Al Ain FC

Al-Ain Football Club (Arabic: نادي العين لكرة القدم; transliterated: Nady al-'Ayn) or Al-Ain FC or simply Al-Ain is a professional football club, based in the city of Al Ain, Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates. It is one of many sport sections of the multi-sports club Al Ain Sports and Cultural Club (Arabic: نادي العين الرياضي الثقافي) Al Ain SCC for short.

Al-Ain FC
نادي العين
Full nameAl-Ain Football Club
نادي العين لكرة القدم
Nickname(s)Al Zaeem (The Boss)
FoundedAugust 1968 (1968-08)
GroundHazza Bin Zayed Stadium
Capacity25,053
OwnerMohamed Bin Zayed Al Nahyan
ManagerPedro Emanuel
LeagueUAE Pro-League
2019–20UAE Pro-League, 2nd
WebsiteClub website

The club was founded in 1968 by players from Al Ain, members of a Bahraini group of exchange students and the Sudanese community working in the United Arab Emirates.[1] The team quickly gained popularity and recognition throughout the country, being the team with the most trophies (34 in total).[2]

Al Ain is by far the most successful club in the UAE.[3] Al Ain has won a record 13 UAE Pro-League, 6 President's Cups, 3 Federation Cups, 1 Arabian Gulf Cup, a record 5 Super Cups, two Abu Dhabi Championship Cups, one Joint League Cup, Emirati-Moroccan Super Cup, Gulf Club Champions Cup and AFC Champions League. The club is the first and only UAE side so far to win the AFC Champions League.[4]

History

Foundation and early years

In the early 1960s, a group of young men learned the rules of the game by watching British soldiers playing football and formed their own team. The first pitch was very simple and small, taking the shape of a square sandy plot of land on the main street near the Clock Roundabout in Al Ain.[5] In August 1968, the club was officially established, taking its name from the city they lived. The founders thought it was necessary to have a permanent headquarters for the club and rented a house on the current Khalifa Road for club meetings. The club's founders took responsibility for all the club's affairs, from planning the stadium to cleaning the club headquarters and washing the kit.[5] Sheikh Khalifa bin Zayed Al Nahyan was approached for assistance and he provided the club with a permanent headquarters in the Al Jahili district and a Land Rover to serve the club and the team.[6] Al Ain made a successful debut by beating a team made up of British soldiers and went on to play friendly matches against other Abu Dhabi clubs. In 1971, the team played their first match against international opposition when they were defeated 7–0 by the Egyptian club Ismaily in a friendly match for the war effort. In 1971, a group members of the club (Hadher Khalaf Al Muhairi, Saleem Al Khudrawi, Mohammed Khalaf Al Muhairi and Mahmoud Fadhlullah) broke away and founded Al Tadhamun Club.[7] In 1971, Sheikh Khalifa bin Zayed Al Nahyan provided the club with new headquarters with modern specifications: the Khalifa Stadium in Al Sarooj district.[6] In 1974 Al Ain combined with the breakaway Al Tadhamun, to form the Al Ain Sports Club. The first board of directors of the club was formed after the merger under the chairmanship Mohammed Salem Al Dhaheri.[7]

The founders were Mohammed Saleh Bin Badooh and Khalifa Nasser Al Suwaidi, Saeed Bin Ghannoum Al Hameli, Abdullah Hazzam, Salem Hassan Al Muhairi, Abdullah and Mane'a Ajlan, Abdullah Al Mansouri, Saeed Al Muwaisi, Nasser Dhaen, Abdullah Matar, Juma Al Najem, Ibrahim Al Mahmoud, Ibrahim Rasool and Ali Al Maloud and Ali Bu Majeed, who were the members of the Bahraini group of exchange students, and Maamoun Abdul Qader, Mahmoud Fadhlullah, Al Fateh Al Talib, Hussain Al Mirghani and Abbas Ali from the Sudanese community working in the UAE.[1]

First titles and Entry to the Football League (1974–1997)

