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Batman Petrolspor

Batman Petrolspor
Full nameBatman Petrolspor Kulübü
Founded1960; 66 years ago (1960)
GroundBatman Stadium, Batman
Capacity15,000
Coordinates37°51′25″N 41°07′58″E / 37.85708025716585°N 41.13276706670538°E / 37.85708025716585; 41.13276706670538
ChairmanMehmet Hakan Toy
ManagerSerdar Bozkurt
LeagueTFF 1. Lig
2025–26TFF 2. Lig, White, 1st of 19 (promoted)
Websitehttps://petrolspor.com/

Batman Petrolspor is a professional Turkish football club located in the city of Batman. Formed in 1960, the club colours are red, white, and black and they play their home matches at Batman Stadium. The club is named Petrolspor because Batman is the largest producer of oil in Turkey.[1] The club is owned by TPAO. [2]

History

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Batman Petrolspor was founded in 1960 with several branches including athletics, basketball, football, swimming, volleyball, and wrestling. The club played amateur football in the Diyarbakır regional leagues until 1986 when they won promotion to the 3. Lig. The club won promotion to the 2. Lig soon after and competed in the division for several years.[3]

They have never won promotion to the Süper Lig, falling in the 2. Lig promotion semi-finals to Göztepe. The club were relegated to the 3.Lig at the end of the 2005–06 season. Their greatest success in the Turkish Cup came in 1977 when they reached the fourth round, losing to Kocaelispor 3–0 on aggregate.[4] At the time, Batman Petrolspor were still competing in the Turkish Regional Amateur League.[3] After winning the TFF Third League 2nd Group in the 2023-24 season, the club managed the following season to win the TFF Second League White Group earning a place in the TFF First League.

Stadium

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The club plays its home matches at Batman Stadium. The stadium seats 15,000 spectators. The club previously played its home matches at the 16 Mayıs Stadium.

Noted players

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Batman Petrolspor have produced Orhan Kapucu, a Batman native, and Ozan İpek, both capped by the Turkey national football team. Kapucu went on to play for several clubs, most notably Fenerbahçe.[5] He earned his solitary cap in an Euro 1988 qualifying match against Northern Ireland on 12 November 1986.[6] İpek currently plays for Bursaspor, winning the 2009-10 Süper Lig.[7] He earned his first cap for the Turkey national football team in a friendly match against Honduras on 3 March 2010.[8]

Current squad

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As of 17 June 2026

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  TUR Atalay Gökçe
4 DF  TUR Ahmet Kesim (captain)
6 DF  TUR Feyyaz Belen
7 FW  TUR Cem Ekinci
10 DF  TUR Onur Eriş
14 MF  TUR Kubilay Yavuz
15 MF  TUR İshak Çakmak
21 MF  TUR Bünyamin Yürür
22 DF  TUR Burak Sefa Kavraz (on loan from Başakşehir)
24 DF  TUR Batuhan Tur
27 MF  TUR Muhammed Aydın
No. Pos. Nation Player
33 MF  GER Arda Temur
45 FW  TUR Mehmet Çakıcı
46 DF  TUR Devran Bozardiç
55 DF  TUR Evren Korkmaz
59 GK  TUR Eren Girgin
72 FW  TUR Furkan Rüzgar
74 FW  TUR Mert Çapar
96 GK  TUR Yusuf Bakır
97 FW  TUR Ali Demirel
99 FW  TUR Okan Eken
GK  TUR Mehmet Turan
MF  SEN Mamadou Cissokho
FW  MTQ Mickaël Biron (on loan from Nürnberg)

Out on loan

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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
DF  TUR Turgut Arda Görmüş (at Orduspor 1967 until 30 June 2026)

References

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  1. ^ Batman britannica.com, accessed 25 June 2010
  2. ^ https://beinsports.com.tr/haber/batman-petrolsporun-devredildigi-aciklandi
  3. ^ a b Tarihçe Archived July 25, 2011, at the Wayback Machine batmanpetrolsk.org (in Turkish), accessed 25 June 2010
  4. ^ Pekin, Cem 1976–1977 – 15. Türkiye Kupası turkish-soccer.com, accessed 25 June 2010
  5. ^ FENERBAHÇE'NIN 1988–1989 SEZONU Archived June 12, 2010, at the Wayback Machine turkfutbolu.net (in Turkish), accessed 25 June 2010
  6. ^ Orhan Kapucu Archived 2016-03-03 at the Wayback Machine scoreshelf.com, accessed 25 June 2010
  7. ^ Bursaspor şampiyon! cnnturk.com (in Turkish), accessed 25 June 2010
  8. ^ TÜRKİYE HONDURAS tff.org (in Turkish), accessed 25 June 2010
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