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Al-Nasr SC (Salalah)

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Al-Nasr S.C.S.C.
نادي النصر الرياضي الثفافي الإجتماعي
Full nameAl-Nasr Sports, Cultural and Social Club
Nickname(s)Al-Malik
(The King)
Founded20 May 1970; 54 years ago (1970-05-20)
GroundAl-Saada Stadium
Salalah Sports Complex
Salalah, Oman
Capacity12,000
8,000
ChairmanOman Amer Ali Al-Shanfari
ManagerCroatia Marinko Koljanin
LeagueOman Professional League
2018–192nd
Websitehttp://nasroman.com/

Al-Nasr Sports, Cultural and Social Club (Arabic: نادي النصر الرياضي و الثقافي و الاجتماعي; also known locally as Al-Malik, or "The King", or just plainly as Al-Nasr) is an Omani sports club based in Salalah, Oman.[1] The club is currently playing in the Oman Professional League, top division of Oman Football Association. Their home ground is Al-Saada Stadium, but they also recognize the older Salalah Sports Complex as their home ground. Both stadiums are government owned, but Al-Nasr S.C.S.C. also own their own personal stadium and sports equipment, as well as their own training facilities. Also Al-Nasr is famous for producing some of the greatest and most successful Omani footballers, such as Ali Al-Habsi, Hashim Saleh and Fawzi Bashir.

History

Al-Nasr S.C.S.C. started off playing in the Al-Haffa district of Salalah organizing specific meetings to play beach soccer. This eventually evolved into something very large. The club was founded on 20 May 1972,under sheikh/ Bakhit Said ALShanfari on the same day as fierce rivals Dhofar S.C.S.C. and was registered on 26 June 2002. As football was their main sport, Al-Nasr shifted to playing on grass fields in order to become a professional club. The club name literally translates from "The Victory" in the Arabic language. Such a name quite well suites a sports club in the Arab world. A club named "Al-Nasr" is commonly found in the Middle East. Some clubs with the same name can be found in Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Libya, Kuwait and Bahrain.

In 1972 Al-Nasr was merged with Al-Shate'a team to carry the name of Al-Nasr. With this merge, the club office moved from Al-Haffa region to Al-Jouf region, where the current headquarters of the club is located.

In 1986, Al-Nasr competed in the Gulf Club Champions Cup and finished with third place.[2]

Al-Nasr, along with the neighbors Dhofar have been generally labelled as the front runners of the Omani League, but as seen in the recent seasons, both the clubs performed horribly with Dhofar losing many games, and not going far in the Sultan Qaboos Cup, along with Al-Nasr who even got relegated in the 2010–11 season. In the 2008–09 season, Al-Nasr settled to the 10th position in the league which was one of their worst performances ever in the Omani League. In the 2009–10 season also they could make it only to the 7th position in the league and were knocked out by Muscat FC in the Round-of-16 in the Sultan Qaboos Cup. In the 2010–11 season they again had to fight a relegation battle but this time they couldn't make it and got relegated for the first time to the Second Division league. Then in the 2011–12 season they secured the 2nd position in the 2nd Division League and got promoted back to the Omani League (First Division). In the 2012–13 season they bounced back and secured the 4th position in the Omani League.

Being a multisport club

Although being mainly known for their football, Al-Nasr S.C.S.C. like many other clubs in Oman, have not only football in their list, but also hockey, volleyball, handball, basketball, badminton and squash. They also have various youth football teams competing in Oman Olympic League, Oman Youth League (U-19) and Oman Youth League (U-17).

Crest and colours

Al-Nasr S.C.S.C. have been known since establishment to wear a full blue or white (Away) kit (usually a darker shade of blue), varying themselves from neighbors Al-Ittihad (Green), Dhofar S.C.S.C. (Red) and Salalah SC (Blue) kits. They have also had many different sponsors over the years. As of now, Kelme provides them with kits. Currently, Jeep and Al-Shanfari Marbles are featured on the team's shirt.

