Samsunspor

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Template:Short description Template:Use dmy dates Template:Short descriptionScript error: No such module "Infobox".Template:Template otherScript error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". Template:Sports club sections Samsunspor Kulübü, officially known as Samsunspor Football Club Joint Stock Company is a Turkish professional football club that competes in the Süper Lig.

The club represents the football branch of Samsunspor Sports Club, and it attained professional status on 30 June 1965. In its early years, the football team played home matches at the City Stadium, but starting from the 1974–75 season, they moved to the 19 Mayıs Stadium. Since the 2017–18 season, the team has been hosting its matches at the newly built 19 Mayıs Stadium.

Samsunspor is the most successful football club from Samsun. The team has spent 23 weeks at the top of the Süper Lig table and holds the record as the 7th team with the longest time spent as league leader. In this ranking, they follow the likes of Galatasaray, Fenerbahçe, Beşiktaş, Trabzonspor, Bursaspor, and Sivasspor. Furthermore, they are the 11th team with the highest all-time points total in Süper Lig history (Süper Lig all-time standings) and hold the distinction of being the most successful team in the First League with the highest number of championship titles.

Remarkably, Samsunspor has also been promoted to the Süper Lig seven times, while also being relegated from the Süper Lig seven times, holding a record in both categories.

Samsunspor maintains a fierce regional rivalry with fellow Black Sea Region club Trabzonspor. Additionally, any fixture against other Black Sea teams is popularly referred to as the "Black Sea Derby." The team's original kits feature solid red and solid white shirts.

History

First years

Samsunspor stepped into professional leagues for the first time in the second football league, today's TFF First League in the 1965–66 season. The opponent of Samsunspor, who played the first professional league match on 5 September 1965, was Yeşildirek S.K. Samsunspor won the match 1–0 with the goal scored by Nihat Serçeme. Thus Nihat made history as the player who scored Samsunspor's first league goal. In this first season of the league, Samsunspor became 5th in the White Group.[1] The club also competed in the Turkish Cup that year. They reached round two after defeating Güneşspor in the first round, but would go on to lose 2–1 to Petrolspor.[2] The following season was more successful, as the club placed second in the 2. Lig, six points behind champion Bursaspor.[3] In the Turkish Cup, the club reached the semi-finals, defeating Konyaspor, Adanaspor, Manisaspor, Galatasaray, and Fenerbahçe along the way. They met Göztepe in the semi-finals, eventually losing 5–2 on aggregate. Samsunspor finished second in the 2. Lig and were knocked out in the first round of the Turkish Cup in 1967–68.[4][5]

Samsun SK's classic home kit
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The club earned their first promotion to the 1. Lig (Süper Lig) in 1969. They finished first in the Beyaz Grup (White Group) of the 2. Lig, six points ahead of runners-up Boluspor. Because there were two groups, the winners of each group played each other in a final game to decide the champion and the runner-up. Ankaragücü beat Samsunspor 1–0 in the final.[6] Samsunspor finished fifth in their first season in the 1. Lig, five points away from securing a spot in the Balkans Cup. The club finished with a record of eleven wins, nine draws, and ten losses, while scoring 24 goals and allowing 28.[7] Samsunspor finished tenth the following season and were knocked out of the first round of the Turkish Cup for the second year in a row.[8][9] After competing in first tier for five seasons, Samsunspor completed the league in the 15th place with 24 points in the 1974–75 season and relegated to the 2nd Football League. Upon this, coach Basri Dirimlili was dismissed and Kamuran Soykıray was brought back to the team. 1975–76 Football League season Soykıray again made the club White Group leader and Samsunspor has moved to the First Football League.[1] In the same season, Samsunspor won Ministry of Youth and Sports Cup after Bursaspor II was defeated 2–1.[10]

