AC Milan forward Leao praises ‘incredible’ Riyadh support after Italian Super Cup win

AC Milan forward Leao has praised the club's Riyadh support after Italian Super Cup final win over city rivals Inter. (Supplied)
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Updated 07 January 2025
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AC Milan forward Leao praises ‘incredible’ Riyadh support after Italian Super Cup win

  • Milan came back from 2-0 down to beat rivals Inter 3-2 at Al-Awwal Park on Monday
  • ‘I must thank the Saudi fans; they have been incredible. They created a beautiful vibe’

RIYADH: AC Milan players praised the support they received in Saudi Arabia for helping to inspire an incredible 3-2 comeback victory in the EA Sports FC Supercup final over holders and rivals Inter Milan in Riyadh on Monday.

Tammy Abraham’s injury-time winner sparked joyous scenes from the AC Milan players, bench and fans packed into Al-Awwal Park, united in celebration of sporting drama at its most thrilling.

Having fallen behind to goals from Inter strikers Lautaro Martinez and Mehdi Taremi, the Rossoneri produced a turnaround for the ages. Theo Hernandez curled in a free-kick from the edge of the penalty area in the 52nd minute before Christian Pulisic struck home from an angle with 10 minutes remaining.

Pulisic’s exquisite injury-time pass was then latched onto by substitute Rafael Leao to play in fellow sub Abraham for the easiest and most satisfying of tap-ins, providing new manager Sergio Conceicao with a trophy in just his second match in charge following another comeback in the 2-1 win over Juventus in the semifinal on Friday.

“It was not easy, especially the first half but I really believed in the signs the guys gave me during the week,” Conceicao said. “I changed just a few things, and they were good ones; I truly believe in my work and in my staff. We need to have the right mentality to change the rest of the season. I accepted AC Milan and I’m happy. We have been hosted in a wonderful way in Saudi and I want to thank all the organizers and fans.”

Conceicao took over from Portuguese compatriot Paulo Fonseca at the helm of the San Siro side on Dec. 30.

Leao, the Milan No.10 who played a key role in the comeback, said: “I must thank the Saudi fans; they have been incredible. They created a beautiful vibe. Winning something with Milan is full of emotion. It’s a collective win, I also thank all of my team-mates and the coach too. The coach brought a fresh mentality and new energy. We believed it till the end. This trophy is an opportunity to change the rest of the season.”

For Inter, there was only disappointment in a city that has served them so well over the past few years. The Saudi capital has hosted of two of the Nerazzurri’s last three Italian Supercup triumphs, meaning Inter were thwarted in their bid for a treble in Riyadh to crown a record four wins in succession.

Simone Inzaghi, the Inter manager, told the post-final press conference: “We reopened the game with our mistakes and Milan did a few strategic changes. We had to do something more in the last 20 minutes. We will go back with a defeat, but we will do better. We missed good players, but this is football at the end. Losing a derby is hard, but we will react positively and be ready as soon as possible for our following games.”

The Supercup final defeat for Inter followed a late-goal loss in Serie A to AC Milan in September. Serie A champions Inter are currently third in the league, with their city rivals eighth.

Federico DiMarco, the Inter Milan left wing-back, said: “A team like us can’t lose from 2-0. We did a few mistakes and congratulations to Milan. All defeats help us to improve. Losing the derby in a final is not easy, but we will improve and make it better. The team give everything, the opponent was strong. It’s the second time they have scored against us in the final minutes. We will wake up and get ready for the following games. We won the last three Supercups. Everything was beautiful, the vibes were good, but this time I can’t say I’m fully happy.”


Kohli highlights importance of partnerships after Bengaluru top IPL table

Updated 17 sec ago
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Kohli highlights importance of partnerships after Bengaluru top IPL table

  • Kohli made a steady 51 while Krunal Pandya sparkled with an unbeaten 73 from 47 balls as Bengaluru beat Delhi Capitals with six wickets and nine balls remaining on Sunday
BENGALURU: Twenty20 cricket is fast becoming a stage for explosive batsmen but Virat Kohli reminded fans of the value of building solid partnerships and rotating strike after taking Royal Challengers Bengaluru to the Indian Premier League summit.
Kohli made a steady 51 while Krunal Pandya sparkled with an unbeaten 73 from 47 balls as Bengaluru beat Delhi Capitals with six wickets and nine balls remaining on Sunday.
The duo put on 119 runs for the fourth wicket and Kohli said it had given his team the perfect platform to seal their seventh victory of the campaign.
“People, I think, are forgetting the importance of stitching partnerships or going deep into the innings in T20 cricket,” the former India captain said after helping his side chase down 163 on a two-paced surface.
“I think this year, you’re seeing that you can’t just come out and tee off from ball one. You need to have professionalism, to read the situation and try and get into a position where you can start dominating the bowlers.
“For that, you need to string a partnership. It won’t come easy on a slow pitch if you don’t know how to rotate the strike. So that’s pretty much my method.”
Kohli’s half-century was his sixth of the season and fourth while chasing, taking his run tally this season to 443.
“Whenever there’s a chase on or there’s a situation I go in, I keep checking with the dugout whether we’re on course, what is my role, what is the kind of innings I need to play,” he added.
Bengaluru will host five-times champions Chennai Super Kings on Saturday.

