Mancini’s Green Falcons looking for Saudi fans to help drive Asian Cup ambitions

The Asian Cup in Qatar could be further evidence of the vibrant football culture and love for the sport in the Middle East and North Africa region. (X.com/@SaudiNT)
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Updated 15 January 2024
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Mancini’s Green Falcons looking for Saudi fans to help drive Asian Cup ambitions

  • Saudi Arabia, like Morocco, received huge support from local crowds at 2022 World Cup in Qatar, but cannot count on neutrals this time0

RIYADH: Saudi Arabia kick off their AFC Asian Cup campaign against Oman on Tuesday, and though there will be massive pressure on manager Roberto Mancini’s side to immediately deliver with a win, the players are used to the huge occasions these days.

Attend a big game in the Saudi Pro League, such as the Riyadh Derby between Al-Hilal and Al-Nassr or a big game in Jeddah, and the atmosphere compares with any of those in the major European leagues. There are world-class tifos and banners and colourful, vociferous fans.

With global audiences increasingly tuning into Saudi football, the reputation of the fan culture and the passion for the game in the country and the wider region can only grow.

The Asian Cup in Qatar could be further evidence of the vibrant football culture and love for the sport in the Middle East and North Africa region.

Morocco showed that at the 2022 World Cup in Qatar, and it is an inspiration for Saudi Arabia. The Green Falcons will want to surpass Morocco’s semi-final achievement on the field, and they will also look to emulate North Africans in the stands.

Saudi Arabia’s team and supporters had some beautiful moments the last time they went to Qatar in November 2022.

When Herve Renard’s men took to the pitch at Lusail Stadium to face Argentina, they knew they were facing one of the best teams in the world and that nobody gave them a chance.

They did, however, have the support of the vast majority of the 80,000 fans in the arena. What happened next has gone down in the history of the competition as the Asian team came back from a goal down to win 2-1.

The Saudi fans, and those from Arab communities in Qatar, kept coming in the remaining group games against Poland and Mexico, although sadly Saudi Arabia failed to reach the knockout stages.

What Saudi Arabia started, Morocco took to the next level. Their support during the World Cup is one of the abiding memories of that tournament. The Atlas Lions fans turned stadiums into a sea of red and created unforgettable atmospheres that won praise from even the most hardened of international journalists.

That support helped drive the team on to success and that success then, in turn, helped fuel the fervor in the stands. The combination sent Morocco all the way to the last four, beating Belgium, Spain, and Portugal along the way before losing to France.

In 20 to 30 years when the tournament starts to fade from memories to become history, the fans of Morocco will still be talked about.

Saudi Arabia will want the same. The support they received at the World Cup was bolstered by local and regional fans for the games against opposition from Europe as well as South and Central America.

That will not be the case at the Asian Cup, as Saudi Arabia will not automatically be the choice of the neutrals at the stadiums and will certainly not be seen as underdogs as they were against the likes of Argentina.

This is a competition that Saudi Arabia have a genuine hope of winning and having the backing of tens of thousands of their followers will increase those chances. It has not happened since 1996 and the hunger is there.

Head coach Mancini will be looking to give those supporters something to cheer about. He has the knowhow to win international tournaments as he showed with Italy at the last European Championship.

He has surprised fans however by omitting goalkeeper Nawaf Al-Aqidi from his final squad. The Al-Nassr shot stopper is one of the few Saudi Arabians to get regular playing time in the league this season. With the 23-year-old seemingly uninjured, it looks to be a gamble from the Italian coach and any mistakes by the other goalkeepers will be highlighted. Yet these are the decisions that coaches live or die by.

Regardless of that controversial selection, the team will be cheered onto the pitch at Al-Khalifa Stadium. If the players can inspire the fans to go to the next level, then the 12th man will play their part. If so, a beautiful Moroccan-style momentum could develop and, this time, it could go all the way.


Oscar Piastri wins Saudi Arabian Grand Prix, Verstappen second

Updated 16 sec ago
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Oscar Piastri wins Saudi Arabian Grand Prix, Verstappen second

JEDDAH: Oscar Piastri won the Saudi Arabian Grand Prix for McLaren in Jeddah on Sunday, as title challenger and defending world champion Max Verstappen crossed the line in second.

More to follow...


Verschoor storms to F2 victory as Weug claims historic win in F1 Academy in Jeddah

Updated 20 April 2025
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Verschoor storms to F2 victory as Weug claims historic win in F1 Academy in Jeddah

  • The victory moves Verschoor into the lead of the F2 Drivers’ Championship
  • With her victory, Weug also snatched a narrow lead at the top of the F1 Academy standings

JEDDAH: Richard Verschoor produced a masterclass in tire management and racecraft to win the Formula 2 feature race in Jeddah, fighting back from ninth on the grid to claim victory for MP Motorsport.

