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Espérance Sportive de Tunis

Espérance Sportive de Tunis (French pronunciation: [ɛspeʁɑ̃s spɔʁtiv tynis]; Arabic: الترجي الرياضي التونسي, romanizedAttarajī ar-Riyāḍi Attūnisī), known as ES Tunis or simply EST for short, is a Tunisian professional sports club based in Bab Souika neighbourhood of Tunis, Tunisia. The club was founded in 1919 and its traditional colours are red and yellow. Their home stadium, Stade Hammadi Agrebi, has a capacity of 60,000 spectators. The club is currently playing in the Tunisian Ligue Professionnelle 1. The club is mostly known for its football team, which is one of the most popular clubs in Tunisia, considered one of the continent's giants.[1]

Espérance de Tunis
Full nameEspérance Sportive de Tunis
Nickname(s) (The Smiling) المكشخة
(Blood and Gold) الدم و الذهب
(Red and Yellow) الأحمر و الأصفر
Short nameES Tunis
Founded15 January 1919; 104 years ago (1919-01-15)
GroundHammadi Agrebi Stadium
Capacity60,000
ChairmanHamdi Meddeb
Head coachTarek Thabet
LeagueTunisian Ligue Professionnelle 1
2022–232nd of 16
WebsiteClub website
Current season

Espérance is the most successful Tunisian club; domestically, they have won 32 Tunisian Professional League 1 titles, 15 Tunisian Cup titles, and 6 Tunisian Super Cup titles, all of them national records. Espérance has won a total of 53 domestic trophies, more than any other Tunisian football club.

At international level, Espérance has won a total of 13 titles, with 8 organized by Confederation of African Football, including 4 CAF Champions League titles, 1 CAF Cup title, 1 CAF Cup Winners' Cup title, 1 CAF Super Cup title[2] and one Afro-Asian Cup.

History edit

Founding and early years edit

The club was founded in Bab Souika, which is one of the historic neighborhoods of the capital Tunis, by Mohamed Zouaoui and Hédi Kallel as an act of resistance against French colonization. The club was named 'Espérance' after the coffeehouse where the founders used to meet each other often, Café de L'Espérance (Arabic: مقهى الترجي). They appealed to Louis Montassier, a member of the French administration, to obtain authorization from the colonial authorities, given the regulations of the time which required that all foundations and clubs must be chaired by a Frenchman. EST was officially registered on 15 January 1919.[3]

Their first colours were green and white. In 1920, the club recruited a young high school student, Chedly Zouiten, who provided a set of jersey with vertical red and yellow bands, which became the club's new colors.[4] Zouiten became a member of the club's management committee in 1923 before becoming president in 1931. On 29 June 1930, Habib Bourguiba was part of the club's management committee.

Under Zouiten's tenure, which lasts more than three decades, Espérance was nearly on the verge of abandonment until promotion to the honorary division of the League of Tunisia in 1936. Espérance also managed to reach the final of the Tunisian Cup, but were beaten by Stade Gaulois. Three years after its failure against the Stade Gaulois, Espérance won the Tunisian Cup (1939) against the Etoile Sportive du Sahel (3–1), its first ever triumph and title. It was in 1955 that Espérance qualified to represent the Tunisian League in the North African championship. In the knockout match, two of the five teams were drawn at random to compete against each other and the winner immediately qualifies for the semi-finals. Wydad of the Moroccan League and the Espérance Sportive de Tunis faced each other; the meeting took place in Tunis on 15 May 1955, the Tunisian club losing on the score of 2 goals to 1.

Between the start of the Second World War and independence (1956), the squad quality improved, especially since the club received the reinforcement of Algerian players like Abdelaziz Ben Tifour. The French, Italian and Maltese clubs which until then dominated football in Tunisia, had to compete with a "indigenous" club.

 
Mohamed Zouaoui, the co-founder of Espérance

Post independence edit

When independence was proclaimed, Espérance stood out as one of the leading clubs in the country. The titles (champion in 1958 and 1960 and winner of the cup in 1957) but also the style of play, resolutely spectacular and turned towards the offensive, explain the popular enthusiasm. Attacking football was abandoned in 1963 following the passage of Ben Azzedine as coach. The latter opts for very rigorous Italian-style defensive principles.

In 1971, violent riots occurred in Stade El Menzah by Espérance supporters following the final lost against the Club Sportive Sfaxien (historic goal of Abdelwahed Trabelsi in the first minute of the game). The authorities then sanctioned Espérance and withdrew the right to play in the first division. The football section of the Espérance was dissolved while the team was one day away from being crowned as champions.

In 1977, Espérance's iconic playmaker Tarak Dhiab won the African Ballon d'Or, becoming the only Tunisian football player to have received the trophy to date.

Slim Chiboub era and national dominance (1989–2004) edit

Slim Chiboub, son-in-law of president Zine El Abidine Ben Ali, took charge of the club in 1989. Quickly, he kept one of his promises with a double in 1990–1991, which increased his popularity. In 1993, he won several international and local titles and signed the striker of the Zambian national team, Kenneth Malitoli. Espérance also won its first regional cup, the Arab Club Champions Cup, becoming the first Tunisian team to do so in 1993. The following year, the club won its first CAF Champions League at the expense of defending champion Zamalek. In 1995, EST won the CAF Super Cup as well as the Afro-Asian Cup, becoming the first Tunisian club to win all possible continental titles. Espérance Sportive de Tunis won ten Tunisian league titles, including seven successive titles between 1998 and 2004 and set a new national record.[5]

Espérance Sportive de Tunis was designated by IFFHS as the World Club of the Month for July 2004.

Hamdi Meddeb era and sustained success (2007–present) edit

 
Espérance Sportive de Tunis, CAF Champions League Champions in 2011
 
Espérance Sportive de Tunis, CAF Champions League Champions in 2018

Between 2005 and 2007, Aziz Zouhir led the club, which won the double (championship and cup) in 2006. In 2007, Hamdi Meddeb took charge of the club. He focused on boosting Espérance financially and recruiting African and Tunisian talents. This is how, in a few years, Espérance signed many promising players like Michael Eneramo, Harrison Afful, Youssef Msakni, Mejdi Traoui and Yannick N'Djeng.

