Palestine Cup of Nations
President Habib Bourguiba honors the Tunisian national team after winning the 1973 Palestine Cup
Founded1972
Abolished1977
RegionArab World
Number of teams8
Last champions Egypt (2nd title)
Most successful team(s) Egypt (2 titles)

The Palestine Cup (Arabic: كأس فلسطين, romanized: Kaʾs Filasṭīn) was a football competition which was held between countries in the Arab world. The tournament de facto acted as the replacement for the Arab Cup during the long interruption between 1966 and 1982, it held on three occasions in Arab countries in the 1970s. The first edition was held in 1972 in Iraq.

History

The cup was established in 1972 at the initiative of Said al-Sabeh, president of the Supreme Council for Palestinian Youth Welfare. The aim of the initiative was to create a new Arab championship that would reunite sport in the Arab countries, as well as with the aim of proving Arab affiliation and support for the Palestinian cause. The tournament was also created to be an alternative to the Arab Cup, which had been suspended after the third edition. Iraq was chosen to host the first edition in the same year, and eight Arab countries took part in the tournament, but only three editions were organised. After the return of the Arab Cup in 1982, the Palestine Cup became a tournament for youth teams under the name Palestine Cup for Youth.[1]

Statistics

Winners

Year Host Final Third Place Match
Winner Score Runner-up 3rd Place Score 4th Place
1972
Details
 Iraq
Egypt
3–1
Iraq

Algeria
3–1
Syria
1973
Details
 Libya
Tunisia
4–0
Syria

Algeria
0–0
(3–0 p)

Iraq
1975
Details
 Tunisia
Egypt
1–0
(a.e.t.)

Iraq

Sudan
1–0
Syria
1977  Saudi Arabia Cancelled Cancelled

Successful national teams

Team Titles Runners-up Third-place Fourth-place
 Egypt 2 (1972, 1975)
 Tunisia 1 (1973)
 Iraq 2 (1972, 1975) 1 (1973)
 Syria 1 (1973) 2 (1972, 1975)
 Algeria 2 (1972, 1973)
 Sudan 1 (1975)

Summary

Source:[2]

RankTeamPartMWDLGFGAGDPoints
1 Egypt3139222910+1929
2 Syria3169163128+328
3 Iraq3157532510+1526
4 Algeria212732327+2524
5 Tunisia28710234+1914
6 Sudan142113307
7 South Yemen28215634-287
8 Libya391351715+26
9 Palestine3102171324-114
10 Kuwait1310247-33
11 Yemen[lower-alpha 1]26105320-173
12 United Arab Emirates26024315-122
13 Saudi Arabia1200213-20
14 Qatar14004515-100

See also

Notes and references

Notes

  1. Includes participations as  North Yemen from 1967–1990; see below.

References

  1. موسوعة كرة القدم العراقية من الالف الى الياء ... بطولة كأس العرب [Encyclopedia of Iraqi football from A to Z ... Arab Cup Championship]. Kooora.com (in Arabic). 18 September 2005. Retrieved 28 April 2021.
  2. - mundial11.com
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