UAE Pro League review: Al-Wasl defeat star-studded Sharjah to reach top of the table

Al-Wasl players celebrate going top of the UAE Pro League table after win over Sharjah. (Twitter: @AlWaslSC)
Short Url
Updated 17 October 2022
Follow

UAE Pro League review: Al-Wasl defeat star-studded Sharjah to reach top of the table

  • Champions Al-Ain and Al-Jazira stumble in sixth round of the season

Star-studded Sharjah stumbled and champions Al-Ain continued to flounder during a consequential matchweek six in the ADNOC Pro League.

Gilberto’s second-half strike gifted a 1-0 triumph to shock leaders Al-Wasl in a summit clash with the previously unbeaten Sharjah, defined by Caio’s avoidable 35th-minute dismissal for twin bookings.

The 2020-21 champions Al-Jazira also faltered after veteran UAE defender Yousif Jaber struck in the 97th minute to earn Shabab Al-Ahli Dubai Club an unforgettable 2-1 victory and send their typically taciturn head coach Leonardo Jardim flying through the air in celebration.

Al-Wasl on 14 points now lead the table by one point from Sharjah after six rounds.

Meanwhile, Al-Ain anchorman Ahmed Barman’s own goal at a packed Hazza bin Zayed Stadium handed recovering Al-Wahda bragging rights with their rollercoaster 3-2 derby success and dropped the reigning champions four points off the front.

Gambia striker Dembo Darboe’s astute turn and finish in the 86th minute salvaged a 1-1 draw for Al-Nasr at Baniyas, though boss Thorsten Fink stays embattled. Prolific summer addition Lourency doubled up when new boys Al-Bataeh returned to winning ways in a 2-1 win at struggling Al-Dhafra, Ittihad Kalba left it late to down another promoted side in Dibba Al-Fujairah 2-0 during ex-Al-Wahda supremo Gregory Dufrennes’ top-flight debut, and Ajman vs Khor Fakkan was goalless. 

Here are Arab News’ top picks and talking points from the latest action.

Player of the Week: Ruben Canedo (Al-Wahda)

A coming-of-age display delivered in what is swiftly becoming UAE football’s most-contested fixture.

Portuguese left-back Ruben Canedo, 20, registered two official assists, and an unofficial third for Barman’s own goal, when Wahda produced a rousing comeback to triumph in the Garden City for the first time since February 2014.

This influential performance is a testament to the value of patience.

Canedo arrived in the UAE capital from Porto’s fabled academy back in September 2020. Yet it is only now that he has become a regular starter.

Time and effort have been put into honing a prospect deemed worthy of featuring in the UEFA Youth League by his former club.

Canedo exhibited rare composure to cut back for Euro 2016-winning compatriot Adrien Silva’s 43rd-minute leveler. He then lofted an intelligent cross onto the on-rushing Joao Pedro’s head moments later for the second and forced Barman into a deciding error immediately after the break.

Work remains to be done. Morocco winger Soufiane Rahimi’s first came via a center conjured from Canedo’s wing, and he won only 37.5 percent of defensive duels.

It will be intriguing to watch his developmental path.

Goal of the Week: Gilberto (Al-Wasl)

Great goals are not momentary experiences.

Gilberto’s superb clincher against Sharjah’s 10 men moved beyond the ephemeral. It was an exemplar of the remarkable transformation achieved in Juan Antonio Pizzi’s opening months and crystalized renewed belief flooding through UAE football’s premier 20th-century club.

A hopeful punt in the air from UAE midfielder Ali Salmeen was back-heel-volleyed to Gilberto by the magical Fabio De Lima. The 33-year-old then performed the tightest of turns inside a condensed penalty box and curled into the bottom corner.

Cue bedlam from Al-Wasl supporters who traveled en masse to Sharjah Stadium.

Gilberto had meandered upon arrival last January from Bahia, constrained by Odair Hellmann’s dour tactics. He recorded four goals in 14 matches last term — he’s already equaled this tally in six fixtures under the unbounded Pizzi.

Sharjah, for whom ex-Barcelona midfielder Miralem Pjanic came off injured ahead of Friday’s President’s Cup final versus Al-Wahda, represented Wasl’s first test in a stringent trio of fixtures. Ittihad Kalba and Al-Jazira round off this month.

Uphold the sole unbeaten record by November and ambitions about a first top-flight trophy since 2006-07 become tangible.

Coach of the Week: Leonardo Jardim (Shabab Al-Ahli Dubai Club)

It has been a mixed introduction to UAE football for Jardim.

But this huge result — and subsequent jubilation — felt seismic.

Jardim’s counter-punching style saw Al-Jazira, minus iconic marksman Ali Mabkhout, dominate possession at Rashid Stadium. When Bruno popped up with a deserved 87th-minute leveler for the visitors, a stalemate seemed certain.

