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| Full name | Karachi United Football Club | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Short name | KUFC | ||
| Founded | 1996 | ||
| Ground | Karachi United Stadium | ||
| Capacity | 2,000 | ||
| Coordinates | 24°48′51.3″N67°00′05.5″E / 24.814250°N 67.001528°E | ||
| Owner & Chairman | Taha Alizai | ||
| Head Coach | Shaikh Hamdan | ||
| League | Pakistan Premier League | ||
| Website | karachiunited | ||
Karachi United Football Club is a Pakistani professional football club based in Clifton, Karachi. It last competed in the Pakistan Premier League, the top tier of the Pakistani football league system. Karachi United uses the 2,000-capacity Karachi United Stadium for most of their home games. [1]
Formed in 1996, the club turned professional in 2013, making their national league debut in second tier 2013 PFF League. The club also competed in the 2016 PFF Cup, the highest cup competition in Pakistan that year. In October 2020, the club was promoted to the Pakistan Premier League for the first time, courtesy of a second-place finish in the 2020 PFF League. [2] It therefore made its top-flight debut in the 2021 Pakistan Premier League. [3]
Karachi United was founded in 1996 by Taha Alizai, aiming to promote grassroots football in Pakistan. [4] [5] [6] [7] The club started its youth academy in 2001. [8]
In 2003 the club launched the citywide KASB League, which quickly became a consistent open club competition in Karachi, and a counterweight to departmental dominance in the national top tier. [5] The team regularly played there. [9] [10]
Karachi United also launched their women team in 2010. [8]
In 2013, Karachi United launched their professional team to compete in Pakistan's second tier PFF League. [11] Registering as a department, [2] they made their debut in the departmental phase of the 2013 PFF League. They ended first in the group and advanced to the final phase where they finished last.
In 2014, the club participated in the departmental phase of the 2014 PFF League. They finished bottom of group C, failing to win either of their two matches. The club acquired its own stadium in 2015. [8]
Head Coach - Kareem Kerai. Asst. Coach - Shaikh Hamdan.
The club competed in the 2016 PFF Cup, the highest cup competition in Pakistan at the time. [12] After getting through the qualifying and group stage, they lost to Pakistan Air Force in the quarter-finals. In the 2018 and 2019 National Football Challenge Cup, they failed to get past the group stage.
At the 2020 National Football Challenge Cup, the team lost to eventual champions WAPDA in the quarter finals. Later on in the 2020 PFF League, Karachi United finished at the top of group A and advanced to the final phase, where they finished second, and thus after a struggle of many years, were finally promoted to the Pakistan Premier League. [2]
It therefore made its top-flight debut in the 2021 Pakistan Premier League. However during a turmoil within the Pakistan Football Federation, the league not being recognised by FIFA, and organised by a faction who came to power after forcibly taking control of the PFF office, the league was suspended after a few months into the season and then cancelled. [3] [13]
The club's crest represents Teen Talwar on their logo, one of the most popular monuments in the city of Karachi, which represent Unity, Faith and Discipline .
Karachi United's colours are red, white and black. Traditionally, the club has used red as the home colour and black, white, or green as the away colour.