In February 1974,.. the club won its first title, the Abu Dhabi League. On 13 November 1974, Sheikh Khalifa was named honorary president of Al Ain, in recognition of his continuing support for the club.[7] On 21 May 1975, Sheikh Sultan bin Zayed Al Nahyan was elected Chairman of Board of Directors. In 1975, Al Ain won its second Abu Dhabi League[8] In the same year on 21 March 1975, the club played its first UAE President Cup losing 4–5 on penalties in the Round of 16 against Al Shaab after drawing 1–1 in normal time. In 1975–76 season, the team participated for the first time in the UAE Football League, finishing runners-up behind Al Ahli. Al Ain won its first League title in the 1976–77 season, after drawing 1–1 with Al Sharjah in the last match. In the following season, they finished runners-up to Al Nasr; Mohieddine Habita was the top scorer with 20 goals. In the 1978–79 season, Al Ain secure third place with 27 points in the league and defeated by Al Sharjah in the President Cup final.

Mohammed Bin Zayed Al Nahyan became president of Al Ain on 19 January 1979. Al Ain won the League again in the 1980–81 season and lost the President Cup final to Al Shabab of Dubai. In 1983–84, the team won Joint League Cup and followed with its third League title, becoming the second with Al Ahli to have won the championship three times. The team had the strongest attack with 35 goals, and Ahmed Abdullah, with 20 goals was the joint-winner of the Arab League Golden Boot award for top corer, alongside Al Wasl striker Fahad Khamees. This season was the first season in which foreign players were excluded from the UAE League, a restriction which was opposed by Al Ain. The team were eliminated in the qualifying stages of the 1986 Asian Club Championship. After winning the League title in 1983–84 season, Al Ain failed to win any trophies till 1989 when they won the Federation Cup. In the following year they reached the final of the President Cup, losing to Al Shabab.

The 1992–93 season began with several new signings: Saif Sultan (Ittihad Kalba), Salem Johar (Ajman), Majed Al Owais (Al Thaid), Saeed Juma (Emirates). Al Ain won their fourth League title with three games left to play, after a 5–0 win at Al Khaleej. In the following season, they finished second in the Football League and were runners-up the 1993 UAE Super Cup losing 2–1 against Al Shaab of Sharjah. They also reached the President Cup final but were beaten 1–0 by Al Shabab, failing for the fourth time to win the Cup. In 1994 and 1995, Al Ain lost two President Cup finals, finished second in the League, won the 1995 UAE Super Cup and lost out in the Asian Cup Winners' Cup second round to the Kuwaiti team Kazma. In the 1996–97 season, Al Ain were eliminated in the round of 16 of the President Cup by Hatta of Dubai and finished fourth in the Football League.

The Golden Age (1997–2003)

Al Ain celebrating their 2017–18 UAE President's Cup win against Al Wasl

Before the start of the 1997–98 season, the honorary board was formed on 7 June 1997.[9] After this initiative, Al Ain won the league championship. In the following season, they won the President Cup and finished runner-up in the league and secured the third place in their second appearance in Asian Club Championship, after the 1985. Ilie Balaci took charge in 1999. He led them to their sixth League championship, while in the Asian Cup Winners' Cup they were eliminated by Al Jaish on the away goals rule in the first round.

In 2003, Al Ain contested the AFC Champions League competition. In the Group stage they won all three matches, beating Al Hilal of Saudi Arabia, Al Sadd of Qatar and Esteghlal of Iran. In the semi-final they were matched against the Chinese side Dalian Shide over two legs. In the first game, Al Ain won 4–2 at home, with Boubacar Sanogo scoring twice. In the return match in China Al Ain went 4–2 down with six minutes to play but won 7–6 on aggregate after a late goal by Farhad Majidi. The final saw Al Ain face BEC Tero Sasana of Thailand. In the home leg, Al Ain prevailed 2–0 with goals from Salem Johar and Mohammad Omar. At the Rajamangala Stadium on 11 October, Al Ain were beaten 1–0 by Tero Sasana, but won 2–1 on aggregate to become the first Emirati club to win the Champions League.

New Era (2016–present)

In December 2018, Al Ain which celebrated the 50th anniversary participating in the 2018 FIFA Club World Cup, representing the host nation as the reigning champions of the UAE Pro-League. Al Ain beat Team Wellington from New Zealand in the first round and Espérance de Tunis of 2018 CAF Champions League champions to enter semifinal. On 18 December 2018, Al Ain defeated Copa Libertadores champions River Plate by penalties hosted in home stadium Hazza Bin Zayed Stadium to enter the final for the first time in team history and became the first Emirati club to reach the decisive match. The final, on 22 December, was lost 4–1 to UEFA Champions League winners Real Madrid at the Zayed Sports City Stadium in Abu Dhabi.