But Jardim never stopped believing. Substitutes Azizjon Ganiev and Jaber combined to deliver Shabab Al-Ahli’s grandstand finish, via an emphatic header from a corner.

The ex-Monaco and Al-Hilal tactician is still searching for a coherent XI. But like at Dibba last month, game-changing substitutions were initiated.

Shabab Al-Ahli, and their esteemed manager, remain within range.

Shape of things to come

Forces of sporting gravity are at play.

A scan of the standings showcases a crowded top six, containing the competition’s grandest names separated by four points. The sole surprise is that Al-Wasl lead the way.

Predicted dark horses Kalba and Al-Bataeh are within striking distance. So too are ever-improving Ajman.

The question now emerges about whether a season for the ages is set.

The 2021-22 campaign provides a cautionary note.

The top six had the same margin at this stage. Al-Ain would, though, cruise 10 points ahead by the campaign’s end.

Fundamentals are key. How many clubs can sustain the pace, especially in an unprecedented season interrupted by World Cup 2022?

This is where organizers, the Pro League Committee, should feel bullish.

Talent is evenly spread after Sharjah, Al-Jazira, Al-Ain, Al-Wahda and Shabab Al-Ahli made eye-catching additions. Ittihad Kalba, Al-Wasl and Al-Bataeh recruited intelligently.

Expert management is in situ at clubs where fanbases appear freshly attached.

Nail-biting title races are not traditional in the ADNOC Pro League.

The average winning margin in the professional era is nine points. The 2020-21 season is the only time several clubs engaged in a meaningful contest.

An atypical 2022/23 promises to defy typical expectations.


Pacer Marco Jansen admits South Africa face challenge after losing three wickets

Updated 23 sec ago
Follow

Pacer Marco Jansen admits South Africa face challenge after losing three wickets

  • Pakistan’s opening bowlers had South Africa reeling at 27-3, 121 runs short of a win
  • The third day of the match started with a three-hour delay due to continuous rain

CENTURION, South Africa: South African fast bowler Marco Jansen admitted that his team faced a challenge after Pakistan took three quick wickets late on the third day of the first Test at SuperSport Park on Saturday with the hosts chasing 148 runs for victory.
Pakistan opening bowlers Mohammad Abbas and Khurram Shahzad had South Africa reeling at 27-3, 121 runs short of a win which would clinch them a place in the World Test championship final in England next June.
Abbas took two wickets for three runs in four immaculate overs of swing bowling, dismissing Tony de Zorzi and Tristan Stubbs, while Shahzad trapped Ryan Rickelton.
Aiden Markram, South Africa’s top scorer in the first innings, was unbeaten on 22 going into what could be a nervy fourth day for the hosts.
Jansen, who took six for 52 as Pakistan were bowled out for 237 in their second innings, said the pitch had “quickened up,” with some balls lifting sharply and others keeping low.
“If Pakistan keep on bowling the lengths they did now we will have a task on our hands,” said Jansen.
But he added that a victory target of 148 “isn’t too much.”

South Africa’s Marco Jansen, left, celebrates with his teammates after dismissing Pakistan’s Babar Azam for 50 runs during day three of the Test cricket match between South Africa and Pakistan, at the Centurion Park in Centurion, South Africa on December 28, 2024. (AP)

“We know the new ball moves quite sharply, especially in the second innings. Once the ball gets older it gets a lot easier to bat,” the 24-year-old added.
All three South African wickets were leg before wicket decisions as the Pakistan bowlers attacked the stumps — and all three were reviewed.
De Zorzi batted outside his crease in an attempt to counter the swing which undid him in the first innings, but Abbas beat his inside edge and he was given out.
He reviewed umpire Alex Wharf’s decision but replays showed the impact was “umpire’s call,” with the ball going on to hit the stumps, and he had to go for two runs.
Rickelton failed to score before he was trapped by Shahzad and Stubbs made one before falling to Abbas — with Pakistan successfully reviewing on both occasions after the batsmen were initially given not out.
It was a dramatic end to a day on which the start was delayed by three hours because of rain.
South Africa seemed well on target for victory when Pakistan were bowled out for 237 despite Saud Shakeel making an impressive 84.
Resuming at 88-3, Babar Azam and the left-handed Shakeel batted confidently, adding another 65 runs in 14.5 overs.
Babar made 50, his first half-century in 19 Test innings, before Jansen had a burst of three wickets in 14 balls, starting when Babar slapped a short ball to deep point.
Shakeel was ninth man out when he missed a full toss from Jansen after hitting 10 fours and a six in a 113-ball innings.
“I was looking for a yorker,” admitted Jansen. “I missed by a shin length.”


