Saudi Olympic committee holds monthly conference to mark Olympic Day

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The conference, hosted online ran under the patronage of Prince Abdulaziz Alfaisal, president of SAOC, attracted the attendance of SAOC and Saudi national sports federation members, and sports specialist in the kingdom. (Supplied)
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The conference, hosted online ran under the patronage of Prince Abdulaziz Alfaisal, president of SAOC, attracted the attendance of SAOC and Saudi national sports federation members, and sports specialist in the kingdom. (Supplied)
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The conference, hosted online ran under the patronage of Prince Abdulaziz Alfaisal, president of SAOC, attracted the attendance of SAOC and Saudi national sports federation members, and sports specialist in the kingdom. (Supplied)
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The conference, hosted online ran under the patronage of Prince Abdulaziz Alfaisal, president of SAOC, attracted the attendance of SAOC and Saudi national sports federation members, and sports specialist in the kingdom. (Supplied)
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Updated 24 June 2020
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Saudi Olympic committee holds monthly conference to mark Olympic Day

RIYADH: The Saudi Arabian Olympic Committee (SAOC) held its initial monthly conference to mark the Olympic Day on Tuesday to discuss sports governance.

The Head of Institutional Relations and Governance International Olympic Committee, Jerome Poivey, and Advocate at the High Court of Uganda and Secretary General of Uganda Olympic Committee, Donald Rukare, were also present for the discussion.

The conference, hosted online ran under the patronage of Prince Abdulaziz Alfaisal, president of SAOC, attracted the attendance of SAOC and Saudi national sports federation members, and sports specialist in the kingdom.

Rukare started the first session on the principles of governance and highlighted that transparency, accountability, and equality and equity, fairness, and being inclusive are the most crucial principles to follow.

Poivey meanwhile discussed the role of the national Olympic committees and new IOC agenda 2020 and its recommendations which included for an example.

Several Olympic issues were also discussed, such as the coronavirus pandemic, women sports and the interrelation between all various sport institutions.

When asked about the unprecedented conditions for athletes due to the pandemic, Rukare said: “We need national Olympic committees to go back and review their policies because most of it was framed during the time we thought things would be done in physical presence only, but now we need to go back to the guidelines and re configure and amend it to be suitable for nowadays things like taking decisions online.”

“For example, can we do campaigns online without breaching the law, then we need to put that process and build capacity. We need to offer access, quality, and building capacity once again because for example maybe not everyone has internet,” he continued.

When asked about governance and what module would be useful to use for a sport federation in Saudi, Poivey said: “We tend to ask the NOCs to follow the IOC charter and see if the values are reflected then they can approve it if it doesn’t contradict by the law.”

“There must be some flexibility so we need to make sure the basic principle is there,” he added.

The relationship between NOC and governance in terms of rules, implementation and auditing with reference to the IOC agenda 2020 was also brought to the discussion table, Poivey explained.

“Every NOC should imply with the sports law and Olympic charter. The issue is when sports law is not reflected then we try to negotiate to find solution and usually it works, if not then we suspend the NOC because it doesn’t follow the Olympic movement for example there must be an election process and sport law must be respected,” he said.

About women and sports, Donald explained that all sport institutions need to embed a mechanism to empower more women in sports.

“Each country needs to find what works best for them within their context. the IOC agenda 2020 is very clearly trying to have 50/50 percentage of men and women employed. You need to embed it in the system and deliver programs to target women in leadership and sports acquisition courses. This will attract them and help build capacity and women power through encouraging them and of course then you will have to document it and identify particular women to mentor and help further to grow,” he said.

The second SAOC monthly conference will be held in July with a new topic: Managing National federations.


Mhally lands Saudi Cup start

Updated 18 January 2026
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Mhally lands Saudi Cup start

  • 2000 Guineas winner shines in The Custodian of the Two Holy Mosques Cup

RIYADH: Last year’s winner of the 2000 Guineas, Mhally (GB), stepped up to the mark 12 months later to earn a place in the 2026 Saudi Cup with victory under in-form Ricardo Ferreira in the Group 3 Custodian of the Two Holy Mosques Cup.

The success in the $400,000 feature at King Abdulaziz Racecourse was part of a Ferreira four-timer and capped a terrific day for the rider who, along with trainer Thamer Al-Daihani and owner Sheikh Abdullah Homoud Al-Malek Al-Sabah, also won the 2000 Guineas again, this time with Al-Haram (IRE).

Mhally progressed from his 2000 Guineas success to be third on Saudi Cup night in the Derby in 2025 and will be back again this time in the main $20 million event on Feb. 14 after proving his stamina in the qualifier over 1800m.

There were four in with a chance halfway down the home stretch, but Mhally knows where the winning post is at King Abdulaziz and found more when required to deny last year’s US winning rider, Joel Rosario, aboard Ameerat Al-Zamaan (GB) by three-quarters of a length.

And the owner-trainer-jockey combination could have another superstar on their hands, given Al Haram’s devastating success in the $124,000 2000 Guineas sponsored by J Event.

The 3-year-old had won both of his previous starts over the 1600m trip but took his form to a new level to qualify for the $1.5 million G3 Saudi Derby.

Al-Haram was slightly slow away and found himself at the rear of the field, leaving himself with a huge task ahead, but he found generously for pressure and surged through the field to win in monstrous fashion by seven-and-a-quarter lengths.

Maestro Du Croate (FR) ran well to be third last week and got off the mark at the seventh attempt under Camilo Ospina to take the $44,000 G3 Al-Diriyah Cup sponsored by STC.

Nijinski Al Maury (FR) looked to be going best turning in, but the Bassim Al-Mousa-trained 4-year-old found more under an inspired Ospina, and after an almighty tussle, collected by one length to qualify for the $2 million G1 Obaiya Arabian Classic.

Ospina also took the $44,000 Riyadh Dirt Sprint Qualifier sponsored by Nova as his Min Shan (KSA) led home a one-two for the White Stable of King Abdullah bin Abdulaziz and Sons.

Over three lengths separated Min Shan from the Mickael Barzalona-ridden Jeddah Beach (USA) at the line, with the winner completing a hat-trick over the 1200m trip to land a gate in the $2 million G2 Riyadh Dirt Sprint.

One of Ferreira’s other winners came as Thayaf (KSA) maintained his unbeaten record with a fourth career victory in the domestic G1 King Abdulaziz Cup, while Christophe Soumillon landed back-to-back wins aboard Wanaameen (KSA) as they followed up last month’s success in the domestic G1 Custodian of the Two Holy Mosques Cup.