Al Shabab FC (Riyadh)

(Redirected from Al-Shabab FC (Riyadh))

Al-Shabab Football Club (Arabic: نادي الشباب; lit.'The Youth Football Club') is a Saudi Arabian professional football club based in Riyadh that competes in the Saudi Professional League. Founded in 1947 as Shabab Al Riyadh (شباب الرياض; lit.'Riyadhi Youth'), it was renamed Al Shabab in 1967.

Al-Shabab
Full nameAl-Shabab Football Club
Nickname(s)Al Leith (White Lion)
Founded1947; 77 years ago (1947)
GroundAl-Shabab Club Stadium, Riyadh
Capacity15,000[1]
ChairmanKholaif Al-Hweshan
Head coachVítor Pereira
LeagueSaudi Pro League
2023-24Pro League, 8th of 18
WebsiteClub website
Current season
Al Shabab active departments

Football
(men's)

Football
(women's)

History

Al Shabab was the first football club in Riyadh. The club began before 1947, with many conflicts before with its numerous members, but it was settled in 1947 and Abdulrahman Bin Saeed was the president. Five years later, Al Shabab won its first tournament beating Sakit Al Hadeed (Railway Club) in Riyadh. In 1955 Al Shabab beat the Military College to win the King Saud Cup. Two years passed, and a new conflict arose in 1957. The player, Saleh Jaber, was assigned captain, but then was fired, and the new captain was Ahmed Lmfoon. This did not please some members of the club. Soon the conflict was impossible to solve, and Abdulrahman Bin Saeed and some members, left Al Shabab and took the best players that played for the club back then in an injustice way leaving Al Shabab to a chaos, The club stopped for half a year due to financial weakness, a new football club was born from the conflicts and separation with Abdulrahman Bin Saeed as the president which is the club known today as Al-Hilal. Then in the beginning of 1959 another problem began, Abdullah Bin Ahmed, the president then, was all alone taking care of the club. He could not take the pressure of handling the club alone, and decided to take a vacation abroad. Before traveling, he disbanded the first team, and most of the players signed for other clubs mainly Al-Ahli and Al-Hilal. What was left was the youth team, and the player Abdulrahman Bin Ahmed decided to take care of the youth, and from that they got there name Shabab Al Riyadh which means Riyadh's youth. Soon Abdullah Bin Ahmed returned, and many members returned and supported the club. Then Abdullah Bin Ahmed announced the return of forming the first team, and some players returned, but some stayed at Al-Ahli and Al-Hilal. Also in 1959 was the formation of the Saudi Football Federation, and all football clubs were announced official. In 1960 in the first official tournament called King Saud Cup for the Central Province, Al Shabab faced Al Hilal in their first official games between the two, and won 3–0 to win their first cup.

In the 1960s, everyone wanted to play and be part of the club, and after the request of Al Najmah FC and Al Marekh in 1967, they were united as one club and changed their name from Shabab Riyadh, to simply Al Shabab. The colors of the team were at first white and green, then they were changed after the unification to orange and blue, but in 1977 it was changed to white, gray, and black, the current colors. In 1975 Al Shabab was relegated to 1st Division, but the following season it was able to gain 1st place and came back to the Premier League in 1976. In 1993, Al Shabab became the first club in Saudi Arabia to win 3 premier leagues in a row. In 2007, Al Shabab became the first club in Saudi Arabia to build projects to increase the club's revenue, and began a 200 million dollar project which contains a 5 star hotel, and a shopping mall. During a visit to the club in January 2008, Al Shabab's main supporter, Khalid bin Sultan, announced the launch of two new projects, Al Laith TV Channel, and Al Shabab Museum.

Honours

Records

  • First Saudi club to win three Saudi Premier League in a row (1991, 1992, and 1993).[2]
  • First Saudi club to win the professional and new Saudi Premier League, in 1991.
  • Largest margin win was against Al Shoalah during a friendly tournament in 2007, 8–0. Largest margin win in an official game was against Al-Ta'ee in the Saudi Premier League in 2003, 7–0. Largest margin win against a high-ranked club was 6–1 against Al Nassr in the Saudi Premier League 2004.

