Return of football during Saudi summer will be a step into the unknown

Matches are expected to resume in August - the hottest month of the year in the Kingdom. (File/AFP)
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Updated 29 June 2020
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Return of football during Saudi summer will be a step into the unknown

  • Matches could resume in August - the hottest month of the year in Saudi Arabia
  • All sporting activities in the Kingdom were indefinitely suspended on March 14 after the dramatic spread of the Covid-19 virus

DUBAI: The countdown for the return of the Saudi Pro League on Aug. 4 is under way as organizers continue to roll out a series of initiatives that have seen foreign players and staff return to the country and resume training safely with their Saudi colleagues.

Around the world, the almost complete halt to sporting events has slowly been reversed over the last two months with the German Bundesliga’s restart paving the way for other competitions like La Liga, the Premier League, Series A and the Champions League to be completed.  

However, with the summer weather conditions taken into account, there were genuine possibilities that the Saudi Pro League and others in the region ultimately being cancelled.

All sporting activities in the Kingdom were indefinitely suspended on March 14 after the dramatic spread of the Covid-19 virus, but as life slowly returned to normal with the easing of the nationwide lockdown, so were plans put in place to restart the SPL.

While the UAE’s Arabian Gulf League has been voided, providing no champions or relegation in the process, its Saudi counterpart initially set out a roadmap to complete the 2019-20 season starting from Aug. 20, a date that was decided upon after several meetings of the Saudi Arabian Football Federation (SAFF).

However, that resumption date was later brought forward to Aug. 4 by the SAFF through a series of tweets on June 12, with the last of the eight remaining rounds of the season set to be completed on Sept. 9.

“The SAFF decided to resume all football competitions, starting from Aug. 4 and will be coordinating with the SPL to determine the dates of resuming the top flight and the first division,” SAFF said in the Arabic language statement posted on Twitter.

“The Saudi Arabia Football Federation acknowledges all the efforts of the Saudi Arabia government to face the outbreak of the COVID-19 which is a confirmation of their concern for the safety of everyone in the Kingdom.

Just how up to speed the teams will be on their return remains to be seen, but cues can be taken from other restarts around the world.

While the Bundesliga, for example, provided a series of highly technical matches after a very brief period of re-acclimatization, the English Premier League’s return has been largely lethargic, with the lack of fans and atmosphere highlighting, perhaps even contributing, to an inevitable lack of its trademark intensity on the field.

A similar lack of energy, at first at least, is likely to affect the SPL matches as well. For a start, the enforced suspension of play has been longer than any regular preseason break and it will take the players time to regain match sharpness.

Just as important will be the fact that August happens to be Saudi Arabia’s hottest month, with average temperatures reaching almost 45C. There is a reason why football is not traditionally played in the summer.

The heat and humidity will unquestionably lead to slower pace and you can expect the average number of minutes that the ball is in play to drop, despite the introduction of water breaks and increased number of substitutions.

Much will also depend on just how many of the matches have anything riding on them, unlike at the usual start of the season when teams are invariably raring to go.

When the 2019-20 season was indefinitely suspended, reigning champions Al Hilal held a six-point lead over second-placed Al Nassr. With only eight match days left, Al Adalah, Damac and Al Fateh were the three clubs stuck in the relegation places.

Teams with little to play may have an eye on next season already, and the late resolution of the current campaign will impact the start of the next one. 

Clubs will no doubt have to change traditional pre-season training practices as they prepare for the 2020-21 campaign, pending its starting dates.

For now, the clubs will continue will have to do with returning players and Prince Abdul Aziz bin Turki Al Faisal, Saudi Sports Minister, has already confirmed there will be no changes to the quota of SPL clubs’ foreign players.

There will be logistical changes when SPL returns, with a possible dispensation of Video Assistant Referee (VAR) system. 

Also, in line with new FIFA directive since the resumption of competitive football after the coronavirus crisis, the Saudi Pro League will allow five substations for each team, with caveat that they are used over three intervals only, of which half-time does not count.

The decision to resume domestic football was also tied in with the rescheduling of matches for the Saudi Arabian national team.