Golden ages

In the late 1970s, Ender Cengiz, who was then the club chairman, introduced the return to roots (Turkish: öze dönüş) policy, aimed at bringing back local talent to strengthen the soccer team.[11] In the mid-1980s, Samsunspor has achieved some of its major successes in the first tier of Turkish Football. After the promotion from second tier in 1984–85, Samsunspor finished First League at 3rd place with 33 goals scored by Tanju Çolak in 1985–86 season.[12] The next season, the club had one of the best season in its history. Ranking again 3rd in the league where Tanju Çolak scored 25 goals, the team rose to the semi-finals in the Federation Cup.[1] The next season, Samsunspor finished the league in fourth place and reached the final in the Turkish Cup. Until the cup final, Nevşehirspor, Uşakspor, Kocaelispor and Ankaragücü were eliminated but lost to Sakaryaspor as a result of the two-legged final.

20 January disaster

File:20 Ocak Futbol Kahramanları Anıtı (2).jpg
Monument to the "20 January Football Heroes" in front of the Samsun 19 Mayıs Stadium.

At the start of the 1988–89 season, Samsunspor began training under head coach Nuri Asan with a pre-season camp in Uludağ. The team collected 19 points during the first 18 matches of the league. On 20 January 1989, while traveling to their first match of the second half of the season against Malatyaspor, the team was involved in a tragic traffic accident.[13]

Around 9:30 am, near Havza, the club's bus collided with a truck and plunged down a cliff.[14] The first aid to the injured Samsunspor players came from the Çarşambaspor delegation, who happened to be passing by en route to their own match against Diyarbakırspor. Çarşambaspor's officials, players, and staff pulled the injured out of the wreckage and transported them to Havza State Hospital, also donating blood.[15] Many survivors suffered serious injuries or lifelong disabilities.[16]

Head coach Nuri Asan, players Muzaffer Badalıoğlu and Mete Adanır, and the bus driver Asım Özkan died at the scene. Player Zoran Tomić fell into a coma and passed away six months later in Yugoslavia.[17] Equipment manager Halil Albayrak and players Emin Kar and Erol Dinler were permanently disabled and retired from football.[18] Burhaneddin Beadini was injured and voluntarily retired from football one year later. Players Yüksel Öğüten, Fatih Uraz, Şanver Göymen, Kasım Çıkla, and Uğur Terzi were injured but eventually continued their football careers.[19] Another survivor, Orhan Kılınç, continued playing football but tragically died in another car accident in 1994. Club manager Yüksel Özan also survived the crash with injuries.

After the accident, leading figures from Turkey's political and sporting world – including President Kenan Evren, Prime Minister Turgut Özal, Speaker of Parliament Yıldırım Akbulut, Minister of National Education, Youth, and Sports Hasan Celal Güzel, SHP chairman Erdal İnönü, DYP chairman Süleyman Demirel, Trabzonspor President Mazhar Afacan, and Malatyaspor President Metin Çağlayan – offered their condolences to Samsunspor. Due to the accident, Samsunspor was unable to complete the remainder of the season. They were ruled to have lost all remaining matches by default 3–0 defeats. However, the Turkish Football Federation granted the club a special status, allowing them to remain in the league, and they were declared the "Honorary Champions" of that season.[20][21]

In memory of the tragedy, Samsunspor added black to its traditional red and white club colors.[22] The disaster is chronicled in Mehmet Yılmaz's book "Samsunspor: Red, White, Black” published by İletişim Publishing in 2009, and in Hakan Dilek’s book “This Is How It Was”, also by İletişim Publishing.[23][24]

The idea of erecting a memorial monument for the tragedy was proposed several times but had not been realized until 2020, when concrete steps were finally taken. The Samsun Metropolitan Municipality erected a monument in the Samsun National Garden, and Samsunspor built another in front of the Samsun 19 Mayıs Stadium. Although the club's Board of Elders also proposed a project for an additional monument, progress was stalled because the municipality did not allocate a location.[25][26]