Current squad

As of 6 October 2023[3]

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

No.Pos. NationPlayer
26MF  KSARiyadh Sharahili
28FW  KSANasser Al-Bishi
30MF  CROIvan Rakitić
32FW  KSASaad Al-Muwallad
34FW  KSAFares Al-Garzae
36DF  KSANawaf Al-Ghulaimish
37MF  KSAAbdullah Matuq
38DF  KSAMohammed Harbush
41FW  KSADhaidan Al-Mutairi
45GK  KSAMussa Camara
50GK  KSAMohammed Al-Absi
85MF  KSAHamad Al-Ghamdi
88DF  KSANader Al-Sharari

Unregistered players

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

No.Pos. NationPlayer
DF  KSASultan Al-Enezi
DF  KSAAbdullah Al-Rubaie
MF  ARGCristian Guanca

Management

Current board of directors and Administrators

OfficeName
PresidentKhalid AlBaltan
Vice-presidentKholaif AlHweshan
Member of the Board, Investment Officer
Member of the Board, Secretary-General
Member of the Board, Director of the Media CenterAhmad AlMasoud
CEOPat Janssen[4]

Current technical staff

PositionName
Head coach Vítor Pereira
Assistant head coach Luís Miguel
André Monteiro
First-Team coach Edgar Sá
Nawaf Al-Abaid
Saad Al-Subaie
Goalkeeping coach Ricardo Silva
Abdulelah Al-Mubayed
Fitness coach Guilherme Gomes
Saqr Al-Maqbool
Match analyst Adriano Teixeira
Club doctor Hassan Al-Mubadallah
Misael Rivas
Physiotherapist Salman Al-Khamis
Team manager Allisa Fahad Issa
Youth coach Juan Brown
U 23 team coach Turki Al-Gabr
U 20 team coach Waleed Al-Muslim
U 17 team coach Omar Islam
Sporting director Domenico Teti

Recent seasons

The table below chronicles the achievements of Al Shabab in various competitions since 2000.

YearDivisionPositionCrown Prince CupKing CupACL
2000–01Premier League7thSemi-final – –
2001–02Premier League9thQuarter-final –
2002–03Premier League6thQuarter-final –
2003–04Premier League1stQuarter-final –
2004–05Premier League2ndQuarter-finalGroup stage
2005–06Premier League1stSemi-finalQuarter-final
2006–07Premier League4thQuarter-finalGroup stage
2007–08Premier League3rdSemi-finalChampion –
2008–09Pro League4thRunners-upChampionRound of 16
2009–10Pro League4thSemi-finalSemi-finalSemi-final
2010–11Pro League4thRound of 16Quarter-finalRound of 16
2011–12Pro League1stQuarter-finalQuarter-final –
2012–13Pro League3rdRound of 16Runners-upQuarter-finals
2013–14Pro League4thSemi-finalChampionRound of 16
2014–15Pro League5thRound of 16Quarter-finalGroup stage
2015–16Pro League6thSemi-finalRound of 16 –
2016–17Pro League6thQuarter-finalsRound of 32 –
2017–18Pro League10th –Quarter-finals –
2018–19Pro League5th –Round of 16 –
2019–20Pro League7th –Round of 32 –
2020–21Pro League2nd –Round of 16 –
2021–22Pro League4th –Round of 16Quarter-final
2022–23Pro League4th –Semi-finalRound of 16
2023–24Pro League

Managers

Asian competitions

Overview

As of 23 February 2023
CompetitionPldWDLGFGA
AFC Champions League7641132311680
Asian Club Championship94322110
Asian Cup Winners' Cup84221410
Asian Super Cup201134
TOTAL95491928154104

