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Al-Minaa SC

Al-Minaa Sports Club (Arabic: نادي الميناء الرياضي, lit.'Port Sports Club') is an Iraqi multi-sport club based in Al-Maqal, Basra that participates in the Iraq Stars League, the top tier of Iraqi football. It is one of the most popular clubs in Iraq, particularly in the south, and became the first club outside Baghdad to win the Iraqi Premier League.

Al-Minaa
Full nameAl-Minaa Sports Club
Nickname(s)Al-Safana (The Sailors)
Al-Areeq (The Deep-Rooted)
Founded22 November 1931; 92 years ago (22 November 1931)
GroundAl-Minaa Olympic Stadium
Capacity30,000
ChairmanFarhan Al-Farttousi
ManagerHassan Ahmed
LeagueIraq Stars League
2022–23Iraqi First Division League, 1st of 24 (promoted)
WebsiteClub website
Current season
Active departments of Al-Minaa SC
Football Football Academy[1][2] Futsal[3][4]
Basketball[5] Athletics[3] Taekwondo[3]
Karate[5] Wrestling[3][4] Weightlifting[4]
Boxing[5][4] Bodybuilding[4] Futnet[6]

Al-Minaa was founded on November 22, 1931, in Al-Maqal. In 1974, the club was merged with another team called Al-Bareed to form a single club called Al-Muwasalat, and it was a strange situation because the Al-Bareed team were based in Baghdad while Al-Minaa were based in Basra and the two teams met in Baghdad on the day of the match only, so after just one season the club was dissolved and Al-Minaa returned in their place. In 1978, the team won the national league title for the first time. After a lean period in the post-war years, the team finished second in the league in the 2004–05 season, and therefore qualified for the 2006 AFC Champions League, becoming the first Iraqi club from outside Baghdad to play in this tournament.

For a long time, the club was considered to be one of the Iraqi football clubs that had its own style of play, and the team practised only under the supervision and training of coaches who graduated from the club, until the beginning of 2011, when the club started to depend on foreign coaches.

History edit

Foundation and early years (1931–1951) edit

Al-Minaa Sports Club was formed by some of the British sailors and workers serving in the Marine Transportation Company in Basra on the banks of the Shatt Al-Arab after Mandatory Iraq, where Colonel Sir John Ward was the director of company in the 1920s. When they were forming gatherings, sports were practiced and football was the most important.[7] After the founding of Al-Maqal City and establishment the General Company for Ports on March 1, 1931, by Colonel Sir Ward under the auspices of King Faisal, and the transfer of employees in the company to Al-Maqal, the club coordinated with the company's management to make the green squares in the park located there to be a playing field for them,[8] and after a few months, the company announced the establishment of the club officially, and Mr. C. F. Neikell was chosen as the first president of the club. The first football team consisted of Markar Avadician, Kadhim Dawood, Dehjat Ohaness, Liu Steven, Samuel Akesh, Aziz Hormuz, Rashad Al-Mufti, Khudair Abbas and others.[9] After the founding of the Iraq Football Association, Al-Minaa participated in the Iraq FA Basra Premier League, a regional league for teams in Basra organised by the Basra branch of the IFA.[10] Al-Minaa won the league title in its first season, beating Sharikat Naft Al-Basra 1–0 in the final.[11] Al-Minaa also participated in the first ever national knockout cup in Iraq, the 1948–49 Iraq FA Cup, but were knocked out in the quarter-finals 2–0 by Baghdad-based side Al-Haras Al-Malaki.[12] Al-Minaa went on to finish in third place in the regional league in both the 1949–50 and 1950–51 seasons.[13][14]

 
Al-Minaa squad in 1950

In 1950, Al-Minaa played its first match outside the country as the first Iraqi team to play outside Iraq, they played against Shahin at the Amjadiyeh Stadium in Tahran and the result was 2–2, The team was composed of these players: Mustafa Hameed, Karim Allawi, Noori Lafta, Jassim Bader, Karim Jaber, Djali Najeeb, Subhi Mohammed Zaki, Alwan Hussein, Michael Stanley, Salih Mohammed and Sabeeh Darwish.[12] And the team played several friendly matches with other Iranian clubs. They played against Arteshe and the game ended in a 2–1 victory for Al-Minaa, and they played against Taj Ahvaz and won that match 5–1. They also played against Khorramshahr and won 3–1, and they faced Abadan F.C. and won that game too.[12] The team benefited greatly from those matches. In 1951, the team won the Hanna Al-Sheikh Cup, which was organized for Basra-based teams.[15] And in the same year, the first Iraqi national football team was established. Coach Dhia Habib invited three players from the Al-Minaa club to join them – Percy Lynsdale, Saeed Easho and Karim Allawi – to play against Turkey in Turkey. Before traveling, and on Wednesday 2 May 1951, Al-Minaa played – with adding a player from Sharikat Naft Al-Basra club; Shaker Ismail – against Iraq in Basra, and ended the match a draw 1–1, Tariq Khalil scored for Al-Minaa.[16][17][18]

Matches with foreign teams (1952–1972) edit

The 1950s and 1960s were periods of preparation for Al-Minaa, and the team played several friendly matches with different teams in this period; some of these clubs were strong European teams, and other were strong Asian teams. These matches helped the club develop the qualities of the players in terms of tactics and technique and other aspects. On 6 January 1956, Al-Minaa played with Tehran F.C. and lost 3–0,[19] and after a year they played with a number of English sailors teams, who were arriving in Basra in those years.[20] On December 20, 1958, Al-Minaa team travelled to Kuwait, playing against Kuwait national football team in a friendly match in Ahmadi, defeating Kuwait 8–0, scoring goals by Mohammed Manther, Karim Allawi, Nouri Lafta and Waleed Dawood, each with two goals, It was a very big result against a national team.[21]

In 1961, under the leadership of Danish coach Ingvard Hansen, the team played with a number of Iranian teams, beating Abadan F.C. 4–3 and losing to Shahin 1–0.[22] and in February 1962, the Romanian club; Steaua București visited Iraq and Al-Minaa, under the same coach, played with them and lost 4–1, then, Al-Minaa played with the Syrian team Damascus and won 2–0.[23] In February 1963, the team under the same coach, played with another Romanian club, Petrolul Ploiești, and lost 2–0 to them.[24] The 1962–63 season saw Al-Minaa win the Iraq FA Basra First Division, the top-tier league in the region, by winning three and drawing one of their four games. The club's B team were the league's runners-up.[25] In November 1965, the team played the Kuwaiti club Al-Qadsia and the match ended in a 3–3 draw.[26] In September 1968, the team traveled to Syria and played with some its teams, and the results were good,[27] and in 1969 the team under the leadership of coach Abdul Salam Saud, played against Bahraini club Al-Nasr and beat them 4–1; they then played against the Soviet club Neftçi and lost 1–0[28]

On January 17, 1970, Al-Minaa played against Yugoslavian club Sarajevo and lost 3–1,[29] and over a year later on January 29, 1971, they played under the leadership of coach Hadi Hassan Wasfi, with Czechoslovak club Spartak Trnava and won 2–0; Waleed Dawood and Abdul Razzak Ahmed scored.[30] On December 20, 1972, Al-Minaa under the leadership of coach Hamza Qasim, played against the China national football team lost 1–0.[31] These matches had a significant impact in making Al-Minaa stronger team.

Golden years and League title (1973–1979) edit

By 1973, Al-Minaa had amassed 15 regional league titles in Basra. In the 1973–74 season, Al-Minaa played in Iraq's new nationwide league under the leadership of coach Hamza Qasim, and finished the season in third place.[9] In the 1974–75 season, the first nationwide league of clubs was formed, and Al-Minaa were merged with another team called Al-Bareed to form a club called Al-Muwasalat which finished third place in the league.[9]

 

 
Sattar
 
Azeez
 
Abdul-Ridha
 
Raad
 
 
 
Starting line-up for the 1977–78 Iraqi League Final home match against Al-Shorta on 27 March 1978

Al-Minaa began to participate in the Iraqi Premier League as an independent club in the 1975–76 season under the leadership of coach Najem Abdullah, and finished the season in fourth place.[9] The team was not well under coach Faleh Hassan Wasfi in the 1976–77 season, and finished in sixth place.[9]

The first match in Iraqi Premier League history to be televised was played in this season between Al-Minaa and Al-Zawraa at Al-Shaab Stadium on Friday, March 11, 1977, which ended 5–1 for Al-Zawraa.[32]

The 1977–78 season was the golden season for the team when they won the league title, and the title moved for the first time from the clubs of the capital, Baghdad, to Basra under coach Jamil Hanoon. The team collected 21 points by winning eight matches and drawing in five matches; they did not lose any matches in this season. The Al-Minaa player Jalil Hanoon won the top scorer award with 11 goals in the league.[33] The champions' squad included the following players: Sattar Farhan, Sameer Nori, Aziz Abdullah, Sabeeh Abed Ali, Abdul Redha Hussein, Rahim Karim, Khalil Ibrahim, Hadi Ahmed, Alaa Ahmed, Ali Abdul Zahra, Abdul Razzaq Ahmed, Jalil Hanoon, Hassan Abdul Hussein, Adnan Saddam, Raad Abdullah and Hadi Jabbar.[9] Before the league start, Al-Minaa played in a pre-season football friendly tournament in Arbil, and the team played against Arbil and won 0–6, and won against Salahaddin in two matches 7–0 and 8–0, depending on this, the team was well prepared for the league championship.[34] The first match of this league season was on October 1, 1977, and the last match was on March 31, 1978. Al-Minaa started the first two matches under coach leadership Faleh Hassan Wasfi, who resigned after being drawn against Salahaddin 0–0 and Al-Sinaa 0–0, the team played after that under the leadership of coach Jamil Hanoon, who took over the job, and led the team to a series of successes, began to win against defending champions Al-Zawraa 2–3 in Baghdad.[34] In the last match, Al-Minaa played against Al-Shorta at Al-Minaa Stadium in Basra, and Al-Minaa won 1–0, thanks to Jalil Hanoon's goal on 50th minutes. The Al-Minaa goalkeeper, Sattar Farhan, saved a penalty kick obtained by Al-Shorta in the final minutes of the match.[35] In 1978–79 season, The team played under the leadership of coaches Sabeeh Abed Ali and Abdul Mahdi Hadi, and finished the season in fourth place, after being equated with second-placed; Al-Shorta and third; Al-Talaba in the number of points (15 points), who applied it on goals difference.[9]

Years of war and chaos (1980–2003) edit

At the beginning of the Iran–Iraq War in 1980, Basra became a battleground, and the eight-year war broke all areas of life in Basra, including the field of sports. Al-Minaa in particular had many players recruited and transported to the battlefield, and the team lost their playing field, and did not find a training ground. Their financial allocations were significantly reduced, and the stars of the team left to play in the big clubs of Baghdad. In this period, the Iraqi Ba'athist government worked on the separation of the club and GCPI in terms of funding, so the club has become dependent on self-financing, which was very poor, and as a result the team was composed of 11 players only (players without substitutes).[36]