Era of stability and recent success

Following the tragic 1989 accident, Samsunspor rebuilt its squad using funds from donation campaigns, but was relegated in the 1989–90 season.[27] After bouncing between divisions for several years, the club earned promotion to the top flight again in 1992–93.[28] Samsunspor then entered its most stable period, remaining in the Süper Lig for 13 consecutive seasons from 1993 to 2006.[29] During this era, the club finished 5th in 1993–94 and reached the Turkish Cup semi-finals.[30] Samsunspor also won the 1993–94 Balkan Cup, becoming the last Anatolian club to do so.[31]

The club participated in European competitions twice: the 1997 and 1998 UEFA Intertoto Cup. In 1998, Samsunspor reached the semi-finals, defeating Crystal Palace before falling to Werder Bremen.[32] The highlight of the later years was Serkan Aykut becoming top scorer of the 1999–2000 Süper Lig with 30 goals, a record unmatched by any Samsunspor player since.[33]

In the 2005–06 season, Samsunspor was relegated from the Süper Lig after 13 years in the top flight.[34] After spending several years in the 1. Lig, the club earned promotion in the 2010–11 season.[35] However, Samsunspor was again relegated after the 2011–12 season.[36] In subsequent seasons, the team reached the promotion playoffs multiple times but failed to return to the Süper Lig.[37] In the 2017–18 season, facing severe financial problems, the club was handed over to trusteeship for the first time in its history, and was relegated to the third tier.[38]

In 2018, former president İsmail Uyanık led the corporatization process, resulting in the formation of Samsunspor Football Club Joint Stock Company.[39] Yüksel Yıldırım later acquired the majority shareholding.[40]

Under new ownership, the club invested heavily in infrastructure and player recruitment. Samsunspor won promotion from the 2. Lig in 2019–20 and returned to the Süper Lig in the 2022–23 season.[41] The corporatization era saw total investments of €65 million.[42] In 2024, FIFA imposed a two-window transfer ban on the club.[43] Although the ban was temporarily lifted, it resumed in the 2024–25 season.[44]

Samsunspor will play in the UEFA Europa League for the first time in their history during the 2025–26 season. Despite facing a transfer ban during the 2024–25 season, the team achieved a remarkable third-place finish in the Süper Lig, securing qualification for the Europa League play-off round.[45][46]Template:Primary source inline

Colors and crest

Samsunspor's traditional colors are red and white. The club has consistently used this color scheme throughout its history, both in its home kits and club branding. The club's crest features a red-bordered shield with a depiction of the statue of Mustafa Kemal Atatürk on horseback – a monument located in Samsun commemorating Atatürk's landing in the city to start the Turkish War of Independence. Above the image, the club's name "SAMSUNSPOR" appears in bold red letters on a white background, with the foundation year "1965" placed below the central graphic.

The crest symbolizes both the city's historical importance in Turkish history and the club's strong identity as one of the leading teams from the Black Sea region. The red and white colors represent passion, energy, and the club's enduring connection with the people of Samsun. Throughout its history, Samsunspor has made only minor adjustments to the design of its crest, retaining the same core visual elements of the statue, colors, and shield format.[47]

Rivalry with Trabzonspor

One of Samsunspor's most notable rivalries is with Trabzonspor, another major club from the Black Sea region of Turkey. The rivalry is fueled by geographical proximity and regional pride, with both clubs representing their respective cities on the national stage.

While Trabzonspor has historically achieved greater success in terms of national titles, matches between the two clubs are highly anticipated and fiercely contested. For Samsunspor supporters, games against Trabzonspor are seen as a showcase of the club's competitive spirit and deep connection to the local community.

The rivalry highlights the Black Sea region’s passionate football culture and often features intense atmospheres both in Samsun and Trabzon. It remains one of the key fixtures in Samsunspor's calendar, embodying the pride of Samsun in Turkish football.[48][49]

Supporters

Samsunspor's main ultra supporters, known as Şirinler (Smurfs), were founded in 1986 and derive their iconic name from the beloved cartoon.[50] They are the most active ultras group, famous for their "light march" – thousands of fans processioning with flares from Çiftlik avenue to the stadium, turning the city red before match days .

