Mancini’s Green Falcons looking for Saudi fans to help drive Asian Cup ambitions

The Asian Cup in Qatar could be further evidence of the vibrant football culture and love for the sport in the Middle East and North Africa region. (X.com/@SaudiNT)
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Updated 15 January 2024
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Mancini’s Green Falcons looking for Saudi fans to help drive Asian Cup ambitions

  • Saudi Arabia, like Morocco, received huge support from local crowds at 2022 World Cup in Qatar, but cannot count on neutrals this time0

RIYADH: Saudi Arabia kick off their AFC Asian Cup campaign against Oman on Tuesday, and though there will be massive pressure on manager Roberto Mancini’s side to immediately deliver with a win, the players are used to the huge occasions these days.

Attend a big game in the Saudi Pro League, such as the Riyadh Derby between Al-Hilal and Al-Nassr or a big game in Jeddah, and the atmosphere compares with any of those in the major European leagues. There are world-class tifos and banners and colourful, vociferous fans.

With global audiences increasingly tuning into Saudi football, the reputation of the fan culture and the passion for the game in the country and the wider region can only grow.

The Asian Cup in Qatar could be further evidence of the vibrant football culture and love for the sport in the Middle East and North Africa region.

Morocco showed that at the 2022 World Cup in Qatar, and it is an inspiration for Saudi Arabia. The Green Falcons will want to surpass Morocco’s semi-final achievement on the field, and they will also look to emulate North Africans in the stands.

Saudi Arabia’s team and supporters had some beautiful moments the last time they went to Qatar in November 2022.

When Herve Renard’s men took to the pitch at Lusail Stadium to face Argentina, they knew they were facing one of the best teams in the world and that nobody gave them a chance.

They did, however, have the support of the vast majority of the 80,000 fans in the arena. What happened next has gone down in the history of the competition as the Asian team came back from a goal down to win 2-1.

The Saudi fans, and those from Arab communities in Qatar, kept coming in the remaining group games against Poland and Mexico, although sadly Saudi Arabia failed to reach the knockout stages.

What Saudi Arabia started, Morocco took to the next level. Their support during the World Cup is one of the abiding memories of that tournament. The Atlas Lions fans turned stadiums into a sea of red and created unforgettable atmospheres that won praise from even the most hardened of international journalists.

That support helped drive the team on to success and that success then, in turn, helped fuel the fervor in the stands. The combination sent Morocco all the way to the last four, beating Belgium, Spain, and Portugal along the way before losing to France.

In 20 to 30 years when the tournament starts to fade from memories to become history, the fans of Morocco will still be talked about.

Saudi Arabia will want the same. The support they received at the World Cup was bolstered by local and regional fans for the games against opposition from Europe as well as South and Central America.

That will not be the case at the Asian Cup, as Saudi Arabia will not automatically be the choice of the neutrals at the stadiums and will certainly not be seen as underdogs as they were against the likes of Argentina.

This is a competition that Saudi Arabia have a genuine hope of winning and having the backing of tens of thousands of their followers will increase those chances. It has not happened since 1996 and the hunger is there.

Head coach Mancini will be looking to give those supporters something to cheer about. He has the knowhow to win international tournaments as he showed with Italy at the last European Championship.

He has surprised fans however by omitting goalkeeper Nawaf Al-Aqidi from his final squad. The Al-Nassr shot stopper is one of the few Saudi Arabians to get regular playing time in the league this season. With the 23-year-old seemingly uninjured, it looks to be a gamble from the Italian coach and any mistakes by the other goalkeepers will be highlighted. Yet these are the decisions that coaches live or die by.

Regardless of that controversial selection, the team will be cheered onto the pitch at Al-Khalifa Stadium. If the players can inspire the fans to go to the next level, then the 12th man will play their part. If so, a beautiful Moroccan-style momentum could develop and, this time, it could go all the way.


Inoue, Nakatani aim to set up a showdown in Riyadh’s ‘Night of the Samurai’

Updated 23 December 2025
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Inoue, Nakatani aim to set up a showdown in Riyadh’s ‘Night of the Samurai’

TOKYO: Japanese boxing will be center-stage in Saudi Arabia on Dec. 27 when Riyadh hosts “The Ring V: Night of the Samurai,” with two undefeated champions – INOUE Naoya and NAKATANI Junto – likely to set up a Japanese blockbuster in 2026.

The Night of the Samurai will feature several Japanese boxers in world title fights, highlighted by the best pound-for-pound fighter in the world, Inoue, who will face off against Mexico’s Alan Picasso, 25, for the 32-year-old Inoue’s unified super-bantamweight belts. Both fighters are undefeated. Inoue has won 31 fights with 27 knockouts, while Picasso has 32 victories and one draw with 17 knockouts.

Nakatani (310, 24 KOs), the unified bantamweight champion, will make his super bantamweight debut against Mexico’s Sebastian Hernandez Reyes (200, 18 KOs), a 24yearold rising star. A win by Nakatani is likely to set up a showdown with Inoue at the Tokyo Dome in May next year.

On the undercard, Willibaldo Garcia will face former world flyweight champion TERAJI Kenshiro for the IBF super-flyweight title; IMANAGA Taiga will meet Armando Martinez in a lightweight bout; and TSUTSUMI Reito will fight Leobardo Quintana in a super-featherweight bout. 

The WBA super-featherweight world title fight between TSUTSUMI Hayato and champion Jazza Dickens was canceled because Tsutsumi suffered a facial fracture during a sparring session. 

The boxing event is part of the Riyadh Season of cultural, entertainment and sporting events, which is part of the larger Saudi Seasons initiative in support of Saudi Vision 2030.

Saudi Arabia has placed itself at the forefront of boxing promotion in recent years, staging massive title fights and non-title fights such as Anthony Joshua vs. Andy Ruiz, Tyson Fury vs. former UFC heavyweight champion Francis Ngannou, Deontay Wilder against Zhilei Zhang, and Oleksandr Usyk vs.Joshua.

Turki Alalshikh, chairman of Saudi Arabia’s General Entertainment Authority, has become the most visible boxing promoter in the world and is one of the most influential figures in boxing. The Night of the Samurai will enable him to make his mark in Japan, which has a strong boxing culture. 

“Riyadh Season in Saudi Arabia is only going to grow in importance for boxing,” Inoue told Japanese media. The undefeated champion described Alalshikh as “a boxing fan who truly loves the sport.”

Inoue and Riyadh Season inked a $20 million sponsorship deal a year ago and the fight in Riyadh gives the promoter a massive boost in viewership in Japan.

“Fighting in Saudi Arabia for the first time is motivating for me,” Inoue was quoted as saying. “I’ll enter the fight with a fresh mindset. It’s a little different from fighting in Japan, and there are unknowns, but I’m excited.”