Al Clasico: Saudi Arabia’s fiercest football rivalry

Al Clasico: Saudi Arabia’s fiercest football rivalry
Hilal's players celebrate with the trophy after winning the Saudi Super Cup final football match between Al-Ittihad and Al-Hilal at the Mohammed bin Zayed Stadium in Abu Dhabi on April 11, 2024. (AFP)
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Updated 22 September 2024
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Al Clasico: Saudi Arabia’s fiercest football rivalry

Al Clasico: Saudi Arabia’s fiercest football rivalry

Al-Hilal will always look over their shoulders at Riyadh rivals Al-Nassr, while Al-Ittihad, the Kingdom’s oldest club, have to contend with Jeddah neighbors Al-Ahli.

On Saturday, Al-Hilal team achieved a major victory over its counterpart Al-Ittihad 3-1 in the fourth round of the Saudi League, at Prince Faisal bin Fahd City Stadium.

These two derbies are highlights of the Saudi Arabian football calendar. But even those epic rivalries have to take a back seat to the country’s biggest match: Al-Hilal against Al-Ittihad.

Derbies traditionally take place between rivals from within the same city, with historic animosity shrouding fixtures between Al-Ahly and Zamalek in Cairo, Celtic and Rangers in Glasgow, and Boca Juniors and River Plate in Buenos Aires.




Hilal's Saudi defender #87 Hassan al-Tambakti heads the ball during the Saudi Pro League football match between Al-Hilal and Al-Ittihad at the Prince Faisal bin Fahd Stadium in Riyadh on September 21, 2024. (AFP)

Some of the world’s biggest clashes, however, are between rival city clubs: Juventus versus Inter in Derby d’Italia, Bayern Munich and Borussia Dortmund’s Der Klassiker, and, above all, Real Madrid against Barcelona in El Clasico.

And in Saudi, "Al Classico".

In the blue corner, the champions and the country’s most decorated club, one that sees itself as the best not only of Saudi Arabia, but also Asia. Few will argue. They are the proud holders of 19 Saudi league titles and four AFC Champions Leagues — both records.

In the yellow corner, the contenders. Nine titles and two AFC Champions League fall short of their rivals from the capital. But to Al-Ittihad fans, that is of little consequence. History is theirs. They are the people’s club, with qualities that cannot be measured in gold, such as history, tradition, and passion. Anyone who has been to an Al-Ittihad match, and witnessed their supporters’ displays of color and noise, would be hard pressed to dispute their claim.




Ittihad's fans cheer for their team during the Saudi Pro League football match between Al-Ittihad and Al-Hilal at Prince Abdullah al-Faisal Stadium in Jeddah on September 1, 2023. (AFP)

The two first crossed swords in a 1962 friendly, a match won 2-0 by Al-Ittihad. Two years later, they clashed in their first official match, their first-ever meeting during a King’s Cup. Al-Ittihad won that one, too, 3-0. This early dominance, however, would gradually be diluted over the years.

Today, after 163 official meetings, Al-Hilal have claimed 76 victories, Al-Ittihad 42, while 45 have been drawn. 

Some of those matches might have been forgotten. Many more, however, are etched in the minds of Saudi football fans.

In 11 cup finals between the two, Al-Hilal have won six to Al-Ittihad’s five.

In 2010, Al-Ittihad beat Al-Hilal 5-4 on penalties in the King’s Cup final after the match had finished 0-0. It was the last time the two met in a major final.

Still, only rarely is the Classico an irrelevance in the Saudi Premier League, and these days the clash features more big-name players than at any time in its history.




Hilal fans cheer ahead of the Saudi Pro League football match between Al-Hilal and Al-Ittihad at the Prince Faisal bin Fahd Stadium in Riyadh on September 21, 2024. (AFP)

Alongside hometown hero and World Cup champion-beater Salem Al-Dawsari, Al-Hilal can call on Aleksander Mitrovic, Malcom, Sergej Milinkovic-Savic and, hopefully, Neymar.

Al-Ittihad roster includes Karim Benzema, Fabinho, Moussa Diaby and former Al-Hilal favorite Saleh Al-Shehri.

Matches between the two tend to have major bearing on the outcome of the league title, even when one of the clubs are not directly involved in the title race.

That was the case when the two met in the SPL for the second time last season. Al-Hilal, in the middle of a world record run of consecutive wins that would eventually extend to 34, were in danger of disappearing over the horizon in the race for the championship.

Only Al-Nassr stood a slim chance of catching them. Having drawn 4-4 against bottom Al-Hazem on Feb 29, 2024, Cristiano Ronaldo and his teammates needed a big favor from Al-Ittihad — then still reigning Saudi Pro League champions — in the Classico following day.