The 2010–2011 season was one of the most successful in the history of the club when Espérance completed a historical treble by winning the League, National Cup and the African Champions League, under coach Nabil Maâloul.[6] Following this success, a new committee chaired by Hamdi Meddeb was elected on 25 September 2011 for a three-year term. However, Maâloul resigned after a sixth place in the FIFA Club World Cup. However, the team lost the 2012 CAF Champions League final to Al Ahly, and the team star Youssef Msakni was sold to Qatari club Lekhwiya for 23 million Tunisian dinars.[7]

On 6 August 2017, the club won their fourth Arab title and third Arab club championship by beating the Jordanian side Al Faisaly (3–2) after extra time.[8] After winning its 28 league title on 8 April, Espérance won its third CAF Champions League against Al Ahly despite a defeat (3–1) on the home soil of the eight-time African champions in the first leg. In the second match, the Tunisians won with a score of 3–0, in front of a crowd of 60,000 people, with goals from Saad Bguir and Anice Badri. With the help of the young coach Moïne Chaâbani the club clinched the third Champions League in its history, a few months before its centenary on 15 January 2019.[9] The club ended the 2018–2019 season as African champions for the fourth time after winning the CAF Champions League against Wydad (1–1 away and 1–0 at home), due to Wydad refusing to play in protest of VAR decision.[10][11]

Colors and symbols edit

Logos throughout history edit

Red & Yellow edit

During the first year of its establishment, Espérance played in white and green, their uniform green with the elegance of the shirt and hands and black veil. When Dr. Chedly Zouiten came in 1920 and joined the board of directors as a general clerk, he carried with him the uniform of the school team “Football Club of Tunisia,” which he supervised before dissolving and dividing his property between his managers. Chadli Zouiten’s share was the red and yellow sports uniforms, which were better than Esperance’s uniforms. He gifted them to Esperance, and since then red and yellow become their official colors.

Kit manufacturers and shirt sponsors edit

Period Kit manufacturer Shirt sponsor Ref
1993-94   Uhlsport   Boga/Noumem [12]
1994-95   Lotto   Coca-Cola
1995-96
1996-97   Coca-Cola/  Opel
1997-98   Coca-Cola/  Danone
1998-99   Uhlsport
1999-00 Esperance
2000-01 ?
2001-02   Lotto
2002-03   Adidas
2003-04 ?   Danone/  Boga
2004-05   Atletica   Danone/  Virgin
2005-06   Nike
2006-10   Groupe Délice [fr]/  Danone
2010-11   Groupe Délice [fr]/  Danone/  KIA
2011-16   Groupe Délice [fr]/  Danone
2016-17
2017-2022   Umbro
2022-   Kappa

Popular culture edit

Supporters edit

 
Scene from a 2007 Tunis derby at the Radès Stadium

Officially, the club's fans and supporters are framed by the Espérance Sportive de Tunis, but many ultras groups have appeared alongside it that organize the club's income during major interviews. The oldest group of them is the Ultras L'Emkachkhines, which belong to the ultras movement but do not have any legal system as is the case for the European bands' lovers groups. We also find the Supras, which appeared in 2004, the Blood & Gold group appeared in 2005, Zapatista Esperanza in 2007 and Torcida in 2008, and in the same year the Matadors group appeared. In 2009 the Fedayn, Ayounos Algres and Strano Boys group appeared, and in 2010 the Los guerreros group, the Resista Armada group and others... All of these groups share the southern runways behind a guard the goal under the banner of Curva Sud. Among the acronics that some of these groups raise is A.C.A.B, which is also raised by other groups in Europe and even in Tunisia. The elderly Ultras made many incomes and carcasses and created more than 35 for them at the local level only, without counting the years of repression from 2009 to 2011 when Ultras in Tunisia were prevented from entering.

Ultras L'Emkachkhines edit

Ultras L'Emkachkhines, and its symbol (ULE02), is an ultras group established in 2002 by a group of fans of Espérance Sportive de Tunis. Ultras was established in the summer of 2002, specifically on 16/08/2002, and it was the result of the idea of a group of Esperance fans who love the team and were influenced by the activity of long-standing ultras groups in Europe, such as Ultras Romani and Fossa Dei Leoni.

After many consultations and discussions via the Internet, they decided to organize Their first meeting was at the Opera Café in the Cité Ennasr in the Tunisian capital, where it was agreed to establish the group under the name Ultras Giallorosso, but soon the name was changed through a proposal by one of the members to replace the word Galloroso with L'Emkachkhines for the symbolism of this word among the supporters of Esperance and to impart a spirit of belonging and identity More for the group, and the image of the warrior leader Geranimo was chosen as the group's emblem as a symbol of resistance and struggle... Ultras L'Emkachkhines had the first match and the initiation of creativity in the Esperance match against the Egyptian Zamalek in 2002.

Zapatista Esperanza edit

Zapatista Esperanza, the ultras group that supports Espérance Sportive de Tunis, was founded in 2007 and its symbol is (ZE07) and with its word (siamo solo noi).

The name comes from the Zapatista National Liberation Army (Ejército Zapatista de Liberación Nacional, EZLN) is an armed revolutionary group from the state of Chiapas in southern Mexico. The movement consists mainly of the indigenous people of the region. The movement takes the name Emiliano Zapata - one of the leaders of the Mexican Revolution of 1910.

Accidents edit

Tragedy of 13 June 1971 edit

The tragedy of 13 June 1971, when the red and yellow lost the Tunisian Cup final against CS Sfaxien at Stade El Menzah, and from it a spark of a conflict with the security erupted behind several human and material losses to order the Minister of Interior and Sports at that time to dissolve the team until President Habib Bourguiba returned to bring him back to the sports arena.

The events of 8 April 2010 edit

Espérance lived several stations that its sons considered as a struggle, such as the events of 8 April 2010 against the security, which witnessed several wounded and arrested as a result of unprecedented clashes with the security in a famous match in which the lights of El Menzah stadium went out in a match between Espérance and CS Hammam-Lif that ended in a 3–3 draw.

Infrastructure edit

Stadiums edit

Stade Hammadi Agrebi edit

Stade Olympique Hamadi Agrebi, opened as Stade 7 November, is a multi-purpose stadium in Radès, Tunis, Tunisia about 10 kilometers south-east of downtown Tunis, in the center of the Olympic City. It is currently used mostly for football matches and it also has facilities for athletics. The stadium has a capacity of up to 60,000 spectators and was built in 2001 for the 2001 Mediterranean Games. The stadium and is considered to be one of the best stadiums in Africa.

 
The exterior of Radès stadium

It was inaugurated in July 2001 for the final of the Tunisian Cup between CS Hammam-Lif and Étoile du Sahel (1–0).

Stade El Menzah edit

Stade El Menzah is a multi-purpose stadium, located in the north of Tunis, Tunisia.

 
El Menzah Stadium

It is built to host the 1967 Mediterranean Games at the same time as the Olympic swimming pool and gymnasium. Since then, it is an integral part of Tunisia's main sports complex. Tunisia's three major football teams, Espérance de Tunis, Club Africain and Stade Tunisien played their games there.

The stadium was completely renovated for the 1994 African Cup of Nations. It has a capacity of 45,000 seats.[13] The VIP section consists of a grandstand and 2 salons that can accommodate 300 people in a "cocktail" configuration. The stadium hosted the matches of Tunisia national football team until the inauguration of the Stade 7 November in the south of Tunis in 2001.

