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Al-Ittihad Club (Jeddah)

Association football club in Saudi Arabia


Association football club in Saudi Arabia

FieldValue
clubnameAl-Ittihad الإتحاد
imageAl-Ittihad Club (Jeddah) logo.svg
image_size175px
fullnameAl-Ittihad Saudi Football Club
founded
nickname{{unbulleted list
ownerPublic Investment Fund (75%)
Ittihad Non-Profit Foundation (25%)
chairmanLoay Mashabi
mgrtitleHead coach
managerSérgio Conceição
groundKing Abdullah Sports City
Prince Abdullah Al-Faisal Sports City (selected matches)
capacity62,345
27,000
leagueSaudi Pro League
season2024–25
positionPro League, 1st of 18 (champions)
current2025–26 Al-Ittihad Club season
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Note

the Saudi football team based in Jeddah

|Al-Amid (The Chief) |Al-mundiali (The Mundial) |Al-numour (Tigers) |Nadi Al-Sha'ab (The People's Club) |Nadi Al-Watan (The Nation's Club)}} Ittihad Non-Profit Foundation (25%) Prince Abdullah Al-Faisal Sports City (selected matches) 27,000 Al-Ittihad Club (), commonly known as Al-Ittihad or simply Ittihad, is a professional football club based in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia. The club has spent its entire history in the top flight of football in Saudi Arabia, currently known as the Saudi Pro League. Ittihad has won 60 championships, 37 of which are official.

Ittihad matches are played at Jeddah's main stadium King Abdullah Sports City, which is the second-largest stadium in Saudi Arabia, accommodating 62,345 spectators. Al-Ittihad has a long-standing rivalry with Al-Hilal, which is referred to as Saudi El Clasico, and is considered the most prominent and most watched annual match.

Founded in 1927, it is the oldest sports club still surviving in Saudi Arabia. The most successful period in the club history was the 1990s and the 2000s, when the club achieved a large number of titles and achievements domestically, regionally, and globally, culminating in the club securing the 4th place in the 2005 FIFA Club World Championship.

Ittihad is one of the most successful Asian club at domestic and continental level, as they have achieved the AFC Champions League title twice in a row (the first to do so), the Asian Cup Winners' Cup, the GCC Champions League and the Arab Champions League title each once. Domestically, Ittihad is also one of two successful clubs in Saudi Arabia, having won ten league titles, ten King's Cup titles, eight Crown Prince Cup titles, three Saudi Federation Cup titles and one Saudi Super Cup.

History

Creation (1927–1949)

The club was founded after a meeting of some of the notable football enthusiasts of the city of Jeddah, on 26 December 1927. They met in the offices of a radio broadcasting company and discussed the idea of forming a football club to compete with various travelling teams and be a source of entertainment for inhabitants and an outlet for the city's youth to practice organised sport. Everyone agreed that they should create the team that unites them and Ittihad Jeddah was born. The attendees were Hamza Fitaihi, Abdulrazag Ajlan, Abdullah Bin Zagor, Fahad Badkook, Abdulsamad Najeeb Alsaady, Ismail Zahran, Ali Yamani, Abdulaziz Jameel, Abdul Latif Jameel, Abdulateef Linjawi, Othman Banajah, Ahmad Abu Talib, Ali Sultan, Ahmed Almir and Saleh Salamah.

As long as we are here together, let's call it *Ittihad*
Mazen Mohammed

The name of the club was quoted from this wisdom, Mazen Mohammed words which created the current club name. Club owners agree with him to put the club name Ittihad (United or Union, jointly) in Arabic.

Ali Sultan became the first official president of the club. Ittihad did not find at first a strong support, there wasn't an official clubs (communities) such as Al Riyadhi, because the presence of powerful culture in the city of Jeddah only. In their first meeting with Al-Riyadhi, Ittihad make it victory with 3–0 won. The club has achieved a historic first tournament, which was called The Cup of Nishan Nazer, counted as an official tournament at the time, The cup have formed a popularity of Ittihad, Because of a challenge between them in the final. Depending on the narrator, the winner can burn the Embassy wood's. The Championship attended by several of the clubs, communities, was fought by Ittihad where several games had to be won to achieve access to the final against Al-Mukhtalat. The weather was dust, did not complete the first half, the match was stopped about 10 minutes. the referee stopped the game to rest for 8 minutes, the weather was changed for the better with the second half, Al-Mukhtalat squad had led to fail, it was a low attacking level. The most prominent player in the game is the club's defender Safwan which was sacrificed for his team. the club won the championship by 3–0 against Al-Mukhtalat. The most important characteristic of this tournament is the first sporting event held in the reign of the founder King Abdul-Aziz Al-Saud The period of 1940 to 1950 remained difficult, as the Football Association was not established until 1956.

