Brwa Nouri's journey means Ostersunds and Iraq star is unfazed about facing Arsenal

Brwa Nouri has not had a simple journey to top-level European football, but he is determined to enjoy the challenge of facing Mesut Ozil and Co.
Updated 15 February 2018
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Brwa Nouri's journey means Ostersunds and Iraq star is unfazed about facing Arsenal

LONDON: Brwa Nouri might not yet be well known among European football fans, but the Iraqi midfielder is central to one of the continent’s greatest sporting stories of modern times: The remarkable rise of Sweden’s Ostersunds FK.
Next week, Nouri will captain the provincial outfit as they host Premier League heavyweights Arsenal in the Europa League Round of 32. Few will give Ostersunds much chance of getting past Peter Cech and Co, but having upset the odds to become the first Swedish team in a decade to reach the knockout rounds of European competition, Nouri is unfazed about lining up against some of his soccer heroes.
“These are players you look at every Saturday, so you know them and now we get the chance to play face to face, it’s a dream come true,” Nouri, 31, told Arab News in an exclusive interview.
“But when the referee blows his whistle, it’s a game, it’s a ball and it’s a pitch and you gotta fight and not think about that.”
Temperatures for the evening kick-off at the 8,466-capacity Jämtkraft Arena will likely be around minus 12 degrees Celsius, conditions that Arsenal’s multimillionaires will likely find uncomfortable, yet Nouri was unsure if playing at home first will be advantageous.
“We hate it (too),” said Nouri.
“I’m not used to playing these home and away ties. For us, it’s just a great opportunity. There’s gonna be an incredible atmosphere.”
The game will be only Ostersunds’ second of 2018 following today’s Cup match against Trelleborg, but Nouri was philosophical about his team’s probable lack of match sharpness.
“It’s not the best thing we aren’t midway in the season, but we’ll be preparing well and had some games at our (Spanish training) camp against local teams and we’ll have a competitive game before, so it’s nothing really to complain about,” he said.

IRAQI DIASPORA
Nouri was born to Iraqi Kurdish parents in Iran, the family fleeing from the Iraqi city of Sulaymaniyah around the time of Saddam Hussein’s genocidal Anfal campaign, which murdered at least 100,000 Iraqi Kurds.
The family then reached Sweden when Nouri was an infant. He signed as a youngster to Stockholm giants AIK and made a handful of senior appearances for the club as well as winning international caps for Sweden at under-17 and under-19 level.
A precociously talented attacking midfielder, he gained valuable experience on loan at lower- league clubs and a promising career beckoned, but off-field problems led AIK to release Nouri.
He then signed for Dalkurd FF in 2009, a club founded just five years earlier by members of the Kurdish diaspora and which was then in Sweden’s fourth tier. Nouri helped the club win promotion in his first season and averaged a goal roughly every three games during his five-year stint there.
Those achievements drew the attention of Graham Potter, the English coach of Ostersunds FK. Appointed for the 2011 season with the club languishing in Sweden’s fourth division, Potter had enjoyed a nomadic career as a full-back, mostly in England’s lower leagues before retiring in 2005 to complete university studies in social sciences, emotional intelligence and leadership.
Those skills proved vital as he recruited an unlikely band of players for Ostersunds, located in a snow-swept town of 50,000 inhabitants 550 kilometers north of Stockholm that drew crowds of around 1,000 to its home matches.
Often from immigrant backgrounds and with a point to prove after failing to make it at bigger clubs, Potter galvanized his players to extraordinary effect, winning successive promotions in his first two seasons in charge.
Nouri joined Ostersunds for the team’s debut season in the second tier in 2014. A third promotion followed in 2015 to take Ostersunds into the top flight as Potter converted Nouri to a holding midfielder to brilliant effect.
Silverware soon followed as Nouri lifted the 2016-17 Swedish Cup following Ostersunds’ 4-1 hammering of 13-time national champions Norrköping in the final. He was effusive in his praise for Potter, who has spent just €75,000 ($91,000) on transfers, according to transfermrkt.com, roughly what Arsenal’s Mesut Özil earns over a long weekend.
“For me he’s fundamental, for the team he’s fundamental, for the club he’s fundamental,” said Nouri.
“He’s the heart and the core of the club. He’s built everything, the environment, the philosophy, the way he sees things and has brought people and characters that will benefit him and benefit us. I’m really happy to work with him and learn a lot.”

