Kocaelispor (, ) is a professional football club based in ðzmit, Kocaeli Province, Turkey. Founded in 1966, the club competes in the Süper Lig, the highest tier of the Turkish football league system, and plays home matches at the 34,829-seat Kocaeli Stadium. The traditional colours of the team are green and black.
Kocaelispor has had several top-flight spells, most notably from 1980 to 1988, 1992 to 2003, and in the 2008âÂÂ09 season. Their best league finish was fourth in the 1992âÂÂ93 season. The club has won the Turkish Cup twice, in 1997 and 2002, and has participated in European competition.
Nicknamed Körfez (The Gulf), the club has a strong following in ðzmit and the surrounding Kocaeli region. Its fiercest rivalries are with Sakaryaspor and Gebzespor.
After financial collapse and successive relegations in the 2010s, Kocaelispor dropped into the amateur leagues. A rebuilding process led to successive promotions, culminating in a return to the Süper Lig in the 2024âÂÂ25 season after a 16-year absence.
The roots of Kocaelispor go back to the late 1950s. In 1957, representatives of local side Baçspor petitioned the ðzmit municipality for a dedicated training ground. Then-mayor Osman Gencal, himself a former athlete and Baçspor member, supported the project and oversaw the allocation of a 28-acre municipal plot in Baç for sporting use.
By the early 1960s Baçspor had redeveloped the area and in 1964 proposed forming a fully professional team to apply to the national second tier (2. Lig). At the time the federationâÂÂs regulations required a composite club structure with adequate facilities and staff, and encouraged local mergers to concentrate resources. In 1966 three ðzmit clubsâÂÂBaçspor, ðzmit Gençlik and DoÃÂansporâÂÂagreed to unite under a single umbrella; at a joint congress the name Kocaelispor was adopted and greenâÂÂblack were chosen as the club colours. The new board launched a subscription campaign that raised an initial budget reportedly around 175,000 lira to build the first squad and meet entry requirements for national competition.
Kocaelispor were admitted to the 1. Lig for the 1966âÂÂ67 season and quickly became the regionâÂÂs flagship representative in Turkish professional football. The club earned a first-ever promotion to the Süper Lig (top flight) in 1980, remaining at that level for eight consecutive seasons during the 1980s. After relegation battles and disputed disciplinary rulings in the late 1980s, KocaelisporâÂÂs league status was the subject of appeals that culminated in a decision by the Council of State affecting relegation procedures; the club subsequently returned to the top tier during that period following the legal process.
Back in the top division after promotion in 1991âÂÂ92, Kocaelispor opened the 1992âÂÂ93 1. Lig at full throttle under coach Güvenç Kurtar. On opening day they beat Kayserispor 7âÂÂ2 in ðzmit, a result widely reported as a statement of intent. Through the autumn the âÂÂKocaeli fñrtñnasñâ put together a long unbeaten run and finished the first half among the leaders; a spring dip cost a podium place, but the team still recorded the clubâÂÂs best top-flight finish to that date (4th) and qualified for Europe. That league placing earned a berth in the 1993âÂÂ94 UEFA Cup, the first European campaign in Kocaelispor history.
KurtarâÂÂs side blended a Balkan-school defensive spine with quick, vertical transitions. In goal, former Yugoslavia international Fahrudin Omeroviàprovided commanding shot-stopping and organization after his 1992 summer move. At centre-back, Stevica Kuzmanovski and Mirko MirkoviÃÂâÂÂwho later took Turkish citizenship as Mert MeriçâÂÂformed a robust pairing noted for aerial strength and tight marking.
Up front, academy product Bülent Uygun partnered Saffet Sancaklñ, creating one of the leagueâÂÂs most direct and productive forward lines; contemporaneous reports highlighted UygunâÂÂs second-ball finishing and SancaklñâÂÂs runs in behind as core patterns of KurtarâÂÂs narrow 4-4-2. SancaklñâÂÂs subsequent moves to Galatasaray and Fenerbahçe were framed as a natural step after his ðzmit breakthrough. With contributors such as Bülent Baturman, Halil ðbrahim Kara, Melih Erdem and Ergun Kula, the side set club records for top-flight wins and goals at the time.
