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Saudi Pro League
Saudi association football league
Saudi association football league
| Field | Value | |
|---|---|---|
| name | Roshn Saudi League | |
| دوري روشن السعودي | ||
| logo | Roshn Saudi League Logo.svg | |
| pixels | 220px | |
| country | Saudi Arabia | |
| organiser | Saudi Arabian Football Federation (SAFF) | |
| confed | AFC | |
| founded | ||
| {{small | {{ubl | |
| teams | 18 (since 2023–24) | |
| relegation | Saudi First Division League | |
| levels | 1 | |
| domest_cup | King's Cup | |
| Saudi Super Cup | ||
| confed_cup | AFC Champions League Elite | |
| AFC Champions League Two | ||
| Gulf Club Champions League | ||
| Arab Club Champions Cup | ||
| champions | Al-Ittihad (14th title) | |
| season | 2024–25 | |
| most successful club | Al-Hilal (21 titles) | most_appearances = Mohamed Al-Deayea (406) |
| top_goalscorer | Majed Abdullah (189) | |
| sponsorship_name | Roshn Saudi League | |
| sponsor | Roshn | |
| tv | Thmanyah | |
| website | ||
| current | 2025–26 Saudi Pro League |
the Saudi men's league
دوري روشن السعودي {{small|{{ubl| 1957–1974 (as His Majesty's League)| 1974–1975 (as the Saudi Categorization League)| 1975–2007 (as the Saudi Premier League)| 2008–present (as the Saudi Pro League) Saudi Super Cup AFC Champions League Two Gulf Club Champions League Arab Club Champions Cup The Saudi Pro League (SPL), also known as the Roshn Saudi League (RSL) for sponsorship reasons, is a professional association football league in Saudi Arabia and the highest tier of the Saudi football league system. The SPL is regarded as the premier football league in Asia, having the highest ranking among AFC club competitions.
Al-Hilal is the most successful club in the top-tier Saudi football league, amassing a record 21 titles, with their latest triumph in the 2023–24 season. Other prominent clubs, such as Al-Shabab, Al-Ittihad, and Al-Nassr, have contributed significantly to the league's history. Since 2023, the SPL has achieved greater global recognition, fueled by strategic developments under the Saudi Vision 2030 initiative. The nation's Public Investment Fund acquired 75% stakes in four foundational clubs—Al-Ahli, Al-Ittihad, Al-Hilal, and Al-Nassr, investing large amounts of money to bring players such as Cristiano Ronaldo, Neymar and Karim Benzema to the league. These efforts have increased the prominence of the SPL in world football.
As of 2025, depending on the nation's AFC club competition coefficient, three teams from Saudi Arabia qualify annually for the AFC Champions League Elite, Asia's top-tier continental club competition (equivalent in tier to the UEFA Champions League in Europe). The winner of the King's Cup qualifies for the AFC Champions League Two, the second-tier continental competition (equivalent in tier to the UEFA Europa League). If the King's Cup winner has already qualified for the AFC Champions League Elite through their league position, the fourth-placed team in the league qualifies for the AFC Champions League Two instead.
History
Origins (1957–2022)
The origins of the Saudi top division league trace back to the establishment of the His Majesty's League in 1957, which lasted until 1974. It was succeeded by a single transitional season known as the 1974–75 Saudi Categorization League. Following that, the first official season of the Saudi Premier League was the 1976–77 season.
The league operated as a round-robin tournament from its inaugural season until the 1989–90 season. After that, the Saudi Arabian Football Federation merged the league with the King's Cup into a single competition, introducing the Golden Box format. This system featured an end-of-season knockout stage involving the top four teams from the regular league, who competed in semi-finals and a final to determine the national champion.
The round-robin format was reinstated in the 2007–08 season, and the league was rebranded as the Saudi Pro League in 2008. While the Saudi Pro League is a continuation of earlier league formats, its statistics and records are maintained separately, in a manner similar to how the English Premier League is considered distinct from the former Football League First Division.
Following the rebranding to the Saudi Pro League, the competition underwent several sponsorship-driven name changes, reflecting commercial partnerships with various organizations over the years. In addition to commercial titles, the league was also officially named in honor of Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman during a period, recognizing his support and influence in the development of Saudi sports.
In 2019, the Saudi government, through the General Sports Authority (which was later transformed into the Ministry of Sport), launched the Sports Clubs Support Strategy, allocating over SAR 1.6 billion to improve governance, infrastructure, and fan engagement within the league.
In 2022, Saudi real estate firm Roshn, owned by the Public Investment Fund, signed the largest title sponsorship in the league's history: a 5‑year agreement worth SAR 478 million (≈ USD 127 million) that granted Roshn the naming rights. From the 2022–23 season onward, the Saudi Pro League was officially renamed the Roshn Saudi League under this deal.
Saudi football revolution (2023–)
In June 2023, the Public Investment Fund acquired 75% stakes in four major clubs—Al-Nassr, Al-Hilal, Al-Ittihad, and Al-Ahli—as part of Saudi Vision 2030. The aim of the initiative is to eliminate club debt, increase market value, and prepare teams for full privatization. The long-term goal is to sell clubs to both domestic and international investors.
