Alanyaspor

Alanyaspor
Full nameAlanyaspor Kulübü
Nickname(s)Şimşekler (Thunders)
Founded1948 (1948)
GroundAlanya Oba Stadium[1]
Capacity9,789[1]
ChairmanHasan Çavuşoğlu[1]
Head coachJoão Pereira
LeagueSüper Lig
2024–25Süper Lig, 12th of 19
Websitealanyaspor.org.tr

Alanyaspor Kulübü, known as Corendon Alanyaspor for sponsorship reasons, is a Turkish professional football club based in the city of Alanya in Antalya Province. The team have competed in the Süper Lig since their first-ever promotion to the top flight in 2016.[2] Home matches are played at the Alanya Oba Stadium, a compact, all-seater ground with a capacity of 9,789.[3]

The club’s traditional colours are orange and green, adopted in 1982 following a statute change.[4] In June 2022 the club confirmed a naming-rights agreement with Corendon, after which the professional football team have competed as Corendon Alanyaspor.[5]

Founded in 1948, Alanyaspor rose through the national pyramid and established themselves in the top tier in the late 2010s. The club’s best league finish to date is fifth place in the 2019–20 Süper Lig, a season in which they also reached the Turkish Cup final; Trabzonspor won the decider 2–0 in Istanbul.[6][7]

The same campaign qualified Alanyaspor for Europe for the first time; they entered the UEFA Europa League in 2020–21 and were eliminated 1–0 away to Rosenborg in a single-leg third qualifying round tie played behind closed doors during the COVID-19 pandemic.[8]

History

Foundation and early years

Alanyaspor were founded in 1948 by Dr. Ali Nazım Köseoğlu and local youth as an amateur side first known as Alanya Kalespor, later Kale Gençlikspor; the early kit colours were blue–white. The club competed at amateur level until gaining full affiliation for 1965–66, when they entered the Antalya Amateur League in red–white.[9]

In May 1982 a statute change under chairman Hüseyin Arıkan adopted the present orange–green identity and the name “Alanyaspor”.[10] With the creation of Turkey’s professional TFF 3. Lig in 1984–85, Alanyaspor were admitted to the TFF 3. Lig—the first professional team from Alanya while construction of Alanya Oba Stadium was finally completed.[11][12]

First promotions and cup runs (1987–2005)

Under president Necati Azakoğlu the team won their TFF 3. Lig group in 1987–88 and earned promotion to the TFF 2. Lig for the first time.[13] The club reached the sixth round of the Turkish Cup in 1993–94.[14] Relegation back to the TFF 3. Lig followed in 1996–97, before a return as TFF 3. Lig champions in 2003–04.[15]

Alanyaspor topped their group in 2005–06 and reached the promotion group, then the Ankara play-offs, but were eliminated by Pendikspor.[16]

The team led their classification group in 2007–08 and, in the Turkish Cup, defeated top-flight Sivasspor 1–0 to qualify for the groups for the first time; they faced Fenerbahçe on 23 January 2008 at Milli Egemenlik Stadium in Alanya, losing 10–3, and finished the group without points against Kayserispor, Şanlıurfaspor and Gaziantepspor.[17][18] In 2008–09 they again reached the groups after eliminating Gençlerbirliği 2–1, drawing with Sivasspor and Manisaspor, but losing to Denizlispor and Konyaspor. [19]

Rebuild and rise (2010–16)

The club narrowly avoided relegation in 2009–10 and placed 16th in 2010–11. A leadership crisis in 2011 brought a short interim by Mevlüthan Çavuşoğlu before Hasan Çavuşoğlu was elected with broad support; he would oversee the modern rise.[20][21]

Alanyaspor finished 9th in 2012–13; during winter camp they hosted Galatasaray in a friendly at Alanya Oba Stadium.[22] In 2013–14, after a notable 2–1 friendly win over Fenerbahçe, Alanyaspor finished second in the 2. Lig (Red Group) and won the promotion play-offs beating Amed and Ankaragücü before a penalty shoot-out victory over Hatayspor to reach the TFF 1. Lig.[23][24]

