![]() Haidar with Lebanon U18 in 2022 | |||
Personal information | |||
---|---|---|---|
Full name | Celine Abbas Haidar | ||
Date of birth | 13 April 2005 | ||
Place of birth | Al-Qusaibah, Lebanon | ||
Height | 1.65 m (5 ft 5 in) | ||
Position(s) | Midfielder | ||
Team information | |||
Current team | BFA | ||
Number | 6 | ||
Youth career | |||
Akhaa Ahli Aley | |||
2020–2022 | Safa | ||
2022–2023 | BFA | ||
Senior career* | |||
Years | Team | Apps | (Gls) |
2021–2022 | Safa | 3 | (0) |
2022– | BFA | 33 | (1) |
International career‡ | |||
Lebanon U18 | |||
Lebanon U20 | |||
Lebanon | |||
*Club domestic league appearances and goals, correct as of 04:59, 17 December 2024 (UTC) ‡ National team caps and goals, correct as of 04:59, 17 December 2024 (UTC) |
Celine Abbas Haidar (Arabic : سيلين عباس حيدر; born 13 April 2005) is a Lebanese footballer who plays as a midfielder for Lebanese Women's Football League club BFA, which she captains, and the Lebanon national team. She previously played for Akhaa Aley and Safa, with which she won the 2022 WAFF Women's Clubs Championship.
With BFA, Haidar won the league in 2023–24; with the Lebanon under-18 team, she won the 2022 West Asian Championship. She sustained a head injury from shrapnel on 16 November 2024 during the Israeli invasion of Lebanon, and was placed in an induced coma.
Celine Abbas Haidar was born on 13 April 2005 in Al-Qusaibah, Lebanon, [1] to Abbas Haidar and Saana Shahrour. [2] [3] She is the youngest of three, with an older sister and brother. Though the youngest, Celine was able to relocate her family out of Beirut when Israeli attacks became more intense. Celine was raised devoutly religious but also given the freedom to express herself, something which clashed with conservatism typical in Lebanon. [3]
Early in her career, Haidar played for Akhaa Aley. [4] She then joined Safa and played for their U19 team in the 2020–21 Lebanese Women's U19 Football League, [5] before moving into the first team in 2021. [1] With them she took part in and won the 2022 WAFF Women's Clubs Championship. Throughout her time at Safa, she wore number 70. [6] [7] [8] At the end of the 2021–22 season, Safa dissolved the women's team. [9]
When Safa was dissolved, Haidar was offered to another Beirut team, BFA, which initially declined to take her on. The club already had a number of good midfielders and the coach thought Haidar's reputation as headstrong would clash with his strictness. Haidar then messaged the coach directly, and he agreed to her joining. [3]
For the 2022–23 season, Haidar wore the number 20 at BFA. [10] She primarily played for the Under-19 team this season, with whom she won the U19 league, [8] [3] and made a few appearances for the senior team. [1] In her first two seasons at BFA, Haidar made 33 Lebanese Women's Football League appearances [11] and scored one goal, the team's first in a 10–0 victory over Helium Sports on 25 June 2023. [1]
BFA won the senior league for the first time in the 2023–24 season, in a perfect season. [12] Haidar had worn the captain's armband for several games during this successful run, [3] and was made team captain in September 2024 [12] [2] when Syntia Salha left the club. [13] Described as the pillar and cornerstone of the team, [12] [2] and an intelligent player, [14] Haidar is focal in transition from defense to attack; [12] her coach called her "Lebanon's Sergio Busquets". [8]
Internationally, Haidar has represented Lebanon in its under-18 and under-20 teams, [14] including winning the 2022 WAFF U-18 Girls Championship. In 2024, she was selected to the senior team ahead of preparation for the WAFF Women's Championship. [2] After four call-ups to the senior national team without playing, [3] she had been set to make her senior debut against Iran in October 2024, but the Lebanese Football Association cancelled the match after further ground attacks by the Israel Defense Forces (IDF). [15]
When the IDF began more intense shelling of Beirut in November 2024, [15] Haidar and her family left their home in Chiyah in the south of Beirut [14] [12] to stay in Baakleen, in the mountains outside the city. [15] Haidar had recently been named captain of her football team, and returned to the city regularly to train, [12] which she did on 15 November 2024. [3] On 16 November, the IDF bombed Beirut's suburbs throughout the day. [16] Haidar was at home in Chiyah when an IDF evacuation order was issued, and she left; her father also called her to make sure she received the warning, [16] and was 500 metres away from her when the missile hit. [3] Though Haidar left the building, the airstrike was imminent [8] and she was getting on her motorbike when the area was hit. She was struck by shrapnel on the right side of the head. [2] [3]
Haidar suffered "severe brain injuries, including multiple skull fractures and brain bleeding." [2] She was taken to a hospital in Hadath that was then hit by an airstrike. [8] She was transferred to the Saint George Hospital University Medical Center, where she underwent surgery to control the bleeding, [14] after the president of BFA intervened with the Lebanese Health Minister. [3] On 16 November [8] she was placed in an induced coma. [12] She was in a stable condition for several days, before deteriorating on 20 November, when she suffered more bleeding on the brain, which was treated; [14] she was reportedly stable again by 22 November. [8] Early complications were related to the sodium in her blood. Her oxygen tube was removed on 16 December and, on 20 December, Haidar had an emergency tracheotomy; after this, she woke from her coma, unable to move or speak and "rarely register[ing] sounds around her." [3]
A video of Haidar unconscious in the street, showing her injuries and a man screaming nearby, went viral on social media in Lebanon. [12] [3] Other social media responses included further calls for FIFA to suspend Israel from international football in response to their invasions, which have injured multiple footballers. [14] There had been unconfirmed reports on 17 and 18 November that Haidar had fallen into a coma following surgery and then died, [17] with BFA clarifying her condition to the press. [8] [16] Haidar's family are concerned that a full recovery would require medical treatment not available in Lebanon. [3]
Safa
BFA
BFA under-19
Lebanon under-18
Football is the most popular sport in Lebanon. It was introduced to Lebanon in the late-19th century, becoming particularly popular among teachers and students Christian schools. The Lebanese Football Association (LFA) was formed in 1933 as one of the earliest administrative bodies for association football in the Middle East. The Lebanon national team made its unofficial debut in 1935 against Romanian club CA Timișoara (T.A.C.), while their first official FIFA game was in 1940 against Mandatory Palestine.