The Saudi Pro League underwent a major transformation starting in 2023, following the high-profile signing of Cristiano Ronaldo by Al-Nassr. His move helped attract other global stars, including Neymar, Karim Benzema, Sadio Mané, and N'Golo Kanté, during a record-breaking transfer window in which clubs spent nearly $1 billion acquiring 94 players from Europe's top leagues.
This privatization effort began with Al-Kholood, originally owned by the Ministry of Sport, which became the first Saudi football club to be 100% foreign-owned after being sold to The Harburg Group, led by American businessman Ben Harburg, on 24 July 2025. Lower-division clubs such as Al-Ansar have also been privatized.
The sweeping reforms have drawn international attention and criticism, with some labeling the moves as sportswashing. In response, Saudis argue the investments are part of a broader effort to grow the sport and diversify the economy.
League reputation and competitiveness
Initially, the Saudi Pro League was perceived by some observers as a "retirement league" due to the influx of aging stars such as Cristiano Ronaldo and Karim Benzema. However, the league has since demonstrated ambitions beyond marketing, aiming to become one of the top five leagues in the world. While the SPL has long been among the leading leagues in Asia, recent developments have significantly raised its international profile and competitive standard.
In 2023, several SPL-based players were part of the Ivory Coast squad that won the 2023 Africa Cup of Nations. Franck Kessié, Seko Fofana, and Ghislain Konan all played key roles in the tournament while active in the Saudi league. Kessié notably scored the equaliser in the final, a 1–2 comeback win over Nigeria, highlighting the continued international impact of players competing in the SPL.
In addition to veteran players, the league has attracted younger talent, including João Félix. Brazilian goalkeeper Bento, and Italian-Argentine striker Mateo Retegui, signaling a broader strategic direction.
The increasing quality of domestic competition has been reflected in the continued international success of players active in the league. Aymeric Laporte was a central figure in Spain's victorious run at UEFA Euro 2024, winning the tournament while playing in the Saudi Pro League. Meanwhile, Cristiano Ronaldo was the top scorer for Portugal during their victorious 2024–25 UEFA Nations League campaign, playing a pivotal role throughout the tournament and scoring in the final. The final was sealed by teammate Rúben Neves, who converted the decisive penalty in the shoot-out to secure the title. Both players were actively competing in the Saudi Pro League at the time, underscoring its growing competitiveness.
Other Saudi-based players also made notable contributions at Euro 2024, including N'Golo Kanté (France) and Nicolae Stanciu (Romania), further challenging the idea that the league lacks high-level competitiveness.
In 2025, Al-Hilal defeated Manchester City 4–3 and held Real Madrid to a 1–1 draw at the 2025 FIFA Club World Cup, results which drew international attention to the growing competitiveness of Saudi clubs.
Historical Documentation Project
Until the mid-2020s, historical records of Saudi football prior to the establishment of the top-tier league in 1976 were limited and often inconsistent. This lack of comprehensive documentation led to ongoing debates among fans and historians, particularly regarding the achievements and origins of early clubs and regional competitions.
In response to growing public interest and longstanding criticism, the Saudi Arabian Football Federation (SAFF) launched a multi-year national initiative to document the pre-1976 era of Saudi football, which began in 2023 and concluded in 2025. The project involved collaboration with local historians, journalists, and individuals who witnessed the sport's early development. Efforts included reviewing newspaper archives, collecting personal testimonies, and verifying historical records from club documents. The initiative was supported by FIFA and a panel of international experts specializing in sports history and archival research.
As a result of the project's findings, significant changes were made to the official historical records of Saudi football. The founding date of the Saudi top-tier league was revised from 1976 to 1957, acknowledging earlier league-style competitions that had previously been overlooked or classified differently. In addition, several domestic tournaments—including the King's Cup, Prince Faisal bin Fahd Cup, and early regional or lower-division leagues—were re-evaluated and formally incorporated into the official historical framework. All national cups and competitions from the pre-1976 era were reviewed under the project.
Some King's Cup titles from earlier decades were also reclassified as league titles, based on their structure and competitive format at the time. These revisions led to updates in the official title counts of several clubs, prompting renewed interest in the early history of Saudi football and altering longstanding narratives around club achievements and legacies. The findings were published in a comprehensive final report, which SAFF presented to media and football institutions in 2025.