The fourth-place finish secured Europe and fixed the 1992âÂÂ93 squad in local memory as the âÂÂefsane kadroâ (legendary roster). The momentum carried into the following autumnâÂÂs UEFA Cup, confirming the step-change in the clubâÂÂs stature.
Building on a top-five league finish in the 1995âÂÂ96 campaign, Kocaelispor qualified for the summer UEFA Intertoto Cup, whichâÂÂat the time offered additional paths into European competition. ðzmitâÂÂs side treated the July fixtures as a continuation of their domestic momentum, drawing strong crowds at ðzmit ðsmetpaà Âa and recording competitive results against continental opposition before bowing out in the latter stages of the programme.
The clubâÂÂs breakthrough arrived the following season in the national cup. Under the guidance of coach Güvenç Kurtar, Kocaelispor navigated a demanding bracket in the Turkish Cup, dispatching several top-flight opponents en route to the final and leaning on a compact defensive shape and rapid transitions that became the hallmark of the side. In the two-legged 1997 final they defeated Trabzonspor on aggregate, winning the clubâÂÂs first major national trophy and earning a berth in European competition for the following season. The triumph was widely viewed as a landmark for the Green-Blacks, validating a player-recruitment strategy that blended experienced domestic names with rising talents from the Yugoslav football school already on the roster.
Five years later Kocaelispor produced an even more emphatic finale. Having again pieced together a robust cup runâÂÂthis time with a deeper attacking rotationâÂÂthe team lifted its second national title by defeating Beà Âiktaà  in the 2002 Turkish Cup Final with a one-sided scoreline that remains one of the most memorable showpieces of the era. Contemporary reports highlighted both the tactical flexibility shown across two halves and the intensity of the ðzmit support, underlining how the clubâÂÂs provincial identity fed directly into performance on the day.
Each cup victory carried a continental dividend. The 1997 success delivered European qualification under the then-existing format, while the 2002 title secured a place in the early rounds of the UEFA competition of the following season, giving Kocaelispor fresh exposure and revenue at international level. More broadly, the twin triumphs bookended KocaelisporâÂÂs most decorated period: they cemented the clubâÂÂs reputation as one of the few sides outside the traditional Istanbul trio capable of lifting major silverware in the modern era, and they remain central to the Green-Blacksâ institutional identity and supporter culture today.
These victories remain historic milestones for the club and its supporters. However, following the 2002âÂÂ03 season, Kocaelispor was relegated after finishing last in the Süper Lig. After spending five seasons in the TFF First League, they won the 2007âÂÂ08 championship and earned promotion back to the Süper Lig. This return lasted only one season due to financial difficulties, and the club was relegated again after losing 3âÂÂ1 at home to Trabzonspor on 9 May 2009 in Round 31, finishing 17th. The following season, after a 2âÂÂ1 away defeat to Kartalspor on 4 April 2010, Kocaelispor was relegated to the TFF Second League, the third tier of Turkish football.
During the 2007âÂÂ08 campaign Kocaelispor used three head coaches Fuat Yaman, Kayhan ÃÂubuklu and Engin ðpekoÃÂlu yet still clinched the 1. Lig title and a return to the Süper Lig. A severe financial squeeze and squad turnover, however, triggered back-to-back relegations: first from the top flight in 2008âÂÂ09, and then to the TFF Second League after the 2010âÂÂ11 season. Finishing bottom of the Second League White Group in 2011âÂÂ12 pushed the club down again â to the fourth tier â and, after protracted off-field problems, Kocaelispor fell into the Turkish Regional Amateur League in April 2014 following a 1âÂÂ0 defeat to ðstanbulspor with four rounds remaining.
