Saudi Professional League

The Saudi Pro League (SPL for short)[1] (Arabic: دوري المحترفين السعودي, Dawriyy al-Muḥtarifayni as-Suʿūdī), known as the Roshn Saudi League (RSL for short) (Arabic: دوري روشن السعودي, Dawriyy Roshan as-Suʿūdī) for sponsorship reasons,[2][3] is the highest division of association football in the Saudi Arabian league system. It has been operating as a round-robin tournament from it inaugural season until the 1989–90 season, after that the Saudi Federation decided to merge the football League with the King's Cup in one tournament and the addition of the Golden Box. The Golden Box would be an end of season knockout competition played between the top four teams of the regular league season. These teams would play at a semi-final stage to crown the champions of Saudi Arabia. The league reverted to a round-robin system in the 2007–08 season.

Saudi Professional League
Founded1976 (1976)
ConfederationAFC
Number of teams16 (18 in 2023–24)
Level on pyramid1
Relegation toFirst Division
Domestic cup(s)King Cup
Super Cup
International cup(s)AFC Champions League
UAFA Club Cup
GCC Champions League
Current championsAl-Hilal (18th title)
(2021–22)
Most championshipsAl-Hilal (18 titles)
Most appearancesMohamed Al-Deayea (406)
Top goalscorerMajed Abdullah (189 goals)
TV partnersShahid and SSC (MENA)
Websitespl.com.sa
Current: 2022–23 Saudi Professional League

The association is also regularly ranked with the highest coefficient in Asia due to having successful and consistent performances in the AFC Champions League by its clubs.

The first season of competition was the 1976–77 season.[4] Al-Hilal is the most successful team, holding 18 titles in its history and most recently winning the title in 2021–22.

History

Up until the late 1950s, football in Saudi Arabia was organized on a regional basis, with the only nationwide tournament being the King's Cup. In 1957, the first qualification process consolidated the regional tournaments of the Central, West, East and North regions. Clubs competed in their regional leagues to qualify for the King's Cup, which was the final stage of the competition. The winner of the King's Cup was not the league winner.

1976 saw the start of the first ever professional football league in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia with eight teams, the following season the number of clubs increased to ten. The 1981–82 season saw the merger of both the Saudi Premier League and the Saudi First Division for that season exclusively to the concern of the 1982 FIFA World Cup qualification process. Twenty teams were divided into two groups, A and B. The top two in each group would enter a semi-final stage to determine the overall champions. In the following season which reverted back to regular round robin competition, the number of first-division clubs was later increased to 12 in the 1984–85 season.

In December 1990, the Saudi football federation decided to merge the league with the king cup in one tournament, it was decided to revamp local competitions and to introduce professional football. A new league championship was formed called "The Custodian of The Two Holy Mosques League Cup", which was a two-stage championship. The first stage was a regular double round-robin league competition with the top 4 qualifying to the final knockout stage, called the golden box. Clubs were allowed to sign players on a professional basis making the league semi professional. This system lasted for seventeen seasons before reverting to a regular round robin competition. The league became fully professional in 2007.[5]

As of 2008, depending on the nation's coefficient, four teams from Saudi Arabia qualify for the AFC Champions League annually. This includes the top three positions of the league, together with the winner of the King Cup. If the winner of the King Cup is also among the top three teams then the fourth-best team qualifies to the play-offs, and if the winner of the King Cup is not in the top three league positions in the league, the top two will qualify directly to the group stages while the third team will qualify for the AFC Champions League play-offs.

Competition format

Competition

There are 16 clubs in the Saudi Professional League. During the course of a season (usually from August to May) each club plays the other clubs twice (a double round-robin system), once at their home stadium and once at that of their opponents, for 30 games. Teams receive three points for a win and one point for a draw. No points are awarded for a loss. Teams are ranked by position on the league table depending on points, then the head-to-head record between the tied teams is taken into consideration, and then goal difference.

Promotion and relegation

A system of promotion and relegation exists between the Saudi Professional League and the Saudi First Division League. The three lowest placed teams in the Saudi Professional League are relegated to the First Division, and the top three teams from the First Division are promoted to the Saudi Professional League.