Safa Sporting Club is a football club based in Wata El Msaytbeh, a district in Beirut, Lebanon, that competes in the Lebanese Premier League. Founded in 1939, they have won three league titles, three domestic cups, one Super Cup, and two Elite Cups; they also reached the 2008 AFC Cup final.
Women's football in Lebanon officially began in 2005, with the creation of the Lebanese Women's Football (LWF). Founded in 2008, the Lebanese Women's Football League is the national club league; Sadaka and SAS won the league a record seven times each. Internationally, Safa became the first Lebanese team to win the WAFF Women's Clubs Championship in 2022.
Alice Kusi is a Ghanaian footballer who plays as a midfielder for the Ghana national team. She competed for Ghana at the 2018 Africa Women Cup of Nations, playing in three matches.
Racha Mohammad Yaghi is a Lebanese footballer who plays as a goalkeeper for Lebanese club SAS.
Layla Pascal "Lili" Iskandar is a Lebanese footballer who plays as a forward for Saudi Women's Premier League club Al-Ittihad and the Lebanon national team. A versatile forward, Iskandar can also play as a winger.
Samira Mohamad Awad is a Lebanese footballer who plays as a winger for Lebanese club SAS and the Lebanon national team.
Yara Antoine Bou Rada is a Lebanese footballer who plays as a forward for Lebanese club EFP and the Lebanon national team.
Hanin Maher Tamim is a Lebanese footballer who plays as a forward for Lebanese club SAS and the Lebanon national team.
Safa Women's Football Club, or simply Safa, was a women's football club based in Wata El-Museitbeh, Beirut, Lebanon, section of the homonymous football club. Founded in 2019, they competed in the Lebanese Women's Football League, which they won in 2020–21. They were disbanded following the 2021–22 season.
Aya Salah Jamal-Eddine is a Lebanese footballer who plays as a defender.
Celine Salim Al Haddad is a Lebanese footballer who plays as a defender for Lebanese club SAS and the Lebanon national team.
Fatima Al Zahraa Khachab is a Lebanese former footballer who played as a midfielder.
Dima Hani Al Kasti is a Lebanese footballer who plays as a left-back or left winger for Saudi Arabian club Al Hilal and the Lebanon national team.
Doumouh Ibrahim Al Bakkar is a Lebanese football referee who officiates primarily in the Lebanese Women's Football League.
Syntia Hikmat Salha is a Lebanese footballer who plays as a winger or midfielder for Cypriot club Lakatamia and the Lebanon national team.
Waed Bilal Raed is a Lebanese footballer who plays as a left wing-back for Lebanese club SAS and the Lebanon national team.
The 2021–22 Lebanese Premier League was the 60th season of the Lebanese Premier League, the top Lebanese league for association football clubs since its establishment in 1934. The league started on 11 September 2021 and ended on 4 June 2022.
The 2022–23 Lebanese Premier League was the 61st season of the Lebanese Premier League, the top Lebanese league for football clubs since its establishment in 1934. The league started on 2 September 2022, and ended on 12 March 2023.
On 10 October 2024, the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) carried out an airstrike in Bachoura in central Beirut, Lebanon, as part of the 2024 Israeli invasion of Lebanon. The airstrike in the densely populated neighborhood killed at least 22 Lebanese people and injured another 117. The apparent target of the airstrike was Wafiq Safa, the brother-in-law of former Hezbollah secretary-general Hassan Nasrallah, who reportedly evaded the assassination attempt against him. Israel used US-made JDAM fit for 2,000-pound bombs in the attack. The attack has been the deadliest attack in Beirut since the start of the 2023 Israel–Hezbollah conflict on 8 October 2023.