Upcoming
23/05 | Al-Zawraa | - | Al-Minaa | | 3:00pm |
28/05 | Al-Kahrabaa | - | Al-Minaa | | 12:00am |
01/06 | Al-Minaa | - | Naft Al-Wasa | | 12:00am |
17/06 | Al-Hudood | - | Al-Minaa | | 12:00am |
21/06 | Al-Minaa | - | Naft Maysan | | 12:00am |
Results
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18/05 | Al-Minaa | 0 - 0 | Al-Quwa Al-J | |
18/05 | Al-Minaa | P - P | Amanat Baghd | |
12/05 | Al-Qasim | 0 - 0 | Al-Minaa | |
09/05 | Al-Minaa | 0 - 0 | Al-Naft | |
05/05 | Erbil | 1 - 2 | Al-Minaa | |
DescriptionAvailable in:
Al-Mina'a Sports Club (Arabic: نادي الميناء الرياضي, lit. 'Port Sports Club') is an Iraqi multi-sport club based in Al-Maqal, Basra that participates in the Iraqi Premier League, the top-flight of Iraqi football. It is one of the most popular clubs in Iraq, particularly in the south, and became the first club outside Baghdad to win the Iraqi Premier League.
Al-Mina'a was founded on November 22, 1931, in Al-Maqal. In 1974, the club was merged with another club called Al-Bareed to form a single club called Al-Muwasalat, and it was a strange situation because the Al-Bareed team were based in Baghdad while Al-Mina'a were based in Basra and the two teams met in Baghdad on the day of the match only, so after just one season the club was dissolved and Al-Mina'a returned in their place. In 1978, the team won the national league title for the first time. After a lean period in the post-war years, the team finished second in the league in the 2004–05 season, and therefore qualified for the 2006 AFC Champions League, becoming the first Iraqi club from outside Baghdad to play in this tournament.
For a long time, the club was considered to be one of the Iraqi football clubs that had its own style of play, and the team practised only under the supervision and training of coaches who graduated from the club, until the beginning of 2011, when the club started to depend on foreign coaches.
Team Members = Player Contract years remaining
Showing 0 to 0 (Total: 0)Stadium or HomeBasra International Stadium (Arabic: مدينة البصرة الرياضية) is a sports complex in Basra, southern Iraq.
Surrounding area of the stadium
Its construction started on 1 January 2009 and was completed on 12 October 2013. The sports city is being funded by the government of Iraq with a budget of $550 million, contributed to contain the main stadium with a capacity of 65,000 people, a secondary stadium with a capacity of 10,000, four Five Star hotels and other sports-related facilities.
The contract of this project was given to Abdullah Al-Jaburi, a major Iraqi construction contractor, and two American companies, 360 architecture and Newport Global.
The main stadium is a multilevel structure with 65,000 capacity, 20 suites, and 230 VIP seats. The complex also has VIP lounges and restaurants, spectator facilities, 205 VIP underground parking stalls and a tunnel connecting the main stadium to the secondary stadium. The secondary stadium has a capacity of 10,000. The basic structure was cast-in-place concrete with precast stadia seating. The roof structure is steel and cantilever 30 meters from the back support column of the upper deck with a 15-meter back-span. The stadium is enveloped with a curtain wall of multidirectional curved elements. The complex has 10,000 parking spaces in total.
The stadium is the tenant for Naft Al-Janoob and Al-Mina'a sports clubs who both play in Basra and contest the Basra Derby.
Iraq played their first international home game in four years at the stadium on 1 June 2017, beating Jordan 1–0. It was also the first international game played at the stadium.
On 10 October 2019, Iraq played their first competitive (not friendly) international game at home after eight years against Hong Kong. The result was a 2–0 win.
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