AS FAR
Full name | Association's Sports of Forces Armed Royal | |||
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Nickname(s) |
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Short name | FAR,JAY,ASF | |||
Founded | 1 September 1958 | |||
Ground | Prince Moulay Abdellah Stadium | |||
Capacity | 53,000 | |||
President | G.Mohamed Haramou | |||
Manager | Hubert Velud | |||
League | Botola | |||
2023–24 | Botola, 2nd of 16 | |||
Website | http://www.as-far.ma | |||
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Association sportive des Forces armées royales (transl. Sports Association of the Royal Armed Forces, Arabic: الجمعية الرياضية للقوات المسلحة الملكية), abbreviated as AS FAR (Arabic: نادي الجيش الملكي, romanized: Nādī al-Jaysh al-Malakī), is a professional sport club based in Morocco's capital Rabat, that competes in Botola, the top tier of Moroccan football.
The club was founded in 1958, 3 years after Morocco had gained their independence and is one of the most famous football clubs in Morocco. The club has traditionally worn a black home kit since inception. AS FAR is a well known club for the success of its football section, very popular in and outside the country. The team played its home matches in the 53,000 capacity Prince Moulay Abdellah Stadium in downtown Rabat from 1983 to 2023.
The club is one of the most widely supported teams in Africa. AS FAR is one of three founding members of Botola that have never been relegated from the top division, Since the club's inception in 1958, along with Wydad AC and Raja CA.[1][2] The club holds many long-standing rivalries, most notably the rivalries with Wydad AC, Raja CA and FUS Rabat, whom they contest the "Capital Derby".
AS FAR is among the clubs with the most titles in Morocco, and was ranked first locally, 10 continental and 201 universally, in the international rankings of clubs during the first ten years of the 21st century (2001–2010), issued by the International Federation of Football History & Statistics in 2011.[3]
AS FAR is one of the most successful clubs in Morocco with 31 titles in total: 13 Botola, 12 Moroccan Throne Cup, 4 Moroccan Super Cup, 1 African Champions League and 1 African Confederation Cup. They are the first Moroccan team to win the African Champions League in 1985 and the African Confederation Cup in 2005.[4][5][6]
History
[edit]Early years (1958–1965)
[edit]AS FAR was founded on 1 September 1958, by the initiative of the Crown Prince Moulay El Hassan,[7] who was an avid football fan himself, by signing a decree as High Commander of the Moroccan Royal Army. The club scouts and players work with the Royal Armed Forces to develop players in multiple aspects (technical level, fitness management, sportsmanship).[8]
One year after its creation, the football team, while still in the second division, won their first Throne Cup. That same year, the club finished first in the division of the Moroccan Championship. In the Moroccan Throne Cup, they managed to hide in eighths of final and then face the Wydad Casablanca. The latter was beaten by a score of 1–0. During the quarter-finals, the military defeated the Fath Union Sport Rabat at the first Rabat derby, where AS FAR won the match 3–1. The final took place on December 14, 1959, face Mouloudia Oujda won the first two editions of the throne cup and prepares to make a triple while the military, for their first season, a cut of the throne would be the ideal. Finally the AS FAR win this match on the 1–0 score that is stuck at Stade Mohammed V.[9]
The Royal Army's won its second title in less than two years, after it squandered the championship title in a play-off against the KAC Kénitra. The 1964–65 season was known for repeated arbitration mistakes, and the meeting with Maghreb de Fès was the point that overflowed the cup with a disastrous arbitration that directly affected the outcome of the meeting and the fate of the championship title by virtue of the fact that the defeat ended 3-0 and in Rabat, the match with a quarrel between the players and the referee. After the incident, the Royal Moroccan Football Federation took an unfair decision to suspend the club for a full season and thus not participate in the championship and cup for the following season 1965–66. The military team spent a white season away from local stadiums, but it did not stop competing, as it preferred to play international matches against international teams and teams to maintain competitiveness. They played nearly 50 international matches in one season against international teams in various European countries such as Spain, France and Russia, including Cádiz CF, Recreativo de Huelva and Gibraltar, most notably against Barcelona at the Camp Nou on December 25, 1966, which ended with four goals to zero in favor of the Spaniards, while they succeeded in snatching a tie against Atlético Madrid in a match on the occasion of the inauguration of the Vicente Calderón Stadium, ended with a score of 2-2, before the team visited the Soviet Union in two trips, the team drew 1–1 against Dinamo Moscow.
Domination of Moroccan football (1965–1984)
[edit]The Royal Army returned to the atmosphere of competition in the championship, after the banned season. AS FAR was crowned with two other titles immediately after resuming its activity in the championship in 1967 and 1968 and 1970.
