Bento’s UAE look to finally step out of shadow of Golden Generation at AFC Asian Cup

Paulo Bento attends a press conference at the Qatar National Convention Center (QNCC) in Doha (AFP)
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Updated 12 January 2024
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Bento’s UAE look to finally step out of shadow of Golden Generation at AFC Asian Cup

  • Portuguese coach had promising start overseeing Whites who head to Qatar with cautious optimism after turbulent years

Abu Dhabi: An Asian Cup imbued with tantalizing, yet fragile, hope lies ahead for Paulo Bento’s blossoming UAE.

Pained memories of a tortured World Cup 2022 qualifying campaign were assuaged in a six-match winning run upon the ex-Portugal and South Korea tactician’s summer arrival.

A sense of renewal defines the 54-year-old’s refreshed squad who are attempting to follow in hallowed footsteps of their nation’s Golden Generation and secure a third successive semi-final berth.

Previous AFC players of the year, Ahmed Khalil and Omar Abdulrahman, are now glorious footnotes. New leadership allied with elite performers such as Al-Wasl’s naturalized forward Fabio de Lima, Shabab Al-Ahli Dubai Club sensation Harib Abdalla, and historic 85-goal Al-Jazira marksman Ali Mabkhout hint at better times after the ignominy of last January’s humbling group-stage exit at the Arabian Gulf Cup.

Yet, this month’s deflating 1-0 friendly reversal to unfancied Oman makes predictions of deep progress a tremulous undertaking.

Here, Arab News looks at the Whites’ major issues and key men ahead of Sunday’s Group C opener against Hong Kong at Khalifa International Stadium.

Bento’s big challenge

Ambitions – and expectations – swell when the UAE compete at Asian Cups.

Abdulrahman, Khalil, and Mabkhout electrified Australian crowds at the 2015 running under Mahdi Ali. A measured approach from Alberto Zaccheroni on home soil four-years later, also, dragged them to the last four.

This edition’s intriguing pool contains inviting clashes with Hong Kong and Palestine, plus a bellwether trial versus Iran. Quarterfinals look to be the minimum expectation from there for the AFC’s eighth highest-ranked competitor (64) by FIFA.

Pre-tournament standing as a dark horse has, on the surface, been strengthened by the UAE’s narrow miss for World Cup 2022. Slender fourth-round disappointment to heavyweights Australia, however, under Rodolfo Arruabarrena was illusionary.

Their curious campaign contained five permanent head coach appointments. It was also run alongside consecutive opening-round departures at the 24th and 25th Gulf Cups, plus consequential 5-0 quarter-final elimination by Qatar at the 2021 FIFA Arab Cup which ultimately put paid to Bert van Marwijk’s second spell in charge since March 2019.

Contrasting tactics and philosophies confused minds. Bento’s opening test has been to generate clarity after July’s appointment on a contract until December 2026.

A possession-based system has been successfully applied within the 4-2-3-1 formation ubiquitous in Emirati football. Bento’s debut 4-1 thrashing of Keylor Navas’ Costa Rica in September provided ignition, ahead of the accelerator being pressed for World Cup 2026 qualifying’s supreme opening in November against Nepal (4-0) and Bahrain (2-0).

Culture was key to Bento’s record five-year stint with South Korea. Superstars such as Son Heung-min and Kim Min-jae were treated in the same fashion as lesser lights.

This meritocracy has continued with the UAE and, critically, appears to have received similar buy-in.

Mabkhout – the sole extant talisman from the preceding Golden Generation – netted a brace from the start versus Nepal, yet would score off the bench at Bahrain when a different starting 11 was required.

Further commitment from a promising squad is key to hopes of advancement this winter.

Fresh faces for new quest

Bento’s bold selection has echoed Roberto Mancini’s clean slate with Saudi Arabia, rather than the status quo chosen by Tintin Marquez for holders – and hosts – Qatar.

Key men De Lima and Caio Canedo, of Al-Wasl, did not even hold UAE passports at the previous Asian Cup. Mabkhout, Al-Ain goalkeeper Khalid Essa, Al-Jazira center-back Khalifa Al-Hammadi, club-mate Ali Khaseif, and Al-Wasl midfielder Ali Salmeen are the only survivors from the matchday squad beaten 4-0 by Qatar in those semis.

