Vladimir Burdun: turning sporting dreams into reality in the UAE

Vladimir Burdun, founder and CEO of Emirates Sports. (AN Photo)
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Updated 06 July 2024
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Vladimir Burdun: turning sporting dreams into reality in the UAE

  • CEO of Emirates Sports speaks to Arab News about being president of the World Strongman Federation, promoting ice hockey in the region, and the 2029 Asian Winter Games in NEOM

DUBAI: Few individuals have experienced — or contributed to — the growth of Dubai’s sporting industry in recent decades quite like Vladimir Burdun.

The 52-year-old Serb moved to the UAE in 1995, a time when the Dubai Rugby Sevens was still played on sand, the Dubai Tennis Championships was two years old, and the first Dubai World Cup was still a year away.

Today he is the founder and CEO of Emirates Sports, which oversees a sports promotion company and hotel, as well as being president of the World Strongman Federation.

Burdun, a karate competitor in his youth, is steeped in combat sports and is also director of development at the Serbian Boxing Federation.

He moved to Dubai when a group of friends were setting up a trading company in the city and needed an English translator. He jumped at the opportunity.

“They wanted to sell marble, so I came to the UAE and I found my first local partner. His name was Mohammad Galadari,” said Burdun. “Other businesses were a marble company and a Russian restaurant.

“It was 1995. Only brands like Pizza Hut and other big names were here. But you could not find proper dining with entertainment, so we started that. Even now our group still owns some restaurants.

“But this is one of my hated businesses,” Burdun said, laughing, because of the time involved in running a restaurant.

His true passion was sports and he was soon dipping his toes into an industry that was on the verge of exploding in the UAE.

“I’ve been a sports guy all my life,” he said. “Even when I was involved only in the other businesses, there was always a possibility to be involved in sport. I’m a pioneer of martial arts in the Middle East. I was the first person to bring martial arts here. Thai boxing, kickboxing professional competitions. I was the first to organize professional MMA or boxing events in the UAE. And we did it at the beginning of the 2000s.”

In 2003, Burdun opened his first martial arts academy and, by 2011, had 18 clubs across the city.

He also partnered with David Skidmore, founder of the Dubai Rugby Sevens, and the two went on to establish white-collar boxing with the Transguard Group.

After the establishment of the Dubai Sports Council in 2005, the number of sporting activities and competitions mushroomed, and Burdun points out that last year alone more than 1,170 official events took place.

As president of the World Strongman Federation, he set up the brand’s first UAE event in 2016.

“We want to grow (Strongman) and we want it to be an Olympic sport in future.”

Burdun is sitting in his apartment at the Emirates Sports Hotel in Dubai Sports City, which is also home to five professional football clubs from the UAE’s second tier, as well as many visiting athletes. A short walk away, a new ice rink is being built, another sign of the growth of ice hockey in the country.

The biggest surge in business came after the pandemic, he said.

“People understood that a healthy life will give them an opportunity to fight against different type of diseases.”

Accessibility to fitness facilities is all-important, according to Burdun.

“(Almost) every building here has a gym,” he said. “And the professional gyms are run by professional people. I think the number of coaches who work here is one of the highest in the world in relation to the number of people living in the city. I would say that the UAE is a very, very healthy destination.”

Today, much of Burden’s attention is devoted to ice hockey, a sport he has been involved in since 2010.

“I wanted snow, I wanted winter,” he said. “You miss home.”

However, he points out that the UAE’s first ice hockey team was established, incredibly, in 1994 at Al-Nasr Leisureland.

“A group of pilots from North America working for Emirates wanted to skate, so they established the first ice hockey team. Now, if you look at the city of Dubai, we have four ice rinks.

“We are building the fifth one. Imagine, this is the middle of the desert and we have five ice rinks in one city.”

The Emirates Hockey League was founded in 2009 by the UAE’s Winter Sports Federation and the Emirates Olympic Committee, and is governed by the International Ice Hockey Federation.

Burdun said that ice hockey is a demanding sport when it comes to logistics.

“To play one game, you need at least two teams, and two teams have to be at least 10 people each. You need an ice arena, changing rooms, you need lots of equipment. It is one of the most complicated sports, but when people start to love it, you start to love it with all your heart,” he said.

