Arab Super Cup

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

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.

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 Egypt Al-Ahly 2 0
Saudi Arabia Al-Shabab 2 0
3 Saudi Arabia Al-Hilal SFC 1 2
4 Algeria MC Oran 1 0
Morocco Wydad Casablanca 1 0
Tunisia ES Tunis 1 0
7 Jordan Al-Faisaly 0 1
Morocco OC Khouribga 0 1
Saudi Arabia Al-Nassr 0 1
Saudi Arabia Al-Riyadh SC 0 1
Syria Al-Jaish 0 1
Tunisia 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 Saudi Arabia Sami Al-Jaber 4
Egypt Hady Khashaba
Saudi Arabia Fahad Al-Mehallel
4 Syria Maher Al-Sayed 3
Syria Ahmed Koussa
Jordan Jeris Tadrus
Ghana Felix Aboagye
South Africa Mark Williams (South African soccer)

External links[edit]