Kooora, the largest digital sports publisher in the Middle East, acquired by Footballco

Kooora signing with Khalid Aldoseri (left) and Juan Delgado (right). (Supplied)
Short Url
Updated 12 April 2022
Follow

Kooora, the largest digital sports publisher in the Middle East, acquired by Footballco

  • Footballco regional HQ is relocating to Saudi Arabia, the region’s fastest-growing football market
  • Comes ahead of the first FIFA World Cup to be hosted in the region

LONDON: Footballco, the world’s largest digital football content and media business, announced the purchase of Kooora, the largest digital sports publisher in the Middle East, in a mid-eight-figure all-cash deal.

Kooora, the Dubai-based online sports publisher, has dominated online sports news and data in the Middle East since its launch in Bahrain in 2002 by founder Khalid Aldoseri.

Published in Arabic and English and reaching an average of 25 million unique users monthly, Kooora has always been known for its immediacy, promptness, consistency, credibility and integrity in covering sports news.

Koora also amasses 7 million followers on its social media and covers more than 42 different sports, 85 percent of which is about football.

The acquisition will complement Footballco’s current footprint in the Middle East which is served by seven local editions of GOAL, published in both English and Arabic, and will more than double Footballco’s audience in the region and increase its monthly global reach to 640 million fans.

The acquisition comes at a time when fans across the world are looking ahead to the first FIFA World Cup in the Middle East.

Kooora’s founder, Khalid Aldoseri, said: “I’m proud to have founded Kooora and to have taken it to this level and I’m excited to see how far it can grow as part of Footballco.

“Since the day it was launched, we worked hard to build and maintain the pioneering position of Kooora.com at all levels.

“Setting standards and sustaining them is one challenge that was not subject to any compromise.

“We look forward to Kooora.com growing and expanding onto higher realms as part of Footballco, striving to always serve a valuable and precious Arabic-speaking user base of sports fans.

“It is all about the solidarity, synchrony, harmony and hard work that have always been common elements within Kooora’s work environment.”

Mustafa Mohamed, COO of Karmic Consultancy, the management company of Kooora.com, said: “The family and team spirit brought us to this point. Thanks to each member in the team and look forward to achieving more great results with the massive global value Footballco would bring to the formula.”

Footballco CEO Juan Delgado said: “Kooora supercharges our global and Middle East footprint at a time when more eyes will be on the sport and the region.

“As a core market for Footballco, being the number one football platform in the Middle East is a must, allowing us to serve its young, growing and football-mad population.

“It is an affluent digital market, which allows us to continue to populate our map with leading local publishing brands alongside GOAL’s global scale.”

To further expand Footballco’s presence in the Middle East, the company will be moving its regional headquarters to Saudi Arabia, integrating both Kooora and GOAL’s operations in the region.


Saudi Arabia strengthens global ranking in 2026 Soft Power Index

Updated 20 January 2026
Follow

Saudi Arabia strengthens global ranking in 2026 Soft Power Index

  • UAE maintains 10th place, Qatar climbs 2 spots

DUBAI: Saudi Arabia climbed three positions to 17th place in this year’s Soft Power Index, released on Tuesday by marketing consultancy Brand Finance.

Other Gulf nations also performed well, with the UAE maintaining its 10th-place ranking and Qatar and Bahrain each climbing two spots to No. 20 and No. 49, respectively, marking a rebound for the region after a softer showing in 2025.

The report indicates that the performance reflects sustained investment in proactive diplomacy, economic diversification and expanded initiatives across culture, tourism and sports.

It also comes at a time when several Western powers are recording declines in their rankings, highlighting the growing influence of Gulf states.

“The UAE remains a clear regional leader, while Saudi Arabia and Qatar have strengthened their global positions through focused economic diplomacy and international engagement,” said Savio D’Souza, managing director for the Middle East and Africa, Brand Finance.

Saudi Arabia and the UAE either maintained or improved their rankings across all key pillars, including familiarity, reputation and influence.

The Kingdom recorded notable gains, with increases of 25 points in the People & Values pillar and 12 points in the Culture & Heritage pillar.

“Although perceptions across some markets remain mixed, renewed upward movement in the rankings suggests that targeted, long-term soft power strategies are beginning to pay off,” D’Souza said.

Globally, the US retained its top position despite recording the steepest overall decline in its score, followed by China in second place. Japan rose to third place, overtaking the UK, which ranked fourth, while Germany placed fifth.

Brand Finance defines “soft power” as a “nation’s ability to influence the preferences and behaviors of various actors in the international arena (states, corporations, communities, publics, etc.) through attraction and persuasion rather than coercion.” 

Each nation is assessed across 55 individual metrics, producing an overall score out of 100 and a ranking from first to 193rd.