The Start of The Official Tournaments, The First League Title, The Treble (1950–1999)

In late 1950s, it is considered as the first club to achieve both the Crown Prince Cup and the King's Cup for two consecutive times. On 2 May 1960, Ittihad faced their traditional rivals Al-Ahli in the King's Cup, which ended with a big 7–0 victory, which is the largest victory in the derby. The tournament ended and the club became champions for the third time in a row over Al-Wehda, which completed the 1958, 1959, and 1960 series. The club went through its worst period since its founding, after winning the King's Cup in 1967, with the exception of achieving the Saudi Association Cup in 1974, after defeating Al-Hilal on penalties. In the following decade, the Saudi Pro League and the First Division were merged due to the many matches of the national team in 1982, which Ittihad won its first league title in its history, which is the first and only club to achieve it. After an absence for 21 years, the club won the King's Cup after defeating Al Ettifaq in 1988.

In mid 1990s, Which is considered as the beginning of the golden age of the club, where a numerous of titles were achieved. In 1996–97, the club delivered a cup treble, winning the Premier League, Crown Prince Cup, and Federation Cup. After two seasons, the club won the league title for the third time in its history after eliminating rivals Al-Hilal in the final 2–0. The first continental championship was also achieved after winning 3–2 over Jeonnam Dragons with a golden goal, scored by Ahmed Bahja. GCC Champions League was also achieved, as the season ended with winning four trophies. In 1999, The club was a runner-up in the Asian Super Cup, after losing 2–3 on aggregate to Júbilo Iwata.

New Century, A Miracle, Two Champions League Titles (2000–2010)

With the beginning of the new century during the period of president Ahmed Masoud, which is considered one of the most successful periods, winning 8 titles within 3 years. The 1999–2000 league season was achieved at the beginning of the century, after a 3–1 win over Al-Ahli in the final, also, Hamza Idris scored an unprecedented 33 goals, a record in that period, which made him the league's top scorer, and the most scored in a single season. In the following season - the club winning the League for fifth time, and Crown Prince Cup. In the 2001–02 season, on May 1, 2002, Ittihad lost the league final to Al-Hilal, a cross from a corner kick went to Al Hasan Al-Yami, who hit it and the ball entered the goal clearly before Al Hilal's Mohammed Al-Nazhan took it out with his hand. A goal was not awarded by the referee, even as a penalty kick, which in turn ended with a loss 1–2, where the referee was suspended six months after the final - and later apologized, declaring, "I am innocent of your defeat, and God bears witness to that." The match created a great controversy at all levels, as it faced a lot of criticism, which was considered by many and critics as a "robbery".

When Ahmed Masoud left the club, Mansour Al-Balawi became president, which is considered by many including the fans as the most prominent and successful period in the club's history. In the 2002–03 season, many players have been brought in, such as Tukar, Saud Kariri, Muhammad Al-Khilaiwi, and Tcheco; who is considered as one of the greatest deals in the club's history, while both the League and the Crown Prince Cup were achieved. Despite leading the league and ending it without a loss, Ittihad lost the league final to Al-Shabab in the championship-playoff finals. In the 2004 AFC Champions League, Ittihad finished the group in first place with only one loss. In quarter-finals, it was successfully passed with a 1–1 draw in Dalian, followed by a home 1–0 victory scored by Tukar, against Chinese Dalian Shide, of which led them to reach the semi-finals. Both matches ended in the last minutes, as Hamad Al-Montashari finished the first leg's 2–1, and Osama Al-Muwallad scored the deadly equalizer in the second leg, with a 4–3 aggregate over Jeonbuk Hyundai Motors, as the club qualified for the final for the first time. The final was out of the ordinary; Ittihad were thrashed at home 1–3 by Korean side Seongnam in the first leg—leading to the sacking of Croatian coach Tomislav Ivić, as assistant coach Dragan Talajić was given the opportunity. Who, in turn, started the return match in Seongnam, Redha Tukar opened the scoring, rising to a ball from a corner kick to score the first goal, Idris scored the second late minute goal in the first half, Mohammed Noor scored the two decisive goals in the second half, before Abushgeer scored the fifth and the last goal. Overcoming the 1–3 loss with a miraculous 5–0 victory, to achieve the first title, Dragan Talajić achievement was unforgettable and almost impossible, this second leg match became one of the most surprising and unforgettable comebacks in AFC Champions League history, which was called "the miracle". Recalling the tournament, Talajić said, "I was initially an assistant to the compatriots Tomislav Ivic, and I learned a lot from him, and I considered the opportunity to work with a great team as a wonderful thing, which is why I agreed to work with him, I was with the team eight months after we arrived at the beginning of the season, and I knew all about the players." and continued, "I was young at the time, and maybe I was crazy by playing with five strikers, I told everyone before the match that we would win, I always knew we would win, but I didn't know if the difference would be enough."