It was not to be as Al-Hilal came from behind to defeat Al-Ittihad 3-1 and take a giant step toward the Saudi Pro League trophy. The journey was completed on May 11 when a record 19th title was secured after a 4-1 win over Al-Hazem.




Ittihad's Saudi defender #04 Abdulelah al-Amri is marked by Hilal's Portuguese midfielder #08 Ruben Neves during the Saudi Pro League football match between Al-Hilal and Al-Ittihad at the Prince Faisal bin Fahd Stadium in Riyadh on September 21, 2024. (AFP)

But, once again, it was the Al-Classico matchday that had proven decisive.

On Saturday, Al-Hilal and Al-Ittihad met in the first Clasico of the 2024-25 season. The victory went to Al-Hilal, 3-1 winners in Riyadh.  A long season stretches ahead in which both will be vying for titles and bragging rights.

On Thursday, Feb. 20, 2025, the two clubs will resume hostilities in Jeddah.

Almost certainly, the Saudi Classico will once again, one way or the other, have a major impact on the result of the Saudi Pro League title.


Maxwell’s power-hitting and Australia pace flatten Pakistan in a rain-shortened T20

Maxwell’s power-hitting and Australia pace flatten Pakistan in a rain-shortened T20
Updated 14 November 2024
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Maxwell’s power-hitting and Australia pace flatten Pakistan in a rain-shortened T20

Maxwell’s power-hitting and Australia pace flatten Pakistan in a rain-shortened T20
  • Match started after a three-hour delay and was shortened to seven over per side
  • Pakistan made 64-9 in response to Australia’s 93-4, losing five wicket in first 15 balls

BRISBANE: Glenn Maxwell’s robust 43 off 19 balls helped Australia thump Pakistan by 29 runs in a rain-shortened first Twenty20 on Thursday.
After a nearly three-hour delay due to lightning and rain, the match was shortened to seven overs per side.
Maxwell powered Australia to 93-4 and Pakistan reached only 64-9 after slumping to 16-5 inside the first 15 balls.
Nathan Ellis (3-9) and Xavier Bartlett (3-13) ran through the top order before No. 8 batter Abbas Afridi’s unbeaten 20.
“Certainly had a lot of fun out there,” Maxwell said. “We thought we had enough on the board … the bowlers did a great job. There was a few of us who had packed our bags expecting the game to be called off, so it was a mad rush to get ready.”
Maxwell followed scores of 0, 16, 0 in the preceding one-day international series won by Pakistan 2-1 by smacking three sixes and five boundaries. He played some extravagant lap shots to third man against the pace of Haris Rauf (1-21) and Naseem Shah (1-37).
Maxwell fell in the penultimate over when he hooked Abbas Afridi (2-9) to backward square leg but Marcus Stoinis provided a final flourish with an unbeaten 21 off seven balls. Stoinis smashed 20 runs in Shah’s last over with two fours and six.
None of the top six Pakistan batters reached double figures.
Sahibzada Farhan hit Spencer Johnson for two successive boundaries off the first two balls he faced before mistiming a pull shot off the fourth ball and holing out at midwicket.
Mohammad Rizwan, in his first match as the Pakistan skipper, fell to the first ball when he top-edged Bartlett to point. Usman Khan was caught at third man in the same over.
Ellis struck twice in his first over when Babar Azam was caught in the deep and Jake Fraser-McGurk snapped his third catch as Irfan Khan also offered a tame catch at deep midwicket.
Pakistan was 24-6 in the fourth over when Salman Ali Agha scored only 4 in his debut T20, guiding a sharp, short Bartlett delivery to Australia first-time captain Josh Inglis on the run.
Leg-spinner Adam Zampa clean-bowled Shaheen Shah Afridi and Naseem Shah off successive balls in the last over to complete the rout.
“It was difficult to keep things normal in a seven-over game,” Rizwan said. “Got to give credit to Maxy, his style worked really well.”
The second T20 is in Sydney on Saturday, and the last in Hobart on Monday.
 