Sponsorship
| Period | Sponsor | Brand | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1957–1974 | No sponsor | date=2025-04-22 | title=الكشف عن نتائج مشروع توثيق تاريخ كرة القدم السعودية.. وتفاصيل رفض نادي الشباب | url=https://www.alyaum.com/ampArticle/6590302 | publisher=صحيفة اليوم | access-date=2025-05-07 }} | |||
| 1974–1975 | No sponsor | Saudi Categorization League | |||||||
| 1975–2007 | No sponsor | Saudi Premier League | |||||||
| 2008–2008 | No sponsor | Saudi Pro League | |||||||
| 2009–2013 | Zain | Zain Pro League | |||||||
| 2014–2017 | Abdul Latif Jameel | date=2014-01-14 | title=الرياض نت : "عبداللطيف جميل" ترعى الدوري السعودي للمحترفين | url=http://www.alriyadh.com/net/article/784364 | access-date=2023-07-05 | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140114050217/http://www.alriyadh.com/net/article/784364 | archive-date=14 January 2014 }} | ||
| 2018–2021 | No sponsor | Saudi Pro League | |||||||
| 2022–present | Roshn | date=August 23, 2022 | title=Saudi Pro League renamed to Roshn Saudi League | url=https://spl.com.sa/en/node/4202 | url-status=live | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220920170729/https://spl.com.sa/en/node/4202 | archive-date=20 September 2022 | access-date=24 August 2022 | publisher=SPL}} |
Official match ball suppliers
| Season(s) | Supplier | Ball Model / Notes | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2023–24 (Jan) | Nike | title=Saudi Pro League changes ball supplier from Nike to Adidas | url=https://www.sportcal.com/sponsorship/saudi-pro-league-changes-ball-supplier-from-nike-to-adidas/ | access-date=2025-05-10}} |
| 2023–24 (from Feb) | Adidas | Oceaunz – introduced mid-season following Adidas' partnership launch | ||
| 2024– | Adidas | Custom design inspired by wild lavender fields and Saudi tapestries |
Competition format
Competition
Stadium
:Note: Table lists in alphabetical order.
| Team | Location | Stadium | Capacity |
|---|---|---|---|
| Al-Ahli | Jeddah | King Abdullah Sports City Stadium | |
| Al-Faisal Stadium | |||
| Al-Ettifaq | Dammam | EGO STADIUM | |
| Al-Fateh | Al-Mubarraz | Maydan Tamweel Aloula | |
| Al-Fayha | Majmaah | Majmaah Sports City Stadium | |
| Al-Hazem | Ar Rass | Al-Hazem Club Stadium | |
| Al-Hilal | Riyadh | Kingdom Arena | |
| Al-Ittihad | Jeddah | King Abdullah Sports City Stadium | |
| Al-Faisal Stadium | |||
| Al-Khaleej | Saihat | Prince Mohamed bin Fahd Stadium (Dammam) | |
| Al-Kholood | Ar Rass | Al-Hazem Club Stadium | |
| Al-Najma | Unaizah | King Abdullah Sports City Stadium Buraidah | |
| Al-Nassr | Riyadh | Al-Awwal Park | |
| Al-Okhdood | Najran | Prince Hathloul bin Abdulaziz Sports City Stadium | |
| Al-Qadsiah | Khobar | Prince Mohamed bin Fahd Stadium (Dammam) | |
| Al-Riyadh | Riyadh | SHG Arena | |
| Al-Shabab | Riyadh | SHG Arena | |
| Al-Taawoun | Buraidah | King Abdullah Sports City Stadium Buraidah | |
| Al-Taawoun Stadium | |||
| Damac | Khamis Mushait | Damac Club Stadium | |
| Prince Sultan bin Abdulaziz Sports City Stadium (Abha) | |||
| Neom | Tabuk | King Khalid Sport City Stadium |
Personnel and kits
| Team | Manager | Captain | Kit manufacturer | Main sponsor | Other sponsors | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Al-Ahli | Adidas | Red Sea Global | {{collapsible list | {{smalldiv | ||||
| Al-Ettifaq | Adidas | Kammelna | {{collapsible list | {{smalldiv | ||||
| Al-Fateh | 100° | Theeb Rent A Car | {{collapsible list | {{smalldiv | ||||
| Al-Fayha | HH Sports | Basic Electronics Company | {{collapsible list | {{smalldiv | ||||
| Al-Hazem | Right Away Sport | Yelo | ||||||
| Al-Hilal | Puma | Savvy Games Group | {{collapsible list | {{smalldiv | ||||
| Al-Ittihad | Nike | Roshn | {{collapsible list | {{smalldiv | ||||
| Al-Khaleej | Laser | Yelo Rent a Car | {{collapsible list | {{smalldiv | ||||
