‘Finally!’: Esports Nations Cup will provide new experiences for gamers and fans

Ralf Reichert, CEO, Esports World Cup Foundation. (Supplied)
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Updated 24 February 2026
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‘Finally!’: Esports Nations Cup will provide new experiences for gamers and fans

  • Ralf Reichert, CEO of Esports World Cup Foundation, spoke to Arab News about the new tournament that will pit countries against each other for the first time

RIYADH: With the inaugural Esports Nations Cup set for Riyadh in November, Ralf Reichert, CEO of the Esports World Cup Foundation, spoke to Arab News about the new tournament that will pit countries against each other for the first time.

How do you see the Nations Cup impacting the esports landscape in Saudi Arabia?

The Esports Nations Cup can be a meaningful catalyst for Saudi esports for two reasons. It expands the audience by adding national pride as a simple, universal entry point, and it accelerates ecosystem building by making talent pathways and country level coordination real and visible.

The Nations Cup adds a new layer next to club competition through national teams and national narratives. Club esports is the cultural backbone of the sport, but national teams widen the target group immediately because people may not follow a specific club or title, yet they will show up for their flag, in the arena and online.

It also strengthens the local ecosystem because a credible Nations Cup requires alignment across publishers, clubs, and development structures such as coaching, scouting, and youth programs. That coordination is where long-term impact comes from.

The Esports World Cup Foundation is an independent, nonprofit organization that designs and operates leading global esports competitions.

Saudi Arabia is the original host and the originator of this platform, and we are building the Nations Cup in close partnership here in Riyadh, with the long-term ambition for it to travel and become a truly global competition over time.

Did the success of the Esports World Cup play a role in the idea of the Nations Cup?

Esports grew up as a digital-first sport. From day one it was borderless, and clubs became the cultural backbone because they’re not defined by geography. Fans followed skill, story, and community across regions.

That’s why a Nations Cup isn’t the default format in esports. It’s a different layer, one that only works when the club ecosystem is stable and when you can operate cross-title competition at the highest level without compromising integrity.

The Esports World Cup proved that layer: multi-game competition at global scale, built with publishers, clubs, and players, with the operational credibility to align calendars, uphold consistent standards, and create a connected story across weeks.

Once that platform existed, adding national representation became realistic, not as EWC 2.0, but as a complementary format that brings identity and pride on top of a strong club foundation.

What has been the reaction in the gaming world to this new competition?

The reaction has been: Finally! If you do it properly.

Fans love the clarity of the story. National teams are instantly understandable, even for people who don’t follow a specific title or club. Players feel the difference too.

Representing your country is a distinct kind of pressure and pride, and it creates a new career milestone that hasn’t existed in esports in a consistent, credible way.

Clubs have been engaged from the start, because they are the backbone of esports and we are treating them that way. The Nations Cup is designed to sit next to club competition, not on top of it, with clear rules around eligibility, scheduling, and player release, and with incentives that keep the ecosystem aligned.

Publishers have reacted the way you want serious partners to react: supportive but focused on execution. They care about integrity, calendar alignment, and long-term sustainability. So the feedback isn’t make it louder, it’s make it durable.

Will we see many high-profile players from different clubs playing under the same flag, or will teams be based mostly on established clubs?

You will absolutely see high-profile players from different clubs coming together under the same flag, and that is one of the defining features of national team competition.

The Nations Cup is designed to avoid simply replicating club rosters under a national banner. The goal is real national representation, not convenience.

To reinforce that, we apply a maximum number of players per club on any national roster. That rule ensures the strongest eligible talent can still be selected, while preventing a national team from effectively becoming a club team in disguise.

Just like in traditional sports, rivals at the club level often become teammates when they represent their country. That creates new stories, new chemistry, and a different kind of pressure. It also changes how fans experience the competition, because you are no longer just watching a roster, you are watching a nation.

Selection is based on eligibility and competitive merit, not club affiliation. However, no more than two thirds of the national roster can come from the same club, providing the ability to still feature a core club line-up, if that is truly the best option, while creating exciting new teams that fans don’t get to see in club competitions.

The result can be pathways for new talents to showcase themselves next to established players or all-star rosters that are formed to represent their nation. Through this rule we will not only see new rivalries between national teams, but also some rivalries between players on the same club suddenly competing for spots on the national roster.

Will this new format bring a bigger audience to esports, including fans who may not follow clubs closely?

Yes, and that is one of the biggest opportunities.

Club esports creates the deepest fandom and the strongest stories, but it naturally speaks first to gaming and esports fans who already follow teams, leagues, and titles closely.

National teams widen the target group immediately. They are instantly understandable, they tap into national pride, and they give casual viewers a clear reason to care from the first match. You do not need to know every roster to know who you support when your country is playing.

That is how this format can bring new audiences into esports, while still respecting and strengthening the club ecosystem that built the sport in the first place.

What can fans expect that they haven’t seen before?

Fans can expect a layer of emotion and identity that club esports cannot create in the same way.

You will see flags and anthems, real national rivalries, and star players becoming teammates under one badge, fighting for something bigger than a title.

And you will get moments that stick. First appearances for countries, unexpected heroes, and matchups that return year after year and start to feel like true international classics.