| Period | Kit manufacturer | Main Shirt Sponsor | Sleeve Sponsor |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2021–2024 | M. I. Industries | Engro Corporation [14] [15] | - |
| 2025–present | M. I. Industries | - | Coach360 [16] |
The Karachi United Stadium in the DHA neighborhood of Clifton, Karachi, serves as the home ground of Karachi United. [11] [17]
Karachi United first used the DHA Football Stadium, also named Rahat Football Stadium, in Khayaban-e-Rahat, DHA, as their home ground. [18] [19] The team later started training in a renovated residential park in Clifton, which the club rented on a more permanent basis, [20] and acquired the Karachi United Stadium in 2015. [8] By 2017, the Karachi United Stadium in Clifton started featuring regular youth fixtures. [21]
Karachi United started its youth academy in 2001. [8] This was followed by the launch of Karachi United School Championship in 2005, becoming a notable annual schools and colleges football tournament throughout Karachi. [22] The club initiated its youth summer camp in 2009, and the next year it launched community program. [8]
In July 2004, Karachi United became the first team from Pakistan to visit one of the premier football clubs of the world when its 14-member under-15 youth academy team went on a week-long tour to the Manchester United Soccer Schools (MUSS) in Manchester, [23] a trip sponsored by ABN Amro. The team was coached by a Manchester United coach for a week, and also played three matches against local opposition. The team also visited the Manchester United first team training at their facility at Carrington, where it spent time in the company of manager Alex Ferguson, assistant manager Carlos Queiroz, and players including Roy Keane, Alan Smith, and Rio Ferdinand. [24]
In July 2006, two youth academy players Atif Sachak and Kareem Kerai, were selected for a pre-season two-week academy and community programmes at Premier League club's Charlton Athletic youth academy. [25] A few days later, both the players were drafted into Charlton's under-13 side for a match against a visiting American club. [25]
In September 2008, the youth team was invited to Qatar on a week-long tour to play matches against the youth teams of Al-Ahli and Al Sadd, as well as train at the Aspire Academy for Sports Excellence. [26] [27]
In September 2011, it was invited again to Qatar on a five-day tour to train and play matches versus Aspire Academy, Al Sadd and other local clubs.
The academy team was invited to play a four-match bilateral series against Aspire Academy in Doha in March 2019. The under-12 side managed to win all four matches in the series. The under-11 team won and lost twice. [28] [29] [30]
In November 2019, KU U-12 and U-11 categories were again invited by the Aspire Academy to participate in a tri-series football tournament. [7]
In March 2023, KU was once again invited by the Aspire Academy to Doha for a 5-day tour to participate in a 3-match friendly series between the U-11 and U-12 teams. [31]
The academy squad was invited in October 2023 to play a couple of competitive matches and a friendly match with Aspire Academy.
In February 2017, Karachi United became the first Pakistani club to tour FC Barcelona. [32] During their week long tour, the Karachi United squad, comprising 53 people (44 players and 9 officials), was given six coaching sessions by coaches from FCB. The squad was housed at the Marcet Fundacion, a Catalonian youth set-up. During their stay, Karachi United's four teams (two under-13 teams, with one of the teams comprising both boys and girls, and two under-16) played over 15 matches against local opposition. The squad also visited La Masia, FCB Museum and Camp Nou. [33]
In July 2024, Karachi United formed a partnership with English club Swindon Town. This collaboration was facilitated by Prospect Pakistan, a sports platform. The memorandum of understanding was signed at the Royal Agricultural University in the UK, with key figures from both clubs present. Key components of the partnership include coaching development, player pathways through exchange programs, scouting and training camps, and regular exchanges between the clubs on club management, player development, and community engagement. [34] [35] [36]
Since 2010, Karachi United has worked with Generation Amazing, a Qatar 2022 World Cup community programme. The partnership built a full-size turf pitch at the club's ground in Karachi and encouraged more girls to play football through youth ambassadors from Lyari. [7]
By 2019 the club was operating 11 community centres across Karachi, serving over 1,000 children, including around 200 girls, staffed by a large cohort of community and academy coaches. [7]
Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules; some limited exceptions apply. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.
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| Position | Name |
|---|---|
| Head Coach | |
| Assistant Coach | |
| Goalkeeper Coach | |
| Academy Coach | |
| S&C Coach & Physical Therapist | |
| Commercial Manager | |
| Media and Communications | |
| Graphic Designer | |
| Official Photographer | |
| Director of Football Operations | |
| Director of Youth and Academy | |
| Director of Football Development | |
| General Secretary | |
| Season | Division | League | National Challenge Cup | Asian club competition | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| P | W | D | L | GF | GA | Pts | Pos. | |||||
| 2013 | PFF League | 2 | 0 | 0 | 2 | 0 | 3 | 0 | Group stage | DNE | DNQ | |
| 2014 | PFF League | 6 | 1 | 3 | 2 | 6 | 11 | 6 | Group stage | DNE | ||
| 2016 | NH | Quarterfinals | ||||||||||
| 2018 | NH | Group stage | ||||||||||
| 2019 | NH | Group stage | ||||||||||
| 2020 | PFF League | 7 | 4 | 3 | 0 | 12 | 5 | 15 | 2nd | Round of 16 | ||
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League
Karachi United runs several competitions:
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