In the same period, at the beginning of the sixties, Al-Asaker also took control of the Moroccan Super Cup winning it in four out of six times.[10] Then the Royal Army, led by its French coach Clezo, began to dominate the league competition by winning four titles, and the team's first meeting with the championship title was in the 1960–61 season, and control of the championship title continued for four consecutive seasons until 1964 as a new record.[11][12][13][14]
Internationally and in the same era, the Royal Army team had the honor of participating in the first edition of the Mohammed V Cup in 1962, after winning the league title the same year, the Royal Army was ranked third, after a 5–0 defeat against French club Stade Reims. They were set to face Real Madrid for the third-place position, the match ended in 4–3 victory, thus becoming the first Arab and African team to beat the 20th Century Club.[15]
In their fifth participation, the military team was able to reach the final of the Mohammed V Cup for the first time in 1967, when it eliminated in the semi-finals the Dukla Prague with a score of 1–0, to face the Bulgarian CSKA Sofia in the final, which won the title at the expense of the military team with great difficulty by a score of 1- 0.[15] The military team returned to the Mohammed V Cup final in 1970 for the second time, where they faced the Spanish giant Atlético Madrid, the Royal Army lost 4–1.[15]
AS FAR was the first Moroccan team to participate in African competitions by drawing the 1968 African Cup of Champions Clubs, after winning the league for the same year. With the beginning of the seventies, exactly in 1971, and after an absence of 11 years, the military team, accompanied by its Spanish coach Sabino Barinaga, won the second title of the Moroccan Throne Cup at the expense of Maghreb Fez, after the match ended in a 9-8 penalty shootout victory.
First African title (1984–2004)
[edit]After a long 12 years trophyless run, AS FAR achieved the most important victory by winning the championship titles and the Moroccan Throne Cup, despite the short period that José Faria spent as the team's coach.[16][17]
The Royal Army team entered the African competition, after winning the championship title, by participating in the 1985 African Cup of Champions Clubs. It entered history as the first Moroccan team to win a continental title. the Royal Army team reached the semi-finals of the African Champions League for the second time in its history, where it faced the Egyptian team Zamalek, and the first leg ended with a score of 1-0 from a penalty kick in favor of the Egyptians in Cairo, and the same result was recorded in Rabat from A penalty kick by Shesha before the match was settled by penalty kicks (4–3), which saw the brilliance of goalkeeper Salah El-Din Hamid, who gave the team qualification for the final round by blocking two penalties, and the joy was not yet complete. In the final, the FAR team faced AS Bilima, the champions of the Democratic Republic of the Congo, and despite the injury of Timoumi and Abdeslam Laghrissi, the first leg match in Rabat ended with a great victory for the military team, 5–2. The away game ended in a 1–1 draw which gifted the Royal Army their first CAF Champions League title.[18][19] After this historical achievement, Hassan II of Morocco insisted on receiving the military team at his residence in the suburbs of the French capital, Paris, after this first African coronation of its kind. The team is an exceptional congratulations from King Hassan II.[20]
The team went on to win three Throne Cup in a row. The Royal Army became the second team to have the honor of keeping the cup in its treasury after Kawkab Marrakech, because the law of the competition grants the winner of the title three times in a row the honor of keeping the Silver Cup permanently. In the 1986 Afro-Asian Club Championship, the first edition of its kind, which was held in Riyadh in January 1987, between the Royal Army, the African champions, and the South Korean club, Busan IPark, the Asian champion, noticed the defeat of AS FAR by a score of 2–0.[21]
Then the Royal Army team embraced the championship title for the second time with Faria in 1987, and in 1989 with Argentine Angelillo, making the military team the first team to reach 10 championships. This generation continued its continental tour by reaching the semi-finals of the 1988 African Cup of Champions Clubs for the third time in the team's history. To the penalty shootout that defined the Nigerian team's superiority, the Royal Army missed another opportunity to cross into the final.[22]
The Return (2004–)
[edit]The Royal Army won two successive titles for the Moroccan Throne Cup in two Clasico matches at the expense of rival Wydad Casablanca, in 2003 with a goal of zero from a header by Hafeez Abdel-Sadiq with a pass from Ahmed, and in the 2004 final, the match ended in a goalless draw, which continued into overtime as well, to decide the penalty shootout, which marked the brilliance of goalkeeper Tariq Al-Jarmouni, and the match ended with the army winning 3–0 on penalties.[23][24]
After a long absence from the championship title that lasted 15 seasons, the military team returned to win its 11th league title in 2005, in a historic match drawing the 30th and last round of the league, in the Mohammed V compound in front of Raja Casablanca, leaders by two points, which needed a draw only to crown the title, but it was The soldiers have another opinion, and the Mohamed Fakhir battalion was able to overthrow Raja and win a clean double signed by Mohamed Armoumen, who also won the top scorer title. The army took the championship title from the city of Casablanca amid a great public astonishment for the opponent and the great joy of the soldiers, where the meeting was titled in the 21st century match in the Moroccan championship.