Pioneers in fan culture, Şirinler launched Samsunspor's first fan website, launched official scarves and polar fleece, and operated an online radio. They disbanded in 1993 to form the 1965 Genç Samsunsporlular, later re-forming as Yeni Şirinler. In 2011, they faced a one‑year stadium ban for profane chants, but famously returned just 42 days later.

Organized into sub‑groups ("Liseli" and "Üniversiteli"), Şirinler maintain alliances with other Turkish ultras—including Ankaragücü and Bursaspor—and actively engage supporters via social media under names like Forza Şirinler and Ultras Şirinler

Stadium

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In the early years, football matches in Samsun were played on the grounds of the Dârülmuallimîn School (currently the site of Gulsan Industrial Area). In the early 1930s, a field called Fener Stadium was built in a marshy area named Fener, but due to poor conditions, the site was reconstructed in 1932. In 1951, basic improvements such as wire fencing, open stands, showers, and treatment facilities were added. This stadium remained the only stadium in Samsun during the amateur era and was also used by Samsunspor.

In 1958, the construction of the Samsun Şehir Stadyumu provided a modern facility where Samsunspor began hosting its matches. The club also celebrated its first league championship at this venue during the 1968–69 season. The team continued to use the City Stadium for nine seasons after turning professional, before relocating to the Samsun 19 Mayıs Stadium. On 23 February 1975, Samsunspor played its first match at the 19 Mayıs Stadium against Trabzonspor. The final match at this venue was played on 20 May 2017 against Bandırmaspor in a TFF First League fixture.

Since 29 July 2017, Samsunspor has played its home games at the new Samsun 19 Mayıs Stadium, a modern 33,919-seat venue that opened with a friendly match against Ankaragücü. The stadium currently meets UEFA standards and is capable of hosting international competitions.

Stadium history

# Stadium Years Years played
1 Samsun Şehir Stadyumu 1965–1975 10
2 Canik 19 Mayıs Stadyumu 1975–2017 32
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Ownership and finances

Following relegation to the 2. Lig for the first time in its history in the 2017–18 season, Samsunspor entered a period of financial and structural turmoil. A court-appointed trustee (kayyum) took control of the club after the existing management resigned. Investigations were launched into previous board members for alleged misconduct and mismanagement.[51]

During this period, former club president İsmail Uyanık announced his intention to run again for the presidency, contingent on permission to corporatize the club. Following approval at an extraordinary general assembly, Uyanık was elected president for a third term.[52] On 8 August 2018, Samsunspor Futbol Kulübü Anonim Şirketi (Samsunspor Football Club Joint Stock Company) was officially established, separating the football branch from the parent club as a distinct legal entity.[53] The company was registered with the Samsun Chamber of Commerce and Industry under registration number 34405, with an initial capital of ₺500,000. The ownership structure was initially 67% Yıldırım Holding and 33% İsmail Uyanık.

However, after six months, Yıldırım Holding Chairman Ali Rıza Yıldırım withdrew from the project, and Yüksel Yıldırım acquired the 67% stake.[54] Consequently, Yılport Samsunspor became the name used for competition purposes, reflecting the sponsorship of Yılport Holding, led by Yüksel Yıldırım. Under the new ownership, the club prioritized both first-team success and the development of youth talent. Partnerships were signed with local clubs such as Erbaaspor and over thirty amateur clubs in the Samsun region.[55] In parallel, the Samsunspor Football Academy was restructured and an international collaboration was established with Belgian club KRC Genk for youth development.[56] By June 2019, the club had cleared its existing debts of ₺32,206,979.[57]

Kit history and sponsorship

File:Samsunspor arma ve forma tescil fişi.JPG
The club's first officially registered kit.