In the 2014âÂÂ15 Regional Amateur League season Kocaelispor battled promotion rivals including TekirdaÃÂspor, ÃÂengelköyspor and Arnavutköy Belediyespor, but despite a long spell at the summit finished 4th in Group 11. The following season brought a decisive turnaround: Kocaelispor won their group and then defeated Sultangazispor 2âÂÂ0 in a neutral-venue promotion play-off at Eskià Âehir on 24 April 2016 â goals from Sinan Pektemek and Hamza Mutlu sealing a long-awaited rise back to the professional pyramid (TFF 3. Lig).
Promoted from the Regional Amateur League in April 2016, Kocaelispor restarted life in the 3. Lig in 2016âÂÂ17. They finished 4th in their group but fell short in the promotion play-offs, remaining in the division; the following season (2017âÂÂ18) brought a mid-table 13th-place finish. In 2018âÂÂ19 Kocaelispor climbed to 2nd in their group but again could not secure promotion via the play-offs.
The pandemic-affected 2019âÂÂ20 season was curtailed with Kocaelispor leading their 3. Lig group; the TFF confirmed group leaders would be promoted, sending the club up to the 2. Lig for 2020âÂÂ21. Momentum continued in 2020âÂÂ21: Kocaelispor finished 3rd in the 2. Lig Kñrmñzñ Grup and won the promotion play-offs â defeating Sakaryaspor 4âÂÂ0 in the final to return to the 1. Lig after a single year.
The step up proved difficult: in 2021âÂÂ22 Kocaelispor finished 16th in the 1. Lig and were relegated back to the 2. Lig. The response was emphatic: in 2022âÂÂ23 the club won their 2. Lig group to clinch immediate promotion back to the second tier. Back in the 1. Lig for 2023âÂÂ24, Kocaelispor closed the season in 6th place and qualified for the promotion play-offs, where their campaign ended short of a top-flight return.
In the 2024âÂÂ25 season, KocaelisporâÂÂs long push back to the top tier finally came to fruition. Under head coach ðsmet Taà Âdemir (appointed in late December 2024), the side put together a sustained spring run that kept them clear at the top of the Trendyol 1. Lig. On a weekend late in April, one day before Kocaelispor were due to visit Esenler Erokspor, Fatih KaragümrükâÂÂs 1âÂÂ0 home defeat to Boluspor meant the ðzmit club could no longer be caught, mathematically guaranteeing an automatic-promotion place with three matchdays remaining; the club confirmed promotion to the Süper Lig after a 16-year absence.
Beyond securing promotion early, season metrics published by the TFF showed Kocaelispor among the leagueâÂÂs top sides for goal difference and away points, while home fixtures at Kocaeli Stadium regularly drew five-figure gates during the run-in, underscoring the scale of the clubâÂÂs return to the elite.
Kocaelispor's crest features a traditional shield shape with vertical black and green stripes, which represent the club's official colors â green and black. Prominently displayed in the center are the intertwined white initials "K" and "S", standing for Kocaelispor, along with the club's founding year 1966 at the bottom.
In the upper left corner of the crest, a blue silhouette represents the Gulf of ðzmit (ðzmit Körfezi), symbolizing the city's connection to the sea. Adjacent to it is a yellow sun, symbolizing energy and hope. On the right side of the crest, three yellow stars are aligned diagonally, typically symbolizing achievements and aspirations of the club. The green and black color scheme has been consistently used by the club since its founding, with green symbolizing nature and vitality, and black representing determination and strength.