EUROPA LEAGUE
Ostersunds’ cup victory earned them a Europa League second-qualifying-round tie against Turkey’s Galatasary and a 2-0 home victory in the first leg gave Ostersunds hope of securing an upset, despite what awaited them in Istanbul.
“After we won the first game it was like ‘OK, we might do something here,’” Nouri said.
“We went to play at probably the most horrible environment in all European football, which for a small team like us was amazing.”
Before the tie, Nouri received threats on social media and in Istanbul the home crowd taunted him for being a Kurd, but he was unfazed, slotting home a 60th-minute penalty to give Ostersunds an unassailable 3-0 aggregate lead.
Recalling the moments before he struck that spot kick, Nouri said: “I was thinking not to think, because if I started to think then maybe I’d miss this, then they’d get energy and get a goal and it’s not good. I was just pretty sure that I was gonna make the shot.”
He also scored away to Greece’s PAOK in another qualifier as the club reached the tournament group stage and then netted again in a 1-0 home win over Hertha Berlin as Ostersunds finished joint top in their section alongside Spain’s Athletic Bilbao.
“It’s hard to compare,” said Nouri when asked if that goal in Istanbul was his favorite moment of Ostersunds’ European run.
“Every goal I scored was an incredible feeling, but if I had to say something, probably the Galatasaray meant the most, because it was a big game, it was just incredible. The volume of the crowd was so intense that you felt it inside your core, so to make them quiet was quite a feeling.”
Having finished fifth last year in their second season in Sweden’s top flight, Nouri believes Ostersunds can be league champions this term.
“Our aim is to win. That’s our potential. We won’t settle until we do, and then when we’ve done it we wanna do it again,” added Nouri.
“Like right now, we qualified for the Europa League, we went through to last 32, which is amazing, but the bigger dream is to win the league, play in the Champions League. That’s what we’re working for. Even though we’re playing Arsenal, and we’re really satisfied, we’re not finished.”

‘IT WAS LIKE NOTHING YOU CAN IMAGINE’ — NOURI’S IRAQ EXPERIENCE
Bwra Nouri is among 15 players from Iraq’s diaspora who were spotted by a fans’ website and brought to the attention of the national team, making his international debut in a 0-0 draw against Jordan in 2016.
Last year, FIFA again permitted Iraq to host home friendly internationals and Nouri scored in the country’s second game since the ban was lifted, a 2-1 victory over Kenya in Basra in front of nearly 30,000 ecstatic supporters.
“It was like nothing you can imagine, incredible to play in your home country, in front of the home fans for the first time,” said Nouri. “Then to get the chance to score a goal was a feeling I can’t really explain. I wish more of those kinds of opportunities happen for me.”
Iraq were unbeaten in the recent Gulf Cup, exiting on penalties in the semifinals to the UAE, and took eight points from their last five World Cup 2018 qualifiers against Asian heavyweights Japan, Australia and Saudi Arabia, plus Thailand and the UAE. Those results along with the appointment of the widely admired Basim Qasim as coach, have made fans and players hopeful of Iraq going far in next January’s Asian Cup.
“We need consistency, we need him (Qasim) to be there for a while, to work with the group, to get to know the players and for us to learn how to play (his style),” said Nouri. “We have a good team with a lot of good players. If we keep the same coach, we can build a foundation and the days to come might be very positive for Iraq.”
Nouri does not speak Arabic, but said it had been straightforward to assimilate into the Iraqi squad where other foreign-based players include US-based playmaker Justin Meram, who was born in Michigan to Iraqi Chaldean parents.
“There’s diversity in Iraq, so I didn’t think it was hard,” said Nouri. “My upbringing is Sweden, so there are some differences, but to integrate with the players, with the team, no problem at all.”