Official Honours edit

Type Competition Titles Winning Seasons
Domestic Tunisian Ligue Professionnelle 1 32 1941–42, 1958–59, 1959–60, 1969–70, 1974–75, 1975–76, 1981–82, 1984–85, 1987–88, 1988–89, 1990–91, 1992–93, 1993–94, 1997–98, 1998–99, 1999–00, 2000–01, 2001–02, 2002–03, 2003–04, 2005–06, 2008–09, 2009–10, 2010–11, 2011–12, 2013–14, 2016–17, 2017–18, 2018–19, 2019–20, 2020–21, 2021–22
Tunisian Cup 15 1938–39, 1956–57, 1963–64, 1978–79, 1979–80, 1985–86, 1988–89, 1990–91, 1996–97, 1998–99, 2005–06, 2006–07, 2007–08, 2010–11, 2015–16
Tunisian Super Cup 6 1960, 1993, 2001, 2019, 2020, 2021
Continental CAF Champions League 4 1994, 2011, 2018, 2019
African Cup Winners' Cup 1 1998
CAF Cup 1 1997
CAF Super Cup 1 1995
Regional Arab Club Champions Cup 3S 1993, 2009, 2017
Arab Super Cup 1 1996
North African Cup Winners Cup 1 2008
Intercontinental Afro-Asian Club Championship 1 1995
  •   record
  • S shared record

Club prizes edit

Individual awards edit

Personnel edit

Management edit

Position Name
President   Hamdi Meddeb
Honorary President   Slim Chiboub
Sporting Director   Tarek Thabet
Financial Director   Rafik Mrabet
Law Director   Farouk Kattou
President of Football Operations   Riadh Bennour
Spokesman   Welid Guerfala

Coaching Staff edit

Position Name
Head coach   Tarek Thabet (interim)
Assistant coaches   Seifallah Hosni
  Chamseddine Dhaouadi
Goalkeeping coach   Wassim Naouara
Fitness coach   Mohamed Sabri Bouazizi
Team doctor   Yassine Ben Ahmed

Players edit

Current squad 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
1 GK   TUN Amenallah Memmiche
2 DF   TUN Mohamed Ben Ali
3 DF   TUN Amenallah Majhed
4 MF   TUN Mohamed Wael Derbali
5 DF   TUN Yassine Meriah
6 MF   NIG Youssouf Oumarou
7 FW   JOR Sharara
8 MF   TUN Houssem Tka
9 FW   BRA Rodrigo Rodrigues
10 MF   BRA Yan Sasse
11 FW   TUN Oussama Bouguerra
12 GK   TUN Moez Ben Cherifia (captain)
13 DF   TUN Raed Bouchniba
15 DF   ALG Mohamed Amine Tougai
16 GK   TUN Hamza Ghanmi
17 FW   TUN Zied Berrima
18 FW   ALG Houssam Ghacha
No. Pos. Nation Player
19 MF   TUN Mootez Zaddem
20 DF   TUN Mohamed Amine Ben Hamida
21 FW   TUN Aziz Abid
22 DF   TUN Hani Amamou
23 MF   TUN Ghaith Ouahabi
24 FW   TUN Bilel Sahli
25 MF   TUN Ghailene Chaalali
26 GK   TUN Mohamed Sedki Debchi
27 FW   GAM Kebba Sowe (on loan from Avenir de Soliman)
28 MF   TUN Aziz Fellah
29 FW   TUN Mohamed Ali Ben Hammouda
30 DF   TUN Oussama Shili
31 MF   TUN Zakaria El Ayeb
32 MF   TUN Montassar Triki
33 FW   TUN Farouk Mimouni
35 DF   TUN Zinedine Sassi
36 MF   NGA Onuche Ogbelu

Out on loan 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
MF   CIV Cedrik Gbo (at Minnesota United until 31 December 2023)
DF   TUN Ghassen Mahersi (at Union de Tataouine until 30 June 2024)
MF   TUN Wael Chaieb (at Union de Tatouine until 30 June 2024)
GK   TUN Wassim Karoui (at Avenir de Soliman until 30 June 2024)
No. Pos. Nation Player
FW   TUN Rayen Hamrouni (at Avenir de Soliman until 30 June 2024)
FW   TUN Achref Jebri (at Espérance de Zarzis until 30 June 2024)
MF   TUN Khalil Guenichi (at Avenir de Soliman until 30 June 2025)

Other players under contract 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
DF   TUN Bilel Chabbar
DF   TUN Zied Machmoum
No. Pos. Nation Player
FW   ALG Riad Benayad

International participations edit

IFFHS rankings edit

FIFA Club World Cup edit

Participation Record in the FIFA Club World Cup
Year Position Last opponent
2011 Sixth place   Monterrey
2018 Fifth place   Guadalajara
2019 Fifth place   Al-Sadd

African Cup of Champions Clubs and CAF Champions League edit

Participation Record in the African Cup of Champions Clubs and CAF Champions League
Year Final position / round Last opponent
1971 Second round   Ismaily
1986 Quarter-Finals   Africa Sports
1989 Second round   MC Oran
1990 Quarter-Finals   Iwuanyanwu Nationale
1994 Winners   Zamalek
1995 Quarter-Finals   Ismaily
1999 Runners–up   Raja Casablanca
2000 Runners–up   Hearts of Oak
2001 Semi-finals   Al Ahly
2002 Group stage   Zamalek
  ASEC Mimosas
  Costa do Sol
2003 Semi-finals   Ismaily
2004 Semi-finals   Enyimba
2005 Group stage   Étoile du Sahel
  Zamalek
  ASEC Mimosas
2007 Group stage   Étoile du Sahel
  Al Hilal
  ASEC Mimosas
2010 Runners–up   TP Mazembe
2011 Winners   Wydad AC
2012 Runners–up   Al Ahly
2013 Semi-finals   Orlando Pirates
2014 Group stage   Club Sfaxien
  ES Sétif
  Al Ahly Benghazi
2015 Second round   Al Merrikh
2017 Quarter-finals   Al Ahly
2018 Winners   Al Ahly
2019 Winners   Wydad AC
2020 Quarter-finals   Zamalek
2021 Semi-finals   Al Ahly
2022 Quarter-finals   ES Sétif
2023 Semi-finals   Al Ahly

CAF Confederation Cup edit

CAF Cup edit

Participation Record in the CAF Cup
Year Position Last opponent
1997 Winners   Petro de Luanda

African Cup Winners' Cup edit

Participation Record in the African Cup Winners' Cup
Year Position Last opponent
1980 Second round   Kadiogo
1981 First round   Zoundourma
1987 Runners–up   Gor Mahia
1998 Winners   1º de Agosto

CAF Super Cup edit

Participation Record in the CAF Super Cup
Year Position Last opponent
1995 Winners   Motema Pembe
1999 Runners–up   ASEC Mimosas
2012 Runners–up   Maghreb de Fès
2019 Runners–up   Raja Casablanca
2020 Runners–up   Zamalek

Afro-Asian Club Championship edit

Participation Record in the Afro-Asian Club Championship
Year Position Last opponent
1995 Winners   Thai Farmers Bank

Twinning edit

Rival clubs edit

Presidents edit

  •   Mohamed Melki (1919–1923)
  •   Chedly Zouiten (1924)
  •   Mohamed Zouaoui (1925)
  •   Mustapha Kaak (1926–1930)
  •   Chedly Zouiten (1930–1963)
  •   Mohamed Ben Ismaïl (1963–1968)
  •   Ali Zouaoui (1968–1971)
  •   Hassen Belkhodja (1971–1981)
  •   Naceur Knani (1981–1984)
  •   Abdelhamid Achour (1984–1985)
  •   Moncef Zouhir (1985–1986)
  •   Mondher Znaïdi (1986–1987)
  •   Hedi Jilani (1987–1989)
  •   Slim Chiboub (1989–2004)
  •   Aziz Zouhir (2004–2007)
  •   Hamdi Meddeb (2007–present)