After 20 years of winning its first African title, the FAR team won the CAF Confederation Cup in 2005 after defeating the Nigerian Dolphins F.C 3–1 in aggregate.[25] AS FAR later went on to lose the 2006 CAF Super Cup against Al Ahly SC on penalties.[26]
On 2 December 2006, AS FAR lost the 2006 CAF Confederation Cup final after losing to Étoile Sportive du Sahel on an away goal.[27] In 2007, AS FAR won the Throne Cup after defeating Rachad Bernoussi on penalties.[28] Next season, they managed to clinch both domestic titles, the 2008 Botola and the Throne Cup.[29] IN 2009, As far won the Throne Cup after defeating Fath Union Sport on penalties.[30]
After 11 trophyless seasons, AS FAR clinched the 2020 Throne Cup after defeating Moghreb Tétouan 3–0.[31][32] They qualified to the 2023 CAF Confederation Cup, after a 15-year continental drought.[33][34] In their return to continental competition, AS FAR topped their group stage, qualifying to the knock out stages.[35] Later to be knocked out in the quarter-finals against USM Alger.[36][37]
After 15 years, AS FAR won its 13th league title in 2023 after topping the table with 67 points.[38][39]
Grounds
[edit]Prince Moulay Abdellah Stadium
[edit]Prince Moulay Abdellah Stadium (Arabic: مركب الأمير مولاي عبد الله) was a multi-purpose stadium in Rabat, Morocco. It was named after Prince Moulay Abdellah of Morocco. It was built in 1983 and was the home ground of AS FAR. It was used mostly for football matches and it also staged athletics. The stadium had a capacity of 52,000. From 2008 until 2023, it hosted of the Meeting International Mohammed VI d'Athlétisme de Rabat. It was a confirmed venue for the 2015 Africa Cup of Nations until Morocco was stripped of its hosting rights. It was also a venue for the 2014 FIFA Club World Cup and the 2023 FIFA Club World Cup.[40][41][42]
AS FAR Football Academy
[edit]Sports Center of FAR
[edit]Honours
[edit]- This is a list of honours for the senior AS FAR team that include a total of 31 Trophies[43]
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Other competitions
[edit]- Trofeo Semana del Sol, Spain[53]
- Winner (1): 1977
- Trofeo Ciudad de Cordoba, Spain
- Runners-up (1): 1976
- North African Cup of Champions
- Runners-up (1): 2008
- International elite championship
- Runners-up (1): 2008
- Ahmed Antifit Tournament
- Winner (1): 2007
- Runners-up (1): 2009
Top scorers in Botola
[edit]The AS FAR controls the title of Top scorers in Botola, which has the largest number of scorers a total of 14 times.Morocco - List of Topscorers
Season | Nat | Player | Goals Scored |
---|---|---|---|
1980 | Idriss Ouadich | 15 | |
1983 | Abdeslam Laghrissi | 14 | |
1987 | Abderrazak Khairi | 12 | |
1988 | Lahcen Anaflous | 17 | |
1990 | Abdeslam Laghrissi | 22 | |
1991 | Lahcen Anaflous | 15 | |
1992 | Lahcen Anaflous | 11 | |
1995 | Abdeslam Laghrissi | 15 | |
2005 | Mohamed Armoumen | 12 | |
2007 | Jawad Ouaddouch | 12 | |
2008 | Abderrazak El Mnasfi | 13 | |
2009 | Mustapha Allaoui | 14 | |
2011 | Jawad Ouaddouch | 11 | |
2016 | Mehdi Naghmi | 12 |
Top scorers in CAF Champions League
[edit]Season | Nat | Player | Goals Scored |
---|---|---|---|
1985 | Saad Dahane | 4 | |
1985 | Abdellah Haidamou | 4 | |
1985 | Abderrazak Khairi | 4 | |
1988 | Abdeslam Laghrissi | 7 |
Performance in CAF competitions
[edit]At the continental level, AS FAR is the first Moroccan club to have participated in an African Cup; It was in 1968, when it has reached the stage of the semi-finals of the African Cup of Champions Clubs. She was also the first Moroccan club to win the CAF Champions League, in 1985.
- CAF Champions League: 12 appearances
- CAF Confederation Cup: 7 appearances
- CAF Cup Winners' Cup: 5 appearances
- CAF Super Cup: 1 appearances
- 2006 – Finalist
African cups all-time statistics
[edit]As of 22 September 2024
CAF competitions | ||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Competition | S | P | W | D | L | GF | GA | GD |
CAF Champions League | 13 | 68 | 29 | 13 | 26 | 108 | 69 | +39 |
CAF Confederation Cup | 7 | 52 | 26 | 16 | 10 | 72 | 37 | +35 |
African Cup Winners' Cup | 5 | 32 | 16 | 6 | 10 | 45 | 27 | +18 |
CAF Super Cup | 1 | 1 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
Total | 26 | 153 | 71 | 36 | 46 | 225 | 133 | +92 |
Players
[edit]First team squad
[edit]- As of 31 August 2024[update]
Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.