Ittihad achieved its first Arab championship, after defeating Tunisian Club Sportif Sfaxien in the final. On 5 November 2005, Ittihad won the Champions League for the second time in a row, after a 5–3 victory over Al-Ain. Mohammed Kallon, which loaned from AS Monaco, became the top scorer of the tournament with six goals; of which two were in the final—which helped to achieve the second title. Mohammed Noor, was awarded the best player in the tournament. The club remaining as the only to win back-to-back AFC Champions League titles in its current edition. The club qualified for the FIFA Club World Cup for the first time, in the edition that was held in Japan, after achieving the Champions League title—as it became the second Saudi team to qualify for the tournament. On December 11, 2005, Ittihad defeated African champions Al-Ahly after Mohamed Noor's only goal, to qualify for the semi-finals. Ittihad faced the CONMEBOL champion São Paulo, and it was ended by a 2–3 loss. Ittihad played the match to determine the third place against the Costa Rican club Deportivo Saprissa and lost with a 2–3, were two goals scored by Mohamed Kallon and Joseph-Désiré Job—to end the Club World Cup in the 4th place. Former FIFA President Sepp Blatter expressed his admiration, saying, "In 25 years, I have not seen an Asian team this great." Ittihad's success is not limited only to football, but also in basketball, water polo, table tennis, volleyball, and swimming, amongst others. In total, Ittihad has won 8,649 trophies. However, football remains the primary sport.

Rivalries

Jeddah Derby

Main article: Al Ahli Saudi F.C.–Ittihad F.C. rivalry

The Jeddah derby between Ittihad and Al-Ahli is known to be one of the most competitive games in the Saudi League. From the start of national competitions both clubs were seen as representatives of two rivals from the same city: Jeddah. This rivalry continued annually for more than 70 years, until Al-Ahli were relegated to the first division in 2022. The derby was back on October sixth 2023.

Saudi Clasico

Main article: Saudi El Clasico

Saudi El Clasico, or simply the Clasico, is a long-running competitive match in Saudi football, between Ittihad and Al-Hilal. The competition represents the largest and most important two clubs in the city of Jeddah and the capital, Riyadh, the largest and most culturally prominent cities in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia. The two clubs are considered the most successful at domestic and continental level. Ittihad is the oldest sports club still surviving in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, and is seen as the People's Club. While Al-Hilal represents the culture of the Capital Club, it is called by the masses the Leader. The two teams meet twice a year in the league, as they may also meet in the King's Cup or the Saudi Super Cup or the AFC Champions League. It is considered as the most prominent and most watched match in Saudi football.

The first meeting between the two teams was held on July 27, 1962, a friendly match, in the capital, Riyadh, and ended with a 2–0 victory for Ittihad. The first official meeting between the two teams was on January 10, 1964, the King's Cup Final, which in turn also ended with a 3–0 victory for Ittihad.

Together with Al-Nassr, they are the only 3 teams that have not been relegated to the Second Division since its founding.

Present-day

Ittihad is based in Sahafa street, Mushrefa district, in southeastern Jeddah, where they have a large sports complex. Senior teams play official games at the King Abdullah Sports City, north of the city, while youth teams play at the club's headquarters.

Fanbase

Ittihad is the highest-attended club in Saudi Arabia. In the 2014-15 Saudi League, Ittihad's attendance during 12 home games averaged 42,371 per match. In 2016, American website The Sportster ranked Ittihad fans the 12th most influential football fans in the world. Ittihad has built a strong fan-base across Saudi Arabia, amongst the Arab League and in Asia. Since its opening on 1 May 2014, Ittihad shares the King Abdullah Sports City Stadium with local rival Al-Ahli, while their previous home the Prince Abdullah Al Faisal Stadium faced construction until it was renovated in 2022.

Sponsorship

Official sponsor

In a press conference on 9 January 2006, president of the club Mansour Albalawi announced that Sela Sport Co (which is the sponsor of Saudi National Team) will pay 350 million riyals to sponsor Ittihad for 5 seasons. Ittihad was later on sponsored by the Saudi Telecom Company, however the team has not renewed STC's contract.