| Al-Kholood | Renown | Yelo Rent a Car | {{collapsible list | {{smalldiv | ||||
| Al-Najma | Puma | Yelo | {{collapsible list | {{smalldiv | ||||
| Al-Nassr | Adidas | KAFD | {{collapsible list | {{smalldiv | ||||
| Al-Okhdood | Skillano | Yelo Rent a Car | {{collapsible list | {{smalldiv | ||||
| Al-Qadsiah | Nike | Aloula Aviation | {{collapsible list | {{smalldiv | ||||
| Al-Riyadh | Black Panther | Science Technology | {{collapsible list | {{smalldiv | ||||
| Al-Shabab | BEL Yannick Carrasco | Offside | Theeb Rent A Car | {{collapsible list | {{smalldiv | |||
| Al-Taawoun | Macron | Aldyar Alarabiya | {{collapsible list | {{smalldiv | ||||
| Damac | Skillano | Basic Electronics Company | {{collapsible list | {{smalldiv | ||||
| Neom | Puma | None | {{collapsible list | {{smalldiv |
Champions
List of champions{{cite web
|access-date=2025-09-17 |access-date=2025-09-17 |access-date=2025-09-17
| No | Season | Champion | Runners-up | His Majesty's League | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1957–1974 | Saudi Categorization League | ||||||
| 1974–1975 | Saudi Premier League | ||||||
| 1975–2007 | Saudi Pro League | ||||||
| 2008–present | |||||||
| 1 | 1957–58 | Al-Wehda | Al-Ittihad | ||||
| 2 | 1958–59 | Al-Ittihad | Al-Wehda | ||||
| 3 | 1959–60 | Al-Ittihad | Al-Wehda | ||||
| 4 | 1960–61 | Al-Ittihad | Al-Wehda | ||||
| 5 | 1961–62 | Al-Hilal | Al-Wehda | ||||
| 6 | 1962–63 | Al-Ahli | Al-Riyadh | ||||
| 7 | 1963–64 | Al-Ittihad | Al-Hilal | ||||
| 8 | 1964–65 | Al-Hilal | Al-Ittihad | ||||
| 9 | 1965–66 | Al-Ahli | Al-Ettifaq | ||||
| 10 | 1966–67 | Not completed | |||||
| 11 | 1967–68 | Not held | |||||
| 12 | 1968–69 | Al-Ahli | Al-Ettifaq | ||||
| 13 | 1969–70 | Cancelled | |||||
| 14 | 1970–71 | Al-Ahli | Al-Wehda | ||||
| 15 | 1971–72 | Al-Ahli | Al-Nassr | ||||
| 16 | 1972–73 | Al-Ahli | Al-Nassr | ||||
| 17 | 1973–74 | Al-Nassr | Al-Ahli | ||||
| 18 | 1974–75 | Al-Nassr | Al-Hilal | ||||
| 19 | 1975–76 | Cancelled | |||||
| 20 | 1976–77 | Al-Hilal | Al-Nassr | ||||
| 21 | 1977–78 | Al-Ahli | Al-Nassr | ||||
| 22 | 1978–79 | Al-Hilal | Al-Nassr | ||||
| 23 | 1979–80 | Al-Nassr | Al-Hilal | ||||
| 24 | 1980–81 | Al-Nassr | Al-Hilal | ||||
| 25 | 1981–82 | Al-Ittihad | Al-Shabab | ||||
| 26 | 1982–83 | Al-Ettifaq | Al-Hilal | ||||
| 27 | 1983–84 | Al-Ahli | Al-Ittihad | ||||
| 28 | 1984–85 | Al-Hilal | Al-Shabab | ||||
| 29 | 1985–86 | Al-Hilal | Al-Ittihad | ||||
| 30 | 1986–87 | Al-Ettifaq | Al-Hilal | ||||
| 31 | 1987–88 | Al-Hilal | Al-Ettifaq | ||||
| 32 | 1988–89 | Al-Nassr | Al-Shabab | ||||
| 33 | 1989–90 | Al-Hilal | Al-Ahli | ||||
| 34 | 1990–91 | Al-Shabab | Al-Nassr | ||||
| 35 | 1991–92 | Al-Shabab | Al-Ettifaq | ||||
| 36 | 1992–93 | Al-Shabab | Al-Hilal | ||||
| 37 | 1993–94 | Al-Nassr | Al-Riyadh | ||||
| 38 | 1994–95 | Al-Nassr | Al-Hilal | ||||
| 39 | 1995–96 | Al-Hilal | Al-Ahli | ||||
| 40 | 1996–97 | Al-Ittihad | Al-Hilal | ||||
| 41 | 1997–98 | Al-Hilal | Al-Shabab | ||||
| 42 | 1998–99 | Al-Ittihad | Al-Ahli | ||||
| 43 | 1999–2000 | Al-Ittihad | Al-Ahli | ||||
| 44 | 2000–01 | Al-Ittihad | Al-Nassr | ||||
| 45 | 2001–02 | Al-Hilal | Al-Ittihad | ||||
| 46 | 2002–03 | Al-Ittihad | Al-Ahli | ||||
| 47 | 2003–04 | Al-Shabab | Al-Ittihad | ||||
| 48 | 2004–05 | Al-Hilal | Al-Shabab | ||||
| 49 | 2005–06 | Al-Shabab | Al-Hilal | ||||
| 50 | 2006–07 | Al-Ittihad | Al-Hilal | ||||
| 51 | 2007–08 | Al-Hilal | Al-Ittihad | ||||
| 52 | 2008–09 | Al-Ittihad | Al-Hilal | ||||
| 53 | 2009–10 | Al-Hilal | Al-Ittihad | ||||
| 54 | 2010–11 | Al-Hilal | Al-Ittihad | ||||
| 55 | 2011–12 | Al-Shabab | Al-Ahli | ||||
| 56 | 2012–13 | Al-Fateh | Al-Hilal | ||||
| 57 | 2013–14 | Al-Nassr | Al-Hilal | ||||
| 58 | 2014–15 | Al-Nassr | Al-Ahli | ||||
| 59 | 2015–16 | Al-Ahli | Al-Hilal | ||||
| 60 | 2016–17 | Al-Hilal | Al-Ahli | ||||
| 61 | 2017–18 | Al-Hilal | Al-Ahli | ||||