“Based on the decision of the Ministry of Sports to return all sports activities and in line with the AFC's proposed dates for the resumption of Asian competitions and the resumption of the 2022 FIFA World Cup Qualifiers, we will coordinate the return of clubs to training as of June 21 in order to continue the current season based on a medical protocol and strict precautionary measures,” added the SAFF’s announcement added.

When football returns to Saudi Arabia, it will look different to what we are used to, just like it has everywhere else around the world. Nonetheless, for fans watching the action from their living rooms, it will be a hugely welcome sight, a sign that life is slowly returning to normal.


Neymar hails title-winning Al-Hilal team-mates, says he is ‘impatient’ to return to action

Updated 13 sec ago
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Neymar hails title-winning Al-Hilal team-mates, says he is ‘impatient’ to return to action

  • Al-Hilal clinched the Roshn Saudi League title after a 4-1 win over Al-Hazem, but Brazilian superstar has missed most of the season through injury

RIYADH: Neymar has praised his Al-Hilal team-mates for winning the Roshn Saudi League title in his absence, and revealed he is eagerly awaiting a return to action next season.

The Brazilian superstar attacker joined Al-Hilal from Paris Saint-Germain last summer but has missed most of the season after suffering a cruciate ligament injury in October on international duty.

Neymar made three Roshn Saudi League appearances before his injury, recording three assists as Al-Hilal won two and drew one of the matches in which he featured.

His final league club appearance of the season, a 2-0 win over Al-Shabab at the end of September, marked the first in a world record run that saw Al-Hilal win an incredible 34 matches in succession.

Speaking at the title celebrations on Saturday following Al-Hilal’s 4-1 victory over Al-Hazem that clinched the Riyadh club’s 19th Saudi Arabian league crown, Neymar said: “I am very happy obviously. Winning titles is always good. The best thing would have been being on the pitch, but I am so happy for my team-mates.

 

“I am fine. I am feeling good. I am impatient to be back on the pitch. The fans are unbelievable. Unfortunately, I haven’t been able to give them the happiness they deserve but you can be sure that next season we are going to have a lot of fun.”

Unbeaten domestically this season, Al-Hilal clinched the Roshn Saudi League title with three matches to spare, winning 29 of their 31 games thus far. Nearest challengers Al-Nassr are 12 points behind. Al-Hilal’s next match sees them travel to Al-Nassr for the Riyadh derby, which takes place at Al-Awwal Park on Friday May 17.

Al-Hilal’s top flight world football record run earlier this season saw them overtake Welsh club The News Saints’ winning streak of 27 games in 2016-17. Prior to that, the record stood for 44 years following Dutch giants Ajax’s 26-game winning run between 1971 and 1972.


Star duos lead Celtics, Mavs to NBA playoff victories

Updated 12 May 2024
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Star duos lead Celtics, Mavs to NBA playoff victories

  • Tatum scored 33 points and Brown 28 as top seeds Boston, stunned by the Cavaliers on their home court in Game 2, beat the Cavs 106-93 in Cleveland to take a 2-1 lead
  • Irving scored 14 of his 22 points in the second half and Doncic scored 22 points and had 15 rebounds as the Mavericks rallied for a 105-101 victory

LOS ANGELES: Jayson Tatum and Jaylen Brown combined to score 61 points to fire the Boston Celtics to a bounce-back NBA playoff win over Cleveland on Saturday as Kyrie Irving and Luka Doncic led Dallas over Oklahoma City.

Tatum scored 33 points and Brown 28 as top seeds Boston, stunned by the Cavaliers on their home court in Game 2, beat the Cavs 106-93 in Cleveland to take a 2-1 lead in their best-of-seven Eastern Conference semifinal.

For Dallas, Irving scored 14 of his 22 points in the second half and Doncic scored 22 points and grabbed 15 rebounds as the Mavericks rallied for a 105-101 victory that put them up 2-1 against Western Conference top seeds Oklahoma City.

The Celtics emerged from a nip-and-tuck first quarter with a two-point lead and never trailed again.