PeriodKit manufacturerShirt sponsor
1999–03UmbroMultiple
2003–05LottoLingo
2006–07HattrickSTC
2007–08Nike
2008–10Lotto
2010–12Nike
2012–13One
2013–2014OneNone
2014–2015Errea
2015–2016AdidasBupa Arabia / Mobil 1
2016–2017JomaBridgestone / Unionaire / Almosafer / Mobil 1
2017–2018Bridgestone / Unionaire / Mobil 1
2018–2019Noon / faqih / Mobil 1
2019–2020Stribes /S.TeamNoon / faqih / C. Hub / Al Wefaq Rent A Car / Ibrahim Al-Qurashi
2020–2021Tamimfaqih / C. Hub / Al Wefaq Rent A Car / Ibrahim Al-Qurashi
2021–2022ErreàYelo / Emkan
2022–2023NikeYelo / Emkan / DARCO / SAL / Tameeni / ALAMOUDI
2023–2024Roshn / SURJ Sports Investments / Nua
2024–2025Roshn / SURJ Sports Investments / Milaf / Yaqoot / Jamjoom Pharma / Flow Progressive Logistics / Volkswagen

Honours

Ittihad is one of the most of successful clubs in Saudi Arabia, it has 37 official honours, 32 of which are domestic. In addition to their continental successes, the club is one of the only three Asian clubs to have won the AFC Champions League twice in a row.

TypeCompetitionTitlesSeasonsPremier League/Pro LeagueKing's CupSaudi Super CupCrown Prince's CupSaudi Federation CupAFC Champions League EliteAsian Cup Winners CupArab Champions LeagueGCC Champions League
Domestic101982, 1997, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2003, 2007, 2009, 2023, 2025
101958, 1959, 1960, 1963, 1967, 1988, 2010, 2013, 2018, 2025
12022
81958, 1959, 1960, 1963, 1991, 1997, 2001, 2004, 2017
31986, 1997, 1999
Continental22004, 2005
11999
Regional12005
11999
  • shared record

Statistics

Other records

:{|class="wikitable" style="text-align: center;" |- ! style="color:#000000; background:Yellow;"| Season ! style="color:#000000; background:Yellow;"| Div. ! style="color:#000000; background:Yellow;"| Pos. ! style="color:#000000; background:Yellow;"| Pl. ! style="color:#000000; background:Yellow;"| W ! style="color:#000000; background:Yellow;"| D ! style="color:#000000; background:Yellow;"| L ! style="color:#000000; background:Yellow;"| GS ! style="color:#000000; background:Yellow;"| GA ! style="color:#000000; background:Yellow;"| GD ! style="color:#000000; background:Yellow;"| P !colspan="3" style="color:#000000; background:Yellow;"|Domestic cups !colspan="2" style="color:#000000; background:Yellow;"|Asia !colspan="2" style="color:#000000; background:Yellow;"|Other competitions !colspan="2" style="color:#000000; background:Yellow;"|Top scorer !colspan="3" style="color:#000000; background:Yellow;"|Manager |- |1998–99 | |

Belgium Davidovic
1999–2000
Saudi Arabia Hamzah Idris
33
Brazil Oscar
-
2000–01
Argentina Ardiles
-
2001–02
Brazil Oscar
-
2002–03
Brazil Cleberson
8
Brazil Oscar, Saudi Arabia Khalid Al Koroni
-
2003–04
Saudi Arabia Mohammed Noor
8
Croatia Tomislav Ivić, Croatia Talajić, Croatia Luka Peruzović
-
2004–05
Brazil Sérgio Ricardo Messias Neves
13
Romania Iordănescu
-
2005–06
ACL
Quarter-finals
Sierra Leone Mohamed Kallon
12
France Metsu
-
2006–07
Guinea Alhassane Keita
21
Belgium Dimitri
-
2007–08
ACL
Group stage
Brazil Magno Alves
14
Argentina Calderón
-
2008–09
Morocco Hicham Aboucherouane
17
Argentina Calderón
-
2009–10
ACL
Group stage
Algeria Abdelmalek Ziaya
15
Argentina Calderón, Argentina Enzo Héctor
-
2010–11
ACL
Semi-finals
Saudi Arabia Naif Hazazi
18
Portugal Manuel José, Portugal Toni, Belgium Dimitri
-
2011–12
ZPL
ACL
Semi-finals
Saudi Arabia Hazazi
20
Slovenia Kek, Spain Raul Caneda
-
2012–13
ZPL
Saudi Arabia Fahad Al-Muwallad
9
Spain Raul Caneda, Spain Beñat
-
2013–14
ALJ
ACL
Quarter-finals
Saudi Arabia Mukhtar Fallatah
31
Spain Beñat, Egypt Amro Anwar, Uruguay Juan Verzeri, Saudi Arabia Khalid Al Koroni
-
2014–15
Brazil Marquinho
13
Saudi Arabia Khalid Al Koroni, Romania Victor Pițurcă
-
2015–16
ACL
Group stage
Venezuela Gelmin Rivas
24
Romania László Bölöni, Egypt Amro Anwar, Romania Victor Pițurcă
-
2016–17
ALJ
Egypt Kahraba
19
Chile José Luis Sierra
-
2017–18
SPL
Tunisia Ahmed Akaïchi
10
Chile José Luis Sierra
-
2018–19
MBS
Saudi Arabia Fahad Al-Muwallad
11
-
2019-20
SPL
11
30
9
8
13
42
41
+1
35

