Arab Super Cup

Summary

The Arab Super Cup (Arabic: الكأس العربية الممتازة) was an Arab football competition, held between four teams (the winners and runners-up of both the Arab Club Champions Cup and the Arab Cup Winners' Cup) each year.

Arab Super Cup
Founded1992
Abolished2001
RegionArab world (UAFA)
Number of teams4
Most successful club(s)
Saudi Arabia Al-Shabab
(2 times)Egypt Al-Ahly

History edit

The Arab Super Cup started in 1992 with an unofficial edition in Casablanca, Morocco, and was discontinued after the 2001 edition held in Damascus, Syria.

Records and statistics edit

Finals edit

List of Arab Super Cup finals
Year Country Team 1 Score Team 2 Country Venue Attendance average
1992   Morocco Wydad Casablanca n/a Al-Hilal SFC   Saudi Arabia Stade Mohamed V, Casablanca
1993 Not held
1994
1995   Saudi Arabia Al-Shabab n/a Al-Hilal SFC   Saudi Arabia King Fahd International Stadium, Riyadh
1996   Tunisia ES Tunis n/a Al-Riyadh SC   Saudi Arabia Stade El Menzah, Tunis 30 000
1997   Egypt Al-Ahly n/a OC Khouribga   Morocco Stade Mohamed V, Casablanca
1998   Egypt Al-Ahly n/a Club Africain   Tunisia Stade El Menzah, Tunis
1999   Algeria MC Oran n/a Al-Jaish   Syria Abbasiyyin Stadium, Damascus 15 000
2000   Saudi Arabia Al-Shabab n/a Al-Faisaly   Jordan Amman International Stadium, Amman
2001   Saudi Arabia Al-Hilal SFC n/a Al-Nassr   Saudi Arabia Abbasiyyin Stadium, Damascus
Notes

^n/a A round-robin tournament determined the final standings.

Winners by club edit

Num Club Winners Runners-up
1   Al-Ahly 2 0
  Al-Shabab 2 0
3   Al-Hilal SFC 1 2
4   MC Oran 1 0
  Wydad Casablanca 1 0
  ES Tunis 1 0
7   Al-Faisaly 0 1
  OC Khouribga 0 1
  Al-Nassr 0 1
  Al-Riyadh SC 0 1
  Al-Jaish 0 1
  Club Africain 0 1

Winners by country edit

Num Nation Winners Runners up
1   Saudi Arabia 3 4
2   Egypt 2 0
3   Morocco 1 1
  Tunisia 1 1
5   Algeria 1 0
6   Jordan 0 1
  Syria 0 1

All-time top scorers edit

Rank Nat Name Goals
1   Sami Al-Jaber 4
  Hady Khashaba
  Fahad Al-Mehallel
4   Maher Al-Sayed 3
  Ahmed Koussa
  Jeris Tadrus
  Felix Aboagye
  Mark Williams (South African soccer)

External links edit

  • RSSSF