Saudi Arabia defeat Iraq to advance to Gulf Cup last four

Updated 28 December 2024
Follow

Saudi Arabia defeat Iraq to advance to Gulf Cup last four

  • Kingdom into the last 4 of competition

KUWAIT CITY: Saudi Arabia defeated Iraq 3-1 on Saturday to finish top of Group B in the Arabian Gulf Cup and book their place in the last four of the Kuwait tournament.

Needing just a point to progress, two late goals from substitute Abdullah Al-Hamdan, following an earlier strike from his Al-Hilal colleague Salem Al-Dawsari, produced victory and meant that the Green Falcons stayed on course for a first regional title since 2004.

Both teams had chances in the first half, but 10 minutes into the second, Herve Renard’s men — who lost the opening game against Bahrain — got the breakthrough they had been looking for. Ibrahim Bayesh was judged by VAR to have handled in the area to give Saudi Arabia a penalty.

Al-Dawsari had missed his last two spot kicks for the national team, but the 2022 Asian player of the year showed few signs of nerves as he stroked the ball home to give his team a vital lead.

However, after 64 minutes Iraq were level. Mohanad Ali turned Ali Al-Bulaihi inside the area to shoot home inside the near post to give the holders real hope.

There were plenty of nerves among the Kingdom’s fans but the team restored their lead with nine minutes remaining following a delightful strike. Sultan Al-Ghannam pulled the ball back from the right side of the area for Al-Hamdan to take a touch and curl the ball into the top corner of the Iraqi net.

Five minutes later and it was all over. Al-Dawsari skipped clear of challenges in the Iraqi half to feed Al-Hamdan on the left corner of the area and the forward rolled the ball into the opposite side of the net with a precise low shot.

The result meant Saudi Arabia finished top of the group with six points, above Bahrain who lost 2-1 to bottom team Yemen.

The Green Falcons take on hosts Kuwait in the semifinals on Tuesday, while Bahrain meet Group A winners Oman.


Rain washes out first session on Day 3 of first test between South Africa and Pakistan

Updated 28 December 2024
Follow

Rain washes out first session on Day 3 of first test between South Africa and Pakistan

  • South Africa wants a victory for a place in next year’s World Test Championship final
  • The host team claimed a 90-run lead after Markram and Bosch scored half centuries

CENTURION, South Africa: Rain delayed the start of the third day’s play in the first cricket test between South Africa and Pakistan with no play possible before lunch on Saturday.
The entire first session was washed out at SuperSport Park with Pakistan scheduled to resume its second innings at 88-3 – still trailing South Africa by two runs.
South Africa has plenty of time left to press its bid for a place in next year’s World Test Championship (WTC) final.
The home team needs to win one of the two test matches against Pakistan for a guaranteed place in next June’s WTC final at Lord’s.
South Africa claimed a 90-run first innings lead on the back of half centuries from Aiden Markram and debutant Corbin Bosch, who smashed an unbeaten 81 on a dream debut.
Bosch's scintillating knock, which featured 15 fours, was the highest score by a No. 9 batter on debut in test history.
Pakistan had been bowled out for 211 as Bosch claimed a wicket with his first ball and finished with impressive figures of 4-63.
Paceman Dane Paterson took 5-61 on a wicket where both teams have packed their line-ups with four fast bowlers each, going into the game without a specialist spinner.


Damac’s dangerman Georges-Kevin N’Koudou has Ronaldo and Mitrovic in his sights

Updated 28 December 2024
Follow

Damac’s dangerman Georges-Kevin N’Koudou has Ronaldo and Mitrovic in his sights

  • The Cameroon international has scored 13 goals in the Saudi Pro League so far this season

LONDON: Few players will want the winter break in the Saudi Pro League to be over more than Georges-Kevin N’Koudou.

Despite his team Damac sitting in 10th place in the Saudi Pro League table, N’Koudou has netted eight goals in 13 games so far; only Cristiano Ronaldo, Karim Benzema and Aleksandar Mitrovic have scored more in the league this season.

The Cameroon international primarily operates as a winger but since moving to Damac in the summer of 2023, N’Koudou has become a dangerous finisher. Before arriving in Saudi Arabia, he had only scored more than five goals in a season once in his career. At Damac, he has done it twice in a row.

N’Koudou hit the ground running in impressive fashion after his move from Turkish side Besiktas, bagging 14 goals in his first 16 games, including a sensational match-winning brace against then-reigning Saudi champions Al-Ittihad last December. The Damac No. 10 credits his prolific form to the influence of his coach, ex-AC Milan defender Cosmin Contra.

“The coach has given me so much responsibility and freedom on the field,”  N’Koudou told Arab News. “He knows I have experience, so he has just let me play my game and be happy on the pitch and off the pitch.

“I have had many great coaches in my career so far but before being a coach, (Contra) is a great man. He’s honest and if he has something to say he will say it to you straight.