Champions League semifinals: Barcelona-Inter revives memories of 2010 epic and Arsenal hosts PSG

Updated 28 April 2025
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Champions League semifinals: Barcelona-Inter revives memories of 2010 epic and Arsenal hosts PSG

The free-flowing attack of Barcelona comes up against the rugged, smothering defense of Inter Milan in the Champions League semifinals.
Ring any bells?
Go back to 2010 — when Lamine Yamal was not even 3 years old and Lionel Messi was close to his prime — and Camp Nou was the scene of one of the most memorable matches in Champions League history, between the same teams going head-to-head there again on Wednesday.
Protecting a 3-1 lead from the first leg, Inter — coached at the time by Jose Mourinho — delivered a defensive masterclass against Pep Guardiola’s Barcelona to survive with 10 men for more than an hour and lose just 1-0 to progress to the title match.
Memories will come flooding back ahead of the rematch this week, especially with the two protagonists owning the same traits as 15 years ago.
Barcelona is back in the Champions League semifinals for the first time since the 2018-19 season, on the back of by far the best attack in the new-look, 36-team league stage. With Yamal, Raphinha and Robert Lewandowski up front, Barca scored 28 goals in eight games — and has netted nine more goals in eliminating Benfica and Borussia Dortmund in the knockouts.
Then there’s Inter, the Italian champion, which conceded just once in eight games in the first stage and held on grimly to oust Bayern Munich in the quarterfinals.
Inter won the 2010 final, against Bayern, for a third European Cup title so its run toward the final this season has echoes of that title-winning campaign.
Arsenal vs. Paris Saint-Germain
While the Barcelona-Inter Milan semifinal is awash with history, this one seems relatively fresh.
Arsenal and Paris Saint-Germain have met just three times in the Champions League and never in the knockout stage. One of those occasions was this season, when Arsenal won 2-0 at Emirates Stadium.
And it’s at home that the Gunners play on Tuesday in the first leg, hoping to reproduce the exploits that saw them beat defending champion Real Madrid in both legs in the quarterfinals.
Their opponents, however, are aiming to eliminate an English opponent for the third straight round, after seeing off Liverpool and — less impressively — Aston Villa.
With its “galacticos” — Kylian Mbappe, Neymar and Messi — long gone, PSG is bidding to win a first Champions League title by going with talented up-and-coming players instead.
Arsenal is also striving to become European champion for the first time, having not reached the semis since 2009.


Casper makes it 2-0 to Ruud family after beating Korda in Madrid

Updated 28 April 2025
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Casper makes it 2-0 to Ruud family after beating Korda in Madrid

  • Christian Ruud defeated former world number two Petr Korda in their only meeting on the ATP Tour at the Miami Open in 1999, a stat which surprised world number 15
  • “Honestly I thought he had lost to Petr before, so I was out here seeking revenge for the family, but this is an even better statistic for us,” he said after his 6-3 6-3 win on Sunday

Casper Ruud said gaining revenge for his family was on his mind during his win over Sebastian Korda at the Madrid Open on Sunday but the Norwegian could only grin sheepishly after learning his father Christian had actually beaten Petr Korda 26 years ago.
Christian Ruud defeated former world number two Petr Korda in their only meeting on the ATP Tour at the Miami Open in 1999, a stat which surprised world number 15.
“Honestly I thought he had lost to Petr before, so I was out here seeking revenge for the family, but this is an even better statistic for us,” he said after his 6-3 6-3 win on Sunday.
“We’ll try to keep it alive for as long as possible. It’s fun that you see certain situations like this where father and son have played and are doing well.
“I’m sure Sebi and I will play many more times in our career and I’ll try my best to keep him behind me but at some point I’m sure he’ll catch up or get a win over the Ruud family.”
Victory was Ruud’s 150th win on clay and the twice French Open runner-up will continue his preparations for the May 25-June 8 Grand Slam when he meets third-seeded American Taylor Fritz in the Madrid round of 16.