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Managers
[edit]Current technical staff
[edit]Role | Name |
---|---|
Head coach | Czesław Michniewicz |
Assistant head coach | Gerard Juszczak Barae Jrondi |
Goalkeeping coach | Mohamed Znibi |
Fitness coach | Hassane Benazzouz |
Physiotherapist | Jaouad Taghzaoui Adil Boussif |
Club doctor | Hafid Bouchan |
Equipment manager | Abderrahman Badraoui |
Performance analyst | Ayman Makroud |
Team manager | El Habib Laâzizi |
- Last updated: 16 July 2024
Former coach
[edit]- Fin Mohamed Anouar (shtoki) (1958–59)
- Fin Larbi Benbarek (1959–60)
- Guy Cluseau (1960–69)
- Mustafa El Ghazouani (1969–70)
- Sabino Barinaga (1970–71)
- Blagoje Vidinić (1971–72)
- Anoul dos Santos (1972–73)
- Amar Ben Siffedine (1972–73)
- Sabino Barinaga (1973–74)
- Fin Driss Bamous (1973–74)
- Guy Clisaux (1974–80)
- Sabino Barinaga (1980–82)
- Mircea Dridea (1982–83)
- Fin José Faria (1983–88)
- Antonio Angelillo (1988–90)
- Fin José Faria (1990–92)
- Mustapha Dafarallah (1992–93)
- Mário Wilson (1993–95)
- Jesualdo Ferreira (1995–96)
- Carlos Alhinho (1996–97)
- Henri Depireux (1997–98)
- Georges Heylens (1998–99)
- Rachid Taoussi (1999–2000)
- Henri Depireux (2000–2001)
- Alain Giresse (July 1, 2001 – June 30, 2003)
- Mohamed Fakhir (2004–05)
- Henri Stambouli (March 1, 2006 – Jan 6, 2007)
- Jaouad Milani (2007)
- Mustapha Madih (2007–2008)
- Mohamed Fakhir (2008–2009)
- Walter Meeuws (July 16, 2009 – Nov 7, 2009)
- Aziz El Amri (2010)
- Mustapha Madih (2010–2011)
- Fathi Jamal (Nov 1, 2011 – April 16, 2012)
- Rachid Taoussi (July 1, 2012 – Dec 7, 2012)
- Abderrazak Khairi (Dec 7, 2012 – June 25, 2013)
- Jaouad Milani (July 1, 2013 – Oct 1, 2013)
- Rachid Taoussi (Oct 22, 2013 – Dec 13, 2014)
- José Romão (2015–16)
- Abdelmalek El Aziz (2016)
- Aziz El Amri (2016–2018)
- Abderrazak Khairi (2018)
- Mohamed Fakhir (2018)
- Carlos Alós Ferrer (2019)
- Abderrahim Taleb (2019–2020)
- Sven Vandenbroeck (2021–2022)[54]
- Fernando Da Cruz (2022–2023)[55]
- Mohammed Aziz Samadi (2023)
- Nasreddine Nabi (2023–2024)[56]
- Czesław Michniewicz (2024–)
Departments of AS FAR
[edit]Active sections of ASFAR | |||
---|---|---|---|
Football | Basketball | Athletics | Handball |
Boxing | Volleyball | Taekwondo | Wrestling |
Archery | Judo | Gymnastics | Swimming |
There are several other sporting branches in the club besides football professionally and the results of the Club in those prestigious results are sports and distinct local and continental levels.
Supporters
[edit]ASFAR has the largest number of supporters of any team in Morocco. The greater focus of fans are in the region Rabat-Salé-Kénitra. It has a population of 4,580,866. Also, the club has an important fan base inside the country, where several towns are renowned for counting vast majorities of ASFAR supporters, and outside the borders, among Moroccan emigrants.
The ASFAR Ultras movement began in 2005, with Ultras Askary Rabat (UAR05) being the first Group Ultra in Morocco, and Black Army (BA06) being the second Group Ultra and it was created in 2006. Their sanctuary is the southern Included of the Prince Moulay Abdellah Stadium.
- Curva chè
- Tifo Ultras Black Army
- Pyroshow Ultras Askary
- Tifo Ultras Askary before a final Coupe de Trône
References
[edit]- ^ "ثلاثة أندية مغربية فقط لم تذق طعم الهبوط للقسم الثاني". medi1news. 7 August 2017. Retrieved 2022-03-09.
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- ^ "حكاية البرازيلي "المهدي" الذي قاد المغرب لأروع ظهور بالمونديال". الشرق الأوسط (in Arabic). Retrieved 2022-03-14.
- ^ "رحلة جيل.. الجيش الملكي يفك للمغرب طلاسم إفريقيا". كووورة. 2020-06-15. Retrieved 2022-03-14.
- ^ "الـجيش المغربي يسعى لثاني لقب قاري". جريدة القبس. Retrieved 2022-03-14.
- ^ "African Club Competitions 1985". RSSSF. Retrieved 2022-01-11.
- ^ "فريق الجيش الملكي من الداخل : عندما استقبلنا جلالة الملك الحسن الثاني في باريس 13". مغرس. Retrieved 2022-03-14.
- ^ "Afro-Asian Club Championship". RSSSF. Retrieved 2022-03-14.
- ^ "African Club Competitions 1988". RSSSF. Retrieved 2022-03-14.
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- ^ "African Club Competitions 2006". RSSSF. Retrieved 2022-01-11.
- ^ "Morocco 2006/07". RSSSF. Retrieved 2022-11-06.
- ^ "Morocco 2007/08". RSSSF. Retrieved 2022-11-06.
- ^ "Morocco 2008/09". RSSSF. Retrieved 2022-11-06.
- ^ "الجيش الملكي يدك شباك المغرب التطواني ويحرز لقب كأس العرش". Hespress - هسبريس جريدة إلكترونية مغربية (in Arabic). 2022-05-14. Retrieved 2022-11-06.
- ^ "الجيش يهزم التطواني ويتوج بكأس العرش". كووورة. 2022-05-14. Retrieved 2022-11-06.
- ^ "الجيش الملكي يفوز على "دجوليبا" المالي". Hespress - هسبريس جريدة إلكترونية مغربية (in Arabic). 2022-11-09. Retrieved 2022-11-09.
- ^ Football, CAF-Confedération Africaine du. "Defending champions Berkane out as line up complete for TotalEnergies CAF CC Group Stage | Total CAF Confederation Cup". CAFOnline.com. Retrieved 2022-11-10.
- ^ Football, CAF-Confedération Africaine du. "Best eight gear up for TotalEnergies CAF Confederation Cup quarters draw | Total CAF Confederation Cup". CAFOnline.com. Retrieved 2023-04-07.
