Al-Hilal and Urawa battle for supremacy on and off the pitch

Al-Hilal celebrate following their 2-0 victory in the second leg of the AFC Champions League final football match against Japan’s Urawa Red Diamonds on Nov. 24, 2019. (AFP)
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Updated 28 April 2023
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Al-Hilal and Urawa battle for supremacy on and off the pitch

  • The Saudi and Japanese clubs will meet in a third AFC Champions League final in 5 editions
  • The finalists have some of the most passionate and colorful fan bases in Asian football

If familiarity breeds contempt, then the feeling between Saudi Arabia’s Al-Hilal and Japan’s Urawa Red Diamonds has gone well beyond that emotion.

For the third time in five editions of Asia’s showpiece club competition, the two powerhouse clubs will again meet in the decider as they look to secure, for players and fans, the bragging rights of being Asia’s best team.

The spectacle, firstly at the King Fahd Stadium in Riyadh this weekend, followed by the return bout at the iconic Saitama Stadium the following weekend, will rival anything taking place in world football, with crowds of 60,000 expected at both legs that will create an atmosphere worthy of the occasion.

As hot as the battle will be on the pitch, the fight off it will be just as fiercely contested. While the almost 9,000-kilometer distance between the two makes away travel difficult, there will be small pockets of both red and blue at either stadium, demonstrating the passion of both sets of fans.

It is the noise and spectacle created by the respective home crowds that will be most eagerly anticipated, with both Urawa and Al-Hilal fans known around the world for their raucous support and epic, stadium-wide tifos — giant colorful displays generated before the game.

Both the King Fahd and Saitama stadiums have borne witness to some of the best displays of fan culture in Asia in recent years. And while the players are busy preparing for the battle on the pitch, those supporters clad in red or blue will be desperate to outdo each other to show that they too are Asia’s best.

“There is no doubt that there is great competition between the fans of the two clubs,” Al-Hilal diehard Bandar Alsaeedan told Arab News recently.

“In 2014, Al-Hilal’s board created a fans committee to manage Al-Hilal fans, and since then Al-Hilal fans have excelled in making tifos that have dazzled Asia,” said Alsaeedan.

“In 2019 the new management of Al-Hilal created something called ‘Blue Power,’ which is a huge group of fans who follow the team wherever it goes, and support and encourage the team in a creative way to motivate the players.

“But to be honest, Urawa also has very wonderful and amazing fans, and we may see each set of fans challenging the other in this match to prove its superiority in Asia.”

Taku Murakami is a lifelong Urawa Reds fan, having attended each of the club’s previous three AFC Champions League finals and will again be one of the lucky 60,000 fans clad for the return leg next weekend when he hopes to see his side clinch a third Asian title.

While he concedes there is a rivalry with Al-Hilal fans given their history, in true Japanese style he said Urawa fans seek only to support their players and not prove they are better than their Saudi counterparts.

“Some Reds supporters, particularly the ones who chant behind the goal at the north side of Saitama Stadium, might have a bit of rivalry with the Al-Hilal supporters,” he told Arab News recently.

“However, the main purpose of Reds’ supporters creating the best atmosphere and displaying the best tifo is not to prove they are better than the other, but to encourage Reds’ players to play for and pursue victory.”

One thing both sets of fans can agree on is that this year’s final is seen as the ultimate decider, with the ledger sitting at one win each. Urawa got the better of Al-Hilal in 2017 before the Saudi giants got their revenge in 2019.

“It is very rare for the same two clubs to play three times in the ACL final in this short period,” Murakami continued.

“Urawa won once in 2017, and Al-Hilal won once in 2019, so this third battle between them will determine which club is the genuine Asian champion.”

Alsaeedan, 29, is not short of confidence as the final approaches, going in with all the bravado we have come to expect from the blue half of Riyadh.

“In my opinion, at the present time, specifically the last three years, Al-Hilal is superior to all Asian teams in terms of level and in terms of local and international stars who play for Al-Hilal Club,” he said.

“I feel very optimistic about the next match, and I expect that we will win the match at home in Riyadh and achieve the title for the second time in a row and the fifth in the history of Al-Hilal.

“In my opinion, Al-Hilal is better than Urawa.”

Let the games begin, on and off the pitch.