Source: www.est.org.tn

Managers edit

Source: www.est.org.tn

References edit

  1. ^ "Top 10 African Football Clubs Ranking 2022". thefootballlovers.com. 6 May 2022. from the original on 14 May 2023. Retrieved 14 May 2023.
  2. ^ FIFA.com. "FIFA Club World Cup 2018 - News - Esperance return to African summit - FIFA.com". www.fifa.com. from the original on 10 July 2019. Retrieved 10 July 2019.
  3. ^ "L'Esperance Sportive de Tunis est éternelle". from the original on 25 June 2022. Retrieved 17 December 2020.
  4. ^ "En Vert et Blanc, l'Espérance de Tunis en 1919". 17 February 2019. from the original on 17 November 2020. Retrieved 17 December 2020.
  5. ^ "Esperance rewrite Tunisian football". 30 June 2004. from the original on 10 July 2019. Retrieved 10 July 2019.
  6. ^ Football, CAF-Confedération Africaine du. "CAF CL - Head-to-head: Wydad vs Esperance in CAF matches | Total CAF Champions League 2022/23". CAFOnline.com. from the original on 29 April 2023. Retrieved 29 April 2023.
  7. ^ "Youssef Msakni dans un club qatari pour... 23 millions de dinars !". from the original on 10 May 2021. Retrieved 18 December 2020.
  8. ^ "Coupe arabe des clubs : l'Espérance de Tunis sacrée". from the original on 9 August 2017. Retrieved 18 December 2020.
  9. ^ "Ligue des champions: l'Espérance Tunis sacrée face à al Ahly". 9 November 2018. from the original on 19 September 2020. Retrieved 18 December 2020.
  10. ^ "Esperance win CAF Champions League after Wydad refuse to play in protest of VAR decision | Goal.com". www.goal.com. from the original on 29 April 2023. Retrieved 29 April 2023.
  11. ^ "Esperance declared African Champions League winners – DW – 08/07/2019". dw.com. from the original on 29 April 2023. Retrieved 29 April 2023.
  12. ^ "Espérance de Tunis Kit History". Football Kit Archive. from the original on 14 March 2023. Retrieved 14 March 2023.
  13. ^ "Stade Olympique El Menzah". from the original on 12 September 2023. Retrieved 14 April 2022.
  14. ^ "Club World Ranking by footballdatabase". footballdatabase. 3 June 2018. from the original on 18 May 2021. Retrieved 22 May 2020.

External links edit

  • e-s-tunis.com
  • www.sofascore.com
  • Espérance Sportive de Tunis at FIFA.com