In the 1985–86 season, Al-Minaa were not able to play in Basra, due to the fall of the bombs and the lack of safe stadiums, so their matches were moved to Amarah, and because of these harsh conditions, the team finished in 14th place and were relegated to the Iraq Division One for the first time in its history.[34] But the team was determined to return to play in the Iraqi Premier League, and they managed to win the Iraq Division One title in 1987, and thus were able to return to play in the Premier League again in the 1987–88 season.[34] They were runners-up of the Al-Faw Liberation Championship in 1988, a tournament hosted at Al-Minaa Stadium that featured Al-Talaba, Al-Zawraa and Al-Tayaran.[37] The club remained unstable after the Second Gulf War, which began in 1991, and Sanctions against Iraq[38] later (1991-2003), which destroyed the sport in the whole of Iraq.[39] The ruling Ba'ath Party has been accused of treating the club with racist treatment, including the opening match of Maysan Stadium in 1987 between Al-Minaa and Al-Rasheed (club sponsored by the ruling party in Iraq), which ended in a 0–0 draw attended by the son of president Uday Saddam Hussein, and when he found that the fans cheer for Al-Minaa team said: "If this stadium could have been moved to Baghdad, I would have done so (this audience is not worth it)".[40] And another of the manifestations of racism that the Ba'athist government was accused of is what happened in the league in 1991–92 season at the Al-Minaa match against Al-Karkh, on Friday, 8 May 1992 at the Al-Minaa Stadium and the attendance of more than 20,000, which ended for Al-Karkh 3–2. The match was led by international referee Subhi Rahim, who scored an incorrect penalty against Al-Minaa and the most famous red card against Al-Minaa player Asaad Abdul Razzaq, which led to the protest of the supporters of the club, then the Al-Karkh coach Adnan Dirjal was accused of shooting Al-Minaa supporters from his pistol,[41] resulting in serious injuries among supporters of the club. The Football Association punished Al-Minaa players, and because Dirjal led the Iraq national football team in the 1994 FIFA World Cup qualification, he prevented Al-Minaa players from playing in the national team, including Mohammed Abdul Hussein, who won the title of best player in the league for the 1992–93 season.[42] Among the practices that one of the most important players in Al-Minaa was exposed to, when Sabah Mirza Mahmoud, a close associate of Saddam Hussein, became president of the Al-Shabab Club and ordered Hadi Ahmed, the most important player in Al-Minaa team, to leave his club and moving to Al-Shabab Club, but Ahmed refused because of his loyalty to the club and was severely punished. Also Uday Saddam Hussein imprisoned him in Al-Radwaniyah Prison, shaved his hair and forced him to retire.[43][44]

Despite these difficult circumstances, the team managed to reach fourth place in Umm al-Ma'arik Championship and fourth place in the league in 1998–99 season,[45] and reach the semifinals of the 1999–2000 Iraq FA Cup, where they were came out of the championship after losing from Al-Zawraa, who won the title that season,[46] and in the 2002–03 Iraq FA Cup also reached the semifinals, came out of the championship after losing from Al-Talaba, who won the title that season.[47]

Gradual return and Asian prominence (2004–2006) edit

With the change that took place after the 2003 invasion of Iraq and the overthrowing of Saddam Hussein, GCPI took care of the club, and started to bring the team back to their natural position slowly, and the 2004–05 season was the distinctive season. Under the leadership of coach Abdul Karim Jassim (Jombi), Al-Minaa won the Southern Group in the First Stage, and advanced to the Elite Stage where they won Group A. In the semi-finals, they managed to beat Al-Zawraa in Baghdad 1–0 and tied 0–0 with them in Basra to advance to the final, where they played against Al-Quwa Al-Jawiya. The match was played in Baghdad which gave Al-Quwa Al-Jawiya an advantage. Al-Minaa lost the match 2–0 to take the runner-up title, and the opportunity to represent Iraq in the next AFC Champions League; the team became the first team from outside Baghdad to represent Iraq in the continental championship.[48]

After the return of the Iran–Iraq relations, Al-Minaa participated in the 2004 Peace and Friendship Cup in Ahvaz, under the leadership of coach Abdul Karim Jassim, has won the tournament, having played against Iranian clubs have won it, in semi-final, the team played against Esteghlal Ahvaz B and won 2–1, Al Mina'a's goals were scored by Nasser Talla Dahilan at the 35th minute and Qais Essa at the 75th minute.[49] in final played against Foolad Khuzestan B and won 1–0, the winning goal was scored by Alaa Aasi at the 44th minute of the game.[50]

The team under the leadership of coach Aqeel Hato did not enter the 2006 AFC Champions League to compete for the title, given the weaknesses of the team (most of them were young and they needed experience in matches like this), but as a chance to play with strong teams and prepare for the Iraqi Premier League.[51][52] But Al-Minaa embarrassed some of the big teams in Asia and by earning draws against the likes of Mash'al[53] and Al-Hilal.[54]

Last five years of local dependence (2006–2011) edit

After the team were knocked out of the AFC Champions League, the experienced players joined other clubs,[55] and thus began a new era for the club under the leadership of young coach Asaad Abdul Razzaq[56] for two seasons with and the young players who have grown up in the club. The team entered the 2006–07 season and managed to finish second in their First Stage group behind Al-Najaf to qualify for the Elite Stage,[57] but team was not able to get to the semi-finals as they finished fourth behind Arbil, Al-Talaba and Karbalaa.[58]

 

 
Saddam
 
Jassim
 
M.A.Majeed
 
Sajjad
 
M.A.Jabbar
 
Omar
 
M.Ghazi
 
Bashar
 
Faisal
 
Ihsan (c)
Starting line-up for the 2009 Thaghr Al Iraq Championship Final against Naft Al-Junoob on 22 December 2009

In the 2007–08 season, a similar thing repeated under the same coach, where the team finished in 3rd place in their First Stage group behind Karbalaa and Al-Najaf, having won eight matches, drawn six and lost two, but could not go beyond the Elite Stage,[59] where they finished in fourth place in Group A behind Arbil, Al-Quwa Al-Jawiya and Kirkuk.[60]

In the following three seasons, the team was under the leadership of young coach Adel Nasser[61] and these were not good seasons, as they were knocked out in the First Stage in all three seasons. In the 2008–09 season, the team finished in sixth place in their group, where team won ten matches, drew six and lost eight matches,[62] and in the 2009–10 season, the team ended up in seventh place in the group stage where they won 16 matches, drew 11 and lost seven.[63]

In pre-season and under the leadership of coach Adel Nasser, Al-Minaa won 2009 Thaghr Al Iraq Championship title, Al-Minaa qualified for the final game after collecting 7 points by defeating Naft Maysan 3–1, Ghaz Al-Junoob 4–1,[64] and won the Thaghr Al Iraq Championship after beating Naft Al-Junoob in the final game with a score of 2–1. Al Mina'a's goals were scored by Nayef Falah in the 46th minute and Hassan Hadi Ahmad in the 79th minute. On the other hand, the sole goal of Naft Al-Junoob was scored by Muhannad Youssef at the 10th minute of the game. The two teams shared the lead of the game that was led by referee Ahmad Shaker. The referee gave red cards to 3 players: Amjad Hameed, Alaa Nayrouz from Naft Al-Junoob team and Al-Minaa player Ihsan Hadi.[65]

In the third season, 2010–11, the team under the same coach finished in fourth place in their First Stage group with 12 wins, nine draws and five defeats.[66]

Eight coaches in three seasons (2011–2014) edit

The club was always praised for depending on coaches and players that had graduated from the club itself, but since the 2011–12 season, the club went a different way by contracting with a professional coach of Norwegian nationality (Iraqi origin) called Younis Al Qattan.[67] But the club's management did not settle on one coach during the season, so they changed the coach seven times during these three years. In the 2011–12 season, the team under the leadership of Al-Qattan was not successful with two wins, two losses and six draws, so the manager was changed.[68] The team began playing under the leadership of Rahim Hameed[69] and they ended the Premier League in 11th place, and in the 2012-2013 season, the club returned to the local coach Aqeel Hato[70] but this did not last very long as he was sacked having won four matches, drawn four matches and lost two matches, and the team played under the leadership of the young coach Ghazi Fahad[71] afterwards but this also did not last long as he was fired having won five matches, drawn one match and lost five matches.[72] The club then appointed coach Asaad Abdul Razzaq [73][74] who led the team to finish the season in eighth place, having won eight matches and lost six with one draw, and the team began the season relying on foreign players. Al-Minaa used five foreign professionals from Europe, Africa and Asia in this season.[75]

In the 2013–14 season, the same thing happened as happened in the previous season, where three coaches led the team in a row. They started the season led by coach Jamal Ali[76] and who resigned because the results were not good, especially after the 2–1 loss to Al-Karkh.[77] Ali won two matches as coach, drew four and lost three, so the club turned the leadership of the team to his assistant Ammar Hussein, who also did not remain long; he resigned after the 3–0 loss to Al-Zawra'a, and he won three matches, drew four and lost three.[78] The club then appointed coach Hassan Mawla,[79] who finished the season in 11th place, and he led the team for just four matches, winning one, losing one and drawing two, and he could not continue the rest of the matches because of Iraq Football Association suspended the Premier League and considered it finished on June 18, 2014.[80]

Title challenge under Al-Sayed (2014–2016) edit

In the 2014–15 season, the team was under coach Asaad Abdul Razzaq[81] and he was sacked after six matches because the results were not satisfactory; he won one match, lost three and drew two, leaving the team in eighth place in their First Stage group. Al-Minaa contracted with the Syrian professional coach, Hussam Al-Sayed,[82] who led the team through 13 matches until the end of the group without a loss, where the team move into second place in the group behind Al-Shorta.

 
Al-Minaa players lining up before a match in 2014.

In the Elite Stage they played against three teams (Duhok, Naft Al-Junoob and Al-Quwa Al-Jawiya). The team was competing to top the group which would have qualified them for the final, but mistakes from assistant referees shattered that dream, where the assistant referee Maitham Khamat allowed an offside goal to stand in favor of Al-Quwa Al-Jawiya against Naft Al-Junoob, while assistant referee Haider Hameed did not count a legitimate goal for Al-Minaa against Duhok due to offside, which lost them two points.[83] These cases deprived the team from getting to the final, where the team is equal to Al-Quwa Al-Jawiya in the number of points (ten points) but Al-Quwa Al-Jawiya had a better goal difference.[84] In the third place match they were set to play against Al-Shorta but Al-Shorta declared that they pulled out of the match. But strangely, Al-Shorta ended up turning up for the match and Al-Minaa was not prepared to match them so they withdrew meaning the team finished in fourth place in the Premier League.[85]

In the 2015–16 season, the coach Hussam Al-Sayed led the team to a series of wins against strong teams, defeating the likes Erbil 3–1, Al-Quwa Al-Jawiya 2–1 and Al-Shorta 1–0. Al-Minaa were in first place in their First Stage group,[86] with six wins, one draw and two losses, but the many mistakes for the referees against the team[87][88] and then a number of problems arose between the club management and some players[89][90] and other reasons[91] which caused a decline in the level of the team, although the team still managed to qualify for the Elite Group. Their performances in the Elite Group were not up-to-scratch, so the team ended the season in sixth place.[92]

Administrative problems & relegation (2016–2022) edit

In the 2016–17 season, Al-Minaa contracted with the Romanian professional coach, Marin Ion[93][94] and he was sacked after twenty-seven matches because the chaos that appeared in the team due to the weakness of the personality of the coach, and the results were not satisfactory; he won fourteen matches, lost four and drew nine, and lost both Basra Derbies; against Al-Bahri 2–1, Naft Al-Junoob 1–0, leaving the team in fourth place in their First Stage in league,[95] then Al-Minaa signed local coach Ghazi Fahad,[96][97] who finished the league in sixth place.[98][99] In the 2016–17 Iraq FA Cup, Al-Minaa reached the semi-finals, but could not reach the final after losing from Naft Al-Wasat on penalties, in the match that ended 1-1.[100] Then, the team ended the season without any good results due to several problems within the club.[101] The administrative problems continued within the club, where two departments were formed and each claimed to be the legitimate administration. There was also a conflict between the management of the club and the Ministry of Transport (the owner), which led to a financial crisis, in which the important players migrated to the Baghdad clubs, and change of coaches in the same season was repeated within the club, all of which led to a decline in the level of the team, and ranked last in the ranking of the league teams for more than a season (15th place in the 2017–18 season and 17th place in the 2018–19 season).[102] In the 2021–22 season, the level of the team declined so much that it did not win during the whole season except only 3 times, and the administration resigned after the disastrous mistakes they made during the season, and a temporary administration was formed, but they could not do anything,[103] and in the end the team occupied the 19th place (penultimate) and was officially relegated to the Iraq Division One.[104][105]

Recent history (2022–) edit

After the end of the season, the Football Association did not specify the mechanism for the participation of clubs and their number in the subsequent season, and the matter remained ambiguous. Orally and in the media, the Football Association decided that the system of playing in the league will be according to the professional league system, and any club that did not complete its file according to the Club Licensing Law will not participate.[106] The president of Football Association, Adnan Dirjal promised the president of Al-Minaa club and the governor of Basra that the Al-Minaa team would play in the Iraqi Premier League and not in the Iraq Division One if the club completed the licensing file. Based on the foregoing, the club contracted with coach Basim Qasim and five professionals, paid all their debts and completed the licensing file.[107][108] But the club was surprised by the decision of the Football Association to reverse its decision to play according to the professional league system and not to accredit the licensed clubs, and that they were deceived by the Football Association.[109][110][111]

Kit edit

Al-Minaa's traditional colours are blue and white. The home kit is blue and the away kit is white. For much of Al-Minaa's history, their home colours have been bright blue shirts with white sleeves and white shorts, though this has not always been the case. The shirt was blue, and was worn with blue shorts and white socks in 1977–78 season when won league title for the first time.[112] In some seasons the team used the home kit that was blue and painted in yellow or white, and in the away kit use the white and painted in blue or black or red or some of these colors together. But in the 1998–1999 season only the kit was green, and this was unfamiliar.[113]

Historical kits edit

Kit manufacturers and shirt sponsors edit

Al-Minaa's shirts have been made by manufacturers including Adidas (from the 1970s until 1982), Puma (1982–1984), Adidas (1984–1989), Uhlsport (2001–2003), Macron (2011–2014), Uhlsport (2014–2016), Adidas (2016–2017) and Jako (2017–2018), Uhlsport (from 2018). Like those of most other Iraqi football clubs, Al-Minaa's shirts have featured sponsors' logos since the 1980s; sponsors include Samsung (1999–2000), Elaph Islamic Bank (2015–2016), Fuchs Petrolub (2016–2017) and GCPI (2017–2020).[114]

Stadium edit

 
Basra Sports City was a temporary ground of Al-Minaa from May 23, 2015.