- ^ "Morocco's FAR club disqualified from CAF Cup despite victory over Algerian union". HESPRESS English - Morocco News. 2023-04-30. Retrieved 2023-04-30.
- ^ Football, CAF-Confedération Africaine du. "FAR Rabat bow out despite win over USM Alger | Total CAF Confederation Cup". CAFOnline.com. Retrieved 2023-04-30.
- ^ Kasraoui, Safaa. "FAR Wins Morocco's Football League". moroccoworldnews. Retrieved 2023-06-25.
- ^ "AS FAR win Botola championship after a 15-year wait". HESPRESS English - Morocco News. 2023-06-23. Retrieved 2023-06-25.
- ^ Staff Writer. "Rabat Confirmed as Second Host City to 2014 FIFA Club World Cup". moroccoworldnews. Retrieved 2023-04-23.
- ^ Mackey, Ed. "FIFA Club World Cup — all you need to know". The Athletic. Retrieved 2023-04-23.
- ^ "Real Madrid seeking to write history in Morocco". www.aljazeera.com. Retrieved 2023-04-23.
- ^ "جميع ألقاب الجيش الملكي المغربي". بطولة فووت - botolafoot (in Indonesian). Retrieved 2022-03-11.
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- ^ Sang, Kiplagat. "Vandenbroeck: Former Simba SC coach signs for Morocco's ASFAR Rabat". Goal. Retrieved 6 November 2022.
- ^ "الجيش الملكي يتعاقد مع الفرنسي فرناندو دا كروز كمدير تقني لأكاديمية كرة القدم". ASFAR. Retrieved 6 November 2022.
- ^ لكعيدا, أمال (17 July 2023). "رسميا.. نصر الدين نابي يدرب الجيش الملكي". هسبورت. Retrieved 19 July 2023.
External links
[edit]History
[edit]Early years (1958–1965)
[edit]AS FAR was founded on 1 September 1958, by the initiative of the Crown Prince Moulay El Hassan,[1] who was an avid football fan himself, by signing a decree as High Commander of the Moroccan Royal Army. The club scouts and players work with the Royal Armed Forces to develop players in multiple aspects (technical level, fitness management, sportsmanship).[2]
One year after its creation, the football team, while still in the second division, won their first Throne Cup. That same year, the club finished first in the division of the Moroccan Championship. In the Moroccan Throne Cup, they managed to hide in eighths of final and then face the Wydad Casablanca. The latter was beaten by a score of 1–0. During the quarter-finals, the military defeated the Fath Union Sport Rabat at the first Rabat derby, where AS FAR won the match 3–1. The final took place on December 14, 1959, face Mouloudia Oujda won the first two editions of the throne cup and prepares to make a triple while the military, for their first season, a cut of the throne would be the ideal. Finally the AS FAR win this match on the 1–0 score that is stuck at Stade Mohammed V.[3]
The Royal Army's won its second title in less than two years, after it squandered the championship title in a play-off against the KAC Kénitra. The 1964–65 season was known for repeated arbitration mistakes, and the meeting with Maghreb de Fès was the point that overflowed the cup with a disastrous arbitration that directly affected the outcome of the meeting and the fate of the championship title by virtue of the fact that the defeat ended 3-0 and in Rabat, the match with a quarrel between the players and the referee. After the incident, the Royal Moroccan Football Federation took an unfair decision to suspend the club for a full season and thus not participate in the championship and cup for the following season 1965–66. The military team spent a white season away from local stadiums, but it did not stop competing, as it preferred to play international matches against international teams and teams to maintain competitiveness. They played nearly 50 international matches in one season against international teams in various European countries such as Spain, France and Russia, including Cádiz CF, Recreativo de Huelva and Gibraltar, most notably against Barcelona at the Camp Nou on December 25, 1966, which ended with four goals to zero in favor of the Spaniards, while they succeeded in snatching a tie against Atlético Madrid in a match on the occasion of the inauguration of the Vicente Calderón Stadium, ended with a score of 2-2, before the team visited the Soviet Union in two trips, the team drew 1–1 against Dinamo Moscow.
Domination of Moroccan football (1965–1984)
[edit]The Royal Army returned to the atmosphere of competition in the championship, after the banned season. AS FAR was crowned with two other titles immediately after resuming its activity in the championship in 1967 and 1968 and 1970.
In the same period, at the beginning of the sixties, Al-Asaker also took control of the Moroccan Super Cup winning it in four out of six times.[4] Then the Royal Army, led by its French coach Clezo, began to dominate the league competition by winning four titles, and the team's first meeting with the championship title was in the 1960–61 season, and control of the championship title continued for four consecutive seasons until 1964 as a new record.[5][6][7][8]
Internationally and in the same era, the Royal Army team had the honor of participating in the first edition of the Mohammed V Cup in 1962, after winning the league title the same year, the Royal Army was ranked third, after a 5–0 defeat against French club Stade Reims. They were set to face Real Madrid for the third-place position, the match ended in 4–3 victory, thus becoming the first Arab and African team to beat the 20th Century Club.[9]
In their fifth participation, the military team was able to reach the final of the Mohammed V Cup for the first time in 1967, when it eliminated in the semi-finals the Dukla Prague with a score of 1–0, to face the Bulgarian CSKA Sofia in the final, which won the title at the expense of the military team with great difficulty by a score of 1- 0.[9] The military team returned to the Mohammed V Cup final in 1970 for the second time, where they faced the Spanish giant Atlético Madrid, the Royal Army lost 4–1.[9]
AS FAR was the first Moroccan team to participate in African competitions by drawing the 1968 African Cup of Champions Clubs, after winning the league for the same year. With the beginning of the seventies, exactly in 1971, and after an absence of 11 years, the military team, accompanied by its Spanish coach Sabino Barinaga, won the second title of the Moroccan Throne Cup at the expense of Maghreb Fez, after the match ended in a 9-8 penalty shootout victory.