| | | | | | | | BRA Romarinho | 13

Chile José Luis Sierra, NetherlandsHenk ten Cate, Brazil Fábio Carille
2020-21
SPL
3
30
15
11
4
45
29
+16
56

| | | | | | | | BRA Romarinho | 16

Brazil Fábio Carille
2021-22
SPL
2
30
20
5
5
62
29
+33
65

| | | | | | | | BRA Romarinho | 20 |Brazil Fábio Carille, RomaniaCosmin Contra |}

League records

SeasonDivisionTms.Pos.Pts
1976–77Premier League8416
1977–78Premier League10419
1978–79Premier League10324
1979–80Premier League10321
1980–81Premier League10619
1981–82Premier League20(10)129
1982–83Premier League10616
1983–84Premier League10225
1984–85Premier League12622
1985–86Premier League122
1986–87Premier League12723
1987–88Premier League12427
1988–89Premier League12627
1989–90Premier League12820
1990–91Premier League12526
1991–92Premier League12526
1992–93Premier League12326
1993–94Premier League12729
1994–95Premier League12730
1995–96Premier League12341
1996–97Premier League12144
1997–98Premier League12728
SeasonDivisionTms.Pos.Pts
1998–99Premier League12148
1999–00Premier League12151
2000–01Premier League12138
2001–02Premier League12249
2002–03Premier League12149
2003–04Premier League12256
2004–05Premier League12338
2005–06Premier League12342
2006–07Premier League12148
2007–08Premier League12248
2008–09Professional League12155
2009–10Professional League12245
2010–11Professional League14251
2011–12Professional League14537
2012–13Professional League14737
2013–14Professional League14637
2014–15Professional League14452
2015–16Professional League14349
2016–17Professional League14452
2017–18Professional League14933
2018–19Professional League161034

Performance in AFC competitions

  • AFC Champions League: 13 appearances
SeasonStage
2001Quarter-finals
2002Second round
2003Did not qualify
2004Champions
2005Champions
2006Quarter-finals
2007Did not qualify
2008Group stage
2009Runner-up
2010Group stage
2011Semi-finals
2012Semi-finals
2013Did not qualify
2014Quarter-finals
2015Did not qualify
2016Group stage
2017Couldn't obtain AFC license due to financial issues
2018Couldn't obtain AFC license due to financial issues
2019Quarter-finals
2020Couldn't obtain AFC license due to financial issues
2021Couldn't obtain AFC license due to financial issues
2022Couldn't obtain AFC license due to financial issues
2024Quarter-finals

Top scorers in the AFC Champions League

RankingNationalityNameYearsGoals
1Mohammed Noor1996–1319
2Naif Hazazi2006–1314
3Hamzah Idris1997–079
4Fahad Al-Muwallad2012–228
5Abdelmalek Ziaya2009–117
Mukhtar Fallatah2012–167
Romarinho2018–247
8Marzouk Al-Otaibi2000–076
Osama Al-Muwallad2000–166
Mohammed Kallon2005–066
Ahmed Bahja1996–996
12Hicham Aboucherouane2008–105
Redha Tukar2003–135
Manaf Abushgeer1999–125
15Abdulrahman Al-Ghamdi2013–214
Sultan Al-Nemri2006–124
Abderrazak Hamdallah2023–244
Gelmin Rivas1999–124
Dimba20044
20Renato Cajá20093
Tcheco2003–083
Faouzi Abdelghani2012–143
Mohammed Abousaban2009–163
Nasser Al-Shamrani2018-193
Hamad Al-Montashari2001–163
Saleh Al-Saqri1999–123
Sultan Al-Nemri2006–123
Amine Chermiti2009–103
Ziyad Al-Sahafi2015–193
Abdulfattah Asiri2012–163
Saud Kariri2007–173
Nuno Assis2010-113
Wendel2011–123