espérance, sportive, tunis, french, pronunciation, ɛspeʁɑ, spɔʁtiv, tynis, arabic, الترجي, الرياضي, التونسي, romanized, attarajī, riyāḍi, attūnisī, known, tunis, simply, short, tunisian, professional, sports, club, based, souika, neighbourhood, tunis, tunisia,. Esperance Sportive de Tunis French pronunciation ɛspeʁɑ s spɔʁtiv de tynis Arabic الترجي الرياضي التونسي romanized Attaraji ar Riyaḍi Attunisi known as ES Tunis or simply EST for short is a Tunisian professional sports club based in Bab Souika neighbourhood of Tunis Tunisia The club was founded in 1919 and its traditional colours are red and yellow Their home stadium Stade Hammadi Agrebi has a capacity of 60 000 spectators The club is currently playing in the Tunisian Ligue Professionnelle 1 The club is mostly known for its football team which is one of the most popular clubs in Tunisia considered one of the continent s giants 1 Esperance de TunisFull nameEsperance Sportive de TunisNickname s The Smiling المكشخة Blood and Gold الدم و الذهب Red and Yellow الأحمر و الأصفرShort nameES TunisFounded15 January 1919 104 years ago 1919 01 15 GroundHammadi Agrebi StadiumCapacity60 000ChairmanHamdi MeddebHead coachTarek ThabetLeagueTunisian Ligue Professionnelle 12022 232nd of 16WebsiteClub websiteHome coloursAway coloursThird coloursCurrent seasonEsperance is the most successful Tunisian club domestically they have won 32 Tunisian Professional League 1 titles 15 Tunisian Cup titles and 6 Tunisian Super Cup titles all of them national records Esperance has won a total of 53 domestic trophies more than any other Tunisian football club At international level Esperance has won a total of 13 titles with 8 organized by Confederation of African Football including 4 CAF Champions League titles 1 CAF Cup title 1 CAF Cup Winners Cup title 1 CAF Super Cup title 2 and one Afro Asian Cup Contents 1 History 1 1 Founding and early years 1 2 Post independence 1 3 Slim Chiboub era and national dominance 1989 2004 1 4 Hamdi Meddeb era and sustained success 2007 present 2 Colors and symbols 2 1 Logos throughout history 2 2 Red amp Yellow 2 3 Kit manufacturers and shirt sponsors 3 Popular culture 3 1 Supporters 3 1 1 Ultras L Emkachkhines 3 1 2 Zapatista Esperanza 3 2 Accidents 3 2 1 Tragedy of 13 June 1971 3 2 2 The events of 8 April 2010 4 Infrastructure 4 1 Stadiums 4 1 1 Stade Hammadi Agrebi 4 1 2 Stade El Menzah 5 Official Honours 5 1 Club prizes 5 2 Individual awards 5 2 1 Players awards 5 2 2 Competition topscorers 6 Personnel 6 1 Management 6 2 Coaching Staff 7 Players 7 1 Current squad 7 2 Out on loan 7 3 Other players under contract 8 International participations 8 1 IFFHS rankings 8 2 Club world ranking 8 3 CAF club rankings 8 4 National club rankings 8 5 FIFA Club World Cup 8 6 African Cup of Champions Clubs and CAF Champions League 8 7 CAF Confederation Cup 8 8 CAF Cup 8 9 African Cup Winners Cup 8 10 CAF Super Cup 8 11 Afro Asian Club Championship 9 Twinning 10 Rival clubs 11 Presidents 12 Managers 13 References 14 External linksHistory editFounding and early years edit The club was founded in Bab Souika which is one of the historic neighborhoods of the capital Tunis by Mohamed Zouaoui and Hedi Kallel as an act of resistance against French colonization The club was named Esperance after the coffeehouse where the founders used to meet each other often Cafe de L Esperance Arabic مقهى الترجي They appealed to Louis Montassier a member of the French administration to obtain authorization from the colonial authorities given the regulations of the time which required that all foundations and clubs must be chaired by a Frenchman EST was officially registered on 15 January 1919 3 Their first colours were green and white In 1920 the club recruited a young high school student Chedly Zouiten who provided a set of jersey with vertical red and yellow bands which became the club s new colors 4 Zouiten became a member of the club s management committee in 1923 before becoming president in 1931 On 29 June 1930 Habib Bourguiba was part of the club s management committee Under Zouiten s tenure which lasts more than three decades Esperance was nearly on the verge of abandonment until promotion to the honorary division of the League of Tunisia in 1936 Esperance also managed to reach the final of the Tunisian Cup but were beaten by Stade Gaulois Three years after its failure against the Stade Gaulois Esperance won the Tunisian Cup 1939 against the Etoile Sportive du Sahel 3 1 its first ever triumph and title It was in 1955 that Esperance qualified to represent the Tunisian League in the North African championship In the knockout match two of the five teams were drawn at random to compete against each other and the winner immediately qualifies for the semi finals Wydad of the Moroccan League and the Esperance Sportive de Tunis faced each other the meeting took place in Tunis on 15 May 1955 the Tunisian club losing on the score of 2 goals to 1 Between the start of the Second World War and independence 1956 the squad quality improved especially since the club received the reinforcement of Algerian players like Abdelaziz Ben Tifour The French Italian and Maltese clubs which until then dominated football in Tunisia had to compete with a indigenous club nbsp Mohamed Zouaoui the co founder of EsperancePost independence edit When independence was proclaimed Esperance stood out as one of the leading clubs in the country The titles champion in 1958 and 1960 and winner of the cup in 1957 but also the style of play resolutely spectacular and turned towards the offensive explain the popular enthusiasm Attacking football was abandoned in 1963 following the passage of Ben Azzedine as coach The latter opts for very rigorous Italian style defensive principles In 1971 violent riots occurred in Stade El Menzah by Esperance supporters following the final lost against the Club Sportive Sfaxien historic goal of Abdelwahed Trabelsi in the first minute of the game The authorities then sanctioned Esperance and withdrew the right to play in the first division The football section of the Esperance was dissolved while the team was one day away from being crowned as champions In 1977 Esperance s iconic playmaker Tarak Dhiab won the African Ballon d Or becoming the only Tunisian football player to have received the trophy to date Slim Chiboub era and national dominance 1989 2004 edit Slim Chiboub son in law of president Zine El Abidine Ben Ali took charge of the club in 1989 Quickly he kept one of his promises with a double in 1990 1991 which increased his popularity In 1993 he won several international and local titles and signed the striker of the Zambian national team Kenneth Malitoli Esperance also won its first regional cup the Arab Club Champions Cup becoming the first Tunisian team to do so in 1993 The following year the club won its first CAF Champions League at the expense of defending champion Zamalek In 1995 EST won the CAF Super Cup as well as the Afro Asian Cup becoming the first Tunisian club to win all possible continental titles Esperance Sportive de Tunis won ten Tunisian league titles including seven successive titles between 1998 and 2004 and set a new national record 5 Esperance Sportive de Tunis was designated by IFFHS as the World Club of the Month for July 