Fixtures

Libanoni Kupa 04/20 13:00 3 Al Ahli Nabatieh vs Tripoli SC - View

Results

Libanoni Liga 04/13 13:00 10 [4] Shabab Al-Ghazieh v Tripoli SC [5] D 0-0
Libanoni Liga 04/07 12:30 9 Shabab Al-Sahel v Tripoli SC L 3-2
Libanoni Liga 03/29 12:15 8 [2] Tadamon Sour v Tripoli SC [3] L 3-0
Libanoni Liga 03/24 12:15 7 Tripoli SC v Al Ahli Nabatieh L 1-2
Libanoni Liga 03/17 13:00 6 [3] Tripoli SC v Al Hikma Beirut [5] W 1-0
Libanoni Liga 03/03 12:15 5 Tripoli SC v Shabab Al-Ghazieh L 0-1
Libanoni Liga 02/25 12:15 4 [2] Tripoli SC v Shabab Al-Sahel [1] L 0-1
Libanoni Liga 02/20 12:15 2 [5] Al Ahli Nabatieh v Tripoli SC [1] L 1-0
Libanoni Liga 02/16 12:15 3 [2] Tripoli SC v Tadamon Sour [4] D 1-1
Libanoni Liga 02/03 12:15 1 [9] Al Hikma Beirut v Tripoli SC [8] W 0-2
Libanoni Kupa 01/20 11:30 4 Tripoli SC v Al-Mabarrah W 4-0
Libanoni Liga 12/10 12:15 11 Tripoli SC v Al Hikma Beirut W 1-0

Statisztika

 TotalHazaiVendég
Matches played 23 18 5
Wins 6 5 1
Draws 6 5 1
Losses 11 8 3
Goals for 23 19 4
Goals against 26 19 7
Clean sheets 8 6 2
Failed to score 8 5 3

Wikipedia - AC Tripoli

Tripoli Sporting Club (Arabic: نادي طرابلس الرياضي), also known as AC Tripoli or simply Tripoli, is a football club based in Tripoli, Lebanon, that competes in the Lebanese Premier League.

Founded as Al Majd Sports Association (Arabic: جمعية المجد الرياضي), the club was renamed Olympic Beirut Sporting Club (Arabic: نادي اولمبيك بيروت الرياضي) in 2001, winning the domestic double in the 2002–03 season. In 2005 they were re-established as AC Tripoli, and won a Lebanese FA Cup in 2014–15.

History

Olympic Beirut

Founded as Al Majd Sports Association (Arabic: جمعية المجد الرياضي), the club was renamed Olympic Beirut Sporting Club (Arabic: نادي اولمبيك بيروت الرياضي) on 4 April 2001, by Taha Koleilat. In 2001–02 the club won the Lebanese Second Division, and were promoted to the Lebanese Premier League. Koleilat allocated a budget of USD$7 million, with the goal of winning the league and building a competitive team for the AFC Cup. Having strengthened the team with the signings of Pierre Issa, Edílson, Faisal Antar, Youssef Mohamad, and Abbas Ali Atwi, among others, Olympic Beirut won the domestic double in 2002–03, winning both the league and FA Cup.

On 14 February 2003, Al Medina Bank [ar] – which funded the club's activities – declared bankruptcy. The decline was felt the following season, in 2003–04, with Olympic Beirut being knocked out of the 2004 AFC Cup in the quarter-finals against Singaporean club Home United, and finishing the league in third place. In 2004–05 Olympic Beirut finished in fourth place.

AC Tripoli

Prior to the 2005–06 season, Koleilat sold the club's license to former national team player Walid Kamareddine for $400,000, with the club being relocated to Tripoli. The club was first renamed Olympic, then Olympic Tripoli, and finally AC Tripoli (Arabic: نادي طرابلس الرياضي). The Lebanese Football Association (LFA) approved of the move on 24 November 2005.

In 2014–15 Tripoli won the Lebanese FA Cup, their first trophy under their new name. They participated in the 2016 AFC Cup where, after beating Kyrgyz club Alay Osh in the qualifying play-offs on penalty shoot-outs, they qualified to the group stage. Drawn in group B, Tripoli finished in third place out of four with two wins, a draw, and three defeats.

Starting from the 2016–17 season, Tripoli found themselves in financial issues due to Najib Mikati, the club's main funder, deciding to cut the club's salary year by year, leaving the club to rely on social donations and TV sponsorship payments.