First African title (1984–2004)
[edit]After a long 12 years trophyless run, AS FAR achieved the most important victory by winning the championship titles and the Moroccan Throne Cup, despite the short period that José Faria spent as the team's coach.[10][11]
The Royal Army team entered the African competition, after winning the championship title, by participating in the 1985 African Cup of Champions Clubs. It entered history as the first Moroccan team to win a continental title. the Royal Army team reached the semi-finals of the African Champions League for the second time in its history, where it faced the Egyptian team Zamalek, and the first leg ended with a score of 1-0 from a penalty kick in favor of the Egyptians in Cairo, and the same result was recorded in Rabat from A penalty kick by Shesha before the match was settled by penalty kicks (4–3), which saw the brilliance of goalkeeper Salah El-Din Hamid, who gave the team qualification for the final round by blocking two penalties, and the joy was not yet complete. In the final, the FAR team faced AS Bilima, the champions of the Democratic Republic of the Congo, and despite the injury of Timoumi and Abdeslam Laghrissi, the first leg match in Rabat ended with a great victory for the military team, 5–2. The away game ended in a 1–1 draw which gifted the Royal Army their first CAF Champions League title.[12][13] After this historical achievement, Hassan II of Morocco insisted on receiving the military team at his residence in the suburbs of the French capital, Paris, after this first African coronation of its kind. The team is an exceptional congratulations from King Hassan II.[14]
The team went on to win three Throne Cup in a row. The Royal Army became the second team to have the honor of keeping the cup in its treasury after Kawkab Marrakech, because the law of the competition grants the winner of the title three times in a row the honor of keeping the Silver Cup permanently. In the 1986 Afro-Asian Club Championship, the first edition of its kind, which was held in Riyadh in January 1987, between the Royal Army, the African champions, and the South Korean club, Busan IPark, the Asian champion, noticed the defeat of AS FAR by a score of 2–0.[15]
Then the Royal Army team embraced the championship title for the second time with Faria in 1987, and in 1989 with Argentine Angelillo, making the military team the first team to reach 10 championships. This generation continued its continental tour by reaching the semi-finals of the 1988 African Cup of Champions Clubs for the third time in the team's history. To the penalty shootout that defined the Nigerian team's superiority, the Royal Army missed another opportunity to cross into the final.[16]
The Return (2004–)
[edit]The Royal Army won two successive titles for the Moroccan Throne Cup in two Clasico matches at the expense of rival Wydad Casablanca, in 2003 with a goal of zero from a header by Hafeez Abdel-Sadiq with a pass from Ahmed, and in the 2004 final, the match ended in a goalless draw, which continued into overtime as well, to decide the penalty shootout, which marked the brilliance of goalkeeper Tariq Al-Jarmouni, and the match ended with the army winning 3–0 on penalties.[17][18]
After a long absence from the championship title that lasted 15 seasons, the military team returned to win its 11th league title in 2005, in a historic match drawing the 30th and last round of the league, in the Mohammed V compound in front of Raja Casablanca, leaders by two points, which needed a draw only to crown the title, but it was The soldiers have another opinion, and the Mohamed Fakhir battalion was able to overthrow Raja and win a clean double signed by Mohamed Armoumen, who also won the top scorer title. The army took the championship title from the city of Casablanca amid a great public astonishment for the opponent and the great joy of the soldiers, where the meeting was titled in the 21st century match in the Moroccan championship.