“We just wanted to bounce back,” Tatum said after they pushed their advantage to 23 points by opening the third quarter on a 14-0 scoring run.

“Essentially our back was against the wall, so it was a good test for us to see how we respond,” Tatum said. “We were up for the challenge.”

Donovan Mitchell scored 33 points for the Cavaliers, but appeared to tweak his troublesome left knee in the fourth quarter.

Cleveland halted Boston’s third-quarter spurt with a 9-0 run of their own.

But the Celtics had an answer for every Cleveland surge and the Cavs could not get any closer than nine points behind in the final period.

In Dallas, the Mavericks dug deep in the face of another bruising defensive effort from the Thunder.

Irving’s second-half star turn included a floater that pushed the Dallas lead to five points with 39.3 seconds remaining.

Slovenian star Doncic took another pounding, including a hard fall flat on his back after a mid-air collision with Luguentz Dort, and said he tweaked his sprained right knee as the game ended.

“We got the win, that’s all that matters,” said Doncic, who when asked what was hurting the most — his knee, his back or his sore ankle — said “everything.”

“I think I’m battling,” he said. A day without travel before the Mavs host Game 4 on Monday was welcome, he added.

P.J. Washington led the Mavs with 27 points and Dereck Lively added 12 off the bench to help Dallas withstand a 31-point performance from Thunder star Shai Gilgeous-Alexander.

Both teams struggled to get their offenses firing in the first quarter, which ended with Dallas up by three.

Oklahoma City connected on 60 percent of their shots in the second quarter to take a 52-51 half-time lead and pushed their advantage to 65-55 with an 11-0 scoring burst in the third.

The Mavs responded with a 16-0 run that featured a huge dunk by Washington and was capped by his three-pointer that pushed their lead to 71-65.

The run energized the American Airlines Center crowd, but Oklahoma City quickly cut the lead to one before the Mavs responded again.

Irving connected on a pair of three-pointers and fed Daniel Gafford for a dunk before Tim Hardaway Jr. closed the third quarter with a three-pointer that put Dallas up 82-78.

Irving, who handed out seven assists as he focused early on getting his teammates involved, said one Dallas coach told him he’d left it a bit late to make a scoring push.

But Doncic said his contribution was “amazing.”

“He’s doing it all on both ends of the floor,” Doncic said.

Thunder coach Mark Daigneault said his young team — with an average age of just over 23 — got a little sloppy in the third quarter to squander a golden chance to grab a win in Dallas.

“There’s a lot of things we can learn from,” he said.


Nadal eyes French Open despite Rome exit as Djokovic laughs off bottle drama

Updated 12 May 2024
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Nadal eyes French Open despite Rome exit as Djokovic laughs off bottle drama

  • Nadal: Physically I have some issues, but not probably yet enough to say I’m not playing in the most important event of my tennis career. Let’s see what’s going on
  • World No. 1 Djokovic donned a cycling crash helmet on his way to practice to show that he was fit

ROME: Rafael Nadal said Saturday that he is leaning toward playing at the French Open despite his second-round elimination in Rome, as Novak Djokovic laughed off being hit by a bottle which briefly cast doubt on his continued participation.

Clay-court icon Nadal had previously said that he would only play at the French Open, where he has won a record 14 titles, if he feels competitive after a raft of injury problems over the last two years which have left him languishing 305th in the world rankings.

And the manner of his elimination in his first ever encounter with Hubert Hurkacz — winner in straight sets 6-1, 6-3 — seemed a step backwards after reaching the last 16 in Madrid, leaving a question mark hanging over his plans.

“The decision, as you can imagine, is not clear in my mind today. But if I have to say what’s my feeling and if my mind is closer one way or the other way, I am going to say to be in Roland Garros and try my best,” Nadal told reporters.

“Physically I have some issues, but not probably yet enough to say I’m not playing in the most important event of my tennis career. Let’s see what’s going on, how I feel myself mentally tomorrow, after tomorrow, and in one week.”

Nadal held his own in the first two games in the first set, which took 26 minutes to complete, but then quickly fell away, Hurkacz winning without dropping a service game and seemingly without breaking a sweat.