List of teams

For details on the 2022–23 Saudi Professional League season, see here.

Note: Table lists in alphabetical order.
Team Location Stadium Capacity
Abha Abha Prince Sultan bin Abdul Aziz Stadium 20,000[6]
Al-Adalah Al-Hasa (Al-Hulaylah) Prince Abdullah bin Jalawi Stadium 26,000[7]
Al-Batin Hafar al-Batin Al-Batin Club Stadium 6,000[8]
Al-Ettifaq Dammam Prince Mohamed bin Fahd Stadium 35,000[9]
Al-Fateh Al-Hasa (Hofuf) Prince Abdullah bin Jalawi Stadium 26,000[7]
Al-Fayha Al Majma'ah Al Majma'ah Sports City 7,000
Al-Hilal Riyadh King Fahd International Stadium 62,685
Al-Ittihad Jeddah King Abdullah Sports City 62,345
Al-Khaleej Saihat Prince Mohamed bin Fahd Stadium (Dammam) 35,000
Al-Nassr Riyadh Al-Awwal Park 25,000
Al-Raed Buraidah King Abdullah Sport City Stadium 25,000
Al-Shabab Riyadh Prince Faisal bin Fahd Stadium 15,000
Al-Taawoun Buraidah King Abdullah Sport City Stadium 25,000
Al-Tai Ha'il Prince Abdul Aziz bin Musa'ed Stadium 12,000[10]
Al-Wehda Mecca King Abdul Aziz Stadium 38,000
Damac Khamis Mushait Prince Sultan bin Abdul Aziz Stadium (Abha) 20,000

List of champions

No Season Champion
1 1974–75 Al-Nassr
- 1975–76 Canceled
21976–77Al-Hilal
31977–78Al-Ahli
41978–79Al-Hilal
51979–80Al-Nassr
61980–81Al-Nassr
71981–82Al-Ittihad
81982–83Al-Ettifaq
91983–84Al-Ahli
101984–85Al-Hilal
111985–86Al-Hilal
121986–87Al-Ettifaq
131987–88Al-Hilal
141988–89Al-Nassr
151989–90Al-Hilal
161990–91Al-Shabab
171991–92Al-Shabab
181992–93Al-Shabab
191993–94Al-Nassr
201994–95Al-Nassr
No. Season Champion
211995–96Al-Hilal
221996–97Al-Ittihad
231997–98Al-Hilal
241998–99Al-Ittihad
251999–00Al-Ittihad
262000–01Al-Ittihad
272001–02Al-Hilal
282002–03Al-Ittihad
392003–04Al-Shabab
302004–05Al-Hilal
312005–06Al-Shabab
322006–07Al-Ittihad
332007–08Al-Hilal
342008–09Al-Ittihad
352009–10Al-Hilal
362010–11Al-Hilal
372011–12Al-Shabab
382012–13Al-Fateh
392013–14Al-Nassr
402014–15Al-Nassr
No. Season Champion
412015–16Al-Ahli
422016–17Al-Hilal
432017–18Al-Hilal
442018–19Al-Nassr
452019–20Al-Hilal
462020–21Al-Hilal
472021–22Al-Hilal
48 2022–23 -

Champions

Performance by club

# Club Winners Runners-up
1Al-Hilal
18
15
2Al-Nassr
9
6
3Al-Ittihad
8
8
4Al-Shabab
6
6
5Al-Ahli
3
9
6Al-Ettifaq
2
2
7Al-Fateh
1
0
8Al-Riyadh
0
1

Total titles won by city

City Number of titles Clubs
Riyadh
33
Al-Hilal (18), Al-Nassr (9), Al-Shabab (6)
Jeddah
11
Al-Ittihad (8), Al-Ahli (3)
Dammam
3
Al-Ettifaq (2)
Al-Hasa
1
Al-Fateh (1)

League participation

As of 2022, 37 clubs have participated in the Saudi football top division. Note: The tallies below include up to the 2022–23 season. Teams denoted in bold are current participants.

