Results

Egypt - League 03/26 19:30 - Gazira HC v Heliopolis W 34-32
Egypt - League 02/23 18:00 - Gzira v El Zamalek L 24-38
Egypt - League 02/16 18:00 - Gazira HC v Smouha SC D 34-34
Egypt - League 02/06 18:00 - Gazira HC v Al Ahly (Egypt) L 21-26
Egypt - League 02/02 18:00 - Bank Al Ahli v Gzira W 20-22
Egypt - League 11/28 18:00 - Gzira v Ashab Aljead D 1-1
Egypt - League 11/21 18:00 - Gzira v El Maady W 20-17
Håndballkamper 10/31 16:00 - Gazira HC v Alshaykh Zayid W 31-28
Egypt - League 10/13 13:00 - Al Ahly (Egypt) v Gzira L 31-21
Egypt - League 10/10 17:00 - Gazira HC v El Olympi W 25-22
Egypt - League 09/19 17:00 - Gazira HC v Al Obour W 24-23
Egypt - League 09/15 15:00 - Al Zohour v Gazira HC W 24-27

Wikipedia - Gezira Sporting Club

The Gezira Sporting Club (Arabic: نادى الجزيرة الرياضى, transliteration:nādī al-ǧazyrah al-reyādī) is the largest multi-sport facility in Egypt. It was founded in 1882 and was originally called Khedivial Sporting Club. It is located on the island of Zamalek in Cairo.

History

The 150-acre (0.61 km2) grounds of the Gezira Sporting Club were initially carved out of the Khedivial Botanical Gardens, and as a result acacias and gardens decorate the area. After the land had been formally leased to the British military command in 1882, club rules were licensed and the land was divided into several recreational playing grounds. At first, the club was for the exclusive use of the British Army.[] Membership was restricted to applicants elected by the committee, on the recommendation of two members, although British army officers were automatically enrolled. There were about 750 members.[] Guests could visit the club whenever accompanied by those members by purchasing Day Passes for E£50.[]

In 1906, the club members asked the Egyptian government for ownership, but their request was refused. Instead, they were granted a 60-year lease.[]

The exclusive character of the club continued until after World War II. In January 1952, the club was nationalized and became a public club. By this point, most members of the Gezira Sporting Club were Egyptians, but the club's members were from society's elite. As a result of nationalization, the ethos and structure of the club were to be altered during the Nasser regime. Half of its eighteen-hole golf course were given over to a youth club built by the Egyptian government on the club premises (making it a nine-hole course). Much of what was deemed as a traditionally aristocratic asset was nationalized.[]

During Anwar Al Sadat's presidency, a new elevated highway (the 6th October Bridge) was built over the remaining nine-hole golf course and six-furlong racecourse causing the size of the club to further erode.[]

Despite suffering vandalism, the Gezira Sporting Club still offers most of the sports and games practiced by its founders: golf, tennis, squash, croquet, horse riding and cricket.[]

As of 2012, membership was estimated to consist of 43,000 families.