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Al Jazeera
Al Jazeera
Hamza Mohamed

Doha exhibition traces Qatar’s football journey

Football first appeared in Qatar in the late 1940s [Sorin Furcoi/Al Jazeera]

Doha, Qatar – An exhibition charting the history of football in Qatar has opened its doors in Doha, as the Middle Eastern country readies to welcome fans for the World Cup, due to start on Sunday.

“The World Cup is coming to Qatar in a few days and we wanted to celebrate the occasion by holding this exhibition,” said Aysha al-Ansari, head of the Heritage Collection at the imposing Qatar National Library, where the showcase is being held.

“We want to increase the awareness of the public and the visitors coming to our country from around the world when it comes to our football heritage,” she told Al Jazeera. “For certain fans of the game, it is still an untold story.”

At the exhibition, titled “Goaaal! How Football Kicked off in Qatar”, visitors can walk past large billboards documenting the history of the sport in Qatar, including information about its stadiums, leagues and teams.

They can also see handmade football jerseys that the Maroons – Qatar’s national team – used to wear, alongside decades-old footballs, retro boots and other memorabilia. And they can watch and listen to recordings in which pioneering figures narrate how the love for football evolved in the country.

Qatar played its first-ever World Cup qualifying match in 1977 [Sorin Furcoi/Al Jazeera]

People in the small, gas-rich nation first began playing football in the late 1940s, according to the exhibition’s organisers. But it was not until 1970 that the country’s national team played their first ever international match, a 2-1 loss to neighbouring Bahrain.

The Maroons have come a long way since then.

They have made 10 appearances at the Asian Cup, which they won in a major upset in 2019 by beating four-time winners Japan in the final. Shortly afterwards, left-winger Akram Afif, the star of the current Qatar national team, was crowned the Asian footballer of the year.

Qatar has also won the regional Arabian Gulf Cup on three occasions – 1992, 2004 and 2014. In 2015, the Maroons recorded their biggest-ever win, smashing Bhutan 15-0.

The exhibition honours past legends of the game in Qatar, including Khalfan Ibrahim Khalfan, a former winger for the national team and a Qatar 2022 legacy ambassador.

“I’m very proud that we are hosting the World Cup. It makes me, Qatar and all Arabs extremely proud,” Khalfan told Al Jazeera.

[Sorin Furcoi/Al Jazeera]

More than one million visitors are expected to visit the country during the tournament that will end on December 18.

“We will show, through a successful tournament, that there is more to our region than the negative things that some people see in the media. There is more to this region than conflicts. This World Cup will look very different than the other World Cups. Our unique culture and hospitality will be on display,” Khalfan said.

This will be the first time that the football showpiece will be hosted in the Middle East, and the first time Qatar will take part.

The hosts will face Ecuador in the tournament’s opening match on Sunday, before squaring against Senegal and the Netherlands.

At the exhibition, which will be open throughout the World Cup and beyond, guests and dignitaries were optimistic about the Maroons’ chances.

“Qatar will go far in the competition, God willing,” Khalfan said, a hint of a smile forming on his face.

The exhibition, which will run until January 31, is been held at Qatar National Library [Sorin/Furcoi/Al Jazeera]
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