“We believe that ice hockey has a bright future in the Middle East. Because you know that the UAE won three world championships for the last three years, in different divisions. This is unbelievable growth for the country which is in the middle of the desert.

“We are getting strong involvement with different nationalities,” he said. “Can you believe we have Canadians, North Americans, we have Swedish, we have Finnish, we have Danish, we have Slovakians, we have Croatians, we have Russians? We have so many different nationalities which are involved.”

Burdun is particularly keen to develop ice hockey, among other sports, in the Middle East region, particularly Saudi Arabia, which he first visited in 2009.

“We went to the World Combat Games in Riyadh recently and I will tell you that I was totally shocked by the changes which Saudi have done,” he said. “We were watching the final of the 48kg division, a world final, and a Saudi girl was fighting with a girl from Bahrain. This for me was a shock. In just 15 years, girls from the (Gulf) countries are now fighting like tigers, and they had eliminated all the European rivals and they are competing for the medals. They were really good fighters. The world is changing.

“We are looking to expand in the Middle East,” he added. “We cover the full infrastructure in our company, from A to Z. From hotel apartments, food, special treatment, health preparations for the athletes, custom equipment, our own ice rink. Now we are ready to do something for the Middle East. Maybe a GCC league of hockey. Our company can afford to build arenas anywhere. I have a dream to build an arena in NEOM. I know how to do it, and how to set up a team there, and how to attract the world’s best talent.”

Referring to the 2029 Asian Winter Games that will take place in the Tabuk region of Saudi Arabia, he said: “People who come to NEOM will enjoy being there.”

Burdun believes he is fortunate to be in a region that encourages development and called European countries “tortoises” in comparison.

“Instead of trying to put up obstacles, they actually help you get things done here. The good thing about the UAE is because this is a very new country, not everything has been set up like in Europe,” he said, highlighting the support of the government in getting things off the ground.

“That’s how we want to do things in Dubai. We don’t want to wait 50 years for the federation to grow. We want to make it yesterday. We want to achieve results tomorrow. We want our players to be here now. And that’s what we do.”


Team Abu Dhabi duo ready for powerboating battle after Wyatt claims pole in China

Updated 05 October 2024
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Team Abu Dhabi duo ready for powerboating battle after Wyatt claims pole in China

  • Veteran Emirati Thani Al-Qemzi calls on his vast experience as typhoon looms at Grand Prix of Shanghai

SHANGHAI: Team Abu Dhabi’s Thani Al-Qemzi and Alberto Comparato are ready for a tough examination in tomorrow’s Grand Prix of Shanghai, China after Sharjah Team’s Rusty Wyatt secured pole position for Round 4 of the 2024 UIM F1H2O World Championship.

Rough waters stirred by powerful winds have plagued the championship’s return to Shanghai following a 20-year absence, and Wyatt adapted best to dominate today’s single qualifying session as he looked to extend his lead in the title race.

The Canadian rookie won by an impressive 1.25 seconds from Sweden’s defending world champion Jonas Andersson, who was followed by Victory Team’s Erik Stark as the top three in the championship standings made their mark.

Veteran Emirati driver Al-Qemzi, making his 156th race start, will be looking to call on his vast experience to climb through the field after qualifying eighth, 13 years after securing one of his 10 Grand Prix victories in China.

He was forced to return to the pontoon with technical issues after completing just two qualifying laps, but returned to the circuit later, although he was unable to improve his position.

Abu Dhabi teammate Comparato also has a lot of work to do when he starts in ninth position on the new and demanding 2,153m circuit on the Huangpu River, with typhoon conditions forecast for this weekend.

With that in mind, a last-minute decision was taken to start qualifying 30 minutes early today and reduce it from the normal three phases to a single 40-minute session.

But as conditions deteriorated following the completion of qualifying, the two scheduled sprint races, both carrying championship points, were canceled, and tomorrow’s Grand Prix was switched from the afternoon to a 9 a.m. local time start.

The race could become a test of nerve if there is no reprieve from the stormy weather that greeted the teams on their arrival in Shanghai and forced the cancelation of Friday’s first free practice session because of safety concerns.