Al-Minaa Stadium was founded in the 1930s and contained an open field with a stand on one side. In the 1960–61 season, lighting was installed in the stadium and the stadium was considered the second best stadium in the Arab world after the Alexandria Stadium in Egypt.[115] In the mid-1980s, terraces with three strips were placed around stadium in order to accommodate 4,000 spectators. In 1995, circular strips were built around the ground in order to accommodate 10,000 spectators. The opening match of the new stadium was Al-Minaa match against Samarra, and ended for Al-Minaa 1–0, Adel Nasser scored from a penalty kick.[116]

Construction work for Al-Minaa Olympic Stadium began on March 22, 2011[117][118][119] to be the club's new stadium with a capacity of 30,000 spectators, being built on an area of 52 acres.[120]

Al-Minaa played at the Naft Al-Junoob Stadium during the first phase of the 2012–13 season, for the period from 20 October 2012 to 1 March 2013. In the second phase of the same season, the team was played at the Basra Stadium (Al-Jamhoriya) for the period from 27 April 2014 to 4 September, and they were training at Al-Hawta Stadium in this season. On October 1, 2013, Al-Zubair Olympic Stadium was inaugurated and the team played all home matches at it, during the 2013–14 season and the 2014–15 season, and until May 23, 2015, when the Basra Sports City became a temporary stadium for the team.[121] Since October 2017, Basra Sports City was officially leased to club.[122]

 
Al-Minaa Olympic Stadium has officially become the team's home stadium in January 26, 2024.

In low attendance matches, Al-Minaa played at Basra Sports City's secondary stadium (also known as Al-Fayhaa Stadium), which has a capacity of 10,000 spectators.[123]

On December 26, 2022, the Al-Minaa Olympic Stadium was inaugurated by the Ministry of Youth and Sports in preparation for the establishment of the 25th Arabian Gulf Cup,[124][125] where the tournament will take place on this stadium in addition to the Basra Sports City. The opening included a ceremony in which the retired Al-Minaa stars were honored.[126] After that, a friendly match took place between Al-Minaa and Kuwait SC,[127] in which Kuwait won 2–1. Ali Hussain (57') and Taha Yassine Khenissi (66') scored the double for Kuwait, and Karrar Mohammed scored for Al-Minaa from a penalty kick in the 89th minute.[128][129][130] On January 8, 2024, the Minister of Youth and Sports announced that Al-Minaa team will begin playing home matches on Al-Minaa Olympic Stadium starting from the fourteenth round of Iraq Stars League.[131] On February 3, 2024, Al-Minaa played its first official match on this Stadium in the second round of the FA Cup, where it faced Naft Al-Wasat, and they were able to score three goals. The first was by Ayad Abed Farhan in the first half, and the second and third were by Salem Ahmed and Hameed Ali Hameed in the second half. The match ended 3-1, and Al-Minaa qualified for the next round of the tournament.[132][133]

Supporters edit

 
Ultras Safana during Al-Minaa match in October 2014

Al-Minaa fans often refer to themselves as "Jamhoor Al-Safana", the name derived from the team's nickname, "Al-Safana". The fanbase is large and generally loyal; in 2014–15, Al-Minaa had the highest average League attendance for an Iraqi club (40,000, which was 66.6% of available capacity).[134] Al-Minaa has the Promoters Association, which was established at the beginning of the club's starting point, and remained supportive of the team in all their matches, and traveled with them wherever they went.[135]

In June 2014, Al-Minaa supporters founded a group known as "Ultras Safana". The supporters group has become well known throughout Iraqi football as one of the most passionate groups of football fans in Iraq and the group's banners and logos can be seen in any stadium that their club play in. The number of group members is increasing. The foundation of this group has significantly increased both the number of Al-Minaa fans in stadiums and their presence in matches.[136] Ultras Safana won the title of Best Ultras in the Iraqi league a year after its founding,[137] as well as in the second consecutive year.[138]

The supporters of Al-Minaa are very many, spread throughout the provinces of Iraq, and some live outside Iraq, and was considered to be the best fans in the Iraqi league.[137][139][140]

Rivalries edit

Basra derby edit

Al-Minaa contest the Basra Derby with Naft Al-Basra[141][142] (formerly Naft Al-Janoob until 2020).[143] Since 2005, there have been 33 competitive Basra Derbies. Al-Minaa hold the precedence in these matches, with 11 victories to Naft Al-Basra's 9; there have been 13 draws. The most decisive result in an Al-Minaa–Naft Al-Basra game is Al-Minaa's 4–1 victory at Al Mina'a Stadium, their home ground, on March 11, 2005. There have been two incidences of 3–1, Al-Minaa have been won in both matches; home in December 2005, and away in January 2006. The competition saw 62 goals scored, 33 for Al-Minaa and 29 for Naft Al-Basra; the individual player who scored the most goals was Al-Minaa player Ihsan Hadi and Naft Al-Basra player Bassim Ali, each scored four goals. And there are five players who scored for both teams, they are Alaa Aasi, Nasser Talla Dahilan, Ahmed Hassan, Sajjad Abdul Kadhim and Hussam Malik.[144]

Al-Araqa derby edit

There also exists a rivalry between Al-Minaa and Al-Quwa Al-Jawiya, which is sometimes called the Al-Araqa derby, because the two clubs are the oldest clubs in Iraq, founded in 1931.[145][146]

Players edit

First-team squad edit

As of 5 February 2024

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

No. Pos. Nation Player
2 DF   IRQ Abdullah Mohsin (captain)
3 DF   IRQ Zain Al-Abidin Hussein
4 DF   IRQ Emad Yousef
5 MF   IRQ Ahmed Mohsin Ashour
6 MF   IRQ Haider Salem
7 MF   IRQ Ayad Abed Farhan
10 FW   IRQ Mohammed Shokan (vice-captain)
11 MF   IRQ Hatim Aysar
12 FW   IRQ Karrar Jaafar
15 MF   IRQ Mohammed Khudhair
17 DF   IRQ Muntadhar Hassan
18 FW   IRQ Salem Ahmed
19 DF   IRQ Hassan Odah
22 GK   IRQ Jaafar Shenaishil
No. Pos. Nation Player
23 DF   IRQ Hussein Jabbar
26 FW   IRQ Sajjad Alaa
28 MF   IRQ Hamza Hadi Ahmed
29 DF   IRQ Karrar Al-Amir Ali
30 GK   IRQ Mohammed Saadoun
33 MF   IRQ Abbas Yas (3rd captain)
35 DF   IRQ Mujtaba Ali
36 DF   IRQ Hameed Ali Hameed
38 DF   IRQ Mahdi Hashim
39 MF   IRQ Naji Nasser
40 DF   IRQ Mohammed Ghaleb
42 DF   IRQ Muslim Musa Fayyadh
50 GK   IRQ Mohammed Sabah
GK   IRQ Ammar Ali

Reserves team squad edit

As of 1 June 2023

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

No. Pos. Nation Player
2 DF   IRQ Muslim Ali
3 DF   IRQ Fadhl Sabah
8 MF   IRQ Mohammed Al-Sadr
9 FW   IRQ Hasanain Waleed
11 MF   IRQ Abbas Tarish
12 DF   IRQ Mustafa Maher
13 DF   IRQ Hussein Hashim
14 FW   IRQ Hamza Shaowi
No. Pos. Nation Player
16 MF   IRQ Zain Al-Abidin Qais
20 MF   IRQ Haider Jabbar
21 MF   IRQ Hassan Faleh
24 DF   IRQ Hussein Abdul Razzaq
28 MF   IRQ Hussein Falah
31 GK   IRQ Ali Saad
34 DF   IRQ Yousef Hussein
48 MF   IRQ Hussein Abdul Karim

Under-19s and Academy edit

As of 9 December 2022
Players to have featured in a first-team matchday squad for Al-Minaa

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

No. Pos. Nation Player
6 MF   IRQ Daniel Waleed
No. Pos. Nation Player
38 DF   IRQ Mahdi Hashim

Retired numbers edit

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

No. Pos. Nation Player
20 GK   IRQ Karrar Ibrahim (posthumous honour)[147]

Current staff edit

Position Staff
Manager   Hassan Ahmed
Assistant coach   Nasser Talla Dahilan
  Mahmoud Yasser
Goalkeeping Coach   Qusay Jabbar
Fitness coach   Ali Mohammed Jaber
Physiotherapist   Fares Abdullah
Team Supervisor   Abbas Hassan
Under-19s Coach   Mohammed Abdul Hussein
Under-16s Coach   Fadhel Nasser
Under-14s Coach   Fadhel Jather

Board members edit

Note: This administrative body was chosen temporarily by the Iraqi Olympic Committee until elections are held to form an official administrative body.[148]

Position Staff
President   Farhan Al-Farttousi
Vice president   Alaa Abdul Khaliq
Secretary   Raad Malik Sharqi
Treasurer   Bahaa Al-Deen Hussein
Member of the Board   Mohammed Abdul Hussein
  Yousef Rehaima
  Adel Nasser
  Ali Taleb Sharhan
  Aqeel Hato

