Kasımpaşa S.K.

Kasımpaşa
Full name Kasımpaşa Spor Kulübü
Nickname(s) Apaçiler (Apaches)
Founded 15 January 1921 (1921-01-15)[nb 1]
Ground Recep Tayyip Erdoğan Stadium
Capacity 14,234
Owner Turgay Ciner
Chairman Hasan Hilmi Öksüz
Manager Mustafa Denizli
League Süper Lig
2017–18 Süper Lig, 8th
Website Club website

Kasımpaşa Spor Kulübü (Turkish pronunciation: [ˈkɑsɯmpɑʃɑ], Kasımpaşa Sports Club), also known as Kasımpaşa, is a Turkish football club located in the Beyoğlu district of Istanbul, Turkey. They play their home games in the Recep Tayyip Erdoğan Stadium in Kasımpaşa, a neighbourhood of the district of Beyoğlu. The club is one of five Süper Lig clubs representing Istanbul, along with Fenerbahçe, Galatasaray, Beşiktaş and İstanbul Başakşehir. The 2017–18 season is Kasımpaşa's fourteenth consecutive season in the Süper Lig and their 97th year in existence.

History

Kasımpaşa was founded in 1921 as Altıntuğ. They played in the Istanbul First League between 1939–1945 and 1946–1959. The club was promoted to the Türkiye Ligi in 1959 and remained there for 5 seasons, where their best finish was 5th in 1961–62 season. After 43 years, on 30 May 2007, the team was promoted to the Süper Lig for the second time in their history. In a dramatic match against Altay, Kasımpaşa came from behind twice to force a penalty shootout, which they won 4–3. They competed in the Süper Lig in the 2007–08 season, but were relegated back to the TFF First League. Kasımpaşa was promoted to the Süper Lig for the third time in the club's history on 17 May 2009 by beating Karşıyaka 2–1 after extra time in Ankara. The team remained in the top tier of Turkish football and managed to finish in top ten in the 2009–10 season, during which they beat Fenerbahçe away from home 3-1 and Beşiktaş away in the Turkish Cup by the same score. They also beat Trabzonspor at home in the league by the same 3-1 scoreline. By the beginning of the 2010–11 season, Kasımpaşa lost some of their important players due to the decisions of coach Yılmaz Vural just before the season started. After the squad weakened, the team went on a run of poor results and were relegated at the end of the season. In the 2011–12 season, the team made a rapid return to Süper Lig after play-off matches that were played in Ankara. They first beat Konyaspor 2–0 away and 4–0 at home. Then they played the final against Adanaspor and beat them 3-2 after a dramatic match on 27 May 2012. This was their 3rd consecutive victory in play-off finals since 2007. Thus, they represented their neighbourhood in Süper Lig in the 2012–13 season. Despite challenging for a UEFA Europa League spot throughout the season, rising as a dark horse in the league, a series of dismal performances in the final few matches saw Kasımpaşa finishing sixth in the table, five points away from Bursaspor on fourth, the final Europa League qualification spot. Since 2013, Kasımpaşa have lured well-known players such as Ryan Babel from Ajax and striker Eren Derdiyok from the Bundesliga and have continued to invest and strengthen their squad. As a result Kasımpaşa is now one of Turkey's stronger clubs.

Star and Crescent

Kasımpaşa was awarded with the right to use the Star and Crescent in its logo by İsmet İnönü, the President of the Republic at that time, due to the successes achieved by their wrestlers Gazanfer Bilge, Mehmet Oktav and Ahmet Kireççi, who were Champions in the 1948 Summer Olympics. Upon this award, Kasımpaşa was the second Turkish team following Beşiktaş in Turkey, who could use the Star and Crescent in its logo.[1]

Legends

Free Spirited

The establishment of the Kasımpaşa Club dates back to a street match with occupying British soldiers. Young people living in Kasımpaşa made a team to overcome the British soldiers. The history of the Kasımpaşa Club begins with this event, when these young people won the match with the British soldiers 11-4.[1]

Source of Pride Once Upon a Time

Kasımpaşa blew like a storm between 1940 and 1960. It was one of the strongest teams in the Istanbul and National League. It became a nightmare for Galatasaray, Fenerbahçe and Beşiktaş, which were known as big three.[1]