Cristiano Ronaldo’s Al-Nassr is chasing silverware in the Asian Champions League Elite

Updated 28 April 2025
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Cristiano Ronaldo’s Al-Nassr is chasing silverware in the Asian Champions League Elite

  • With all playoff games taking place in Jeddah, there is home advantage and big crowds supporting the three domestic clubs that are laden with high-profile international stars
  • In the summer transfer window of 2023, Saudi clubs spent almost $1 billion and it’s making a difference in Asian competition

Big-spending Saudi clubs including Cristiano Ronaldo’s Al-Nassr are dominating the Asian Champions League Elite, accounting for all but one of the semifinalists in action this week.
In three quarterfinals played on the weekend, the three Saudi Pro League teams won with a combined scoreline of 14-1. At least one is guaranteed a place in the final on May 3 as four-time champion Al-Hilal meets two-time finalist Al-Ahli in the first of the two semis at Jeddah.
On Wednesday, Al-Nassr takes on Japan’s Kawasaki Frontale, the only non-Saudi club still in contention for the continental title. Kawasaki edged 2011 champion Al Sadd of Qatar 3-2 after extra time on Sunday to advance to the semifinals for the first time.
With all playoff games taking place in Jeddah, there is home advantage and big crowds supporting the three domestic clubs that are laden with high-profile international stars.
In the summer transfer window of 2023, Saudi clubs spent almost $1 billion and it’s making a difference in Asian competition.
Al-Nassr thumped last season’s runnerup Yokohama F.Marinos of Japan 4-1 on Saturday, with goals coming from Ronaldo, former Liverpool star Sadio Mane and two from Jhon Duran, who signed from Premier League club Aston Villa in January in a deal reportedly worth more than $80 million.
“When you come here, the teams are playing Premier League-level football,” Yokohama’s interim coach Patrick Kisnorbo said. “I don’t think it’s a technical issue but sometimes these things happen. We have to move forward.”
The journey to Jeddah was also a punishing one for teams in the middle of domestic seasons in East Asia.
“Our local league is our priority,” Buriram United coach Osmar Loss said after his Thai club lost 3-0 to Al-Ahli on Saturday. “It’s a long trip to Jeddah and back and I needed to protect our main players.”
In the most lopsided of the quarterfinals, South Korean club Gwangju FC, making its first appearance in the tournament, was thrashed 7-0 by Al-Hilal on Friday.
Al-Hilal now faces Jeddah club Al-Ahli on Tuesday in a bid to reach its 10th title match in the Asian competition. Al-Ahli, fourth in the domestic league, had a 3-2 win over Al-Hilal in February with all three goals scored by England striker Ivan Toney.
With other former Premier League stars such as Riyad Mahrez and Roberto Firmino on the scoresheet against Buriram United, coach Matthias Jaissle believes Al-Ahli is well placed to advance to a third final and then to capture a first title.
“I congratulated the players for making it to the semifinals but from now on, they have to focus on what’s best – rehabilitate, rest, and get back to the best physical level to perform against Al Hilal,” Jaissle said. “Everyone knows it’s going to be an intense match and we need to be in top shape.”


With a little help from Kei Nishikori, Moyuka Uchijima hits new heights in Madrid

Updated 16 min 39 sec ago
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With a little help from Kei Nishikori, Moyuka Uchijima hits new heights in Madrid

  • Ons Jabeur’s conqueror reaches maiden WTA 1000 last-16

MADRID: Moyuka Uchijima is living “a dream” currently at the Madrid Open.

Over the past few days, the Japanese world No. 56 defeated her favorite player Ons Jabeur in the second round before claiming a career-first top-10 win over world No. 3 Jessica Pegula on Sunday.

This time last year, Uchijima was ranked 130 in the world, which was not high enough for her to get into the draw in Madrid. She was instead grinding it out on the lower-level ITF circuit.

Then she went on a 15-match winning streak, sweeping three consecutive titles — in Japan, Slovakia and Spain — in as many weeks.

 

That run earned her a place in the top 100 for the first time, and the 23-year-old has not looked back since, rising to a career-high 51 in the world earlier this month.

With wins over Robin Montgomery, and 2022 Madrid finalists Jabeur and Pegula, Uchijima punched her ticket to the last-16 stage at a WTA 1000 tournament for the first time.

She will take on 21-seed Ekaterina Alexandrova for a place in the quarterfinals on Monday evening.

“I’m just really, really happy. It’s my first Masters 1000 round of 16, and I still cannot believe it, I’m in a dream kind of,” Uchijima said in an interview with Arab News and wtatennis.com.

“I know Jessica is a really, really great player, so I was just really happy to share a court with her, but to get a win is something really, really special for me.”

Uchijima entered her third round against Pegula with a 0-6 record against top-10 opposition, including a tight third-set tiebreak loss to Coco Gauff in Indian Wells last month.

She lost in similar fashion to 15th-ranked Mirra Andreeva at the Australian Open early in the year.