Pride of Abu Dhabi full-backs Abdulla Idrees and Zayed Sultan have been entrusted to provide fresh impetus. Fellow Al-Jazira performer Abdullah Ramadan adds further drive in midfield and ample star quality.

Enviable options in attack see the aforementioned Mabkhout, De Lima, Canedo, and Abdalla supplemented by the likes of 23-year-old Al-Wasl skipper Ali Saleh and a maturing Yahya Al-Ghassani of ADNOC Pro League champions Shabab Al-Ahli.

It is not, however, a perfect picture for Bento.

Question marks remain

For all the beguiling exuberance of Abdulrahman and punishing lethality of Mabkhout, granite defending was just as crucial in 2015 and 2019.

Exemplary rear-guard actions dumped out champions Japan and Australia at the quarter-final stages of both.

No replacements have subsequently emerged for center-back warriors Ismail Ahmed and Mohanad Salem, despite the polar qualities of Khalifa Al-Hammadi and Al-Jazira partner Mohammed Al-Attas. This also applies in defensive midfield where the retired Khamis Esmail casts a long shadow.

Spines of the 2015 and 2019 selections were drawn from Al-Ahli and Al-Ain club sides who made AFC Champions League finals. Years of underwhelming performances in that competition, however, denies this roster similarly fortifying experiences.

Recent Gulf Cup, Arab Cup, and World Cup qualifying failures make doubts arise, despite obvious talent. It is up to Bento and his players to positively answer them.

Prediction

It is important to quantify which staging post Bento’s UAE are currently at.

Only six months have passed since his hire. Just four squad members hold more than 50 caps, while De Lima and Mabkhout are the solitary players with international goals counted in double figures.

The Asian Cup’s generous Group C offers the chance to build momentum enough to prevail against likely round-of-16-opponents China. From there, a football miracle is required to continue the journey past a Japan who have downed Peru, Germany, Turkiye, Canada, and Tunisia in their current 10-match winning streak.

Valiant defeat versus Samurai Blue would represent failure to replicate prior semi-final runs but should solidify belief in Bento’s methods ahead of the defining quest for a World Cup return.


Report: PIF’s LIV Golf investments nearing $5 billion

Updated 06 May 2025
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Report: PIF’s LIV Golf investments nearing $5 billion

  • Money in Sport had previously projected an increase in the PIF investment of $5 billion by the end of 2025

NEW YORK: LIV Golf’s investors are reaching into their pockets again for funding, with Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund nearing $5 billion in spending on the three-year-old league.

LIV Golf Investments, the parent company for worldwide LIV Golf operations, has increased its authorized share capital twice this year, once in mid-January and once late in April, for a total of $674.3 million, according to the Money in Sport newsletter on Monday.

This brings the total spend to $4.58 billion, with $1.9 billion of that coming since January 2024.

Money in Sport had previously projected an increase in the PIF investment of $5 billion by the end of 2025.

With a reference to $82 million in revenue from January to October 2024, PIF’s filing included the first time a consolidated revenue figure for LIV Golf has been publicly disclosed.

The filing shows the latest authorizations come with three conditions: a minimum number of events this season, a minimum revenue and a finalized TV deal with Fox Sports.

LIV Golf has made significant changes this year, including Scott O’Neill replacing Greg Norman as CEO in addition to altering its team format to make all players’ scores count in every round.

LIV Golf’s first event in the US of 2025 brought record viewership for the league, with 484,000 people tuning in to watch Marc Leishman’s triumph in Miami on April 8.

Unfortunately for the Saudi-backed league, that was still less than a third of the number of people who opted to watch a standard PGA Tour event the same day.

“I think we all hoped it would have been a little bit further along, and that’s no secret,” American golfer Brooks Koepka said ahead of the LIV Golf Miami tournament at Trump National Doral on April 2.

“No matter where you’re at, you always hope everything is further along. But they’re making progress, and it seems to be going in the right direction.”


