List of Algerian football players in foreign leagues

This is a complete List of Algerian football players in foreign leagues, i.e. association football players who have played in foreign leagues. For most of the twentieth century, most international play in the Algerian Ligue Professionnelle 1. However, the national team has from the beginning players playing abroad. Several Algerian international play first Algerian division in the 1960s and 1970s, for example Hacène Lalmas and Mokhtar Khalem to CR Belcourt. Others play in France, as Sadek Boukhalfa in Nantes or Mustapha Zitouni in AS Monaco. and Seven players of the Algerian football team at the 1982 World Cup come from a foreign club: Abdelmajid Bourebbou (Stade Lavallois) Mustapha Dahleb (Paris SG) Djamel Tlemcani (Stade de Reims) Djamel Zidane (KV Kortrijk) Karim Maroc (FC Tours) Faouzi Mansouri (Montpellier HSC) and Nourredine Kourichi (Girondins Bordeaux). All players selected for the World Cups of 1986, 2010 and 2014 playing in other European leagues.

Algeria national football team
From Left to Right:
Stand Up : Zemmamouche (USM Alger) - Slimani (Sporting CP) - Belkalem (Watford) - Mandi (Stade Reims) - Halliche (Académica Coimbra) - Mesbah (Livorno)
Sitting Lacen (Getafe) (C) - Mahrez (Leicester City) - Guedioura (Crystal Palace) - Ghilas (Porto) - Brahimi (Granada).
Algeria national football team
From Left to Right:
Stand Up : Medjani (Trabzonspor) - Ghoulam (Napoli) - Bentaleb (Tottenham Hotspur) - Mandi (Stade Reims) - M'Bolhi (Philadelphia Union) - Bougherra (Al-Fujairah) (C)
Sitting Soudani (Dinamo Zagreb) - Feghouli (Valencia) - Mahrez (Leicester City) - Taïder (Sassuolo) - Brahimi (Porto).

The history of Algerian players in Europe

Founded FLN team football in conditions of secrecy in 1958 during the French colonial period to Algeria All of them were professionals in France
From Left to Right:
Stand Up A.Sellami - Doudou - Zouba - Rouaï - Amara - Zitouni - M. Soukhane - Bouricha - Oudjani - Boubekeur
Sitting Mazouz - Kerroum - Benfadah - Bouchouk - A. Soukhane - Kermali - Mekhloufi - Oualiken.

A Large number of Algerian players have played in Europe as especially in France, the former colonial ruler of Algeria, Where the French league is the most attractive to the Algerians, where he was the first Algerian player in Europe and first North African to play in France, Ali Benouna in 1930 to Sète.[1][2] Also is the first Algerian player to win a European title, When he won the French league and Coupe de France of the 1933–34 season with FC Sète, Benouna opened his eyes to the rest of the Algerians coming from Algeria to taste the sweetness of the French league title. This was done by Abdelkader Ben Bouali in the colors of Olympique de Marseille in the 1936–37 season, then Mohamed Firoud and Abdelaziz Ben Tifour on two consecutive occasions with Nice season 1950–51 And 1951-52, in addition to Rachid Mekhloufi in 1956–57 with Saint Etienne and Mohamed Maouche in the next season with Stade de Reims, all titles came in the colonial era. as for the first player to win a title outside France is Mekhloufi for winning the Swiss League in 1962 in the same context, the number of players who played for French clubs in the Ligue 1 until the season of 2017–18, 161 players at the level of all the leagues in Europe, Algerian players were present in 31 of the 55 league. on the level of statistics the most prominent of these are Mekhloufi star AS Saint-Étienne and historical scorer his 150-goal and won the league title four times.[3][4] and there is also Mustapha Dahleb former Paris Saint-Germain star where he achieved two titles Coupe de France and is the most popular players in the history of the club where he played 310 Match and scored 98 goals in 10 seasons.[5] comes after Rabah Madjer best Algerian player turn professional in Europe and identifying with FC Porto and won with 10 titles, three League, two Cup and two Super Cup and two titles on the level Continental are the European Cup.[6] as the first Algerian and an African player to achieve this feat and globally achieved the intercontinental Cup in Japan against Peñarol from Uruguay and scored the winning goal.[7][8] in the 1970s and 1980s, Algerian players were not allowed to practice until they were over 28 years old Which deprived many of the stars of the Algerian team at the time of professionalism, especially after the 1982 FIFA World Cup, including Mehdi Cerbah, Hocine Yahi, Chaabane Merzekane, Fodil Megharia, Hacène Lalmas, Mahmoud Guendouz, Ali Bencheikh, Ali Fergani, Lakhdar Belloumi, Djamel Menad, Tedj Bensaoula and Omar Betrouni some of them were professional but did not achieve much success because of their age however, there are some players who are allowed to go out and be professional even though they do not reach the age of 28, they are Djamel Zidane, Rabah Madjer and Salah Assad.

There are several other players have achieved the most prominent titles Rafik Djebbour won eight titles, four League and 4 in the cup comes after El Arbi Hillel Soudani with 7 titles, including three league and three cup then Madjid Bougherra all six titles with Glasgow Rangers, and received the defender Ahmed Reda Madouni is the first Algerian title in the Bundesliga in the colors of Borussia Dortmund in the 2001–02 season, where Madouni was young but his career was followed by a strange fluctuation. in Eastern Europe, Selim Bouadla was crowned Hungarian league title with Debrecen twice in the 2011-12 and 2013–14 season, noting that La Liga and Serie A has not tasted the taste of any Algerian player so far and the nearest thing was the Runner-up in Serie A by Djamel Mesbah in 2012 and Faouzi Ghoulam in 2016. However, the English Premier League, which earned Riyad Mahrez with Leicester City title remains the most expensive and the best, which did not do any Algerian player, the 2012–13 season is considered the best for Algerian players, where they won 12 titles including three league, seven cups, three Super Cup and one league cup achieved by 10 players are Djebbour, Soudani, Abdoun, Se.Bouadla, Boudjemaa, Ghoulam, Rani, Sayoud, Sl.Bouadla and Benzia.

At the level of individual titles Mehrez won the PFA Players' Player of the Year award.[9] He was the first African to earn the accolade.[10] There is also Ali Benarbia achieved the best player award in the French league with Girondins de Bordeaux. Sofiane Hanni also won the best player award.[11] in the Belgian league with Mechelen as the first Algerian player achieves this award, El Arabi Hillel Soudani also with Dinamo Zagreb he won his first trophy in Croatia as the best player in the Prva liga after a vote of all the captains of the Prva liga Croatian clubs.[12] as for at the level scorers There are only two Algerian players have achieved the title of top scorer of the league is in Europe, namely Ahmed Oudjani in the French league and Jabbour in Greek league and there are also Madjer, who won the title top scorer in the European Cup 1987-88 season. as for Makhloufi is considered the best Algerian scorer in Europe with 170 goal, including 156 in the league, followed by Djebbour 132 goal which 110 in the league comes after Dahleb 115 goal, including 102 in the league. as for more than play games just in the leagues there Rachid Mekhloufi with 360 games, Abdelkader Ferhaoui 343, Ryad Boudebouz by 328, Mustapha Dahleb by 321 and finally Mohamed Salem 308 games. on the other hand more than hat-tricks record is Makhloufi 9 all hat-tricks with Saint-Étienne then Madjer by 5 and finally Ahmed Oudjani and El Arbi Hillel Soudani by 4 hat-tricks.

At the level of countries have made Algerians players sixty one title in France which is sixteen league, twenty five cup, nine Coupe de la Ligue and eleven Trophée des Champions after that Luxembourg twenty title, fourteen League and six cups and finally Scotland thirteen title, five Premiership, four Cup and four League Cup. Other countries where the Algerians players at least won one title is the 17th state in the following figure Azerbaijan, Belgium, Bulgaria, Croatia, Cyprus, England, Finland, Germany, Greece, Hungary, Italy, Northern Ireland, Portugal, Romania, Switzerland, Czechoslovak and Turkey. the beginning of sparkling Algerian national team in 2009 began Algerian players Shares rise in Europe, such as El Arbi Hillel Soudani, who moved from ASO Chlef to Vitória Guimarães from Portugal.[13] There are also Islam Slimani from CR Belouizdad to Sporting CP and then moved to Leicester City as the most expensive transfer deal for Algerian player in the history, The transfer fee paid to Sporting was reported as £28 million, a club record for Leicester.[14][15] also there is the Paradou AC/JMG "El Ankaoui" Academy, which graduated three players to Europe and they are Ramy Bensebaini, Youcef Attal and Tayeb Meziani.

Algerian descent players played for other national teams

Zidane's parents' house in the village of Aguemoune Ath Slimane in Algeria.