2004 Hamdi Meddeb era and sustained success 2007 present edit nbsp Esperance Sportive de Tunis CAF Champions League Champions in 2011 nbsp Esperance Sportive de Tunis CAF Champions League Champions in 2018Between 2005 and 2007 Aziz Zouhir led the club which won the double championship and cup in 2006 In 2007 Hamdi Meddeb took charge of the club He focused on boosting Esperance financially and recruiting African and Tunisian talents This is how in a few years Esperance signed many promising players like Michael Eneramo Harrison Afful Youssef Msakni Mejdi Traoui and Yannick N Djeng The 2010 2011 season was one of the most successful in the history of the club when Esperance completed a historical treble by winning the League National Cup and the African Champions League under coach Nabil Maaloul 6 Following this success a new committee chaired by Hamdi Meddeb was elected on 25 September 2011 for a three year term However Maaloul resigned after a sixth place in the FIFA Club World Cup However the team lost the 2012 CAF Champions League final to Al Ahly and the team star Youssef Msakni was sold to Qatari club Lekhwiya for 23 million Tunisian dinars 7 On 6 August 2017 the club won their fourth Arab title and third Arab club championship by beating the Jordanian side Al Faisaly 3 2 after extra time 8 After winning its 28 league title on 8 April Esperance won its third CAF Champions League against Al Ahly despite a defeat 3 1 on the home soil of the eight time African champions in the first leg In the second match the Tunisians won with a score of 3 0 in front of a crowd of 60 000 people with goals from Saad Bguir and Anice Badri With the help of the young coach Moine Chaabani the club clinched the third Champions League in its history a few months before its centenary on 15 January 2019 9 The club ended the 2018 2019 season as African champions for the fourth time after winning the CAF Champions League against Wydad 1 1 away and 1 0 at home due to Wydad refusing to play in protest of VAR decision 10 11 Colors and symbols editLogos throughout history edit nbsp 1919 nbsp 1924 nbsp 1950 nbsp 1969 nbsp 1987 nbsp 2012Red amp Yellow edit During the first year of its establishment Esperance played in white and green their uniform green with the elegance of the shirt and hands and black veil When Dr Chedly Zouiten came in 1920 and joined the board of directors as a general clerk he carried with him the uniform of the school team Football Club of Tunisia which he supervised before dissolving and dividing his property between his managers Chadli Zouiten s share was the red and yellow sports uniforms which were better than Esperance s uniforms He gifted them to Esperance and since then red and yellow become their official colors Kit manufacturers and shirt sponsors edit Period Kit manufacturer Shirt sponsor Ref1993 94 nbsp Uhlsport nbsp Boga Noumem 12 1994 95 nbsp Lotto nbsp Coca Cola1995 961996 97 nbsp Coca Cola nbsp Opel1997 98 nbsp Coca Cola nbsp Danone1998 99 nbsp Uhlsport1999 00 Esperance2000 01 2001 02 nbsp Lotto2002 03 nbsp Adidas2003 04 nbsp Danone nbsp Boga2004 05 nbsp Atletica nbsp Danone nbsp Virgin2005 06 nbsp Nike2006 10 nbsp Groupe Delice fr nbsp Danone2010 11 nbsp Groupe Delice fr nbsp Danone nbsp KIA2011 16 nbsp Groupe Delice fr nbsp Danone2016 172017 2022 nbsp Umbro2022 nbsp KappaPopular culture editSupporters edit nbsp Scene from a 2007 Tunis derby at the Rades StadiumOfficially the club s fans and supporters are framed by the Esperance Sportive de Tunis but many ultras groups have appeared alongside it that organize the club s income during major interviews The oldest group of them is the Ultras L Emkachkhines which belong to the ultras movement but do not have any legal system as is the case for the European bands lovers groups We also find the Supras which appeared in 2004 the Blood amp Gold group appeared in 2005 Zapatista Esperanza in 2007 and Torcida in 2008 and in the same year the Matadors group appeared In 2009 the Fedayn Ayounos Algres and Strano Boys group appeared and in 2010 the Los guerreros group the Resista Armada group and others All of these groups share the southern runways behind a guard the goal under the banner of Curva Sud Among the acronics that some of these groups raise is A C A B which is also raised by other groups in Europe and even in Tunisia The elderly Ultras made many incomes and carcasses and created more than 35 for them at the local level only without counting the years of repression from 2009 to 2011 when Ultras in Tunisia were prevented from entering Ultras L Emkachkhines edit Ultras L Emkachkhines and its symbol ULE02 is an ultras group established in 2002 by a group of fans of Esperance Sportive de Tunis Ultras was established in the summer of 2002 specifically on 16 08 2002 and it was the result of the idea of a group of Esperance fans who love the team and were influenced by the activity of long standing ultras groups in Europe such as Ultras Romani and Fossa Dei Leoni After many consultations and discussions via the Internet they decided to organize Their first meeting was at the Opera Cafe in the Cite Ennasr in the Tunisian capital where it was agreed to establish the group under the name Ultras Giallorosso but soon the name was changed through a proposal by one of the members to replace the word Galloroso with L Emkachkhines for the symbolism of this word among the supporters of Esperance and to impart a spirit of belonging and identity More for the group and the image of the warrior leader Geranimo was chosen as the group s emblem as a symbol of resistance and struggle Ultras L Emkachkhines had the first match and the initiation of creativity in the Esperance match against the Egyptian Zamalek in 2002 Zapatista Esperanza edit Zapatista Esperanza the ultras group that supports Esperance Sportive de Tunis was founded in 2007 and its symbol is ZE07 and with its word siamo solo noi The name comes from the Zapatista National Liberation Army Ejercito Zapatista de Liberacion Nacional EZLN is an armed revolutionary group from the state of Chiapas in southern Mexico The movement consists mainly of the indigenous people of the region The movement takes the name Emiliano Zapata one of the leaders of the Mexican Revolution of 1910 Accidents edit Tragedy of 13 June 1971 edit The tragedy of 13 June 1971 when the red and yellow lost the Tunisian Cup final against CS Sfaxien at Stade El Menzah and from it a spark of a conflict with the security erupted behind several human and material losses to order the Minister of Interior and Sports at that time to dissolve the team until President Habib Bourguiba returned to bring him back to the sports arena The events of 8 April 2010 edit Esperance lived several stations that its sons considered as a struggle such as the events of 8 April 2010 against the security which witnessed several wounded and arrested as a result of unprecedented clashes with the security in a famous match in which the lights of El Menzah stadium went out in a match between Esperance and CS Hammam Lif that ended in a 3 3 draw Infrastructure editStadiums edit Stade Hammadi Agrebi edit Main article Stade Olympique Hammadi Agrebi Stade Olympique Hamadi Agrebi opened as Stade 7 November is a multi purpose stadium in Rades Tunis