During the club's amateur era, Samsunspor's kits were not standardized, and early players typically wore black and white kits with varying designs. With the start of professional competition in the 1965–66 season, the club introduced standardized kits, wearing solid red and solid white kits. In the following season, the club introduced striped kits for the first time, with a red kit used as the away version, complemented by white shorts and red-white socks.[58]

In the 1968–69 season, Samsunspor wore white shirts with white shorts and red-white socks for the first time.[59] The 1971–72 season saw the debut of the club's first custom-designed kit: a white shirt with two horizontal red stripes.[60] In 1973–74, the club wore a halved kit (first use of this style).[61]

Until the 1977–78 season, kits were sourced from various local suppliers. That season marked the first time Samsunspor partnered with an official kit manufacturer, wearing Umbro kits for one season.[62] Between 1981 and 1982, after producing its own kits, Samsunspor began using Adidas kits.[63] In the following decades, the club partnered with other kit suppliers including Puma, Lotto, Erreà, Lescon (2014–15), LiG, Kappa (2015–2018), and Macron (from 2018 to 2019).[64]

Samsunspor's first shirt sponsorship appeared in 1982–83, when Hasbi Menteşoğlu sponsored the kit with "Menteşoğlu" printed on the shirt.[65] Over the following years, sponsors included VakıfBank, Fotospor, Panasonic, Bayındır, Metro Turizm, Sarelle, Tadelle, Turkcell, Yeşilyurt, and Bank Asya. From 2011 to 2015, Samsunspor featured Spor Toto on its shirts.[66] In 2018, Samsunspor entered into a naming rights and shirt sponsorship agreement with Yılport, a subsidiary of Yıldırım Holding. The club adopted the name Yılport Samsunspor for the football team, and Yılport also appeared on the kits as the main sponsor.[67]

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Kit manufacturers and shirt sponsors

Period Kit manufacturer Shirt sponsor Ref
2007–08 Puma Samgaz [68]
2008–09 Erreà Bank Asya
2009–10
2010–11 LiG
2011–12 Erreà SporToto
2012–13
2013–14
2014–15 Lescon Yeşilyurt Group
2015–16 LiG N/A
2016–17 Yeşilyurt Group
2017–18 Kappa
2018–19 Macron
2019–20 N/A
2020–21
2021–22
2022–23 Diadora Yılport
2023– Hummel

Honours

  • 1. Lig
    • Winners (7): 1968–69, 1975–76, 1981–82, 1984–85, 1990–91, 1992–93, 2022–23
    • Runners-up (2): 1968–69, 2010–11
  • 2. Lig
    • Winners (1): 2019–20
  • Balkans Cup

Statistics

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Results of league and cup competitions by season

