Deadly defense, awesome Otayf: How Al-Hilal snatched their 15th title

Al-Halal may have faltered in the AFC Champions League, but the Riyadh club have been dominant at home.
Updated 13 April 2018
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Deadly defense, awesome Otayf: How Al-Hilal snatched their 15th title

  • Riyadh club won the title on the last day of the season with a 4-1 win over Al-Fateh
  • Accomplished with two coaches over the course of the season

Al-Hilal fans could breathe easier after their side’s 4-1 win over Al-Fateh, a victory that ensured they finished just one point ahead of Jeddah rivals Al-Ahli in a nail-biting finish to an exciting campaign.

Here we take a look back over the season and come up with five reasons why the Riyadh giants won title No. 15.

DOMINANT DEFENCE 

As Omar Khribin showed with a brilliant hat-trick on Thursday, strikers win games. But it is defenses that win titles. Al-Hilal had the best backline and conceded fewer goals than anyone else. Just four times all season did the capital club concede more than one goal in a match. Osama Hawsawi (who announced he was leaving after the game) and Mohammed Jahfali developed a fine partnership, while Yasser Al-Shahrani and Mohammed Al-Hafith are an underrated pair of full backs. Throw in experienced goalkeepers Abdullah Al-Maiouf and Ali Al-Habsi and it is clear to see why opposition attacks found breaking Al-Hilal down a tough task.

RAMON DIAZ

It may seem strange to praise a manager who got his marching orders midway through the season, but there is little doubt that without the Argentine in the dugout Al-Hilal fans would not be celebrating right now. Diaz was sacked after defeat to Esteghlal in the AFC Champions League. The Asian campaign was disappointing, but domestically all was fine and Al-Hilal were on a nine-game unbeaten run in the league at the time he departed. Diaz had won 30 out of 41 games and had the team well organized and disciplined. Assistant Juan Brown stepped in for the final five games of the season and deserved praise for getting the team over the line — but the hard work had already been done.

STRENGTH IN DEPTH

Champions normally have at least one striker at or near the top of the goalscoring charts. Not so this season with Al-Hilal. If you scan the top 15 scorers in the league, you will not find one player from the Riyadh giants. Injuries to Carlos Eduardo and Omar Khribin, the side’s usual go-to pair for goals, should have put paid to their side’s title chances. But in their absence the rest of the team stepped up. The defense chipped in with seven goals, the midfield did its bit and while new attacking signings such as Gelmin Rivas, Ezequiel Cerutti and Achraf Bencharki did not exactly set the place alight, they contributed just enough to keep the points column ticking over.


ABDULLAH OTAYF


It is inevitable that those who score the goals get the headlines, but Otayf was the man who made Al-Hilal tick. He is the kind of player every title-winning team needs — an unassuming get-to-it and do-the-job midfielder. Underrated he did the simple things very well, worked hard to get possession, kept it and then gave it to those with a nose for goal. He loves to pull the strings from deep and has did so time and time again this season.

EARLY ADVANTAGE OVER AL-AHLI


Usually it is hard to point to one game over the course of a long season and say that it the key moment of the campaign. Not so this time. With just a point separating Al-Hilal and Al Ahli by the season’s final whistle, it is clear the meetings between them were crucial. While last week’s clash ended 0-0, the first meeting back in December saw Al-Hilal claim victory with a 2-0 win. Salem Al-Dawsari, now on loan at Villarreal in Spain, bagged both goals in the second half to give the Boss the advantage in the title race. It was one they did not relinquish.


Young future stars of Saudi golf enjoy a moment alongside the big names at LIV Golf Riyadh

Updated 07 February 2026
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Young future stars of Saudi golf enjoy a moment alongside the big names at LIV Golf Riyadh

  • Participants in ROSHN Rising Stars program to develop golfing talent in the Kingdom play friendly competition at Riyadh Golf Club before round 3 of the season opener tees off
  • ‘Golf is such a fundamental sport for development … The values of golf can be correlated to the values of society: confidence, resilience and integrity,’ says LIV Golf’s Jake Jones

RIYADH: While much of the spotlight during LIV Golf’s 2026 season opener in Riyadh this week has of course been on the return of some of the sport’s biggest names for the new campaign, a new generation of Saudi golfers is also quietly taking its own first steps into the game.

Participants in the ROSHN Rising Stars program, an initiative designed to introduce and develop young golfing talent across the Kingdom, gathered at Riyadh Golf Club on Friday afternoon for a friendly competition a few hours before the third round of the main event teed off under the lights.

“The real focus is getting golf into the lives of young people in the Kingdom,” Jake Jones, LIV Golf’s senior vice president of impact and sustainability told Arab News as the young golfers took to the course under cloudy skies.

“We wanted to do something a little bit different, something sustained, with a long-term outcome, and that’s how this program was created.”

The program runs for 20 weeks, during which the participants receive weekly coaching and instruction sessions at Riyadh Golf Club from Golf Saudi professionals.

“This takes them from never having held a golf club before to reaching a point where they’ve now played in a competition,” Jones said.

The fact that the LIV Golf season opens in Riyadh provides another key benefit for the participants, as they get to experience the professional game up close, and this access to world-class players and events forms a key part of their journey.

“We give them exposure to our LIV Golf events, here and internationally,” Jones added.

Beyond this, and teaching people how to play the game, the program offers participants insights into the wider aspects of the world of golf, including career opportunities.

“They’ve had behind-the-scenes tours, pitch-and-putt sessions, long-drive competitions and visits to places like the media center,” Jones said. “It’s about showing them what it’s like not just to play golf, but work in the sport as well.”

Friday’s event in Riyadh marked the conclusion of the 20-week program for its participants.

“Today is really the celebration point,” Jones said. “We’re at the graduation phase of this journey, where they’ll compete in a three-hole challenge. We then crown a winner and celebrate with them back at the ROSHN Fan Village.”

As golf continues to grow in popularity in the region, Jones believes initiatives such as Rising Stars will have a lasting effect on the development of next generation of players.

“Golf is such a fundamental sport for development; it’s not just about physical activity and having fun,” he said. “The values of golf can be correlated to the values of society: confidence, resilience and integrity.

“Imagine playing golf and you miss the ball or you end up in the sand; you have to get back up and try again. You block the noise around you and focus on the ball to make the right shot.”

Jones highlighted in particular the importance of integrity as one of golf’s defining characteristics, and how that can help shape personal development.

“The rules of golf are reliant on you following them,” he said. “That sense of honesty and self-discipline is something young players can carry beyond the course” into the roles they play in their communities, societies and countries.

“The role that golf can have with young people in Saudi Arabia is actually another layer of baking in those core societal skills, to ensure that they are fit and robust for the future,” Jones added.

This is particularly important given the youthful nature of the Saudi population, more than half of which is under the age of 30, he said, and they now have the chance to benefit from golf in one way or another.

“Golf is now another avenue that they can explore. Whether it’s playing, working in the sport or simply finding a community, we want to give them another reason to get excited.

“We believe that golf can do all of that and, hopefully, it can spark a lasting passion among the Saudi youth.”