Amorim keen to keep hold of Mainoo, Garnacho

Updated 2 min 28 sec ago
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Amorim keen to keep hold of Mainoo, Garnacho

  • “I really love my players. I want to keep my players, especially the talented ones,” Amorim said
  • “It’s a special moment in this club, it’s a hard moment, but, of course, I’m really happy with Kobbie, he’s improving, and also with Garna“

MACNEHSTER: Manchester United boss Ruben Amorim has expressed his desire to keep talented youngsters Kobbie Mainoo and Alejandro Garnacho despite rumors the duo could be sold to ease the club’s financial pressures.
United sit 13th in the Premier League and have won only four of Amorim’s 12 games in charge so far.
The club’s ability to hand the former Sporting Lisbon coach, who took charge in November, significant funds to rebuild in the transfer market is limited by profit and sustainability rules.
United lost £113.2 million ($139 million) in the financial year to June 2024 — their fifth straight year in the red.
As academy graduates, any fee received for Mainoo or Garnacho would appear on the books as 100 percent profit.
Reports this week said United were therefore open to offers for the pair, as well as a number of other recently acquired signings such as Leny Yoro, Manuel Ugarte and Matthijs de Ligt.
“I really love my players. I want to keep my players, especially the talented ones,” Amorim said at his pre-match press conference ahead of Sunday’s FA Cup trip to Arsenal.
“It’s a special moment in this club, it’s a hard moment, but, of course, I’m really happy with Kobbie, he’s improving, and also with Garna.”
Amorim has previously admitted United’s recruitment must be better and he stressed the need to also improve the club’s academy to help save money in the transfer market.
“When we are targeting players, we need to be sure that they will cope with the demands,” he added.
“I also said we have to improve our academy, to bring young kids that fills the club in the right way, and also with that rules, we are able to do some business and have some money to invest in the team.
“Our idea is always to keep the best players and the players that we build for this club.
“We know the position that the club is in at the moment, but we will see. I’m very happy, I like our players, especially the guys from our academy.”
Another United academy graduate — Marcus Rashford — does seem set to leave Old Trafford this month.
The 27-year-old reportedly held talks with AC Milan this week, with other European clubs, including Borussia Dortmund, also interested.
Rashford has not featured in United’s last six games and Amorim refused to be drawn on whether he could return at the Emirates.
The Portuguese coach did confirm that second string goalkeeper Altay Bayindir will feature ahead of Andre Onana despite his errors in a 4-3 League Cup quarter-final exit to Tottenham last month.


Newcastle boss Howe eager to hang onto goalkeeper Dubravka

Updated 10 January 2025
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Newcastle boss Howe eager to hang onto goalkeeper Dubravka

  • Newcastle manager Eddie Howe still hopes goalkeeper Martin Dubravka will stay at St. James’ Park beyond the end of the January transfer window

LONDON: Newcastle manager Eddie Howe still hopes goalkeeper Martin Dubravka will stay at St. James’ Park beyond the end of the January transfer window.
The in-form 35-year-old Slovakia international has been heavily linked with a move to Saudi Pro League side Al Shabab as he enters the final six months of his contract with the Magpies.
Dubravka has conceded just two goals in seven games in all competitions — all of them victories — while deputising for the injured Nick Pope during a run where Newcastle are closing in on a place in the English League Cup final and are fifth in the Premier League table.
“Martin’s been in a difficult situation,” Howe said Friday.
“Like any player that is coming out of contract in the summer, with every player that I’ve ever worked with, there’s always that feeling of doubt.
“He will naturally want some conclusion to his future, whether that’s a new contract with us, whatever the outcome. But he’s certainly played very well and I’ve been really pleased with him.
“He’s more than played his part in our recent run of fixtures. Again against Arsenal (a 2-0 win in the first leg of a League Cup semifinal), I thought he was very, very good, so hopefully we can come to some sort of agreement with him.”
Dubravka was seen to be in tears following the conclusion of Tuesday’s game against Arsenal, in what many observers interpreted as a farewell to Newcastle.
He was signed by former Newcastle boss Rafael Benitez, initially on loan, in January 2018, but has largely been a back-up to England international Pope for the last two-and-a-half years, a period which included a loan spell at Manchester United.
But he has shown his value in recent weeks with Howe, who must decide whether or not to rest Dubravka for Sunday’s FA Cup third-round tie against fourth-tier Bromley, saying: “I know how much Newcastle means to him and you can see that emotionally, he’s very invested.
“Of course, all those things will be playing a part in his decision-making and our decision-making and hopefully there’s a successful outcome at the end.”
Newcastle have been linked with a move for Burnley’s England under-21 international James Trafford should Dubravka move on.
And Howe refused to say whether Pope, who is back in training, remained his first-choice goalkeeper.
“It’s always in a state of flux,” he said. “It’s always changing and moving because that’s down to the player’s performances.”