Season League table Turkish Cup UEFA Top scorer
League Pos Pld W D L GF GA Pts Player Goals
1965–66 1.Lig 5. 20 8 5 7 14 16 21 2R Ali Kandil 6
1966–67 2. 30 13 13 4 32 17 43 SD Yücel Acun 10
1967–68 2. 38 24 6 8 64 27 54 1R Rıfat Usta 17
1968–69 1. 34 21 7 6 51 15 49 1R Abidin Akmanol 18
1969–70 Süper Lig 6. 30 11 9 10 24 28 31 2R Ahmet Şahin 6
1970–71 10. 30 10 9 11 29 33 29 1R Temel Keskindemir 8
1971–72 13. 30 5 15 10 14 21 25 1R 4
1972–73 12. 30 8 10 12 21 40 26 Adem Kurukaya 8
1973–74 8. 30 10 8 12 24 30 28 Temel Keskindemir 8
1974–75 15. 30 7 10 13 24 31 24 2R Adem Kurukaya 10
1975–76 1.Lig 1. 30 17 9 4 42 16 43 SR Temel Keskindemir 15
1976–77 Süper Lig 10. 30 8 12 10 19 22 28 3R Naim Anuştekin 6
1977–78 14. 30 8 8 14 26 36 24 B Ercan Albay 10
1978–79 15. 30 6 8 16 18 37 20 Adem Kurukaya 9
1979–80 1.Lig 3. 30 14 8 8 34 20 36 5R Hakkı Bayrak 9
1980–81 2. 30 16 7 7 42 27 39 6R Murat Şimşek 13
1981–82 1. 28 15 8 5 48 17 38 QF Tanju Çolak 12
1982–83 Süper Lig 16. 34 10 8 16 37 49 28 6R 16
1983–84 1.Lig 3. 30 17 9 4 56 22 43 2R 24
1984–85 1. 32 21 9 2 49 15 51 6R 25
1985–86 Süper Lig 3. 36 19 10 7 57 25 48 5R 33
1986–87 3. 36 19 11 6 56 22 49 SF 25
1987–88 4. 38 17 9 12 43 41 60 RU Yücel Çolak 10
1988–89 19. 36 4 7 25 12 70 19 3R Erol Dinler 5
1989–90 16. 34 7 6 21 20 50 27 3R Duško Milinković 4
1990–91 1.Lig 1. 34 23 9 2 74 24 78 6R Adnan Medjedović 17
1991–92 Süper Lig 16. 30 4 6 20 36 62 18 6R Duško Milinković 7
1992–93 1.Lig 1. 20 14 6 0 56 16 48 5R Bünyamin Kubat 17
1993–94 Süper Lig 5. 30 15 5 10 53 47 50 SF Ertuğrul Sağlam 17
1994–95 8. 34 12 9 13 54 60 45 SF Serkan Aykut 19
1995–96 8. 34 12 7 15 46 46 43 SF 14
1996–97 9. 34 12 9 13 49 52 45 QF GS 18
1997–98 5. 34 14 7 13 42 42 49 5R SF 18
1998–99 10. 34 11 8 15 38 53 41 6R 11
1999–2000 7. 34 16 4 14 51 43 52 6R 30
2000–01 8. 34 13 9 12 55 52 48 3R İlhan Mansız 12
2001–02 15. 34 10 8 16 32 43 38 6R Mehmet Yılmaz 10
2002–03 12. 34 10 9 15 42 59 39 6R Serkan Aykut 12
2003–04 7. 34 13 7 14 46 47 46 6R 20
2004–05 12. 34 10 8 16 40 55 38 63 Kaies Ghodhbane 10
2005–06 17. 34 9 9 16 45 62 36 QF Serkan Aykut 9
2006–07 1.Lig 10. 34 11 10 13 31 38 43 2R Gökhan Kaba 8
2007–08 15. 34 10 8 16 45 61 38 1R Caner Altın 10
2008–09 15. 34 11 6 17 35 47 39 2R Burhan Coşkun 11
2009–10 10. 34 12 6 16 49 47 42 PO Turgut Doğan Şahin 15
2010–11 2. 32 16 10 6 45 20 58 PO Simon Zenke 16
2011–12 Süper Lig 16. 34 9 9 16 36 47 36 4R Ekigho Ehiosun 9
2012–13 1.Lig 14. 34 7 18 9 38 39 39 2R Abdulkadir Özgen 9
2013–14 5. 36 17 14 15 61 36 65 2R Eldin Adilović 16
2014–15 6. 34 15 13 6 48 30 55 GS Mbilla Etame 15
2015–16 9. 34 13 8 13 45 39 44 2R Famoussa Koné 11
2016–17 15. 34 9 9 16 27 46 36 PR 6
2017–18 16. 34 7 15 12 32 46 36 3R Göksu Türkdoğan 7
2018–19 2.Lig 3. 34 22 7 5 60 25 73 3R Bahattin Köse 14
2019–20 1. 28 23 4 1 64 11 73 5R Bahattin Köse 19
2020–21 1.Lig 3. 34 20 10 4 58 30 70 3R Nadir Çiftçi 8
2021–22 7. 36 13 12 11 54 46 51 5R Yasin Öztekin 12
2022–23 1. 36 23 9 4 70 26 78 5R Douglas Tanque 17
2023–24 Süper Lig 13. 38 11 10 17 42 52 43 R16 Marius Mouandilmadji 10
2024–25 3. 36 19 7 10 55 41 64 4R 10