Zhao’s title success at world championships shines light on snooker’s growth in China

Updated 06 May 2025
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Zhao’s title success at world championships shines light on snooker’s growth in China

TAIPEI: Once considered a saloon or rec-room past-time by many, snooker has long been serious business in the UK and much of the rest of the world. Now, it seems, it’s China’s turn in the spotlight.

Zhao Xintong’s crowning as Asia’s first world snooker champion has put the focus on the growth of the sport in China in a relatively short time.

“There’s a new superstar of the game,” said Mark Williams, 50, the three-time world champion from Wales who lost to Zhao in the final of the World Snooker Championship, held in Sheffield, north England, on Sunday. “It could be huge for the sport.”

Brought to China by foreign traders in the 19th century, snooker suffered during the early Communist period, when all pastimes seen as individualistic, bourgeois and foreign were frowned upon. The first ranking event to be held in Asia was the Hong Kong Open in 1989. The following year China hosted the Asian Open.

The death in 1976 of Mao Zedong, opened the doors for the sport and snooker has now moved from smoky backstreet parlors and outdoor shopfront street-side tables — amazingly kept level by the bricks they sat on — to swanky halls and practice venues.

Former world No. 1 Ding Junhui blazed the trail for Zhao and others like him, even as enthusiasm for the sport may be waning somewhat among a younger generation infatuated with e-sports and smartphone games.

Zhao himself may be the best thing to happen to China-British relations in recent years, with ties under pressure over trade and China’s curtailment of democracy in the former British colony of Hong Kong. The 28-year-old now lives and trains in Sheffield, and enjoyed strong support from the British fans at Sunday’s final.

Raised in the bustling industrial center of Shenzhen, Zhao picked up a cue at age eight and, somewhat surprisingly for education-obsessed Chinese parents, received strong support from his parents, who built him a practice room at home.

That didn’t fully shield him from the shadier side of the sport, however. He was banned for 20 months as one of 10 Chinese players implicated in a match-fixing scandal. Zhao owned up to knowledge of what was happening, although he said he wasn’t directly involved. He returned to the sport in September 2024 as an amateur. requiring him to battle his way back up the ranks.

Boost for the game in China

Dubbed “The Cyclone,” Zhao now stands at 11th in the world rankings and his combination of youth and talent is being celebrated across the country.

His expressions of disbelief at his world title was witnessed by millions of television viewers in China, with many praising him in online posts as the “pride of China” who “brought tears to one’s eyes.”

“It’s worth celebrating in China,” said Tong Jianfeng, 29 and long-time fan of the game. “Through the whole process, Zhao Xintong played smoothly. His precision is impressive.”

Huang Siyuan, also 29, agreed, “It didn’t come easy. I feel proud for Chinese billiards.”

Wang Heng, the manager and founder of Beijing Xinrui Billiard Academy, located in Tongzhou, just outside the capital, said Zhao’s success will be positive for the domestic game.

“I believe this will make Chinese players very confident because they would realize the world championship is no longer something difficult to break,” he said. “They will be more and more sure of themselves.”

‘On a pedestal’

There may already be more Zhao’s in the works. At this year’s world championships, 10 Chinese players qualified for the main draw and six made it into the final 16 — the highest ever.

“Now this will give them (children in China) power and in the future many Chinese players can do this,” said Zhao covered in confetti and a Chinese flag after taking the title.

International recognition will be crucial to the sport’s continued growth, according to Jason Ferguson, chairman of the World Professional Billiards and Snooker Association.

“The one thing we do know about China is that snooker is treated like any other major Olympic sport, it is on a pedestal, it does get major broadcast hours and it really is supported by government and education systems,” Ferguson told The Associated Press.

“The sport is extremely well-respected. To have a world champion is really just incredible.”


Bayern keeper Urbig eyes another title after winning Bundesliga

Updated 06 May 2025
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Bayern keeper Urbig eyes another title after winning Bundesliga

  • The 21-year-old could end up collecting a second title with second-tier club Cologne
  • Urbig made 10 appearances for them this season

BERLIN: Bayern Munich keeper Jonas Urbig celebrated his first Bundesliga title on Sunday with his team sitting eight points clear at the top with two games left to play.
But the 21-year-old, who is first choice at Bayern with Manuel Neuer injured, could end up collecting a second title with second-tier club Cologne.


