Maryline Eon wins International Jockey Challenge on opening night of Saudi Cup

French rider Maryline Eon emerging victorious with 25 points. (Saudi Cup)
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Updated 24 February 2024
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Maryline Eon wins International Jockey Challenge on opening night of Saudi Cup

  • The world’s most valuable race meet, with total prize money of $37m, got underway with eight races at King Abdulaziz Racecourse

RIYADH: The Saudi Cup, the world’s most valuable race meet, got underway on Friday at Riyadh's King Abdulaziz Racecourse, with total prize money of more than $37 million up for grabs over the weekend.

Fourteen jockeys, seven women and seven men, competed in the Invest Saudi International Jockey Challenge across four of the opening day’s eight races, with French rider Maryline Eon emerging victorious with 25 points.

Reigning champion Camilo Ospina, a Colombian jockey who races out of Saudi Arabia, was runner-up on 17 points, with Victoria Mota of Brazil in third.

“It was very emotional to win this … and I can only thank the Saudi Cup for having invited me here today. Obviously it was going to be an emotional moment,” Eon told Arab News.

“I am really impressed with the track here in Saudi Arabia. It was my first time riding on the dirt and I wasn’t used to getting dirt in my face and everything. Everything is in really good condition.

“I was told when I was coming that the horses that I am going to ride would need a bit of work and that they would be outpaced in the early stages of the race. The handicappers showed me the races of the horse that I was riding and that was really helpful.”

Despite the unfamiliar ground conditions, Eon said she did not alter her approach to the races or her technique.

“I didn’t really change anything in the style of my riding and I just followed instructions,” she said.

“I would like to thank the country for making such an effort to bring women here and obviously I’m very lucky to win this championship, which is something I would have never imagined.”

In the other events, 16 riders competed in the 1,600-meter Mosef First Fillies Mile, the first race of the day, in which Ospina, riding Istita’aeh, took the lead with 300 meters to go and romped home for the win. First across the line in the 1,200-meter Saudia Sarawat Cup was Aezm Al-Riyadh, ridden by Tariq Almansour. Adel Alfarid, on Badr, was the winner of the 1,800-meter Lucid Tuwaiq Cup.

In the final race of the night, the Group 1 $1.5 million Ministry of Culture Al-Mneefah Cup, Tilal Al-Khalediah, the 2023 Obaiya Arabian Classic winner, was victorious.

Day 2 of the fifth Saudi Cup on Saturday will again feature eight races: the Ministry of Culture Jockey Club Local Handicap, the Group 1 Diriyah Gate Development Authority Obaiya Arabian Classic, the NHC Saudi International Handicap, the G3 Boutique Group Saudi Derby, the G3 Sports Boulevard Riyadh Dirt Sprint, the G2 Saudi National Bank 1351 Turf Sprint, the $2 million G2 Howden Neom Turf Cup, and the $2.5 million G3 Longines Red Sea Turf Handicap.


Marmoush, Salah strike as Egypt edge out holders Ivory Coast in quarter-final

Updated 11 January 2026
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Marmoush, Salah strike as Egypt edge out holders Ivory Coast in quarter-final

  • Egypt wasted little time in taking the lead as Marmoush scored in the fourth minute
  • That set up a siege of the Egyptian goal in the final 15 minutes but they held out to advance

AGADIR, Morocco: Omar Marmoush netted the opener and Mohamed Salah scored the decisive goal as Egypt ended Ivory Coast’s reign with a narrow 3-2 triumph in Saturday’s Africa Cup of Nations quarter-final.
Center back Rami Rabia was the other scorer for the Egyptians, who had little possession at the Grande Stade Agadir but took their chances with clinical precision and held on grimly to book a semifinal meeting with Senegal on Wednesday.
An own goal from Ahmed Fatouh and a late effort by Guela Doue proved insufficient for the Ivory Coast, winners of the tournament on home soil two years ago but now deposed ⁠as African champions.

Egypt, who have won a record seven Cup of Nations titles, wasted little time in taking the lead as Marmoush scored in the fourth minute after Hamdi Fathy pinched the ball from Franck Kessie in the midfield, allowing Emam Ashour to thread a pinpoint ball to the sprinting Marmoush. He still needed to shrug off the attentions of defender Odilon Kossounou before slotting home.
But it quickly became clear ⁠the Ivorians were going to dominate possession, showing much more physical strength on the ball but without setting up clear chances.
Egypt went 2-0 up in the 32nd minute when Rabia rose above the defenders to head his side further ahead from a corner.


The Ivory Coast, who had 70 percent of possession in the first half, reduced the deficit eight minutes later when teenager Yann Diomande’s freekick near the corner took a slight brush off Kossounou’s head and ricocheted off the knee of full back Fatouh and into the net.

SALAH FINISHED OFF CLEVER MOVE
The Ivorians had come from 2-0 down to beat Gabon 3-2 earlier in the tournament but ⁠hopes of turning the scoreline around soon after the re-start were stymied by a simply created, but superbly finished, goal for Salah seven minutes after the break.
Rabia was well inside his own half when he chipped the ball over the top of the Ivorian defensive line, allowing Ashour to run onto it and hit an accurate pass with the outside of his right boot into the path of Salah to score.
An Ivorian comeback was still on when Doue touched home at the end of a goalmouth scramble in the 73rd minute.
That set up a siege of the Egyptian goal in the final 15 minutes but they held out to advance.
Earlier on Saturday, Nigeria overpowered Algeria 2-0 in Marrakech and will take on hosts Morocco in the other semifinal.