Al Rajhi takes over Dakar Rally lead after miserable stage for Lategan

Driver Yazeed Al Rajhi and co-driver Timo Gottschalk compete during the ninth stage of the Dakar Rally between Riyadh and Haradh, Saudi Arabia, Jan. 14, 2025. (AP)
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Updated 14 January 2025
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Al Rajhi takes over Dakar Rally lead after miserable stage for Lategan

  • Lategan led the Dakar for the past week
  • Al Rajhi, like Lategan, has never won the Dakar

HARADH: Local driver Yazeed Al Rajhi took advantage of a miserable stage by South Africa’s Henk Lategan to grab the Dakar Rally lead in the Saudi Arabia desert on Tuesday.
Lategan led the Dakar for the past week, but errors and bad luck on the 357-kilometer ninth stage from Riyadh south-east to Haradh turned his overall lead of more than five minutes over Al Rajhi into a potentially decisive seven-minute deficit.
The rally has effectively two days and 400 kilometers remaining in the dunes of the Empty Quarter. The last day, Friday, is a ceremonial drive to the finish line in Shubaytah.
Al Rajhi, like Lategan, has never won the Dakar. This is the Saudi’s 11th attempt with a best finish of third in 2022. He’d been lying second since last Wednesday. The title race appears to be between only them.
Third-placed Mattias Ekström of Sweden and five-time champion Nasser Al-Attiyah of Qatar were about 25 minutes behind.

 


“It’s a bit of disaster to be honest,” Lategan said. “About 13 kilometers in we got lost. We thought we missed the waypoint but we actually had it. When we got lost we got one puncture and then toward the end we got another one and the wheel is actually flat. So, it was a messy, messy, messy day for us but it’s not the end of the world, we’re still in it.”
Lategan and navigator Brett Cummings were 11th on the stage and Al Rajhi and Timo Gottschalk third.
“We did a great job like we planned to,” Al Rajhi said. “We pushed well. We enjoyed it, that’s the most important. I hope everything goes well the next two or three days to win the Dakar ... I will fight to win. It won’t be easy.”
Al-Attiyah won the stage ahead of Belgium’s Guillaume de Mévius in under three hours to rise to one minute off third place overall.
His 49th car stage win, and first in the Dakar for Romanian manufacturer Dacia, lifted him to only one behind the record jointly held by Finland’s Ari Vatanen and France’s Stephane Peterhansel.
Sanders cushions motorbike lead
Australian rider Daniel Sanders bolstered his motorbike lead to nearly 15 minutes when closest challenger, Spain’s Tosha Schareina, crashed early.
The back wheel of Schareina’s Honda hit a rock and sent him flying only 20 kilometers in. He resumed racing but the nearly four minutes he finished behind Sanders dropped him in the general standings.
Schareina’s teammate Adrien van Beveren of France remained third, more than 20 minutes behind, while Sanders’ KTM teammate Luciano Benavides of Argentina strengthened his position in fourth place by winning his second successive stage.
Benavides, thanks to collecting time bonuses of nearly five minutes by opening the way, beat Van Beveren by nearly two minutes, and repeated his win into Haradh two years ago. Sanders was third after leading until about 70 kilometers from the end.
“I only got lost a couple of times ... and lost a little bit of time,” Sanders said. “I could have pushed and made some more (time) but it’s not too bad.”

 


First Saudi NCAA basketball player talks to Arab News about his influences

Updated 12 sec ago
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First Saudi NCAA basketball player talks to Arab News about his influences

  • Student Mohamed Saeid Binzagr credits his family, coach, and an accident playing football
  • The National Collegiate Athletic Association is the primary governing body for American college sports

CHICAGO: Student Mohamed Saeid Binzagr’s desire to impress his father motivated him to become the first Saudi to play for the National Collegiate Athletic Association, he told Arab News. 

The NCAA is the primary governing body for American college sports that regulates more than 1,000 member universities and colleges.

The 22-year-old sophomore at George Washington University in Washington D.C. is a member of its NCAA basketball team, the Revolutionaries.

“I’m a guard, and honestly, any role that I can help impact on winning is a role I’ll take,” said Binzagr. “My role is to impact the team in winning on and off the court, pushing them in practice, being a positive influence, cheering them on, working hard.”

He is where he is at today thanks to love for his family, a Saudi coach, and a chance accident when he was playing football with friends.

“Basketball isn’t a growing sport back home. It was never that big. It’s always been football. But my dad studied in the US and fell in love with the game of basketball,” Binzagr said.

“As a kid, I wanted to learn how to play basketball to play with him. So as a 7, 8-year-old I’d watch YouTube videos on basketball.”

He said his first basketball trainer, Mohanad Shobain, became his “mentor,” adding: “I joined his academy, played, evolved, and learned the game through him.”

The COVID-19 pandemic interrupted his plans to attend college so he took an extra year as a postgraduate student at Cushing Academy in Boston in order to play basketball and try to impress scouts and coaches.

He then attended Marymount University in Arlington, where an informal game of footballresulted in him tearing his ACL and meniscus, requiring medical rehabilitation.

That is where he met basketball star Alex McLean, a former trainer for the Washington Wizards, who oversaw Binzagr’s rehabilitation and introduced him to Chris Caputo, head coach of the Revolutionaries men’s team.

McLean “helped me grow. He helped me with my rehab. He has helped me on and off the court and took me in with his family as if I was one of his brothers,” Binzagr said, adding that since joining the Revolutionaries, he has received many queries from young people, including in Saudi Arabia.

“It didn’t hit me until I was having a bad day, opened my phone and saw a message from a kid back home telling me that I inspired him. His dream is also to play in the NCAA and he wants to be my rival, which is great to see,” Binzagr said.

“I’m doing something special if I can impact a kid’s life into staying disciplined, staying grounded, and showing him that anything is possible. That’s a good feeling, and I hope to continue doing that.”