Saudi Arabia’s Green Falcons fly to St. Petersburg ahead of World Cup 

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The Saudi Green Falcons pose for a souvenir picture with the crew of a Saudi Arabian Airlines plane at a German airport on Saturday before taking off for St. Petersburg in Russia for the World Cup. (Twitter photo)
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The Saudi Green Falcons pose for a souvenir picture with the crew of a Saudi Arabian Airlines plane at a German airport on Saturday before taking off for St. Petersburg in Russia for the World Cup. (Twitter photo)
Updated 10 June 2018
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Saudi Arabia’s Green Falcons fly to St. Petersburg ahead of World Cup 

JEDDAH: Saudi Arabia's Green Falcons flew to Russia on Saturday after finishing their World Cup preparations. 

A tweet on the national team’s official account made the announcement: “We are here!” accompanied with a photo that says “ Hello Russia”.

The team has left for St. Petersburg after completing their World Cup preparations, with a 2-1 reversal, against Germany on Friday night and now nerves will be starting to jangle ahead of the tournament curtain-raiser.

Several pictures on the Twitter account showed the Saudi delegation in formal attire as they snapped selfies outside the national carrier airplane, breaking the design of a falcon with a body of the Saudi flag.  

Saudi Arabia’s national squad will play the opening game of the World Cup against host country Russia.  

Saudi Arabia are the second lowest ranked side in the World Cup — Russia are the lowest at 70 — so expectations are low, but with Egypt not in great form and without Mohamed Salah for at least some of the group stage, there is a feeling the Green Falcons could seriously contend for the second spot in the group behind Uruguay.


Lando Norris says F1 cars gone from best to ‘probably the worst’

Updated 07 March 2026
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Lando Norris says F1 cars gone from best to ‘probably the worst’

  • Norris’ title defense comes amid sweeping changes to the cars
  • The 26-year-old British driver has endured a tough weekend at Albert Park so far

MELBOURNE: Formula 1 champion Lando Norris is struggling with his new era McLaren car and frustrated to line up only sixth in Sunday’s season-opening Australian Grand Prix.
Norris’ title defense comes amid sweeping changes to the cars, and the 26-year-old British driver has endured a tough weekend at Albert Park so far.
F1’s new cars are complex, with unprecedented changes across the chassis and power unit, which now feature an almost 50:50 output split between the turbo 1.6-liter V6 engine and electrical energy harvested from the brakes — one that requires a new, often counterintuitive driving style.
“We’ve come from the best cars ever made in Formula 1, and the nicest to drive, to probably the worst,” he said after Saturday’s qualifying.
He’s not just coming to grips with his car’s complex energy management systems, but also in getting out on track — with the Briton losing significant time in Friday’s two practice sessions.
“Just getting into the rhythm of lifting everywhere to go quicker and using gears you don’t want to use and just understanding that when you lift more, you brake later but you have to brake less,” Norris said.
“That’s why laps are more valuable than ever. In the past, miss P1, not too bothered. Now, you miss five laps, not only do you as a driver have to figure things out quicker, the engine doesn’t learn what it needs to learn and then you’re just on the back foot.”