Tunisia about 10 kilometers south east of downtown Tunis in the center of the Olympic City It is currently used mostly for football matches and it also has facilities for athletics The stadium has a capacity of up to 60 000 spectators and was built in 2001 for the 2001 Mediterranean Games The stadium and is considered to be one of the best stadiums in Africa nbsp The exterior of Rades stadiumIt was inaugurated in July 2001 for the final of the Tunisian Cup between CS Hammam Lif and Etoile du Sahel 1 0 Stade El Menzah edit Main article Stade El Menzah Stade El Menzah is a multi purpose stadium located in the north of Tunis Tunisia nbsp El Menzah StadiumIt is built to host the 1967 Mediterranean Games at the same time as the Olympic swimming pool and gymnasium Since then it is an integral part of Tunisia s main sports complex Tunisia s three major football teams Esperance de Tunis Club Africain and Stade Tunisien played their games there The stadium was completely renovated for the 1994 African Cup of Nations It has a capacity of 45 000 seats 13 The VIP section consists of a grandstand and 2 salons that can accommodate 300 people in a cocktail configuration The stadium hosted the matches of Tunisia national football team until the inauguration of the Stade 7 November in the south of Tunis in 2001 Official Honours editType Competition Titles Winning SeasonsDomestic Tunisian Ligue Professionnelle 1 32 1941 42 1958 59 1959 60 1969 70 1974 75 1975 76 1981 82 1984 85 1987 88 1988 89 1990 91 1992 93 1993 94 1997 98 1998 99 1999 00 2000 01 2001 02 2002 03 2003 04 2005 06 2008 09 2009 10 2010 11 2011 12 2013 14 2016 17 2017 18 2018 19 2019 20 2020 21 2021 22Tunisian Cup 15 1938 39 1956 57 1963 64 1978 79 1979 80 1985 86 1988 89 1990 91 1996 97 1998 99 2005 06 2006 07 2007 08 2010 11 2015 16Tunisian Super Cup 6 1960 1993 2001 2019 2020 2021Continental CAF Champions League 4 1994 2011 2018 2019African Cup Winners Cup 1 1998CAF Cup 1 1997CAF Super Cup 1 1995Regional Arab Club Champions Cup 3S 1993 2009 2017Arab Super Cup 1 1996North African Cup Winners Cup 1 2008Intercontinental Afro Asian Club Championship 1 1995 record S shared recordClub prizes edit African Inter Club Team of the Year 2011 FIFA Fair Play Award 2019Individual awards edit Players awards edit African Footballer of the Year1977 nbsp Tarak DhiabTunisian Athlete of the Year Award1977 nbsp Tarak Dhiab 1989 nbsp Khaled Ben Yahia 2000 nbsp Chokri El OuaerTunisian Golden Boot1981 nbsp Khaled Ben Yahia 1982 nbsp Tarak Dhiab 1987 nbsp Khaled Ben YahiaTunisian Golden Ball2009 nbsp Oussama Darragi 2012 nbsp Moez Ben Cherifia 2013 nbsp Youssef MsakniAfrican Inter Club Player of the Year Based in Africa 2011 nbsp Oussama Darragi 2019 nbsp Youcef BelailiArab Golden Ball2012 nbsp Oussama DarragiBest Maghreb Player Award2018 nbsp Anice BadriCompetition topscorers edit Tunisian Ligue Professionnelle 1 goalscorer1959 nbsp Abdelmajid Tlemcani 1960 nbsp Abdelmajid Tlemcani 1962 nbsp Chedly Laaouini 1975 nbsp Zoubeir Boughnia 1982 nbsp Riadh El Fahem 1988 nbsp Nabil Maaloul 1993 nbsp Kenneth Malitoli 1994 nbsp Kenneth Malitoli 1997 nbsp Sami Laaroussi 1998 nbsp Ziad Tlemcani 2000 nbsp Ali Zitouni 2002 nbsp Kandia Traore 2006 nbsp Amine Ltifi 2009 nbsp Michael Eneramo 2010 nbsp Michael Eneramo 2012 nbsp Youssef Msakni 2013 nbsp Haythem Jouini 2017 nbsp Taha Yassine Khenissi 2019 nbsp Taha Yassine Khenissi 2022 nbsp Mohamed Ali Ben HammoudaCAF Champions League goalscorer2010 nbsp Michael Eneramo 2014 nbsp Haythem Jouini 2017 nbsp Taha Yassine Khenissi 2018 nbsp Anice BadriFIFA Club World Cup goalscorer2019 nbsp Hamdou ElhouniPersonnel editManagement edit Position NamePresident nbsp Hamdi MeddebHonorary President nbsp Slim ChiboubSporting Director nbsp Tarek ThabetFinancial Director nbsp Rafik MrabetLaw Director nbsp Farouk KattouPresident of Football Operations nbsp Riadh BennourSpokesman nbsp Welid GuerfalaCoaching Staff edit Position NameHead coach nbsp Tarek Thabet interim Assistant coaches nbsp Seifallah Hosni nbsp Chamseddine DhaouadiGoalkeeping coach nbsp Wassim NaouaraFitness coach nbsp Mohamed Sabri BouaziziTeam doctor nbsp Yassine Ben AhmedPlayers editCurrent squad edit Note Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules Players may hold more than one non FIFA nationality No Pos Nation Player1 GK nbsp TUN Amenallah Memmiche2 DF nbsp TUN Mohamed Ben Ali3 DF nbsp TUN Amenallah Majhed4 MF nbsp TUN Mohamed Wael Derbali5 DF nbsp TUN Yassine Meriah6 MF nbsp NIG Youssouf Oumarou7 FW nbsp JOR Sharara8 MF nbsp TUN Houssem Tka9 FW nbsp BRA Rodrigo Rodrigues10 MF nbsp BRA Yan Sasse11 FW nbsp TUN Oussama Bouguerra12 GK nbsp TUN Moez Ben Cherifia captain 13 DF nbsp TUN Raed Bouchniba15 DF nbsp ALG Mohamed Amine Tougai16 GK nbsp TUN Hamza Ghanmi17 FW nbsp TUN Zied Berrima18 FW nbsp ALG Houssam Ghacha No Pos Nation Player19 MF nbsp TUN Mootez Zaddem20 DF nbsp TUN Mohamed Amine Ben Hamida21 FW nbsp TUN Aziz Abid22 DF nbsp TUN Hani Amamou23 MF nbsp TUN Ghaith Ouahabi24 FW nbsp TUN Bilel Sahli25 MF nbsp TUN Ghailene Chaalali26 GK nbsp TUN Mohamed Sedki Debchi27 FW nbsp GAM Kebba Sowe on loan from Avenir de Soliman 28 MF nbsp TUN Aziz Fellah29 FW nbsp TUN Mohamed Ali Ben Hammouda30 DF nbsp TUN Oussama Shili31 MF nbsp TUN Zakaria El Ayeb32 MF nbsp TUN Montassar Triki33 FW nbsp TUN Farouk Mimouni35 DF nbsp TUN Zinedine Sassi36 MF nbsp NGA Onuche OgbeluOut on loan 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 MF nbsp CIV Cedrik Gbo at Minnesota United until 31 December 2023 DF nbsp TUN Ghassen Mahersi at Union de Tataouine until 30 June 2024 MF nbsp TUN Wael Chaieb at Union de Tatouine until 30 June 2024 GK nbsp TUN Wassim Karoui at Avenir de Soliman until 30 June 2024 No Pos Nation Player FW nbsp TUN Rayen Hamrouni at Avenir de Soliman until 30 June 2024 FW nbsp TUN Achref Jebri at Esperance de Zarzis until 30 June 2024 MF nbsp TUN Khalil Guenichi at Avenir de Soliman until 30 June 2025 Other players under contract 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 DF nbsp TUN Bilel Chabbar DF nbsp TUN Zied Machmoum No Pos Nation Player FW nbsp ALG Riad BenayadInternational participations editIFFHS rankings edit Club world ranking edit Footballdatabase club s points 13 August 2023 14 Pos Team Points189 nbsp Rosario Central 1557190 nbsp Atletico Tucuman 1557191 nbsp Esperance de Tunis 1556192 nbsp Sturm Graz 1555193 nbsp Associacao Portuguesa de Desportos 1554 CAF club rankings edit Footballdatabase club s points 13 August 2023 Pos Team Points3 nbsp Wydad Casablanca 16244 nbsp TP Mazembe 15855 nbsp Esperance de Tunis 15566 nbsp Pyramids FC 15467 nbsp CR Belouizdad 1538 National club rankings edit Footballdatabase club s points 13 August 2023 Pos Team Points1 nbsp Esperance de Tunis 15562 nbsp Etoile du Sahel 15323 nbsp US Monastir 14594 nbsp CS Sfaxien 14595 nbsp Club Africain 1446 FIFA Club World Cup edit Participation Record in the FIFA Club World Cup Year Position Last opponent2011 Sixth place nbsp Monterrey2018 Fifth place nbsp Guadalajara2019 Fifth place nbsp Al SaddAfrican Cup of Champions Clubs and CAF Champions League edit Participation Record in the African Cup of Champions Clubs and CAF Champions League Year Final position round Last opponent1971 Second round nbsp Ismaily1986 Quarter Finals nbsp Africa Sports1989 Second