League participations

  • Süper Lig: 1969–1975, 1976–1979, 1982–1983, 1985–1990, 1991–1992, 1993–2006, 2011–2012, 2023–
  • 1. Lig: 1965–1969, 1975–1976, 1979–1982, 1983–1985, 1990–1991, 1992–1993, 2006–2011, 2012–2018, 2020–2023
  • 2. Lig: 2018–2020

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European competitions record

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Samsunspor competed in European competition for the first time in 1993. The club took part in the last edition of the Balkans Cup, defeating Pirin Blagoevgrad before facing PAS Giannina in the final. The first leg took place in Greece, which Samsunspor won 3–0. The second leg took place in Turkey, where Samsunspor sealed the championship with a 2–0 win.[69] The club competed in the 1997 UEFA Intertoto Cup after finishing in ninth place.[70] They were drawn into Group 6 alongside Hamburger SV, FBK Kaunas, Leiftur Ólafsfjörður, Odense Boldklub. Samsunspor finished second with nine points and were unable to advance.[71] The club qualified for the Intertoto Cup again the following season. Drawn against Danish club Lyngby Boldklub, Samsunspor took a 3–0 lead in the first leg. The club faced a scare in the second leg, advancing by one goal on aggregate after losing the match 1–3. They faced English club Crystal Palace in the second round, beating the club four to nil on aggregate. Samsunspor were knocked out of the cup in the semi-finals after losing 6–0 at the hands of Werder Bremen.[72] Samsunspor qualified for the UEFA Europa League qualifying rounds for the first time in their history after a 2–2 draw against Trabzonspor on 25 May 2025.[73]

Summary

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Balkans Cup

Competition Pld W D L GF GA GD
Balkans Cup 8 5 1 2 21 15 +6
Total 8 5 1 2 21 15 +6

UEFA competetion

Competition Pld W D L GF GA GD
UEFA Intertoto Cup 10 6 0 4 15 12 +3
UEFA Europa League 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Total 10 6 9 4 15 12 +3

Balkans Cup results

Season Competition Round Club Home Away Aggregate
1987–88 Balkans Cup Group B Template:Flagicon Sliven 3–2 0–7 2nd
Template:Flagicon Iraklis 6–1 3–4
1993–94 SF Template:Flagicon Pirin Blagoevgrad 4–1 0–0 4–1
W Template:Flagicon PAS Giannina 2–0 3–0 5–0

UEFA competition results

Season Competition Round Club Home Away Aggregate
1997 UEFA Intertoto Cup Group 6 Template:Flagicon Hamburger 1–3 2nd
Template:Flagicon Kaunas 1–0
Template:Flagicon Leiftur 3–0
Template:Flagicon Odense 2–0
1998 UEFA Intertoto Cup 2R Template:Flagicon Lyngby 3–0 1–3 4–3
3R Template:Flagicon Crystal Palace 2–0 2–0 4–0
SF Template:Flagicon Werder Bremen 0–3 0–3 0–6
2025–26 UEFA Europa League PO

Players

Current squad

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<templatestyles src="Template:Football squad player/styles.css" /> 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 Template:Fba/core Okan Kocuk
2 DF Template:Fba/core Nanu
4 DF Template:Fba/core Rick van Drongelen
5 MF Template:Fba/core Celil Yüksel
6 MF Template:Fba/core Youssef Aït Bennasser
7 FW Template:Fba/core Arbnor Muja
8 MF Template:Fba/core Soner Aydoğdu
9 FW Template:Fba/core Marius Mouandilmadji
10 MF Template:Fba/core Olivier Ntcham
11 MF Template:Fba/core Emre Kılınç
12 MF Template:Fba/core Alper Efe Pazar
13 MF Template:Fba/core Flavien Tait
14 FW Template:Fba/core Landry Dimata
No. Pos. Nation Player
17 MF Template:Fba/core Kingsley Schindler
18 DF Template:Fba/core Zeki Yavru (captain)
20 MF Template:Fba/core Muhammet Ali Özbaskıcı
21 MF Template:Fba/core Carlo Holse
25 GK Template:Fba/core Efe Berat Törüz
28 DF Template:Fba/core Soner Gönül
37 DF Template:Fba/core Ľubomír Šatka
45 GK Template:Fba/core Halil Yeral
55 DF Template:Fba/core Yunus Emre Çift
64 GK Template:Fba/core Taha Tosun
66 DF Template:Fba/core Elano Yegen
96 DF Template:Fba/core Bedirhan Çetin
DF Template:Fba/core Logi Tómasson