Crest and colours

Crests

The Al Jahili Castle is considered as a symbol of the club, because it reflects the history of the city and also was the formal home of Sheikh Zayed bin Sultan Al Nahyan since 1946 when he was a ruler's representative. It officially became a crest for the club in 1980.[10] They import a single star in their emblem because of their 2003 AFC Champions League victory.

Colours

The club kit in 1975

The team began playing in green and white in 1968. After merging with Al Tadhamun in 1974, their red color became Al Ain's from season 1974–75 till the start of season 1976–77. During the first team training camp in Morocco in 1977, a friendly tournament was held by Moroccan club Wydad Casablanca with the Nice, Sporting CP, and Anderlecht. Al Ain admired Anderlecht's purple colors, and an idea came to change Al Ain's colors to purple. The idea was presented to Sheikh Hamdan bin Mubarak Al Nahyan, who agreed to change the club colors officially to the purple with the beginning of the season 1977–78.[11]

Kit suppliers and shirt sponsors

Period Kit manufacturer Shirt main sponsor
2002–2004 Nike
2004–2009 Lotto
2009 Adidas
2009–2010 Erreà First Gulf Bank
2010–2011 Macron
2011 Kappa
2011–2013 Adidas[12]
2013– Nike[13]

Grounds

Hazza Bin Zayed
Capacity25,000
Field size105 m × 68 m (344 ft × 223 ft)
Construction
Opened14 January 2014 (2014-01-14)
ArchitectPattern Design Limited (2014)

Al Ain first playground was set up on the main street near the Clock Roundabout. Took the shape of a square sandy plot of land.[14] Al Ain owns three home grounds, Tahnoun bin Mohammed Stadium, Sheikh Khalifa International Stadium, and Hazza Bin Zayed Stadium which opened on 14 January 2014.

Current squad

First team squad

As of UAE Pro-League:

No Position Player Nation
1 Goalkeeper Mohammed Abo Sandah  United Arab Emirates
3 Defender Salem Abdullah  United Arab Emirates
4 Defender Mohammed Ali Shaker  United Arab Emirates
5 Defender Ismail Ahmed (Captain)  United Arab Emirates
6 Midfielder Yahia Nader  United Arab Emirates
7 Forward Caio Canedo  United Arab Emirates
9 Forward Kodjo Laba  Togo
11 Midfielder Bandar Al-Ahbabi  United Arab Emirates
12 Goalkeeper Hamad Al-Mansouri  United Arab Emirates
13 Midfielder Ahmed Barman  United Arab Emirates
14 Midfielder Rayan Yaslam  United Arab Emirates
15 Defender Erik Menezes  Brazil
16 Midfielder Mohamed Abdulrahman  United Arab Emirates
17 Goalkeeper Khalid Eisa  United Arab Emirates
19 Defender Mohanad Salem  United Arab Emirates
20 Midfielder Wilson Eduardo  Angola
21 Midfielder Mohammed Hilal  United Arab Emirates
22 Midfielder Shoya Nakajima (on loan from Porto)  Japan
23 Defender Mohamed Ahmed  United Arab Emirates
26 Midfielder Omar Yaisien  Egypt
27 Midfielder Mohsen Abdullah  United Arab Emirates
30 Midfielder Mohammed Khalfan  United Arab Emirates
33 Defender Tsukasa Shiotani  Japan
34 Defender Rafael Pereira  Brazil
44 Defender Saeed Juma  United Arab Emirates
50 Defender Mohammed Fayez  United Arab Emirates
77 Goalkeeper Ibrahim Al-Kaebi  United Arab Emirates
88 Midfielder Fahad Hadeed  United Arab Emirates
99 Forward Jamal Maroof  United Arab Emirates