Due to Algeria's historic ties with France, there have been a number of Algerian players playing professionally in the French leagues, while the French national team has included players of Algerian heritage, most notably Zinedine Zidane, Karim Benzema and Samir Nasri.[16]

  • Zinedine Yazid Zidane (Arabic: زين الدين يزيد زيدان) was born on 23 June 1972 in La Castellane, Marseille, in Southern France. Zidane is of Algerian Kabyle descent.[17][18] His parents, Smaïl and Malika, emigrated to Paris from the village of Aguemoune in the Berber-speaking region of Kabylie in northern Algeria in 1953 before the start of the Algerian War. The family, which had settled in the city's tough northern districts of Barbès and Saint-Denis, found little work in the region
  • Karim Benzema was born in the city of Lyon, France to French nationals of Algerian descent.[19][20] As a practicing Muslim, he observes fasting during the Islamic holy month of Ramadan.[21] His grandfather, Da Lakehal Benzema, lived in the village of Tigzirt, located in the northern town of Beni Djellil in Algeria before migrating to Lyon, where he eventually settled in the 1950s.[22] Benzema's father, Hafid, was born in Tigzirt, while his mother, Wahida Djebbara, was born and raised in Lyon; her family originated from Oran. Benzema is the third youngest in the family and grew up with eight other siblings in Bron, an eastern suburb of Lyon.[22] His younger brothers Gressy and Sabri are also footballers.[23] The former currently plies his trade at the amateur level with Vaulx-le-Velin in the Division d'Honneur, the sixth division of French football, while the latter plays in the youth academy of a club in the family's hometown of Bron.[24][25]
  • Samir Nasri (Arabic: سمير نصري) was born in Septèmes-les-Vallons, a northern suburb of Marseille, to French nationals of Algerian descent.[26][27] His mother, Ouassila Ben Saïd, and father, Abdelhafid Nasri, were both born in France; his father being born and raised in Marseille, while his mother being from nearby Salon-de-Provence.[27][28] Nasri's grandparents emigrated to France from Algeria.[29] His mother is a housewife and his father previously worked as a bus driver before becoming his son's personal manager. At the start of his football career, Nasri initially played under his mother's surname, Ben Saïd, before switching to Nasri, his father's surname, following his selection to the France under-16 team.[30] He is the eldest of four children and is a non-practising Muslim.[31]
  • Nabil Fekir Having earned one cap at under-21 level for his native France, Fekir had been named in his ancestral Algeria's squad for friendlies against Oman and Qatar in March 2015. However, he withdrew to take part in the French squad for friendlies against Brazil and Denmark.[32] He made his debut on 26 March against the former at the Stade de France, replacing Antoine Griezmann for the final 16 minutes of a 13 defeat.[33] He scored his first goal on 7 June, concluding a 3–4 home friendly defeat to Belgium.[34] On 4 September, in a 1–0 away friendly win over Portugal, he ruptured three ligaments in his right knee, putting him out for an estimated six months.[35]
  • Karim Boudiaf (Arabic: كريم بوضياف) was born in France, and is of Moroccan-Algerian descent. On December 22, 2009, Boudiaf was called up to the Algerian Under-23 national team for a training camp in Algiers.[36] Boudiaf acquired Qatari nationality and was called up to the Qatar national football team on November 13, 2013.[37] He was capped in an unnoficial friendly exhibition match against Saudi club Al Hilal.[38] He made his official debut for the team on 25 December in the 2014 WAFF Championship in a 1–0 win against Palestine.[39]

European League

List All-time top appearances of Algerian players in european League

List of Algerian players with 200 or more appearances in European League top leval
R. Player European Club(s) Apps
1 Rachid Mekhloufi France AS Saint-Étienne (274) – SC Bastia (67) – Switzerland Servette FC (19) 360
2 Abdelkader Ferhaoui France Montpellier HSC (229) – AS Cannes (94) – AS Saint-Étienne (20) 343
3 Ryad Boudebouz France FC Sochaux (164) – SC Bastia (66) – Montpellier HSC (71) – Spain Betis (27) 328
4 Mustapha Dahleb France CS Sedan (30) – Paris SG (291) 321
5 Mohamed Salem France CS Sedan (237) – Belgium Daring de Bruxelles (71) 308
6 Abdel Djaadaoui France FC Sochaux (307) 307
7 Medhi Lacen Spain Deportivo Alavés (19) – Racing Santander (100) – Getafe CF (139) – Malaga CF (15) 273
8 Rafik Saïfi France Troyes AC (110) – FC Istres (35) – AC Ajaccio (26) – FC Lorient (95) 266
9 Karim Soltani Netherlands VVV-Venlo (28) – ADO Den Haag (59) – Greece Iraklis (23) – Aris (15) – Skoda Xanthi (113) – PAS Giannina (15) 253
10 Rafik Djebbour Belgium Louviéroise (21) – Greece Atromitos (14) – Panionios (41) – AEK Athens (80) – Olympiacos (56) – Turkey Sivasspor (10) – Cyprus APOEL (26) 248
11 Brahim Hemdani France AS Cannes (20) – RC Strasbourg (53) – Olympique de Marseille (95) – Scotland Rangers (67) 246
= Abdelaziz Ben Tifour France OGC Nice (129) – Troyes AC (31) – AS Monaco (86) 246
13 Ali Benarbia France FC Martigues (65) – AS Monaco (90) – Girondins de Bordeaux (25) – Paris SG (42) – England Manchester City (33) 245
14 Mahi Khennane France Stade Rennais (164) – Toulouse FC (61) – Nîmes Olympique (15) 240
15 Sofiane Feghouli France Grenoble (31) – Spain Almería (9) – Valencia (149) – England West Ham United (21) – Turkey Galatasaray (27) 237
16 Nourredine Kourichi France US Valenciennes (109) – Girondins de Bordeaux (22) – Lille OSC (94) 235
17 Ali Bouafia France Olympique de Marseille (12) – Olympique Lyonnais (94) – RC Strasbourg (92) – FC Lorient (25) 223
18 Yacine Brahimi France Stade rennais (39) – Spain Granada CF (62) – Portugal FC Porto (116) 217
19 Antar Yahia France SC Bastia (77) – OGC Nice (30) – Germany VfL Bochum (91) – 1. FC Kaiserslautern (11) – Greece Platanias (11) 220
20 Chérif Oudjani France RC Lens (100) – Stade Lavallois (31) – FC Sochaux (69) – RC Paris (18) 218
21 Karim Maroc France Olympique Lyonnais (48) – Angers SCO (32) – Tours FC (32) – Stade Brestois (88) – Montpellier HSC (12) 217
22 Moussa Saïb France AJ Auxerre (170) – AS Monaco (7) – FC Lorient (8) – England Tottenham Hotspur (13) – Spain Valencia CF (14) 212
23 Mehdi Mostefa France Ajaccio (101) – Lorient (24) – Bastia (56) – Cyprus Pafos (26) 207
24 Djamel Mesbah Switzerland Servette (11) – Basel (11) – Aarau (60) – Luzern (6) – Lausanne (4) – Italy Lecce (46) – Milan (9) – Parma (10) – Livorno (14) – Sampdoria (23) – Crotone (10) 204
25 Fadel Brahami France Le Havre AC (12) – Belgium Louviéroise (47) – Mons (86) – Cyprus AEP Paphos FC (14) – Bulgaria Minyor Pernik (42) 201
(Italics denotes players still playing professional football; Bold denotes players still playing in the European League)
List of Algerian players between 150 and 199 appearances in European League top leval
R. Player European Club(s) Apps
26 Carl Medjani France Metz (22) – Lorient (9) – Ajaccio (54) – Valenciennes (16) – Greece Olympiacos (4) – Turkey Trabzonspor (50) – Sivasspor (22) – Spain Levante (14) – Leganés (8) 199
27 Faouzi Ghoulam France Saint-Étienne (87) – Italy Napoli (121) 197
28 Ahmed Rani Luxembourg Avenir Beggen (10) – Union Luxembourg (63) – Fola Esch (86) – Mondorf-les-Bains (15) – Esch (21) 195
29 Aïssa Mandi France Stade de Reims (123) – Spain Real Betis (60) 186
30 Abdelhamid Bouchouk France FC Sète (24) – Olympique Marseille (39) – Toulouse FC (121) 184
31 Mohamed Remili Hungary Pápa (10) – Újpest (49) – Vasas (104) – Szolnok (20) – Paksi (0) 183
32 Salah Djebaïli France Nîmes Olympique (183) 183
33 Yannis Tafer France Lyon (10) – Toulouse (16) – Switzerland Lausanne-Sport (56) – St. Gallen (103) 182
34 Liazid Sandjak France Paris SG (76) – OGC Nice (32) – AS Saint-Étienne (33) – Switzerland Neuchâtel Xamax (37) 178
35 Hassan Yebda France Le Mans (24) – Portugal Benfica (25) – Belenenses (43) – Italy Napoli (29) – Udinese (10) – England Portsmouth (18) – Spain Granada (26) 175
36 Hillel Soudani Portugal Vitória de Guimarães (37) – Croatia Dinamo Zagreb (132) 169
37 Karim Ziani France Troyes (32) – Sochaux (36) – Marseille (49) – Germany VfL Wolfsburg (15) – Turkey Kayserispor (13) – Romania Petrolul Ploiești (14) 159
38 Karim Belhocine Belgium Kortrijk (92) – Standard Liège (14) – Waasland-Beveren (45) – Gent (7) 158
39 Ishak Belfodil France Lyon (10) – Italy Bologna (8) – Parma (56) – Inter (8) – Livorno (17) – Belgium Standard Liège (32) – Germany Werder Bremen (26) – Hoffenheim (0) 157
40 Alim Ben Mabrouk France RC Paris (127) – Bordeaux (17) – Lyon (13) 157
41 Saphir Taïder Italy Bologna (101) – Internazionale (25) – Sassuolo (27) 153
42 Rabah Madjer France Racing Paris (23) – Tours (7) – Portugal Porto (108) – Spain Valencia (14) 152
(Italics denotes players still playing professional football; Bold denotes players still playing in the European League)