Record by country

CountryPldWDLGFGAGDWin%
 Bahrain101011+0000.00
 China110042+2100.00
 India220090+9100.00
 Indonesia110030+3100.00
 Iran197481518−3036.84
 Iraq431082+6075.00
 Japan303033+0000.00
 Jordan211032+1050.00
 Kuwait4301146+8075.00
 Lebanon210133+0050.00
 Qatar169342517+8056.25
 Saudi Arabia300326−4000.00
 South Korea8215916−7025.00
 Syria6411124+8066.67
 United Arab Emirates1911353520+15057.89
 Uzbekistan5410114+7080.00

Asian record

Matches

SeasonCompetitionRoundClubHomeAwayAggregate
1992–93Asian Club ChampionshipQuarter-finals Yomiuri0–02nd
Al-Muharraq1–1
Arseto3–0
Semi-finals Al-Wasl2–2 (4–3 p)2–2 (4–3 p)
Final PAS Tehran0–10–1
1993–94Asian Club ChampionshipFirst round Al-Arabi5–27–112–3
Quarter-finalsWithdrew
1994–95Asian Club ChampionshipSecond round Al-Ansar3–00–33–3 (4–5 p)
2000–01Asian Cup Winners' CupSecond round Hutteen2–00–12–1
Quarter-finals Al-Wehdat2–21–03–2
Semi-finals Esteghlal3–23–2
Final Dalian Shide4–24–2
2001Asian Super CupFinal Suwon Samsung Bluewings1–22–23–4
2001–02Asian Cup Winners' CupSecond round Al-Sadd0–02–32–3
2005AFC Champions LeagueGroup B Sepahan1–10−13rd
Al-Wahda3–12–1
Al-Ain1–00–3
2006AFC Champions LeagueGroup D Al-Sadd0–03–21st
Al-Quwa Al-Jawiya2–12–0
Al-Arabi2–00–3
Quarter-finals Ulsan Hyundai Horang-i0−10−60–7
2007AFC Champions LeagueGroup D Al-Ain2–02−02nd
Sepahan0–10–1
Al-Ittihad4–01–1
2009AFC Champions LeagueGroup B Al-Gharafa1–03–12nd
Persepolis0–00–1
Sharjah5–03–1
Round of 16 Al-Ittihad1−21–2
2010AFC Champions LeagueGroup C Sepahan1–10–11st
Pakhtakor2–13–1
Al-Ain3–21–2
Round of 16 Esteghlal3–23–2
Quarter-finals Jeonbuk Hyundai Motors0–12–02–1
Semi-finals Seongnam Ilhwa Chunma4–30–14–4 (a)
2011AFC Champions LeagueGroup D Al-Rayyan1–01–12nd
Zob Ahan0–01–0
Emirates4–11–2
Round of 16 Al-Sadd0−10–1
2013AFC Champions LeagueGroup A El Jaish2–00–31st
Al-Jazira2–11–1
Tractor Sazi1–01–0
Round of 16 Al-Gharafa3–02−15–1
Quarter-finals Kashiwa Reysol2–21–13–3 (a)
2014AFC Champions LeagueGroup A Esteghlal2–11–01st
Al-Jazira1–32–1
Al-Rayyan4–32–0
Round of 16 Al-Ittihad1–30−11–4
2015AFC Champions LeagueGroup B Al-Ain0–10–04th
Pakhtakor2–22–0
Naft Tehran0–31–2
2022AFC Champions LeagueGroup B Mumbai City6–03–01st
Al-Jazira3–02–0
Al-Quwa Al-Jawiya3–01–1
Round of 16 Nasaf Qarshi2–02–0
Quarter-finals Al-Duhail1–21–2

AFC Club ranking

Rankings are calculated by the Football Alphabet[8]

RankClubPoints
15 Shandong Taishan505.87
16 Pakhtakor FK480.24
17 Al Shabab460.69
18 Al Wahda FC459.74
19 Sepahan SC441.55

See also

References

Preceded by Asian Cup Winners' Cup
Runner up: Dalian Shide

2001
Succeeded by