The Dutch driver rebounded impressively after heartbreak in Saturday’s Sprint Race, where he crossed the line first but was demoted to second by a five-second penalty for an earlier incident.

Determined to make amends, Verschoor ran the alternative strategy, starting on medium tires and extending his first stint deep into the race.

Despite his aging rubber, Verschoor consistently set fastest laps, showing blistering pace while others pitted early for fresher tires.

His strategy paid off, and after switching to supersofts, he rejoined the track just a few seconds behind leader Jak Crawford with four laps to go.

Once his tires were up to temperature, Verschoor rapidly hunted down the DAMS Lucas Oil driver, closing within DRS range and executing a clinical move into Turn 1 on the final lap to secure a stunning win.

The victory moves Verschoor into the lead of the Drivers’ Championship, with Josep Maria Marti — who finished fifth in the Feature Race — second overall and Leonardo Fornaroli third.

Earlier in the day, Maya Weug made history by becoming the first Ferrari driver to win an F1 Academy race in Jeddah, prevailing in a dramatic and incident-packed Race 2.

Starting from pole for the first time in the series, Chloe Chambers looked to have the race under control after a clean getaway, keeping ahead of a fierce scrap for second between Weug and Mercedes’ Doriane Pin. Amid soaring track temperatures, Weug showed relentless pace, reeling Chambers in and battling wheel-to-wheel for the lead by Lap 3.

Weug briefly seized the lead before being forced wide by Chambers, who was later handed a five-second penalty for the incident. That opened the door for an intense battle between Weug and Pin, with the two repeatedly exchanging P2 as Chambers tried to maintain her advantage.

Despite crossing the finish line first, Chambers’ time penalty demoted her to second, handing victory to Weug. Pin completed the podium for Mercedes.

The race saw further drama as Rafaela Ferreira was hit with a 10-second penalty for spinning Emma Felbermayr of Kick Sauber, dropping both out of the points contention.

Behind the front three, Alisha Palmowski secured fourth place, with Alba Larsen fifth and Aston Martin’s Tina Hausmann sixth. Alpine’s Nina Gademan finished seventh, while Ella Lloyd was promoted to eighth after Ferreira’s penalty. Joanne Ciconte and Chloe Chong rounded out the points-scoring positions.

With her victory, Weug also snatched a narrow lead at the top of the F1 Academy standings, setting up an intriguing battle for the rest of the season.


Kohli, Padikkal guide Bengaluru to revenge win over Punjab in IPL

Updated 20 April 2025
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Kohli, Padikkal guide Bengaluru to revenge win over Punjab in IPL

  • Bengaluru avenged their loss to Punjab at home on Friday and the two teams, both seeking their first IPL title, are level on points

CHANDIGARH: Virat Kohli and Devdutt Padikkal hit half-centuries to steer Royal Challengers Bengaluru to a seven-wicket win over Punjab Kings in the Indian Premier League on Sunday.
Chasing 158 for victory, Bengaluru were propelled by a 103-run second-wicket stand between Kohli, who made an unbeaten 73, and Padikkal to reach their target with seven balls to spare at Mullanpur, near Chandigarh.
Bengaluru avenged their loss to Punjab at home on Friday and the two teams, both seeking their first IPL title, are level on points.
The in-form Kohli, 36, struck his fourth half-ton of the season and surpassed Australia’s David Warner for the most 50-plus scores in the popular T20 tournament.
Kohli has now made it past the 50-mark 67 times, including eight centuries.
Left-handed Padikkal made 61 off 35 balls, his first fifty of the season, after Bengaluru lost opener Phil Salt in the first over to Arshdeep Singh.
Padikkal fell to Harpreet Brar, leaving Kohli to play the anchor in a 54-ball knock laced with seven fours and a six.
Bengaluru spinners Krunal Pandya and Suyash Sharma took two wickets each to set up victory as they helped restrict Punjab to 157-6.
Priyansh Arya and Prabhsimran Singh started aggressively in an opening stand of 42 before Pandya was introduced in the fifth over.
The left-arm spinner struck with his second ball to send back Arya for 22.
Pandya struck again in his next over to dismiss Prabhsimran, who hit 33 off 17 balls, and finished with figures of 2-25.
West Indies fast bowler Romario Shepherd, in his first Bengaluru outing this season, had skipper Shreyas Iyer out for six and Nehal Wadhera was run out soon after.
England’s Josh Inglis attempted to hit back, smashing 29 off 17 balls, but was bowled by leg-spinner Suyash.
Suyash hit the stumps again three balls later to remove Marcus Stoinis as Punjab slipped to 114-6.
Shashank Singh, who made 31, and Marco Jansen, who hit 25, put on an unbeaten stand of 43 to boost the total but it was not enough to challenge Bengaluru.