title-winning managers

Rank Manager Nat. Titles Club(s) Seasons
1 DavidovicBelgium 3 Al-Ittihad 1996–97, 1998–99, 2006–07
2 Ramón DíazArgentina 2 Al-Hilal 2016–17, 2021–22
Gabriel CalderonArgentina Al-Ittihad, Al-Hilal 2008–09, 2010–11
Khalil Al-ZayaniSaudi Arabia Al-Ettifaq 1982–83, 1986–87
Chico FormigaBrazil Al-Nassr 1979–80, 1980–81
5 José MoraisPortugal 1 Al-Hilal 2020–21
Razvan LucescuRomania Al-Hilal 2019–20
Rui VitóriaPortugal Al-Nassr 2018–19
Juan BrownArgentina Al-Hilal 2017–18
Christian GrossSwitzerland Al-Ahli 2015–16
Jorge da SilvaUruguay Al-Nassr 2014–15
José Daniel CarreñoUruguay Al-Nassr 2013–14
Fathi Al-JabalTunisia Al-Fateh 2012–13
Michel Preud'hommeBelgium Al-Shabab 2011–12
Eric GeretsBelgium Al-Hilal 2009–10
Cosmin OlăroiuRomania Al-Hilal 2007–08
Abduladtif Al-HoossieniSaudi Arabia Al-Shabab 2005–06
Marcos PaquetáBrazil Al-Hilal 2004–05
Zé MárioBrazil Al-Shabab 2003–04
Khalid Al-KoroniSaudi Arabia Al-Ittihad 2002–03
Francisco MaturanaColombia Al-Hilal 2001–02
ArdilesArgentina Al-Ittihad 2000–01
OscarBrazil Al-Ittihad 1999–00
Ilie BalaciRomania Al-Hilal 1997–98
JoubertBrazil Al-Hilal 1995–96
Yousef KhameesSaudi Arabia Al-Nassr 1994–95
Jean FernandezFrance Al-Nassr 1993–94
GeninhoBrazil Al-Shabab 1992–93
Lori SandriBrazil Al-Shabab 1991–92
Paulo CamposBrazil Al-Shabab 1990–91
João CarlosBrazil Al-Hilal 1989–90
Joel SantanaBrazil Al-Nassr 1988–89
Omar BorrasUruguay Al-Hilal 1987–88
NoagiraBrazil Al-Hilal 1985–86
CandinhoBrazil Al-Hilal 1984–85
Telê SantanaBrazil Al-Ahli 1983–84
ChinesinhoBrazil Al-Ittihad 1981–82
Mário ZagalloBrazil Al-Hilal 1978–79
DidiBrazil Al-Ahli 1977–78
George SmithEngland Al-Hilal 1976–77
Mahmoud Abou-RegailaEgypt Al-Nassr 1974–75

Top scorers

All-time top scorers

As of matches played 16 May 2023[11][12]

Boldface indicates a player still active in the Pro League.

Rank Player Club(s) Years Goals Apps Ratio
1 Saudi Arabia Majed Abdullah Al-Nassr 1977–19971891940.97
2 Saudi Arabia Nasser Al-Shamrani Al-Wehda, Al-Shabab, Al-Hilal, Al-Ittihad 2003–20191673010.55
3 Syria Omar Al Somah Al-Ahli 2014–20221441800.94
4 Saudi Arabia Fahd Al-Hamdan Al-Riyadh 1984–20001202520.48
5 Saudi Arabia Yasser Al-Qahtani Al-Qadsiah, Al-Hilal 2000–20181122060.54
6 Morocco Abderrazak Hamdallah Al-Nassr, Al-Ittihad 2018-1091100.99
7 Saudi Arabia Mohammad Al-Sahlawi Al-Qadsiah, Al-Nassr, Al-Shabab, Al-Taawoun 2005–1062440.45
8 Saudi Arabia Sami Al-Jaber Al-Hilal 1988–20071012680.38
9 Saudi Arabia Hamzah Idris Ohod, Al-Ittihad 1992–200796N/A
10 Saudi Arabia Obeid Al-Dosari Al-Wehda, Al-Ahli 1996–200591N/A