Reserve U21

No Position Player Nation
2 Defender Saoud Al-Mahri  United Arab Emirates
18 Midfielder Khalid Al-Bloushi  United Arab Emirates
24 Midfielder Andrija Radovanovic  Serbia
25 Midfielder Ali Al-Blooshi  United Arab Emirates
29 Midfielder Abdullah Sameer  United Arab Emirates
31 Defender Saoud Al-Abri  United Arab Emirates
35 Defender Ahmed Jamal  Egypt
42 Midfielder Jonathan Santos  Brazil
53 Defender Mansour Al-Shamsi  United Arab Emirates
54 Midfielder Abdalla Mazen  Palestine
61 Goalkeeper Zayed Khaled  United Arab Emirates
66 Midfielder Mohammed Al-Zaabi  United Arab Emirates
72 Forward Mohamed Awadalla  Sudan
74 Midfielder Nasser Al-Shekaili  United Arab Emirates
75 Midfielder Saif Al-Harthi  United Arab Emirates

Unregistered players

No Position Player Nation
8 Midfielder Bauyrzhan Islamkhan  Kazakhstan
38 Defender Saeed Musabbeh  United Arab Emirates

Out on loan

No Position Player Nation
28 Midfielder Idriss Mzaouiyani (on loan to Al-Dhafra)  France
70 Midfielder Hazem Muhanaeh (on loan to Al-Taawon)  Syria
Defender Waleed Siraj (on loan to Khor Fakkan)  Sudan
Midfielder Mohammed Jamal (on loan to Al Jazira)  United Arab Emirates
Midfielder Falah Waleed (on loan to Khor Fakkan)  United Arab Emirates
Midfielder Angelo Barbosa (on loan to Dibba Al-Hisn)  Portugal
Forward Ali Eid (on loan to Al-Fujairah)  United Arab Emirates

Personnel

Current technical staff

Pedro Emanuel is the current head coach of Al Ain.
Position Name
Head coach Pedro Emanuel
Assistant coach Rui Gomes[15]
Fitness coach André Galve
Goalkeeping coach Luis Miguel
First team tehnical analyst Virgilio Fernandes
Physiotherapist Fabio Santos
U-21 team head coach Ghazi Fahad
Team Manager Matar Obaid Al Sahbani
Team Supervisor Mohammed Obeid Hammad
Team Administrator Essam Abdulla
Director of football Sultan Rashed

Last updated: 4 January 2020
Source:

Management

Board of directors

Sheikh Hazza bin Zayed is the current club Vice President.
Sheikh Mohammed bin Zayed is the current club president.
Office Name
President Mohammed Bin Zayed Al Nahyan
Vice President Hazza Bin Zayed Al Nahyan
Chairman of Board of Directors Matar Al Darmaki
Vice Chairman of Board of Directors Khaled Al Dhaheri
Board of Directors Member Matar Al Dhaheri
Board of Directors Member Salem Al Jneibi
Board of Directors Member Majid Al Owais

Last updated: 22 June 2019
Source: Al Ain Club

Honours

34 official Championships

Bruno Metsu Al Ain's most successful coach with 4 trophies.
Al Ain FC honours[16]
Type Competition Titles Seasons
Domestic National Pro League 13 1976–77, 1980–81, 1983–84, 1992–93, 1997–98, 1999–00, 2001–02, 2002–03, 2003–04, 2011–12, 2012–13, 2014–15, 2017–18
President's Cup[17] 7 1998–99, 2000–01, 2004–05, 2005–06, 2008–09, 2013–14, 2017–18
Super Cup 5S 1995, 2003, 2009, 2012, 2015
League Cup 1 2008–09
Federation Cup 3S 1988–89, 2004–05, 2005–06
Joint League Cup[18] 1S 1982–83
State Abu Dhabi Championship[7] 2 1974, 1975
Regional GCC Champions League 1 2001
Continental AFC Champions League 1 2003
Other Emirati-Moroccan Super Cup[19] 1 2015[20]
  •   record
  • S shared record