| 62 | 2018–19 | Al-Nassr | Al-Hilal | ||||
| 63 | 2019–20 | Al-Hilal | Al-Nassr | ||||
| 64 | 2020–21 | Al-Hilal | Al-Shabab | ||||
| 65 | 2021–22 | Al-Hilal | Al-Ittihad | ||||
| 66 | 2022–23 | Al-Ittihad | Al-Nassr | ||||
| 67 | 2023–24 | Al-Hilal | Al-Nassr | ||||
| 68 | 2024–25 | Al-Ittihad | Al-Hilal |
Performance by club
Total league titles won (all eras)
| # | Club | Winners | Runners-up |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Al-Hilal | ||
| 2 | Al-Ittihad | ||
| 3 | Al-Nassr | ||
| 4 | Al-Ahli | ||
| 5 | Al-Shabab | ||
| 6 | Al-Ettifaq | ||
| 7 | Al-Wehda | ||
| 8 | Al-Fateh | ||
| 9 | Al-Riyadh |
Total titles won by city
| Province | City | Number of titles | Clubs |
|---|---|---|---|
| Riyadh Province | Riyadh | Al-Hilal (21), | |
| Al-Nassr (10), | |||
| Al-Shabab (6) | |||
| Mecca Province | Jeddah | Al-Ittihad (14), | |
| Al-Ahli (9) | |||
| Eastern Province | Dammam | Al-Ettifaq (2) | |
| Eastern Province | Al-Mubarraz | Al-Fateh (1) | |
| Mecca Province | Mecca | Al-Wehda (1) |
Performance by league
| League | Number of titles |
|---|---|
| Al-Hilal (8), | |
| Al-Nassr (3), | |
| Al-Ittihad (3), | |
| Al-Fateh (1), | |
| Al-Ahli (1), | |
| Al-Shabab (1) | |
| Al-Hilal (11), | |
| Al-Ittihad (7), | |
| Al-Nassr (5), | |
| Al-Shabab (5), | |
| Al-Ettifaq (2), | |
| Al-Ahli (2) | |
| Al-Nassr (1) | |
| Al-Ahli (6), | |
| Al-Ittihad (4), | |
| Al-Hilal (2), | |
| Al-Wehda (1), | |
| Al-Nassr (1) |
AFC ranking
Main article: AFC club competitions ranking
| Ranking | Member association | ||||||||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| (L: League, C: Cup, LC: League cup) | Club points | Total | 2026–27 Competition | 2024–25 | 2023–24 | data-sort-type="number" | Mvmt | Region | 2016 | ||||||||
| (×0.3) | 2017 | ||||||||||||||||
| (×0.4) | 2018 | ||||||||||||||||
| (×0.5) | 2019 | ||||||||||||||||
| (×0.6) | 2021 | ||||||||||||||||
| (×0.7) | 2022 | ||||||||||||||||
| (×0.8) | 2023–24 | ||||||||||||||||
| (×0.9) | 2024–25 | ||||||||||||||||
| (×1.0) | Champions League Elite | Champions League Two | Challenge League | ||||||||||||||
| 1 | 1 | — | W 1 | KSA Saudi Arabia (L, C) | 9.500 | 18.600 | 10.000 | 26.350 | 20.950 | 19.075 | 27.100 | 29.292 | 114.707 | 3+0 | 1+0 | 0 | |
| 2 | 2 | — | E 1 | JPN Japan (L, C, LC) | 10.500 | 21.850 | 13.850 | 21.800 | 17.875 | 20.088 | 21.350 | 26.108 | 105.801 | 3+0 | 1+0 | 0 | |
| 3 | 3 | — | E 2 | KOR South Korea (L, C) | 20.750 | 9.950 | 18.350 | 13.600 | 22.750 | 15.800 | 22.350 | 14.762 | 90.982 | 2+1 | 1+0 | 0 | |
| 4 | 4 | — | W 2 | UAE United Arab Emirates (L, C) | 18.000 | 11.350 | 8.100 | 7.633 | 14.400 | 8.083 | 25.500 | 15.900 | 73.966 | 2+1 | 1+0 | 0 | |
| 5 | 5 | — | W 3 | QAT Qatar (L, C) | 22.000 | 13.400 | 19.850 | 15.900 | 7.300 | 13.500 | 8.100 | 14.451 | 69.076 | 2+1 | 1+0 | 0 | |
| 6 | 6 | — | W 4 | IRN Iran (L, C) | 13.000 | 16.200 | 18.850 | 11.500 | 14.225 | 13.250 | 9.300 | 13.274 | 68.907 | 1+1 | 1+0 | 0 | |
| 7 | 8 | +1 | E 3 | THA Thailand (L, C, LC) | 1.000 | 15.050 | 16.200 | 5.050 | 8.500 | 11.110 | 8.567 | 14.875 | 54.873 | 2+1 | 1+0 | 0 | |
| 8 | 7 | –1 | E 4 | CHN China (L, C) | 14.750 | 24.567 | 16.200 | 17.350 | 0.800 | 0.500 | 11.900 | 10.250 | 54.682 | 1+1 | 1+0 | 0 | |
| 9 | 9 | — | W 5 | UZB Uzbekistan (L, C) | 9.750 | 5.050 | 9.400 | 9.000 | 8.960 | 10.057 | 11.250 | 10.333 | 49.821 | 1+0 | 1+0 | 0 | |
| 10 | 11 | +1 | E 5 | AUS Australia (L, C) | 14.000 | 5.900 | 7.300 | 2.600 | 0.000 | 7.900 | 10.593 | 12.796 | 40.420 | 1+0 | 1+0 | 0 |
Saudi Arabian clubs in Asian football
Saudi Arabian clubs have a distinguished history in Asian football, having won a total of 16 titles across continental competitions. This makes Saudi Arabia the most successful country in Asian club football history. The table below provides a summary of these achievements.