Correct as of 19 May 2018 (UTC)

Algerian players and European Competitions

Bold Still playing competitive football in Europe

List of Algerian players with 10 or more appearances in European competitions
# Name Games Date of debut Debut against Date of
last match
Final match
against
C1 C2 C3 SC TOTAL
1 Brahim Hemdani 22 28 50 13 Aug 2003 Austria Austria Wien 14 May 2008 Russia Zenit Saint Petersburg
2 El Arbi Hillel Soudani 31 16 47 25 Aug 2011 Spain Atlético Madrid 24 Aug 2017 Albania Skënderbeu Korçë
3 Sofiane Feghouli 22 22 44 7 Dec 2010 England Manchester United 4 Aug 2016 Slovenia Domžale
4 Faouzi Ghoulam 15 20 35 27 Feb 2014 England Swansea City 1 Nov 2017 England Manchester City
= Rafik Djebbour 18 17 35 20 Sep 2007 France FC Sochaux 24 Nov 2014 Spain FC Barcelona
= Yacine Brahimi 28 7 35 28 Jul 2011 Georgia (country) Metalurgi Rustavi 14 Feb 2018 England Liverpool
7 Ali Benarbia 16 14 30 24 Sep 1996 Poland Hutnik Kraków 13 Mar 2001 Turkey Galatasaray
8 Rachid Ghezzal 13 12 25 4 Oct 2012 State of Palestine Hapoel Kiryat Shmona 6 Dec 2017 Portugal Porto
9 Rabah Madjer 17 6 23 17 Sep 1986 Malta Rabat Ajax 20 Mar 1991 Germany Bayern Munich
= Sofiane Hanni 8 15 23 26 Jul 2016 Russia Rostov 22 Feb 2018 Spain Athletic Bilbao
11 Ahmed Reda Madouni 14 8 22 22 Aug 2001 Ukraine Shakhtar Donetsk 12 Apr 2007 Spain CA Osasuna
12 Islam Slimani 13 8 21 17 Sep 2014 Slovenia NK Maribor 13 Apr 2017 Spain Atlético Madrid
= Nabil Bentaleb 21 21 20 Feb 2014 Ukraine Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk 20 Apr 2017 Netherlands Ajax Amsterdam
14 Moussa Saïb 8 5 7 20 20 Apr 1993 Germany Borussia Dortmund 19 Mar 1997 Germany Borussia Dortmund
15 Karim Ziani 14 2 16 18 Sep 2007 Turkey Beşiktaş 8 Dec 2009 England Manchester United
16 Carl Medjani 2 13 15 17 Sep 2013 France Paris Saint-Germain 6 Aug 2015 Republic of Macedonia Rabotnički
= Lehit Zeghdane 12 3 15 18 July 2001 Latvia Skonto 8 August 2012 Slovenia Maribor
18 Madjid Bougherra 10 4 14 16 Sep 2009 Germany VfB Stuttgart 3 Aug 2011 Sweden Malmö FF
= Hassan Yebda 14 14 18 Sep 2008 Italy Napoli 24 Feb 2011 Spain Villarreal CF
20 Djamel Abdoun 10 3 13 13 Sep 2011 France Olympique de Marseille 14 Feb 2013 Spain Levante UD
21 Yassine Benzia 3 9 12 4 Oct 2012 State of Palestine Hapoel Kiryat Shmona 4 Aug 2016 Azerbaijan Gabala
= Mehdi Kirch 4 8 12 16 Jul 2013 Croatia Dinamo Zagreb 27 Jul 2017 Sweden Östersunds FK
23 Abdel Djaadaoui 11 11 15 Sep 1976 Scotland Hibernian 8 April 1981 Netherlands AZ Alkmaar
24 Rachid Mekhloufi 10 10 9 Sep 1958 Scotland Glasgow Rangers 16 Nov 1967 Portugal Benfica Lisboa
= Nabil Ghilas 4 6 10 22 Oct 2013 Russia Zenit Saint Petersburg 10 Apr 2014 Spain Sevilla FC
= Rafik Halliche 10 10 27 Aug 2009 Russia Zenit Saint Petersburg 25 Oct 2012 Spain Atlético Madrid
= Jugurtha Hamroun 7 3 10 20 Aug 2009 Germany Hamburger SV 24 Aug 2016 England Manchester City
= Liazid Sandjak 10 10 20 Aug 1996 Cyprus Famagusta FC 30 Sep 1997 Italy Internazionale

Correct as of 18 May 2018 (UTC)

List All-time top goalscorers for the Algerian players in european Leagues

List of Algerian players with 50 or more goals
R. Player European Leagues Club(s) Goals
1 Rachid Mekhloufi France AS Saint-Étienne (123) – SC Bastia (20) – Switzerland Servette FC (13) 156
2 Rafik Djebbour Belgium Louviéroise (6) – Greece Atromitos (6) – Panionios (19) – AEK Athens (24) – Olympiacos (39) – Turkey Sivasspor (2) – Cyprus APOEL (14) 110
3 Mohamed Salem France CS Sedan (83) – Belgium Daring de Bruxelles (21) 104
4 Mustapha Dahleb France CS Sedan (17) – Paris SG (85) 102
5 Mahi Khennane France Stade Rennais (61) – Toulouse FC (31) – Nîmes Olympique (6) 98
6 Ahmed Oudjani France RC Lens (94) – CS Sedan (1) 95
7 El Arbi Hillel Soudani Portugal Vitória de Guimarães (13) – Croatia Dinamo Zagreb (68) 81
8 Chérif Oudjani France RC Lens (39) – Stade Lavallois (14) – FC Sochaux (13) – RC Paris (7) 73
9 Rabah Madjer France Racing Paris (3) – Tours FC (2) – Portugal FC Porto (50) – Spain Valencia CF (4) 59
10 Abdelaziz Ben Tifour France OGC Nice (34) – Troyes AC (9) – AS Monaco (13) 56
11 Islam Slimani Portugal Sporting CP (48) – England Leicester City (8) – Turkey Fenerbahçe (0) 56
(Italics denotes players still playing professional football; Bold denotes players still playing in the European League)
As of 18 May 2018

List All-time top goalscorers for the Algerian players in european Competitions

Bold Still playing competitive football in Europe

List of Algerian players with 4 or more goals in European competitions
# Name Goals Date of debut Debut against Date of
last goal
Final goal
against
C1 C2 C3 SC TOTAL
1 Rabah Madjer 12 2 14 17 Sep 1986 Malta Rabat Ajax 3 Oct 1990 Northern Ireland Portadown
2 El Arbi Hillel Soudani 7 6 13 16 Jul 2013 Luxembourg Fola Esch 24 Aug 2016 Austria Red Bull Salzburg
3 Sofiane Feghouli 6 5 11 7 Nov 2012 Belarus BATE Borisov 4 Aug 2016 Slovenia Domžale
4 Yacine Brahimi 9 9 26 Aug 2014 France Lille OSC 6 Dec 2017 France Monaco
5 Rafik Djebbour 3 4 7 20 Sep 2007 France FC Sochaux 23 Feb 2012 Russia Rubin Kazan
= Islam Slimani 4 3 7 5 Nov 2014 Germany Schalke 04 4 Oct 2018 Slovakia Spartak Trnava
7 Liazid Sandjak 6 6 20 Aug 1996 Cyprus Famagusta FC 12 Aug 1997 Norway Viking FK
8 Rachid Mekhloufi 5 5 4 Sep 1957 Scotland Glasgow Rangers 9 Sep 1964 Switzerland La Chaux-de-Fonds
9 Riyad Mahrez 4 4 14 Sep 2016 Belgium Club Brugge 22 Nov 2016 Belgium Club Brugge
= Sofiane Hanni 2 2 4 26 Jul 2016 Russia Rostov 22 Nov 2017 Germany Bayern München
= Ishak Belfodil 1 3 4 20 Oct 2016 Greece Panathinaikos 2 Oct 2018 England Manchester City

Correct as of 4 October 2018 (UTC)

List of Algerian players hat-tricks in european League

Position key: GKGoalkeeper; DFDefender; MFMidfielder; FWForward; 4 – Player scored four goals; 6 – Player scored six goals; * – The home team

