Senegal’s glory: 5 things we learned from the Africa Cup of Nations final

People celebrate after Senegal won the Africa Cup of Nations in Dakar, Senegal February 7, 2022 in this screengrab obtained from a social media video. (Reuters)
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Updated 07 February 2022
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Senegal’s glory: 5 things we learned from the Africa Cup of Nations final

  • The 4-2 penalty shootout win over Egypt brought redemption from Sadio Mane and sets up an intriguing rematch in the World Cup Qualifiers next month

In the end, glory went to Senegal, who defeated Egypt 4-2 in a penalty shootout to win the African Cup of Nations for the first time on Sunday.

Here are five things Arab News learned from a final that ended 0-0 after two hours but was not short on narrative and drama.

1. It was fitting that Mane scored the winning goal

It can’t have been easy for Sadio Mane. If the Liverpool star had scored the early penalty, then Senegal would likely have won in normal time. And it can’t have been easy to shrug off such a miss for the almost two hours of football that followed.

Everyone knows that you don’t get many chances against Egypt, and that is what happened. Mane did not have his best game, but he still worked hard for the team. And at the end of the shootout, there he was walking up to take the final penalty with the hopes of a nation on his shoulders knowing that a goal would mean everything.

Faced with the same goalkeeper Gabaski, it could easily have been a repeat of the events of much earlier in the game, but the Liverpool star fired home the perfect penalty. His first one had been all power but fairly central. His second was still powerful but right in the bottom corner, and it was unstoppable. It took nerves of steel and was quite a story.

2. More frustration for Salah

There has been a lot said and written about the Liverpool star and his performances during the tournament. Millions of fans at home and more around the world were watching and waiting for Mohamed Salah to catch fire and show the form in Africa that made him one of the most feared attackers in the world. 

It didn’t happen, the Morocco game apart when he scored one and made the other. Egypt’s style is not one that creates many chances, and throughout the tournament, the 29-year-old was marshaled closely and given no space or time. Defenders seemed to relish the chance to test themselves against Salah, and so it was the same in the final.

The fact that the Egyptian King had to watch clubmate Mane score the winning penalty in the knowledge that he would not get to take his own kick seemed to sum up Salah’s tournament. Leaving the main man to take number five is always a gamble and with two of the first four missed, this time, it did not pay off.

3. Egypt’s loss won’t be internationally mourned 

It is safe to say that Egypt have not been the neutral’s favorite in this tournament, and most will be happy with Senegal’s win. The Pharaohs have been machine-like in terms of defending at least. After conceding to Nigeria in the opening game, they conceded just one goal in the next 720 minutes of football.

Every team, no matter who they were and how they played, struggled against the North Africans. The organization, the discipline, the shape, the concentration and the sheer hard work have been worthy of praise, even if that praise has not always been forthcoming from those who would prefer to see goals, drama and action.

Coach Carlos Queiroz will not care about that, but he may wonder if the outcome would have been different had Egypt been a little more adventurous.

4. Gabaski will never be forgotten

It was almost a fairy tale. The tournament started with Mohamed Abou Gabal, now known to the world as Gabaski, as a second-choice goalkeeper over 30 years old who had played fewer than a handful of games for his country until an early injury to main man Mohamed Elshenawy in the first game of the knockout stage changed everything. 

This substitute goalkeeper turned out to be a colossus. His penalty save in the seventh minute from Mane was his fourth spot-kick stop in the tournament — not bad for a player who himself had to go off in extra-time of the quarterfinal win over Morocco and has been feeling the effects of the groin injury ever since. Despite that, he made a number of great stops. In the shootout, he made save number five from the spot and he got close to all the kicks but in the end, he was on the losing side.

The fact that he received the Man of the Match award says it all. It is rare indeed in a final for a member of the losing team to get that prize, but nobody would dispute that the Zamalek man deserved it. 

5. Egypt have a chance to serve some red-hot revenge

The Egyptian players were understandably devastated at the end, and many were in tears. They may have won the tournament seven times, but the last triumph came back in 2010. Players such as Salah who have won huge prizes in Europe are not going to get many more chances to win with their country.

That said, Egypt have a great chance to bounce back as soon as next month. The same two teams will meet in the final African playoffs for a place at the World Cup. It is debatable whether qualifying for Qatar will make up for losing a continental final. What is for sure, however, is that losing to Senegal again and sitting at home later this year when the rest of the world goes to Qatar would be really painful. In terms of big games this year, it is Senegal 1, Egypt 0. There is a chance to make it 1-1.