Records edit

League history edit

Season League Position Played Wins Draws Losses GF:GA Points
1975–76 Iraqi National League 4 24 12 7 5 29:18 31
1976–77 Iraqi National League 5 11 3 6 2 12:12 12
1977–78 Iraqi National League 1 13 8 5 0 27:10 21
1978–79 Iraqi National League 4 12 5 5 2 15:9 15
1979–80 Iraqi National League 10 22 7 6 9 26:29 20
1980–81 Iraqi National League 8 11 3 4 4 8:14 10
1981–82 Iraqi National League 9 22 5 7 10 22:30 17
1982–83 Iraqi National League 11 22 3 6 13 18:32 12
1983–84 Iraqi National League 12 24 5 5 14 22:48 15
1984–85[a] Iraqi National League
1985–86 Iraqi National League ↓ 14 15 3 3 9 13:22 9
1986–87 Iraqi Second Division League 1
1987–88 Iraqi National League 12 30 5 13 12 22:34 23
1988–89 Iraqi Pan-National League 8 14
1989–90 Iraqi Second Division League 1
1990–91 Iraqi National League 8 28 7 9 12 17:24 23
1991–92 Iraqi National League 9 32 12 13 13 39:42 37
1992–93 Iraqi National League 11 69 21 28 20 58:70 70
1993–94 Iraqi National League 17 50 12 21 17 42:58 45
1994–95 Iraqi National League 11 46 16 21 9 54:42 72
1995–96 Iraqi Advanced League 9 22 4 11 7 18:23 23
1996–97 Iraqi Premier League 8 30 9 10 11 22:32 37
1997–98 Iraqi Premier League 7 30 12 3 15 29:41 39
1998–99 Iraqi Premier League 4 30 14 8 8 35:29 50
1999–2000 Iraqi First Division League 8 50 20 24 6 56:28 84
2000–01 Iraqi Elite League 9 30 10 10 10 24:26 40
2001–02 Iraqi Elite League 10 38 13 10 15 39:45 49
2002–03[a] Iraqi First Division League
2003–04[a] Iraqi Premier League
2004–05 Iraqi Premier League 2 21 13 3 5 31:11 42
2005–06 Iraqi Premier League 10 16 9 4 3 26:16 31
2006–07 Iraqi Premier League 7 17 10 4 3 23:11 34
2007–08 Iraqi Premier League 10 24 10 9 5 15:18 39
2008–09 Iraqi Premier League 11 24 10 6 8 20:24 36
2009–10 Iraqi Premier League 13 34 16 11 7 36:23 59
2010–11 Iraqi Elite League 7 26 12 9 5 33:21 45
2011–12 Iraqi Elite League 11 38 13 11 14 40:44 50
2012–13 Iraqi Elite League 8 34 15 7 12 54:48 52
2013–14 Iraqi Premier League 11 23 6 10 7 26:27 28
2014–15 Iraqi Premier League 4 23 9 8 6 28:22 35
2015–16 Iraqi Premier League 6 25 11 7 7 36:30 40
2016–17 Iraqi Premier League 6 36 18 12 6 40:24 66
2017–18 Iraqi Premier League 15 38 8 17 13 34:47 41
2018–19 Iraqi Premier League 17 38 8 16 14 34:42 40
2019–20[a] Iraqi Premier League
2020–21 Iraqi Premier League 8 38 12 13 13 45:44 49
2021–22 Iraqi Premier League ↓ 19 38 3 21 14 33:49 30
2022–23 Iraqi First Division League 1 23 14 7 2 40:16 49

[a] The league was not completed and was cancelled.

Performance in AFC competitions edit

Season Competition Round Nat. Club Home Away Aggregate
2006 AFC Champions League Group B   Al-Ain 1–2 1–2 4th
  Al-Hilal 1–1 1–3
  Mash'al 0–1 2–2

Against National Teams edit

Date Venue Opponent Result Scorers Source
2 May 1951 Basra, Iraq   Iraq 1–1 Tariq Khalil [21]
20 December 1958 Ahmadi, Kuwait   Kuwait 8–0 M. Manthar (2), K. Allawi (2), N. Lafta (2), W. Dawood (2) [21]
27 February 1959 Basra, Iraq   Algeria 2–3 Sabeeh Darwish (2) [149]
20 December 1972 Basra, Iraq   China 0–1 [150]
21 August 2015 İzmit, Turkey   Bahrain 0–0 [151]
23 August 2015 İzmit, Turkey   Libya 1–0 Ziyad Ahmed [152]
24 March 2017 Antalya, Turkey   Turkmenistan 1–0 Ahmed Yasser [153]
25 February 2018 Basra, Iraq   Iraq 0–0 [154]

Top Goalscorers edit

As of 1 April 2024.
Note: The statistic concerns only the goals scored in the Iraqi league since its launch in Iraq, that is, since 1974. The statistics that precede the league are unknown.
Players who are still active with the club are in bold.
# Nat. Name Goals years
  Jalil Hanoon 73 1969–1989
  Adel Nasser 55 1986–2003
  Mohammed Jabbar Shokan 54 2009–Present
  Ihsan Hadi 39 1998–2012
  Nazar Abdul Zahra 36 1980–1993
  Nasser Talla Dahilan 33 1999–2013
  Hussam Ibrahim 30 2005–2017
  Ali Al-Diwan 29 1987–2002

Presidents and managers edit

List of presidents edit

This is a list of Al-Minaa SC presidents and chairmen from its foundation in 1931.[155]

List of presidents

Name Nationality Period
C. F. Neikell   United Kingdom 1931–32
Bey Forde   United Kingdom 1932–43
Donald Langdon   United Kingdom 1944–45
Rajab Al-Ni'ma   Iraq 1946–47
R. C. Klette   United Kingdom 1947–49
G. T. Johnson   United Kingdom 1949–51
Abdul Amir Rahmatallah   Iraq 1951–62
Mohammed Tariq Al-Katib   Iraq 1962–63
Yousef Al-Amer   Iraq 1963
Nasser Mohammed Khan   Iraq 1964–66
Tariq Widad Al-Katib   Iraq 1966–67
Mohammed Tariq Al-Katib   Iraq 1967–69
Adnan Ali Al-Qassab   Iraq 1969–77
Faleh Mahmoud Al-Musa   Iraq 1977–80
Mohammed Lafta Ojoom   Iraq Feb. 2, 1980–May 29, 1982
Talib Hashim Abbas   Iraq 1982–90
Abdul Wahab Al-Na'eb   Iraq 1990–92
Talib Hashim Abbas   Iraq 1992–2003
Hadi Ahmed   Iraq 2004–07
Rahim Karim   Iraq Jun. 2, 2007 – May 30, 2009
Salah Khudhair Abboud   Iraq May 30, 2009 – Jun. 1, 2012
Omran Radhi Thani   Iraq June 1, 2012–Mar. 13, 2016
Jalil Hanoon   Iraq Mar. 13, 2016–Feb. 5, 2017
Abdul Razzaq Ahmed (interim)   Iraq Feb. 5, 2017–Aug. 22, 2017
Jalil Hanoon   Iraq Aug. 22, 2017–Aug. 29, 2018
Asaad Abdul Razzaq (interim)   Iraq Aug. 29, 2018–Dec. 8, 2018
Hadi Ahmed   Iraq Dec. 8, 2018–Sep. 4, 2019
Mohammed Jaber Al-Jaberi   Iraq Nov. 3, 2019–Jan. 4, 2022
Jalil Hanoon   Iraq Jan. 4, 2022–May 21, 2022
Adel Nasser (interim)   Iraq May 21, 2022–Jan. 26, 2023
Farhan Al-Farttousi   Iraq Jan. 26, 2023–Oct. 9, 2023
Ahmed Khalaf Thijeel (interim)   Iraq Oct. 13, 2023–Nov. 20, 2023
Alaa Abdul Khaliq (interim)   Iraq Nov. 20, 2023–Jan. 11, 2024
Farhan Al-Farttousi (interim)   Iraq Jan. 11, 2024–Present

Managerial history edit

This list includes the team coaches after the end of World War II and the return of the club to engage in sports activity.[156]

Notable players edit

For a list of all Al-Minaa players, see Al-Minaa SC players.

Captains edit

This list includes the team's captains since the club's participation in the Iraqi League for the first time.

Years Position Captain
1974–1978 Forward   Abdul Razzaq Ahmed
1978–1983 Defender   Rahim Karim
1983–1986 Midfielder   Hadi Ahmed
1986–1988 Forward   Jalil Hanoon
1988–1990 Forward   Aqeel Hato
1990–1991 Defender   Qasim Jabbar
1991–1992 Defender   Karim Jassim
1992–1995 Goalkeeper   Aqeel Abdul Mohsin
1995–1996 Defender   Asaad Abdul Razzaq
1996–1997 Forward   Mohammed Abdul Hussein
1997–2001 Defender   Asaad Abdul Razzaq
2001–2002 Midfielder   Ali Al-Diwan
2002–2003 Defender   Musa Fayyadh
2003–2005 Forward   Ammar Hussein
2005–2008 Defender   Emad Aoda
2008–2010 Defender   Sajjad Abdul Kadhim
2010–2012 Forward   Mohammed Nasser Shakroun
2012–2014 Midfielder   Nayef Falah
2014–2015 Midfielder   Omar Alaa Ahmad
2015–2016 Goalkeeper   Karrar Ibrahim
2017 Goalkeeper   Noor Sabri
2017–2018 Defender   Mohammed Jabbar Rubat
2018–2019 Forward   Sultan Jassim
2019–2021 Midfielder   Hussam Malik
2021 Defender   Hamza Adnan
2021–2022 Defender   Ahmed Khalid
2022 Forward   Mohammed Jabbar Shokan
2022–2023 Defender   Karrar Mohammed
2023 Defender   Mohammed Abdul-Zahra
2023– Defender   Abdullah Mohsin

Honours edit

Major edit

 
King Faisal II awards medals to Al-Minaa’s players after Al-Minaa won the Iraq FA Basra Premier League in 1949.

National edit

Regional edit

Minor edit

 
Al-Minaa captain Karim Allawi receives the Hanna Al-Sheikh trophy after the team won the championship in 1951.
  • Hanna Al-Sheikh Cup:[157]
    • Winners (11): including 1947–48, 1950–51 (record)
  • Al-Minaa Cup:[158][159]
    • Winners (2): 1948–49, 1949–50
  • Al-Shamkhany Cup:
    • Winners (2): 1947–48, 1948–49
    • Runners-up (1): 1949–50
  • Thaghr al-Iraq Championship:
  • Sabeeh Abed Ali Cup:[160]
    • Winners (1): 2004
  • Peace and Friendship Cup:
  • Basra Mutasarrif Cup:
    • Winners (1): 1956
  • Happiness Cup:
    • Winners (1): 1956
  • Regent's Cup:
    • Winners (1): 1949–50
  • Asfar Knockout Cup:
    • Winners (1): 1948–49
    • Runners-up (1): 1947–48
  • Al-Faw Liberation Championship
    • Runners-up (1): 1988
  • Industries Exhibition Cup[161]
    • Runners-up (1): 1953–54