Riyad Mahrez the first Algerian to score a Premier League hat-trick.[41] against Swansea City.
Yacine Brahimi the first Algerian player to score a hat-trick in the UEFA Champions League in its new version.[42]
El Arabi Hillel Soudani the first Algerian to score a hat-trick in the UEFA Europa League he also has four hat-trick in the Prva HNL all with Dynamo Zagreb.
PlayerPositionForAgainstResultDateLeagueRef
Rachid MekloufiFWAS Saint-ÉtienneGirondins de Bordeaux*3–41 May 1956Ligue 1[43]
Rachid MekloufiFWAS Saint-Étienne*Olympique de Marseille6–326 August 1956Ligue 1[44]
Rachid MekloufiFWAS Saint-ÉtienneStade de Reims*5–430 September 1956Ligue 1[45]
Abdelhamid BouchoukFWToulouse FC*Stade Rennais6–018 November 1956Ligue 1[46]
Rachid MekloufiFWAS Saint-Étienne*FC Sochaux6–025 November 1956Ligue 1[47]
Rachid MekloufiFWAS Saint-ÉtienneOlympique de Marseille*3–417 March 1957Ligue 1[48]
Abdelhamid KermaliFWOlympique LyonnaisRC Paris*4–229 December 1957Ligue 1[49]
Mahi KhennaneFWStade Rennais*CS Sedan3–126 April 1959Ligue 1[50]
Ahmed OudjaniFWRC Lens*Girondins de Bordeaux3–17 February 1960Ligue 1[51]
Mohamed SalemFWCS Sedan*FC Rouen4–027 August 1960Ligue 1[52]
Mohamed SalemFWCS Sedan*FC Grenoble3–027 November 1960Ligue 1[53]
Ahmed OudjaniFWRC LensOlympique de Marseille*3–314 October 1962Ligue 1[54]
Rachid MekloufiFWAS Saint-Étienne*US Boulogne4–310 February 1963Ligue 1[55]
Mohamed SalemFWCS SedanRC Strasbourg*5–124 March 1963Ligue 1[56]
Rachid MekloufiFWAS Saint-ÉtienneCA Paris*4–07 April 1963Ligue 1[57]
Rachid MekloufiFWAS Saint-Étienne*SC Toulon3–121 April 1963Ligue 1[58]
Salah Djebaïli4MFNîmes Olympique*OGC Nice6–321 April 1963Ligue 1[59]
Ahmed OudjaniFWRC Lens*Olympique de Marseille8–128 April 1963Ligue 1[60]
Mahi KhennaneFWToulouse FC*US Valenciennes5–125 May 1963Ligue 1[61]
Ahmed Oudjani6FWRC Lens*RC Paris10–28 December 1963Ligue 1[62]
Salah DjebaïliMFNîmes Olympique*Stade rennais3–115 March 1964Ligue 1[63]
Rachid MekloufiFWAS Saint-Étienne*Lille OSC7–424 October 1965Ligue 1[64]
Mohamed LekkakFWFC RouenCS Sedan*4–411 November 1965Ligue 1[65]
Mohamed LekkakFWOlympique lyonnais*FC Nantes3–112 October 1968Ligue 1[66]
Mustapha DahlebMFCS Sedan*AS Troyes4–325 May 1974Ligue 1[67]
Mustapha DahlebMFParis Saint-GermainAS Nancy*4–28 November 1975Ligue 1[68]
Mustapha DahlebMFParis Saint-Germain*AS Saint-Étienne4–19 November 1977Ligue 1[69]
Karim MarocFWOlympique Lyonnais*Angers SCO5–111 October 1980Ligue 1[70]
Chérif OudjaniFWRC Lens*FC Tours6–12 November 1984Ligue 1[71]
Chérif OudjaniFWStade lavallois*Toulouse FC3–211 October 1985Ligue 1[72]
Rabah MadjerMFPorto*Marítimo4–21 December 1985Primeira Liga[73]
Rabah MadjerMFPorto*Belenenses7–126 August 1987Primeira Liga[74]
Rabah MadjerFWPortoFeirense*1–419 November 1989Primeira Liga[75]
Rabah MadjerMFPorto*Feirense3–01 April 1989Primeira Liga[76]
Rabah Madjer4MFPortoPortadown*8–13 October 1990Champions League[77]
Farid GhaziFWHJK Helsinki*FC Inter5–03 August 2006Veikkausliiga[78]
Idir OualiFWMouscron*Gent4–213 September 2008Belgian First Division[79]
Fouad BouguerraFWNyíregyháza*Szombathelyi3–319 May 2010Nemzeti Bajnokság I[80]
Fouad BouguerraFWNyíregyházaZalaegerszegi*3–422 May 2010Nemzeti Bajnokság I[81]
Samir LouadjMFGrevenmacherSwift Hesperange*3–22 October 2010National Division[82]
El Arbi Hillel SoudaniFWDinamo Zagreb*Slaven Koprivnica3–03 May 2014Croatian First League[83]
Yacine BrahimiMFPorto*BATE Borisov6–017 September 2014Champions League[84]
El Arbi Hillel SoudaniFWDinamo Zagreb*Astra Giurgiu5–118 September 2014Europa League[85]
Islam SlimaniFWSporting CP*Vitória de Guimarães5–14 October 2015Primeira Liga[86]
Riyad MahrezMFLeicester CitySwansea City*3–05 December 2015Premier League[87]
Okacha HamzaouiFWNacionalFeirense*3–024 September 2016Primeira Liga[88]
Nabil GhilasFWGaziantepsporKayserispor*4–318 March 2017Süper Lig[89]
El Arbi Hillel SoudaniFWDinamo Zagreb*Rijeka5–227 May 2017Croatian First League[90]
El Arbi Hillel SoudaniFWDinamo ZagrebLokomotiva*3–027 August 2017Croatian First League[91]
Mohamed RemiliFWVasas*Honvéd1–430 September 2017Nemzeti Bajnokság I[92]
Sofiane HanniMFAnderlechtStandard Liège*3–328 January 2018Belgian First Division[93]

List All-time top goalscorers for the Algerian players in All european Competitions

List of Algerian players with 50 or more goals[lower-alpha 1]
R. Player League Cup League
Cup
Super
Cup
Europe TOTAL
Goals
1 Rachid Mekhloufi 156 9 1 4 170
2 Rafik Djebbour 110 15 7 132
3 Mustapha Dahleb 102 13 115
4 Mohamed Salem 103 11 114
5 Mahi Khennane 98 7 105
6 El Arbi Hillel Soudani 82 9 13 104
7 Ahmed Oudjani 95 8 103
8 Chérif Oudjani 73 6 2 81
9 Rabah Madjer 52 11 1 14 78
10 Islam Slimani 56 5 4 5 70
11 Abdelaziz Ben Tifour 56 5 61
12 Ryad Boudebouz 47 5 2 54
13 Sofiane Hanni 47[lower-alpha 2] 1 5 53
14 Yacine Brahimi 38 5 1 8 52
15 Rafik Saïfi 45 4 1 50
As of 19 May 2018
  1. Goals scored in the Cup, League Cup and the Super Cup, and players with second leval clubs are not counted.
  2. 10 goals in Belgian First Division A playoffs.

Algerian players Titles in European clubs

This is the statistics of Algerian players who won titles in Europe where the player must be Algerian whether he played for the Algeria national football team or from an Algerian father and mother. He has never been represent another country, but if he plays for another national team and then plays for the Algerian team he is considered an Algerian player, and the same thing if he played with teams under-23, under-20 and under-17.

Bold Still playing competitive football in Europe

Summary UEFA

List by League UEFA

R. League Titles Winning Years
1National Division192002, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008 x2, 2009 x2, 2011, 2012, 2013 x2, 2014 x3, 2015, 2016, 2017
2Ligue 1171934, 1937, 1951 x2, 1952 x2, 1957, 1958, 1964, 1965, 1967, 1968, 1982, 1996 x2, 1997, 1999
3Scottish Premiership52009 x2, 2010, 2011 x2
=Superleague Greece52011, 2012 x2, 2013 x2
5Primeira Liga41986, 1988, 1991, 2018
=Croatian First League42014, 2015, 2016, 2018
7Cypriot First Division32007, 2009, 2015
8Nemzeti Bajnokság I22012, 2014
=Swiss Super League21962, 2005
=Belgian Pro League22015, 2017
=Süper Lig22008, 2018
12Czechoslovak League ¤[m]11992
=Bundesliga12002
=Azerbaijan Premier League12011
=Liga I12016
=Premier League12016

List by Cup UEFA

R. Cup Titles Winning Years
1Coupe de France271934, 1938, 1941, 1952 x2, 1954, 1957 x2, 1958, 1959, 1961, 1968, 1978, 1982, 1983, 1985, 1990 x2, 1994, 1996 x2, 1997, 2001, 2002, 2004, 2007, 2009
2Luxembourg Cup102003, 2004, 2006, 2007, 2009 x2, 2012, 2016, 2017, 2018
3Greek Football Cup62012 x2, 2013 x2, 2014, 2016
4Magyar Kupa51991, 1994, 2012, 2013 x2
5Scottish Cup42006, 2008, 2009 x2
=Taça de Portugal41988, 1991, 2013, 2015
7Cypriot Cup32008, 2012, 2015
=Croatian Football Cup32015, 2016, 2018
=Finnish Cup32001, 2006 x2
10Coppa Italia22009, 2014
11Bulgarian Cup12013
=Cupa României12013
=Lithuanian Football Cup12017
=Swiss Cup12018

List by League Cup UEFA

R. League Cup Titles Winning Years
1Coupe de la Ligue91965, 1982, 1992, 2000 x2, 2005 x2, 2012, 2013
2Scottish League Cup42008, 2010, 2011 x2
3Cupa Ligii (defunct)12016
=Taça da Liga12009
=Football League Cup11999

List by Super Cup UEFA

R. Super Cup Titles Winning Years
1Trophée des Champions81957, 1959, 1967, 1985, 1995, 1997, 2007, 2012
2Supertaça51986, 1990, 2013, 2015, 2018
3Supercoppa Italiana22009, 2014
4Croatian Football Super Cup12013
=Cypriot Super Cup12008
=Bulgarian Supercup12013
=Supercupa României12016
=Belgian Super Cup12017
=FA Community Shield12018

List by intercontinental Cup UEFA

R. Intercontinental Cup Titles Winning Years
1UEFA Cup Winners' Cup (defunct)21996 x2
2UEFA Champions League11987
=Intercontinental Cup (defunct)11987

Individual Honours

Most expensive transfers in the history of Algerian players

Riyad Mahrez owner of the most expensive transfer deal for African footballer and most expensive transfer deal for Manchester City and a record transfer fee received by Leicester City for 67.8 million euros.