All-round Stoinis helps Lucknow beat Mumbai in IPL

Updated 30 April 2024
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All-round Stoinis helps Lucknow beat Mumbai in IPL

  • Stoinis top-scored in Lucknow’s modest chase of 145 against Mumbai Indians as the home team achieved their target with four wickets and four balls to spare
  • Mumbai managed 144-7 courtesy Nehal Wadhera’s 46 and an unbeaten 18-ball 35 by Tim David after being invited to bat first

LUCKNOW: All-rounder Marcus Stoinis smashed 62 after he took a wicket on Tuesday to guide Lucknow Super Giants to an IPL win on the eve of Australia’s T20 World Cup team announcement.
Stoinis top-scored in Lucknow’s modest chase of 145 against Mumbai Indians as the home team achieved their target with four wickets and four balls to spare.
Lucknow moved to third spot in the 10-team table led by Rajasthan Royals. Five-time winners Mumbai remained ninth above wooden spooners Royal Challengers Bengaluru.
Lucknow skipper KL Rahul fell for 28, hours after being snubbed by India’s selectors, who on Tuesday afternoon named the team for the T20 World Cup in June.
Mumbai skipper Hardik Pandya was named deputy to India captain Rohit Sharma for the World Cup in the West Indies and the US, but the star all-rounder fell for a duck and his team to their seventh loss in 10 matches.
“Sometimes you will be down, sometimes you will be up, just that you got to give it your all,” Pandya said. “Looks difficult but a lot of things that you can learn from this game.”
Birthday boy Rohit, who turned 37, Japsrit Bumrah, Suryakumar Yadav are three of the four players from Mumbai to make the Indian team for the World Cup starting June 2.
Mumbai managed 144-7 courtesy Nehal Wadhera’s 46 and an unbeaten 18-ball 35 by Tim David after being invited to bat first.
Pandya said Wadhera will “play a lot of IPL and (represent) India eventually.”
Lucknow left-arm quick Mohsin Khan took two wickets after he struck first with the wicket of Rohit, who was caught out for four by Stoinis at extra cover.
Stoinis got the key wicket of Yadav for 10 and Mumbai were soon 27-4 when Naveen-ul-Haq got Pandya for a first-ball duck.
But Pandya returned to take two wickets with his pace bowling.
Stoinis turned up with the bat to raise his second fifty — he has also hit a century — of the season with hours left for the Australian selectors to announce the T20 team on Wednesday.
He fell to Afghanistan spinner Mohammad Nabi after his 42-ball knock laced with seven fours and two sixes.
Lucknow lost two more wickets to raise Mumbai’s hopes of a turnaround, but Nicholas Pooran steered the team home in the final over.


Jeddah hosts Saudi Smash 2024 table tennis championship from May 1-11

Updated 30 April 2024
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Jeddah hosts Saudi Smash 2024 table tennis championship from May 1-11

  • The prestigious championship will see the world’s top table tennis players in action, including rising star Wang Chuqin
  • The championship is set to further solidify the Kingdom’s position as a preferred destination for global sporting events

RIAYDH: Jeddah is gearing up for the commencement of the Saudi Smash 2024 table tennis championship scheduled to take place May 1-11.
The event marks the second run in the series of the Grand Smash tournaments on this year’s World Table Tennis Organization calendar.
Saudi Arabia hosts the 10-day tournament which is being organized by the Saudi Table Tennis Federation under the supervision of the Ministry of Sports and in collaboration with WTT.
The prestigious championship will see the world’s top table tennis players in action, including rising star Wang Chuqin, the Grand Smash Singapore 2024 winner Fan Zhendong, and French talent Felix Lebrun among others.
In the women’s singles category, elite players like Sun Yingsha, Wang Manyu, Chen Meng, Hina Hayata, Shin Yu-bin, Bernadette Szocs, and Adriana Diaz Gonzalez will showcase their skills on the international stage.
Saudi fans are eagerly anticipating the debut of local table tennis players such as Ali Al-Khudrawi in the men’s singles event, alongside Abdulaziz Boushlbi, Khaled Al-Sherif, Hadi Abu Al-Raha, Turki Al-Mutairi, Salem Al-Swailem, and Mohamed Al-Qasab.
This championship offers a unique opportunity for Saudi players to shine globally and compete against the world’s best table tennis players.
The championship is set to further solidify the Kingdom’s position as a preferred destination for global sporting events, fostering the development of sports at the grassroots level and supporting the objectives of Saudi Vision 2030 to promote sports as an integral part of society.
Those interested in witnessing the excitement of the tournament can secure their tickets through the official website: SaudiSmash.com/Visitor