That level of dominance over Nadal on clay, much less a court where he has won a record 10 titles, would have been unimaginable a few short years ago.

Hurkacz will face Tomas Etcheverry in the third round after likely ending Nadal’s love affair with Rome as the 22-time Grand Slam winner said that he was “98 percent” sure that he would never again grace the Roman clay.

“No-one will ever have a record like him on this surface. He’s just bigger than the sport at the end of the day,” said Hurkacz.

Second seed Daniil Medvedev kicked off his title defense by beating Jack Draper in straight sets 7-5, 6-4 to set up a third-round clash with qualifier Hamad Medjedovic, while Stefanos Tsitsipas came back from a set down to beat Jan-Lennard Struff 6-7 (1/7), 6-4, 6-4.

World No. 1 Djokovic donned a cycling crash helmet on his way to practice to show that he was fit and ready to face Chile’s Alejandro Tabilo on Sunday afternoon.

Djokovic was left crouching in agony after being accidentally hit on the head by a hard water bottle while signing fan autographs on Friday night.

But he suffered only minor injuries, and on Saturday he joked “Today I came prepared” with a video of him arriving while wearing the helmet.

Iga Swiatek, Naomi Osaka and Coco Gauff all reached the last 16 as the women’s tournament begins to heat up.

Osaka is ranked at 173 in the world after taking a break from the tour to have her first child but is in good form, yet to drop a set after beating 10th-seeded Daria Kasatkina 6-3, 6-3.

“I’m very grateful to be healthy because I know how much hard work it took for me to be here,” said four-time Grand Slam champion Osaka, who will next play seventh-seed Zheng Qinwen.

“I feel like I’m just clawing my way back to hopefully where I think I belong.”

World No. 1 Swiatek will next face Angelique Kerber after seeing off Yulia Putintseva 6-3, 6-4 as she bids to become the first woman since Serena Williams to claim a third Rome title.

The 22-year-old came into the event having won the Madrid Open last weekend and will also be gunning for a fourth French Open crown later this month.

Third seed Gauff, meanwhile, has Spain’s Paula Badosa in the last 16 after the US Open champion battled to a 6-1, 0-6, 6-3 victory over Jaqueline Cristian.


Man City two wins away from another Premier League title

Updated 12 May 2024
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Man City two wins away from another Premier League title

  • However Arsenal finish the season, the title will be City’s if Pep Guardiola’s team beat both Tottenham away on Tuesday and West Ham at home in the final round on May 19
  • Josko Gvardiol scored twice for City to enhance his status as an unlikely goal-getter for Guardiola, with the left back making it five in his last seven games

LONDON: Two more wins.

That’s all that separates Manchester City from becoming English champion for an unprecedented fourth straight year.

The game is up, though, for Burnley, whose relegation from the Premier League was confirmed on Saturday with a game to spare.

On a significant day at both ends of the standings, City racked up another big victory by routing Fulham 4-0 to climb above Arsenal into a two-point lead. The top two each have two games left, and Arsenal face Manchester United next on Sunday.

However Arsenal finish the season, the title will be City’s if Pep Guardiola’s team beat both Tottenham away on Tuesday and West Ham at home in the final round on May 19.

“My players like to play with pressure. They are used to it,” said Guardiola, whose team have won five of the last six Premier Leagues. “The players enjoy this feeling.

“This season is the same — don’t think about anything other than the next game. Focus on winning the next game and then we will see what happens.”

Josko Gvardiol scored twice for City to enhance his status as an unlikely goal-getter for Guardiola, with the left back making it five in his last seven games. Phil Foden and Julian Alvarez also netted at Craven Cottage as City extended its unbeaten run in all competitions to 33 matches.

No team in the 136-year history of English soccer has won the top division for four successive years. It’s the latest record in touching distance of Guardiola’s City, which have also reached the FA Cup final against Man United on May 25.

Burnley down

Two of the three teams which came up to the Premier League for this season are sure to be heading back down to the Championship after one year.

It’s not looking great for the third one, either.

