Emir of Qatar Cup

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Emir of Qatar Cup
Founded1972; 49 years ago (1972)
CountryQatar
Current championsAl Sadd (18th title)
(2021)
Most championshipsAl Sadd (18 titles)
Current:

Emir of Qatar Cup (Arabic: كأس أمير قطر), also known as the Emir Cup, but changed to Amir Cup starting in 2019, is an association football tournament played every season by 18 first and second division teams. The most successful is Al Sadd who won the tournament 17 times. Emir of Qatar Cup was played for the first time in 1972, and was won by Al Ahli.[1]

History[]

Qatar Emir Cup in 2009

Al Ahli SC won the first ever Emir of Qatar Cup, defeating Al-Rayyan SC 6-1 under the leadership of Sudanese coach Mohammed Kheiri. Till this day, it is the joint-largest scoreline ever recorded in an Emir Cup final. It was refereed by Ali al-Absi, while Abdullah Siddiqi scored the first ever goal in an Emir Cup final. Two years later, Al Ahli were denied another Emir Cup title in a tight match against Al-Sadd SC which Al Sadd won 4–3. In this match, the first ever hat-trick in an Emir Cup was scored by Iranian player Qassim Falah who played for Al Ahli.

The first ever Emir Cup final to be broadcast on color television was the 1975 final which took place in Al-Ahly Stadium. It was commentated by Qatari Mohammed Nuah.

The largest scoring match in the Emir Cup took place in 1981/82 between Al Sadd and Al-Shamal SC. Al Shamal were defeated 16–2.

1991/92 is the only season to ever be held in an away/home format. Al Ahli SC won that year, defeating Al-Rayyan SC.

In the 1992/93 edition, the tournament saw a record number of red cards handed out - Al Sadd players received 4 red cards, while Al-Arabi SC only received 1. Al Arabi won the match 3-0 thanks to a brace by Khalifa Salem and a goal by Edison.

Ali Absi was the first foreign referee to officiate a match in the first edition of the Emir Cup.[2]

The Emir Cup has undergone format changes since it was first played in the early 70s. In 1999, it was decide to include Second Division sides along with the top-tier teams playing for Qatar national league title. In 2004, the tournament was plane in such a manner that the event would last five stages.[3]

Previous winners[]

Statistics[]

Referees of finals[]

[2][4]

Winning club captains[]

Source: alarab.qa

Club managers in finals[]

[2]

Top-Performing Clubs[]

Club Champions
Al-Sadd 18
Al-Arabi 8
Al-Gharrafa 7 (5 as Al-Ittihad)
Al-Rayyan 6
Al-Ahli 4
Al-Duhail 3 (1 as Lekhwiya)
Qatar SC 2 (2 as Al-Esteqlal)
Umm-Salal 1

References[]

  1. ^ "Qatar - List of Cup Winners". RSSSF.com.
  2. ^ a b c "مسابقة كأس سمو الأمير لكرة القدم المباريات النهائية". alkass.net. Archived from the original on 27 September 2013. Retrieved 18 December 2014.
  3. ^ "About Emir Cup". QFA. Archived from the original on 18 December 2014. Retrieved 18 December 2014.
  4. ^ حصريا - قائمة حكام نهائي كأس الأمير من 1973 وحتى 2013 (in Arabic). superkoora. Archived from the original on 27 September 2013. Retrieved 23 September 2013.

External links[]

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