Abdullah Hlehel becomes second Arab-Israeli footballer to join UAE’s Al-Nasr

Just a week or so before the start of the new season, Al-Nasr has signed Hlehel, their second Israeli player. (File/Internet)
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Updated 08 August 2021
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Abdullah Hlehel becomes second Arab-Israeli footballer to join UAE’s Al-Nasr

  • The Muslim striker of Palestinian origin joins compatriot Dia Saba at Dubai club from Hapoel Ironi Kiryat Shmona

LONDON: There were plenty of headlines about politics when Dia Saba joined Al-Nasr SC last year to become the first Israeli player in the Arabian Gulf League, but the fact that the Dubai club has returned to sign a second shows that sport takes precedence. 

It also means that Abdullah Hlehel has a tough act to follow.

Just a week or so before the start of the new season, Al-Nasr has signed Hlehel, their second Israeli player: “We are delighted to welcome the young striker,” Al-Nasr said on social media. “He will wear our colors until 2023.”

The 20-year-old Arab Muslim striker of Palestinian origin arrives from Hapoel Ironi Kiryat Shmona and is expected to add firepower as Al-Nasr look to improve on last season’s fifth place and mount a genuine challenge for a first league title since 1986. 

If he is as successful as Saba has been, then the likes of Al Jazira, Baniyas and Shabab Al Ahli may be worried.

It will not be easy, though. Saba signed in September, a month after the UAE and Israel normalized relations in 2020. The midfielder soon showed why he was valued at around $5 million. 

Al-Nasr said in a statement at the time: “Attracting the player came from a purely artistic perspective and was chosen due to his talent and individual capabilities that would constitute a strong addition to the ranks of the Al-Nasr team, and also out of its keenness to attract sports talents from all over the world without any other considerations in order to enrich local competitions.” 

In other words, it was a football deal, and that the club have returned to Israel to sign a second player is proof of Saba’s successful transition to playing in Dubai. 

Last season the midfielder missed just two league games and scored seven goals in total, in what was a reasonable campaign despite ending in a 2-1 defeat to Shabab Al Ahli in the final of the President’s Cup. Since 2012, when Al-Nasr finished second, they have never finished lower than eighth or higher than fourth. The club will hope Hlehel, just 20, who has represented Israel at youth level, can make the difference. 

Still raw, he scored five league goals last season as Hapoel finished sixth out of 14 teams, earning praise for making life difficult for defenders and working hard for the team. Not an automatic starter in Israel, he is hoping for some more game time in the UAE, and having Saba already established and capable of making goals for teammates should help him settle. It may well be the case, though, that he needs more time than the 28-year-old Saba, who was named by the prestigious World Soccer magazine as one of its “People of the Year.”

Fans may get a look at Hlehel when Al-Nasr kick off the new campaign against Ajman on Aug. 19, but it may be too soon to expect a second Dia Saba.


29 players advance to round 2 of LIV Golf Promotions

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29 players advance to round 2 of LIV Golf Promotions

  • Friday’s 18-hole shootout will determine the weekend field that compete for 3 spots in the 2026 LIV Golf League

LECANTO, FLORIDA: The key to advancing beyond Thursday’s opening round of LIV Golf Promotions was simple: break par.

All 29 players who shot better than even-par 70 at Black Diamond Ranch moved on to Friday’s second round, to be joined by 18 exempt players in another 18-hole shootout to determine the weekend field that will compete for three spots in the 2026 LIV Golf League.

Canada’s Richard T. Lee led the first-round field of 60 players with a bogey-free six-under 64, two shots better than his nearest competitors, thanks to a stretch of four birdies in his final six holes.

“It’s the first round, and finishing first is always a great feeling,” said the 35-year-old Lee. “But the scores are going to reset tomorrow for the second round, and hopefully I can put up another good score out there.”

Of the 47 players competing on Friday, the top 20 and ties will advance to the two-day weekend shootout. The top three players after those 36 final holes will earn wild-card spots for the upcoming LIV Golf season.

At last season’s LIV Golf Promotions tournament, Lee was exempt into the second round, then advanced into the weekend. If he earns one of the three spots, he would be the league’s first Canadian player.

“Definitely for everyone out there that’s striving to get the three cards, I think it’s going to be a life-changer to be out there on LIV Golf and performing at the highest level,” Lee said.

Among those advancing comfortably behind Lee with four-under 64s were youngsters Max Kennedy of Ireland and Pablo Ereno of Spain, Korea’s Hongtaek Kim, and Thailand’s Suteepat Prateeptienchai and Sadom Kaewkanjana.

Ereno turned pro last June and is the youngest player in the field, at 22. He is hoping to follow the same path as current LIV Golf players Josele Ballester, David Puig and Luis Masaveu, the three young Spaniards who will be teammates on Sergio Garcia’s Fireballs GC team this season.

“I’m super close, especially with Josele and Luis Masaveu,” said Ereno, who played collegiately at UCLA. “I’ve only heard good things about it, so that’s why I’m here trying to earn my spot for next year. They’re really happy playing on LIV, and I think I would be, too, in case I play great this week.”

Kennedy was still an amateur in 2023 when he participated in the inaugural LIV Golf Promotions tournament and advanced from the first round.

“Definitely a lot more comfortable,” Kennedy said. “Back then, it was kind of new to me, so I was a little bit more nervous, didn’t know what to expect. Going out there tomorrow, I’ll know how to feel. I know what I’m going to feel.”

Prateeptienchai is one of two players at Black Diamond Ranch who previously advanced to the final 36-hole shootout in each of the previous two Promotions tournaments.

The other, Kieran Vincent, earned a LIV Golf spot in 2023, and Prateeptienchai is hoping for a similar result this week. He previously finished T11 in 2023 and T8 last season.

Provided he advances again after Friday’s second round, he hopes not having to play 36 holes in a single final day, as in the previous Promotions tournaments, will be a positive.

This year, the final two rounds consist of 18 holes on Saturday and 18 more on Sunday. “Just really tired because it’s playing 36 holes in a day,” Prateeptienchai said. “This year, it’s 18 and 18. More happy.”

Kaewkanjana is one of 12 players this week with previous LIV Golf experience. He played in all eight tournaments during the inaugural 2022 season and has been working hard to earn another chance.

“I try to get into LIV Golf this year,” he said, “so that it gets me a great experience to play with the greatest players in the world.”

Eleven players made the top-20-and-ties cut on the number at one-under 69, including Australia’s Cory Crawford, who birdied the difficult par-four 18th to secure his spot.

England’s Joe Pagdin, playing in the final group that started off the 10th tee, bogeyed his next-to-last hole but bounced back with a birdie at the par-five ninth to also advance.