League participation
As of the 2025–26 season, 40 clubs have participated in the Saudi top division league, with only three clubs — Al-Nassr, Al-Hilal, and Al-Ittihad — never being relegated.
- Bold indicates clubs currently competing in the Saudi Pro League.
- Note: This count includes only seasons from the inception of the Saudi Premier League to the present day.
| Seasons | Clubs |
|---|---|
| 49 | Al-Hilal, Al-Nassr, Al-Ittihad |
| 48 | Al-Shabab, Al-Ahli |
| 46 | Al-Ettifaq |
| 40 | Al-Wehda |
| 37 | Al-Qadsiah |
| 25 | Al-Raed, Al-Riyadh, Al-Tai |
| 18 | Al-Taawoun |
| 16 | Al-Nahda, Al-Fateh |
| 13 | Al-Faisaly |
| 11 | Al-Najma, Ohod |
| 10 | Al-Hazem |
| 9 | Al-Ansar, Najran, Al-Khaleej |
| 7 | Abha, Al-Shoulla, Damac, Al-Fayha |
| 6 | Hajer, Al-Batin |
| 4 | Al-Rawdah |
| 3 | Al-Kawkab, Al-Jabalain, Al-Orobah |
| 2 | Al-Adalah, Sdoos, Al-Watani, Al-Okhdood |
| 1 | Al-Arabi, Al-Ain, Al-Kholood, , Neom |
Top scorers
All-time top scorers
- Bold indicates a player still active in the Pro League.
- Note: This count includes only seasons from the inception of the Saudi Categorization League to the present day.
| Rank | Player | Goals | Apps | Ratio | First | Last | Club(s) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | KSA Majed Abdullah | 189 | 194 | 1977 | 1997 | Al-Nassr | |
| 2 | KSA Nasser Al-Shamrani | 167 | 301 | 2003 | 2019 | Al-Wehda, Al-Shabab, Al-Hilal, Al-Ittihad | |
| 3 | SYR Omar Al Somah | 154 | 198 | 2014 | 2025 | Al-Ahli, Al-Orobah, Al-Hazem | |
| 4 | MAR Abderrazak Hamdallah | 150 | 164 | 2018 | 2025 | Al-Nassr, Al-Ittihad, Al-Shabab | |
| 5 | KSA Fahd Al-Hamdan | 120 | 252 | 1984 | 2000 | Al-Riyadh | |
| 6 | KSA Yasser Al-Qahtani | 112 | 206 | 2000 | 2018 | Al-Qadsiah, Al-Hilal | |
| 7 | KSA Mohammad Al-Sahlawi | 111 | 257 | 2005 | 2022 | Al-Qadsiah, Al-Nassr, Al-Shabab, Al-Taawoun | |
| 8 | KSA Sami Al-Jaber | 101 | 268 | 1988 | 2007 | Al-Hilal | |
| 9 | KSA Hamzah Idris | 96 | – | – | 1992 | 2007 | Ohod, Al-Ittihad |
| 10 | KSA Obeid Al-Dosari | 91 | – | – | 1996 | 2005 | Al-Wehda, Al-Ahli |
Top scorers by season
SPL Awards
The Saudi Pro League Awards are presented annually to recognize the best performers in the League. The awards were first held for the 2018–19 season but were paused from 2019 to 2023. They resumed partially for the 2023–24 season and have continued in full from the 2024–25 season onward, with all major categories awarded.