After 20 years of winning its first African title, the FAR team won the CAF Confederation Cup in 2005 after defeating the Nigerian Dolphins F.C 3–1 in aggregate.[19] AS FAR later went on to lose the 2006 CAF Super Cup against Al Ahly SC on penalties.[20]
On 2 December 2006, AS FAR lost the 2006 CAF Confederation Cup final after losing to Étoile Sportive du Sahel on an away goal.[21] In 2007, AS FAR won the Throne Cup after defeating Rachad Bernoussi on penalties.[22] Next season, they managed to clinch both domestic titles, the 2008 Botola and the Throne Cup.[23] IN 2009, As far won the Throne Cup after defeating Fath Union Sport on penalties.[24]
After 11 trophyless seasons, AS FAR clinched the 2020 Throne Cup after defeating Moghreb Tétouan 3–0.[25][26] They qualified to the 2023 CAF Confederation Cup, after a 15-year continental drought.[27][28] In their return to continental competition, AS FAR topped their group stage, qualifying to the knock out stages.[29] Later to be knocked out in the quarter-finals against USM Alger.[30][31]
After 15 years, AS FAR won its 13th league title in 2023 after topping the table with 67 points.[32][33]
Grounds
[edit]Prince Moulay Abdellah Stadium
[edit]Prince Moulay Abdellah Stadium (Arabic: مركب الأمير مولاي عبد الله) was a multi-purpose stadium in Rabat, Morocco. It was named after Prince Moulay Abdellah of Morocco. It was built in 1983 and was the home ground of AS FAR. It was used mostly for football matches and it also staged athletics. The stadium had a capacity of 52,000. From 2008 until 2023, it hosted of the Meeting International Mohammed VI d'Athlétisme de Rabat. It was a confirmed venue for the 2015 Africa Cup of Nations until Morocco was stripped of its hosting rights. It was also a venue for the 2014 FIFA Club World Cup and the 2023 FIFA Club World Cup.[34][35][36]
AS FAR Football Academy
[edit]Sports Center of FAR
[edit]Honours
[edit]- This is a list of honours for the senior AS FAR team that include a total of 31 Trophies[37]
|
Other competitions
[edit]- Trofeo Semana del Sol, Spain[47]
- Winner (1): 1977
- Trofeo Ciudad de Cordoba, Spain
- Runners-up (1): 1976
- North African Cup of Champions
- Runners-up (1): 2008
- International elite championship
- Runners-up (1): 2008
- Ahmed Antifit Tournament
- Winner (1): 2007
- Runners-up (1): 2009
Top scorers in Botola
[edit]The AS FAR controls the title of Top scorers in Botola, which has the largest number of scorers a total of 14 times.Morocco - List of Topscorers
Season | Nat | Player | Goals Scored |
---|---|---|---|
1980 | Idriss Ouadich | 15 | |
1983 | Abdeslam Laghrissi | 14 | |
1987 | Abderrazak Khairi | 12 | |
1988 | Lahcen Anaflous | 17 | |
1990 | Abdeslam Laghrissi | 22 | |
1991 | Lahcen Anaflous | 15 | |
1992 | Lahcen Anaflous | 11 | |
1995 | Abdeslam Laghrissi | 15 | |
2005 | Mohamed Armoumen | 12 | |
2007 | Jawad Ouaddouch | 12 | |
2008 | Abderrazak El Mnasfi | 13 | |
2009 | Mustapha Allaoui | 14 | |
2011 | Jawad Ouaddouch | 11 | |
2016 | Mehdi Naghmi | 12 |
Top scorers in CAF Champions League
[edit]Season | Nat | Player | Goals Scored |
---|---|---|---|
1985 | Saad Dahane | 4 | |
1985 | Abdellah Haidamou | 4 | |
1985 | Abderrazak Khairi | 4 | |
1988 | Abdeslam Laghrissi | 7 |
Performance in CAF competitions
[edit]At the continental level, AS FAR is the first Moroccan club to have participated in an African Cup; It was in 1968, when it has reached the stage of the semi-finals of the African Cup of Champions Clubs. She was also the first Moroccan club to win the CAF Champions League, in 1985.
- CAF Champions League: 12 appearances
- CAF Confederation Cup: 7 appearances
- CAF Cup Winners' Cup: 5 appearances
- CAF Super Cup: 1 appearances
- 2006 – Finalist
African cups all-time statistics
[edit]As of 22 September 2024
CAF competitions | ||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Competition | S | P | W | D | L | GF | GA | GD |
CAF Champions League | 13 | 68 | 29 | 13 | 26 | 108 | 69 | +39 |
CAF Confederation Cup | 7 | 52 | 26 | 16 | 10 | 72 | 37 | +35 |
African Cup Winners' Cup | 5 | 32 | 16 | 6 | 10 | 45 | 27 | +18 |
CAF Super Cup | 1 | 1 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
Total | 26 | 153 | 71 | 36 | 46 | 225 | 133 | +92 |
Players
[edit]First team squad
[edit]- As of 31 August 2024[update]
Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.
|
|
Managers
[edit]Current technical staff
[edit]Role | Name |
---|---|
Head coach | Czesław Michniewicz |
Assistant head coach | Gerard Juszczak Barae Jrondi |
Goalkeeping coach | Mohamed Znibi |
Fitness coach | Hassane Benazzouz |
Physiotherapist | Jaouad Taghzaoui Adil Boussif |
Club doctor | Hafid Bouchan |