As conditions eased later, Wyatt set the fastest time ahead of Stark in the second free practice session, with Al-Qemzi recording the third-best lap ahead of Frenchman Peter Morin and Andersson, and Comparato in ninth spot.

Few are better equipped to handle the conditions, and their effect on the race schedule, than Al-Qemzi, who has seen it all in an F1H2O career that began back in 2000, and he will be determined to get the maximum out of himself, and Team Abu Dhabi 5, tomorrow.


Jokic in ‘category of his own,’ despite Nuggets defeat to Celtics in Abu Dhabi

Updated 05 October 2024
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Jokic in ‘category of his own,’ despite Nuggets defeat to Celtics in Abu Dhabi

  • Russell Westbrook praised the Serbian star after Boston beat Denver 107-103 in first of pre-season games at Etihad Arena

ABU DHABI: Russell Westbrook believes his new teammate Nikola Jokic “belongs in a category of his own,” the 16-year NBA veteran said in Abu Dhabi on Friday after making his first appearance for the Denver Nuggets.

Playing the first of two preseason games against the Boston Celtics in the UAE capital, the Nuggets squandered a 14-point lead en route to a 107-103 defeat to the reigning NBA champions.

Westbrook, a former MVP and nine-time All-Star, joined the Nuggets in July after spending last season with the LA Clippers, and the 35-year-old made his debut for his new team on Friday, sharing some minutes with Jokic in the first half.

“As we all know, he sits in a category of his own. He’s so unique in the sense of he’s so unselfish,” said Westbrook of the three-time MVP.

“He loves to be able to make the game easy for his teammates and he’s done that and won a championship and multiple MVPs and he’s still the same person since I’ve been around.

“Getting a chance to know a little about him and his background, I really enjoyed that and I’m grateful to be on his team and learn from him as well.”

Jokic is coming off a hectic summer during which he helped guide Serbia to a bronze medal at the Olympic Games.

In a clash that pit the last two NBA champions in front of a capacity crowd at Etihad Arena, Jokic had 14 points, eight rebounds, two assists, and a 71.4 field goal percentage in under 17 minutes of play.

“Last time, I remember, when I played for the national team, we won the championship, so maybe that’s saying something, maybe not, who knows. Most players say that summer tournaments, like the Olympics, kind of helps you stay in shape or to get better maybe,” said Jokic.

“I don’t know if that’s the case or not, but I definitely had a really good time and I think I improved playing for the national team.”

The Celtics started with Jaylen Brown, Jayson Tatum, Luke Kornet, Derrick White and Jrue Holiday, but it was their second unit that cut their deficit against the Nuggets, with guard Payton Pritchard scoring 21 points, including six 3-pointers from 12 attempts.

Boston players combined for 61 3-point attempts, which would have been a franchise record had it been an official game.

“I feel like we took a lot of 3s last year. I don’t know if we’ll take 61 most nights, but obviously we don’t have two of our interior players and it’s the first game, getting our legs under us, so sometimes repeatedly is tiring. I think we’ll get to the rim more during the season,” said Pritchard, referring to coach Joe Mazzulla emphasizing shooting from beyond the arc throughout their run to the championship.

NBA Finals MVP Brown, who addressed the Abu Dhabi crowd with some Arabic words ahead of the game, had eight points, two rebounds and two assists in 19 minutes of play, while Tatum had 12, six and five.

“We’re definitely getting back into season form, just finding that continuity again, we had some good spots, defensively made some good plays, offensively we got some good looks,” said Brown, who spent a large portion of his summer in the Arabian Peninsula.

“A lot of excitement here in Abu Dhabi as well, so I think the next game we should be better.”

The night in the UAE capital was a star-studded affair with a host of football legends in attendance, including Ronaldinho, Thierry Henry, Roberto Carlos and Alessandro Del Piero.

Jokic said he was happy to see them all in one place, adding: “Thierry Henry was my favorite player, when he was in Arsenal, I really loved him. He was really fast and I’m going to say a game-changer. He was a really good player.”

Boston and Denver will square off again in a second preseason game on Sunday, Oct. 6. The 2024-25 NBA season tips off on Oct. 22.


