Three key duels in the Champions League final between Real Madrid and Liverpool

The contributions of Ronaldo and Salah could shape the final. (AFP/Getty Images)
Updated 26 May 2018
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Three key duels in the Champions League final between Real Madrid and Liverpool

  • Marcelo will have to find a way to stop Salah
  • Ronaldo will come up against the mountainous van Dijk

The two highest scoring sides in this season's Champions League face off for the title when defending champions Real Madrid and Liverpool go head-to-head in Kiev on Saturday. With goals seemingly guaranteed in the Ukrainian capital, we look at the key matchups where the game could be won and lost.

Virgil van Dijk vs. Cristiano Ronaldo

Ronaldo is looking to join an esteemed group of 10 players to win five European Cups by scoring in his fourth separate final.
After a slow start to the season, the World Player of the Year has been in stunning form since the turn of the year, scoring 30 goals in 23 appearances for club and country in 2018.
Ronaldo leads the Champions League goalscorers charts for the sixth consecutive season with 15, but will come up against the world's most expensive defender in £75 million ($100 million) Dutchman Virgil van Dijk in Kiev.
Van Dijk already looks worth the massive price Liverpool paid Southampton for his services in January, as much for the improvement he has inspired in those around him as his own performances.
"I feel also personally much more confident when you know you have a really good partner next to you," said Liverpool centre-back Dejan Lovren.
"He's a leader, he takes control," added right-back Trent Alexander-Arnold. "He's really got authority."

Mohamed Salah vs. Marcelo

Salah has been the star turn of Liverpool's season, scoring 44 goals in his debut season at Anfield to plunder a series of individual Player of the Year awards.
The Egyptian should get plenty of space to showcase his blistering pace and new-found calm in front of goal in the space normally left unoccupied by Madrid's cavalier left-back Marcelo.
Salah exploited the gaps left by the Brazilian on numerous occasions when Roma were eliminated by Madrid from the Champions League two seasons ago, when Salah lacked the killer finishing touch he has demonstrated this season to take his chances.
Bayern Munich right-back Joshua Kimmich scored in both legs of this season's semi-final against Real with Marcelo caught out of position.
However, the Madrid vice-captain, now in his 11th year at the Bernabeu, makes up for his defensive liabilities by bombing forward at every opportunity to wreak havoc at the other end.
"I know exactly how I have to play," insisted Marcelo on Friday.
The flying full-back has scored against Paris Saint-Germain, Juventus and Bayern on route to the final, and also has plenty of positive experience in Champions League finals having netted in 2014 and 2016, in a penalty shootout, against Atletico Madrid.

Roberto Firmino vs. Sergio Ramos

Overshadowed by Salah's sensational season, Firmino also has 10 Champions League goals to his name this season and is the key starting point for Jurgen Klopp's pressing game.
"He's not bothered about hard work, which is another important thing," said Klopp when Firmino recently extended his contract to 2023. "For an offensive player that is pretty rare in world football."
Described as a cross between a goalscoring number nine and creative number 10 by Brazil coach Tite, Liverpool will hope Firmino's movement can drag another Madrid Champions League specialist in Ramos out of position.
Madrid captain Ramos embodies this Real side as he tends to save his best for the big occasion.
The Spaniard started Real's recent run of European dominance with a stoppage time equaliser against Atletico in the 2014 final and also scored against Real's local rivals two years later in another all-Madrid showpiece.


UAE golden boy Yahya Alghassani hoping to pay it forward for country’s young footballers

Updated 10 sec ago
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UAE golden boy Yahya Alghassani hoping to pay it forward for country’s young footballers

  • The Shabab Al-Ahli forward spoke to Arab News about captaining his country at the Arab Cup, childhood inspirations, challenges ahead and helping young Emirati talent blossom

DUBAI: On Nov. 6 this year, Omar Abdulrahman, the golden boy of Emirati football during the 2010s, announced his retirement at the age of 34, to little fanfare.

It was a somewhat sad end for one of the UAE’s great talents, one whose last five years as professional were ruined by injuries.

It may have taken a few years for the Whites to have a new hero on the pitch, but in Yahya Alghassani, 27, the UAE finally have one of their own to take the national team forward.

The Shabab Al-Ahli star recently captained the UAE in two matches at the 2025 FIFA Arab Cup in Qatar and is looking increasingly at ease as the face of Emirati football — on and off the pitch.

Alghassani has in recent years stepped up from being one of the UAE national team’s great hopes to being one of the senior players. With several nationalized foreign superstars vying for places in the squad, that is no mean feat.

Now he is paying it forward. In December, after the Arab Cup, Alghassani hosted a youth tournament to encourage more youngsters to take up a career in football, and indeed to find the country’s newest gem.

“When I was young we used to get a lot of opportunities to show off our talents,” he said at the launch of the Talent Cup at Dubai Police Club Stadium.

“But as the years went by, these opportunities decreased. The avenues to show off our talents decreased. Of course, there should be someone to help them show off (and) display their skills.”

“These kids need outlets for their energy, so instead of wasting it in the wrong places, they could release it via football,” Alghassani added.

“I know football, and I was raised in that environment, so I know what it means to them and what it means to get the same competitions to play in, to in the same way have someone discover their talents.

“All of what we’re doing is for the sake of the kids. In the end we need to give back everything to the society.”

For the more outstanding players present, Alghassani sees real opportunities to find a pathway into the professional game.