Managerial history

No. Nationality Head coach From Until Honours
1 Nasser Dhaen (No such name in FIFA)* 19681971[21][22][23]
2 Abdel Aziz Hammami 1971[22] 1973
3 Ahmed Hajeer 19731976
4 Hamid Dhib 19761976
5 Ahmed Alyan 19761979 1 Championship
6 Abdelmajid Chetali 19791980
7 Ahmed Nagah 19801982 1 Championship
8 Nelsinho Rosa 19821984 1 Championship
9 Miljan Miljanić 19841986
10 Jair Picerni 19861986
11 João Francisco 19861988
12 Zé Mario 19881990 1 Federation Cup
13 Mahieddine Khalef 19901992
14 Yusri Abdul Ghani 19921992
15 Amarildo 19921995 1 Championship
16 Shaker Abdel-Fattah 19951995 1 Supercup
17 Ángel Marcos 19951996
18 Lori Sandri 19961996
19 Cabralzinho 19971997
20 Shaker Abdel-Fattah 19971998 1 Championship
21 Nelo Vingada 19981999 1 President's Cup
22 Ilie Balaci 19992000 1 Championship
23 Oscar Fulloné 20002000
24 Mrad Mahjoub 20002001 1 Gulf Club Champions Cup
25 Anghel Iordănescu 20012002 1 President's Cup
26 Ahmed Abdullah* 20022002
27 Džemal Hadžiabdić Jan 20022002 1 Championship
28 Bruno Metsu Aug 2002May 2004 2 Championships,
1 Champions League,
1 Supercup
29 Alain Perrin July 200421 Oct 2004
30 Mohammad El Mansi* 23 Oct 2004Jan 2005 1 Federation Cup
No. Nationality Head coach From Until Honours
31 Milan Máčala Jan 2005Jan 2006 1 President's Cup
32 Mohammad El Mansi* 20062006 1 President's Cup,
1 Federation Cup
33 Anghel Iordănescu June 2006Dec 2006
34 Tiny Ruys* 20062007
35 Walter Zenga Jan 2007June 2007
36 Tite July 2007Dec 2007
37 Winfried Schäfer 2007Dec 2009 1 Cup,
1 President's Cup,
1 Supercup
38 Rasheed Mahmoud* Dec 2009Dec 2009
39 Toninho Cerezo Dec 2009April 2010
40 Abdul Hameed Al Mistaki* April 2010Dec 2010
41 Ahmed Abdullah* 20102010
42 Alexandre Gallo 21 Dec 20106 June 2011
43 Cosmin Olăroiu 6 June 20116 July 2013 2 Championships,
1 Supercup
44 Jorge Fossati 29 July 201313 Sept 2013
45 Ahmed Abdullah* 13 Sept 201327 Sept 2013
46 Quique Sánchez Flores 27 Sept 20138 March 2014
47 Zlatko Dalić 8 March 201423 January 2017 1 Championship,
1 President's Cup,
1 Supercup
Joško Španjić* January 2017February 2017
49 Zoran Mamić February 2017January 2019 1 Championship,
1 President's Cup
Željko Sopić* January 2019February 2019
51 Juan Carlos Garrido February 2019June 2019
52 Ivan Leko June 2019December 2019
Ghazi Fahad* December 2019January 2020
54 Pedro Emanuel January 2020

* Served as caretaker coach.

Pro-League Record

Season Div. Tms. Pos. President's Cup League Cup
2008–09 PL 12 3rd Champions Champions
2009–10 PL 12 3rd Round of 16 Semi-Finals
2010–11 PL 12 10th Round of 16 Runner-ups
2011–12 PL 12 1st Quarter-Finals Group Stage
2012–13 PL 14 1st Semi-Finals Group Stage
2013–14 PL 14 6th Champions Group Stage
2014–15 PL 14 1st Quarter-Finals Group Stage
2015–16 PL 14 2nd Runner-ups Group Stage
2016–17 PL 14 4th Quarter-Finals Group Stage
2017–18 PL 12 1st Champions Quarter-Finals
2018–19 PL 14 4th Round of 16 Quarter-Finals
2019–20a PL 14 2nd Finalists Semi-Finals

Notes^ 2019–20 UAE football season was cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic in the United Arab Emirates.

