Cuba rushes to build first female boxing team, one of last nations to do so

Cuban boxers fight during the first official women's boxing program in Cuba at the Giraldo Cordova boxing school in Havana, on December 17, 2022. (AFP)
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Updated 18 December 2022
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Cuba rushes to build first female boxing team, one of last nations to do so

  • The women now are competing for a ticket in the six Olympic divisions en route to the Central American and Caribbean Games in San Salvador, in June 2023

HAVANA: Boxing powerhouse Cuba on Saturday staged a series of official female boxing matches for the first time since Fidel Castro’s 1959 Revolution, just a few weeks after lifting a taboo on the sport.
While women have been boxing for decades, in community and basement gyms, they were banned from the state-dominated sports system and competitions.
The 14 competitors in the seven fights were among 26 women already selected to receive special attention due to their promise to compete internationally for the Communist-run country.
“I feel super proud. Winning an official competition is a dream come true for me. We women have been waiting for this possibility for a long time,” Eliani de la Caridad Garcia, 27 and mother of a 2-year-old girl, told Reuters.
Garcia, who became the first woman to win a state-sponsored match in the country, was speaking in a gym and training area where many athletes, including male boxers, were cheering the women on.
The women now are competing for a ticket in the six Olympic divisions en route to the Central American and Caribbean Games in San Salvador, in June 2023.
The Caribbean island — long hailed for its top-ranked male boxers — has won 41 gold medals in the Olympic games since Munich in 1972, topping global charts.
But until now, it was one of a handful of countries that did not practice women’s boxing among the 202 nations affiliated with the International Boxing Association. Female boxers had no choice but to migrate to reach the highest levels of their sport.
Coach Julio Cesar Morales, who for decades trained male boxers and has now begun to work with the women, was eager to get started.
He told Reuters Cuba was hopeful women’s boxing would achieve international results, perhaps not right away as the team was just getting started, but in the medium term.
“The Cuban woman is a guerrilla in all spheres of life,” Cesar said. (Reporting by Nelson Acosta; Writing by Marc Frank; Editing by Chizu Nomiyama)

 


‘20 years of engagement’ — inaugural Formula 4 championship success signals bright future for motorsport in Saudi Arabia

Updated 03 February 2026
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‘20 years of engagement’ — inaugural Formula 4 championship success signals bright future for motorsport in Saudi Arabia

  • Peter Thompson, founder of the Formula 4 Saudi Arabian Championship and Meritus.GP team principal, spoke about the Kingdom’s first motorsport academy and his hopes for the future

RIYADH: Last year welcomed the inaugural season of the FIA-certified Aramco Formula 4 Saudi Arabian Championship.

The series, which aims to provide the first step on the ladder towards Formula 1, was the culmination of years of collaboration between various investors and partners, led by the Kingdom’s first motorsport academy, Meritus.GP.

The championship’s mission?

To produce local driving talent, strengthen Saudi national race engineering capabilities and advance motorsport in alignment with the objectives of Saudi Vision 2030.

Five Saudi drivers emerged, with standout victories by Omar Al-Dereyaan and Faisal Al-Kabbani, both from Riyadh. Other graduates included race winner Oscar Wurz, who has since won the 2025 Central European Formula 4 Championship.

Arab News spoke with Peter Thompson, founder of Formula 4 Saudi Arabia and Meritus.GP, about the season’s success and his hopes for the future.

How did Meritus.GP build the Formula 4 Saudi Arabian Championship?

The Formula 4 Saudi Arabian Championship was the result of more than 20 years of engagement, exploration and groundwork in Saudi Arabia, in anticipation of a potential FIA-certified junior single-seater championship in the Kingdom.

Long before the first Formula 1 Saudi Arabian Grand Prix, we were on the ground exploring circuit development opportunities, assessing infrastructure readiness and evaluating whether Saudi Arabia could host a round of one of the Asian championships operated by the team. Throughout this period, we maintained long-standing relationships within Saudi motorsport circles including former Meritus.GP driver Raad Abduljawad and his brother Mohammed Abduljawad.

A defining moment came with the introduction of Formula 1 to Saudi Arabia. The Jeddah Corniche Circuit quickly became a visible symbol of this ambition, providing confidence that Saudi Arabia could support not only Formula One, but also a structured ladder of junior single-seater racing.

When did Meritus.GP receive formal institutional approval to begin Formula 4 Saudi Arabia?

More than three years of focused groundwork preceded the first race. During this period there was no formal government mandate, no guaranteed institutional backing and no commercial certainty that the project would proceed or be viable.

Then, in December 2022, a formal No-Objection Letter was issued by the Saudi Automobile and Motorcycle Federation, under the leadership of its then-CEO Sattam Al-Hozami, which allowed the project to progress from concept to reality.

Recognizing the benefits F4 would bring to the Kingdom, Mohammed Abduljawad became an investor in June 2023, and Formula 4 Saudi Arabia moved into full delivery mode.

What were the objectives of the proposal presented to Saudi Aramco?

The proposal positioned Aramco Formula 4 Saudi Arabia as a long-term national development platform aligned with Vision 2030.

Its objectives included creating a structured FIA driver pathway from grassroots to Formula One, as well as developing Saudi engineers, mechanics and officials in motorsports.

How did the championship support Saudi drivers, and what was the impact on local talent?

A core objective of Formula 4 Saudi Arabia was to create a genuine, fair and internationally credible environment in which Saudi racers could develop.

Saudi drivers competed alongside international peers under identical technical and sporting conditions, allowing performance and development to be measured objectively.

They ended up achieving race wins, podium finishes and measurable progress across the season, demonstrating that when provided with the right structure, Saudi talent can compete at international level. 

How has Formula 4 Saudi Arabia engaged with Saudi education and skills development?

Education and skills transfer formed an important part of the championship’s wider mission.

During the season, Meritus.GP engineers and senior staff visited Saudi education and research institutions such as KAUST, Alfaisal University, University of Tabuk and the Japanese College in Jeddah to discuss career pathways in motorsport engineering, data analysis, and systems integration. These engagements were designed to connect academic study with real-world high-performance engineering environments.

What level of investment was required and how did you ensure equality of performance?

Approximately $6.5 million was invested prior to the first event.

Was there any pre-season training to help Saudi drivers prepare?

During August and September 2023 Saudi drivers participated in a structured pre-season academy program at Meritus.GP’s training facility in Sepang, Malaysia.

What role did sports psychology and driver well-being play in the championship?

Driver well-being and mental performance were treated as integral components of driver development.

Formula 4 Saudi Arabia appointed a dedicated sports psychologist to support drivers throughout the season, focusing on mental preparation, confidence building, coping strategies, performance consistency and adaptation to high-pressure racing environments.