Barca beat Real Sociedad to top Liga as Yamal returns

Barca beat Real Sociedad to top Liga as Yamal returns
Barcelona's Polish forward #09 Robert Lewandowski fights for the ball with Real Sociedad's Croatian defender #16 Duje Caleta Car during the Spanish league football match between FC Barcelona and Real Sociedad at the Estadi Olimpic Lluis Companys in Barcelona on September 28, 2025. (AFP)
Short Url
Updated 28 September 2025
Follow

Barca beat Real Sociedad to top Liga as Yamal returns

Barca beat Real Sociedad to top Liga as Yamal returns
  • Alvaro Odriozola gave Real Sociedad the lead against the run of play in the first half but Jules Kounde headed the Spanish champions level

BARCELONA: Lamine Yamal returned from injury to help Barcelona beat Real Sociedad 2-1 on Sunday and move top of La Liga by one point.
After Real Madrid were thrashed 5-2 by rivals Atletico Madrid in a derby on Saturday, Hansi Flick’s side had the chance to claim pole position above Xabi Alonso’s side.
Alvaro Odriozola gave Real Sociedad the lead against the run of play in the first half but Jules Kounde headed the Spanish champions level.
Yamal, who missed the last four games with a groin injury, created the winner for Robert Lewandowski just moments after coming on as a second-half substitute.
“I’m very happy for (Yamal), very pleased that he’s back on the pitch because we’re going to need him,” Kounde told Movistar.
Barcelona held the game at the Olympic stadium, where they have played for the last two seasons, after the city council refused them a permit to reopen their Camp Nou home earlier in the week.
Flick handed 17-year-old attacking midfielder Dro Fernandez his debut, also starting Roony Bardghji on the right wing and bringing in veteran Wojciech Szczesny for injured goalkeeper Joan Garcia.
Barcelona dominated the ball in the first half but found it hard to beat Real Sociedad goalkeeper Alex Remiro.
The Spain international made a fine save to deny Marcus Rashford in the early stages.
On loan from Manchester United, Rashford is finding his footing at Barca and played a superb through ball for Lewandowski, who fired across the face of goal from a tight angle.
Real Sociedad hit Barca with a sharp counter-attack to open the scoring after 31 minutes.
Former Real Madrid defender Odriozola applied the finishing touch to Ander Barrenetxea’s cross.
Barcelona stepped up a gear and found Remiro in their way again, with the goalkeeper superbly  palming away a Kounde cross which was deflected toward his goal.
Remiro also tipped a Bardghji effort away for a corner, which led to Barcelona’s equalizer.
Rashford, who provided an assist from a corner against Real Oviedo in midweek, whipped it to the near post, where Kounde powered home a header.

- Yamal’s return -

Flick replaced Dro with Dani Olmo at half-time and also brought on Yamal before the hour mark, after the teenager recovered from his groin issue.
Voted the second best player in the world at the Ballon d’Or gala on Monday, Yamal made an instant impact.
The 18-year-old burst into the box and crossed for Lewandowski to head home off the post, just over a minute after his introduction.
Szczesny made a good save from Oyarzabal as La Real gave Barcelona a couple of scares, while Remiro denied Rashford and Olmo with two more good saves.
The game grew increasingly chaotic and both sides hit the crossbar in quick succession.
Kounde, daydreaming in midfield, was robbed and Real Sociedad worked the ball to Takefusa Kubo, who crashed a shot against the woodwork.
Then Barcelona broke away and Ferran Torres teed up Lewandowski, who battered the crossbar when well placed to put the game to bed, but the hosts were not punished.
“It was a difficult game, I didn’t like our last 25 minutes, we suffered too much,” added Kounde.
“The first 70 minutes I think were quite good, we could have scored more than two... but I didn’t like how it ended.”
Barcelona host Paris Saint-Germain in the Champions League on Wednesday, also at the Olympic stadium.
Real Sociedad have had a tough start to the season, sitting 17th, but have been improving and will take heart from the pressure they put Barca under.
“Despite the defeat I’m proud of the team’s work,” said Odriozola. “It’s been a tough start and today we showed up.”