An Olympiad Legend

Kasımpaşa was allowed to use the Star and Crescent in its seal after becoming a champion in the Olympics with Gazanfer Bilge, Mehmet Oktav and Ahmet Kireççi.[1]

Team of Hard Times

The building of the club was completely burnt out on 7 October 1977. Historical cups, plates and documents were burnt. The financial loss of Kasımpaşa reached ₺700 thousand. Even after a second fire shock in 1986, Kasımpaşa has survived.[1]

Kasımpaşa District

On the northeast shore of the Golden Horn, laying from the north of Atatürk Bridge and the pools of the Golden Horn Shipyard to Hasköy on the coast; climbing the hillsides of Dolapdere to the northeast into the highlands; surrounded by Azapkapı to the south, Şişhane, Tepebaşı, Ömer Hayyam Cd. to the east, Hacıhüsrev to the north, Piyalepaşa, Okmeydanı, Aynalıkavak to the northwest. Kasımpaşa is a calm but also a wild Kid of Haliç within the borders of Beyoğlu.[1]

Grounds

Recep Tayyip Erdoğan Stadium

Recep Tayyip Erdoğan Stadium is a multi-use stadium in the Kasımpaşa neighbourhood of Istanbul, Turkey. It is currently used mostly for football matches, and is the home stadium of Kasımpaşa. The stadium capacity was extended to 14,234 spectators. Due to extension works, Kasımpaşa played most of its home matches in the Atatürk Olympic Stadium in the 2007–2008 season. It is named after the incumbent Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, a native of Kasımpaşa and a football player in his youth.[1]

Kasımpaşa Kemerburgaz Tesisleri

The new social facilities of Kasımpaşa are situated in Kemerburgaz. It is designed as a good practice and recovery facility for the football players of Kasımpaşa as well as other players, who will contribute to Turkish football.[1]

Achievements

Honours

League affiliation

Players

Current squad

As of 13 September 2018[2]

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

No. Position Player
1 Turkey GK Ramazan Köse
3 Portugal DF Josué Sá (on loan from Anderlecht)
5 Tunisia DF Syam Ben Youssef
6 Kosovo MF Loret Sadiku
7 Egypt MF Trézéguet
8 Czech Republic MF David Pavelka
9 Guinea FW Bengali-Fodé Koita
10 Senegal FW Mbaye Diagne
11 Nigeria MF Samuel Eduok
15 Turkey MF Tarkan Serbest (on loan from Austria Wien)
17 Turkey MF Hasan Bilal
19 Turkey FW Ethem Erboğa
20 Turkey MF Hakan Demir
No. Position Player
21 Sweden MF Abdul Khalili
22 Turkey DF Onur Ural
26 Turkey MF İlhan Depe
31 France DF Olivier Veigneau
34 Turkey GK Eray Birniçan
35 Turkey DF Ugurcan Yazgili
32 Nigeria FW Atto Abbas
55 Turkey GK Murat Can Yildiz
60 Turkey DF Özgür Çek
66 Turkey MF Batuhan Diraga
67 Turkey GK Mehmet Enes Sari
88 Turkey DF Veysel Sarı
90 Bulgaria DF Strahil Popov

Club officials

Board members

Owner Turgay Ciner
Chairman Hasan Hilmi Öksüz
General manager Can Kaymak
Board Members Ahmet Misbah Demircan
Board Members İhsan Kalkavan
Board Members Mübariz Mansimov
Board Members Mehmet Turgut Yılmaz
Board Members Mehmet Fatih Saraç

Source:[3]

Technical staff

Manager Mustafa Denizli
Assistant manager Murat Duman
Goalkeeping coach Nejdet Şen
Coach İsmail Özünal
Coach Shay Nahmias
Coach Murat Aslan
Performance Coach Uğur Güler
Club doctor Cem Ergenç

Source:[4]

See also

Notes

  1. Kasımpaşa was founded in 1921 as Altıntuğ

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 "OUR CLUB". kasimpasa.com.tr. 26 May 2017. Retrieved 26 May 2017.
  2. "Kasımpaşa Profesyonel A Takımı" (in Turkish). Kasımpaşa S.K.
  3. "Yönetim Kurulu" (in Turkish). kasimpasa.com.tr. 26 May 2017. Retrieved 26 May 2017.
  4. "Teknik Kadro" (in Turkish). kasimpasa.com.tr. 26 May 2017. Retrieved 26 May 2017.
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