Leading golfers to compete in Rooftop Charity Challenge ahead of Dubai Desert Classic

Rafa Cabrera will take part in the rooftop charity challenge ahead of the 2022 Dubai Desert Classic. (Supplied)
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Updated 18 January 2022
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Leading golfers to compete in Rooftop Charity Challenge ahead of Dubai Desert Classic

  • Four Major champions will be part of the eight golfers participating in the event at the JA The Resort Dubai on Jan. 24

DUBAI: On the eve of next week’s Slync.io Dubai Desert Classic, four major champions will be among the eight golfing greats battling it out for a good cause in a charity match-play tournament as the JA Lake View Hotel at JA The Resort Dubai welcomes back its Rooftop Charity Challenge on Monday Jan. 24.

Rafa Cabrera Bello will lead the star-studded field, which also includes the challenge’s defending champion Adri Arnaus, along with Charl Schwartzel and Danny Willett, masters champions from 2011 and 2016 respectively, Open winners Henrik Stenson (2016) and Shane Lowry (2019), Swedish star Sebastian Soderberg and US amateur hotshot Sam Bennett.

The challenge takes place from 4:30 p.m. on Jan. 24 in the BIBÉ rooftop lounge on the JA Lakeview Hotel, with the players hitting 90-yard shots from an elevated tee onto the stunning second hole of the nine-hole golf course 30 yards below. The winning player will secure up to $6,800 for the Al-Jalila Foundation.

The JA Lake View Hotel’s Rooftop Charity Challenge will see players and guests overlook a nine-hole, par 35 championship standard golf course with driving range, putting and pitching greens and Leadbetter Golf Academy Dubai of JA The Resort.

Director of golf at JA The Resort, Stuart McMurdo, said: “We are privileged to host this event once again, after its inception in 2020. This year features some of the world’s best players who come from all corners of the globe. It’s a fantastic opportunity to showcase our wonderful golf course and resort facilities.”

The event is being held in the build-up to the Slync.io Dubai Desert Classic, the region’s longest-running golf event, which has been elevated to a Rolex Series event for 2022.

For the first time in the event’s 33-year history, the Slync.io Dubai Desert Classic is free to attend for all spectators. This year’s field includes four-time major winner Rory McIlroy, recently crowned DP World Tour Number One Collin Morikawa, defending champion Paul Casey, world No. 7 Viktor Hovland, 2017 Masters champion Sergio Garcia, five-time DP World Tour winner Tommy Fleetwood and more.


Formula One enters new era with excitement and uncertainty

Updated 6 sec ago
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Formula One enters new era with excitement and uncertainty

LONDON: New cars, new power and new teams for a new era — Formula One starts afresh in Australia this week with a heady mix of excitement, uncertainty and apprehension. Never shy of underselling itself, the high-octane sport appears on the money in billing the 2026 season as the biggest shakeup it has ever seen.

For the first time in decades the chassis and power unit regulations have changed at the same time, a massive challenge even for the biggest teams, with near parity between the electrical and combustion engine elements. There is also 100 percent advanced sustainable fuel, Madrid’s debut on the 24-race calendar, a new champion in McLaren’s Lando Norris and one of the youngest drivers ever to start a grand prix in Racing Bulls’ British 18-year-old rookie Arvid ‌Lindblad.

The last time ‌there was such a significant engine reset, in 2014, Mercedes went on ‌a record run of dominance but this time the campaign could be much more open.

How will the fans respond?

The list of questions is long.

Will the fans like what is on offer? How has the pecking order changed? Can Ferrari finally end their wait of nearly two decades for a drivers’ title? And if they are contenders, could Lewis Hamilton win a record eighth championship? Will Mercedes’ George Russell live up to his pre-season billing as title favorite? Maybe Charles Leclerc’s time has come at Ferrari, or will Red Bull’s Max Verstappen bounce back with a fifth championship after his run of four in a row ‌ended? Can Norris become only the second Briton to successfully defend ‌a title after Hamilton, or will Australian teammate Oscar Piastri gain the upper hand? How will French youngster ‌Isack Hadjar fare as Verstappen’s new teammate in the hottest of hot seats?

The jury is out ‌on all of the above, with pre-season testing in Bahrain — whose race in April now faces uncertainty following US and Israeli attacks on Iran — hinting at a familiar top four amid tantalising suspicions of “sandbagging” — hiding true performance. Mercedes boss Toto Wolff has suggested Red Bull, racing with their own powertrain for the first time, had set a ‌benchmark.

Red Bull have dismissed that idea and said they were possibly only fourth. Champions McLaren, meanwhile, pointed the finger at Mercedes and Ferrari as ⁠a step ahead of the ⁠rest and said they would be on the defensive, initially at least. Further back, Renault-owned Alpine will be starting over and hoping for a big leap from last overall after replacing their French-made engines with Mercedes units. Swiss-based Sauber are now racing as the Audi factory outfit while the grid has expanded to 11 teams following the arrival of Cadillac, already pushing the promotional bar higher with a livery launch via an expensive commercial aired during the Super Bowl. They will also be bringing back two highly experienced winning names from the recent past in Mexican Sergio Perez, Verstappen’s former teammate, and Finland’s Valtteri Bottas, who once raced alongside Hamilton at Mercedes. Cadillac might be expected to finish last but the Ferrari engine looks strong while Aston Martin, starting a new partnership with Honda and with Adrian Newey as designer and team principal, have struggled to get laps in testing due to reliability issues.

Melbourne will provide early pointers but a true pattern will take longer to emerge in what also promises to be a ferocious development race.