Kocaelispor commands one of the most dedicated provincial followings in Turkey. Its core ultra collective, Hodri Meydan, was founded in 1989 as the successor to the âÂÂÃÂñlgñnlarâ and âÂÂEski Tüfeklerâ crews; the name was borrowed from journalist UÃÂur DündarâÂÂs TV debate programme while supporters were travelling to a away match, and the group has occupied the Maraton stand ever since. Academic work on the club shows that even when Kocaelispor slid into the amateur divisions identification among local fans remained âÂÂhigh,â making the club a textbook case of civic loyalty over glory-hunting. That loyalty translates into gates most top-flight teams would envy: in the 2024âÂÂ25 1. Lig season Kocaelispor drew 246 898 ticket-paying spectators at an average of 13 716 per home game, the highest in the division. The fan base extends well beyond ðzmit, with sizeable pockets across the wider Marmara and Black Sea regions. Match-day culture revolves around continuous ninety-minute chanting, industrial drums, large-format tifos and the slogan âÂÂBurasñ Hodri Meydan,â all presented in the clubâÂÂs green and black colours. The group has also shown a capacity for self-policing: after member Serhat Boz was murdered en route to an Altay fixture in March 2017, Hodri Meydan voluntarily withdrew from the terraces for the remainder of the campaign and issued a public apology to the city, citing fatigue with violence. Their fiercest enmity remains the regional clash with Sakaryaspor, known as the Marmara or Gulf Derby, which has produced some of the collectiveâÂÂs most elaborate choreographies and occasional unrest.
The Marmara DerbyâÂÂalso known as the Gulf Derby or, colloquially, the Green-Black DerbyâÂÂis the football rivalry between Kocaelispor and Sakaryaspor, two neighbouring clubs from the provinces of Kocaeli and Sakarya. It has been regarded as the most significant fixture for both teams since their first official meeting on 6 January 1974, which ended in a 1âÂÂ0 victory for Sakaryaspor in Adapazarñ. As of 2025, the two clubs have faced each other in 42 competitive matches, with Sakaryaspor leading the series with 17 wins to KocaelisporâÂÂs 15, along with 10 draws. The largest margin of victory belongs to Kocaelispor, who won 6âÂÂ2 on 8 March 1992.ÃÂ
What keeps the derby white-hot is less the league table than the combustible mix of geographyâÂÂbarely fifty kilometres separate the Gulf citiesâÂÂand two ultra cultures, Hodri Meydan and Tatangalar, whose confrontations regularly push the fixture onto TurkeyâÂÂs high-risk list. Flash-point moments include the 5âÂÂ1 match of 8 May 2011 when KocaelisporâÂÂs Gökhan Bozkaya deliberately scored an own goal to avoid a 4âÂÂ1 scoreline that would have echoed KocaeliâÂÂs âÂÂ41â licence-plate code, the earthquake-relief friendly of 22 February 2023 that still saw flares and scuffles despite both clubs donating gate receipts to AFAD and the Red Crescent, KocaelisporâÂÂs first away win in Sakarya for forty-two years on 10 November 2024, and their 3âÂÂ1 home victory on 31 March 2025 in front of a full Kocaeli Stadium.
For more than four decades Kocaelispor played at the centrally located ðzmit ðsmetpaà Âa Stadium, a municipal ground inaugurated in 1974. After periodic safety and seating works its official capacity settled at around 12,700, and the venue hosted the club through its 1. Lig and Süper Lig eras until the mid-2010s, as well as numerous regional and youth fixtures. Demolition of the ageing ground began in 2018 as part of an urban-renewal scheme once the new stadium project was delivered, bringing an end to one of ðzmitâÂÂs longest-serving sports venues.
Kocaelispor subsequently relocated to the new Kocaeli Stadium (often referred to as ðzmit Stadyumu), a purpose-built, all-seater arena in the Alikahya neighbourhood roughly 7 km from the ðzmit city centre. Designed and delivered under the national stadium programme, the facility provides approximately 34,000 seats in a continuous lowerâÂÂupper bowl with a full roof canopy and modern matchday/operational spaces, and is built to meet UEFA and Süper Lig requirements. The club completed its move during the 2017âÂÂ18 period as the venue came on stream, with official opening events and early fixtures staged in 2018.