 

 

Those two close defeats gave Uchijima the belief she was at the same level as these top players; she just needed to get over that final hump and close out victories.

She did just that against Jabeur and Montgomery, rallying back from a set down, and was clinical in her straight-sets win over Pegula.

“I just try not to think about the score, because when you think you have a chance, then you start to get nervous,” explained Uchijima.

“So this week, I’m just trying to, even first round, I was getting killed by Robin Montgomery, she is also a great player; I just try not to think during the point too much and just enjoy the moment and just try to do what I can do at that moment.”

She added: “Ons is one of my favorite players, and I’m always watching her on TV.

“And Jessica as well. Obviously, they’ve always been on top in the WTA Tour, so it’s kind of a dream that I’m playing against them and actually able to win some matches.”

Jabeur, the Tunisian former world No. 2, plays a brand of tennis that Uchijima finds particularly exciting to watch, albeit when she is not on the receiving end of it.

“It’s just she’s different,” said Uchijima.

“She plays a style that is different than a lot of players, so I hate to play against her because she uses a lot of drop shots, so I have to run more, but to watch is really, really interesting because you don’t see a lot of players like the way she plays, so it’s just really fun to watch.”

Uchijima was born in Kuala Lumpur to a Japanese father and Malaysian mother. She moved around with her family for a few years before settling in Tokyo when she was around 8 years old.

On her way to elementary school every day, she would pass a tennis court at her father Kazuto’s workplace. Uchijima did swimming and basketball at the time, but when she picked up tennis, she enjoyed it way more than the monotony of swim practice and the running drills in basketball.

She forced her sister, who did ballet and gymnastics, to join her during tennis practice and was doing it for fun until, at 13, she realized she was good at it.

Uchijima’s current training base is Guangzhou, where she gets to spend her preseason hitting with Zheng Saiai, Zhu Lin and others.

“A lot of those girls, they’ve been top 30, top 20, so they gave me a lot of tips, and they always support me from wherever,” she said.

“We are far away from each other, maybe not playing the same tournament, but if we play the same tournament, we still support each other, and yeah, of course, my coaches, they’re helping me a lot.”

This week in Madrid, Uchijima received some priceless advice from her compatriot Kei Nishikori, who she grew up watching and idolizing. The 35-year-old Nishikori is a former world No. 4 and the only man from an Asian country to reach a Grand Slam final (US Open 2014).

He contested the men’s tournament in Madrid this week, losing to Denis Shapovalov in the second round, and Uchijima cannot believe that after all these years, she gets to be at the same event as her idol.

“We went to the Olympics together last year, so I got to know him more there,” said Uchijima.

“I was watching him on TV, so it’s just crazy, you’re actually living the same life, same place.

“I don’t have a lot of experience here, playing in Madrid, where (there is) a little bit of altitude, and a little bit different conditions, and Kei played here many, many years.

“And I think he was runner-up here (in 2014), so he gave me some tips. Actually, after the first-round match, he gave me some tips, so I guess it’s working.”

Years after Li Na and Nishikori paved the way, Japan’s Naomi Osaka exploded onto the scene, winning four Grand Slams and becoming Asia’s first singles world No. 1.

More recently, China’s Zheng Qinwen reached the Australian Open final in 2024 and clinched the gold medal at the Paris Olympics. Filipina teenager Alex Eala made a historic run to the semifinals in Miami last month.

Asian tennis is booming and Uchijima is keen to write her own chapter in its story.

“I think it’s a really, really great thing,” she said.

“For me, I grew up watching Kei Nishikori and Naomi, for the most part, but yeah, Alex in Miami, what she has done was really, really incredible, and of course, I got a lot of motivation from her, and also from Olympics last year, when Zheng Qinwen won the gold, first Asian to win a gold.

“So yeah, of course, I got a motivation from her that even we can do it, so I don’t know, hopefully, I can be a little part of it, and give some dreams for the younger players, not only in Japan, maybe in Asia.

“Because that’s how I look up, watching Kei and Naomi, so I can hope I can do the same for the younger generation.”

Uchijima grew up playing on hard courts and artificial grass in Japan but says she started to find her game on clay last season and realized the red dirt is probably the most suited to her playing style.

With a quarterfinal spot on the line for Uchijima on Monday, she is focusing on the task at hand and does not want to get distracted by her achievements so far at the Caja Magica.

“It gave me confidence, but there’s a lot of things still I can improve from today’s match, so just trying to improve day by day,” she said.

After competing at a lower-level tournament at a different site in Madrid 12 months ago, Uchijima’s time at the WTA 1000 in the Spanish capital this week has been a significant upgrade.

“Good food, good courts, a good facility — I’m just enjoying it and everything,” she says with a smile.