Before 2014–15 the team played as “Albimo Alanyaspor” via a naming-rights deal, finishing third but losing the play-off semi-final to Samsunspor.[25][26] In 2015–16, renamed “Multigroup Alanyaspor”, they again finished third and this time won promotion to the Süper Lig for the first time by defeating Adana Demirspor on penalties in the final. [27][28]

Establishment in the top flight (2016–present)

Alanyaspor’s debut Süper Lig campaign in 2016–17 opened under promotion-winning coach Hüseyin Kalpar, but a rugged first half of the season led to his resignation on 16 January 2017.[29] The club appointed former Bosnia and Herzegovina national coach Safet Sušić ten days later to steer the spring run-in.[30] A key piece of their adaptation was the late-summer signing of Brazilian striker Vágner Love on a two-year deal,[31] who finished the season as the league’s top scorer with 23 goals.[32] With Sušić stabilizing results and Love’s goals providing punch, Alanyaspor secured mid-table safety and closed their first top-flight season on 40 points matching the tally they would post again the following year.[33]

Alanyaspor’s second top-flight campaign 2017–18 brought another year of consolidation as the team finished 12th on 40 points in the Süper Lig, maintaining safety with a late-season uptick in form.[34] In 2018–19 the club climbed into the top half, ending the season 9th with 44 points, aided by improved defensive numbers and consistent home results in Alanya.[35]

The 2019–20 campaign was a high-water mark: Alanyaspor finished 5th on 57 points to secure European qualification and reached the Turkish Cup final, where they were narrowly beaten 2–0 by Trabzonspor in the Atatürk Olympic Stadium on 29 July 2020.[36][37] As a result of the 2019–20 finish, Alanyaspor debuted in UEFA competition in 2020–21 but fell 1–0 away to Rosenborg in a one-off UEFA Europa League qualifying tie affected by the pandemic schedule; domestically they sustained form to claim 7th with 60 points and reached the Turkish Cup semi-finals (lost 2–0 to Antalyaspor).[38][39][40]

In 2021–22 Alanyaspor put together one of the best seasons in club history, finishing 5th with 64 points after a mid-season managerial handover to Francesco Farioli, whose positional play approach stabilized results down the stretch.[41][42] The 2022–23 campaign proved more turbulent; despite strong attacking spells, defensive fragility left the team 15th on 41 points, safely above the relegation places but short of the previous year’s standards.[43]

A managerial reset under Fatih Tekke in 2023–24 delivered a solid rebound to 8th with 52 points after his early-November appointment was followed by an extended unbeaten run that secured a comfortable top-half finish.[44][45] In 2024–25 the club settled mid-table again, finishing 12th with 45 points as squad churn was balanced by a consistent home record and incremental minutes for academy graduates under Tekke’s staff.[46]

In January 2024 FIFA imposed a three-window transfer ban on the club for a registration dispute; the sanction was reported in Turkish media and later confirmed in federation bulletins. [47][48]

From a 1948 amateur start to their 2016 promotion, Alanyaspor’s modern trajectory has featured professionalisation, a sequence of naming-rights eras, and consistent top-flight consolidation, punctuated by a first European appearance (2020) and repeated cup runs, alongside the deep shock of Josef Šural’s death in 2019 events that collectively shape the club’s contemporary identity. [49]

Supporters

Alanyaspor’s organised supporter scene grew rapidly after the club’s rise through the professional tiers in the 2010s. An earlier umbrella group known as the “Alanyasporlular Derneği” (Alanyaspor Fans Association) formally wound itself up in 2017, announcing that it had completed its mission and encouraging independent terrace groups to continue matchday organisation.[50] In the Süper Lig era, support has centred on the Maraton (sideline) and Kale Arkası (behind-the-goal) sections at Alanya Oba Stadium; in 2022 local media reported that multiple fan groups agreed to unite in the Kale Arkası in an effort to raise a louder, coordinated atmosphere.[51]

Ticketing and season-ticket demand has been covered regularly by the local press, with the club publicising price bands and sales windows each summer as interest has increased with sustained top-flight participation.[52]