Out on loan

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No. Pos. Nation Player
DF Template:Fba/core Enes Albak (at Ankara Demirspor until 30 June 2025Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".)
DF Template:Fba/core Ercan Kara (at Rapid Wien until 30 June 2025Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".)
DF Template:Fba/core Mustafa Tan (at Serik Belediyespor until 30 June 2025Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".)
No. Pos. Nation Player
DF Template:Fba/core Ali Ülgen (at Boluspor until 30 June 2025Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".)
FW Template:Fba/core Ali Kılıç (at Çankaya until 30 June 2025Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".)
FW Template:Fba/core Polat Yaldır (at Karaman FK until 30 June 2025Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".)

Non-playing staff

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Administrative staff

Position Name
President Template:Flagicon Yüksel Yıldırım
Vice President Template:Flagicon Veysel Bilen
Chief Financial Officer Template:Flagicon Soner Soykan
Template:Flagicon Koray Yalçın
Executive Board Member Template:Flagicon Suat Çakır
Template:Flagicon Fazlıhan Carus
Template:Flagicon Serkan Kaya
Template:Flagicon Zafer Erdoğan

Source: [75]

Coaching staff

Position Name
Head coach Template:Flagicon Thomas Reis
Assistant coach Template:Flagicon Markus Gellhaus
Template:Flagicon Ton Lokhoff
Goalkeeping coach Template:Flagicon Zsolt Janos Petry
Athletic performance coach Template:Flagicon Fatih Yıldız
Template:Flagicon Serkan Eyüpoğlu
Fitness coach Template:Flagicon Oktay Arslanoğlu
Assistant goalkeeping coach Template:Flagicon Kadir Tütüncü
Head of analysis department Template:Flagicon Emre Bayraktar
Analyst Template:Flagicon Baykal Aydınlı
Template:Flagicon Yunus Emre Zengin
Template:Flagicon Ahmet Özdemir

Source: [76]

Presidents

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Other departments

Besides football, Samsunspor also operates men's basketball and women's volleyball teams at various levels. At the amateur level, the club has had athletes competing in archery, boxing, judo, and table tennis.

Basketball

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Samsunspor basketball team was promoted to the Basketbol Süper Ligi from Türkiye Basketbol Ligi following the 2022–23 season. The team played its home matches at Mustafa Dağıstanlı Sports Hall.

After their relegation at the end of 2023–24 Basketbol Süper Ligi, the club has suspended professional basketball operations.

References

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  4. Sivritepe, Erdinç 1967–1968 1. Lig turkish-soccer.com. Retrieved 19 July 2010
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  6. Pekin, Cem 1968–1969 Türkiye 2. Ligi turkish-soccer.com. Retrieved 20 July 2010
  7. Sivritepe, Erdinç 1969–1970 1. Lig turkish-soccer.com. Retrieved 20 July 2010
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  9. Pekin, Cem 1970–1971 – 9. Türkiye Kupası turkish-soccer.com. Retrieved 20 July 2010
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  50. SAMSUNSPOR Template:Webarchive turkish-football.com (English) accessed 29 May 2010
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External links

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  • Samsunspor at TFF.org

Template:Sister project

Template:Samsunspor Template:Samsunspor managers Script error: No such module "Navbox". Template:Turkish clubs in European football

Template:Authority control