Key

  • Pos. = Position
  • Tms. = Number of teams
  • PL = Pro-League

Asian Record

Participations

  • Q : Qualified, GS : Group Stage, R16 : Round of 16, QF : Quarterfinals, SF : Semifinals, RU : Runners-Up, W : Winners
Participations
Qualified 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2010 2011 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021
16 TimesWQFRUQFGSGSGSGSSFR16RUQFR16GSGSQ

AFC Club Rankings

As of 2019

This is the current AFC coefficient, the rankings are calculated by AFC.[24]

AFC Club Points
1 Al-Hilal 128.48
2 Al Ain 119.855
3 Guangzhou Evergrande 102.409
4 FC Seoul 101
5 Jeonbuk Hyundai Motors 89
6 Al-Duhail 87.368
7 Shanghai SIPG 75.409
8 Urawa Red Diamonds 74.527
9 Al-Ahli 72.48
10 Shabab Al Ahli 68.855

FootballDatabase Rankings

As of 2 February 2020[25]

Continental

AFC ranking Club Points
14 Al Ain 1542

World

World ranking Club Points
206 Al Ain 1542

Top scorers

Note: this includes goals scored in all competitions.[26]

No. Nationality Player Goals
1 Ahmed Abdullah 180
2 Asamoah Gyan 128
3 Mohieddine Habita 71
4 Majed Al Owais 70
5 Omar Abdulrahman 62
6 Matar Al Sahbani 60
Salem Johar 60
8 Saif Sultan 55
9 Marcus Berg 48
Caio Lucas 48
11 Abdul Hameed Al Mistaki 45
12 José Sand 44
13 Boubacar Sanogo 43
14 Subait Khater 38

References

  1. "club Foundation3". alainclub.com. Archived from the original on 1 August 2007. Retrieved 23 June 2014.
  2. "40 years of UAE Football". EmaratAlYoum.
  3. "Al Ain look to the future". Fifa.
  4. "Al Ain "The Boss" with 58 titles". EmaratAlYoum.
  5. "The Beginning". alainclub.com. Archived from the original on 1 August 2007. Retrieved 1 July 2014.
  6. "club Foundation4". alainclub.com. Archived from the original on 20 August 2008. Retrieved 19 January 2020.
  7. "club Foundation5". alainclub.com. Archived from the original on 1 August 2007. Retrieved 4 July 2014.
  8. "club Foundation – 2". alainteam.com. Archived from the original on 27 March 2005. Retrieved 31 July 2014.
  9. "The honorary board". alainteam.com (in Arabic). Archived from the original on 11 December 2004. Retrieved 13 August 2014.
  10. "Club Emblem" (in Arabic). AlAinClub.com. Archived from the original on 11 May 2004. Retrieved 2 August 2014.
  11. "The Purple Story". alainclub.com (in Arabic). Archived from the original on 14 January 2010. Retrieved 5 July 2014.
  12. قمصان جديدة للعين من نايكي بدل أديداس
  13. العين ونايك يوقعان اتفاقية شراكة
  14. "first playground". alainclub.com. Archived from the original on 1 August 2007. Retrieved 5 July 2014.
  15. "بيدرو يلجأ إلى "رفاق التعاون" مع الزعيم". Al Ittihad Newspaper (in Arabic). 9 January 2020. Retrieved 15 January 2020.
  16. "Club Milestones". Al Ain FC. Archived from the original on 7 March 2016.
  17. "List of Cup Winners". RSSSF.
  18. "Joint League" (in Arabic). UAEFA.ae. Archived from the original on 2 July 2014. Retrieved 5 August 2016.
  19. "Moroccan, UAE Super cup".
  20. not official by UAE FA
  21. "ناصر ضاعن: ملعب "دوار الساعة" شاهد على الانطلاقة". Al-Ittihad.
  22. "أفكار محمد وهزاع بن زايد وراء القفزة النوعية للبنفسج". Al Bayan.
  23. "ناصر ضاعن أول مواطن يقود تدريب العين". Al Bayan.
  24. "AFC Club Ranking ( 1st December 2017 ) - Global Football Ranks". Global Football Ranks. Retrieved 11 December 2017.
  25. footballdatabase.com. "Al-Ain, Ranking and Statistics - FootballDatabase". FootballDataBase.
  26. "Top Scorers". alainteam.com. Archived from the original on 20 January 2004. Retrieved 17 July 2014.
Achievements
Preceded by
Suwon Samsung Bluewings
Champions of Asia
2002–03
Succeeded by
Al-Ittihad

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