Saudi judoka Hessah Almelaiki’s journey from ‘curiosity’ to gold

Saudi judoka Hessah Almelaiki’s journey from ‘curiosity’ to gold
Updated 07 November 2025
Follow

Saudi judoka Hessah Almelaiki’s journey from ‘curiosity’ to gold

Saudi judoka Hessah Almelaiki’s journey from ‘curiosity’ to gold
  • Criminology researcher won gold at the 2025 Asian Open in Amman

ALKHOBAR: What began as “curiosity” at university has turned into a golden future for Hessah Almelaiki.

When the young Saudi first stepped onto a judo mat in 2018, she never imagined she would one day stand on a podium holding the Kingdom’s flag, with a gold medal around her neck.

“I joined a judo class out of curiosity,” Almelaiki said. “But from the first session, I was captivated by its balance between strength, strategy, and respect. Judo teaches you to fall, learn, and rise stronger every time.”

That simple, yet profound, philosophy has guided her journey from student to champion, from a young woman discovering herself to a national athlete symbolizing Saudi women’s growing presence in global sports.

The turning point came when Almelaiki represented Saudi Arabia for the first time on an international stage.

“Standing there with my country’s flag on my back, that was it,” she said. “It gave me purpose. I realized I wasn’t just fighting for myself but for every Saudi woman who dreams of competing.”

From that moment, she committed to professional training and a disciplined routine of early morning drills, tactical analysis, and strength sessions.

Her determination paid off in Amman, Jordan, in 2025, where she clinched the gold medal at the Asian Open in the under-52 kg category, marking one of the most significant milestones for Saudi women’s judo.

“When I stood on the podium and heard my country’s name announced, I remembered every injury, every moment of doubt, every night I pushed through exhaustion,” she said.

For her, that victory represented the resilience of Saudi women and the nation’s rapid evolution in sports under Vision 2030. “That medal wasn’t just mine,” she added. “It was for every woman proving her place in international arenas.”

Competing in martial arts as a Saudi woman once came with cultural challenges and limited resources.

“Early on, opportunities and facilities were rare,” Almelaiki recalled. “Traveling abroad for training meant adjusting to new cultures, languages, and competitors with far more experience.”

Instead of letting obstacles define her, she turned them into motivation. “Every challenge became a reason to push harder,” she said. “The support from my federation, coaches, and family gave me the strength to keep going.”

Her perseverance silenced doubts and earned her respect on the international circuit, where she is recognized for her composure, tactical precision, and relentless drive.

Outside competition, Almelaiki maintains the same discipline in her academic life. She is pursuing a master’s in criminology, a field she says complements her athletic mindset.

“Both judo and criminology demand focus, patience, and analysis,” she explained. “In judo, you study your opponent’s movements. In criminology, you study human behavior. Both require balance between intellect and instinct.”

She organizes her days with near-military precision, training at dawn, attending lectures by day, and studying late into the night. “Being a student-athlete has made me more resilient and grounded,” she said.

For Almelaiki, her success is not just about medals. “I want every Saudi girl watching to know that opportunity exists,” she said. “That she can wear the gi, step on the tatami, and win, not just in sports, but in life.”

Her journey reflects the broader transformation unfolding across Saudi Arabia, where women are taking leading roles in fields once closed to them.

“The next generation will go further than us,” she said confidently. “My role is to make sure they have a path to walk on, one built with belief and hard work.”

Almelaiki views judo as a lifelong mission. “It’s a way of thinking,” she said. “Judo teaches you humility, respect, and patience. You learn to control not only your opponent but also yourself.”

Her goals now go beyond personal achievement and representing the Kingdom in international competitions. She aims to establish training programs for Saudi youth and promote female participation in combat sports.

“I carry my country in every match,” she said. “That’s my greatest honor.”