (19)
International career
2004–2007 Bahrain U21 19 (9)
2005– Bahrain 132 (47)
*Club domestic league appearances and goals

Ismail Abdullatif Ismail Hassan (Arabic: إسماعيل عبد اللطيف; born 11 September 1986) is a Bahraini professional football forward who is currently playing for Al-Khalidiya and the Bahrain national football team. Representing Bahrain at three AFC Asian Cups and the 2021 FIFA Arab Cup, two of his 47 international goals made history for the country: one in a 2–1 upset against South Korea at the 2007 AFC Asian Cup and the other against Saudi Arabia in 2009 that sent Bahrain to play New Zealand in the inter-confederation play-offs, which they eventually lost.

International goals[edit]

Scores and results list Bahrain's goal tally first.[2][3]
No. Date Venue Opponent Score Result Competition
1. 15 July 2007 Gelora Bung Karno Stadium, Jakarta  South Korea
2–1
2–1
2007 AFC Asian Cup
2. 2 June 2008 Rajamangala Stadium, Bangkok  Thailand
2–1
3–2
2010 FIFA World Cup qualification
3. 21 January 2009 Hong Kong Stadium, Hong Kong  Hong Kong
1–0
3–1
2011 AFC Asian Cup qualification
4. 3 June 2009 Bahrain National Stadium, Riffa  Jordan
3–0
4–0 Friendly
5.
4–0
6. 31 August 2009  Iran
2–0
4–2
Bahrain 3 Nations Tournament
7. 9 September 2009 King Fahd International Stadium, Riyadh  Saudi Arabia
2–2
2–2
2010 FIFA World Cup qualification
8. 6 November 2009 Bahrain National Stadium, Riffa  Togo
2–0
5–1 Friendly
9.
3–0
10. 18 November 2009  Yemen
1–0
4–0
2011 AFC Asian Cup qualification
11. 6 January 2010  Hong Kong
1–0
4–0
12.
2–0
13.
3–0
14. 11 August 2010 Nanjing Olympic Sports Center, Nanjing  China
1–1
1–1
Friendly
15. 26 September 2010 King Abdullah Stadium, Amman  Oman
1–0
2–0 2010 WAFF Championship
16.
2–0
17. 8 October 2010 Jaber Al-Ahmad International Stadium, Kuwait City  Kuwait
1–0
3–1
Friendly
18. 26 November 2010 May 22 Stadium, Aden  Iraq
2–3
2–3
2010 Gulf Cup of Nations
19. 28 December 2010 Al-Rashid Stadium, Dubai  Jordan
2–1
2–1
Friendly
20. 14 January 2011 Jassim bin Hamad Stadium, Doha  India
2–1
5–2 2011 AFC Asian Cup
21.
3–1
22.
4–1
23.
5–2
24. 26 August 2011 Bahrain National Stadium, Riffa  Sudan
1–0
1–0
Friendly
25. 6 September 2011 Gelora Bung Karno Stadium, Jakarta  Indonesia
2–0
2–0
2014 FIFA World Cup qualification
26. 13 December 2011 Jassim bin Hamad Stadium, Doha  Iraq
2–0
3–0 2011 Pan Arab Games
27.
3–0
28. 23 December 2011  Jordan
1–0
2–6
29. 29 February 2012 Bahrain National Stadium, Riffa  Indonesia
1–0
10–0 2014 FIFA World Cup qualification
30.
10–0
31. 16 October 2012 Zabeel Stadium, Dubai  United Arab Emirates
1–0
2–6
Friendly
32. 9 November 2013 Bahrain National Stadium, Riffa  Lebanon
1–0
1–0
33. 15 November 2013  Malaysia
1–0
1–0
2015 AFC Asian Cup qualification
34. 7 November 2014  Singapore
1–0
2–0
Friendly
35. 30 December 2014 Melbourne Cricket Ground, Melbourne  Saudi Arabia
3–1
4–1
36.
4–1
37. 13 October 2015 Bahrain National Stadium, Riffa  Philippines
1–0
2–0
2018 FIFA World Cup qualification
38. 29 March 2016  Yemen
1–0
3–0
39. 1 September 2016  Singapore
3–1
3–1
Friendly
40. 10 October 2017 Taipei Municipal Stadium, Taipei  Chinese Taipei
1–0
1–2
2019 AFC Asian Cup qualification
41. 4 August 2019 Franso Hariri Stadium, Erbil  Jordan
1–0
1–0
2019 WAFF Championship
42. 10 August 2019  Kuwait
1–0
1–0
43. 25 March 2021 Bahrain National Stadium, Riffa  Syria
1–0
3–1 Friendly
44.
2–1
45. 3 June 2021  Cambodia
7–0
8–0 2022 FIFA World Cup qualification
46.
8–0
47. 15 June 2021  Hong Kong
4–0
4–0
48. 21 March 2024    Nepal 5–0 5–0 2026 FIFA World Cup qualification

Career statistics[edit]

Club[edit]

As of 18 April 2024
Club Season League Cup Continental Others Total
Division Apps Goals Apps Goals Apps Goals Apps Goals Apps Goals
Al-Hala 2004-05 BPL 8 1 - 8 1
2005-06 Bahraini Second Division 14 16 - 14 16
2006-07 BPL 21 22 - 21 22
2010-11 10 2 - 10 2
Total 53 41 - 53 41
Al-Arabi 2007-08 KPL 16 6 - 16 6
2008-09 8 1 - 8 1
Total 24 7 - 24 7
Al-Riffa 2009-10 BPL 12 8 4 4 16 12
Al-Nasr 2011-12 OFL 8 3 - 8 3
Al-Muharraq 2011-12 BPL 12 6 - 5 3 17 9
2014-15 18 16 - 18 16
2015-16 18 17 4 4 6 3 28 24
2016-17 10 6 7 1 17 7
2017-18 14 11 - 14 11
2018-19 12 5 - 1 1 13 6
2019-20 7 3 1 1 1 1 1 1 10 6
2020-21 10 6 3 2 2 3 15 11
Total 101 70 5 5 17 7 9 8 132 90
Al-Ahli 2012-13 QSL 17 3 - 17 3
Al-Salmiya 2013-14 KPL 18 6 - 18 6
Al-Nahda 2013-14 SPL 11 3 - 11 3
Al-Khaldiya 2021-22 BPL 16 9 1 1 - 3 2 20 12
2022-23 15 7 4 4 - 2 1 21 12
2023-24 6 3 2 3 1 1 3 2 12 9
Total 37 19 7 8 1 1 8 5 53 33
Total career 281 160 12 13 22 12 17 13 321 198

International[edit]

National team Years Apps Goals
Bahrain 2005 1 0
2006 6 0
2007 7 1
2008 12 1
2009 16 8
2010 18 9
2011 17 8
2012 5 3
2013 10 2
2014 8 3
2015 6 1
2016 3 2
2017 7 1
2018 0 0
2019 8 2
2020 0 0
2021 7 5
2024 1 1
Total 132 47

Honours[edit]

Muharraq
Al-Khaldiya

Individual[edit]

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b c "FIFA Arab Cup Qatar 2021: List of players: Bahrain" (PDF). FIFA. 4 December 2021. p. 2. Retrieved 12 December 2022.
  2. ^ "Hasan, Ismail Abdullatif". National Football Teams. Retrieved 17 September 2015.
  3. ^ Mamrud, Roberto. "Ismail Abdullatif Hasan - Century of International Appearances". RSSSF.

External links[edit]