Al-Ahli hand Al-Nassr first defeat of SPL campaign in Jeddah thriller

Al-Ahli beat Al-Nassr 3-2 in a Saudi Pro League thriller in Jeddah on Friday night, handing Cristiano Ronaldo’s charges their first league defeat of the season. (X/@ALAHLI_FCEN)
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Updated 03 January 2026
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Al-Ahli hand Al-Nassr first defeat of SPL campaign in Jeddah thriller

  • Ronaldo fluffs his lines as league leaders beaten 3-2
  • Win strengthens Al-Ahli’s hold on 4th place, just 6 points off top

RIYADH: Al-Ahli beat Al-Nassr 3-2 in a Saudi Pro League thriller in Jeddah on Friday night, handing Cristiano Ronaldo’s charges their first league defeat of the season.

Al-Ahli made a blistering start, needing just 59 seconds to threaten the Al-Nassr goal. Nawaf Al-Aqidi saved Wenderson Galeno’s initial effort before Matheus Goncalves blazed the rebound over the bar.

The hosts remained on the front foot, repeatedly exploiting the space behind right-back Sultan Al-Ghannam. That approach paid dividends in the seventh minute, when Galeno broke into space and squared the ball to Ivan Toney, who finished calmly to open the scoring.

Al-Ahli continued to target the same channel, with Galeno again involved as he laid the ball off to Ali Majrashi, whose effort drifted inches wide of the post.

Majrashi redeemed himself minutes later when a long ball, combined with a clever run from Toney, broke the Al-Nassr offside trap. The English striker confidently finished past Al-Aqidi in the 20th minute for his second goal of the night and his eighth of the league campaign.

By the half-hour mark, Al-Ahli were firmly in control, with Al-Nassr struggling to create any clear chances. That changed in the 30th minute when a bold long-range effort from center back Abdulelah Al-Amri was mishandled by goalkeeper Abdulrahman Al-Sanbi, allowing the visitors to pull one back.

Momentum swung in Al-Nassr’s favor, although Saad Al-Nasser denied Feras Al-Brikan a potential third goal for Al-Ahli with a brave slide tackle on the edge of the six-yard box.

That missed opportunity proved costly, when on the brink of halftime Al-Amri rose highest to head home the equalizer.

Stoppage time brought further drama, as Al-Nassr went close at one end before Al-Ahli launched a swift counterattack and found Toney inside the box. The former Brentford striker struck the post to cap a thrilling first half.

The intensity was maintained in the second half, but it was Al-Ahli who regained the upper hand. A free-kick delivered to the far post in the 54th minute was met by Toney, who cleverly flicked the ball back into the danger area with his heel for Merih Demiral to score.

Al-Nassr were handed a golden opportunity to equalize just after the hour when Ronaldo found space in front of goal. But the league’s joint top scorer stumbled as he attempted to control the ball and the chance went begging.

Al-Ahli held firm through to the final whistle, although tempers flared deep into stoppage time.

Majrashi was shown a red card following a late scuffle, while Al-Nassr were also reduced to 10 when Nawaf Bu Washl was dismissed for denying Saleh Abou Al-Shamat a clear goalscoring opportunity as the last defender.

Elsewhere in the league, Georginio Wijnaldum inspired Al-Ettifaq to their fifth victory of the season with his second consecutive brace.

The Dutch midfielder opened the scoring in the 54th minute before converting from the spot in the 76th, leading The Commandos to a 2-0 win over Al-Okhdood and lifting them temporarily into seventh place on 19 points.

In the day’s third fixture, Samir Caetano’s stoppage-time equalizer earned Al-Najma their second point of the season in a dramatic 2-2 draw against Al-Khaleej.

The SPL action resumes on Saturday, with Al-Fateh hosting Al-Shabab, followed by Al-Fayha against Al-Kholood and Al-Ittihad versus Al-Taawoun.


Alonso fears more pain in China with struggling Aston Martin

Updated 12 March 2026
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Alonso fears more pain in China with struggling Aston Martin

  • Fernando Alonso said Thursday he expects another difficult weekend wrestling with his new Aston Martin at the Chinese Grand Prix after failing to finish the season-opener in Australia

SHANGHAI: Fernando Alonso said Thursday he expects another difficult weekend wrestling with his new Aston Martin at the Chinese Grand Prix after failing to finish the season-opener in Australia.
Silverstone-based Aston Martin endured a horror start after serious issues with their Honda power unit and a lack of spare parts.
Two-time world champion Alonso and teammate Lance Stroll had to endure extreme vibration in the chassis caused by the power unit, which was feared could cause the drivers permanent nerve damage.
“The situation unfortunately didn’t change within four or five days since Melbourne, so it will be a difficult weekend,” Alonso told reporters at the Shanghai International Circuit.
“We’ll limit the laps in one or two sessions as we are short on parts. We need laps, to find the window on the chassis side.
“I’ll be happy if we leave China with a more or less normal practice, more or less normal qualifying.”
The Spaniard could not put a timeframe on when improvements might come.
“What can I do within the team? Work harder, help Honda as much as I can,” said Alonso.
“We can allocate resources to help Honda with the power unit. We are one team, it is a bumpy start that I hope won’t last too long.
“We are pushing, we have very talented people in the team, so I hope within a couple of grands prix, we can have a normal weekend.
“To be competitive will take more time. Once we fix the reliability, we will be behind on power and things.”
The 44-year-old veteran has been in Formula One for more than two decades and has driven vastly different iterations of cars from the old V10 petrol engines through to the current complex hybrid configuration.
Despite the issues he said was embracing the challenge of the new cars enthusiastically in what could be his final season on the grid.
His Aston Martin contract expires at the end of 2026.
“Do we enjoy driving these cars? Yes, because we love racing,” Alonso said.
“I do four or five 24-hour races because I love racing and I love driving. So if you jump into an F1 car, you enjoy going fast.
“But it is a challenge, a different challenge.
“I was super lucky to race in (the last) era and I feel lucky to race in both.”