“In this competition, I insisted that there be scouts present, both from the local clubs and international ones, especial from the UK. Maybe in the summer they will have special trials for some of these best players, they will get opportunities to play there.”

“And the local coaches will be able to scout freely, I don’t interfere in these matters,” he said. “From my side, if I see a good player, a player who deserves to be in a local team, I will help him. All of us are here to help the local players.”

With the help of several entities, Alghassani’s work extends beyond the training pitch. “One of the things I like to be involved in is charity work.” he said.

“I now work with Al-Jalila Foundation, who provide me with a lot of support. I am also an ambassador for Dubai Sports Council, and I am proud to work with such government organizations.”

“There are companies like Red Bull and Whoop that support me personally, as well as Nike. They all help me and I in turn provide all my resources to help the kids so that they receive the highest level of training and get the best chance of being discovered.”

Alghassani remembers those who helped him become the player he is today. “I used to train at Al-Furjan before joining Al-Ahli (now Shabab Al-Ahli). I was 14 years old.

“To be honest, progress wasn’t easy, but there were a lot of opportunities to show your talent. Al-Furjan has somewhat disappeared now, so we are trying to bring it back. This is a positive thing for the community.”

He also credits his brothers for being an inspiration and regrets that they did not become professional footballers. “But I was lucky that God helped me to make it, so in the end I have to give back to the community. This is the most important thing for me.”

As Alghassani took his first steps in club football, his inspirations where two of the UAE’s most prominent members of the Golden Generation that blossomed under Emirati Mahdi Ali.

“Ali Mabkhout and Amoory (Omar Abdulrahman),” he said without hesitation.

“They were very passionate about their way of playing, their way of thinking, their way of being in the field. I was fortunate to play with them for a while, and I hope to play with them again. Especially Omar Abdulrahman.”

The former Al-Ain, Al-Jazira, Shabab Al-Ahli and Al-Wasl superstar may have officially retired, but Alghassani believes there could still be one final twist in his tale.

“Amoory is one of the talents you can’t deny, he is a very positive person on the team, and he likes to help the players around him,” he said. “I don’t think he is retired completely.

“There could still be a return on the cards, and I think he will be back soon, God willing.”

After his youth team stint at Al-Ahli, Alghassani signed with Abu Dhabi’s Al-Wahda Club in 2018, before moving back in January 2021 to current club Shabab Al-Ahli in Dubai, where his career overlapped with Abdulrahman’s. His international debut came a year later.

“You can’t describe the feeling of being in the national team,” Alghassani said. “Nothing else you do can compare to it, to represent your country and have all your people supporting you.

“I have been with the national team for a long time now. Honestly, the pressure is very high, it is not easy. But we have to embrace this pressure with pride because we are representing our nation.”

Alghassani is delighted to have the extra pressure of captaining the UAE national team. “If you are a professional football player and you don’t welcome the pressure with a smile, you won’t be able to continue.

“I always say that I have to welcome the stress and the pressure, because they are what keeps the player focused and calm at the same time.”

In the absence of goalkeeper Khalid Eissa, Alghassani assumed national captain duties for the Arab Cup matches against Algeria and Morocco. Emirati fans must have been proud to witness him give last-minute team talks as players went into a huddle seconds before kick-off.

“It is one of my duties,” he said.

“If I am the captain, I have to give these instructions. Of course these players have helped me a lot. They give me this platform to give them advice, and they accept my advice. We are all equal, there is no one leader on the pitch. We are all captains and everyone helps each other.”

After the UAE’s progress ended in the Arab Cup following a 1-0 loss to Morocco, the third-place play-off against Saudi Arabia was abandoned due to bad weather.

“We are thankful to God that we were awarded (joint) third place with the Saudi team,” Alghassani said.

“Honestly, I expected to do even better. It’s true no one expected us to reach this level, but personally I felt that we could reach a higher level. We have to see the Arab Cup as an experience. It will help us in the future.”

Despite not qualifying for the 2026 World Cup, Alghassani is already looking to some major challenges ahead. “We will now focus on this championship (AFC Asian Cup 2027 in Saudi Arabia),” he said.

“This is our sole focus now. Unfortunately, the World Cup is gone. It is a very important tournament for us, and I hope we will produce positive results.”

Alghassani has already scored in that competition — against Hong Kong in 2023. And if he needs any inspiration, he could cast his mind back to the 2015 AFC Asian Cup and the heroics his childhood heroes performed in Australia.

“I remember the penalty kick by Ismail Ahmed,” he said, recalling the winning spot-kick against Japan in a memorable semifinal in Sydney.

“His was the decisive penalty. I also remember Amoor’s ‘Panenka’ kick, I remember all of them. But when Ismail Ahmed scored I ran out of the house. I was happy. It was an indescribable feeling as a fan.”

A Panenka kick refers to a technique where the player chips the ball softly down the center of the goal, relying on the goalkeeper diving to one side, named after Czechoslovakia player Antonin Panenka who first used it to win the 1976 European Championship final.

After that 2015 Asian tournament, in which the UAE finished third, there was genuine interest in Abdulrahman and Mabkhout from European clubs, though a move never materialized for either.

Would Alghassani be willing to take that step? “Of course, I always welcome the idea of a professional career abroad,” he said confidently.

“It is always in my mind. I welcome any idea, but I have to respect my contract with Shabab Al-Ahli. If they need me, I will be there. And if they support a move abroad for me, I will go, why not. This is the dream of every professional player.”