| Season | Manager of the Season | Player of the Season | Saudi Player of the Season | Young Player of the Season | Golden Glove | Golden Boot | Goal of the Season | Ref. | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2018–19 | POR Pedro Emanuel | MAR Abderrazak Hamdallah | KSA Mohamed Kanno | KSA Muteb Al-Mufarrij | TUN Farouk Ben Mustapha | MAR Abderrazak Hamdallah | Award not established | ||
| 2023–24 | POR Jorge Jesus | Not awarded | Not awarded | Not awarded | MAR Yassine Bounou | POR Cristiano Ronaldo | Award not established | title=رونالدو يفوز بجائزة الحذاء الذهبي لموسم 2023–24 | url=https://example.com/boot202324}} |
| 2024–25 | FRA Laurent Blanc | FRA Karim Benzema | KSA Salem Al-Dawsari | KSA Musab Al-Juwayr | BEL Koen Casteels | POR Cristiano Ronaldo | POR Cristiano Ronaldo |
Records
| Record | Player | Statistic |
|---|---|---|
| All-time most appearances | Saudi Arabia Mohamed Al-Deayea | |
| All-time top goalscorer | Saudi Arabia Majed Abdullah | |
| Most top goalscorer awards | Saudi Arabia Majed Abdullah | |
| Most appearances in Pro League history | Saudi Arabia Mohammed Al-Fuhaid | |
| Pro League all-time top goalscorer | Syria Omar Al-Somah | |
| Most Pro League golden boots | Saudi Arabia Nasser Al-Shamrani | |
| Most goals in a single season | Portugal Cristiano Ronaldo | |
| Most assists in Pro League history | Saudi Arabia Salem Al-Dawsari | |
| Most clean sheets in a single season | Brazil Marcelo Grohe | |
| Most goals in consecutive matches | Morocco Abderrazak Hamdallah | |
| Most hat-tricks in Pro League history | Morocco Abderrazak Hamdallah |
Broadcasters
| Country | Broadcaster | Ref. | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| **** | Thmanyah | |||||||||
| Unsold markets | YouTube | |||||||||
| SolhSport BEGIN | ||||||||||
| SuperSport | ||||||||||
| Setanta Sports | ||||||||||
| 10 | ||||||||||
| Sportdigital | ||||||||||
| FanCode | ||||||||||
| Grupo Globo | ||||||||||
| Canal GOAT | ||||||||||
| Grupo Bandeirantes | ||||||||||
| Max Sport | ||||||||||
| Caribbean | Fox Sports | |||||||||
| Latin America (exc. Brazil) | ||||||||||
| Star Sports | ||||||||||
| Qiukedao | ||||||||||
| TikTok | ||||||||||
| Zhibo8 | ||||||||||
| Sport Klub | ||||||||||
| Czech Republic | Strike TV | |||||||||
| ZackNani | ||||||||||
| Cosmote Sport | date=9 August 2023 | title=Saudi Pro League signs deals with broadcasters for rights to screen games in over 170 countries | url=https://arab.news/peaqs | access-date=2023-09-16 | website=Arab News | language=en}} | ||||
| Spíler TV | ||||||||||
| Como TV | ||||||||||
| Sportitalia | ||||||||||
| SPOTV | ||||||||||
| Southeast Asia | ||||||||||
| Polsat Sport 1 | ||||||||||
| Sport TV | date=2023-01-20 | title=Saudi Pro League lands rights deals in Portugal and Italy | url=https://www.sportbusiness.com/news/saudi-pro-league-lands-rights-deals-in-portugal-and-italy/ | access-date=2023-01-21 | website=SportBusiness | language=en-US | archive-date=21 January 2023 | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230121094754/https://www.sportbusiness.com/news/saudi-pro-league-lands-rights-deals-in-portugal-and-italy/ | url-status=live }} | |
| Voyo | ||||||||||
| Okko | ||||||||||
| Sub-Saharan Africa | StarTimes Sports | |||||||||
| ESPN | ||||||||||
| SportyTV | ||||||||||
| New World TV | ||||||||||
| ZAP | ||||||||||
| Azam TV | ||||||||||
| Movistar Plus+ | {{Cite web | date=2025-08-23 | title=Where to Watch Saudi Pro League Football: Broadcast Channels | |||||||
| Turkey | S Sport | |||||||||
| TV8.5 |
References
References
- (June 8, 2023). "Why has Saudi sovereign fund taken over kingdom's football clubs?". Al Jazeera.
- (August 15, 2023). "Saudi Pro League: the key factors that will decide project's global impact". The Guardian.
- (18 May 2025). "AFC Club Competitions Ranking 2025". FootyRankings.
- (16 August 2024). "New AFC club competition brands hailed by AFC Marketing Committee". Asian Football Confederation.
- (22 August 2019). "Saudi Football Professional League renamed after Crown Prince for second season".
- "Saudi Arabia announces ambitious strategy to support sports clubs". Ajel English.
- "Roshn clinches biggest sponsorship deal in Saudi Pro League history". Arab News.
- Walid, Ahmed. (5 June 2023). "PIF to take control of Saudi Arabia's four biggest clubs as part of major shake-up in Pro League". [[The Athletic]].