Humbert stuns Tsitsipas as defending champion exits Dubai in first round

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Humbert stuns Tsitsipas as defending champion exits Dubai in first round

  • Last year’s winner lost in straight sets to the 2024 champion
  • Ugo Humbert will now play the 2022 champion, Andrey Rublev, on Wednesday

DUBAI: Defending champion Stefanos Tsitsipas crashed out of the Dubai Duty Free Tennis Championships on Tuesday night, falling in the first round to 2024 title-winner Ugo Humbert under the bright lights of the center court.

The 4-6, 5-7 defeat at the Dubai Duty Free Tennis Stadium means the 27-year-old Greek, who left the court with his head bowed, will drop outside the world top 40 for the first time in almost eight years.

The first-round meeting between the two unseeded Dubai champions caught the eye as soon as the main draw took place on Saturday for this week’s ATP 500 tournament. Only seven world ranking places separated the pair and the lower-ranked Humbert, at No. 37, edged the pre-match head-to-head record at 3-1. Tsitsipas has not yet progressed beyond the quarterfinals across five events since the start of the year.

“It was a funny first round — the two last winners of the tournament,” said Humbert, who beat Alexander Bublik in the final here two years ago. “It’s so good to be back where I won the tournament. I have such good memories, and it was a tough battle tonight.”

From the first exchanges, both players dominated their service games with remarkable ease. Tsitsipas only conceded two points in his first four, while Humbert was forced to deuce in just one game. Yet as the scoreline progressed in undramatic fashion to 5-4 to Humbert, and with Tsitsipas’ majestic topspin backhand starting to purr, the Greek’s serve deserted him when he needed it most.

Fewer than 24 hours after he had enjoyed a Ramadan cultural experience that saw him don a dark blue kandura to eat the fast-breaking iftar meal, Tsitsipas demonstrated the season’s spirit of generosity by gifting Humbert a pair of double-faults, an unforced error and, ultimately, the opening set.

The second set followed a similar pattern, with Tsitsipas unable to change the course of the match. Humbert conceded two break points in the first game yet found the resolve to dig deep and hold on. The set stayed on serve for 11 consecutive games until, with Humbert 6-5 up and Tsitsipas serving to stay in the tournament, another two wasteful forehands by the three-time finalist handed Humbert two match points.

The Frenchman took the victory at the first opportunity as Tsitsipas’ third unforced forehand error in sequential points sealed his fate.

“I think today, it was a big battle,” said Humbert. “We both served very well, and I had just a few opportunities and I did it, so I’m super happy. It’s nice to come back to play again on this beautiful court. I have such a nice feeling when I play here and it’s nice to be in (the) second round.”

Next up for Humbert is 2022 champion Andrey Rublev, who eased past France’s Valentin Royer 6-3, 6-4. The energetic Muscovite shuttled around Center Court like a man incapable of letting a ball past him, with more than one seemingly impossible return sent safely back by the 28-year-old.

Royer saved eight second-set break points by the time he levelled the set at 2-2, but Rublev’s serving was at times unplayable. His shot selection must have left his opponent bewildered as he mixed impudent drop shots with returnable volleys at the net.

“It was a great win for me because I knew very well in our first meeting, I lost,” said Rublev. “[Royer’s] a great fighter, and I’m really happy that I was able to take that challenge and go through in straight sets. When you play so late, to have some time to recover before the next match is so important.”

On facing Humbert, he added: “It’s going to be great for me to see my level because Ugo is a great player. He’s hitting the ball really hard; he’s getting better and better, and always fights until the end, playing super aggressive and hitting bombs from all over the place. He’s won here in the past too, so it’s going to be an interesting fight.”

Earlier in the day, eighth seed Jiri Lehecka survived losing the first set to Lucky Loser Luca Nardi — a late injury replacement for France’s Arthur Fils — by recovering to win 4-6, 6-4, 6-2. The Czech world No. 22 will face Spaniard Pablo Carreno Busta on Wednesday after the qualifier disposed of Canada’s Denis Shapovalov 6-2, 6-4.

In the final game on New Court 1, sixth seed Jakub Mensik edged past Hubert Hurkacz of Poland 6-4, 7-6 (7). Mensik will face Australia’s Alexei Popyrin, the world No. 47, who narrowly edged out Poland’s Kamil Majchrzak 3-6, 6-3, 7-6.

Meanwhile on Court 2, world No. 25 Tallon Griekspoor of the Netherlands — the highest-ranked player not seeded in Dubai this week — defeated Finnish qualifier Otto Virtanen 6-3, 6-4 to set-up a mouthwatering second round match against second seed Alexander Bublik.

Elsewhere, Arthur Rinderknech also lost the first set en route to defeating Hungary’s Fabian Marozsan 3-6, 6-3, 6-4.

The imposing Frenchman will play British fourth seed Jack Draper in the next round. The USA’s Jenson Brooksby, the world No. 49, dispatched Belgium’s Zizou Bergs 6-3, 6-4 to seal a last-16 tie against seventh seed Karen Khachanov, who required three sets to eliminate Lucky Loser Alexander Shevchenko of Kazakhstan 6-7 (5), 6-2, 6-3.