India recalls Rishabh Pant for T20 World Cup after near-fatal car crash

Updated 30 April 2024
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India recalls Rishabh Pant for T20 World Cup after near-fatal car crash

  • Pant was India’s first-choice wicketkeeper across all three formats until December 2022 when he crashed and dislocated his right knee
  • Pant feared amputation. He returned to competitive cricket last month for the ongoing Indian Premier League and has proved himself

NEW DELHI: Rishabh Pant was restored to the India squad for the T20 World Cup on Tuesday, 16 months after a near-fatal car crash.

Allrounder Shivam Dube, recalled by India last August after more than two years out, also made the cut, and star batters Rohit Sharma and Virat Kohli were confirmed for the tournament in June in the Caribbean and the United States.

Pant was India’s first-choice wicketkeeper across all three formats until December 2022 when he crashed and dislocated his right knee. He was pulled out by passersby before the car caught fire. Pant feared amputation. He returned to competitive cricket last month for the ongoing Indian Premier League and has proved himself.

Pant has 398 runs in 11 innings — good for fourth overall — at a strike rate of 158.56.

Dube has also lit up the IPL with 350 runs in nine innings at a strike rate of 172.41.

Wrist spinner Yuzvendra Chahal, the only bowler to take 200 wickets in IPL history, was a surprise inclusion because he wasn’t used at the Cricket World Cup that India hosted late last year. Chahal has 13 wickets in nine IPL games at an economy of 9.

India has picked three other spinners; left-arm unorthodox wrist spinner Kuldeep Yadav, and left-arm spin allrounders Ravindra Jadeja and Axar Patel.

Sharma and Kohli were informally announced as selections in February by Jay Shah, the secretary of the Board of Control for Cricket in India.

“In the 2023 (final) at Ahmedabad, even though we did not win the World Cup after 10 straight wins, we won hearts,” Shah said then. “I want to promise you that in 2024, under Rohit Sharma’s captaincy, we will hoist the Indian flag in Barbados (in the final on June 29).”

Sharma and Kohli are in good form in the IPL. Kohli leads the run-scorers’ charts with 500 in 10 innings, including one hundred and four half-centuries. Sharma has 311 in nine games at a strike rate of 160.30.

Despite Kohli opening the innings in the IPL, he should bat at number three while left-handed youngster Yashasvi Jaiswal opens with Sharma.

The world No. 1-ranked T20 batter, Suryakumar Yadav, will be at number four.

Nine of the 15-man squad were at the 2022 T20 World Cup, where India lost in the semifinals to eventual champion England.

India begins the World Cup on June 5 against Ireland. It will also play Pakistan and tournament host the US; all three games will be at the purpose-built Nassau County International Cricket Stadium on Long Island. India will meet Canada in Florida.


Jofra Archer picked by England for T20 World Cup after cruel run of injuries

Updated 30 April 2024
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Jofra Archer picked by England for T20 World Cup after cruel run of injuries

  • Jofra Archer, 29, is considered one of cricket’s most exciting fast bowlers
  • England will hope Archer stays fit for four-match T20 series against Pakistan

Jofra Archer was selected in England’s provisional squad for the T20 World Cup on Tuesday, setting up a much-awaited international return for one of cricket’s most exciting bowlers whose career has been derailed by injuries.

The 29-year-old Archer has barely featured for England in any format since 2021, mainly because of ongoing issues with his right elbow for which he has undergone two operations. A back injury ruled him out of most of 2022.

The Barbados-born pacer was a breath of fresh air after switching nationality to be eligible for England ahead of the 2019 Cricket World Cup, which he helped his adopted country win on home soil. Then he played a starring role in the Ashes that year.

England will hope he stays fit to play in a four-match Twenty20 series against Pakistan and then the World Cup, which is being held in the Caribbean and the United States.

England’s opening match is against Scotland on June 4 at Kensington Oval in Barbados.