Equipment manager | Abderrahman Badraoui |
Performance analyst | Ayman Makroud |
Team manager | El Habib Laâzizi |
- Last updated: 16 July 2024
Former coach
[edit]- Fin Mohamed Anouar (shtoki) (1958–59)
- Fin Larbi Benbarek (1959–60)
- Guy Cluseau (1960–69)
- Mustafa El Ghazouani (1969–70)
- Sabino Barinaga (1970–71)
- Blagoje Vidinić (1971–72)
- Anoul dos Santos (1972–73)
- Amar Ben Siffedine (1972–73)
- Sabino Barinaga (1973–74)
- Fin Driss Bamous (1973–74)
- Guy Clisaux (1974–80)
- Sabino Barinaga (1980–82)
- Mircea Dridea (1982–83)
- Fin José Faria (1983–88)
- Antonio Angelillo (1988–90)
- Fin José Faria (1990–92)
- Mustapha Dafarallah (1992–93)
- Mário Wilson (1993–95)
- Jesualdo Ferreira (1995–96)
- Carlos Alhinho (1996–97)
- Henri Depireux (1997–98)
- Georges Heylens (1998–99)
- Rachid Taoussi (1999–2000)
- Henri Depireux (2000–2001)
- Alain Giresse (July 1, 2001 – June 30, 2003)
- Mohamed Fakhir (2004–05)
- Henri Stambouli (March 1, 2006 – Jan 6, 2007)
- Jaouad Milani (2007)
- Mustapha Madih (2007–2008)
- Mohamed Fakhir (2008–2009)
- Walter Meeuws (July 16, 2009 – Nov 7, 2009)
- Aziz El Amri (2010)
- Mustapha Madih (2010–2011)
- Fathi Jamal (Nov 1, 2011 – April 16, 2012)
- Rachid Taoussi (July 1, 2012 – Dec 7, 2012)
- Abderrazak Khairi (Dec 7, 2012 – June 25, 2013)
- Jaouad Milani (July 1, 2013 – Oct 1, 2013)
- Rachid Taoussi (Oct 22, 2013 – Dec 13, 2014)
- José Romão (2015–16)
- Abdelmalek El Aziz (2016)
- Aziz El Amri (2016–2018)
- Abderrazak Khairi (2018)
- Mohamed Fakhir (2018)
- Carlos Alós Ferrer (2019)
- Abderrahim Taleb (2019–2020)
- Sven Vandenbroeck (2021–2022)[48]
- Fernando Da Cruz (2022–2023)[49]
- Mohammed Aziz Samadi (2023)
- Nasreddine Nabi (2023–2024)[50]
- Czesław Michniewicz (2024–)
Departments of AS FAR
[edit]Active sections of ASFAR | |||
---|---|---|---|
Football | Basketball | Athletics | Handball |
Boxing | Volleyball | Taekwondo | Wrestling |
Archery | Judo | Gymnastics | Swimming |
There are several other sporting branches in the club besides football professionally and the results of the Club in those prestigious results are sports and distinct local and continental levels.
Supporters
[edit]ASFAR has the largest number of supporters of any team in Morocco. The greater focus of fans are in the region Rabat-Salé-Kénitra. It has a population of 4,580,866. Also, the club has an important fan base inside the country, where several towns are renowned for counting vast majorities of ASFAR supporters, and outside the borders, among Moroccan emigrants.
The ASFAR Ultras movement began in 2005, with Ultras Askary Rabat (UAR05) being the first Group Ultra in Morocco, and Black Army (BA06) being the second Group Ultra and it was created in 2006. Their sanctuary is the southern Included of the Prince Moulay Abdellah Stadium.
- Curva chè
- Tifo Ultras Black Army
- Pyroshow Ultras Askary
- Tifo Ultras Askary before a final Coupe de Trône
References
[edit]- ^ ويكيبيديا-بتصرف, كتبه (2015-03-04). "نادي الجيش الملكي المغربي تاريخ ومجد". مشاهد 24 (in Arabic). Retrieved 2022-03-11.
- ^ "سجل الابطال | سجل بطولات الجيش الملكي المغربي". ميركاتو داي (in Arabic). 2020-05-13. Retrieved 2022-03-11.
- ^ "Morocco 1958/59". www.rsssf.org. Retrieved 11 March 2023.
- ^ "Morocco - List of Super Cup Finals". RSSSF. Retrieved 2022-03-11.
- ^ "Morocco 1960/61". RSSSF. Retrieved 2022-03-11.
- ^ "Morocco 1961/62". RSSSF. Retrieved 2022-03-11.
- ^ "Morocco 1962/63". RSSSF. Retrieved 2022-03-11.
- ^ "Morocco 1963/64". RSSSF. Retrieved 2022-03-11.
- ^ a b c "Coupe Mohamed V (Casablanca, Morocco)". RSSSF. Retrieved 2022-03-11.
- ^ "حكاية البرازيلي "المهدي" الذي قاد المغرب لأروع ظهور بالمونديال". الشرق الأوسط (in Arabic). Retrieved 2022-03-14.
- ^ "رحلة جيل.. الجيش الملكي يفك للمغرب طلاسم إفريقيا". كووورة. 2020-06-15. Retrieved 2022-03-14.
- ^ "الـجيش المغربي يسعى لثاني لقب قاري". جريدة القبس. Retrieved 2022-03-14.
- ^ "African Club Competitions 1985". RSSSF. Retrieved 2022-01-11.
- ^ "فريق الجيش الملكي من الداخل : عندما استقبلنا جلالة الملك الحسن الثاني في باريس 13". مغرس. Retrieved 2022-03-14.
- ^ "Afro-Asian Club Championship". RSSSF. Retrieved 2022-03-14.
- ^ "African Club Competitions 1988". RSSSF. Retrieved 2022-03-14.
- ^ "Morocco 2002/03". RSSSF. Retrieved 2022-03-15.
- ^ "Morocco 2003/04". RSSSF. Retrieved 2022-03-15.
- ^ "African Club Competitions 2005". RSSSF. Retrieved 2022-01-11.
- ^ "African Club Competitions 2005". RSSSF. Retrieved 2022-01-11.
- ^ "African Club Competitions 2006". RSSSF. Retrieved 2022-01-11.
- ^ "Morocco 2006/07". RSSSF. Retrieved 2022-11-06.
- ^ "Morocco 2007/08". RSSSF. Retrieved 2022-11-06.
- ^ "Morocco 2008/09". RSSSF. Retrieved 2022-11-06.