ICC Champions Trophy promo confirms Pakistan as host

ICC Champions Trophy promo confirms Pakistan as host
Updated 14 November 2024
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ICC Champions Trophy promo confirms Pakistan as host

ICC Champions Trophy promo confirms Pakistan as host
  • The video comes days after the ICC informed Pakistan that India had declined to play in the country
  • Pakistan has said it is not interested in a hybrid hosting model adopted during last year’s Asia Cup

ISLAMABAD: The International Cricket Council’s promotional video for the Champions Trophy 2025 has portrayed Pakistan as the tournament host, with the global governing body for cricket promising a “thrilling competition” in a statement released on Wednesday.
The video comes just days after the ICC informed Pakistan that India had declined to play tournament matches in the country, prompting Pakistani authorities to rule out the hybrid hosting model adopted last year for the Asia Cup, where India played all its matches in Sri Lanka.
Political tensions between the two countries have led the Indian team to avoid traveling to Pakistan since 2008, with both sides only competing in multination tournaments, including ICC World Cups.
The ICC has not directly commented on the situation, though the promotional video clearly showed visuals communicating that the tournament will be arranged in Pakistan.
It promo displayed an unconventional logo, which the ICC said was designed to be “bold, loud, confident, and fun,” saying the visual identity was digital-first while calling it a dynamic, typographic logo.
“The two weeks of thrilling competition the event is renowned for is reflected in the bold and loud edge to the brand,” ICC Chief Commercial Officer Anurag Dahiya said in a statement. “The new elements are accompanied by the distinctive white jackets which nod to the history of the Champions Trophy and its unique, global appeal.”
The men’s Champions Trophy is set to return in 2025 after about eight years, with Pakistan clinching the title in the 2017 final against India.
The tournament was last held in England.
The Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) has spent millions of dollars on the upgrade of stadiums in Karachi, Lahore and Rawalpindi that are due to host 15 Champions Trophy games scheduled to be held between February 19 and March 9.
 


Bento feeling the heat as UAE look to revisit former glories

Bento feeling the heat as UAE look to revisit former glories
Updated 14 November 2024
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Bento feeling the heat as UAE look to revisit former glories

Bento feeling the heat as UAE look to revisit former glories

ABU DHABI: A familiar crunch point awaits the UAE and their long-held — but stubbornly unfulfilled — dream of a World Cup return.

Hopes of repeating the heroics of 1990 in 2026, so high after the Whites opened the third round of qualifying with a resounding 3-1 victory over double Asian Cup holders Qatar in September, are receding following a dispiriting single point earned from three subsequent outings.

Their impending double-header in Abu Dhabi against Kyrgyzstan (Nov. 14) and Qatar (Nov. 19) will decide much for Group A’s third-placed outfit. With a team this mercurial, the UAE could just as easily pass the halfway stage, hot on the heels of automatic entry for the 2026 World Cup, as be cast aside.

Last month they were valiant in narrow defeat to second-placed Uzbekistan and insipid throughout a stultifying 1-1 home draw against bottom-placed North Korea.

Paulo Bento is the latest manager to feel the heat. His predecessors — Rodolfo Arruabarrena, Edgardo Bauza, Mahdi Ali and others — all came up short. What can the former Portugal and South Korea head coach do differently to ensure a different outcome?

“I am confident, because I saw the way that the guys approached the training sessions and their focus,” Bento told reporters at Mohamed bin Zayed Stadium on Wednesday.

“This, for me, in this moment, is enough. We need to prove this on the pitch. I don’t hide my feelings and my thoughts, they (the players) know the way that we approached the game against North Korea and how we are doing now, it is different.”

The biggest challenge for the 55-year-old is to plot a course without star attacker Ali Saleh, the Al-Wasl talisman who cut Qatar to ribbons in September. Sadly, he is ruled out thanks to injury.

Instead, an engine room also lacking the dynamism of suspended Al-Wahda tyro Abdulla Hamad will be fueled by a recall for Al-Ain’s ceaseless AFC Champions League-holder, Mohammed Abbas, while Sharjah’s versatile Majid Rashid also returns to the fold.

This month’s Ligue 1 breakthrough for Montpellier forward Junior Ndiaye — Dubai-born son of prolific former Al-Nasr attacker Samba N’Diaye — has also been rewarded with a return.

Another naturalized addition is Fleetwood Town utility player Mackenzie Hunt, who provided an assist on his debut at Qatar. Asian football’s rapid improvement leaves question marks about the lasting impact of someone who was a regular on the bench for Premier League club Everton last season but who is yet to find the net in 14 League Two appearances during this one.

Fabio De Lima’s clean bill of health after an enforced absence in October is another welcome boost. With 12 international goals to his name he is three ahead of any other current squad member — namely Caio Canedo, on nine.

It is this lack of lethal players up top that will cause sleepless nights for Bento. Just two goals have been scored in three successive (winless) home qualifiers across the second and third rounds.

The UAE are also Group A’s joint-second lowest scorers, with four strikes in four matches. A cause for concern when just two points separate them, in third, from North Korea in sixth.