Top scorers by season

Season Nat. Top scorer(s) Club(s) Goals
1975–76 Saudi ArabiaMohammad S. AbdeliAl-Nassr13
1976–77 Saudi ArabiaNasser EidAl-Qadsiah7
1977–78 Saudi ArabiaMotamad KhojaliAl-Ahli14
1978–79 Saudi ArabiaMajed AbdullahAl-Nassr18
1979–80 Saudi ArabiaMajed AbdullahAl-Nassr17
1980–81 Saudi ArabiaMajed AbdullahAl-Nassr21
1981–82 Saudi ArabiaKhalid Al-Ma'ajilAl-Shabab22
1982–83 Saudi ArabiaMajed AbdullahAl-Nassr14
1983–84 Saudi ArabiaHussam Abu DawoodAl-Ahli14
1984–85 Saudi ArabiaHathal DosariAl-Hilal15
1985–86 Saudi ArabiaMajed AbdullahAl-Nassr15
1986–87 Saudi ArabiaMohammad SuwaidiAl-Ittihad17
1987–88 Saudi ArabiaKhalid Al-Ma'ajilAl-Shabab12
1988–89 Saudi ArabiaMajed AbdullahAl-Nassr19
1989–90 Saudi ArabiaSami Al-JaberAl-Hilal16
1990–91 Saudi ArabiaFahad Al-MehallelAl-Shabab20
1991–92 Saudi ArabiaSaeed Al-OwairanAl-Shabab16
1992–93 Saudi ArabiaSami Al-JaberAl-Hilal18
1993–94 SenegalMoussa NdaoAl-Hilal15
1994–95 Saudi ArabiaFahd Al-HamdanAl-Riyadh15
1995–96 GhanaOhene KennedyAl-Nassr14
1996–97 MoroccoAhmed BahjaAl-Ittihad21
1997–98 Saudi ArabiaSulaiman Al-HadaithyAl-Najma15
1998–99 Saudi ArabiaObeid Al-DosariAl-Wehda20
1999–00 Saudi ArabiaHamzah IdrisAl-Ittihad33
2000–01 AngolaPaulo da SilvaAl-Ettifaq13
2001–02 SenegalDiene FayeAl-Riyadh10
2002–03 EcuadorCarlos TenorioAl-Nassr15
2003–04 Ghana
Ivory Coast
Godwin Attram
Kandia Traoré
Al-Shabab
Al-Hilal
15
2004–05 SenegalMohammed MangaAl-Shabab15
2005–06 Saudi ArabiaEssa Al-MehyaniAl-Wehda16
2006–07 GhanaGodwin AttramAl-Shabab13
2007–08 Saudi ArabiaNasser Al-ShamraniAl-Shabab18
2008–09 Saudi Arabia
Morocco
Nasser Al-Shamrani
Hicham Aboucherouane
Al-Shabab
Al-Ittihad
12
2009–10 Saudi ArabiaMohammad Al-ShalhoubAl-Hilal12
2010–11 Saudi ArabiaNasser Al-ShamraniAl-Shabab17
2011–12 Saudi Arabia
Brazil
Nasser Al-Shamrani
Victor Simões
Al-Shabab
Al-Ahli
21
2012–13 ArgentinaSebastián TagliabuéAl-Shabab19
2013–14 Saudi ArabiaNasser Al-ShamraniAl-Hilal21
2014–15 SyriaOmar Al SomahAl-Ahli22
2015–16 SyriaOmar Al SomahAl-Ahli27
2016–17 SyriaOmar Al SomahAl-Ahli24
2017–18 ChileRonnie FernándezAl-Fayha13
2018–19 MoroccoAbderrazak HamdallahAl-Nassr34
2019–20 MoroccoAbderrazak HamdallahAl-Nassr29
2020–21 FranceBafétimbi GomisAl-Hilal24
2021–22 NigeriaOdion IghaloAl-Hilal24
2022–23 On course