Mustapha Dahleb arrived in Paris Saint Germain in 1974, coached by Just Fontaine, the president of the club Daniel Hechter recruited him for 1.35 million francs, record amount for a transfer to France at the time. there is also Moussa Saïb who moved from Auxerre to Valencia with 3,600,000 euros in 1997 in a historic deal for an Algerian player then. In 1998, he joined struggling English club Tottenham for £2.3 million, thus becoming the first Algerian to play in the Premier League.[95] In 2016, Islam Slimani moved into a historic deal for English Premier League champions Leicester City for 28 million pounds to become the most expensive player in the history of Algeria.[15] two years later Riyad Mahrez become the most expensive transfer deal for an Algerian player moved to English Premier League champions Manchester City for 60 million pounds.[96][97] and also become the most expensive African footballer after he broke the record for Gabonese Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang with £56.1 in 2018 winter transfer window. in the same time most expensive transfer deal for Manchester City and a record transfer fee received by Leicester City.

As of 10 July 2018; during the 2018 summer transfer window.
  Fee broke the Algerian record at the time of the transfer
  Fee broke the national club record
  Fee broke the record for a African
  Fee broke the record for an Algerian teenager at the time of the transfer (at most at the age of 21 years old)
R. Player Fee
(M )
From To Position Year Ref
1 Riyad Mahrez[lower-alpha 1] €67.8 England Leicester City England Manchester City Midfielder 2018 [96][97]
2 Islam Slimani[lower-alpha 2] €30 Portugal Sporting CP England Leicester City Forward 2016 [14][15]
3 Nabil Bentaleb €20 England Tottenham Hotspur Germany Schalke 04 Midfielder 2017 [98][99][100]
4 Rachid Ghezzal €15 France Monaco England Leicester City Midfielder 2018 [101][102][103]
5 Adam Ounas €12[lower-alpha 3] France Girondins de Bordeaux Italy Napoli Midfielder 2017 [104][105][106][107]
6 Ishak Belfodil €10 Italy Parma Italy Internazionale Forward 2013 [108]
7 Karim Ziani €8 France FC Sochaux France Olympique de Marseille Midfielder 2007 [109]
Sofiane Hanni €8 Belgium Anderlecht Russia Spartak Moscow Midfielder 2018 [110][111]
9 Saphir Taïder €7,5 Italy Bologna Italy Internazionale Midfielder 2013 [112]
Nadir Belhadj €7,5 England Portsmouth Qatar Sadd Sports Club Defender 2010
11 Ryad Boudebouz €7 France Montpellier Spain Real Betis Midfielder 2017 [113][114][115]
Karim Ziani €7 France Olympique de Marseille Germany VfL Wolfsburg Midfielder 2009 [116]
13 Yacine Brahimi €6,5 Spain Granada Portugal Porto Midfielder 2014 [117][118]
14 Ishak Belfodil €5,5 Belgium Standard Liège Germany Hoffenheim Forward 2018 [119]
  1. Fee broke the Algerian record at the time of the transfer and fee broke the national club record in the same time.
  2. Fee broke the Algerian record at the time of the transfer.
  3. €2M in bonuses after Napoli qualify for the 2018–19 UEFA Champions League.

Rest of the world League

Nadir Belhadj the best Algerian professional player outside of Europe.

Algerian players have played in all continents, most of them in Arab leagues in Africa and Asia, especially in the Persian Gulf, and Nadir Belhadj is the most successful player. he played 214 matches in six seasons with the Qatari club Al-Sadd, and 21 matches in one season with Al-Sailiya. during which he won 6 titles including the AFC Champions League and participated in the FIFA Club World Cup.,[120] the first Algerian to Participates in this competition is Moussa Saïb with Al-Nassr in 2000 and scored one goal, At the level of titles Algerian players won 69 titles in ten countries, namely Bahrain, Egypt, Kuwait, Morocco, Saudi Arabia, Singapore, Thailand, United Arab Emirates and Tunisia the country where Algerian players have won the highest number of titles with 29 titles followed by Qatar with 22 titles. and more player won titles is Baghdad Bounedjah with seven, On the level of local league, Abdelkader Zerrar won with CS Hammam-Lif and Youcef Belaïli with Espérance ST three league championships more than any other Algerian player. in 2010 witnessed the achievement of four Algerian players S.League and League Cup in Singapore, they are Khaled Kharroubi, Karim Boudjema, Nordine Talhi and Mansour Lakehal which has never happened before, The two brothers Abdelaziz and Mustapha Ben Tifour, first who won title outside Algeria by winning the Tunisian Cup twice in 1947 and 1948.

Baghdad Bounedjah more who won titles with seven and the best scorer with 110 goals.

At the level of continental titles and start in Africa, where the Algerian players won seven titles in CAF Champions League, CAF Confederation Cup and CAF Super Cup, mostly with Tunisian clubs and the first to win the continental title is the international goalkeeper Nacerdine Drid with Moroccan club Raja Casablanca in 1989 led by Algerian coach Rabah Saâdane. On the level of Asia, Nadir Belhadj won the AFC Champions League title for the first time for an Algerian player in 2011 and scored the decisive penalty kick.

Aymen Tahar is the first Algerian to play in the J1 League, but has played only one match.[121] also Karim Matmour is the first Algerian to play in Australia A-League where he joined to Adelaide United,[122] but he left in December 2017, terminating his contract early after playing 11 games.[123] Raïs M'Bolhi is also the first Algerian to play in Major League Soccer with a club Philadelphia Union.[124] After playing in only 9 matches in the 2015 season, head coach, Jim Curtin said that M'Bolhi would never play again for Philadelphia.[125] M'Bohli is rated as one of the worst signings in club history.,[126] On 22 January 2018, Saphir Taïder signed a three-year deal at Major League Soccer franchise Montreal Impact, starting with a two-year loan and the option of a fourth year.[127] He joined as a Designated Player.[128] and the first goal for an Algerian player in MLS was against Atlanta United FC in a 4–1 defeat away.[129] in Africa, Farès Hachi is the first Algerian to play in South Africa when he joined African champion Mamelodi Sundowns.[130] but played only 21 games in the Premier Soccer League in a season and a half and then left South Africa.[131] Also there is the French-born Chaher Zarour who spent the Vietnam League 1 with Sanna Khánh Hòa as the first Algerian player to play there.[132] The first player to play in South Asia was Hamid Berguiga, when he joined Brunei DPMM in Brunei, who plays in the Singapore league and won the League Cup in 2009 first in this region for an Algerian player. On the level of statistics, Algerian players scored the top scorer in 6 times, most notably Bounedjah twice in Tunisia with Etoile du Sahel and second with Al-Sadd and is considered the same player the most recorded hat-tricks with four. he also won the CAF Confederation Cup top scorer with Etoile du Sahel in 2015 with 6 goals.[133] On 12 August 2018, Bounedjah broke the Qatar Stars League single-game goal record, scoring 7 goals in a 10-1 win against Al Arabi.[134]

League statistics rest of the world

List of Algerian players with 60 or more appearances since the 1999–2000 season in the rest of the world Leagues
R. Player Rest of the world Club(s) Apps
1 Nadir Belhadj Qatar Al-Sadd (137) – Al-Sailiya (28) 165
2 Khaled Kharroubi Brazil Vitória (29) – Singapore Etoile FC (16) – Thailand Osotspa Saraburi (29) – BEC Tero Sasana (28) 102
3 Romain Gasmi Thailand Bangkok United (85) – Bangkok Glass (13) 98
4 Baghdad Bounedjah Tunisia Étoile du Sahel (49) – Qatar Al Sadd (44) 93
5 Farid Cheklam Saudi Arabia Najran (91) 91
6 Madjid Bougherra Qatar Lekhwiya (44) – United Arab Emirates Al-Fujairah (39) 83
7 Karim Ziani Qatar El Jaish (41) – Al-Arabi (23) – United Arab Emirates Ajman (3) – Al-Fujairah SC (11) 78
8 Abdelmoumene Djabou Tunisia Club Africain (68) – Saudi Arabia Al-Nassr (7) 75
9 Chaher Zarour Vietnam Sanna Khánh Hòa (71) 71
10 Kamel Ramdani Singapore Tanjong Pagar United (42) – Home United (26) 68
11 Ibrahim Chenihi Tunisia Club Africain (52) – Saudi Arabia Al-Fateh (13) 65
12 Mohamed Benyettou Saudi Arabia Al-Shabab (57) – United Arab Emirates Al-Fujairah (5) 62
List of Algerian players with 20 or more goals in the rest of the world Leagues
R. Player Rest of the world Club(s) Goals
1 Baghdad Bounedjah Tunisia Étoile du Sahel (26) – Qatar Al Sadd (57) 83
2 Farid Kerkar Réunion SS Dynamo (16) – USS Tamponnaise (12) – US Possession (19) – FC Avirons (9) – SS Gauloise (1) 57
3 Romain Gasmi Thailand Bangkok United (28) – Bangkok Glass (4) 32
4 Mohamed Benyettou Saudi Arabia Al-Shabab (22) – United Arab Emirates Al-Fujairah (3) 25
5 Kamel Ramdani Singapore Tanjong Pagar United (15) – Home United (6) 21
6 Abdelmoumene Djabou Tunisia Club Africain (19) – Saudi Arabia Al-Nassr (1) 20
= Nadir Belhadj Qatar Al Sadd (19) – Al-Sailiya (1) 20
As of 9 October 2018

