Golf Saudi CEO sees bright future for the sport with The Line

Majed Al-Sorour
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Updated 19 January 2021
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Golf Saudi CEO sees bright future for the sport with The Line

  • The clean, high-tech environment that The Line will create will no doubt allow golf courses to flourish due to their aesthetics, environmental development

JEDDAH: Golf Saudi CEO Majed Al-Sorour has hailed the launch of The Line, a zero-carbon urban-development project, as being the Kingdom’s most ambitious project to date.

Al-Sorour said the announcement from Crown Prince Mohammed Bin Salman about The Line, as well as other big projects including NEOM, was a blessing for world tourism and investment. It was also good news for the future of golf because the sport was associated with beaches, smart cities, and high-end tourism, he added.

“The clean, high-tech environment that The Line will create will no doubt allow golf courses to flourish due to their aesthetics, environmental development and consideration for health and nature in conjunction with Saudi Arabia’s Vision 2030. Turning the Red Sea Coastline into a hub for golf.”

Al-Sorour, who was formerly a professional footballer in the Saudi Premier League, had a career with Al Nassr before moving to the US in 1990 to pursue a business career. The change brought him into close contact with golf.

He competed in domestic golf tournaments as an amateur, going on to qualify for the Golf World Cup in 2012 in South Africa and winning the Saudi Canadian Golf Championship in 2015. 

In 2018 he was appointed CEO of Golf Saudi and the Saudi Golf Federation, and tasked with overseeing the development of a multibillion-dollar investment in the sport’s development and its commercial opportunities.

The next stage of the journey is the third Saudi International powered by SoftBank Investment Advisers. It will be a major event on the Saudi sporting calendar, with some of the European Tour’s best golfers taking part.

Al-Sorour said: “We are now just a fortnight away from hosting one of the largest golf tournaments in the world for the third time at King Abdullah Economic City. Looking back on my earlier career, who would have imagined that this high-value sport would find itself in such a distinguished place in Saudi Arabia? Add to that, who would have expected that the best top-ranked golf players in the world would compete to take part in it? I say with great pride that this would not have come about without the vision that the crown prince has spearheaded.”

The Saudi International is a permanent fixture on the Desert Swing, with Golf Saudi working closely with the European Tour to implement mass participation programs.


4 former champions prepare for battle at Dubai Tennis Championships 2026

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4 former champions prepare for battle at Dubai Tennis Championships 2026

  • Past winners Daniil Medvedev, Andrey Rublev, Ugo Humbert, Stefanos Tsitsipas return this month

DUBAI: From Roger Federer’s record eight titles to Novak Djokovic’s domination — three successive wins from 2009 to 2011 — the Dubai Duty Free Tennis Championships have long proved an event popular with former champions. And that tradition will continue this month as a quartet of previous men’s winners prepare to compete once more.

From Feb. 23-28, Daniil Medvedev, Andrey Rublev, Ugo Humbert, and Stefanos Tsitsipas will all feature, promising a mix of elite competition, dramatic storylines, and the unmistakable glamour that has made the ATP 500 event a highlight on the men’s calendar.

Coming a week after the city’s WTA 1000 tournament featuring all the world’s top 20 female players, the Dubai Duty Free Tennis Stadium in Al-Garhoud will light up once again with a field that includes eight of the world’s top 20 male players.

This year marks the first time since 2023 that Medvedev — ranked No. 12 in the world — is not the tournament’s top seed. He won his only Dubai title in 2023, beating that year’s top seed Djokovic in the semifinal. A former world No. 1, Medvedev is considered one of the most imposing hard-court players of his generation, with strong defensive resilience and surgical precision from the baseline.

Within 18 months of lifting the Silver Dhow Trophy, Medvedev had reached two consecutive semifinals at Wimbledon and the final of the Australian Open. A second Grand Slam title to accompany his 2021 US Open title remains elusive, but this year he has got off to a strong start with victory in Brisbane bringing a 22nd ATP title. The Muscovite’s return to Dubai will be watched by throngs of fans eager to see whether the popular 29-year-old can dominate under the Dubai lights once more.

Among those standing in Medvedev’s way — aside from this month’s top seed Felix Auger-Aliassime, world No. 10 Alexander Bublik, and British No. 1 Jack Draper — is his flame-haired compatriot Rublev, a winner in Dubai in 2022. If Medvedev embodies control, Rublev brings chaos, shuttling around the court and overwhelming opponents with raw power and relentless intensity.

The Dubai tournament’s timing early in the season, coupled with its consistent conditions, suits his aggressive baseline style, and as he chases an 18th career title, he will be eager to rediscover the sharpness and conviction that carried him to glory four years ago.

The 2024 tournament, in which Rublev defaulted in the final four, provided a surprise winner as Frenchman Humbert beat Bublik in the final to secure what was only his second ATP 500 title. Humbert was the fifth seed, but few fancied him to come through a tough draw that pitted him against compatriot Gael Monfils, three-time Grand Slam winner Andy Murray, No. 3 seed Hubert Hurkacz, then-world No. 4 Medvedev, and Bublik. Yet aside from an opening match wobble and a tough battle with Hurkacz in the last eight, he did so without dropping a set.

Left-handed, elegant, and evidently fearless, Humbert’s success resonated with fans who were reminded that Dubai is not only a stage for established stars, but also a launchpad for the next generation. His return this month will be closely followed as he looks to utilize fond memories and the confidence they can bring.

Completing the quartet is Tsitsipas, the reigning champion who finally clinched his long-awaited Dubai crown after years of near misses. Following back-to-back final defeats in 2019 and 2020 to Federer and Djokovic, the Greek produced an assured performance to beat Auger-Aliassime to lift the trophy, his first ATP 500 title, and re-enter the world top 10. The 27-year-old’s stylish all-court game has long captivated audiences, but if he is to defend his title this month, he will be achieving a feat no player has managed since Federer in 2015.