Broadcasters

Country Broadcaster Ref
 Middle East and North Africa Shahid
SSC channels
 Austria Sportdigital [13]
 Germany
 Switzerland
 Australia 10 Play [14]
Balkans Sport Klub
 Brunei Astro SuperSport
 Malaysia
Caribbean DirecTV
South America
 France RMC Sport [15]
 Greece Cosmote Sport
 Hong Kong TVB
Indian subcontinent Sony Sports Network [16]
 Indonesia MNC Group (iNews, MNC Sports) [17]
 Italy Sportitalia
 Myanmar Sky Net
 Portugal Sport TV [18]
 Romania Sport Extra
Sub-saharan Africa StarTimes Sports [19]
 Thailand True Sport
 Türkiye S Sport [20]
 Vietnam FPT

See also

References

  1. The logo also used "MBS" as an abbreviation for the MBS Pro League (Prince Mohammad Bin Salman Professional League) until the 2021-22 season.
  2. "Saudi Pro League renamed to Roshn Saudi League". SPL. 23 August 2022. Archived from the original on 20 September 2022. Retrieved 24 August 2022.
  3. "Official SAFF site in English". Archived from the original on 18 September 2021. Retrieved 23 September 2021.
  4. "Live Scores – Clubs: Al Hilalclub_hint=Al Nassr". FIFA. Archived from the original on 1 August 2009.
  5. "Morocco's Abderrazak Hamdallah breaks scoring record in Saudi Arabia". 19 April 2019. Archived from the original on 20 April 2019. Retrieved 22 April 2019 via www.bbc.co.uk.
  6. "Prince Sultan Sport City Stadium (Mahalah)".
  7. "Prince Abdullah bin Jalawi Sports City Stadium".
  8. "Al batin Club Stadiuem".
  9. "Prince Mohammed Bin Fahad Stadium".
  10. "استاد الأمير عبدالعزيز بن مساعد بن جلوي". kooora.com. Retrieved 18 September 2018.
  11. "احصائيات هدافي الدوري تاريخيا والاكثر حصولا على لقب الهداف". Archived from the original on 5 January 2020. Retrieved 24 October 2019.
  12. "ماجد عبد الله، السهلاوي والقحطاني وأبرز الهدافيين التاريخيين في الدوري السعودي". Archived from the original on 18 August 2020. Retrieved 24 October 2019.
  13. "Al-Nassr vs. Ettifaq: Das Debüt von Cristiano Ronaldo heute im TV und LIVE STREAM - gibt es eine Übertragung? | Goal.com". www.goal.com. Archived from the original on 22 January 2023. Retrieved 22 January 2023.
  14. "How to watch Cristiano Ronaldo's Al Nassr in Australia: TV channel and live stream for Saudi Pro League". The Sporting News. 9 February 2023. Archived from the original on 24 February 2023. Retrieved 24 February 2023.
  15. "Arabie saoudite: à quelle heure et sur quelle chaîne regarder le premier match de Ronaldo avec Al-Nassr". RMC SPORT (in French). Archived from the original on 22 January 2023. Retrieved 22 January 2023.
  16. "Sony Networks brings Saudi Pro League action to Indian subcontinent". The Financial Express. 8 February 2023. Archived from the original on 9 February 2023. Retrieved 8 February 2023.
  17. @officialinewstv (21 January 2023). ""SAUDI PRO LEAGUE 2023 RONALDO ON THE COURT! Represent Al-Nassr! Saksikan debut Ronaldo di awal tahun dalam liga sepakbola bergengsi "SAUDI PRO LEAGUE" Al-Nassr VS Al-Ettifaq 23 Januari 00.20 WIB (dini hari) LIVE di iNews" (in Indonesian) via Instagram.
  18. "Saudi Pro League lands rights deals in Portugal and Italy". SportBusiness. 20 January 2023. Archived from the original on 21 January 2023. Retrieved 21 January 2023.
  19. "MATCHDAY LIVE ⚽️ Saudi Pro League Al-Nassr 🆚 Al-Ettifaq 📆 Sun, 22nd Jan ⏱ 8:30PM >> Stream live on StarTimes ON App". www.facebook.com. Archived from the original on 22 January 2023. Retrieved 22 January 2023.
  20. "Cristian Ronaldo ve Suudi Arabistan Ligi S Sport Plus'ta". ajansspor.com (in Turkish). Archived from the original on 20 January 2023. Retrieved 21 January 2023.
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