Urbig made 10 appearances for them this season before his January transfer to Bayern. Cologne are second in the standings, a point behind leaders Hamburg SV with two matches remaining.
“I am in very good contact with the lads and I would be extremely happy if Cologne win the second division title,” Urbig said.
Only two players have previously achieved this feat, Pasi Rautiainen with Bayern Munich and Werder Bremen in the 1980/81 season and Frank Hartmann in 1986/87, with Bayern Munich and Hannover 96.


Saudi Arabia to host Youth National Teams Championship during summer

Updated 06 May 2025
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Saudi Arabia to host Youth National Teams Championship during summer

  • Eight Gulf football national teams will be divided into two groups
  • The tournament marks the first age-category competition held under the supervision of GCFF

RIYADH: Saudi Arabia will host the first Youth National Teams Championship between Aug. 28 and Sept. 9 with the participation of eight Gulf teams, the Arab Gulf Cup Football Federation announced on Tuesday.
The new tournament will see participating teams divided into two groups, each consisting of four teams.
Each group’s top two teams will advance to the semifinals, according to a media statement, which added that the details regarding the draw dates will be announced soon.
The tournament marks the first age-category competition held under the supervision of the AGCFF.
It is also a step aimed at supporting and progressing the base of youth tournaments and reinforcing the focus on promising young players as the core foundation of the future of Gulf football.
The AGCFF is a regional sports organization dedicated to organizing and developing football in the Arabian Gulf region, including Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Bahrain, UAE, Qatar, Iraq, Oman and Yemen. It has been best known for organizing the Arabian Gulf Cup, one of the region’s most prominent sporting events.
The idea of establishing the federation began with preparatory meetings held in 2015 under the name Gulf Football Federation. In May 2016, it was officially founded under the name Arab Gulf Cup Football Federation, reflecting its close connection to the oldest sports tournament in the region, the Gulf Cup.


Aston Villa officials unhappy with Premier League fixture change, citing ‘prejudice’

Updated 06 May 2025
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Aston Villa officials unhappy with Premier League fixture change, citing ‘prejudice’

  • The match was due to be played on Sunday, May 18, but will now take place on Friday, May 16
  • Monchi, president of football operations at Villa, took to X to say the change in match date “is not what we wanted” and represented “the least damaging alternative”

LONDON: Aston Villa officials have expressed their unhappiness with the Premier League for bringing forward a match against Tottenham by two days to help Spurs maximize preparation time for a potential appearance in the Europa League final.
The match was due to be played on Sunday, May 18, but will now take place on Friday, May 16 — five days before the title match in the Europa League in Bilbao, Spain.
Tottenham lead Bodø/Glimt 3-1 from the first leg of the semifinals, with the return match on Thursday in Norway.
The fixture rearrangement gives Villa — a team chasing Champions League qualification — two fewer days to prepare for Tottenham, which might also choose to play a stronger lineup now there is more time to recover for a possible European final.
It also will affect travel and logistical arrangements for some Villa fans.


Monchi, president of football operations at Villa, took to X to say the change in match date “is not what we wanted” and represented “the least damaging alternative.”
“Our fans didn’t deserve (it),” he wrote on the social network site, “but we tried hard to keep the match to protect the most important for us: YOU and OUR TEAM.”
Damian Vidagany, Villa director of football operations, went further in a long post on X, saying there was a “clear prejudice” toward Villa fans and bemoaning the fact that his club “didn’t feel this support” over their last two European campaigns — in the Europa Conference League last season and the Champions League this season.
“European football is not only demanding for English clubs just on the verge of the finals,” Vidagany wrote.
Villa are in seventh place in the Premier League and in a battle with five other teams to secure the remaining four Champions League qualification spots on offer. Liverpool, the already crowned champion, have already qualified.
While it is commonplace in other countries, there has been no precedent for the Premier League moving games to benefit clubs playing in Europe.
Manchester United are also in the Europa League semifinals and hold a 3-0 lead over Athletic Bilbao from the first leg in Spain last week.
United will be playing a Premier League game on Friday, May 16, too — against Chelsea. So United and Tottenham would have the same amount of preparation time should they both reach the Europa League final.