Rankings edit

CWR All-Time Club World Ranking edit

As of 4 July 2015[162]
Rank Club Association Points
2791   Alliance Dudelange UEFA 3
2791   Allied Bank Limited AFC 3
2791   Al-Minaa AFC 3
2791   Al-Oruba AFC 3
2791   Al-Orouba
minaa, minaa, sports, club, arabic, نادي, الميناء, الرياضي, port, sports, club, iraqi, multi, sport, club, based, maqal, basra, that, participates, iraq, stars, league, tier, iraqi, football, most, popular, clubs, iraq, particularly, south, became, first, club. Al Minaa Sports Club Arabic نادي الميناء الرياضي lit Port Sports Club is an Iraqi multi sport club based in Al Maqal Basra that participates in the Iraq Stars League the top tier of Iraqi football It is one of the most popular clubs in Iraq particularly in the south and became the first club outside Baghdad to win the Iraqi Premier League Al MinaaFull nameAl Minaa Sports ClubNickname s Al Safana The Sailors Al Areeq The Deep Rooted Founded22 November 1931 92 years ago 22 November 1931 GroundAl Minaa Olympic StadiumCapacity30 000ChairmanFarhan Al FarttousiManagerHassan AhmedLeagueIraq Stars League2022 23Iraqi First Division League 1st of 24 promoted WebsiteClub websiteHome coloursAway coloursCurrent seasonActive departments of Al Minaa SCFootball Football Academy 1 2 Futsal 3 4 Basketball 5 Athletics 3 Taekwondo 3 Karate 5 Wrestling 3 4 Weightlifting 4 Boxing 5 4 Bodybuilding 4 Futnet 6 Al Minaa was founded on November 22 1931 in Al Maqal In 1974 the club was merged with another team called Al Bareed to form a single club called Al Muwasalat and it was a strange situation because the Al Bareed team were based in Baghdad while Al Minaa were based in Basra and the two teams met in Baghdad on the day of the match only so after just one season the club was dissolved and Al Minaa returned in their place In 1978 the team won the national league title for the first time After a lean period in the post war years the team finished second in the league in the 2004 05 season and therefore qualified for the 2006 AFC Champions League becoming the first Iraqi club from outside Baghdad to play in this tournament For a long time the club was considered to be one of the Iraqi football clubs that had its own style of play and the team practised only under the supervision and training of coaches who graduated from the club until the beginning of 2011 when the club started to depend on foreign coaches Contents 1 History 1 1 Foundation and early years 1931 1951 1 2 Matches with foreign teams 1952 1972 1 3 Golden years and League title 1973 1979 1 4 Years of war and chaos 1980 2003 1 5 Gradual return and Asian prominence 2004 2006 1 6 Last five years of local dependence 2006 2011 1 7 Eight coaches in three seasons 2011 2014 1 8 Title challenge under Al Sayed 2014 2016 1 9 Administrative problems amp relegation 2016 2022 1 10 Recent history 2022 2 Kit 2 1 Historical kits 2 2 Kit manufacturers and shirt sponsors 3 Stadium 4 Supporters 5 Rivalries 5 1 Basra derby 5 2 Al Araqa derby 6 Players 6 1 First team squad 6 2 Reserves team squad 6 3 Under 19s and Academy 6 4 Retired numbers 7 Current staff 8 Board members 9 Records 9 1 League history 9 2 Performance in AFC competitions 9 3 Against National Teams 9 4 Top Goalscorers 10 Presidents and managers 10 1 List of presidents 10 2 Managerial history 11 Notable players 11 1 Captains 12 Honours 12 1 Major 12 1 1 National 12 1 2 Regional 12 2 Minor 13 Rankings 13 1 CWR All Time Club World Ranking 14 References 15 External linksHistory editFoundation and early years 1931 1951 edit Al Minaa Sports Club was formed by some of the British sailors and workers serving in the Marine Transportation Company in Basra on the banks of the Shatt Al Arab after Mandatory Iraq where Colonel Sir John Ward was the director of company in the 1920s When they were forming gatherings sports were practiced and football was the most important 7 After the founding of Al Maqal City and establishment the General Company for Ports on March 1 1931 by Colonel Sir Ward under the auspices of King Faisal and the transfer of employees in the company to Al Maqal the club coordinated with the company s management to make the green squares in the park located there to be a playing field for them 8 and after a few months the company announced the establishment of the club officially and Mr C F Neikell was chosen as the first president of the club The first football team consisted of Markar Avadician Kadhim Dawood Dehjat Ohaness Liu Steven Samuel Akesh Aziz Hormuz Rashad Al Mufti Khudair Abbas and others 9 After the founding of the Iraq Football Association Al Minaa participated in the Iraq FA Basra Premier League a regional league for teams in Basra organised by the Basra branch of the IFA 10 Al Minaa won the league title in its first season beating Sharikat Naft Al Basra 1 0 in the final 11 Al Minaa also participated in the first ever national knockout cup in Iraq the 1948 49 Iraq FA Cup but were knocked out in the quarter finals 2 0 by Baghdad based side Al Haras Al Malaki 12 Al Minaa went on to finish in third place in the regional league in both the 1949 50 and 1950 51 seasons 13 14 nbsp Al Minaa squad in 1950In 1950 Al Minaa played its first match outside the country as the first Iraqi team to play outside Iraq they played against Shahin at the Amjadiyeh Stadium in Tahran and the result was 2 2 The team was composed of these players Mustafa Hameed Karim Allawi Noori Lafta Jassim Bader Karim Jaber Djali Najeeb Subhi Mohammed Zaki Alwan Hussein Michael Stanley Salih Mohammed and Sabeeh Darwish 12 And the team played several friendly matches with other Iranian clubs They played against Arteshe and the game ended in a 2 1 victory for Al Minaa and they played against Taj Ahvaz and won that match 5 1 They also played against Khorramshahr and won 3 1 and they faced Abadan F C and won that game too 12 The team benefited greatly from those matches In 1951 the team won the Hanna Al Sheikh Cup which was organized for Basra based teams 15 And in the same year the first Iraqi national football team was established Coach Dhia Habib invited three players from the Al Minaa club to join them Percy Lynsdale Saeed Easho and Karim Allawi to play against Turkey in Turkey Before traveling and on Wednesday 2 May 1951 Al Minaa played with adding a player from Sharikat Naft Al Basra club Shaker Ismail against Iraq in Basra and ended the match a draw 1 1 Tariq Khalil scored for Al Minaa 16 17 18 Matches with foreign teams 1952 1972 edit The 1950s and 1960s were periods of preparation for Al Minaa and the team played several friendly matches with different teams in this period some of these clubs were strong European teams and other were strong Asian teams These matches helped the club develop the qualities of the players in terms of tactics and technique and other aspects On 6 January 1956 Al Minaa played with Tehran F C and lost 3 0 19 and after a year they played with a number of English sailors teams who were arriving in Basra in those years 20 On December 20 1958 Al Minaa team travelled to Kuwait playing against Kuwait national football team in a friendly match in Ahmadi defeating Kuwait 8 0 scoring goals by Mohammed Manther Karim Allawi Nouri Lafta and Waleed Dawood each with two goals It was a very big result against a national team 21 In 1961 under the leadership of Danish coach Ingvard Hansen the team played with a number of Iranian teams beating Abadan F C 4 3 and losing to Shahin 1 0 22 and in February 1962 the Romanian club Steaua București visited Iraq and Al Minaa under the same coach played with them and lost 4 1 then Al Minaa played with the Syrian team Damascus and won 2 0 23 In February 1963 the team under the same coach played with another Romanian club Petrolul Ploiești and lost 2 0 to them 24 The 1962 63 season saw Al Minaa win the Iraq FA Basra First Division the top tier league in the region by winning three and drawing one of their four games The club s B team were the league s runners up 25 In November 1965 the team played the Kuwaiti club Al Qadsia and the match ended in a 3 3 draw 26 In September 1968 the team traveled to Syria and played with some its teams and the results were good 27 and in 1969 the team under the leadership of coach Abdul Salam Saud played against Bahraini club Al Nasr and beat them 4 1 they then played against the Soviet club Neftci and lost 1 0 28 On January 17 1970 Al Minaa played against Yugoslavian club Sarajevo and lost 3 1 29 and over a year later on January 29 1971 they played under the leadership of coach Hadi Hassan Wasfi with Czechoslovak club Spartak Trnava and won 2 0 Waleed Dawood and Abdul Razzak Ahmed scored 30 On December 20 1972 Al Minaa under the leadership of coach Hamza Qasim played against the China national football team lost 1 0 31 These matches had a significant impact in making Al Minaa stronger team Golden years and League title 1973 1979 edit See also Iraq Stars League By 1973 Al Minaa had amassed 15 regional league titles in Basra In the 1973 74 season Al Minaa played in Iraq s new nationwide league under the leadership of coach Hamza Qasim and finished the season in third place 9 In the 1974 75 season the first nationwide league of clubs was formed and Al Minaa were merged with another team called Al Bareed to form a club called Al Muwasalat which finished third place in the league 9 nbsp nbsp Sattar nbsp Sabeeh nbsp Rahim nbsp Azeez nbsp Abdul Ridha nbsp Raad nbsp Hadi nbsp Alaa nbsp Ali nbsp Abdul Razzaq c nbsp JalilStarting line up for the 1977 78 Iraqi League Final home match against Al Shorta on 27 March 1978 Al Minaa began to participate in the Iraqi Premier League as an independent club in the 1975 76 season under the leadership of coach Najem Abdullah and finished the season in fourth place 9 The team was not well under coach Faleh Hassan Wasfi in the 1976 77 season and finished in sixth place 9 The first match in Iraqi Premier League history to be televised was played in this season between Al Minaa and Al Zawraa at Al Shaab Stadium on Friday March 11 1977 which ended 5 1 for Al Zawraa 32 The 1977 78 season was the golden season for the team when they won the league title and the title moved for the first time from the clubs of the capital Baghdad to Basra under coach Jamil Hanoon The team collected 21 points by winning eight matches and drawing in five matches they did not lose any matches in this season The Al Minaa player Jalil Hanoon won the top scorer award with 11 goals in the league 33 The champions squad included the following players Sattar Farhan Sameer Nori Aziz Abdullah Sabeeh Abed Ali Abdul Redha Hussein Rahim Karim Khalil Ibrahim Hadi Ahmed Alaa Ahmed Ali Abdul Zahra Abdul Razzaq Ahmed Jalil Hanoon Hassan Abdul Hussein Adnan Saddam Raad Abdullah and Hadi Jabbar 9 Before the league start Al Minaa played in a pre season football friendly tournament in Arbil and the team played against Arbil and won 0 6 and won against Salahaddin in two matches 7 0 and 8 0 depending on this the team was well prepared for the league championship 34 The first match of this league season was on October 1 1977 and the last match was on March 31 1978 Al Minaa started the first two matches under coach leadership Faleh Hassan Wasfi who resigned after being drawn against Salahaddin 0 0 and Al Sinaa 0 0 the team played after that under the leadership of coach Jamil Hanoon who took over the job and led the team to a series of successes began to win against defending champions Al Zawraa 2 3 in Baghdad 34 In the last match Al Minaa played against Al Shorta at Al Minaa Stadium in Basra and Al Minaa won 1 0 thanks to Jalil Hanoon s goal on 50th minutes The Al Minaa goalkeeper Sattar Farhan saved a penalty kick obtained by Al Shorta in the final minutes of the match 35 In 1978 79 season The team played under the leadership of coaches Sabeeh Abed Ali and Abdul Mahdi Hadi and finished the season in fourth place after being equated with second placed Al Shorta and third Al Talaba in the number of points 15 points who applied it on goals difference 9 Years of war and chaos 1980 2003 edit See also Iran Iraq War Gulf War and Sanctions against Iraq At the beginning of the Iran Iraq War in 1980 Basra became a battleground and the eight year war broke all areas of life in Basra including the field of sports Al Minaa in particular had many players recruited and transported to the battlefield and the team lost their playing field and did not find a training ground Their financial allocations were significantly