Asian record

Ittihad resultsSeasonRoundResultOpponentVenue
2004Group stage2–0KUW Al-ArabiJeddah, Saudi Arabia
3–1UZB NeftchiFergana, Uzbekistan
2–3IRN SepahanFuladshahr, Iran
4–0IRN SepahanJeddah, Saudi Arabia
0–0KUW Al-ArabiKuwait City, Kuwait
3–0UZB NeftchiJeddah, Saudi Arabia
Quarter-final1–1CHN Dalian ShideDalian, China
1–0Jeddah, Saudi Arabia
Semi-final2–1KOR Jeonbuk H.M.Jeddah, Saudi Arabia
2–2Jeonju, South Korea
Final1–3KOR Seongnam I.C.Jeddah, Saudi Arabia
5–0Seongnam, South Korea
2005Quarter-final1–1CHN Shandong LunengJinan, China
7–2Jeddah, Saudi Arabia
Semi-final5–0KOR Busan IParkBusan, South Korea
2–0Jeddah, Saudi Arabia
Final1–1UAE Al AinAl Ain, UAE
4–2Jeddah, Saudi Arabia
2006Quarter-final2–0SYR Al-KaramahJeddah, Saudi Arabia
0–4Homs, Syria
2008Group stage1–0UZB BunyodkorJeddah, Saudi Arabia
1–0SYR Al-IttihadAleppo, Syria
1–2IRN SepahanFuladshahr, Iran
0–1IRN SepahanJeddah, Saudi Arabia
0–2UZB BunyodkorTashkent, Uzbekistan
3–0SYR Al-IttihadJeddah, Saudi Arabia
2009Group stage2–1IRN EsteghlalJeddah, Saudi Arabia
3–1QTR Umm SalalDoha, Qatar
0–0UAE Al JaziraDubai, UAE
1–1UAE Al JaziraJeddah, Saudi Arabia
1–1IRN EsteghlalTehran, Iran
7–0QTR Umm SalalJeddah, Saudi Arabia
Round of 162–1KSA Al-ShababJeddah, Saudi Arabia
Quarter-final1–1UZB PakhtakorTashkent, Uzbekistan
4–0Jeddah, Saudi Arabia
Semi-final6–2JPN Nagoya GrampusJeddah, Saudi Arabia
2–1Nagoya, Japan
Final1–2KOR Pohang SteelersTokyo, Japan
2010Group stage0–3UZB BunyodkorTashkent, Uzbekistan
2–2IRN Zob AhanJeddah, Saudi Arabia
2–0UAE Al-WahdaAbu Dhabi, UAE
4–0UAE Al-WahdaJeddah, Saudi Arabia
1–1UZB BunyodkorJeddah, Saudi Arabia
0–1IRN Zob AhanFuladshahr, Iran
2011Group stage3–1IRN PersepolisJeddah, Saudi Arabia
1–0UZB BunyodkorTashkent, Uzbekistan
3–0UAE Al-WahdaAbu Dhabi, UAE
0–0UAE Al-WahdaJeddah, Saudi Arabia
2–3IRN PersepolisTehran, Iran
1–1UZB BunyodkorJeddah, Saudi Arabia
Round of 163–1KSA Al-HilalJeddah, Saudi Arabia
Quarter-final3–1KOR FC SeoulJeddah, Saudi Arabia
0–1Seoul, South Korea
Semi-final2–3KOR Jeonbuk H.M.Jeddah, Saudi Arabia
1–2Jeonju, South Korea
2012Group stage4–0UZB PakhtakorJeddah, Saudi Arabia
3–1QTR Al-ArabiDoha, Qatar
1–0UAE BaniyasJeddah, Saudi Arabia
0–0UAE BaniyasAbu Dhabi, UAE
2–1UZB PakhtakorTashkent, Uzbekistan
3–2QTR Al-ArabiJeddah, Saudi Arabia
Round of 163–0IRN PersepolisJeddah, Saudi Arabia
Quarter-final4–2CHN Guangzhou EvergrandeJeddah, Saudi Arabia
1–2Guangzhou, China
Semi-final1–0KSA Al-AhliJeddah, Saudi Arabia
0–2Jeddah, Saudi Arabia
2014Group stage0–1IRN TractorTabriz, Iran
2–1UAE Al-AinMakkah, Saudi Arabia
0–2QTR LekhwiyaDoha, Qatar
3–1QTR LekhwiyaMakkah, Saudi Arabia
2–0IRN TractorMakkah, Saudi Arabia
1–1UAE Al-AinAl Ain, UAE
Round of 161–0KSA Al-ShababMakkah, Saudi Arabia
3–1Riyadh, Saudi Arabia
Quarter-final0–2UAE Al-AinAl Ain, UAE
1–3Makkah, Saudi Arabia
2016Qualifying play-off2–1JOR Al-WehdatJeddah, Saudi Arabia
Group stage1–1UZB LokomotivTashkent, Uzbekistan
1–1UZB LokomotivJeddah, Saudi Arabia
1–2UAE Al-NasrJeddah, Saudi Arabia
0–0UAE Al-NasrDubai, UAE
4–0IRN SepahanDoha, Qatar (H)
2–0IRN SepahanMuscat, Oman (A)
2019Group stage5–1QAT Al-Rayyan SCJeddah, Saudi Arabia
4–1UAE Al Wahda FCAbu Dhabi, UAE
3–2UZB LokomotivJeddah, Saudi Arabia
1–1UZB LokomotivTashkent, Uzbekistan
2-0QAT Al-Rayyan SCDoha, Qatar
1-1UAE Al Wahda FCJeddah, Saudi Arabia
Round of 162-1IRN Zob Ahan SCDubai, UAE
4-3Doha, Qatar
Quarter-final0–0KSA Al-Hilal FCJeddah, Saudi Arabia
1–3Riyadh, Saudi Arabia

