Kuwaiti football looks to undo decades of neglect to challenge region’s best

In more recent times Kuwaiti football has been beset by off-field problems, with a recent international ban by FIFA. (File/AFP)
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Updated 27 May 2021
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Kuwaiti football looks to undo decades of neglect to challenge region’s best

  • National team coach Andres Carrasco targets final round of qualification for 2022 World Cup

RIYADH: It has been a lean few decades for fans of Kuwaiti football.

You have to go a long way back – all the way to the 1970s and 1980s – to find the last time Kuwait was at the forefront of Asian football.

Those with memories long enough will fondly remember those teams with Faisal Al-Dakhil, Saad Al-Houti, and Jasem Yaqoub. Asian Cup champions in 1980, qualifying for the 1982 FIFA World Cup, and winning five of six Gulf Cups between 1970 and 1982. It was a golden age for Kuwaiti football.

But that was almost 40 years ago. In a country with a median age of 36.2, most of the population will have no memory of those days, relying only on what they have been told by the generation old enough to remember.

In more recent times Kuwaiti football has been beset by off-field problems, with a recent international ban by FIFA – one of a number of bans the country has faced in the past two decades – extending over two years that, according to a national team defender, “finished off a generation” such was its effect.

“It’s had a huge effect both at home and abroad,” Talal Al-Fadhel told Arab News at the time.

“Domestically, the Kuwaiti players have no real ambition at present. Internationally, our ranking has plummeted, our national team doesn’t play, and our clubs don’t take part in international competitions.

“I didn’t expect the suspension to last this long, it has finished off a generation completely,” he said.

While Kuwaiti football has yet to fully recover, especially at club level where the domestic league remains well off the pace from its regional rivals, the national team stands on the brink of an achievement not seen in almost two decades and one that was almost unthinkable a few short years ago.

Not since the qualification stages for the 2006 FIFA World Cup held in Germany has Kuwait progressed to the final round of qualifying, but with three games on home soil over the next fortnight against Australia, Jordan, and Taiwan, Al-Azraq are in prime position to do just that.

With Qatar almost certain to finish top of Group E – and having already qualified for the World Cup as the host nation – it means the other seven group winners plus the five best runners-up will qualify for the final stage.

Under new coach, Spaniard Andres Carrasco, Kuwait is currently second in Group B behind Australia.

“Australia are one of the best teams in Asia, with great professional players that play in big leagues,” Carrasco recently told Australia’s SBS The World Game website.

“We see the match as one more chance to earn experience and an opportunity for our young team to earn credit in front of our fans. We are looking forward to this match and see where we are.”

While Kuwait has so far played five matches this year – including this week’s 4-1 win over Malaysia – compared to none for Australia, Carrasco did not think that gave his side an advantage over the 2015 AFC Asian Cup champions.

He said: “Obviously, there’s a difference but I don’t think we can say it may give us an advantage. When you see the Aussie squad list, I don’t think any football person would say we could have an advantage.

“Most teams have been struggling. Our plans have been adjusted many times, our league was stopped a couple of times, and some of our main players are still with their clubs. But as a coach I would never make this an excuse.

“(The coronavirus disease) COVID-19 (pandemic) changed everything. We played five matches but had very little training. Our team is very young, and we are in the process of building for the next decade ... this is our main focus,” he added.

The coach pointed out that the damage inflicted by the bans could not be undone in a short period of time.

“We all need to understand that Kuwaiti football stopped for two years due to a FIFA ban (for government interference in the sport) and this affected our football from its foundation,” he said.

“We are now trying to get our game back to where it belongs. Kuwait has a great football history and now it’s all about growing and improving day by day.”

This team is unlikely to match the feats of the godfathers of the game in Kuwait from the 1970s and 1980s, who stand alone as the true golden generation of Kuwaiti football.

But given the turmoil of the past two decades, an appearance in the final round of qualifying – which brings with it qualification for the AFC Asian Cup in China in 2023 – would be a massive boost for a country that was once the beating heart of football in the region.


Phil Foden leaves England’s Euro 2024 camp for ‘pressing family matter’

Updated 26 June 2024
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Phil Foden leaves England’s Euro 2024 camp for ‘pressing family matter’

  • English soccer’s governing body did not elaborate further on the reason for Foden’s departure

DUESSELDORF, Germany: Phil Foden has temporarily left England’s Euro 2024 base and returned to Britain for a “pressing family matter,” the Football Association said Wednesday.
English soccer’s governing body did not elaborate further on the reason for Foden’s departure.
The Manchester City forward played in Tuesday’s 0-0 draw with Slovenia.
England have advanced to the round of 16 and play their next match on Sunday. It is not known how long Foden will be away from the team’s base in Blankenhain, or if he will be available to play in that match.
The English Footballer of the Year started all three of the games in the group stage of the Euros and was expected to be in the starting lineup for the round of 16.


Esports World Cup ticket holders offered electronic visas

Updated 26 June 2024
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Esports World Cup ticket holders offered electronic visas

  • Organizers work with Kingdom’s authorities to ease access for foreign visitors
  • Riyadh to host $60m, eight-week event for first time

RIYADH: Ticket holders for the Esports World Cup, which opens next week at Boulevard Riyadh City, will be able to apply for electronic visas to enter the country, the Saudi Press Agency reported on Wednesday.
The Esports World Cup Foundation said it had been working with the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Ministry of Tourism to help streamline access to the event, which is being held in the Kingdom for the first time.
The eight-week competition will see more than 1,500 players from 500 clubs around the world competing in 22 tournaments for a total prize pot of more than $60 million — the highest ever in the history of esports.
Hosting the event aligns with the Kingdom’s National Gaming and Esports Strategy, launched by Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman. The EWC aims to bolster the nation’s global standing as a premier gaming and esports destination.
As well as watching the action, visitors to the tournament will be able to take part in a range of activities that combine sports, entertainment, education, culture and creativity.
World Cup ticket holders can apply for a 90-day, single entry visa at ksavisa.sa/visa/tourism/esport/apply.
More information about the competition is available from the EWC’s website at esportsworldcup.com.


