2021 King Cup Final

The 2021 King Cup Final was the 46th final of the King Cup, Saudi Arabia's main football knock-out competition since its inception in 1957.

2021 King Cup Final
Event2020–21 King Cup
Date27 May 2021 (2021-05-27)
VenueKing Fahd International Stadium, Riyadh
RefereeSzymon Marciniak (Poland)[1]
Attendance[note 1]
WeatherClear
36 °C (97 °F)
7% humidity

The final was played at the King Fahd International Stadium, Riyadh, on 27 May 2021. The match was contested by Al-Taawoun and Al-Faisaly.[2] It will be Al-Taawoun's 3rd King Cup final and Al-Faisaly's 2nd. This will be the first meeting between these two sides in the King Cup. The attendance was capped at 40% after due to the COVID-19 pandemic in Saudi Arabia.[3]

Al-Faisaly defeated Al-Taawoun 3–2 to win their first King Cup title.[4]

Teams

Team Previous finals appearances (bold indicates winners)
Al-Taawoun 2 (1990, 2019)
Al-Faisaly 1 (2018)

Venue

The King Fahd International Stadium was announced as the final venue on 25 May 2021.[5] This was the eighth King Cup final hosted in the King Fahd International Stadium following those in 1988, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2013, 2019 and 2020.

The King Fahd International Stadium was built in 1982 and was opened in 1987.[6] The stadium was used as a venue for the 1992, 1995, and the 1997 editions of the FIFA Confederations Cup.[7] Its current capacity is 68,752[8] and it is used by the Saudi Arabia national football team, Al-Hilal, Al-Shabab, and major domestic matches.

Background

Al-Taawoun reached their third final after a 3–2 win against Al-Fateh.[9] This was Al-Taawoun's second final in three years. Al-Taawoun won their first title in 2019 after defeating Al-Ittihad and finished as runners-up in 1990.

Al-Faisaly reached their second final, after a 1–0 away win against Al-Nassr.[10] This was Al-Faisaly's first final since 2018, which they lost against Al-Ittihad.

The two teams met twice earlier in the season with both matches ending in draws. This was the first meeting between these two sides in the King Cup and the 46th meeting between them in all competitions. In the clubs' 45 previous meetings, Al-Taawoun won 21, Al-Faisaly won 13 and the remaining 11 were drawn.[11]

Road to the final

Note: In all results below, the score of the finalist is given first (H: home; A: away).

Al-Taawoun Round Al-Faisaly
Opponent Result 2020–21 King Cup Opponent Result
Damac (A) 2–1 Round of 16 Al-Ettifaq (A) 0–0 (9–8 p)
Al-Qadsiah (H) 2–1 Quarter-finals Al-Batin (A) 2–1
Al-Fateh (H) 3–2 Semi-finals Al-Nassr (A) 1–0

Match

Details

Al-Taawoun2–3Al-Faisaly
  • Tawamba 14'
  • Kaku 45' (pen.)
Report
Al-Taawoun
Al-Faisaly
GK1 Cássio
RB2 Yassin Barnawi
CB33 Ahmed Assiri (c) 39' 46'
CB4 Iago Santos
LB14 Hassan Kadesh 74'
CM17 Cédric Amissi 65' 90+5'
CM55 Sandro Manoel 74'
RW29 Abdullah Al-Jouei
AM10 Kaku
LW8 Sumayhan Al-Nabit 51'
CF3 Léandre Tawamba
Substitutes:
GK23 Hussain Shae'an
DF6 Mohammed Al-Ghamdi 74'
DF25 Faisal Darwish
DF85 Nawaf Al-Sobhi 46'
MF5 Ryan Al-Mousa
MF11 Ali Al-Nemer
MF66 Mohammed Abousaban 74'
FW24 Mohammad Al-Sahlawi 90+5'
FW27 Abdoulaye Sané
Manager:
Nestor El Maestro
GK28 Ahmed Al-Kassar (c)
RB14 Ali Majrashi 86'
CB87 Meshal Al-Sebyani 82'
CB24 Waleed Al-Ahmed
LB18 Mohammed Qassem
CM6 Hicham Faik
CM52 Alexander Merkel
RW77 Khalid Kaabi 90+5'
AM23 Romain Amalfitano 90+5'
LW25 Ismail Omar 71' 87'
CF19 Júlio Tavares
Substitutes:
GK26 Mustafa Malayekah
DF2 Abdullah Al-Hassan
DF17 Mohammed Al-Nukhylan 83' 82'
DF51 Hussain Qassem 87'
MF8 Khaled Al-Samiri
MF12 Shaye Sharahili 90+5'
MF47 Mustafa Bassas
MF88 Abdulaziz Al-Sharid 90+5'
FW80 Mohammed Al-Saiari
Manager:
Péricles Chamusca

Assistant referees:[1]
Tomasz Listkiewicz (Poland)
Pawel Sokolnicki (Poland)
Fourth official:[1]
Majed Al-Shamrani
Video assistant referee:[1]
Tomasz Musiał (Poland)
Assistant video assistant referees:[1]
Faisal Al-Qahtani

Match rules

  • 90 minutes
  • 30 minutes of extra time if necessary
  • Penalty shoot-out if scores still level
  • Nine named substitutes
  • Maximum of five substitutions, with a sixth allowed in extra time

Statistics

See also

Notes

  1. Attendance was capped at 40% due to the COVID-19 pandemic in Saudi Arabia.[12]

References

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