Alanyaspor’s principal regional rivalry is with Antalyaspor; meetings are commonly branded in the press as the “Akdeniz derbisi” (Mediterranean derby) and have featured coordinated choreography and tifo from both sets of fans, as well as periodic club-led initiatives to keep the rivalry within sporting boundaries.[53][54]

Matchdays in Alanya are also shaped by the district’s unusually large foreign-resident population and tourist presence, which bring a visible contingent of international spectators to league fixtures. Recent academic and official figures put foreign residents at over 13% of Alanya’s population in 2022, with tens of thousands of residence-permit holders registered in the district context that helps explain the club’s multilingual communications and diverse crowds.[55][56]

The club itself has periodically hosted joint events with supporter groups to reinforce a positive stadium culture and relations with visiting fans particularly around high-profile fixtures.[57]

Stadium

Alanyaspor play their home matches at the Alanya Oba Stadium, a municipal, multi-purpose venue in the Oba neighbourhood on Alanya’s eastern side. The ground is an all-seater with a capacity of roughly 10,000; official municipal planning documents list 10,846 seats, while recent press reports round attendance capacity to about 9,784 depending on the match configuration and safety adjustments.[58][59]

Ahead of the club’s first Süper Lig season, the municipality carried out upgrading works at Oba seat replacements, turnstiles, improved lighting and media areas so the venue would meet top-flight requirements.[60] Over time the ground has also carried naming-rights titles; between the mid-2010s it was marketed as “Bahçeşehir Okulları Staium,” and for the 2022–23 season it was briefly branded “Kırbıyık Holding Stadium” under a local sponsorship agreement.[61][62] The Turkish Football Federation lists the ground in its facility register as “Alanyaspor Alanya Oba Stadium.”[63]

Before moving permanently to Oba, the club used the Alanya Milli Egemenlik Stadium a smaller, older, multi-use ground closer to the town centre for league and cup fixtures as well as training. Local authority listings give its capacity around 1,200 (with basic covered stands), reflecting its role as a secondary facility once Oba became the primary venue.[64][65]

Independent stadium databases also describe Oba as a compact, football-specific ground used largely by Alanyaspor since the early 2010s, following years of stop-start local stadium construction in the district.[66][67]

Rivalry with Antalyaspor

Alanyaspor’s principal rivalry is with Antalyaspor, the older metropolitan club from the provincial capital of Antalya. The fixture, widely known as the Akdeniz Derbisi (Mediterranean Derby), became a regular top-flight event after Alanyaspor’s promotion to the Süper Lig in 2016, transforming local bragging rights within Antalya Provincebetween the coastal hubs of Antalya and Alanya into a nationally recognised derby.[68][69]

Local authorities have periodically implemented away-fan bans and heightened security measures around the derby. In January 2024, the Antalya Governor’s Office announced that visiting supporters would not be admitted for a league match in Alanya, a precaution mirrored in other seasons depending on match risk assessments.[70][71]

On the pitch the derby has featured narrow scorelines and frequent swings in momentum. National and local media often frame it as pivotal for European qualification races or mid-table positioning. In March 2024, for example, Antalyaspor secured a 2–1 home win, described by press outlets as a significant result in the provincial rivalry.[72] Alanyaspor themselves frequently underline the derby’s symbolic weight in official communications and marketing campaigns.[73] Broadcasters routinely package it as the showpiece fixture of Antalya Province, highlighting its competitive and cultural pull.[74]