reduced and the stars of the team left to play in the big clubs of Baghdad In this period the Iraqi Ba athist government worked on the separation of the club and GCPI in terms of funding so the club has become dependent on self financing which was very poor and as a result the team was composed of 11 players only players without substitutes 36 In the 1985 86 season Al Minaa were not able to play in Basra due to the fall of the bombs and the lack of safe stadiums so their matches were moved to Amarah and because of these harsh conditions the team finished in 14th place and were relegated to the Iraq Division One for the first time in its history 34 But the team was determined to return to play in the Iraqi Premier League and they managed to win the Iraq Division One title in 1987 and thus were able to return to play in the Premier League again in the 1987 88 season 34 They were runners up of the Al Faw Liberation Championship in 1988 a tournament hosted at Al Minaa Stadium that featured Al Talaba Al Zawraa and Al Tayaran 37 The club remained unstable after the Second Gulf War which began in 1991 and Sanctions against Iraq 38 later 1991 2003 which destroyed the sport in the whole of Iraq 39 The ruling Ba ath Party has been accused of treating the club with racist treatment including the opening match of Maysan Stadium in 1987 between Al Minaa and Al Rasheed club sponsored by the ruling party in Iraq which ended in a 0 0 draw attended by the son of president Uday Saddam Hussein and when he found that the fans cheer for Al Minaa team said If this stadium could have been moved to Baghdad I would have done so this audience is not worth it 40 And another of the manifestations of racism that the Ba athist government was accused of is what happened in the league in 1991 92 season at the Al Minaa match against Al Karkh on Friday 8 May 1992 at the Al Minaa Stadium and the attendance of more than 20 000 which ended for Al Karkh 3 2 The match was led by international referee Subhi Rahim who scored an incorrect penalty against Al Minaa and the most famous red card against Al Minaa player Asaad Abdul Razzaq which led to the protest of the supporters of the club then the Al Karkh coach Adnan Dirjal was accused of shooting Al Minaa supporters from his pistol 41 resulting in serious injuries among supporters of the club The Football Association punished Al Minaa players and because Dirjal led the Iraq national football team in the 1994 FIFA World Cup qualification he prevented Al Minaa players from playing in the national team including Mohammed Abdul Hussein who won the title of best player in the league for the 1992 93 season 42 Among the practices that one of the most important players in Al Minaa was exposed to when Sabah Mirza Mahmoud a close associate of Saddam Hussein became president of the Al Shabab Club and ordered Hadi Ahmed the most important player in Al Minaa team to leave his club and moving to Al Shabab Club but Ahmed refused because of his loyalty to the club and was severely punished Also Uday Saddam Hussein imprisoned him in Al Radwaniyah Prison shaved his hair and forced him to retire 43 44 Despite these difficult circumstances the team managed to reach fourth place in Umm al Ma arik Championship and fourth place in the league in 1998 99 season 45 and reach the semifinals of the 1999 2000 Iraq FA Cup where they were came out of the championship after losing from Al Zawraa who won the title that season 46 and in the 2002 03 Iraq FA Cup also reached the semifinals came out of the championship after losing from Al Talaba who won the title that season 47 Gradual return and Asian prominence 2004 2006 edit With the change that took place after the 2003 invasion of Iraq and the overthrowing of Saddam Hussein GCPI took care of the club and started to bring the team back to their natural position slowly and the 2004 05 season was the distinctive season Under the leadership of coach Abdul Karim Jassim Jombi Al Minaa won the Southern Group in the First Stage and advanced to the Elite Stage where they won Group A In the semi finals they managed to beat Al Zawraa in Baghdad 1 0 and tied 0 0 with them in Basra to advance to the final where they played against Al Quwa Al Jawiya The match was played in Baghdad which gave Al Quwa Al Jawiya an advantage Al Minaa lost the match 2 0 to take the runner up title and the opportunity to represent Iraq in the next AFC Champions League the team became the first team from outside Baghdad to represent Iraq in the continental championship 48 After the return of the Iran Iraq relations Al Minaa participated in the 2004 Peace and Friendship Cup in Ahvaz under the leadership of coach Abdul Karim Jassim has won the tournament having played against Iranian clubs have won it in semi final the team played against Esteghlal Ahvaz B and won 2 1 Al Mina a s goals were scored by Nasser Talla Dahilan at the 35th minute and Qais Essa at the 75th minute 49 in final played against Foolad Khuzestan B and won 1 0 the winning goal was scored by Alaa Aasi at the 44th minute of the game 50 The team under the leadership of coach Aqeel Hato did not enter the 2006 AFC Champions League to compete for the title given the weaknesses of the team most of them were young and they needed experience in matches like this but as a chance to play with strong teams and prepare for the Iraqi Premier League 51 52 But Al Minaa embarrassed some of the big teams in Asia and by earning draws against the likes of Mash al 53 and Al Hilal 54 Last five years of local dependence 2006 2011 edit After the team were knocked out of the AFC Champions League the experienced players joined other clubs 55 and thus began a new era for the club under the leadership of young coach Asaad Abdul Razzaq 56 for two seasons with and the young players who have grown up in the club The team entered the 2006 07 season and managed to finish second in their First Stage group behind Al Najaf to qualify for the Elite Stage 57 but team was not able to get to the semi finals as they finished fourth behind Arbil Al Talaba and Karbalaa 58 nbsp nbsp Saddam nbsp Jassim nbsp M A Majeed nbsp Sajjad nbsp M A Jabbar nbsp Omar nbsp M Ghazi nbsp Bashar nbsp Faisal nbsp Ammar nbsp Ihsan c Starting line up for the 2009 Thaghr Al Iraq Championship Final against Naft Al Junoob on 22 December 2009 In the 2007 08 season a similar thing repeated under the same coach where the team finished in 3rd place in their First Stage group behind Karbalaa and Al Najaf having won eight matches drawn six and lost two but could not go beyond the Elite Stage 59 where they finished in fourth place in Group A behind Arbil Al Quwa Al Jawiya and Kirkuk 60 In the following three seasons the team was under the leadership of young coach Adel Nasser 61 and these were not good seasons as they were knocked out in the First Stage in all three seasons In the 2008 09 season the team finished in sixth place in their group where team won ten matches drew six and lost eight matches 62 and in the 2009 10 season the team ended up in seventh place in the group stage where they won 16 matches drew 11 and lost seven 63 In pre season and under the leadership of coach Adel Nasser Al Minaa won 2009 Thaghr Al Iraq Championship title Al Minaa qualified for the final game after collecting 7 points by defeating Naft Maysan 3 1 Ghaz Al Junoob 4 1 64 and won the Thaghr Al Iraq Championship after beating Naft Al Junoob in the final game with a score of 2 1 Al Mina a s goals were scored by Nayef Falah in the 46th minute and Hassan Hadi Ahmad in the 79th minute On the other hand the sole goal of Naft Al Junoob was scored by Muhannad Youssef at the 10th minute of the game The two teams shared the lead of the game that was led by referee Ahmad Shaker The referee gave red cards to 3 players Amjad Hameed Alaa Nayrouz from Naft Al Junoob team and Al Minaa player Ihsan Hadi 65 In the third season 2010 11 the team under the same coach finished in fourth place in their First Stage group with 12 wins nine draws and five defeats 66 Eight coaches in three seasons 2011 2014 edit The club was always praised for depending on coaches and players that had graduated from the club itself but since the 2011 12 season the club went a different way by contracting with a professional coach of Norwegian nationality Iraqi origin called Younis Al Qattan 67 But the club s management did not settle on one coach during the season so they changed the coach seven times during these three years In the 2011 12 season the team under the leadership of Al Qattan was not successful with two wins two losses and six draws so the manager was changed 68 The team began playing under the leadership of Rahim Hameed 69 and they ended the Premier League in 11th place and in the 2012 2013 season the club returned to the local coach Aqeel Hato 70 but this did not last very long as he was sacked having won four matches drawn four matches and lost two matches and the team played under the leadership of the young coach Ghazi Fahad 71 afterwards but this also did not last long as he was fired having won five matches drawn one match and lost five matches 72 The club then appointed coach Asaad Abdul Razzaq 73 74 who led the team to finish the season in eighth place having won eight matches and lost six with one draw and the team began the season relying on foreign players Al Minaa used five foreign professionals from Europe Africa and Asia in this season 75 In the 2013 14 season the same thing happened as happened in the previous season where three coaches led the team in a row They started the season led by coach Jamal Ali 76 and who resigned because the results were not good especially after the 2 1 loss to Al Karkh 77 Ali won two matches as coach drew four and lost three so the club turned the leadership of the team to his assistant Ammar Hussein who also did not remain long he resigned after the 3 0 loss to Al Zawra a and he won three matches drew four and lost three 78 The club then appointed coach Hassan Mawla 79 who finished the season in 11th place and he led the team for just four matches winning one losing one and drawing two and he could not continue the rest of the matches because of Iraq Football Association suspended the Premier League and considered it finished on June 18 2014 80 Title challenge under Al Sayed 2014 2016 edit In the 2014 15 season the team was under coach Asaad Abdul Razzaq 81 and he was sacked after six matches because the results were not satisfactory he won one match lost three and drew two leaving the team in eighth place in their First Stage group Al Minaa contracted with the Syrian professional coach Hussam Al Sayed 82 who led the team through 13 matches until the end of the group without a loss where the team move into second place in the group behind Al Shorta nbsp Al Minaa players lining up before a match in 2014 In the Elite Stage they played against three teams Duhok Naft Al Junoob and Al Quwa Al Jawiya The team was competing to top the group which would have qualified them for the final but mistakes from assistant referees shattered that dream where the assistant referee Maitham Khamat allowed an offside goal to stand in favor of Al Quwa Al Jawiya against Naft Al Junoob while assistant referee Haider Hameed did not count a legitimate goal for Al Minaa against Duhok due to offside which lost them two points 83 These cases deprived the team from getting to the final where the team is equal to Al Quwa Al Jawiya in the number of points ten points but Al Quwa Al Jawiya had a better goal difference 84 In the third place match they were set to play against Al Shorta but Al Shorta declared that they pulled out of the match But strangely Al Shorta ended up turning up for the match and Al Minaa was not prepared to match them so they withdrew meaning the team finished in fourth place in the Premier League 85 In the 2015 16 season the coach Hussam Al Sayed led the team to a series of wins against strong teams defeating the likes Erbil 3 1 Al Quwa Al Jawiya 2 1 and Al Shorta 1 0 Al Minaa were in first place in their First Stage group 86 with six wins one draw and two losses but the many mistakes for the referees against the team 87 88 and then a number of problems arose between the club management and some players 89 90 and other reasons 91 which caused a decline in the level of the team although the team still managed to qualify for the Elite Group Their performances in the Elite Group were not up to scratch so the team ended the