Dakar Rally kicks off new year of sports in Saudi Arabia

Saudi hopes will rest on the shoulders of Yazeed Al Rajhi, of Overdrive Toyota in the car category. (File/AFP)
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Updated 01 January 2021
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Dakar Rally kicks off new year of sports in Saudi Arabia

  • The 12-stage race starts on Sunday with competitors tackling the Kingdom’s desert terrain
  • Saudi hopes will rest on the shoulders of Yazeed Al Rajhi, of Overdrive Toyota in the car category

DUBAI: The long wait for the second Dakar Rally to take place in Saudi Arabia is over.

On Sunday, the first stage of the world’s most famous desert rally will start in Jeddah as the competitors tackle the 622 km route of tracks and valleys that lead to Bisha.

Saudi hopes will rest on the shoulders of Yazeed Al Rajhi, of Overdrive Toyota in the car category, who thanked the country’s leaders for hosting the competition and promised a better showing than last year.

“Last year we had some problems with navigation, we lost a lot of time, but were happy to finish fourth,” the 39-year-old said at a press conference held by the Dakar Rally organization. ‘

“Last year Dirk [von Zitzewitz, his co-driver] couldn’t come with me because he had a back injury, and now he’s back. I’m sure he can do a great job, and our target is to win.”

Saudi Arabia had held the 42nd edition of the race, and the country’s first, in January of last year, and for veteran and new competitors, the Dakar Rally remains one of motorsports most coveted competitions.

Whether in the motorcycle, lightweight vehicles, trucks or car categories, the participants have been raring to go since arriving in Jeddah, and after Saturday’s Prologue, will finally tackle the Kingdom’s desert landscape.

Team Peugeot Total’s Stéphane Peterhansel, with an astonishing record of 13 wins and taking part in his 32nd Dakar Rally, recalled “that in the beginning, the Dakar was a dream and even today it's still not a job, but rather a pleasure.” 

When the race was announced last June, the Dakar Rally organizers promised an entirely new route that is more technical and dune-filled from start to finish.

“Hosting Dakar rally across our breathtaking natural landscape broke new ground for both Saudi Arabia as a nation and Dakar too, with it being the first time in the rally’s history to have the engines roar in Asia,” said Prince Abdul Aziz bin Turki Al-Faisal Al-Saud, Minister of Sports, at the time. “We always believed we had the key components needed to deliver Dakar, and we are thrilled with how amazing the rally was.”

Al Rajhi revealed that even as a Saudi he continues to be taken aback by the terrain that the competitors will have to navigate.

From Monday, the next 11 stages will set out a punishing schedule interrupted by only one day of rest. Day 2 will take place on the dunes between Bisha and Wadi Ad-Dawasir, while the action on Day 3 will continue in the Empty Quarter of Wadi Ad-Dawasir.

Day 4 provides the longest, if not exactly the most difficult, stage of the rally over 813 km that will take the competitors from Wadi Ad-Dawasir to Riyadh.

Stage 5 will be fought over the tough dunes on the route to Al Qaisumah. Day 6, the last before the rest, sees a comparatively smooth road to Ha’il. 

The action restarts on Jan. 10 with the marathon stages, a fearsome sequence of sand mountains on the way to Sakaka.

Day 8 will highlight the scenic route to Neom, where the following day’s action heads to the shore of the Red Sea, starting along the seafront. And on Day 10 the competitors will negotiate the hilly terrain from Neom to AlUla.

Dakar enters its last two days with Stage 11 on the dunes between AlUla and Yanbu. Finally, on Day 12, the winner would have to make their way from Yanbu to the finish line on the shore of the Red Sea. 

Arab representation will come in the form of Nasser Al Attiyah, who finished third last year in the car category.

“Winning is always the goal,” the 2019 Qatari winner, Nasser Al Attiyah, said.

“I have always won with the number 301. But I have respect for all the drivers and I am especially grateful to all those who worked so hard so that we could be together for this Dakar in Saudi Arabia, because this year [2020] has been very difficult for everyone”.

For others, it will be a whole new experience, and the wait, as well as travel obstacles, have been worth it.

I’m just honored to be here,” said Kristen Matlock of Polaris RZR Factory Racing Team. “It took us 51 hours to get here, we had some layovers.”

The American will be taking part alongside husband Wayne Matlock and Craig Scanlon.

“The Dakar is at the very top of my list of things I want to accomplish in my life,” she added. “On the Baja 1000 in the United States, I drove from start to finish and it can last as long as 28 hours, I am used to it. But here, it will be for 12 days. My main worry is the fear of the unknown”.

Another Dakar debutant, 18-year-old Seth Quintero of Red Bull Off-Road Team USA, revealed that he has to rein in his natural instincts if he is to survive the 12 stages.

