Al-Hilal management to settle financial matters as club eyes transfer market

The reigning Saudi champions Al-Hilal have outstanding obligations totaling $6.4 million. (Twitter: @Alhilal_FC)
Short Url
Updated 14 June 2021
Follow

Al-Hilal management to settle financial matters as club eyes transfer market

  • Reigning Saudi champions have outstanding payments totaling $6.4 million

RIYADH: Al-Hilal’s management team was on Monday expected to settle all outstanding payments from April to secure a financial efficiency certificate allowing the club to take part in the summer transfer window, Arabic sports daily Arriyadiyah reported.

The Saudi Ministry of Sports announced through a press statement from the financial efficiency committee for sports clubs, that the club had financial obligations amounting to $6.4 million.

A successful season for Al-Hilal saw the club claim a record-extending 17th Saudi Professional League title, and an historic 62nd trophy, as well as confirm progress to the knockout stages of the 2021 AFC Champions League.

According to Arriyadiyah sources, the outstanding amount covered the salaries of club employees, players of various sporting activities, and the agent of one of the football team’s players, and the cases would be closed once the payments were made.


American Tien beats Belgian Blockx to win Next Gen ATP Finals title

Updated 22 December 2025
Follow

American Tien beats Belgian Blockx to win Next Gen ATP Finals title

  • Tien, who won his first trophy on the tour at the Moselle Open last month, held his nerve and ‌made only ‌12 unforced errors while Blockx had ‌23, ⁠as ​the American ‌won the match in just under an hour
  • Tien: I’m really happy. I knew it was going to be a tough match. I don’t think (Blockx) missed a serve for the first set-and-a-half

JEDDAH: American Learner Tien overpowered Belgian opponent Alexander Blockx 4-3(4) 4-2 4-1 to win the Next Gen ATP Finals on Sunday, the year-ending exhibition tournament between ​the eight highest-ranked players on the tour aged 20 and under.

The tournament uses a modified format, where a player needs to win four games to clinch a set, and winning one point at deuce is enough to take the game.

Tien, who won his first trophy on the tour at the Moselle Open last month, held his nerve and ‌made only ‌12 unforced errors while Blockx had ‌23, ⁠as ​the American ‌won the match in just under an hour. “I’m really happy. I knew it was going to be a tough match. I don’t think (Blockx) missed a serve for the first set-and-a-half. He’s been playing great in these conditions all week,” said Tien, who lost last year’s final to Joao Fonseca.

Blockx, who served seven ⁠aces while his opponent had only one, made his intentions clear from ‌the start, attacking the left-handed Tien’s backhand ‍with a fast serve and ‍running up to the net to apply pressure. Tien, ‍ranked 28th in the world, pushed Blockx back with a well-placed lob before winning the point with a drive volley and although Blockx, ranked 116th, saved a break point and pushed the first ​set into a tiebreaker, top seed Tien outplayed his fellow 20-year-old.

Tien won the second set with a ⁠decisive break, using his powerful forehand to push Blockx back until the under-pressure Belgian second seed hit over the baseline. The American, who has clinched five victories over top-10 ranked players this year including a straight-sets win over Alexander Zverev in February, got another break in the third set to go 3-1 up, leaving Blockx with little chance of fighting back.

“What a year you’ve had,” Blockx told Tien at the trophy presentation ceremony. “There are not a lot of days ‌I feel helpless on court but today was one of them. You’re just too good.”