Four key match-ups in Pakistan-England Test series

Updated 05 October 2024
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Four key match-ups in Pakistan-England Test series

  • The Stokes-Shah showdown lit up the Twenty20 World Cup final in Melbourne in November 2022, with the batter surviving Shah’s lethal spell
  • But barely a month later the rivalry was renewed in Rawalpindi stadium as Shah bowled Stokes for 41 on the day when England piled record haul

MULTAN: Test encounters between Pakistan and England have often been defined by player-on-player showdowns which inject added drama into the already heated confrontation.
Ahead of their three-match series starting Monday in Multan, AFP Sports looks at four key match-ups set to entertain:
Pakistan’s pace spearhead was sidelined with a knee injury when England inflicted a 3-0 clean sweep in 2022. This time he has a chance to halt England’s juggernauts led by opener Duckett.
The left-hander smashed a brilliant century on the Test’s opening day two years ago as England amassed a first-day world record of 506-4 — blazing a trail for Pakistan’s first-ever home whitewash.
Duckett has proven capable of upsetting any bowler with his aggression straight out of the gate.
But Shaheen’s lethal yorkers and swing with a new ball regularly put brakes on the scoring rate and secure wickets up front.
Watch out as the pair tussle for control.
Two years ago, Ahmed was just 18 when he became the youngest England bowler to take a five-wicket haul on debut against Pakistan in Karachi.
Now matured, he is likely to face down Pakistan star batter Azam — one of his victims back in 2022.
Ahmed’s googly could prolong Azam’s run drought, with Pakistani looking to rediscover his touch to counter the wiley spinner.
Azam quit his white-ball captaincy this week to focus on his role at the crease.
His showdown with Ahmed will be the first test of whether he can return to form.
Root has a phenomenal record as England’s top batter — soon set to break former skipper Alistair Cook’s career record of more than 12,000 Test runs.
But in the 2022 tour, it was spinner Abrar who dismissed Root in each innings of the second Test in Multan for low scores of 8 and 21.
Nonetheless, Root holds the record for most hundreds for England with 34, achieving half of them over the past four years.
Pakistan will rely on Abrar for slow and turning wickets. A spin duel between the pair will be a clash to watch.
The Stokes-Shah showdown lit up the Twenty20 World Cup final in Melbourne in November 2022, with the batter surviving Shah’s lethal spell and hitting a fighting half-century to secure England’s triumph.
But barely a month later the rivalry was renewed in Rawalpindi stadium as Shah bowled Stokes for 41 on the day when England piled up its record haul.
Shah missed the next two Tests with a shoulder injury. But when the three-match series starts next week he will have more experience and better fitness — although the contest could be delayed as Stokes races to overcome a hamstring niggle in time for the first Test.
If he’s ready, Stokes will have to overcome a fiery Shah looking to push him to the hilt.


ICC Women’s T20 World Cup: Pakistan to face India in Dubai tomorrow

Updated 05 October 2024
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ICC Women’s T20 World Cup: Pakistan to face India in Dubai tomorrow

  • Pakistan, who have never made it out of the group stages, beat Sri Lanka by 31 runs in opener
  • On the other hand, India lost their opening group match to New Zealand on Friday by 58 runs

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan women’s team will face India on Sunday in their Twenty20 World Cup group stage match in Dubai, according to the International Cricket Council (ICC).
Pakistan, who have never made it out of the group stages in eight previous attempts, beat Sri Lanka by 31 runs in their World Cup opener on Thursday.
The Pakistani side is scheduled to play its second group match against India at the Dubai Cricket Stadium.
“The match will start at 3:00 p.m. Pakistan Standard Time,” the state-run Radio Pakistan broadcaster reported on Saturday.
Pakistan made 116 in their 20 overs in the opening match. They staged a determined fightback to beat Sri Lanka, with left-arm spinner Sadia Iqbal claiming three wickets.
Nashra Sandhu, Omaima Sohail and player of the match Fatima Sana all took two each for Pakistan against Asia Cup champions Sri Lanka.
On the other hand, India lost their opening match to New Zealand on Friday by 58 runs.
India were never in the chase after losing openers Shafali Verma, for two, and Smriti Mandhana, for 12, inside the first five overs.