Suryakumar hits ton as Mumbai dent Hyderabad’s play-off push

Updated 50 min 16 sec ago
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Suryakumar hits ton as Mumbai dent Hyderabad’s play-off push

  • Chasing 174 for victory, Mumbai slipped to 31-3 before Suryakumar Yadav put on an unbeaten stand of 143 with Tilak Varma to achieve the target
  • Hyderabad, led by Pat Cummins, stay fourth in the table but their fifth loss and a big one could hurt their play-off chances

MUMBAI: Suryakumar Yadav hit an unbeaten 102 to lead Mumbai Indians to a crushing seven-wicket win over Sunrisers Hyderabad on Monday as teams jostle for a play-off berth in the IPL.
Chasing 174 for victory, Mumbai slipped to 31-3 before Suryakumar put on an unbeaten stand of 143 with Tilak Varma to achieve the target with 16 balls to spare at their home Wankhede Stadium.
Suryakumar hit the winning six, which also raised his second IPL ton in 51 balls and comes as a welcome sign for India ahead of the T20 World Cup in June in the West Indies and the United States.
However the win for five-time winners Mumbai, placed ninth in the 10-team table, could be late in a tournament fast moving toward its business end.
Hyderabad, led by Pat Cummins, stay fourth in the table but their fifth loss and a big one could hurt their play-off chances.
Hyderabad need to win two of their remaining three matches to make the play-offs as they remain locked at 12 points with third-placed Chennai Super Kings and Lucknow Super Giants at fifth.
The top four teams will make the play-offs with the final on May 26 in Chennai.
Former champions Hyderabad posted 173-8 courtesy of Travis Head’s 48 and an unbeaten 17-ball 35 by lower-order batter Cummins after being invited to bat first.
The left-handed Head gave the team a brisk start with his 30-ball knock before his departure in the 11th over and Hyderabad lost their way with regular wickets.
Skipper Hardik Pandya spinner Piyush Chawla took three wickets each to rattle the opposition middle and lower-order as Hyderabad slipped to 136-8 in 17 overs.
But number nine Cummins had other ideas as the Australian Test and ODI captain hit back in the final three overs and put on an unbeaten stand of 37 off 19 balls with Sanvir Singh.
The batting effort inspired the team and fast bowlers came roaring to reduce Mumbai to 31-3 including the key wicket of Rohit Sharma, out caught behind for four off Cummins.
Suryakumar soon took charge with his attacking batting as he raised his 50 in 30 balls and hammered the opposition bowling with 12 fours and six sixes.
The left-handed Varma made 37 and enjoyed Suryakumar’s blitz from the other end.


FIA President Ben Sulayem welcomes Trump to Miami Grand Prix

Updated 06 May 2024
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FIA President Ben Sulayem welcomes Trump to Miami Grand Prix

  • The former US president witnessed maiden Formula 1 win for McLaren’s Lando Norris

MIAMI: Former US president Donald Trump was welcomed to the Miami Grand Prix by FIA President Mohammed Ben Sulayem, where he saw McLaren’s Lando Norris notch up his first Formula 1 victory.

Sunday’s race saw British driver Norris take the checkered flag from three-time world champion Max Verstappen in the Red Bull Racing car. Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc came third.

Trump, along with a number of famous athletes and other celebrities, delighted the audience by engaging with fans and attendees. He was also invited behind the scenes to tour the McLaren pit garage accompanied by the team’s CEO, American Zak Brown.

A spokesman for the Miami Grand Prix said the race weekend had sold out, with more than 275,000 fans in attendance to witness the high-octane atmosphere and exciting result.


Sandhagen to face Nurmagomedov at UFC fight night in Abu Dhabi

Updated 06 May 2024
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Sandhagen to face Nurmagomedov at UFC fight night in Abu Dhabi

  • The event will take place at the Etihad Arena on Aug 3

ABU DHABI: UFC has announced that its return to Abu Dhabi will see No. 2 ranked bantamweight Cory Sandhagen face No. 9 ranked Umar Nurmagomedov on Saturday, Aug. 3 at Etihad Arena.

Tickets for the event, held in partnership with the Department of Culture and Tourism — Abu Dhabi go on sale from on Tuesday, May 7

Sandhagen, with a record of 17-4 and fighting out of Aurora, Colorado, returns to the UAE capital to cement his status as top contender in the bantamweight division. The Colorado native boasts wins over Rob Font, Chito Vera, and soon-to-be UFC Hall of Famer Frankie Edgar. He now hopes for a convincing win over rising star Nurmagomedov to make his case for a title shot.

Nurmagomedov, 17-0, fighting out of Chelyabinsk, Russia, looks to put the division on notice by taking out a top-ranked opponent and making his first Octagon appearance in Abu Dhabi. He made his mark in the division after delivering dominant performances over Raoni Barcelos, Brian Kelleher and Sergey Morozov.

Now, he sets his sights on securing the biggest win of his career by getting his hand raised against Sandhagen.