Players

Current squad

U21 squad

Out on loan

Notable players

KSAAFCCAFUEFACONMEBOLCONCACAF

Staff

Current Managers Team

PositionStaff
Head coachPOR Sérgio Conceição
Assistant coachFRA Siramana Dembélé
POR Fábio Moura
KSA Hassan Khalifa
Goalkeeping coachPOR Diamantino Figueiredo
Assistant Goalkeeping coachCRO Vedran Runje
Fitness coachPOR João Costa
Performance analystPOR Eduardo Oliveira
Medical TeamPOR Sergio Gomez
ALG Ali Yagdah
PhysiotherapistPOR Eduardo Oliveira
Additional assistantPOR Fábio Moura

Board Directors

Managerial history

NameFromTo
UAR Omar Shendi19601960
SUD Khalil Abo Zaid19611961
KSA Saeed Hussain19611962
AUT Friedrich Pimperl19661967
TUN Bashir Al-Sagheer19671968
AUT Friedrich Pimperl19681969
TUN Ali Chaouach19701970
KSA Abdullah Abo Dawood19701970
TUN Ali Selmi19751977
TUN Jamel Eddine Bouabsa19771978
GER Dettmar Cramer19781981
EGY Mahmoud El-Gohary19811981
BRA Chinesinho19811982
BRA Carlos Alberto Silva1982April 10, 1983
BRA ChinesinhoApril 10, 1983May 13, 1983
Brazil Joubert Luis Meira19831984
Brazil Vanderlei Luxemburgo19841984
England Bob Houghton19841986
Austria Walter Skocik19871989
Germany Heinz Höher19891990
Hungary Kálmán Mészöly19911992
Sweden Roland Andersson19931993
England Bob Houghton19931994
Brazil Paulo Campos19951996
Belgium Dimitri Davidovic19961997
Hungary Sándor Egervári19971997
Hungary Dezső Novák19971998
Brazil Paulo Campos19981998
Belgium Dimitri Davidovic19981999
Brazil José Oscar Bernardi19992000
Georgia Revaz Dzodzuashvili20002000
BEL Dimitri Davidovic20002000
ITA Giuseppe Dossena20002001
Argentina Osvaldo Ardiles20012001
Brazil José Oscar Bernardi20012003
Italy Antonello Cuccureddu20022003
Croatia Tomislav Ivić20032004
Croatia Dragan Talajić (interim)July 1, 20042004
Croatia Luka PeruzovićDec 2004March 2005
Romania Anghel IordănescuMarch 26, 2005June 30, 2006
France Bruno Metsu2006April 26, 2006
Bosnia and Herzegovina Vahid HalilhodžićJune 5, 2006August 1, 2006
Belgium Dimitri DavidovicAugust 1, 20062007
Brazil José Candinho20072007
Brazil Estevam SoaresDec 20, 2007Aug 23, 2008
ARG Gabriel CalderónMay 22, 2008January 13, 2010
ARG Enzo TrosseroJanuary 20, 2010May 30, 2010
POR Manuel JoséJune 2, 2010December 24, 2010
POR ToniDecember 28, 2010May 15, 2011
Belgium Dimitri DavidovicMay 15, 2011November 28, 2011
Saudi Arabia Abdullah Gurab (interim)November 29, 2011December 19, 2011
Slovenia Matjaž KekDecember 20, 2011February 8, 2012
Saudi Arabia Abdullah Gurab (interim)February 8, 2012February 27, 2012
Spain Raul CanedaFebruary 27, 2012February 23, 2013
Spain Beñat San JoséFebruary 23, 2013December 8, 2013
Uruguay Juan VerzeriJanuary 6, 2014February 26, 2014
Saudi Arabia Khalid Al-KoroniFebruary 26, 2014August, 2014
Egypt Amro AnwarAugust 28, 2014October 16, 2014
Romania Victor PițurcăOctober 16, 2014June 12, 2015
Romania László BölöniJuly 21, 2015October 23, 2015
Romania Victor PițurcăDecember 8, 2015July 21, 2016
Chile José Luis SierraJuly 22, 2016May 20, 2018
Argentina Ramón DíazMay 23, 2018September 20, 2018
Croatia Slaven BilićSeptember 27, 2018February 24, 2019
Chile José Luis SierraFebruary 24, 2019October 20, 2019
KSA Mohammed Al-Abdali (interim)October 20, 2019November 4, 2019
NED Henk ten CateNovember 4, 2019February 11, 2020
NED Piet Hamberg (interim)February 11, 2020February 17, 2020
BRA Fábio CarilleFebruary 17, 2020August 24, 2021
Romania Cosmin ContraAugust 29, 2021July 4, 2022
Portugal Nuno Espírito SantoJuly 4, 2022November 7, 2023
Saudi Arabia Hassan Khalifa (interim)November 7, 2023November 18, 2023
Argentina Marcelo GallardoNovember 18, 2023July 2, 2024
FRA Laurent BlancJuly 13, 2024September 28, 2025
Saudi Arabia Hassan Khalifa (interim)September 28, 2025October 7, 2025
POR Sérgio ConceiçãoOctober 7, 2025present
Source:

References

References

  1. (5 June 2023). "Saudi Arabia's PIF takes over Al-Ittihad, Al-Nassr, Al-Hilal and Al-Ahli".
  2. "نادي الاتحاد".
  3. "Al-Ittihad Club History".
  4. "Saudi Arabia's Eternal Rivalry: Al Hilal v Al Ittihad".
  5. "Tale of two winners: Al Hilal 2019 v Al Ittihad 2004-05".
  6. CNN, ARABIA. (15 May 2025). ""رسميا.. الاتحاد يفوز بلقب الدوري السعودي للمحترفين"".
  7. (2015-05-27). "Al Ittihad Football Club recognised by Guinness World Records for back-to-back AFC Championship league wins".
  8. (2007-06-13). "FIFA.com".
  9. "Dimitri, and quadruple of the century.".
  10. "Hamza Idris comments on Hamdallah breaking his historical record in the Saudi league {{!}} Goal.com".
  11. (2022-01-01). "Al-Nazhan Hand's {{!}} alriyadiah".
  12. (2020-03-19). "The hand of Al-Nazhan, which gave Al-Hilal an expensive title {{!}} Goal.com".
  13. (2020-11-20). "Recalling Al-Ittihad's glory days {{!}} Arab News".
  14. (2022-01-01). "ACL Final: A look back at Al Ittihad's inspiring 2004 comeback win - Ghana Latest Football News, Live Scores, Results - GHANAsoccernet".
  15. (2011-12-31). "Al Ittihad coach Dimitri Davidovic believes anything is possible in AFC Champions League semi-finals after Manchester City's unexpected 6-1 win over United - Goal.com".
  16. "Al-Jazirah".
  17. "What is the history of the Al-Ittihad's participation in the Arab Cup? And what is the best achievement? {{!}} Goal.com".
  18. (2011-07-26). "AS MONACO FOOTBALL CLUB - SITE OFFICIEL - Actualité - Mohamed Kallon prêté à AL ITTHIAD".
  19. "Saudi clubs in the Club World Cup .. The kick-off to Al-Nassr and achievement for Al-Ittihad {{!}} Goal.com".
  20. (2009-05-01). "Blatter on Al-Ittihad.".
  21. (7 August 2016). "جمهور الاتحاد ضمن أفضل جمهور في العالم".
  22. (16 January 2016). "عالمي : جماهير الاتحاد تحتل المركز 27 على مستوى العالم".
  23. (12 May 2016). "AL ITTIHAD FC JOINS JOMA SPORT".
  24. [https://twitter.com/ittihad/status/1586315828533657601 النادي يتعاقد مع شركة نايك للملابس] {{Webarchive. link. (2022-10-29 Twitter. (in Arabic). Retrieved 18 December 2022)
  25. . (2023-06-08). ["Real estate developer ROSHN becomes platinum sponsor of Saudi champions Al-Ittihad"](https://www.arabnews.com/node/2318271/sport). *Arab News*.
  26. . (2023-06-08). ["Real estate developer ROSHN becomes platinum sponsor of Saudi champions Al-Ittihad"](https://www.arabnews.com/node/2318271/sport). *Arab News*.
  27. "لاعبي الاتحاد في الفريق الأول".
  28. "Mais de 40 anos vivendo futebol". luxemburgo.com.br.
  29. "نادي الاتحاد السعودي لكرة القدم - منتدى الاتحاد السعودي - #شبكة_الاتحاد".
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