season in sixth place 92 Administrative problems amp relegation 2016 2022 edit In the 2016 17 season Al Minaa contracted with the Romanian professional coach Marin Ion 93 94 and he was sacked after twenty seven matches because the chaos that appeared in the team due to the weakness of the personality of the coach and the results were not satisfactory he won fourteen matches lost four and drew nine and lost both Basra Derbies against Al Bahri 2 1 Naft Al Junoob 1 0 leaving the team in fourth place in their First Stage in league 95 then Al Minaa signed local coach Ghazi Fahad 96 97 who finished the league in sixth place 98 99 In the 2016 17 Iraq FA Cup Al Minaa reached the semi finals but could not reach the final after losing from Naft Al Wasat on penalties in the match that ended 1 1 100 Then the team ended the season without any good results due to several problems within the club 101 The administrative problems continued within the club where two departments were formed and each claimed to be the legitimate administration There was also a conflict between the management of the club and the Ministry of Transport the owner which led to a financial crisis in which the important players migrated to the Baghdad clubs and change of coaches in the same season was repeated within the club all of which led to a decline in the level of the team and ranked last in the ranking of the league teams for more than a season 15th place in the 2017 18 season and 17th place in the 2018 19 season 102 In the 2021 22 season the level of the team declined so much that it did not win during the whole season except only 3 times and the administration resigned after the disastrous mistakes they made during the season and a temporary administration was formed but they could not do anything 103 and in the end the team occupied the 19th place penultimate and was officially relegated to the Iraq Division One 104 105 Recent history 2022 edit After the end of the season the Football Association did not specify the mechanism for the participation of clubs and their number in the subsequent season and the matter remained ambiguous Orally and in the media the Football Association decided that the system of playing in the league will be according to the professional league system and any club that did not complete its file according to the Club Licensing Law will not participate 106 The president of Football Association Adnan Dirjal promised the president of Al Minaa club and the governor of Basra that the Al Minaa team would play in the Iraqi Premier League and not in the Iraq Division One if the club completed the licensing file Based on the foregoing the club contracted with coach Basim Qasim and five professionals paid all their debts and completed the licensing file 107 108 But the club was surprised by the decision of the Football Association to reverse its decision to play according to the professional league system and not to accredit the licensed clubs and that they were deceived by the Football Association 109 110 111 Kit editAl Minaa s traditional colours are blue and white The home kit is blue and the away kit is white For much of Al Minaa s history their home colours have been bright blue shirts with white sleeves and white shorts though this has not always been the case The shirt was blue and was worn with blue shorts and white socks in 1977 78 season when won league title for the first time 112 In some seasons the team used the home kit that was blue and painted in yellow or white and in the away kit use the white and painted in blue or black or red or some of these colors together But in the 1998 1999 season only the kit was green and this was unfamiliar 113 Historical kits edit nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp The first kit worn by the club in 1931 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 1940s 1960s seasons nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 1967 68 season nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 1977 78 League winners nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 1978 85 League seasons nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 1985 86 League nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 1991 92 League nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 1998 99 League nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 2000 01 League nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 2002 03 League nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 2004 05 League Final nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 2014 15 League nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 2014 15 League nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 2015 16 League nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 2016 17 League nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 2018 19 League Kit manufacturers and shirt sponsors edit Al Minaa s shirts have been made by manufacturers including Adidas from the 1970s until 1982 Puma 1982 1984 Adidas 1984 1989 Uhlsport 2001 2003 Macron 2011 2014 Uhlsport 2014 2016 Adidas 2016 2017 and Jako 2017 2018 Uhlsport from 2018 Like those of most other Iraqi football clubs Al Minaa s shirts have featured sponsors logos since the 1980s sponsors include Samsung 1999 2000 Elaph Islamic Bank 2015 2016 Fuchs Petrolub 2016 2017 and GCPI 2017 2020 114 Stadium edit nbsp Basra Sports City was a temporary ground of Al Minaa from May 23 2015 Al Minaa Stadium was founded in the 1930s and contained an open field with a stand on one side In the 1960 61 season lighting was installed in the stadium and the stadium was considered the second best stadium in the Arab world after the Alexandria Stadium in Egypt 115 In the mid 1980s terraces with three strips were placed around stadium in order to accommodate 4 000 spectators In 1995 circular strips were built around the ground in order to accommodate 10 000 spectators The opening match of the new stadium was Al Minaa match against Samarra and ended for Al Minaa 1 0 Adel Nasser scored from a penalty kick 116 Construction work for Al Minaa Olympic Stadium began on March 22 2011 117 118 119 to be the club s new stadium with a capacity of 30 000 spectators being built on an area of 52 acres 120 Al Minaa played at the Naft Al Junoob Stadium during the first phase of the 2012 13 season for the period from 20 October 2012 to 1 March 2013 In the second phase of the same season the team was played at the Basra Stadium Al Jamhoriya for the period from 27 April 2014 to 4 September and they were training at Al Hawta Stadium in this season On October 1 2013 Al Zubair Olympic Stadium was inaugurated and the team played all home matches at it during the 2013 14 season and the 2014 15 season and until May 23 2015 when the Basra Sports City became a temporary stadium for the team 121 Since October 2017 Basra Sports City was officially leased to club 122 nbsp Al Minaa Olympic Stadium has officially become the team s home stadium in January 26 2024 In low attendance matches Al Minaa played at Basra Sports City s secondary stadium also known as Al Fayhaa Stadium which has a capacity of 10 000 spectators 123 On December 26 2022 the Al Minaa Olympic Stadium was inaugurated by the Ministry of Youth and Sports in preparation for the establishment of the 25th Arabian Gulf Cup 124 125 where the tournament will take place on this stadium in addition to the Basra Sports City The opening included a ceremony in which the retired Al Minaa stars were honored 126 After that a friendly match took place between Al Minaa and Kuwait SC 127 in which Kuwait won 2 1 Ali Hussain 57 and Taha Yassine Khenissi 66 scored the double for Kuwait and Karrar Mohammed scored for Al Minaa from a penalty kick in the 89th minute 128 129 130 On January 8 2024 the Minister of Youth and Sports announced that Al Minaa team will begin playing home matches on Al Minaa Olympic Stadium starting from the fourteenth round of Iraq Stars League 131 On February 3 2024 Al Minaa played its first official match on this Stadium in the second round of the FA Cup where it faced Naft Al Wasat and they were able to score three goals The first was by Ayad Abed Farhan in the first half and the second and third were by Salem Ahmed and Hameed Ali Hameed in the second half The match ended 3 1 and Al Minaa qualified for the next round of the tournament 132 133 Supporters edit nbsp Ultras Safana during Al Minaa match in October 2014Al Minaa fans often refer to themselves as Jamhoor Al Safana the name derived from the team s nickname Al Safana The fanbase is large and generally loyal in 2014 15 Al Minaa had the highest average League attendance for an Iraqi club 40 000 which was 66 6 of available capacity 134 Al Minaa has the Promoters Association which was established at the beginning of the club s starting point and remained supportive of the team in all their matches and traveled with them wherever they went 135 In June 2014 Al Minaa supporters founded a group known as Ultras Safana The supporters group has become well known throughout Iraqi football as one of the most passionate groups of football fans in Iraq and the group s banners and logos can be seen in any stadium that their club play in The number of group members is increasing The foundation of this group has significantly increased both the number of Al Minaa fans in stadiums and their presence in matches 136 Ultras Safana won the title of Best Ultras in the Iraqi league a year after its founding 137 as well as in the second consecutive year 138 The supporters of Al Minaa are very many spread throughout the provinces of Iraq and some live outside Iraq and was considered to be the best fans in the Iraqi league 137 139 140 Rivalries editBasra derby edit Al Minaa contest the Basra Derby with Naft Al Basra 141 142 formerly Naft Al Janoob until 2020 143 Since 2005 there have been 33 competitive Basra Derbies Al Minaa hold the precedence in these matches with 11 victories to Naft Al Basra s 9 there have been 13 draws The most decisive result in an Al Minaa Naft Al Basra game is Al Minaa s 4 1 victory at Al Mina a Stadium their home ground on March 11 2005 There have been two incidences of 3 1 Al Minaa have been won in both matches home in December 2005 and away in January 2006 The competition saw 62 goals scored 33 for Al Minaa and 29 for Naft Al Basra the individual player who scored the most goals was Al Minaa player Ihsan Hadi and Naft Al Basra player Bassim Ali each scored four goals And there are five players who scored for both teams they are Alaa Aasi Nasser Talla Dahilan Ahmed Hassan Sajjad Abdul Kadhim and Hussam Malik 144 Al Araqa derby edit There also exists a rivalry between Al Minaa and Al Quwa Al Jawiya which is sometimes called the Al Araqa derby because the two clubs are the oldest clubs in Iraq founded in 1931 145 146 Players editFirst team squad edit As of 5 February 2024Note Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules Players may hold more than one non FIFA nationality No Pos Nation Player2 DF nbsp IRQ Abdullah Mohsin captain 3 DF nbsp IRQ Zain Al Abidin Hussein4 DF nbsp IRQ Emad Yousef5 MF nbsp IRQ Ahmed Mohsin Ashour6 MF nbsp IRQ Haider Salem7 MF nbsp IRQ Ayad Abed Farhan10 FW nbsp IRQ Mohammed Shokan vice captain 11 MF nbsp IRQ Hatim Aysar12 FW nbsp IRQ Karrar Jaafar15 MF nbsp IRQ Mohammed Khudhair17 DF nbsp IRQ Muntadhar Hassan18 FW nbsp IRQ Salem Ahmed19 DF nbsp IRQ Hassan Odah22 GK nbsp IRQ Jaafar Shenaishil No Pos Nation Player23 DF nbsp IRQ Hussein Jabbar26 FW nbsp IRQ Sajjad Alaa28 MF nbsp IRQ Hamza Hadi Ahmed29 DF nbsp IRQ Karrar Al Amir Ali30 GK nbsp IRQ Mohammed Saadoun33 MF nbsp IRQ Abbas Yas 3rd captain 35 DF nbsp IRQ Mujtaba Ali36 DF nbsp IRQ Hameed Ali Hameed38 DF nbsp IRQ Mahdi Hashim39 MF nbsp IRQ Naji Nasser40 DF nbsp IRQ Mohammed Ghaleb42 DF nbsp IRQ Muslim Musa Fayyadh50 GK nbsp IRQ Mohammed Sabah GK nbsp IRQ Ammar AliReserves team squad edit As of 1 June 2023Note Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules Players may hold more than one non FIFA nationality No Pos Nation Player2 DF nbsp IRQ Muslim Ali3 DF nbsp IRQ Fadhl Sabah8 MF nbsp IRQ Mohammed Al Sadr9 FW nbsp IRQ Hasanain Waleed11 MF nbsp IRQ Abbas Tarish12 DF nbsp IRQ Mustafa Maher13 DF nbsp IRQ Hussein Hashim14 FW nbsp IRQ Hamza Shaowi No Pos Nation Player16 MF nbsp IRQ Zain Al Abidin Qais20 MF nbsp IRQ Haider Jabbar21 MF nbsp IRQ Hassan Faleh24 DF nbsp IRQ Hussein Abdul Razzaq28 MF nbsp IRQ Hussein Falah31 GK nbsp IRQ Ali