Al-Itttihad fined $37,000 for King’s Cup misconduct

Updated 06 May 2024
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Al-Itttihad fined $37,000 for King’s Cup misconduct

  • The reigning Saudi Pro League champions lost 2-1 to Al-Hilal last week in the semifinals of the Kingdom’s renowned competition

RIYADH: Al-Ittihad Football Club have been fined $37,000 (SR140,000) for misconduct by players and fans in its recent 2-1 defeat by Al-Hilal in the semi-final of the King’s Cup.

A statement issued by the Saudi Arabian Football Federation’s disciplinary and ethics committee said Abderrazak Hamdallah and Saad Al-Mousa were each fined around $5,300 for not fulfilling their post-match media duties.

The committee also imposed a fine of $27,000 on the Jeddah club after fans threw bottles at opposition players from the stands. Nobody was harmed as a result of the incidents. 

The authorities stressed that the three decisions are not subject to appeal.


Mitchell rallies Cavs for series-clinching Game 7 win over Magic

Updated 06 May 2024
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Mitchell rallies Cavs for series-clinching Game 7 win over Magic

  • Cavs move on to second round a year after a stinging first-round loss to the New York Knicks
  • The Celtics will host Game 1 of their Eastern Conference semifinal series on Tuesday

LOS ANGELES: Donovan Mitchell and the Cleveland Cavaliers silenced the young guns of Orlando, beating the Magic 106-94 in Game 7 of their NBA playoffs first-round series Sunday to book a meeting with Eastern Conference top seeds Boston.

It was another magisterial performance from Mitchell, who scored 39 points two days after pouring in 50 in the Cavs’ Game 6 defeat.

This time he had plenty of scoring support from teammates as the Cavs erased an 18-point second-quarter deficit to clinch a series in which the home team won every game.

Caris LeVert scored 15 points off the bench and Max Strus scored 11 of his 13 points in the third quarter, when the Cavs outscored the Magic 33-15 to take charge.

Evan Mobley scored 11 points with 16 rebounds and five blocked shots and Darius Garland chipped in 12 points to help Cleveland withstand a 38-point performance from Paolo Banchero.

The Cavs, with starting center Jarrett Allen sidelined a third straight game with bruised ribs, moved on to the second round a year after a stinging first-round loss to the New York Knicks.

“I didn’t want to go home,” Mitchell said of the mindset that saw him score 17 points in the third quarter as he virtually willed Cleveland to the lead.

The Magic delivered a strong first punch, Banchero scoring 10 points in the first period as Orlando grabbed a 24-18.

In the face of Orlando’s suffocating defense the Cavs connected on just six of 22 shots in the first quarter and didn’t make a three-pointer until Sam Merrill drilled one midway through the second quarter.

The Magic pushed their lead to as many as 18 points in the second quarter before the Cavs clawed back to cut the lead to single digits.

Banchero’s layup in the closing seconds of the first half saw Orlando take a 10-point lead into the break, but momentum was on Cleveland’s side and they overwhelmed the Magic in the third.

“I didn’t feel our confidence waver much, even when we had 18 points in the first quarter,” Mitchell said.

“They came out and jumped on us,” he added, saying the key was for the Cavs “to respond the way we did, keep plugging, just keep chipping away.”

Mitchell, again relentless in the paint, tied it at 64-64 with a floater and LeVert drained a pair of free throws to give the Cavs their first lead since the first quarter.

Strus hit back-to-back three-pointers as Cleveland built a 76-68 lead going into the final period.

The Cavs pushed their advantage to 14 points in the final frame, fans chanting “We want Boston” as the final minutes ticked off.

The Celtics will host Game 1 of their Eastern Conference semifinal series on Tuesday, and Mitchell vowed the Cavaliers will be ready for the team that posted the best record in the regular season.

“We didn’t make the group we made just to win the first round,” he said. “We accomplished one goal. Now we have to do it again.”

It was a crushing end to a strong season for the Magic, collectively the second-youngest team in the playoffs behind the Oklahoma City Thunder.

Wendell Carter Jr. scored 13 points and Jalen Suggs added 10 for the Magic, but Franz Wagner was held to just six as Orlando remained in search of a first playoff series victory since 2010.

Mitchell heaped praise 21-year-old Banchero, the top pick in the 2022 draft.

Banchero himself said the Magic’s fight back from 0-2 down in the series to force game seven “just shows where we’re headed.”