“He’s really passionate about the game because he was a player before. He understands us and I think that’s maybe the difference between some of the coaches who weren’t players; he played at a good level in Milan. 

“(Now) I feel free and can enjoy my game. The coach helped me a lot and that’s why I think everything happened for me. I scored 15 goals last season and hope I can do the same this season too.”

It could have been even better in 2023-24 for N’Koudou, who tailed off in the second-half of the season, scoring just once in his last 14 games after his electric start. The Cameroon international firmly believes it was fatigue from the mid-season Africa Cup of Nations in the Ivory Coast that was responsible for the slowdown.

“When I came back from AFCON I was so tired; my legs were dead,” N’Koudou said. “I always try to recover as much as I can but sometimes you just can’t.

“Damac is a smaller team and they relied more on me to be the one to score goals or make an assist but it was more difficult (after AFCON).”

Without a continental tournament to disrupt his form this season, could N’Koudou make a serious tilt at the Saudi Pro League Golden boot?

“Honestly I’m not someone who looks at the numbers,” N’Koudou said. “These guys — Cristiano, Mitrovic, Benzema — they are strikers, they play on big teams. They fight for the title.

“I’m a winger, and sometimes No. 10, so for me it’s a little bit different. But I always try to do my best for the team and I will try to score more than last season and then I will see how far I can go. I will try to be there.”

Some of N’Koudou’s best performances for Damac have been against the league’s top sides. Having played in Ligue 1 for Marseille and Monaco, and in the English Premier League for Tottenham, he insists he doesn’t treat these matches any differently.

“I have been used to playing against big players since I was 17, 18. It doesn’t feel surprising to me, like it might for other players who don’t have this experience. I am not shy or scared to play. You still have to be able to express yourself, whoever the opponent — even when it is big players or big teams.”

Although he is one of Damac’s most experienced players, N’Koudou says he is a quiet presence in the club’s dressing-room. The Cameroon winger has certainly done most of his talking on the pitch since arriving in Khamis Mushait, winning over fans not only with high-energy displays but with his sunny disposition too. N’Koudou always plays with a smile on his face, something he attributes to the example set by his football heroes growing up.

“I loved Robinho, Ronaldinho and Ronaldo (Nazario),” he said. “When I was young, I saw these kinds of players, they enjoyed football and played with a smile. For me, this is football.

“It is the pleasure of playing before anything else, the same way I played with my friends as a kid or as people play at the weekend with their mates. This is why I smile too.”

N’Koudou hopes that he and his teammates have more to smile about come the end of the season and promised Damac supporters that he will do everything he can to try to take the club up the Saudi Pro League table.

“For a club like Damac our first priority is to stay in the league at the start of every season. And as a professional football player you want to be competitive — to try to go as far as you can.

“I think we have a lot to improve on from the first part (of the season), but I think if we can make a better finish than last season it’s going to be good for the club. We will see how far we can go.”


Rankings champion Niemann confirms place at International Series India

Updated 28 December 2024
Follow

Rankings champion Niemann confirms place at International Series India

  • The $2m tournament will take place at DLF Golf and Country Club in January

GURUGRAM:  In-form LIV Golf superstar Joaquin Niemann, The International Series Rankings champion for the 2024 season, is the latest big name to be confirmed for International Series India, the $2m tournament taking place at DLF Golf and Country Club in Gurugram next month.

The Chilean, who captains the Torque GC team in the LIV Golf League, will join defending US Open champion Bryson DeChambeau and local hero Anirban Lahiri for the tournament, which will take place from Jan. 30 to Feb. 2.

Niemann was runner-up in the LIV Golf League individual standings in an impressive 2024 season, winning two of the first three tournaments in Mayakoba and Jeddah, and clinching two T2 and two T3 places as he narrowly lost out to two-time major champion Jon Rahm.

The 26-year-old, a two-time PGA Tour winner, finished the campaign on a high by winning the Asian Tour's season-ending $5m PIF Saudi International powered by SoftBank Investment Advisers earlier this month in Riyadh in a thrilling play-off where he held his nerve to edge out 2022 Open champion Cam Smith and promising American Caleb Surratt.

That result, combined with a third-placed finish in the season-opening International Series Oman, gave Niemann the International Series Rankings crown.    

International Series India presented by DLF is the first tournament on the LIV Golf-backed series to be played on the subcontinent. It is the first of 10 events across the season on the Asian Tour that will include stops in Macau, Morocco, Indonesia, Hong Kong and Saudi Arabia.

The series offers players from all over the world a pathway into the LIV Golf League, with the end-of-season rankings champion guaranteed a place on the roster for the following season. The International Series Rankings also offers players a second chance to claim a place on the LIV Golf League, through the innovative LIV Golf Promotions event.