Also in the 15-man squad were Jonny Bairstow and Will Jacks, who have hit big knocks in the Indian Premier League in recent weeks. Left-arm spinning allrounder Tom Hartley is the sole uncapped player in the group.

England will be captained by Jos Buttler, with the team seeking a second T20 World Cup title.

England: Jos Buttler (captain), Moeen Ali, Jofra Archer, Jonny Bairstow, Harry Brook, Sam Curran, Ben Duckett, Tom Hartley, Will Jacks, Chris Jordan, Liam Livingstone, Adil Rashid, Phil Salt, Reece Topley, Mark Wood.


‘The trip of a lifetime’: Chinese supporters travel 30 hours to watch Al-Nassr and Cristiano Ronaldo play

Updated 30 April 2024
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‘The trip of a lifetime’: Chinese supporters travel 30 hours to watch Al-Nassr and Cristiano Ronaldo play

  • 5 superfans take dedication to the next level to see their heroes in person

RIYADH: Not many people would travel for 30 hours to watch a couple of football matches but this does not apply to YunXiang Ding and his wife Xutong Guo who are superfans of Saudi Arabia giants Al-Nassr and Cristiano Ronaldo.

The couple are from Changchun, the capital of northeast China’s Jilin province, which is just a few hours from the border with North Korea.

On April 1 — and no, this is definitely not an April Fool’s joke — the couple flew three hours from Changchun to Shanghai, waited eight hours at the airport there, and then boarded a nine-and-a-half-hour flight to Dubai.

At this point, they met up with Xutong’s sister Angie, who travelled from Hong Kong, and met Angie’s husband Simon, who lives in Abu Dhabi, to fly three hours from the UAE to beautiful Abha in southwest Saudi Arabia. Friend Triston Zhao, who travelled from Shanghai, also accompanied the group.

And it was there, at the end of an exhausting but hugely exhilarating and worthwhile trip, that they watched Al-Nassr play Damac in the Roshn Saudi League at the Prince Sultan bin Abdulaziz Stadium.

Xutong said: “The seats we had in the stadium were very near the touchline and we were close to Ronaldo warming up and when he moved out to the wing. It was the experience of a lifetime. We made a big, handmade poster banner for Ronaldo, and he saw it as he was clapping us walking off the pitch. It was amazing. We were so close to him.”

An injury-time Al-Nassr winner from Aymeric Laporte meant the group truly got to celebrate their trip to Saudi Arabia — but as well as the football, they were also able to appreciate the beauty of Abha. The capital city of Asir province is known for its stunning mountains, greenery, birds and dense juniper forests.

Xutong said: “Abha is so beautiful. The clouds, the scenery — it was more beautiful than the pictures we saw online could ever show. Seeing Al-Nassr play in such a beautiful place was truly special and the Saudi people were so warm and friendly. At the stadium people were asking us for pictures with us, but they said it’s not uncommon for Chinese fans to travel to watch Al-Nassr. Al-Nassr are huge in China.”

Utilizing Chinese public holidays that allowed a 10-day break, the group then flew from Abha back to the UAE, where they watched Al-Nassr play in the Saudi Super Cup in Abu Dhabi. A 2-1 defeat to Al-Hilal, in a match where Ronaldo was shown a red card, failed to dampen spirits about the trip or their love for their adopted team.

Simon said: “We are all big Cristiano fans and started supporting Al-Nassr when he joined — but our love for the club goes beyond him. YunXiang and Xutong in particular are big fans — they watch all the matches at home, and these are often shown very late at night or early in the morning. They have to stay up or get up at various times to watch. People in this part of the world maybe don’t understand how dedicated they are and the lengths they go to watch Al-Nassr. And there are many fans like this in China, Al-Nassr are hugely popular.”

The cost of the trip — inclusive of flights, accommodation and spending money — was “around $5,000 per person,” Tristan said. But each agreed it was worth every penny.

Xutong added: “Cristiano Ronaldo inspires a generation of young people to not give up easily when they face setbacks. He inspires people to be just like him — and even if their efforts sometimes do not lead to a complete perfect ending, the spirit still remains. He is a world-famous superstar and a role model for Al-Nassr and Saudi Arabian football. People may think our trip to see him and Al-Nassr play in person took a long time for travel, but I feel so privileged to have been able to do so. It really was the trip of a lifetime.”