Statistics

Results of League and Cup Competitions by Season

Season League table Turkish Cup UEFA Top scorer
League Pos P W D L GF GA GD Pts Player Goals
1948–84 During these years, the club competed in the Amateur League.
1984–85 3. Lig 11th 26 6 6 14 27 48 −21 24 N/A. DNQ N/A. N/A.
1985–86 5th 24 16 3 5 40 22 +18 51 R4
1986–87 2th 30 20 7 3 64 21 +43 67 R1
1987–88 1st 32 21 9 2 71 25 +46 72 R2
1988–89 2. Lig 4th 34 16 7 11 51 41 +10 55 R2 Erdoğan Paslı 8
1989–90 5th 32 11 13 8 44 43 +1 46 R2 16
1990–91 10th 34 11 10 13 54 53 +1 43 R1 13
1991–92 5th 34 15 8 11 51 47 +4 53 R1 Ahmet Hacıosmanoğlu 13
1992–93 7th 32 12 9 11 35 32 +3 45 L16 İsmail Güler 10
1993–94 5th 32 12 9 11 34 49 −15 45 R1 Celil Odabaşı 9
1994–95 8th 32 13 7 12 32 37 −5 46 R4 Erdoğan Paslı 11
1995–96 8th 32 10 7 15 36 46 −10 37 R 7
1996–97 10th 32 6 5 21 26 69 −43 23 R3 N/A. N/A.
1997–98 3. Lig 7th 32 14 10 8 53 48 +5 52 N/A.
1998–99 15th 32 7 12 13 35 46 −11 33
1999–00 13th 32 9 9 14 32 43 −11 36
2000–01 4th 32 6 15 11 48 47 +1 33 Murat Gökhan Çelebi 15
2001–02 12th 34 12 8 14 54 47 +7 7 17
2002–03 11th 28 10 5 13 32 32 0 35 4
2003–04 1st 32 20 6 6 59 30 +29 66 12
2004–05 2. Lig 2nd 32 16 9 7 64 34 +30 57 14
2005–06 7th 37 18 5 14 53 44 +9 59 R1 Nedim Vatansever 13
2006–07 4th 38 17 16 5 65 48 +17 67 R2 16
2007–08 3rd 33 18 3 12 55 34 +21 58 GS 17
2008–09 5th 36 14 10 12 59 47 +12 52 GS 15
2009–10 8th 36 11 11 14 47 60 −13 44 N/A. Dündar Denizhan 10
2010–11 14th 34 9 8 17 35 54 −19 35 Fatih Arat 17
2011–12 11th 32 9 15 8 26 28 −2 42 Adem Gökçe 5
2012–13 9th 32 12 5 15 34 33 +1 41 R2 Cihan Özkaymak 9
2013–14 2nd 39 26 7 6 82 37 +45 85 R3 Aydın Çetin 16
2014–15 1. Lig 3rd 34 17 6 11 55 40 +15 57 R3 Jonathan Ayite 20
2015–16 3rd 34 17 10 7 60 38 +22 61 R2 13
2016–17 Süper Lig 12th 34 12 4 18 54 65 −11 40 R2 Vagner Love 23
2017–18 12th 34 11 7 16 55 59 −4 40 R2 Emre Akbaba 14
2018–19 9th 34 12 8 14 37 43 −6 44 R5 Papiss Cissé 16
2019–20 5th 34 16 9 9 61 37 +24 57 RU 26
2020–21 7th 40 17 9 14 58 45 +13 60 SF 3QR Davidson 12
2021–22 5th 38 19 7 12 67 58 +9 64 SF DNQ Emre Akbaba 13
2022–23 15th 36 11 8 17 54 70 −16 41 L16 Ahmed Hassan 11
2023–24 8th 38 12 16 10 53 50 +3 52 R5 Oğuz Aydın 13
2024–25 13th 36 12 9 15 43 50 −7 45 GS Sergio Córdova 10
2025–26 TBD

Domestic leagues affiliation

Alanyaspor in Europe

Alanyaspor made their European debut in the 2020–21 UEFA Europa League, entering at the third qualifying round and facing Rosenborg in Trondheim on 24 September 2020; the Turkish side lost 1–0 at Lerkendal, ending their maiden continental campaign at the first hurdle.[75] The tie was a single-leg match played behind closed doors under UEFA’s one-off COVID-19 qualifying format for 2020–21.[76] Local coverage before the game also noted that the fixture would mark Alanyaspor’s first ever European match.[77]

Summary

Competition Pld W D L GF GA GD
UEFA Europa League 0 0 0 1 0 1 –1
Total 0 0 0 1 0 1 –1

Results

Season Competition Round Club Home Away Aggregate
2020–21 UEFA Europa League Q3 Norway Rosenborg 0−1 [a]