De Bruyne ‘surprised’ over Man City exit

Updated 20 April 2025
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De Bruyne ‘surprised’ over Man City exit

  • Kevin De Bruyne has revealed he was “a bit surprised” to be told his glittering Manchester City career will finish at the end of this season

LONDON: Kevin De Bruyne has revealed he was “a bit surprised” to be told his glittering Manchester City career will finish at the end of this season.
De Bruyne recently announced he will leave the Etihad Stadium once the current campaign is over, bringing the curtain down on a memorable era in Manchester for the Belgian midfielder.
The 33-year-old arrived from German club Wolfsburg in 2015 and has been instrumental in City’s incredible success during boss Pep Guardiola’s reign.
De Bruyne has won six Premier League titles, two FA Cups, five League Cups and the 2023 Champions League — which capped an incredible treble-winning season.
Guardiola hinted it was his decision to end De Bruyne’s stay after the playmaker’s struggles with injuries and inconsistent form over the last two seasons.
City have dipped dramatically this term, surrendering their four-year spell as champions and were reduced to focussing on the battle to qualify for the Champions League.
But De Bruyne admitted he was shocked not to receive a new contract offer because he believes he can still shine at the highest level.
“I have not had any offer the whole year, they just took a decision,” he said after City’s 2-0 win at Everton on Saturday.
“Obviously, I was a bit surprised but I just have to accept it. Honestly I still think I can perform at this level like I’m showing but I understand clubs have to make decisions.
“Maybe if the team didn’t struggle and I came back like I did this year and bedded in like normal then maybe they take another decision.”
De Bruyne said he has not made any decisions about his future as he is concentrating on the race to secure a top-five spot to extend City’s run in the Champions League into a 15th successive season.
He has already been linked with moves to Major League Soccer in the United States but he hasn’t ruled out staying in the Premier League or joining a major European club.
“I feel like I still have a lot to give. Obviously I know I’m not 25 any more but I still feel like I can do my job,” he said.
“I’m open for anything. I have to look at the whole picture. I’m looking at sporting, family, everything together, what makes the most sense for me and my family.
“I like to compete. That’s what I feel so I can’t say that I want to quit because I still feel that whenever I’m in training I want to beat the guys.
“I feel like I’m doing really well and that’s why I’ve also played a lot lately.”
De Bruyne applauded off at Goodison Park after Saturday’s win, with his performance a bright spot in another spluttering City display.
“It’s something really rare to come out and get an applause from another team so I just want to say thank you to them. I think they appreciate the way that I play,” he said.


Final heartbreak for Saudi Arabia against nine-man Uzbekistan

Updated 22 min 47 sec ago
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Final heartbreak for Saudi Arabia against nine-man Uzbekistan

  • Saudi Arabia began the tournament with a 2-0 win over China in the first round

TAIF: There was heartbreak for Saudi Arabia with a 2-0 loss to Uzbekistan in the final of the U17 Asian Cup on Sunday. The defeat at the King Fahd Sports City in Taif means that the 37-year wait for a third title goes on despite the fact that the victors had two men sent off in the first half.

Uzbekistan somehow regrouped to score twice in the second half to repeat their 2012 success for a second continental crown.

It was a tough road to the final for the hosts who needed penalties to get past Japan in the quarter-finals and then South Korea three days previously. Perhaps there was some fatigue against an Uzbekistan team that strolled past the United Arab Emirates and North Korea in the knockout stages.

That didn’t matter too much however as, five minutes before the end of a fairly even first half, Uzbekistan had a man sent off as Nurbek Sarsenbaev saw red for kicking out, while on the floor, at Adel Hibah.

Seconds before half-time and it got worse for the Central Asians as they lost another man. This time,a last-ditch tackle on Sabri Dahal was enough to get Miraziz Abdukarimov sent off.

It seemed at half-time as if Saudi Arabia were going through but incredibly, it didn’t take the Central Asians long to break the deadlock in the second half though it was perhaps a little harsh on the Saudi Arabians. The ball bounced up in the area and Yazeed Al-Dosari was adjudged, after a VAR intervention, to have handled and the referee eventually gave a penalty, much to the delight of the small contingent of Uzbekistan fans.

Up stepped Mukhammad Khakimov to fire home, sending the goalkeeper the wrong way.

With the hosts pushing forward in search of an equaliser, the win was sealed with 20 minutes remaining and in fine fashion. Sadriddin Khasanov picked up possession just over the halfway line, skipped past Al Waleed Al-Awfi on the left, cut inside the area and then shot through the legs of Abdulrahman Al-Otaibi.

Saudi Arabia threw everything forward in an attempt to get back in the game but, in the end, were unable to find a way through a committed Uzbekistan defence.

There is some consolation for the hosts however, as they have the U17 World Cup to look forward to, later this year in Qatar.