- (2023-09-20). "Saudi Arabia is trying to disrupt soccer's world order. The reasons why might surprise you".
- "Saudi wealth shaping football's new reality". BBC Sport.
- (24 July 2025). "First foreign firm takes ownership of Saudi football club". The New Arab.
- BBC Sport. (21 September 2023). "Mohammed bin Salman: 'I don't care' about 'sportswashing' accusations". BBC.
- (11 February 2024). "AFCON 2023 final: Hosts Ivory Coast fight back to beat Nigeria".
- (10 August 2025). "Al Nassr sign João Félix".
- (28 August 2025). "Joao Felix hat-trick powers Al Nassr past Al Taawoun".
- (22 July 2025). "Italy striker Mateo Retegui joins Saudi Arabia's Al Qadsiah from Atalanta".
- (22 July 2025). "Ambitious Al Qadsiah sign Mateo Retegui".
- (15 July 2024). "Laporte and Nacho crowned Euro 2024 champions".
- (28 September 2025). "Ronaldo and Neves fire Portugal to UEFA Nations League glory".
- (1 July 2025). "Inzaghi hails 'historic' Al Hilal win over Man City: We climbed a mountain with no oxygen".
- (19 June 2025). "Couldn't have asked for more – Inzaghi lauds Al Hilal after Real Madrid draw".
- (12 January 2023). "SAFF announces project to document history of Saudi football".
- (23 April 2025). "Saudi Football History Documentation Project Concludes Groundbreaking 123‑Year Report".
- (2025-04-22). "الكشف عن نتائج مشروع توثيق تاريخ كرة القدم السعودية.. وتفاصيل رفض نادي الشباب". صحيفة اليوم.
- (2014-01-14). "الرياض نت : "عبداللطيف جميل" ترعى الدوري السعودي للمحترفين".
- "إلغاء مسمى دوري جميل السعودي للمحترفين وكأس ولي العهد".
- (August 23, 2022). "Saudi Pro League renamed to Roshn Saudi League". SPL.
- "Saudi Pro League changes ball supplier from Nike to Adidas".
- "Adidas and the Roshn Saudi League launch the new official match ball for the 24-25 season".
- ""PLAY-OFF» يحدد صاعدي «يلو"".
- "مدينة الملك خالد.. 30 عاماً في خدمة الشباب والرياضة".
- Note: Much like how the European Cup evolved into the UEFA Champions League, Asia’s top club competition began as the Asian Champion Club Tournament, later becoming the Asian Club Championship, then the AFC Champions League, and now the AFC Champions League Elite.
- "احصائيات هدافي الدوري تاريخيا والاكثر حصولا على لقب الهداف".
- "ماجد عبد الله، السهلاوي والقحطاني وأبرز الهدافيين التاريخيين في الدوري السعودي".
- "مدرب فريق #التعاون بيدرو مانويل يحصل على جائزة #أفضل_مدرب".
- "لاعب فريق #النصر عبدالرزاق حمدالله يحصل على جائزة #أفضل_لاعب".
- "لاعب فريق #الهلال محمد كنو يحصل على جائزة #أفضل_لاعب_سعودي".
- "لاعب فريق #التعاون متعب المفرج يحصل على جائزة #أفضل_لاعب_واعد".
- "حارس فريق #الشباب فاروق بن مصطفى يحصل على جائزة #القفاز_الذهبي".
- "اعب فريق #النصر عبدالرزاق حمدالله يحصل على جائزة #الحذاء_الذهبي".
- "رونالدو يفوز بجائزة الحذاء الذهبي لموسم 2023–24".
- "حارس الهلال ياسين بونو يحصل على جائزة أفضل حارس".
- "مدرب الهلال خورخي خيسوس يحصل على جائزة أفضل مدرب لموسم 2023–24".
- (29 May 2025). "Benzema, Blanc, Al Dawsari, Ronaldo honoured with SPL Awards". Saudi Pro League.
- (16 June 2025). "SRMG’s Thmanyah nets SPL exclusivity to 2031". SportBusiness.
- (9 February 2023). "How to watch Cristiano Ronaldo's Al Nassr in Australia: TV channel and live stream for Saudi Pro League".
- (2023-08-10). "FOX Sports secures US media rights to Saudi Pro League with league's acquisition of global stars".
- (9 August 2023). "Saudi Pro League signs deals with broadcasters for rights to screen games in over 170 countries".
- Nagy, Bálint. (11 August 2023). "A Spíler TV-n lehet majd nézni Ronaldo és Benzema meccseit". [[Telex.hu]].
- (2023-01-20). "Saudi Pro League lands rights deals in Portugal and Italy".
- "MATCHDAY LIVE ⚽️ Saudi Pro League Al-Nassr 🆚 Al-Ettifaq 📆 Sun, 22nd Jan ⏱ 8:30PM >> Stream live on StarTimes ON App".
- "Cristian Ronaldo ve Suudi Arabistan Ligi S Sport Plus'ta".
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