UEFA Ranking history

Season Rank Points Ref.
2021 182 Increase 6.020 [78]
2022 248 Decrease 5.420 [79]
2023 206 Increase 6.420 [80]
As of 21 June 2023[81][82]

Honours

Players

Current squad

As of 31 July 2025[83]

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules; some limited exceptions apply. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Pos. Nation Player
1 GK Turkey TUR Ertuğrul Taşkıran
2 DF Turkey TUR Batuhan Yavuz
3 DF Portugal POR Nuno Lima
4 DF Turkey TUR Bedirhan Özyurt
5 DF Kosovo KOS Fidan Aliti
6 MF Turkey TUR İzzet Çelik
7 MF Turkey TUR Efecan Karaca (captain)
8 MF Turkey TUR Enes Keskin
9 FW Slovenia SVN Andraž Šporar
10 FW Turkey TUR Güven Yalçın
11 MF Portugal POR Rony Lopes
15 FW Turkey TUR Arda Usluoğlu
16 FW South Korea KOR Hwang Ui-jo
17 MF France FRA Nicolas Janvier
18 DF Turkey TUR Baran Moğultay (on loan from Borussia Dortmund II)
No. Pos. Nation Player
20 DF Turkey TUR Fatih Aksoy
21 MF Turkey TUR Buluthan Bulut
22 FW Nigeria NGA Uchenna Ogundu
23 GK Turkey TUR Mert Bayram
27 MF Turkey TUR İbrahim Kaya
30 DF Brazil BRA Bruno Viana
38 MF Turkey TUR Yusuf Can Karademir
42 MF Republic of the Congo CGO Gaius Makouta
48 GK Brazil BRA Paulo Victor
50 DF Romania ROU Ümit Akdağ
58 MF Angola ANG Maestro
88 MF Turkey TUR Yusuf Özdemir
94 DF Kosovo KOS Florent Hadergjonaj
99 GK Turkey TUR Yusuf Karagöz

Out on loan

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules; some limited exceptions apply. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Pos. Nation Player
No. Pos. Nation Player

Retired numbers

No. Player Nationality Position Alanyaspor debut Last match Ref
90 Josef Šural Czech Republic Czech Republic Forward 17 January 2019 6 April 2019 [84][85]

Non-playing staff

Administrative staff

Position Name
President Turkey Hasan Çavuşoğlu
Second President Turkey Kamil Köseoğlu
Vice President Turkey Bilal Gömeç
Turkey Hasan Uysal
Turkey Nihat Tufan
Turkey Muzaffer Barcın
Turkey Ahmet Paşaoğlu
Turkey Metin Fahri Özçelik
Turkey Ahmet Cebeci
General Secretary Turkey Mevlüt Görücü
Deputy Chairman Turkey Aycan Fenercioğlu
Turkey Ramazan Caner
Turkey Ahmet Saz
Turkey Murat Topçu
Turkey Enver Vural
Turkey Mehmet Ali Yetgin
Board Member Turkey Anıl Övençoğlu
Turkey Cuma Kadıoğlu
Turkey Yakup Şimşek
Turkey Fahri Gürses
Turkey Hüsamettin Akyüz
Turkey Mehmet Uslu
Turkey Metin Kırbıyık
Turkey Muhammet Çetin
Turkey Mehmet Kuş
Turkey Ahmet Çiğdem
Turkey Veysi Aladağ
Turkey Fazlı Ciğerli
Turkey Abdullah Çalış

Source: [86]

Coaching staff

Position Name
Head Coach Portugal João Pereira
Assistant Coach Portugal Pedro Guerreiro
Portugal Jose Caldeira
Portugal Antonio Pina
Goalkeeping Coach Portugal João Godinho
Turkey Mehmet Altundal
Athletic Coach Portugal Fabio Santos
Performance Coach Portugal João Ferreira
Fitness Coach Turkey Ali Can Sümbül

Source: [87]

Notes

  1. ^ not applicable — UEFA switched Europa League qualifying to a single-leg format in 2020–21 because of COVID-19, so Alanyaspor’s tie consisted of one away match, a 0–1 loss at Rosenborg.

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