Manuel Neuer set to return in goal for depleted Bayern as Jamal Musiala is out with illness

Updated 10 January 2025
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Manuel Neuer set to return in goal for depleted Bayern as Jamal Musiala is out with illness

  • Musiala hasn’t been training because of illness and now is confirmed to miss Bayern’s first league game of the new year

MUNICH: Goalkeeper Manuel Neuer is set to return for Bayern Munich for the first time in more than a month in Saturday’s Bundesliga game against Borussia Moenchengladbach but Jamal Musiala will miss out.
The 38-year-old Neuer missed Bayern’s last four games of 2024 with a broken rib and wasn’t in the squad for a friendly against Salzburg on Monday, but now looks fully fit again, coach Vincent Kompany said Friday.
Neuer’s return for Bayern’s first league game of 2025 is all the more important after backup Daniel Peretz injured a kidney in a training incident on Wednesday. He’s expected to miss a few weeks, Kompany said.
Kompany confirmed Musiala, who hadn’t been training because of illness, won’t be available Saturday for the German league leader.
Among several other absences are midfielder João Palhinha, who hasn’t played since early November with an adductor muscle tear, and defender Dayot Upamecano, who’s serving a one-game Bundesliga suspension for five yellow cards.


Bellingham leads Madrid past Mallorca to set up a Spanish Super Cup final against Barcelona

Updated 10 January 2025
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Bellingham leads Madrid past Mallorca to set up a Spanish Super Cup final against Barcelona

  • Bellingham blasted in the third shot in a row by Madrid after Rodrygo initially hit the post
  • Madrid tacked on two goals late in stoppage time

JEDDAH: Jude Bellingham scored again to lead Real Madrid into the Spanish Super Cup final with a 3-0 win over Mallorca in Saudi Arabia on Thursday.
The England midfielder, who led Madrid in scoring last season, started this campaign slowly but has netted seven goals in his last eight Spanish league games.
He notched another goal in 63rd minute of the Super Cup semifinal when he finally broke down a tough Mallorca that until his goal had imposed their defensive style on the star-studded Madrid.
Bellingham blasted in the third shot in a row by Madrid after Rodrygo initially hit the post and goalkeeper Dominik Greif blocked a follow-up by Kylian Mbappé.
Bellingham collected the rebound and slotted his shot from just outside the six-yard box under the on-rushing Greif and past three defenders who were trying to protect the goalmouth.
Madrid tacked on two goals late in stoppage time. Mallorca’s Martin Valjent scored an own goal when he inadvertently turned a pass by Brahim Díaz into his net. Rodrygo then took Madrid’s third.
The match ended with a short scuffle after the final whistle before calm was restored.
Barcelona await Madrid in Sunday’s final.
Madrid lost Aurélien Tchouaméni, a midfielder playing as a central defender, in the 54th after he took a hard knock to the head during a collision with a Mallorca player.
Youth player Raúl Asencio replaced him.
Madrid were competing as last season’s Spanish league champion, while Mallorca were invited as the runner-up in the Copa del Rey.
Former Madrid striker Karim Benzema, who now plays in the Saudi Arabian league, was in attendance.
The minor trophy has become a major cash maker for the federation and competing clubs since the federation struck a deal in 2019 to hold it in the Middle Eastern kingdom.


Everton fire manager Dyche hours before a game in first big call by new American owners

Updated 09 January 2025
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Everton fire manager Dyche hours before a game in first big call by new American owners

  • Everton announced the move just hours before hosting third-tier Peterborough in the FA Cup third round
  • “The process to appoint a new manager is underway and an update will be provided in due course,” Everton said

LONDON: In the first big call by its new American owners, Everton fired manager Sean Dyche on Thursday with the team just two spots above the relegation zone in the Premier League.
Everton announced the move just hours before hosting third-tier Peterborough in the FA Cup third round.
The storied club — a nine-time English champion which have been without a major trophy since 1995 — were bought last month by the Texas-based Friedkin Group in a deal reportedly worth in excess of 400 million pounds ($495 million).
Fronted by Dan Friedkin and his son Ryan, the group also owns Italian team Roma and has made itself unpopular with supporters of the Serie A club for making contentious management changes — including firing Daniele De Rossi, the club’s beloved former captain, early this season.
Removing Dyche might have been necessary, however, with Everton having won just one of their last 11 league games and scoring in just three of them. With 15 goals from their 19 games, Everton are the second-lowest scorer in the division and have plunged to just one point above the bottom three.
“The process to appoint a new manager is underway and an update will be provided in due course,” Everton said in a statement.
Dyche was in charge for nearly two years, during which he maintained Everton’s status as an ever-present in England’s top division since 1954. His style of play was pragmatic and often turgid, relying on not conceding goals more than providing entertainment — and that might be something the Friedkins look to change.
Everton said Leighton Baines, a former player and the club’s under-18s coach, and current club captain Seamus Coleman will take charge of the team on an interim basis.
Everton’s next Premier League game is on Wednesday against Aston Villa.