Bronny James begins Lakers career with a preseason debut

Updated 05 October 2024
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Bronny James begins Lakers career with a preseason debut

  • Bronny James finishes with two points in the Lakers’ 124-107 loss to the Timberwolves
  • As is typical for inactive players, LeBron largely stays away from the Lakers’ huddles

PALM DESERT, California: Bronny James played in his first NBA preseason game Friday night, but LeBron James wasn’t in uniform with him when the Lakers hosted Minnesota in the first of Los Angeles’ two weekend games in the Coachella Valley.
Lakers coach JJ Redick elected to hold out LeBron James against the Timberwolves after three hard days of training camp, but the 39-year-old top scorer in NBA history is likely to play against Phoenix on Sunday — which just happens to be Bronny’s 20th birthday.
Bronny James finished with two points in the Lakers’ 124-107 loss to the Timberwolves, missing his first five shots before making a layup with 56.9 seconds to play. But the 6-foot-2 guard also blocked three shots, and he picked up one rebound and one assist while playing the first half of the second quarter and most of the fourth.
Before they become the first father and son to play in the same NBA game, Bronny James knows he has plenty of work to do. He got his first chance to play in Lakers gold when he took the floor to begin the second quarter at Acrisure Arena outside Palm Springs.
Playing alongside starting Lakers point guard D’Angelo Russell, Bronny got caught on a pick on his first defensive possession, allowing Rob Dillingham to hit an open 3-pointer. Bronny’s pass was then intercepted by Nickeil Alexander-Walker on the other end, but Bronny hustled back and blocked his layup attempt.
Bronny missed all three of his shots during his first six minutes of action, including a 3-pointer. He picked up an assist when he found Rui Hachimura for a 3-pointer from the corner on a fast break.
Bronny returned for the start of the fourth quarter, missing a jumper and having a layup attempt blocked. In the final minute, he got a pass from fellow rookie Dalton Knecht and looped a layup over a defender for his first points.
LeBron appeared to be keeping a mindful distance from Bronny during the game, allowing his oldest son to focus on his job. But LeBron spoke at length to Bronny during a timeout halfway through the second quarter, explaining something with hand gestures while Bronny nodded.
Bronny James was the Lakers’ second-round draft pick, and he played in summer league in Las Vegas. He is expected to play for the Lakers in the preseason before spending a significant portion of the upcoming regular season with the G League’s South Bay Lakers.
“Of course there’s nerves,” Bronny said after the Lakers’ pregame shootaround. “But I’m just excited to go out there and learn from the people playing in front of me, and if I get a chance to showcase what I can do, I’m going to do that.”
As is typical for inactive players, LeBron largely stayed away from the Lakers’ huddles. He mostly stood on the perimeter during timeouts with Anthony Davis, who also sat out the preseason opener. Both superstars have been at training camp in El Segundo.
“We felt like, given everything they had this summer, and their level of participation over the past three days, it made the most sense for them to get an off day today,” Redick said. “We told them at shootaround to just stay off their feet.”
Redick said Thursday that both LeBron James and Davis will play in at least one game this weekend. Max Christie and Jaxson Hayes started in the superstars’ place against Minnesota alongside Russell, Hachimura and Austin Reaves.
Friday’s crowd didn’t seem disappointed as it poured into the 22-month-old arena that serves at the home of the American Hockey League’s Coachella Valley Firebirds. Hundreds of fans in gold Lakers jerseys representing everyone from James to George Mikan rushed into the building and down the stairs in the lower bowl for an up-close look at the pregame warmups.
“The beautiful thing about the Lakers is that we have fans all over the world,” Redick said. “The desert over here is an extension, I think in some ways, of our fan base in LA. It’s a great opportunity for our group to play in front of these fans tonight.”
James and Davis are sitting out the first of the Lakers’ six preseason games as they ease back into competition after a busy summer. They joined the Lakers before the game in street clothes.
LeBron and Davis were both on the US team that won a gold medal at the Paris Olympics, and they walked to midcourt right before tipoff to greet Minnesota’s Anthony Edwards, their Olympic teammate.