Al-Nasr's logo has been recreated a few number of times. The most recent logo (as shown on this page) was created during the late 1980s or early 1990s, giving the club a more attractive logo, opposed to the older, duller-looking one. Although bearing quite a difference, the influence of the older-logo is still seen when compared to the newer version. Also note that the only scripture of the logo is only written in Arabic, a sign of being an older sports club logo compared to other Omani clubs which usually feature English scripture.

Honours and achievements

National titles

  • Winners: 2018.
  • Runners-up: 2002.

Youth

  • Winners 2000, 2001
  • Winners 1997–98
  • Winners 1985–86, 1990–91, 1998–99

Honours and achievements (other sports)

Hockey

  • Oman Hockey Premier League (1):
  • Winners 2008
  • Sultan Qaboos Cup (3):
  • Winners 2006, 2007, 2014
  • National Youth Championship (U-19) (0):
  • Runners-up 2007
  • Regional Youth Championship (U-19) (3):
  • Winners 2000, 2001, 2007
  • Runners-up 2003
  • Regional Youth Championship (U-16) (1):
  • Winners 2007
  • Runners-up 2008

Table Tennis

  • National Championship (0):
  • Runners-up 2007
  • Regional Championship (5):
  • Winners 2000, 2001, 2003, 2004, 2005

Basketball

  • National Championship (0):
  • Runners-up 2003
  • Regional Youth Championship (6):
  • Winners 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005

Handball

  • Second Division League (1):
  • Winners 2005
  • National Youth Championship (U-19) (1):
  • Winners 2005
  • National Youth Championship (U-16) (0):
  • Runners-up 2003, 2004

Cycling

  • Regional Championship (6):
  • Winners 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005

Club performance-International Competitions

AFC competitions

  • 2006 : Quarter-Finals

UAFA competitions

Players

First team squad

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

No. Pos. Nation Player
16 GK Oman OMA Ahmed Al-Rawahi
GK Oman OMA Mohammed Khamis
2 DF Oman OMA Ali Al-Shehri
3 DF Oman OMA Anwar Al-Shakal
6 DF Oman OMA Khalid Iskandar
13 DF Oman OMA Marwan Abdul Rajab
17 DF Oman OMA Anwar Said Kamona Naseeb
25 DF Oman OMA Shuwain Rashid
26 DF Oman OMA Abdul Naeem Mubarak
27 DF Oman OMA Fahad Nasib Bamasila
28 DF Oman OMA Fahmi Said
DF Oman OMA Yazeed Rajab Jaman
4 MF Oman OMA Ahmed Khamis Al-Maqas
5 MF Oman OMA Ahmed Salim Bait Said
No. Pos. Nation Player
10 MF Oman OMA Qasim Said Sanjoor Hardan
14 MF Oman OMA Amin Ashoor Ramadhan
19 MF Kenya KEN Jamal Mohammed
21 MF Oman OMA Abdullah Al-Hamar
22 MF Oman OMA Juma Darwish Al-Mashari
MF Oman OMA Abdullah Salim Al-Mashali
MF Oman OMA Talal Al-Balushi
MF Oman OMA Luam Hassan Mustahil
MF Oman OMA Abdullah Al-Soori
MF Oman OMA Mohannad Mubasher Ramadan
12 FW Oman OMA Mohammed Faraj Ramadan
FW Oman OMA Musallam Mohammed Akaak
FW Oman OMA Khalid Hilal Sabeeha

Personnel

Technical staff

Position Name
Head Coach
Goalkeeping Coach Egypt Gaber Al-Bilasy
Team Manager Oman Hussain Mustahil
Club Doctor Egypt Imad Ahmed
Physiotherapist Egypt Imad Mujahid

References

  1. ^ "Al-Nasr Salala". national-football-teams.com.
  2. ^ http://live.sportsgoal.com.om/club-details.aspx?id=16 –[permanent dead link] Al-Nasr places 3rd in 1986 competition.