Access to Kocaeli Stadium is provided by arterial roads linking the D-605 corridor as well as dedicated matchday bus services arranged by the Kocaeli Metropolitan Municipality, with on-site parking and segregated turnstile zones integrated into the footprint.
Kocaelispor is one of the Turkish clubs that has represented Turkey in European competitions organized by UEFA. The club has played a total of 18 matches in European competitions: 4 matches in the UEFA Cup (now known as the UEFA Europa League), 4 matches in the UEFA Cup Winners' Cup, and 10 matches in the UEFA Intertoto Cup. In these matches, Kocaelispor recorded 5 wins, 5 draws, and 8 losses, scoring 15 goals and conceding 23.
<small>The following players are among those who represented Kocaelispor in national and international competitions and have gained recognition:</small>
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Kocaelispor have been led by a mix of local and foreign coaches, with landmark spells under Holger Osieck and Hikmet Karaman. In the mid-1990s Mustafa Denizli stabilised the side and delivered a top-five league finish in 1995âÂÂ96, setting up the strongest period in club history. Under Güvenç Kurtar the club also featured regularly in continental competition, including the 1996 Intertoto campaign and subsequent European ties recorded by the clubâÂÂs archive.
German coach Holger Osieck arrived midway through 1996âÂÂ97 and led Kocaelispor to the clubâÂÂs first Turkish Cup. The two-leg final against Trabzonspor finished 1âÂÂ1 in Trabzon and 1âÂÂ0 in ðzmit, with the return leg decided by a late goal at ðsmetpaà Âa Stadium. OsieckâÂÂs role is widely marked in local coverage and anniversary events organised in ðzmit. The cup win took Kocaelispor into the UEFA Cup Winners' Cup the following season; contemporary summaries note ties against Naà £ional Bucureà Âti and Lokomotiv Moskova.
Hikmet KaramanâÂÂinitially an assistant in ðzmitâÂÂreturned as head coach in 2000 and guided Kocaelispor to a second Turkish Cup in 2001âÂÂ02, defeating Beà Âiktaà  4âÂÂ0 in the final at Bursa Atatürk Stadium. That success carried the club into the 2002âÂÂ03 UEFA Cup, where they were eliminated by Ferencváros over two legs (0âÂÂ5 agg.).
In addition to those title-winning tenures, other notable coaching spells include DenizliâÂÂs 1994âÂÂ96 run (culminating in a top-five finish) and multiple appointments for Güvenç Kurtar, who took the team into European competition in the late 1990s and early 2000s.
Over the course of the clubâÂÂs history, Kocaelispor have been led by a long line of locally known administrators, beginning in the mid-1960s with figures such as ðsmail Kolaylñ, Baki Efe and ðbrahim Küçükörs, and then by longer stints under Erol Köse (1972âÂÂ78) and ðsmail Kalkandelen in the late 1970s and mid-1980s. The presidency of Sefa Sirmen (1991âÂÂ2002) is widely regarded as the clubâÂÂs most successful modern era: during his tenure Kocaelispor consolidated their place in the top flight, built competitive squads and captured two Turkish Cups (1996âÂÂ97 and 2001âÂÂ02), the only major national trophies in the clubâÂÂs cabinet.
The 2000s brought shorter administrations and financial headwinds, with a rapid succession of presidents (including Hikmet Erenkaya, ðbrahim Saral, Cemal Derya and Serhan Gürkan) as the club navigated relegations and restructuring. From 2014 to 2019, Bahri Yavuz presided over a community-driven rebuild, followed by a period of stabilization and renewed professionalization under Hüseyin ÃÂzülmez (2019âÂÂ20) and Engin Koyun (2020âÂÂ24), coinciding with the clubâÂÂs steady climb back up the league pyramid and the settling of operations at the new Kocaeli Stadium. In March 2024, Recep Durul took office, with a mandate to maintain financial discipline, strengthen the academy-to-first-team pathway and keep the club competitive as it seeks sustainable success.