Burnley needed to beat Tottenham to stand a chance of a second straight season in the league but lost 2-1 to join already-relegated Sheffield United in going down.

Luton lost at West Ham 3-1 to stand on the brink of being the third team relegated. It was given a reprieve, however, when fourth-from-last Nottingham Forest squandered a lead and lost at home to Chelsea 3-2.

Forest was three points above Luton and has a superior goal difference of 12. In the final round of games next weekend, Forest visits Burnley and Luton hosts Fulham — and there has to be a huge, and improbable, swing in goal difference for Luton to survive.

Last season, all three promoted teams staved off relegation for the first time since 2018.

Spurs retain hope

Tottenham kept alive its Champions League qualification hopes with the come-from behind win over Burnley, which was secured by Micky van de Ven’s 82nd minute goal.

Spurs’ first goal was also scored by a defender — right back Pedro Porro — to begin the fightback.

Spurs trimmed the gap to fourth-placed Aston Villa to four points, with both teams having two games left. Villa can secure fourth spot and the final automatic Champions League spot from the Premier League by beating Liverpool on Monday.

Other results

In the fight to qualify for the minor European competitions, Newcastle stayed in sixth place — but dropped six points behind Tottenham — by drawing at home with Brighton 1-1. Newcastle are tied on points with Chelsea, with both teams three points ahead of eighth-placed Man United.

Brentford won at Bournemouth 2-1, Crystal Palace beat Wolverhampton 3-1, and Everton defeated Sheffield United 1-0 for a fifth straight home win.
 


Real Madrid rest starters in 4-0 rout of relegated Granada with focus on Champions League final

Updated 12 May 2024
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Real Madrid rest starters in 4-0 rout of relegated Granada with focus on Champions League final

  • Brahim Diaz made his case for some playing time in the title game against Dortmund after the creative forward scored two second-half goals
  • Ancelotti and Madrid players will celebrate their league title with supporters in central Madrid on Sunday

BARCELONA, Spain: Real Madrid’s backups eased to 4-0 win at the relegated Granada on Saturday as Carlo Ancelotti rested most of his top players to avoid costly injures before the Champions League final.

Defender Antonio Rudiger was the only first-choice player who Ancelotti started for a Spanish league game that was inconsequential for either side.

Madrid clinched their 36th Spanish league title last weekend. They are now fully focused on the European final against Borussia Dortmund on June 1 in London after eliminating Bayern Munich on Wednesday.

Granada didn’t have much to play for either after Mallorca’s 1-0 win at Las Palmas meant the team from southern Spain was relegated. Granada are in 19th place and join bottom side Almeria in going to the second division. Cadiz are in danger of becoming the third team to drop.

Little used left back Fran Garcia scored and assisted Turkish teenager Arda Guler in the first half. Brahim Diaz made his case for some playing time in the title game against Dortmund after the creative forward scored two second-half goals.

Thibaut Courtois was back in goal for his second appearance of the season after he recovered from an ACL tear and a knee injury. Ancelotti said on Friday he has yet to decide if Courtois or Andriy Lunin, who has played most of the season, will be his pick against Dortmund.

Luka Modric and Eduardo Camavinga, players with real chances to see minutes in the Champions League final, also started.

“My goal is to arrive to the final with the entire team in peak form, and I think we will do that,” Ancelotti said.

Ancelotti and Madrid players will celebrate their league title with supporters in central Madrid on Sunday.

Atheletic held

Fifth-placed Athletic Bilbao needed an added-time goal against visiting Osasuna to salvage a 2-2 draw, dropping points in their fight for a top-four finish and Champions League berth.

The Copa del Rey champions were five points behind fourth-placed Atletico Madrid before they host Celta Vigo on Sunday.

Asier Villalibre equalized for Athletic on one of the last kicks of the game when Osasuna goakeeper Sergio Herrera spilled a cross after colliding with a teammate.

Sorloth double

Alexander Sorloth scored his second goal with a stoppage-time header to snatch Villarreal a 3-2 comeback win over Sevilla.

The victory kept alive Villarreal’s chances of catching Real Betis in seventh place and the Europa Conference League spot.