Algerian players in the rest of the world intercontinental Competitions

Bold Still playing competitive football in the rest of the world

List of Algerian players with 10 or more appearances in the rest of the world intercontinental competitions[135]
# Name Games Date of debut Debut against Date of
last match
Final match
against
C11
C32
C43
TOTAL
1 Nadir Belhadj 35 3 38 12 Feb 2011 Saudi Arabia Al-Ittihad 9 Feb 2016 United Arab Emirates Al-Jazira
2 Baghdad Bounedjah 12 21 33 3 Aug 2013 Ethiopia Saint George 2 Oct 2018 Iran Persepolis
3 Youcef Belaïli 26 26 20 Jul 2012 Algeria ASO Chlef 21 Sep 2018 Angola 1º de Agosto
4 Madjid Bougherra 21 21 7 Mar 2012 Saudi Arabia Al-Ahli 22 Apr 2014 Iran Tractor Sazi
5 Ibrahim Chenihi 4 13 17 14 Feb 2016 Ivory Coast AS Tanda 22 Oct 2017 South Africa SuperSport United
6 Abdelmalek Ziaya 14 14 23 Feb 2010 Uzbekistan Bunyodkor 19 Oct 2011 South Korea Jeonbuk Hyundai Motors
7 Kamel Kaci-Saïd 11 1 12 24 Mar 1996 Mauritius Sunrise Flacq United 17 May 1997 Zambia Mufulira Wanderers
8 Mokhtar Belkhiter 11 11 12 Mar 2017 Sierra Leone Armed Forces FC 22 Oct 2017 South Africa SuperSport United

1 Includes the CAF Champions League and AFC Champions League. 2 Includes the CAF Confederation Cup and AFC Cup. 3 Includes the CAF Super Cup and FIFA Club World Cup.

List All-time top goalscorers for the Algerian players in the rest of the world intercontinental Competitions

List of Algerian players with 5 or more goals in the rest of the world intercontinental competitions[135]
# Name Goals Date of debut Debut against Date of
last goal
Final goal
against
C11
C32
C43
TOTAL
1 Baghdad Bounedjah 12 13 25 3 Aug 2013 Ethiopia Saint George 17 Sep 2018 Iran Esteghlal
2 Abdelmalek Ziaya 7 7 9 Mar 2010 Iran Zob Ahan 24 May 2011 Saudi Arabia Al-Hilal
3 Ibrahim Chenihi 1 5 6 12 Mar 2016 Algeria MO Béjaïa 2 Jun 2017 Morocco FUS Rabat
4 Nadir Belhadj 5 5 26 Feb 2014 Iran Sepahan 17 Mar 2015 Uzbekistan Lokomotiv Tashkent

1 Includes the CAF Champions League and AFC Champions League. 2 Includes the CAF Confederation Cup and AFC Cup. 3 Includes the CAF Super Cup and FIFA Club World Cup.

List of Algerian players hat-tricks in the rest of the world Leagues

Position key: GKGoalkeeper; DFDefender; MFMidfielder; FWForward; 4 – Player scored four goals; 5 – Player scored five goals; 7 – Player scored seven goals; * – The home team

Baghdad Bounedjah it is the most Algerian player to record a hat-trick in the rest of the world Leagues with six.
PlayerPositionForAgainstResultDateLeagueRef
Farid Kerkar4FWUSS Tamponnaise*SS Jeanne d'Arc6–125 March 2001Réunion Premier League[136]
Farid KerkarFWUSS Tamponnaise*SS Dynamo3–16 May 2001Réunion Premier League[137]
Rachid AmraneFWAl-IttihadAl-Arabi*3–125 April 2002Qatar Stars League[138]
Hadj BouguècheFWAl-Qadisiyah FCAl-Fateh SC*6–114 October 2011Saudi Professional League[139]
Mansour BoutaboutFWAS Excelsior*US Bénédictine4–022 October 2011Réunion Premier League[140]
Ismaël BenahmedFWTanjong Pagar UnitedYoung Lions*4–017 April 2013S.League[141]
Baghdad BounedjahFWÉtoile Sportive du SahelEGS Gafsa*3–025 September 2014Tunisian Ligue Professionnelle 1[142]
Mohamed BenyettouFWAl-Shabab FC*Al-Ahli Saudi FC3–218 September 2016Saudi Professional League[143]
Baghdad BounedjahFWAl Sadd SCAl-Rayyan SC*5–07 December 2016Qatar Stars League[144]
Baghdad Bounedjah5FWAl Sadd SC*Al-Arabi7–016 February 2017Qatar Stars League[145]
Ibrahim Chenihi4MFClub Africain*Armed Forces FC9–112 March 2017CAF Confederation Cup[146]
Baghdad Bounedjah4FWAl Sadd SC*Al-Ahli5–025 February 2018Qatar Stars League[147]
Baghdad BounedjahFWAl Sadd SCAl-Kharaitiyat*6–05 August 2018Qatar Stars League[148]
Baghdad Bounedjah7FWAl Sadd SC*Al-Arabi10–112 August 2018Qatar Stars League[149]

List All-time top goalscorers for the Algerian players in All the rest of the world Competitions

Baghdad Bounedjah best Algerian scorer in all competitions in the rest of the world with 127 goals.
List of Algerian players with 25 or more goals
R. Player League Cup League
Cup
Super
Cup
International TOTAL
Goals
1 Baghdad Bounedjah 82 16 1 3 25 127
2 Farid Kerkar 57 3 2 62
3 Romain Gasmi 32 32
4 Mohamed Benyettou 25 2 3 30
5 Ibrahim Chenihi 19 4 6 29
= Abdelmalek Ziaya 16 4 7 27
= Nadir Belhadj 20 2 5 27
8 Kamel Ramdani 21 3 1 25
9 Jugurtha Hamroun 19 1 3 1 1 25
As of 28 September 2018

Algerian players Titles In the rest of the world clubs

Bold Still playing competitive football In the rest of the world League

Summary

List by League

R. League Titles Winning Years
1Tunisian Ligue 1131954, 1955, 1956 x2, 1990, 1992, 2004, 2012, 2014, 2015 x2, 2017, 2018
2Qatar Stars League92002, 2005, 2008 x2, 2011, 2012 x2, 2013, 2014
3S.League42010 x4
4Kuwaiti Premier League32003, 2012 x2
5Egyptian Premier League12011
=Saudi Professional League12014

List by Cup

R. Cup Titles Winning Years
1Tunisian Cup171947 x2, 1948 x2, 1954, 1955, 1992, 1998, 2000, 2012, 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017 x2, 2018 x2
2Emir of Qatar Cup62002, 2007, 2014, 2015, 2017 x2
3Kuwait Emir Cup32003, 2012 x2
4UAE President's Cup12010
=King Cup of Champions12010
=Coupe du Trône11998

List by League Cup

R. Cups Titles Winning Years
1Singapore League Cup52009, 2010 x4
2Qatar Crown Prince Cup42007, 2013, 2017 x2
3Saudi Crown Prince Cup (defunct)12014
=Tunisian Coupe de la Ligue (defunct)12002
=Thai League Cup12014

List by Super Cup

R. Super Cup Titles Winning Years
1Qatari Super Cup32014, 2017 x2
2Arabian Gulf Super Cup22010 x2

List by intercontinental Cup rest of the world

R. Intercontinental Cup Titles Winning Years
1CAF Champions League31989, 1991, 1996
=CAF Super Cup31997, 1998, 2017
3AFC Champions League12011
=CAF Confederation Cup12015
=Afro-Asian Championship (defunct)11992

List Top goalscorers Algerian players In the rest of the world clubs

Rank player Titles League Top goalscorers Years
1Baghdad Bounedjah2Tunisia 2014 (14 goals), (Etoile du Sahel), Qatar 2017 (24 goals), (Al Sadd)
2Rachid Amrane1Qatar 2002 (16 goals), (Al Ittihad Doha)
=Farid Kerkar1France 2002 (19 goals), (US Possession)
=Abdelmoumene Djabou1Tunisia 2013 (8 goals), (Club Africain)
=Rabah Madjer1Qatar 1992 (8 goals), (Qatar)

Algerian players of the Year in the rest of the world clubs

R. player Titles League player of the Year
1Nadir Belhadj1Qatar 2014 (Al Sadd)

Algerian managers Titles In the world clubs

Djamel Belmadi the best Algerian managers outside of Europe.

