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Al-Hilal Club (Omdurman)

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Al Hilal Club
File:Al-Hilal Club (Omdurman) - most football club in sudan.jpg
Al-Hilal Club (Sudan) – most successful football club in Sudan
Full nameAl Hilal Educational Club
Nickname(s)Seed al-balad (The Leader of the Country)
Al-Mawj Al-Azraq (Tha Blue Wave)
"Hilal Al-Malaein"
Founded13 February 1930
GroundAl-Hilal Stadium,
Omdurman, Sudan
Capacity35,000
ChairmanSudan Ashraf Seed Ahmed Al Kardinal
Head CoachFrance Denis Lavagne
LeagueSudan Premier League

Al Hilal Educational Club (Template:Lang-ar) also known as Al Hilal Omdurman or Al Hilal for a short, is a Sudanese football club founded on 13 February 1930 in the city of Omdurman. The team has been crowned champion of the Sudan Premier League in seven of the past nine seasons, and throughout its history has won the championship 27 times during the league's 45 seasons – thus making it Sudan's most successful football team.

Name and history

The name Hilāl is the Arabic word for crescent – a name chosen on a night when the crescent of the moon was visible in Omdurman. Also it is the first club in the world to be named (AL- HILAL).

Idea

During the late 1920s and early 1930s, on the heels of a failed uprising by pro Egyptian elements antagonistic to the Anglo part of the then Anglo-Egyptian Sudan, the British colonial authorities banned many activities and organizations that could potentially disrupt their hold on the region. The only organized activities permitted were sports clubs and Scouting.

In 1930, four graduates from Gordon Memorial College (now the University of Khartoum) – Hamadnallah Ahmed, Yussuf Mustafa Al-Tini, Yusuf Al-Mamoon, and Babikir Mukhtar – decided to establish a sports club as an outlet for their and others' youthful energies. On 13 February 1930, a dozen of yet-to-be the founding fathers of Al-Hilal, mostly graduates from Khartoum Memorial College, met in the house of Hamadnallah Ahmed in Al-shohada Omdurman, to discuss the details of the new sports club.

At that time, sports clubs were named after neighbourhoods, cities and famous figures. Examples included Team Bori (after a Khartoum neighbourhood), Team Abbas (after a famous person) and Hay Alisbtaliya (after an Omdurmanian neighbourhood). The meeting concluded that the new club should have an inclusive name, and not be named after a specific neighbourhood or person.

The story goes that the club founders had been unable to agree upon a name for the proposed club when the meeting was temporarily adjourned at dusk for the evening prayers at a nearby mosque. After prayers and en route back to the meeting house, one of the founders, Adam Rajab, is said to have looked up at the night sky, saw a crescent ("Hilal" in Arabic), and remarking that it was the crescent of the Muslim lunar month of Rajab, asked the others "why not we name it Al-Hilal?". Everyone welcomed the idea, and on 4 March 1930 Al-Hilal became the official name of the club and the first to hold this name in Sudan and the Middle East.

The uniform chosen was dark blue and white – after the white crescent against the dark blue night skies. In light of the aforementioned pro-Egyptian uprising, however, the British colonial authorities initially refused to permit formation of a team whose symbol, a crescent, was reminiscent of the crescent prominently featured on the Egyptian flag of that time. Only after repeated reassurances that the team was simply an athletic outlet for apolitical college students, and that its symbol had no political overtones, did the British authorities relent and allow the team to form.

1930 Squad and Officers

The first squad included many of the founders that were present at the establishing meeting. The following list includes the founding fathers of Al-Hilal and their roles.

First Administration

First Squad (1930)

Other Founders

(F) = denotes Founder

Presidential history

Managerial history

Captain history

Achievements

National

Champion (26): 1965, 1967, 1970, 1973, 1981, 1983, 1984, 1986, 1987, 1989, 1991, 1994, 1995, 1996, 1998, 1999, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2010, 2012, 2014, 2016
Runners-up (13):1971, 1972, 1974, 1977, 1990, 1993, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2008, 2011, 2013, 2015
Third Place (3):1982, 1988, 1997
Fourth Place (4):1968, 1969, 1985, 1992


Winner (7): 1998, 2000, 2002, 2004, 2009, 2011, 2016
Runners-up (12): 1993, 1994, 1996, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2010, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015
Semi-finals (2): 1991, 2001
Quarter-Finals (0):
Round 16 (0):
Round 32 (0):
Preliminary Round (2): 1995, 1997
Did not enter (1): 1990


Champion (16): 1953, 1955, 1958, 1959, 1960, 1961, 1963, 1965, 1967, 1969, 1971, 1973, 1982, 1984, 1990, 1993

International

Runners-up (2): 1987, 1992


Runners-up (1): 2001


Third Place (1): 1988

Performance in CAF competitions

Performance in UAFA Competitions

Performance in Cecafa Clubs Competitions

Motto

The motto for Al-Hilal is Allah – AlWatan – Al-Hilal. It is translated to English as "God – The Nation – Al-Hilal", which establishes a priority love list for Al-Hilal fans.

Current squad (2017)

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

No. Pos. Nation Player
1 GK Sudan SDN Younis Altayeb
2 MF Sudan SDN Abuaagla Abdalla
3 DF Sudan SDN Mahmoud Mohammed Mahmoud
4 MF Sudan SDN Mohamed Ahmed Bashir
5 DF Sudan SDN Tahir Alhag
6 MF Sudan SDN Yuseif Ali
7 MF Sudan SDN Suhip Ezz Aldin
8 FW Nigeria NGA Azeez Shobowale Shobola
9 FW Sudan SDN Walaa Al Din Musa
10 FW Ghana GHA Augustine Okrah
11 FW Ghana GHA Abednego Kofi Tetteh
12 DF Sudan SDN Mohammed Abd Al Kareem Bukhari
13 MF Sudan SDN Nizar Hamid
14 DF Sudan SDN Al Samwal Merghani
15 DF Sudan SDN Hussain Ibrahim
16 GK Cameroon CMR Maxime Loïc Feudjou
17 FW Sudan SDN Mudather El Tahir (Captain)
18 DF Sudan SDN Omer Hassan
19 MF Nigeria NGA Gabson Salmon
20 MF Sudan SDN Waleed Alaaeldeen
21 GK South Sudan SSD Jumma Ginaro
22 FW Sudan SDN Waleed Bakhit
23 MF Sudan SDN Sherfeldeen Shaiboub
24 MF Sudan SDN Emad Eldin Salah Eldin
25 DF Sudan SDN Abdellateef Saeed
26 DF Sudan SDN Ather Altahir
27 DF Sudan SDN Ramadan Alfaki
28 MF Sudan SDN Mohammed Mukhtar
29 MF Sudan SDN Ibrahim Mahgoub
30 FW Sudan SDN Mohanned Musa

References

Template:Sudanese Premier League 2008-09