Saudi national taekwondo team attend training camp in Turkey ahead of 2024 Olympics

Olympic qualifier Donia Abu Taleb speaks with Saudi Taekwondo National Team coach Kurban Bogdaev. (Supplied)
Updated 26 June 2024
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Saudi national taekwondo team attend training camp in Turkey ahead of 2024 Olympics

  • Squad will then compete at 2024 Chuncheon Korea Open, before Olympic qualifier Donia Abu Taleb heads to Paris

JEDDAH: Saudi Arabia’s national taekwondo team has arrived in the Turkish city of Antalya for their latest training camp ahead of the 2024 Olympic Games, which will begin in Paris on July 26.

The male and female team members include Donia Abu Taleb, the sole Saudi to have secured automatic qualification for the Olympics, Riyad Hamdi, Yousef Jaar, Abdullah Al-Mushrif, Abdulrahman Al-Shamrani, Zakria Ghali and Ahmed bin Qasim.

The Saudi Arabian Taekwondo Federation recently hired Russian coach Kurban Bogdaev, who guided Tunisian athlete Mohammed Jendoubi to silver in the sport at the Tokyo Olympics in 2021, to take charge of the national team.

The training camp in Turkey will continue until July 7 and then the team will head to South Korea for the Chuncheon Korea Open International Taekwondo Championships. After that they will return to the Kingdom, while Abu Taleb completes her individual training program for the Olympics.

The director of the national team, Nasser Al-Qahtani, said all team members had reached the required levels of fitness and technical prowess.

“Donia Abu Taleb will be going through a different program to prepare her for the big event, the Paris Olympics,” he added.

Abu Taleb, the first Saudi woman to secure direct qualification for the Olympics, recently reached another historic milestone when she broke into the top five in the official world rankings for her under-53-kilogram weight category. She recently won gold at the Asian Games and is now ranked fourth in the world, the first martial artist from the Kingdom to reach such a level.

During a recent training session in Abha, organized by the Saudi Taekwondo Federation, the Saudi team took to the mats against athletes from Russia, Uzbekistan, Palestine, Kazakhstan and Gabon.


Varga back in Hungary 2 days after surgery on facial fractures following collision at Euro 2024

Updated 26 June 2024
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Varga back in Hungary 2 days after surgery on facial fractures following collision at Euro 2024

  • His club Ferencváros posted a picture of Varga on X, formerly Twitter, with the caption: “Barnabás is back at home”
  • The injury occurred midway through the second half of Sunday’s match against Scotland when Varga collided with goalkeeper Angus Gunn

WEILER-SIMMERBERG, Germany: Hungary forward Barnabás Varga has been released from hospital and is already back in his home country, two days after undergoing surgery on facial fractures he sustained in a collision at the European Championship.
Varga returned to Hungary on Wednesday as his teammates waited in Germany to find out if they have reached the round of 16 as one of the four best third-place teams.
His club Ferencváros posted a picture of Varga on X, formerly Twitter, with the caption: “Barnabás is back at home!”
The injury occurred midway through the second half of Sunday’s match against Scotland when Varga collided with goalkeeper Angus Gunn. Hungary went on to win 1-0 thanks to a stoppage-time goal from substitute Kevin Csoboth.
In concerning scenes, the match was halted for nearly 10 minutes so that Varga could get treatment. Several teammates appeared to be in tears and they held up blankets to shield the stricken forward as medical staff tended to him.
The 29-year-old Varga was taken straight to hospital in Stuttgart and had surgery on Monday after breaking several bones in his face.
Hungary coach Marco Rossi and some of his staff, as well as Ferencváros teammate Endre Botka — representing the national side — visited Varga in hospital on Tuesday.


Arsenal goalkeeper Karl Hein signs new contract

Arsenal goalkeeper Karl Hein has signed a new contract with the club. Credit: @ArsenalSouls
Updated 26 June 2024
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Arsenal goalkeeper Karl Hein signs new contract

  • Hein joined Arsenal from Estonian side Nomme United in 2018 and has progressed through the club’s academy
  • “I’m delighted to extend my contract and continue my journey in this amazing club after six years,” Hein said on his new contract

Arsenal goalkeeper Karl Hein has signed a new contract with the club.
The 22-year-old’s previous deal was set to expire at the end of this month. However, as reported in DealSheet, Arsenal was able to convince the Estonia international to stay at the Emirates beyond this summer.
Hein is relatively inexperienced at club level, with a loan move seen as the next step in his development.
“I’m delighted to extend my contract and continue my journey in this amazing club after six years,” Hein said on his new contract. Hopefully, there will be even more good memories and successes for the club.
Arsenal manager Mikel Arteta added: “Karl has continued to impress us with his attitude and commitment to getting better every day.”
“We value being part of his continued development and I want to congratulate him on earning a new deal with the club.”
Hein joined Arsenal from Estonian side Nomme United in 2018 and has progressed through the club’s academy. He had a short loan spell at Reading in 2022, where he made five appearances.
Hein was an unused substitute in the Premier League five times last season and has made just one senior appearance for Arsenal against Brighton Hove Albion in the Carabao Cup in 2022.
Hein has, though, made 30 appearances for Estonia after making his senior debut in 2020.
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