Kader Firoud he became coach in 1955 by taking in hand "his" crocodiles Nîmes, with training reputed "the hard way". His coaching years are considered the golden age of Nîmes Olympique. Under his leadership, Nîmes played the leading roles in the league: three times second in 1958, 1959 and 1960. Nîmes qualified twice for the final of the Coupe de France, but failed at this stage each time (1958 and 1961). In 1964, following a proposal by Jean Doumeng, the Toulouse president, he joined the club of the pink city. He stays there for three seasons then becomes director of sports of Algeria. Firoud found Nîmes between 1969 and 1978 (winner of the Coupe des Alpes in 1972, finalist in 1976). Final term from 1980 to 1982: he directs Montpellier with a promotion in Division 1, Firoud led from the bench a record 782 Ligue 1 games (323 wins, 264 defeats, 195 draws) only Guy Roux does better. Under his leadership, internationals of Gard origin René Girard, Michel Mézy, and Bernard Boissier emerged Firoud is the only Algerian who has trained in the first level in Europe all this time.

# Name League Cup League Cup Super Cup International TOTAL
1 Djamel Belmadi Qatar 2011, 2012, 2017, 2018 Qatar 2016, 2018 Qatar 2018 Qatar 2015, 2016 9
2 Habib Draoua Tunisia 1954, 1955, 1957, 1960, 1961 Tunisia 1951, 1954 7
3 Kamel Djabour Mali 2011, 2015 Mali 2015 3
= Rabah Madjer Qatar 1999 Qatar 2006 Qatar 1999 3
5 Kamel Lemoui Libya 1990, 1991 2
= Abdelhak Benchikha Tunisia 2008 Morocco 2013 2
= Adel Amrouche Democratic Republic of the Congo 2003, 2006 2
8 Rachid Belhout Tunisia 2010 1
= Rabah Saâdane Morocco 1989 1

