Al-Qadsiah FC

Al-Qadsiah FC
Full name Al-Qadsiah Football Club
Nickname(s) Knight of the East
Pride of The Eastern province
Founded 1967 (1967)
Ground Prince Saud bin Jalawi Stadium
Khobar, Saudi Arabia
Capacity 15,000[1]
Chairman Musaad Al-Zamil
Manager Serbia Aleksandar Stanojević
League Professional League
2017–18 Professional League, 12th

Al-Qadsiah Football Club (Arabic: نادي القادسية) is a Saudi Arabian football team that play in the Saudi Professional League. They are based in Khobar and their home ground is the Prince Saud bin Jalawi Stadium.[2]

Administration

The current administration that runs the club is the club-president Madi Al-Hajri and vice-president Abdullah Badgaish.

Achievements

Domestic

Winners (1): 1991–92[3]
Runners-up (1): 2004–05
Winners (1): 1993–94[3]
Runners-up (2): 1989–90, 1992–93
Winners (3): 2001–02, 2008–09, 2014–15
Runners-up (1): 1999–00

> 6 trophies in total ☆

Asian

Winners (1): 1993–94

Asian Competitions

Season Competition Round Club Home Away
1993–94 Asian Cup Winners' Cup 1st Round Bahrain Al Wahda 4–1 0–1
Quarter-final Maldives New Radiant w/o
Semi-final Qatar Al-Arabi 1–0 1–1
Final Hong Kong South China 2–0 4–2

Current squad

First team squad

As of 31 August 2018:[4][5]

No Position Player Nation
1 Goalkeeper Jack Duncan  Australia
2 Defender Yassin Barnawi  Saudi Arabia
4 Defender Abdulmohsen Fallatah  Saudi Arabia
5 Defender Mohammed Al-Khabrani  Saudi Arabia
6 Defender Rhys Williams  Australia
7 Midfielder Hassan Al-Amri  Saudi Arabia
8 Midfielder Yago Santos (on loan from Atlético Mineiro)  Brazil
9 Forward Haroune Camara  Saudi Arabia
10 Midfielder Bismark Ferreira  Brazil
11 Forward Aboubakar Oumarou  Cameroon
12 Midfielder Jorginho  Brazil
14 Midfielder Mansor Al-Najar  Saudi Arabia
15 Defender Fawaz Fallatah  Saudi Arabia
16 Midfielder Nasser Al-Ozaizi  Saudi Arabia
17 Defender Abdullah Al-Bishi  Saudi Arabia
18 Midfielder Naif Hazazi (captain)  Saudi Arabia
19 Defender Adnan Fallatah  Saudi Arabia
21 Goalkeeper Mohammed Assiri  Saudi Arabia
23 Defender Ibrahim Al-Shoeil  Saudi Arabia
24 Midfielder Hassan Abo Shararah  Saudi Arabia
26 Midfielder Shaye Sharahili  Saudi Arabia
27 Defender Nasser Al-Khalifah  Saudi Arabia
37 Goalkeeper Abdulaziz Al-Shehri  Saudi Arabia
43 Midfielder Khalifah Al-Dossari  Saudi Arabia
44 Midfielder Hatem Belal (on loan from Al-Fayha)  Saudi Arabia
45 Defender Saud Al-Selouli  Saudi Arabia
47 Midfielder Abdulmohsen Al-Qahtani  Saudi Arabia
49 Midfielder Ahmed Al-Zain (on loan from Al-Ahli)  Saudi Arabia
55 Goalkeeper Faisel Masrahi  Saudi Arabia
71 Midfielder Hervé Guy  Ivory Coast
77 Midfielder Elton  Brazil
88 Forward Hamad Al-Yami  Saudi Arabia
97 Goalkeeper Emad Fedaa  Saudi Arabia

Out on loan

No Position Player Nation
20 Midfielder Mohammad Mothnani (on loan to Étoile Sahel)  Tunisia
30 Forward Waleed Shenqeeti (on loan to Al-Washm)  Saudi Arabia
32 Forward Fahad Al-Johani (on loan to Al-Batin)  Saudi Arabia
40 Goalkeeper Ahmed Al-Fahmi (on loan to Al-Washm)  Saudi Arabia
Midfielder Mohammed Fatau (on loan to Al-Kuwait)  Ghana
Midfielder Wesam Wahib (on loan to Al-Kawkab)  Saudi Arabia
Forward Stanley Ohawuchi (on loan to Ajman)  Nigeria

Managerial history

References

  1. "Prince Saud Bin Jalawi Sport City Stadium". Saudi Pro League Statistics. Retrieved 28 December 2015.
  2. Soccerway profile
  3. 1 2 Ian King and Mohammed Qayed (6 September 2012). "Saudi Arabia – List of Cup Winners". RSSSF. Retrieved 5 December 2012.
  4. http://www.kooora.com/?team=155&cz=15887&mode=p
  5. http://www.qadsiah.com/football/1
  6. "The Ministry of Youth And Sports : Sudan" (in Arabic). Archived from the original on 3 December 2013. Retrieved 26 December 2012.
  7. "Mariano Barreto". Soccerway. Global Sports Media. Retrieved 7 February 2013.
Preceded by
Yokohama F·Marinos
Japan
Asian Cup Winners' Cup
Runner up: South China

1994
Succeeded by
Yokohama Flügels
Japan
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.