Thousands of Al-Ittihad fans flood Jeddah streets to celebrate Saudi Pro League triumph

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Jeddah turned into a sea of yellow and black on Monday night as thousands of Al-Ittihad fans poured onto the streets to celebrate their team’s triumphant capture of the 2024–2025 Roshn Saudi League title. (Supplied)
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Jeddah turned into a sea of yellow and black on Monday night as thousands of Al-Ittihad fans poured onto the streets to celebrate their team’s triumphant capture of the 2024–2025 Roshn Saudi League title. (Supplied)
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Jeddah turned into a sea of yellow and black on Monday night as thousands of Al-Ittihad fans poured onto the streets to celebrate their team’s triumphant capture of the 2024–2025 Roshn Saudi League title. (Supplied)
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The win was the club’s 15th top-flight crown. (Supplied)
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Updated 27 May 2025
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Thousands of Al-Ittihad fans flood Jeddah streets to celebrate Saudi Pro League triumph

  • Win was Jeddah club’s 15th Saudi top-flight crown

JEDDAH: Jeddah turned into a sea of yellow and black on Monday night as thousands of Al-Ittihad fans poured onto the streets to celebrate their team’s triumphant capture of the 2024–2025 Saudi Pro League title.

The win was the club’s 15th top-flight crown.

The celebrations erupted following a 1-0 victory over Damac in the final round at King Abdullah Sports City Stadium, where 60,000 passionate fans created an electric atmosphere with four enormous tifos unfurled across the stands to salute the champions.

The jubilant scenes stretched across the city, with supporters waving flags, chanting, setting off fireworks and honking car horns along the Jeddah Corniche.

Many gathered at the Al-Ittihad Club premises and celebrated long into the night.

The title marks a significant milestone for the historic club, whose fans have remained fiercely loyal throughout the season. To show their appreciation for the support, the club invited a number of dedicated supporters to take photos with the league trophy at the team’s training ground.

While fans had hoped to celebrate the achievement with players in an open-top bus parade, Al-Ittihad management announced the festivities would be postponed until after Friday night’s King’s Cup final against Al-Qadsiah, also set to take place in Jeddah.

Club President Loay Mashabi, who oversaw Al-Ittihad’s title victory in his first year in charge, expressed his emotions after the final whistle, saying: “I don’t know if I will ever experience a joy greater than this; making millions of fans happy is a responsibility I carry with pride.”


Africa Cup of Nations moved to every four years

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Africa Cup of Nations moved to every four years

  • The tournament, which brings in an estimated 80 percent of CAF’s revenue, has traditionally been held every two years since its inception in 1957

RABAT: The Africa Cup of Nations will in future be held every four years instead of every two years, the Confederation ​of African Football said on Saturday.
The surprise decision was made at the body’s executive committee meeting in the Moroccan capital and announced at a press conference by CAF President Patrice Motsepe.
The tournament, which brings in an estimated 80 percent of CAF’s revenue, has traditionally been held every two years since its inception in 1957.
Sunday marks the start of the ‌35th edition, ‌hosted in Morocco with the home ‌team ⁠taking ​on ‌Comoros.
Motsepe said the next Cup of Nations finals, scheduled for 2027 in Kenya, Tanzania and Uganda, will go ahead and then another tournament would be held in 2028 but after that it will be hosted every four years.
Motsepe announced the launch of an African Nations League annually from 2029 to fill the ⁠gap, following the example of Europe which holds its championship every four years.
“Historically ‌the Nations Cup was the prime ‍resource for us but now ‍we will get financial resources every year,” he said.
“It ‍is an exciting new structure which will contribute to sustainable financial independence and ensure more synchronization with the FIFA calendar.”
Holding the Cup of Nations every four years had been previously proposed by FIFA ​President Gianni Infantino but this had been rebuffed by CAF because of their reliance on the revenues ⁠that the tournament generates.
The timing of AFCON has long courted controversy because it has usually been hosted in the middle of the European season, forcing clubs to release their African players.
This tug of loyalty was supposed to be solved by moving the Cup of Nations to mid-year from 2019 but later tournaments in Cameroon in 2022 and Ivory Coast in 2024 were again hosted at the start of the year.
This year’s tournament in Morocco was moved back six months when FIFA introduced ‌a new-look Club World Cup, which was hosted in the US in June and July.