See also

  • Category:Algeria international footballers

Notes

    References

    1. "Benouna Ali". Thinesclaude.wifeo.com. Retrieved 5 May 2011.
    2. "Anciennes Gloires". Cheliff.org. Retrieved 5 May 2011.
    3. "Mekloufi, le rebelle". lesrebellesdufoot.com. Retrieved 10 September 2017.
    4. "RACHID MEKHLOUFI, LE CŒUR VERT". sofoot.com. Retrieved 10 September 2017.
    5. "Il était une fois "Moumous" Dahleb, le dribbleur diabolique qui enflammait le Parc". huffpostmaghreb.com. Retrieved 10 September 2017.
    6. "Un but, un jour : 27 mai 1987, Rabah Madjer crée la "Madjer"". dzfoot.com. Retrieved 10 September 2017.
    7. "Intercontinental Cup 1987 Porto Penarol". twb22.blogspot.com. Retrieved 10 September 2017.
    8. "RABAH MADJER : " CE GESTE, C'EST UNE FIERTÉ POUR TOUS LES ALGÉRIENS "". sofoot.com. Retrieved 10 September 2017.
    9. "Riyad Mahrez: Leicester City forward named PFA Player of the Year". BBC Sport. 25 April 2016. Retrieved 25 April 2016.
    10. "Bargain of the century Riyad Mahrez first African to win EPL player of the season". TVNZ. Associated Press. 25 April 2016. Retrieved 25 April 2016.
    11. "Belgique : Hanni élu joueur de l'année !". dzfoot.com. 23 May 2016. Retrieved 11 December 2016.
    12. "Croatie : Soudani meilleur joueur 2017". dzfoot.com. 15 December 2017. Retrieved 15 December 2017.
    13. "Verts : Soudani signe pour 3 ans au Vitoria Guimarães". dzfoot.com. 5 August 2011. Retrieved 11 December 2016.
    14. 1 2 "Islam Slimani signs for Leicester City". Leicester City F.C. Retrieved 31 August 2016.
    15. 1 2 3 Stevens, Samuel (31 August 2016). "Islam Slimani to Leicester City: Premier League champions confirm club-record £28m signing from Sporting Lisbon". The Independent. Retrieved 31 August 2016.
    16. "For Algeria, football remains a fault line with France". America.aljazeera.com. Retrieved 21 December 2014.
    17. "ZZ top". The Guardian. 4 April 2004.
    18. "Why France still loves Zidane". London: The Independent. 11 July 2006.
    19. "Benzema, le phénomène qui réveille le foot". Le Point (in French). 7 February 2008. Retrieved 14 July 2009.
    20. "Benzema, l'arme fatale de l'OL". Maxifoot (in French). 19 September 2007. Retrieved 19 June 2009.
    21. "Ramadan Fasting For Real Madrid Trio Lassana, Benzema and Diarra". Dadyal Online. 22 August 2009. Retrieved 31 December 2012.
    22. 1 2 "Sur les traces de Karim Benzema". DjaZairess (in French). 13 May 2008. Retrieved 6 May 2012.
    23. "Sur les traces de Karim Benzema". 20 Minutes (in French). 6 January 2011. Retrieved 6 May 2012.
    24. "Vaulx-en-Velin – Gressy, l'autre Benzema". Fédération Internationale de Football Association (in French). 21 January 2011. Retrieved 6 May 2012.
    25. "Sabri Benzema, plus fort que son frère?". FootMercato (in French). 9 August 2009. Retrieved 6 May 2012.
    26. "Le minot Prodige de Septèmes" (in French). Septèmes-les-Vallons. Retrieved 18 March 2011.
    27. 1 2 "Petit OM deviendra grand" (in French). Septèmes-les-Vallons. 11 May 2007. Retrieved 18 March 2011.
    28. "Nasri, un Bleu "made in OM"" (in French). RMC Sport. 2 June 2012. Retrieved 2 June 2012.
    29. "Samir Nasri et Tatiana Golovin: "Si demain Tatiana m'apprenait qu'elle attend un enfant ..."" (in French). Pure People. 24 February 2010. Retrieved 19 March 2011.
    30. "Samir Nasri fête ses 20 ans" (in French). French Football Federation. 26 June 2007. Retrieved 8 February 2012.
    31. "Samir Nasri: "Je suis musulman, non pratiquant"" (in French). Le Buteur. 5 March 2011. Retrieved 27 March 2011.
    32. Holyman, Ian (19 March 2015). "Nabil Fekir and Kurt Zouma named in France squad for friendlies". ESPN. Retrieved 20 March 2015.
    33. Emons, Michael (26 March 2015). "France 1-3 Brazil". BBC Sport. Retrieved 26 March 2015.
    34. "Impressive Belgium beat France". UEFA. 7 June 2015. Retrieved 7 June 2015.
    35. Huguenin, Michael (4 September 2015). "Fekir ruptures knee ligaments". Goal.com. Retrieved 5 September 2015.
    36. EN Espoirs : 27 joueurs convoqués
    37. "Qatar calls up Algerian duo of Boualem Khoukhi and Karim Boudiaf". dzfoot.com. 13 November 2013. Archived from the original on 30 December 2013. Retrieved 30 December 2013.
    38. "Al Hilal of KSA hold Qatar reserves to goalless draw". qfa.com.qa. Retrieved 30 December 2013.
    39. "Match report" (PDF). the-waff.com. Retrieved 30 December 2013.
    40. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Played also for France
    41. Pritchard, Dafydd (5 December 2015). "Swansea 0-3 Leicester". BBC Sport. Retrieved 20 December 2015.
    42. "FC Porto 6–0 BATE Bor". BBC Sport. 17 September 2014. Retrieved 17 September 2014.
    43. Girondins de Bordeaux 4-3 AS Saint-Étienne (in French)
    44. AS Saint-Étienne 6-3 Olympique de Marseille (in French)
    45. Stade de Reims 4-5 AS Saint-Étienne (in French)
    46. Toulouse FC 6-0 Stade Rennais (in French)
    47. AS Saint-Étienne 6-0 FC Sochaux (in French)
    48. Olympique de Marseille 4-3 AS Saint-Étienne (in French)
    49. RC Paris 2-4 Olympique Lyonnais (in French)
    50. Stade Rennais 3-1 CS Sedan (in French)
    51. RC Lens 3-1 Girondins de Bordeaux (in French)
    52. CS Sedan 4-0 FC Rouen (in French)
    53. CS Sedan 3-0 FC Grenoble (in French)
    54. Olympique de Marseille 3-3 RC Lens (in French)
    55. AS Saint-Étienne 4-3 US Boulogne (in French)
    56. RC Strasbourg 1-5 CS Sedan (in French)
    57. CA Paris 0-4 AS Saint-Étienne (in French)
    58. AS Saint-Étienne 3-1 SC Toulon (in French)
    59. Nîmes Olympique 6–3 OGC Nice (in French)
    60. RC Lens 8-1 Olympique de Marseille (in French)
    61. Toulouse FC 5–1 US Valenciennes (in French)
    62. RC Lens 10-2 RC Paris (in French)
    63. Nîmes Olympique 3–1 Stade rennais (in French)
    64. AS Saint-Étienne 7-4 Lille OSC (in French)
    65. CS Sedan 4–4 FC Rouen (in French)
    66. Olympique lyonnais* 3–1 FC Nantes (in French)
    67. CS Sedan 4–3 AS Troyes (in French)
    68. AS Nancy 2-4 Paris Saint-Germain (in French)
    69. Paris Saint-Germain 4-1 AS Saint-Étienne (in French)
    70. Olympique Lyonnais 5–1 Angers SCO (in French)
    71. RC Lens 6–1 FC Tours (in French)
    72. Stade lavallois 3–2 Toulouse FC (in French)
    73. FC Porto 4-2 Marítimo (in Portuguese)
    74. FC Porto 7-1 Belenenses (in Portuguese)
    75. Feirense 1-4 FC Porto (in Portuguese)
    76. FC Porto 3-1 Feirense (in Portuguese)
    77. Portadown FC 1-8 FC Porto (in Portuguese)
    78. HJK Helsinki 5-0 FC Inter (in English)
    79. Mouscron 4-2 Gent (in English)
    80. Nyíregyháza 3-3 Szombathelyi (in English)
    81. Zalaegerszegi 4-3 Nyíregyháza (in English)
    82. Swift Hesperange 2-3 Grevenmacher (in English)
    83. Dinamo Zagreb 3-0 Slaven Koprivnica (in French)
    84. "UEFA Champions League 2014/15 - History - Porto-BATE". UEFA Official Website. 17 September 2014. Retrieved 17 September 2014. (in English)
    85. "Dinamo Zagreb 5-1 Astra Giurgiu". UEFA Official Website. 18 September 2014. Retrieved 7 January 2016. (in English)
    86. Sporting CP 5-1 Vitória de Guimarães (in Portuguese)
    87. "Swansea City 0-3 Leicester City". BBC Sport. 5 December 2015. Retrieved 5 December 2015. (in English)
    88. "Feirense 0–3 Nacional". Thefinalball.com. 24 September 2016. (in Portuguese)
    89. 3-4 Gaziantepspor (in Portuguese)
    90. Dinamo Zagreb 5-2 Rijeka (in French)
    91. Lokomotiva 0-3 Dinamo Zagreb (in French)
    92. budapest-honved 1-4 vasas (in English)
    93. Standard Liège 3-3 Anderlecht (in English)
    94. "Rabah Madjer TOTALS (11 TITLES)". thefinalball.com. Retrieved 10 September 2017.
    95. "Football: Saib finalises pounds 2.5m transfer to Spurs". independent.co.uk. 24 February 1998. Retrieved 19 December 2017.
    96. 1 2 "Riyad Mahrez: Manchester City sign winger from Leicester for £60m". bbc.com. 10 July 2018. Retrieved 10 July 2018.
    97. 1 2 "City sign Riyad Mahrez from Leicester". Manchester City F.C. 10 July 2018.
    98. Mark Irwin (14 February 2017). "Tottenham transfer news: Nabil Bentaleb will complete £16million move from Spurs to Schalke if he starts for German club this weekend". The Sun. Retrieved 19 February 2017.
    99. "Bentaleb to join Schalke on permanent deal". Tottenham Hotspur Ltd. 24 February 2017. Retrieved 24 February 2017.
    100. "Nabil Bentaleb: Schalke to sign Tottenham midfielder on four-year deal". BBC Sport. 24 February 2017. Retrieved 24 February 2017.
    101. "Leicester City sign winger Rachid Ghezzal from AS Monaco". Leicester City F.C. 5 August 2018. Retrieved 5 August 2018.
    102. "Mercato : Ghezzal signe 4 ans à Leicester". dzfoot.com. 5 August 2018. Retrieved 5 August 2018.
    103. "Rachid Ghezzal (Monaco) signe à Leicester". lequipe.fr. 5 August 2018. Retrieved 5 August 2018.
    104. "Officiel : Adam Ounas est Napolitain". dzfoot.com. 4 July 2017. Retrieved 4 July 2017.
    105. "Napoli seal deal to sign winger Adam Ounas from Bordeaux". ESPN FC. 3 July 2017. Retrieved 4 July 2017.
    106. "Il Napoli ufficializza l'acquisto di Ounas" (Press release) (in Italian). S.S.C. Napoli. 3 July 2017. Retrieved 4 July 2017.
    107. "Official: Napoli sign Ounas". Football Italia. 3 July 2017. Retrieved 3 July 2017.
    108. "Belfodil à l'Inter (off.)". lequipe.fr. 5 July 2013. Retrieved 29 July 2016.
    109. "Algeria's Ziani joins Marseille". BBC Sport. 29 June 2007. Retrieved 2016-07-29.
    110. "Transfert : Le Spartak officialise la signature de Hanni". dzfoot.com. 31 January 2018. Retrieved 2018-01-31.
    111. Софиан Ханни стал игроком «Спартака» (in Russian). FC Spartak Moscow. 31 January 2018.
    112. "Algeria midfielder Saphir Taider joins Inter Milan". BBC Sport. 21 August 2013. Retrieved 21 August 2013.
    113. "Transferts : Boudebouz pour 4 ans au Betis". dzfoot.com. 9 August 2017. Retrieved 9 August 2017.
    114. "Ryad Boudebouz est un joueur du Betis". lequipe.fr. 9 August 2017. Retrieved 9 August 2017.
    115. "Oficial: Ryad Boudebouz ya es jugador del Betis". estadiodeportivo.com. 9 August 2017. Retrieved 9 August 2017.
    116. "Transferts : Ziani au VfL Wolfsburg pour 4 ans". dzfoot.com. 7 July 2007. Retrieved 2016-07-29.
    117. "Porto sign Algeria's Brahimi from Granada". King Fut. 2014-07-23.
    118. "Porto sign Yacine Brahimi". GIVEMESPORT. 23 July 2014.
    119. "Für 5,5 Millionen Euro: Hoffenheim verpflichtet Belfodil". kicker Online. 15 May 2018. Retrieved 15 May 2018.
    120. "Verts : Belhadj offre l'AFC Champion's League à Al Sadd". dzfoot.com. 5 November 2011. Retrieved 29 August 2017.
    121. "Sagan Tosu finalize deal with midfielder Tahar". The Japan Times. 4 August 2016. Retrieved 6 August 2016.
    122. "Algerian midfielder joins Adelaide United". The World Game. SBS. 16 August 2017.
    123. Migliaccio, Val (5 December 2017). "Adelaide United confirm departure of Algerian international Karim Matmour after just 11 games at the club". The Advertiser.
    124. Philadelphia Union Communications. "Philadelphia Union acquire FIFA World Cup veteran goalkeeper in Algerian Rais Mbolhi, veteran led Algeria to the knockout round 2014 FIFA World Cup". Philadelphia Union official website. Retrieved 31 July 2014.
    125. "Philadelphia Union's Rais M'Bolhi denies rift with teammates". ESPNFC Website. 8 April 2015. Retrieved 14 May 2015.
    126. Kevin Kinkead. "Will Rais Mbolhi Go Down As The Worst Signing In Philadelphia Union History?". philadelphia.cbslocal.com. Retrieved 9 April 2015.
    127. "Algeria's Taider moves from Bologna to MLS side Montreal". BBC Sport. 23 January 2018. Retrieved 11 May 2018.
    128. "Algerian international Saphir Taïder joins Impact as new Designated Player". Montreal Impact. 22 January 2018. Retrieved 11 May 2018.
    129. Quillen, Ian (28 April 2018). "Play Video Atlanta United 4, Montreal Impact 1". Major League Soccer. Retrieved 11 May 2018.
    130. "Transferts : Farès Hachi au Mamelodi Sundowns !". dzfoot. Retrieved 31 January 2017.
    131. "MCA : Arrivée de Hachi et nul contre Grenoble". dzfoot.com. Retrieved 13 July 2018.
    132. "Paris FC : à 33 ans, Chaher Zarour retrouve une seconde jeunesse au Viêt Nam". leparisien.fr. Retrieved 9 May 2018.
    133. "ES Sahel : la belle image laissée par Baghdad Bounedjah". lagazettedufennec.com. Retrieved 20 February 2018.
    134. "Record-breaking Bounedjah seals big win for Al Sadd - The Peninsula Qatar". thepeninsulaqatar.com. Retrieved 2018-08-13.
    135. 1 2 "AFC Champions League". worldfootball.net. Retrieved 15 September 2017.
    136. USS Tamponnaise 6-1 SS Jeanne d'Arc (in French)
    137. USS Tamponnaise 3-1 SS Dynamo (in French)
    138. Al-Arabi 1-3 Al-Ittihad (in French)
    139. Al-Fateh SC 1-6 Al-Qadisiyah FC (in French)
    140. AS Excelsior 4-0 US Bénédictine (in French)
    141. Young Lions 0-4 Tanjong Pagar United (in French)
    142. EGS Gafsa 0-3 ÉS Sahel (in French)
    143. Al-Shabab FC 3-2 Al-Ahli Saudi FC (in French)
    144. Al-Rayyan SC 0-5 Al Sadd SC (in French)
    145. Al Sadd SC 7-0 Al-Arabi (in French)
    146. Club Africain 9-1 Armed Forces FC (in French)
    147. Al Sadd SC 5-0 Al-Ahli (in French)
    148. Al-Kharaitiyat 0-6 Al Sadd SC (in French)
    149. Al Sadd SC 10-1 Al-Arabi (in French)
    This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.