Baniyas loanee Fahad Bader, Shabab Al-Ahli Dubai winger Harib Abdalla and club-mate Yahya Al-Ghassani have all yet to find the net in the 2024/25 ADNOC Pro League. Last month’s naturalized debutant, Bruno, is experiencing his most productive start to a domestic campaign, with four goals in seven top-flight games, but he experienced a chastening opening to his international career.

Breakout Asian Cup hero Sultan Adil — with six goals from 11 caps — has not yet kicked a ball in the current campaign.

However, the current crisis has not prompted Bento to turn back the page.

A rapprochement with 85-goal record marksman Ali Mabkhout has stayed off the agenda, despite the 34-year-old’s revitalized vigor at new club Al-Nasr, where five strikes in seven league appearances leave him sitting comfortably as the season’s current lead Emirati goal scorer.

With the number of teams increasing to 48 for the 2026 World Cup, there are greater opportunities for the UAE. The team still feels the burn of 2022, when an agonizing near-miss by a single goal against Australia in the fourth round prevented them from progressing.

This time offers more chances in a new-look fourth round, with the third and fourth-placed finishers pitted against each other. There are also the dreaded inter-confederation play-offs, if required.

Bento’s mission is more than just assembling a winning XI on the pitch. It is to instill the belief that a less-heralded squad can tread where their predecessors could not.

Confidence, however, remains fragile. Wounds from January’s Asian Cup elimination by debutants Tajikistan in a penalty shootout remain fresh. The UAE was further unpicked by qualifying reversals to Iran and Uzbekistan, and an inability to defeat unfancied North Korea still stings.

Recent history, however, provides some encouragement that Bento will eventually prove his worth.

Scathing criticism following quarterfinal failure at the 2019 Asian Cup transformed into glowing tributes when he departed as South Korea’s longest-serving manager, coming on the back of an encouraging 2022 World Cup which included group-stage victory over his native Portugal.

Another redemption arc will secure Bento a cherished spot in UAE sporting lore.


Cricket battles to address its sustainability issues

Cricket battles to address its sustainability issues
Updated 14 November 2024
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Cricket battles to address its sustainability issues

Cricket battles to address its sustainability issues

COP29, the 29th UN annual conference on climate change, opened in Baku, Azerbaijan, on Nov. 11, providing another opportunity for international collaboration.

Last year’s event confirmed that international action to address climate change was way off track against target, and a focus of COP29 is how finance can be made available to developing countries to enable climate action. Achieving agreement is fraught with difficulty.

Given that there is such a gap between promises and action at national level, it should be little surprise that initiatives at a micro level have been piecemeal. In December 2018, the sports sector and the UN launched the Sports for Climate Action Framework. Its objective is to draw together sports organizations, teams, athletes and fans to raise awareness and develop actions to meet the UN goal of achieving climate neutrality by 2050.

The original signatories to the 2018 initiative numbered 17. Today, there are around 200. The list contains only six cricketing bodies — the England and Wales Cricket Board, Marylebone Cricket Club, Melbourne Cricket Club, Gloucestershire Cricket, Surrey Cricket and the Desert Vipers. The latter is one of six franchises in the UAE’s ILT 20 League and has sustainability at the core of its operations.

What also stands out from the current list is the presence of the national, international and world governing bodies of most other sports. Neither cricket’s governing body, the International Cricket Council, nor 11 of its 12 full-member boards are signatories.

The sports sector generates emissions in various ways, including travel, energy and water use, catering, equipment production, pitch preparation, venue construction and in-stadium activity. Cricket is no exception. Hence the lack of commitment by most of its leading bodies to the Sports for Climate Action Framework is disappointing. It appears to reflect a lack of concern about cricket’s contribution to climate issues. There are few obvious external signs amongst the game’s custodians that a coordinated effort is being orchestrated and encouraged.

In fact, there are strong counterviews. Evidence of these erupted in early 2023 following the announcement that Alinta Energy’s sponsorship of Australian cricket, worth $40m over four years, would end in June 2023. Australia’s men’s captain, Pat Cummins, was accused of influencing the decision because of his climate activism.

Cummins is the public face of Cricket for Climate, an organization working to help local clubs install solar panels. He has insisted his personal stance played no part in either Alinta’s or Cricket Australia’s decision. This did not stop vitriolic personal attacks against him, and he was called a “climate catastrophist clown” and accused of “incoherent far-left activism” on Sky News. The channel went further by suggesting: “Sporting bodies need to understand that it’s one thing to alienate sponsors, but they are also alienating fans.”