round nbsp MC Oran1990 Quarter Finals nbsp Iwuanyanwu Nationale1994 Winners nbsp Zamalek1995 Quarter Finals nbsp Ismaily1999 Runners up nbsp Raja Casablanca2000 Runners up nbsp Hearts of Oak2001 Semi finals nbsp Al Ahly2002 Group stage nbsp Zamalek nbsp ASEC Mimosas nbsp Costa do Sol2003 Semi finals nbsp Ismaily2004 Semi finals nbsp Enyimba2005 Group stage nbsp Etoile du Sahel nbsp Zamalek nbsp ASEC Mimosas2007 Group stage nbsp Etoile du Sahel nbsp Al Hilal nbsp ASEC Mimosas2010 Runners up nbsp TP Mazembe2011 Winners nbsp Wydad AC2012 Runners up nbsp Al Ahly2013 Semi finals nbsp Orlando Pirates2014 Group stage nbsp Club Sfaxien nbsp ES Setif nbsp Al Ahly Benghazi2015 Second round nbsp Al Merrikh2017 Quarter finals nbsp Al Ahly2018 Winners nbsp Al Ahly2019 Winners nbsp Wydad AC2020 Quarter finals nbsp Zamalek2021 Semi finals nbsp Al Ahly2022 Quarter finals nbsp ES Setif2023 Semi finals nbsp Al AhlyCAF Confederation Cup edit Participation Record in the CAF Confederation Cup Year Position Last opponent2006 Group stage nbsp Etoile du Sahel nbsp Saint Eloi Lupopo nbsp Renacimiento2008 Play off round nbsp Etoile du Sahel2015 Group stage nbsp Al Ahly nbsp Etoile du Sahel nbsp Stade Malien2016 Play off round nbsp MO BejaiaCAF Cup edit Participation Record in the CAF Cup Year Position Last opponent1997 Winners nbsp Petro de LuandaAfrican Cup Winners Cup edit Participation Record in the African Cup Winners Cup Year Position Last opponent1980 Second round nbsp Kadiogo1981 First round nbsp Zoundourma1987 Runners up nbsp Gor Mahia1998 Winners nbsp 1º de AgostoCAF Super Cup edit Participation Record in the CAF Super Cup Year Position Last opponent1995 Winners nbsp Motema Pembe1999 Runners up nbsp ASEC Mimosas2012 Runners up nbsp Maghreb de Fes2019 Runners up nbsp Raja Casablanca2020 Runners up nbsp ZamalekAfro Asian Club Championship edit Participation Record in the Afro Asian Club Championship Year Position Last opponent1995 Winners nbsp Thai Farmers BankTwinning editTaraji Wadi Al Nes Palestinian Club Associazione Sportiva Roma Italian Club Rival clubs edit nbsp Club Africain Derby nbsp Etoile du Sahel Rivalry nbsp Club Sfaxien Rivalry nbsp Al Ahly Rivalry nbsp Zamalek Rivalry nbsp Wydad AC Rivalry nbsp TP Mazembe Rivalry Presidents edit nbsp Mohamed Melki 1919 1923 nbsp Chedly Zouiten 1924 nbsp Mohamed Zouaoui 1925 nbsp Mustapha Kaak 1926 1930 nbsp Chedly Zouiten 1930 1963 nbsp Mohamed Ben Ismail 1963 1968 nbsp Ali Zouaoui 1968 1971 nbsp Hassen Belkhodja 1971 1981 nbsp Naceur Knani 1981 1984 nbsp Abdelhamid Achour 1984 1985 nbsp Moncef Zouhir 1985 1986 nbsp Mondher Znaidi 1986 1987 nbsp Hedi Jilani 1987 1989 nbsp Slim Chiboub 1989 2004 nbsp Aziz Zouhir 2004 2007 nbsp Hamdi Meddeb 2007 present Source www est org tnManagers edit nbsp Hammadi Ben Ghachem 1938 1939 nbsp Hachemi Cherif 1942 1959 nbsp Habib Draoua 1959 1961 nbsp Hachemi Cherif 1961 1962 nbsp Jean Baratte 1962 1963 nbsp Abderrahmane Ben Ezzedine 1963 1966 nbsp Sandor Pazmandy 1966 November 1968 nbsp Robert Domergue November 1968 May 1969 nbsp Abderrahmane Ben Ezzedine May 1969 1971 nbsp Slah Guiza September 1971 November 1971 nbsp Vladimir Mirka November 1971 1973 nbsp Hmid Dhib 1973 May 1976 nbsp Abderrahmane Ben Ezzedine May 1976 July 1976 nbsp Stjepan Bobek 1976 1978 nbsp Mokhtar Tlili 1978 1981 nbsp Hmid Dhib 1981 1982 nbsp Mrad Mahjoub 1982 December 1983 nbsp Roger Lemerre December 1983 1984 nbsp Amarildo Tavares da Silveira 1984 1987 nbsp Antoni Piechniczek 1987 1990 nbsp Wladyslaw Zmuda 1990 1991 nbsp Andon Doncevski 1991 1992 nbsp Zdzislaw Podedworny 1992 1993 nbsp Faouzi Benzarti 1993 1996 nbsp Luigi Maifredi 1996 nbsp Khaled Ben Yahia 1996 1997 nbsp Youssef Zouaoui 1997 2002 nbsp Michel Decastel 2002 2004 nbsp Claude Andrey 2004 2005 nbsp Khaled Ben Yahia 2005 2006 nbsp Jacky Dugueperoux 2006 2007 nbsp Faouzi Benzarti 2007 nbsp Larbi Zouaoui July 2007 August 2007 nbsp Carlos Cabral September 2007 December 2007 nbsp Youssef Zouaoui December 2007 May 2008 nbsp Carlos Cabral May 2008 November 2008 nbsp Jose Morais November 2008 March 2009 nbsp Faouzi Benzarti March 2009 November 2010 nbsp Maher Kanzari November 2010 December 2010 nbsp Nabil Maaloul December 2010 January 2012 nbsp Michel Decastel January 2012 May 2012 nbsp Nabil Maaloul May 2012 February 2013 nbsp Maher Kanzari February 2013 October 2013 nbsp Sebastien Desabre December 2013 January 2014 nbsp Ruud Krol January 2014 May 2014 nbsp Sebastien Desabre May 2014 August 2014 nbsp Khaled Ben Yahia August 2014 February 2015 nbsp Jose Morais February 2015 June 2015 nbsp Jose Anigo June 2015 August 2015 nbsp Ammar Souayah August 2015 January 2017 nbsp Faouzi Benzarti January 2017 December 2017 nbsp Mondher Kebaier January 2018 February 2018 nbsp Khaled Ben Yahia February 2018 October 2018 nbsp Mouin Chaabani October 2018 July 2021 nbsp Radhi Jaidi August 2021 June 2022 nbsp Nabil Maaloul June 2022 May 2023 nbsp Anis Boussaidiinterim May 2023 nbsp Mouin Chaabani May 2023 October 2023 nbsp Tarek Thabet October 2023 present Source www est org tnReferences edit Top 10 African Football Clubs Ranking 2022 thefootballlovers com 6 May 2022 Archived from the original on 14 May 2023 Retrieved 14 May 2023 FIFA com FIFA Club World Cup 2018 News Esperance return to African summit FIFA com www fifa com Archived from the original on 10 July 2019 Retrieved 10 July 2019 L Esperance Sportive de Tunis est eternelle Archived from the original on 25 June 2022 Retrieved 17 December 2020 En Vert et Blanc l Esperance de Tunis en 1919 17 February 2019 Archived from the original on 17 November 2020 Retrieved 17 December 2020 Esperance rewrite Tunisian football 30 June 2004 Archived from the original on 10 July 2019 Retrieved 10 July 2019 Football CAF Confederation Africaine du CAF CL Head to head Wydad vs Esperance in CAF matches Total CAF Champions League 2022 23 CAFOnline com Archived from the original on 29 April 2023 Retrieved 29 April 2023 Youssef Msakni dans un club qatari pour 23 millions de dinars Archived from the original on 10 May 2021 Retrieved 18 December 2020 Coupe arabe des clubs l Esperance de Tunis sacree Archived from the original on 9 August 2017 Retrieved 18 December 2020 Ligue des champions l Esperance Tunis sacree face a al Ahly 9 November 2018 Archived from the original on 19 September 2020 Retrieved 18 December 2020 Esperance win CAF Champions League after Wydad refuse to play in protest of VAR decision Goal com www goal com Archived from the original on 29 April 2023 Retrieved 29 April 2023 Esperance declared African Champions League winners DW 08 07 2019 dw com Archived from the original on 29 April 2023 Retrieved 29 April 2023 Esperance de Tunis Kit History Football Kit Archive Archived from the original on 14 March 2023 Retrieved 14 March 2023 Stade Olympique El Menzah Archived from the original on 12 September 2023 Retrieved 14 April 2022 Club World Ranking by footballdatabase footballdatabase 3 June 2018 Archived from the original on 18 May 2021 Retrieved 22 May 2020 External links edite s tunis com www sofascore com Esperance Sportive de Tunis at FIFA com Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Esperance Sportive de Tunis amp oldid 1183036102, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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