Saad34 DF nbsp IRQ Yousef Hussein48 MF nbsp IRQ Hussein Abdul KarimUnder 19s and Academy edit Further information Al Minaa SC Under 19s and Academy As of 9 December 2022Players to have featured in a first team matchday squad for Al MinaaNote Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules Players may hold more than one non FIFA nationality No Pos Nation Player6 MF nbsp IRQ Daniel Waleed No Pos Nation Player38 DF nbsp IRQ Mahdi HashimRetired numbers edit Note Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules Players may hold more than one non FIFA nationality No Pos Nation Player20 GK nbsp IRQ Karrar Ibrahim posthumous honour 147 Current staff editPosition StaffManager nbsp Hassan AhmedAssistant coach nbsp Nasser Talla Dahilan nbsp Mahmoud YasserGoalkeeping Coach nbsp Qusay JabbarFitness coach nbsp Ali Mohammed JaberPhysiotherapist nbsp Fares AbdullahTeam Supervisor nbsp Abbas HassanUnder 19s Coach nbsp Mohammed Abdul HusseinUnder 16s Coach nbsp Fadhel NasserUnder 14s Coach nbsp Fadhel JatherBoard members editNote This administrative body was chosen temporarily by the Iraqi Olympic Committee until elections are held to form an official administrative body 148 Position StaffPresident nbsp Farhan Al FarttousiVice president nbsp Alaa Abdul KhaliqSecretary nbsp Raad Malik SharqiTreasurer nbsp Bahaa Al Deen HusseinMember of the Board nbsp Mohammed Abdul Hussein nbsp Yousef Rehaima nbsp Adel Nasser nbsp Ali Taleb Sharhan nbsp Aqeel HatoRecords editLeague history edit Season League Position Played Wins Draws Losses GF GA Points1975 76 Iraqi National League 4 24 12 7 5 29 18 311976 77 Iraqi National League 5 11 3 6 2 12 12 121977 78 Iraqi National League 1 13 8 5 0 27 10 211978 79 Iraqi National League 4 12 5 5 2 15 9 151979 80 Iraqi National League 10 22 7 6 9 26 29 201980 81 Iraqi National League 8 11 3 4 4 8 14 101981 82 Iraqi National League 9 22 5 7 10 22 30 171982 83 Iraqi National League 11 22 3 6 13 18 32 121983 84 Iraqi National League 12 24 5 5 14 22 48 151984 85 a Iraqi National League 1985 86 Iraqi National League 14 15 3 3 9 13 22 91986 87 Iraqi Second Division League 11987 88 Iraqi National League 12 30 5 13 12 22 34 231988 89 Iraqi Pan National League 8 141989 90 Iraqi Second Division League 11990 91 Iraqi National League 8 28 7 9 12 17 24 231991 92 Iraqi National League 9 32 12 13 13 39 42 371992 93 Iraqi National League 11 69 21 28 20 58 70 701993 94 Iraqi National League 17 50 12 21 17 42 58 451994 95 Iraqi National League 11 46 16 21 9 54 42 721995 96 Iraqi Advanced League 9 22 4 11 7 18 23 231996 97 Iraqi Premier League 8 30 9 10 11 22 32 371997 98 Iraqi Premier League 7 30 12 3 15 29 41 391998 99 Iraqi Premier League 4 30 14 8 8 35 29 501999 2000 Iraqi First Division League 8 50 20 24 6 56 28 842000 01 Iraqi Elite League 9 30 10 10 10 24 26 402001 02 Iraqi Elite League 10 38 13 10 15 39 45 492002 03 a Iraqi First Division League 2003 04 a Iraqi Premier League 2004 05 Iraqi Premier League 2 21 13 3 5 31 11 422005 06 Iraqi Premier League 10 16 9 4 3 26 16 312006 07 Iraqi Premier League 7 17 10 4 3 23 11 342007 08 Iraqi Premier League 10 24 10 9 5 15 18 392008 09 Iraqi Premier League 11 24 10 6 8 20 24 362009 10 Iraqi Premier League 13 34 16 11 7 36 23 592010 11 Iraqi Elite League 7 26 12 9 5 33 21 452011 12 Iraqi Elite League 11 38 13 11 14 40 44 502012 13 Iraqi Elite League 8 34 15 7 12 54 48 522013 14 Iraqi Premier League 11 23 6 10 7 26 27 282014 15 Iraqi Premier League 4 23 9 8 6 28 22 352015 16 Iraqi Premier League 6 25 11 7 7 36 30 402016 17 Iraqi Premier League 6 36 18 12 6 40 24 662017 18 Iraqi Premier League 15 38 8 17 13 34 47 412018 19 Iraqi Premier League 17 38 8 16 14 34 42 402019 20 a Iraqi Premier League 2020 21 Iraqi Premier League 8 38 12 13 13 45 44 492021 22 Iraqi Premier League 19 38 3 21 14 33 49 302022 23 Iraqi First Division League 1 23 14 7 2 40 16 49 a The league was not completed and was cancelled Performance in AFC competitions edit Season Competition Round Nat Club Home Away Aggregate2006 AFC Champions League Group B nbsp Al Ain 1 2 1 2 4th nbsp Al Hilal 1 1 1 3 nbsp Mash al 0 1 2 2Against National Teams edit Date Venue Opponent Result Scorers Source2 May 1951 Basra Iraq nbsp Iraq 1 1 Tariq Khalil 21 20 December 1958 Ahmadi Kuwait nbsp Kuwait 8 0 M Manthar 2 K Allawi 2 N Lafta 2 W Dawood 2 21 27 February 1959 Basra Iraq nbsp Algeria 2 3 Sabeeh Darwish 2 149 20 December 1972 Basra Iraq nbsp China 0 1 150 21 August 2015 Izmit Turkey nbsp Bahrain 0 0 151 23 August 2015 Izmit Turkey nbsp Libya 1 0 Ziyad Ahmed 152 24 March 2017 Antalya Turkey nbsp Turkmenistan 1 0 Ahmed Yasser 153 25 February 2018 Basra Iraq nbsp Iraq 0 0 154 Top Goalscorers edit As of 1 April 2024 Note The statistic concerns only the goals scored in the Iraqi league since its launch in Iraq that is since 1974 The statistics that precede the league are unknown Players who are still active with the club are in bold Nat Name Goals years1 nbsp Jalil Hanoon 73 1969 19892 nbsp Adel Nasser 55 1986 20033 nbsp Mohammed Jabbar Shokan 54 2009 Present4 nbsp Ihsan Hadi 39 1998 20125 nbsp Nazar Abdul Zahra 36 1980 19936 nbsp Nasser Talla Dahilan 33 1999 20137 nbsp Hussam Ibrahim 30 2005 20178 nbsp Ali Al Diwan 29 1987 2002Presidents and managers editList of presidents edit This is a list of Al Minaa SC presidents and chairmen from its foundation in 1931 155 List of presidentsName Nationality PeriodC F Neikell nbsp United Kingdom 1931 32Bey Forde nbsp United Kingdom 1932 43Donald Langdon nbsp United Kingdom 1944 45Rajab Al Ni ma nbsp Iraq 1946 47R C Klette nbsp United Kingdom 1947 49G T Johnson nbsp United Kingdom 1949 51Abdul Amir Rahmatallah nbsp Iraq 1951 62Mohammed Tariq Al Katib nbsp Iraq 1962 63Yousef Al Amer nbsp Iraq 1963Nasser Mohammed Khan nbsp Iraq 1964 66Tariq Widad Al Katib nbsp Iraq 1966 67Mohammed Tariq Al Katib nbsp Iraq 1967 69Adnan Ali Al Qassab nbsp Iraq 1969 77Faleh Mahmoud Al Musa nbsp Iraq 1977 80Mohammed Lafta Ojoom nbsp Iraq Feb 2 1980 May 29 1982Talib Hashim Abbas nbsp Iraq 1982 90Abdul Wahab Al Na eb nbsp Iraq 1990 92Talib Hashim Abbas nbsp Iraq 1992 2003Hadi Ahmed nbsp Iraq 2004 07Rahim Karim nbsp Iraq Jun 2 2007 May 30 2009Salah Khudhair Abboud nbsp Iraq May 30 2009 Jun 1 2012Omran Radhi Thani nbsp Iraq June 1 2012 Mar 13 2016Jalil Hanoon nbsp Iraq Mar 13 2016 Feb 5 2017Abdul Razzaq Ahmed interim nbsp Iraq Feb 5 2017 Aug 22 2017Jalil Hanoon nbsp Iraq Aug 22 2017 Aug 29 2018Asaad Abdul Razzaq interim nbsp Iraq Aug 29 2018 Dec 8 2018Hadi Ahmed nbsp Iraq Dec 8 2018 Sep 4 2019Mohammed Jaber Al Jaberi nbsp Iraq Nov 3 2019 Jan 4 2022Jalil Hanoon nbsp Iraq Jan 4 2022 May 21 2022Adel Nasser interim nbsp Iraq May 21 2022 Jan 26 2023Farhan Al Farttousi nbsp Iraq Jan 26 2023 Oct 9 2023Ahmed Khalaf Thijeel interim nbsp Iraq Oct 13 2023 Nov 20 2023Alaa Abdul Khaliq interim nbsp Iraq Nov 20 2023 Jan 11 2024Farhan Al Farttousi interim nbsp Iraq Jan 11 2024 PresentManagerial history edit This list includes the team coaches after the end of World War II and the return of the club to engage in sports activity 156 nbsp Faraj Dano 1943 1948 player manager nbsp Hameed Majeed 1948 1949 nbsp Karim Jaber 1953 1954 nbsp Kamel Abboudi 1954 1955 nbsp Karim Allawi Homaidi 1955 1956 nbsp Michael Stanley 1959 1961 nbsp Ingvard Hansen 1961 1963 nbsp Tariq Khalil 1963 1965 nbsp Mohammed Manthar 1965 1966 nbsp Abdul Salam Saud 1966 1967 nbsp Mohammed Manthar 1967 1968 nbsp Abdul Salam Saud 1968 1970 nbsp Jamil Mohammed Ali 1970 nbsp Hadi Hassan Wasfi 1970 1971 nbsp Hamza Qasim 1971 1973 nbsp Najm Abdullah Al Azzawi 1973 1975 nbsp Faleh Hassan Wasfi 1975 1977 nbsp Jamil Hanoon 1977 1978 nbsp Sabeeh Abed Ali amp Abdul Mahdi Hadi 1978 1979 nbsp Abdul Razzaq Ahmed 1979 1980 nbsp Jamil Hanoon 1980 1983 nbsp Abdul Razzaq Ahmed 1983 1984 nbsp Rahim Karim 1984 1986 nbsp Abdul Razzaq Ahmed 1986 1990 nbsp Hadi Ahmed 1990 1992 nbsp Jamil Hanoon 1992 1993 nbsp Sabeeh Hussein 1993 1995 nbsp Hadi Ahmed 1995 1999 nbsp Abdul Razzaq Ahmed amp Hadi Ahmed 1999 2000 nbsp Hadi Ahmed 2000 2001 nbsp Aqeel Hato 2001 2003 nbsp Rahim Karim 2003 2004 nbsp Abdul Karim Jassim 2004 2005 nbsp Aqeel Hato 2005 2006 nbsp Asaad Abdul Razzaq 2006 2007 nbsp Adel Nasser 2007 2008 nbsp Abdul Karim Jassim 2008 2009 nbsp Ammar Hussein 2009 nbsp Adel Nasser 2009 2011 nbsp Younis Al Qattan Aug 2011 Dec 2011 nbsp Taher Balas 2011 2012 caretaker nbsp Rahim Hameed Jan 2012 Aug 2012 nbsp Aqeel Hato 2012 2013 nbsp Mohammed Hussein Gholaim Feb 2013 caretaker nbsp Ghazi Fahad Feb 2013 May 2013 nbsp Asaad Abdul Razzaq May 2013 Sep 2013 nbsp Jamal Ali Sep 2013 Dec 2013 nbsp Abbas Obeid 2013 2014 nbsp Ammar Hussein Jan 2014 May 2014 nbsp Hassan Mawla May 2014 Jul 2014 nbsp Asaad Abdul Razzaq 2014 2015 nbsp Ahmed Rahim Jan 2015 caretaker nbsp Hussam Al Sayed 2015 2016 nbsp Marin Ion 2016 2017 nbsp Ghazi Fahad Apr 2017 Aug 2017 nbsp Fajr Ibrahim 2017 2018 nbsp Nadhim Shaker Jan 2018 May 2018 nbsp Ahmed Rahim May 2018 Jun 2018 caretaker nbsp Mahmoud Yasser Jun 2018 Jul 2018 caretaker nbsp Aqeel Hato 2018 2019 nbsp Hicham Ghazia 7 25 Feb 2019 caretaker nbsp Emad Aoda Feb 2019 May 2019 nbsp Ahmad Sabri May 2019 Jul 2019 caretaker nbsp Valeriu Tița 2019 2021 nbsp Adel Nasser Jan 2021 Apr 2021 nbsp Ahmed Rahim Apr 2021 Jul 2021 nbsp Qusay Munir Aug 2021 Oct 2021 nbsp Ihsan Hadi Oct 2021 Nov 2021 caretaker nbsp Ammar Hussien 7 15 Nov 2021 nbsp Ihsan Hadi 15 24 Nov 2021 caretaker nbsp Hatif Shamran 2021 2022 nbsp Ameen Phillip Jan 2022 Feb 2022 nbsp Ahmed Rahim Feb 2022 Mar 2022 nbsp Hatif Shamran Mar 2022 May 2022 nbsp Ali Wahab May 2022 Jul 2022 nbsp Basim Qasim 2022 2023 nbsp Fareed Majeed May 2023 Jun 2023 caretaker nbsp Qahtan Chathir Aug 2023 Nov 2023 nbsp Asaad Abdul Razzaq 4 19 Nov 2023 nbsp Hassan Ahmed Nov 2023 present Notable players editFor a list of all Al Minaa players see Al Minaa SC players Captains edit This list includes the team s captains since the club s participation in the Iraqi League for the first time Years Position Captain1974 1978 Forward nbsp Abdul Razzaq Ahmed1978 1983 Defender nbsp Rahim Karim1983 1986 Midfielder nbsp Hadi Ahmed1986 1988 Forward nbsp Jalil Hanoon1988 1990 Forward nbsp Aqeel Hato1990 1991 Defender nbsp Qasim Jabbar1991 1992 Defender nbsp Karim Jassim1992 1995 Goalkeeper nbsp Aqeel Abdul Mohsin1995 1996 Defender nbsp Asaad Abdul Razzaq1996 1997 Forward nbsp Mohammed Abdul Hussein1997 2001 Defender nbsp Asaad Abdul Razzaq2001 2002 Midfielder nbsp Ali Al Diwan2002 2003 Defender nbsp Musa Fayyadh2003 2005 Forward nbsp Ammar Hussein2005 2008 Defender nbsp Emad Aoda2008 2010 Defender nbsp Sajjad Abdul Kadhim2010 2012 Forward nbsp Mohammed Nasser Shakroun2012 2014 Midfielder nbsp Nayef Falah2014 2015 Midfielder nbsp Omar Alaa Ahmad2015 2016 Goalkeeper nbsp Karrar Ibrahim2017 Goalkeeper nbsp Noor Sabri2017 2018 Defender nbsp Mohammed Jabbar Rubat2018 2019 Forward nbsp Sultan Jassim2019 2021 Midfielder nbsp Hussam Malik2021 Defender nbsp Hamza Adnan2021 2022 Defender nbsp Ahmed Khalid2022 Forward nbsp Mohammed Jabbar Shokan2022 2023 Defender nbsp Karrar Mohammed2023 Defender nbsp Mohammed Abdul Zahra2023 Defender nbsp Abdullah MohsinHonours editMajor edit nbsp King Faisal II awards medals to Al Minaa s players after Al Minaa won the Iraq FA Basra Premier League in 1949 National edit Iraq Stars League top tier Winners 1 1977 78 Runners up 1 2004 05 Iraqi Premier Division League second tier Winners 3 1986 87 1989 90 2022 23 record Regional edit Iraq FA Basra Premier League top tier Winners 15 including 1948 49 1962 63 record Minor edit nbsp Al Minaa captain Karim Allawi receives the Hanna Al Sheikh trophy after the team won the championship in 1951 Hanna Al Sheikh Cup 157 Winners 11 including 1947 48 1950 51 record Al Minaa Cup 158 159 Winners 2 1948 49 1949 50 Al Shamkhany Cup Winners 2 1947 48 1948 49 Runners up 1 1949 50 Thaghr al Iraq Championship Winners 1 2009 Sabeeh Abed Ali Cup 160 Winners 1 2004 Peace and Friendship Cup Winners 1 2004 Basra Mutasarrif Cup Winners 1 1956 Happiness Cup Winners 1 1956 Regent s Cup Winners 1 1949 50 Asfar Knockout Cup Winners 1 1948 49 Runners up 1 1947 48 Al Faw Liberation Championship Runners up 1 1988 Industries Exhibition Cup 161 Runners up 1 1953 54Rankings editCWR All Time Club World Ranking edit As of 4 July 2015 162 Rank Club Association Points2791 nbsp Alliance Dudelange UEFA 32791 nbsp Allied Bank Limited AFC 32791 nbsp Al Minaa AFC 32791 nbsp Al Oruba AFC 32791 nbsp Al Orouba a hre, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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