This is heady stuff. Cummins has dealt with the criticism with dignity, doubling down on his activism. He and his peers have reminded people of the extreme climate conditions which players endured during the ODI World Cup in India in November 2023. These included exceedingly high temperatures, off-the-scale air quality readings and heightened fatigue levels, each of which had adverse impacts.

In some quarters, the riposte is that the players are handsomely rewarded and should keep quiet about societal issues. This puts me in mind of Milton Friedman, the free-market economist, whose stance was that the business of business is business, allowing no room for social responsibility. Cricket is a creator of emissions and waste for which, arguably, it should take responsibility. It is also one of the most vulnerable sports to extreme climate variations. Setting aside apocalyptic visions of stadiums on fire, floods devasting stadiums beyond recovery and unbearable air quality causing death, there is evidence of adverse effects on the game.

One example is the flooding of grounds by rivers bursting their banks in successive years. Worcester is one example, with relocation under consideration. This is ironic, given estimates that an international cricket arena requires around 60,000 liters of water per day.

Cricket seems to react to disasters rather than having plans to prepare for them. It does not appear to be taking steps to anticipate or accept changing trends in weather patterns or putting strategies in place to cope with them. The ECB, to its credit, launched an Environmental Sustainability Plan in November 2023. This has three priority areas — tackling climate change, managing resources and waste, and protecting the natural environment. Some county cricket clubs have sustainability strategies in place.

Within the ECB’s overall plan is an aim to build a more circular economy to replace buy-use-dispose-buy. This applies to equipment and it is in this context that the Desert Vipers’ initiative is so relevant. Their playing kit for the 2025 ILT20 league is produced by a local UAE company, Palmfit, obviating the need for long distance transport and creating local employment opportunities.

The kit uses recycled materials, reducing the need for new ones and lowering carbon footprint by approximately 50 percent. Water-based inks are used, eliminating some harsh chemicals. The kits are printed-on-demand, so made only when needed.

Whether the Indian franchises will follow suit is unknown, but there have been some initiatives in the Indian Premier League. In 2023, Royal Challengers Bangalore wore jerseys made from recycled stadium waste in a match against Rajasthan Royals. However, even with schemes by other franchises, there is little evidence of a coordinated effort across the league.

Cricket is not only a potential victim of a mercurial climate; it is a contributor to environmental degradation. Despite being resource-heavy, it lags behind other sports in calculating its environmental impact, whilst development of sustainability plans is slow compared with other sports.

The reasons for this are not entirely clear but international leadership seems lacking. A balance needs to be achieved between the requirements of development, growth and environmental preservation.

Cricket’s leaders should not expect direction from COP29. They should generate it.


‘Nothing is impossible’ — jiu-jitsu athlete fights back from coma to compete in Abu Dhabi World Masters

‘Nothing is impossible’ — jiu-jitsu athlete fights back from coma to compete in Abu Dhabi World Masters
Updated 14 November 2024
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‘Nothing is impossible’ — jiu-jitsu athlete fights back from coma to compete in Abu Dhabi World Masters

‘Nothing is impossible’ — jiu-jitsu athlete fights back from coma to compete in Abu Dhabi World Masters
  • The 41-year-old’s journey in the sport almost came to an end 4 years ago

ABU DHABI: Swiss jiu-jitsu athlete Gionathan Campana took to the mats at the 16th Abu Dhabi World Masters Jiu-Jitsu Championship on Wednesday, marking an extraordinary comeback from a life-threatening injury that left him in a coma. 

Representing Jiu-Jitsu School Ticino, Campana competed in the Men’s GI/Black/Master 3/85 kg division in the competition, which is currently taking place at Mubadala Arena.

The 41-year-old’s passion for jiu-jitsu started over a decade ago.

“I’ve been practicing martial arts for several years, and around 12 years ago, I started with jiu-jitsu,” he said. “I immediately fell in love with it and continued training, even when I couldn’t find a teacher nearby.”

With no coach available, he trained on his own and eventually earned his brown belt two years ago, followed by his black belt this year.

Four years ago, however, an accident almost ended his sporting career.

“It was a bad injury that put me in a coma,” said Campana.

“When I woke up, I decided that I had to get back in shape and that I wanted to do something great for myself … so I decided to resume my jiu-jitsu training. Above all, I wanted to teach my daughter that nothing is impossible.”

Campana has since returned to competition with a new determination.

“So I am here to participate in my first-ever Abu Dhabi World Professional Jiu-Jitsu Championship,” he said. “Here’s to many more years of participation, hopefully.”