“I kind of have this switch in my head that I like to go as fast as I can all the time, and I have to learn to flick the switch off,” he said.

“It’s long 12-day race, almost 5000 miles, something I’m not used to. I’m used to 300 to 500-mile races, and I kind of have to tone it down a little bit and remember to save the car and save myself for the coming days.”


Riyadh derby ends in 5-3 thriller as Al-Hilal return to winning ways

Updated 22 sec ago
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Riyadh derby ends in 5-3 thriller as Al-Hilal return to winning ways

  • Al-Hilal remain unbeaten after 24 games but sit third on 58 points — one behind leaders Al-Ahli

RIYADH: It was a night to forget for Ali Al-Bulayhi. Loaned to Al-Shabab this winter after nine years at Al-Hilal, his first game against his parent club turned into a nightmare.

Matchday 24 of the Saudi Pro League resumed at the SHG Arena with one of Riyadh’s most entertaining derbies — Al-Hilal vs Al-Shabab. While clashes with Al-Nassr attract greater anticipation, the history between Al-Hilal and Al-Shabab runs deep.

In the inaugural 2008/09 Saudi Pro League season, Al-Shabab held Al-Hilal to a dramatic 1-1 draw, with both sides scoring in stoppage time before chaos erupted. The result handed Al-Ittihad the edge in the title race, which they converted into the league crown. Al-Shabab later thrashed Al-Hilal in the King’s Cup semi-finals en route to lifting the trophy.

The landscape today looks very different. Al-Shabab have flirted with relegation for much of the season, while Al-Hilal, despite remaining in the title race, slipped to third after a poor run of form.

Yet form often counts for little in derby matches. Al-Shabab pushed Al-Nassr close in a 3-2 defeat in January before falling 5-2 to Al-Ahli a month later. For all their defensive frailties, the pairing of Yannick Carrasco and Abderrazzaq Hamed-allah remains dangerous.

It was no surprise, then, when Al-Shabab took the lead after 13 minutes. Al-Hilal’s defensive vulnerabilities were exposed as Carrasco and Saad Yaslam combined down the left, allowing Josh Brownhill a free strike inside the box that he drilled past Yassine Bounou.

With Malcom and Salem Al-Dawsari rested by Simone Inzaghi in favour of Saimon Bouabré and Sultan Mandash — and Karim Benzema absent — belief briefly grew that this could be Al-Shabab’s night.

The momentum shifted quickly. In the 19th minute, Al-Bulayhi misjudged a header from a long throw, and Mohammed Kanno pounced to volley home the equalizer past Marcelo Grohe.

More misfortune followed for the defender in the 31st minute. A cross from Sergej Milinkovic-Savic appeared routine for Grohe but was inadvertently turned into his own net by Al-Bulayhi.

Al-Shabab responded before the break. On the stroke of half-time, Carrasco released Hamed-allah into the same channel Brownhill had exploited, and the Moroccan forward turned past Kalidou Koulibaly before finishing to level the match.

The parallels continued. Both of Al-Shabab’s goals came from near-identical positions, while Al-Hilal’s third arrived in equally chaotic fashion. Another long throw caused havoc in first-half stoppage time, and Koulibaly redeemed his earlier error by forcing the ball home after a poor goal-line clearance from Al-Bulayhi.

From there, Al-Hilal took control. Winter signing Sultan Mandash made his mark three minutes into the second half, meeting Kanno’s cross with a superb first-time trivela finish to make it 4-2. Minutes later, he turned provider, setting up Marcos Leonardo for a composed fifth.

Still, Al-Shabab refused to fade. In the 75th minute, Yacine Adli’s driven cross evaded everyone and crept past Bounou to reduce the deficit to 5-3.

The visitors pushed for an unlikely comeback, but Al-Hilal held firm to secure victory, much to the relief of their supporters after dropping points in their previous two matches.

Elsewhere, Al-Ittihad continued their revival in a turbulent campaign with a 1-0 win over Al-Khaleej. Danilo Pereira scored the decisive goal, tapping in from a Mahamadou Doumbia corner.

In Qassim, Al-Ettifaq travelled to face Al-Hazem as favourites and took an early lead through Koka. However, Abdulbasit Hindi handled on the line in the 17th minute — echoing Luis Suarez’s infamous intervention against Ghana at the 2010 FIFA World Cup — and was sent off.

Yousef Al-Shammari converted the resulting penalty before Fabio Martins produced a stunning long-range header that could contend for the Puskas Award. Martins later assisted Aboubacar Bah for Al-Hazem’s third in a memorable victory.

Saudi Pro League action resumes on Saturday with four matches kicking off at 10pm: Al-Fayha host Al-Nassr, Al-Najma face Al-Okhdood, Al-Qadsiah take on Al-Taawoun, and NEOM meet Al-Kholood.