Husein Alireza becomes the first Saudi athlete inducted into the Olympic Museum

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Saudi rowing captain Husein Alireza was inducted into the Olympic Museum in Lausanne, Switzerland. (Supplied)
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Saudi rowing captain Husein Alireza was inducted into the Olympic Museum in Lausanne, Switzerland. (Supplied)
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Saudi rowing captain Husein Alireza was inducted into the Olympic Museum in Lausanne, Switzerland. (Supplied)
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Saudi rowing captain Husein Alireza was inducted into the Olympic Museum in Lausanne, Switzerland. (Supplied)
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Updated 09 December 2022
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Husein Alireza becomes the first Saudi athlete inducted into the Olympic Museum

  • Husein was approached by the museum to include his story and exhibit the oars he used at the Tokyo 2020 Games

RIYADH: Saudi rowing captain Husein Alireza was inducted into the Olympic Museum in Lausanne, Switzerland, on Wednesday.

The museum hosts exhibits from athletes whose background and stories they find to be unique and inspiring.

Husein was approached by the museum earlier to include his story and showcase the oars the used at the Tokyo 2020 Games - where he reached the quarterfinals in the Men's Single Sculls -  in their permanent exhibits.

A ceremony was held in Lausanne where he officially donated his oars to the museum, becoming the first Saudi athlete to be so honoured.

In attendance was his father and President of the Saudi Rowing Federation, Ali Alireza, members of World Rowing and other international federations.

“These oars have literally had my blood, sweat, and tears on them,” Alireza said.

“I'm so honored and grateful on this occasion and I'd like to thank the Ministry of Sport and the Saudi Olympic Committee for their unconditional support from the start of my journey.

“I want this to give inspiration to the youth and let them know you can do what I can do and you can do it better,” he added. 

Alireza is currently preparing for the World Rowing Championships to be held in Serbia in September 2023.


Undav scores again as Stuttgart sink Frankfurt to go third

Updated 14 January 2026
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Undav scores again as Stuttgart sink Frankfurt to go third

  • A dipping header from Rasmus Kristensen gave Frankfurt an early lead
  • The victory took the German Cup holders to third, a point behind second-placed Borussia Dortmund

BERLIN: Nikolas Nartey nabbed a late winner and Deniz Undav continued his hot form as Stuttgart beat Eintracht Frankfurt 3-2 at home on Tuesday to climb to third in the Bundesliga.
A dipping header from Rasmus Kristensen gave Frankfurt an early lead but Ermedin Demirovic pounced on a goalkeeping error and Undav’s deflected effort helped Stuttgart wrestle back control of the match before half-time.
Bundesliga debutant Ayoube Amaimouni-Echghouyab brought Frankfurt level but Nartey’s 87th-minute strike, his first Bundesliga goal, put the hosts back in front.
The victory took the German Cup holders to third, a point behind second-placed Borussia Dortmund, who cruised to a 3-0 victory over Werder Bremen stretching their unbeaten run to 10 league games.
Frankfurt have struggled this season after last campaign’s third-placed finish, their best result in three decades.
Kristensen connected with a corner to put his side in front after five minutes, but Frankfurt ushered Stuttgart back into the game when goalkeeper Kaua Santos spilled a routine catch, allowing Demirovic to slice home.
Undav put his side in front 10 minutes before the break, wrong-footing the Frankfurt defense and blasting a low shot which took a thick deflection into the bottom corner.
Undav, who has nine goals and two assists in his past eight league games, forced two desperation saves from Santos and flashed just wide of the post in the second half.
Amaimouni-Echghouyab levelled things up just three minutes after coming on but his effort was bested by another debut goal minutes later, when Nartey tapped in from close range.
Elsewhere, the match between Hamburg and Bayer Leverkusen was postponed just two hours before kick-off, the third Bundesliga game canceled in the space of a week due to wild winter weather across northern Germany.