Players using their heads at Euro 2012

Updated 24 June 2012
Follow

Players using their heads at Euro 2012

WARSAW: From the moment Poland center forward Robert Lewandowksi stooped to plant a firm downward header into the net against Greece for the opening goal of Euro 2012, strikers have been using their heads.
Halfway through the quarter-finals, there have been 19 headed goals out of a total of 67 in the tournament, more than any other European Championship.
Irish writer Oscar Wilde once said “Football is all very well a good game for rough girls, but not for delicate boys,” and while the 19th century poet was talking about the game in general, fortune has often favored those who leap highest or put their bonce, tete, nut or noggin in where it hurts.
From when footballs were nothing more than inflated pig-skin bladders, to mud-spattered and water-clogged leather balls that gave the feeling of heading a lump of lead and now the modern-day aerodynamic spheres that zip through the air, the art of heading a ball properly brings reward.
Euro 2012 has featured fine headed goals, from Cristiano Ronaldo’s well-timed and accurate placement that secured Portugal semi-final’s berth, to Croatian Mario Mandzukic’s off-balance effort that caught out Ireland and Andriy Shevchenko’s quickfire double for Ukraine against Sweden.
The pick so far, though, was England striker Andy Carroll’s net-bursting effort against the vulnerable Swedes, a throwback to when a center-forward was cut from granite and commanded the airspace around him.
The burly pony-tailed striker met Steven Gerrard’s cross with a majestic header that had was a perfect blend of power, timing and precision. Hurtling off Carroll’s forehead like a laser-guided missile, Sweden keeper Andreas Isaksson was left flapping in the ball’s vapor trail.
ADDITIONAL OFFICIALS
UEFA president Michael Platini believes the introduction of additional officials behind each goal has led to more headed goals because defenders are more wary and less likely to try and impede opponents when they have additional eyes on them.
“With the additional referee you score more headers, because there is the fear of being caught,” the Frenchman told reporters during the group stage.
“So there are more goals because the players know that the referee is there and they cannot commit fouls all the time.
“I think that the refereeing system allows more goals because there is less shirt pulling, less simulation.”
Platini said it had not always been so.
“We have spent all our youth to try and fool the referee. You actually pulled the shirt when the referee wasn’t looking.
“You can score more goals because you have the space to score. Before, if you held the shirt it was impossible.”
Headed goals have lit up past European Championships, ever since the first in 1960 when Victor Ponedelnik’s extra-time winner for the USSR sank Yugoslavia in the final.
Four years later Jesus Maria Pereda’s early goal in the final for Spain against the USSR set them on their way to glory on home turf.
The muscular Horst Hrubesch, nicknamed Das Kopfball-Ungeheuer (the Header Beast), headed home a corner two minutes from time to secure the Euro 1980 title for Germany after a 2-1 win over Belgium in the Rome final.
Dutch captain Ruud Gullit, his dreadlocks flowing behind him, leapt to bullet a header past Rinat Dassaev and help the Netherlands defeat the Soviet Union for their only European Championship title in 1988.
This century, memories remain vivid of Sweden striker Henrik Larsson diving full length from around the penalty spot to score against Bulgaria in Euro 2004, and Angelos Charisteas’s winner in that year’s final for Greece, the replays of which will be shown from Athens to Thessaloniki and beyond for many years to come.

 


100 aspiring young golfers in Saudi Arabia set for next phase with ROSHN Rising Stars

Updated 10 February 2026
Follow

100 aspiring young golfers in Saudi Arabia set for next phase with ROSHN Rising Stars

  • Arab News spoke to Tyler Jacobson, director of corporate communications at ROSHN Group, about the program’s growth and its long-term vision

RIYADH: With LIV Golf Riyadh 2026 in the books, the success of 22-year-old Australian Elvis Smylie — who claimed victory at Riyadh Golf Club last weekend — has certainly inspired more than just the professionals on the leaderboard.

ROSHN Group, title partner of LIV Golf Riyadh 2026, is now looking to build on that momentum by expanding the ROSHN Rising Stars program, an initiative designed to create opportunities for the next generation of young Saudi golfers.

Following months of training and exposure across LIV Golf events in the UK and US, including participation in the Riyadh Pro-Am tournament, the program is set to enter its next phase, expanding to support a total of 100 aspiring golfers across the Kingdom.

Arab News spoke to Tyler Jacobson, director of corporate communications at ROSHN Group, about the program’s growth and its long-term vision.

“The ROSHN Rising Stars are a group of kids who have come together to learn golf,” Jacobson said. “Many of them have never played golf before in their lives, but last summer, when we partnered with LIV Golf as an international pillar partner, we decided to do something bigger and more meaningful.”

The program focuses not only on developing golfing ability, but on personal growth beyond the course.

“We wanted to give young people the opportunity to grow and learn in the sport of golf, as well as learn new skills on and off of the golf course.”

Golf’s footprint in the region has grown in recent years, with millions tuning in for events in the Middle East as kids partake in the sport through initiatives like the ROSHN Fan Village. For ROSHN Group, that growth aligns naturally with its broader quality-of-life objectives.

“We have seen a real appetite and hunger to engage with the sport. Golf teaches you patience, discipline and values that carry far beyond competition,” Jacobson said. “Quality of life and sport go hand-in-hand, and that’s exactly why we’ve partnered with LIV Golf.

“They’re elevating not only their skills, but their aptitude for life, for traveling, for exposure to new things. This is where we believe the program has offered a lot to the children.”

Participants in the program range in age from 8 to 15, with the program offering an unprecedented level of opportunities to youth in Saudi Arabia.

During the course, which lasts six months, they will receive professional coaching and access to elite golfing facilities in Saudi Arabia, in addition to hands-on competitive experiences. The program is set to support a total of 100 aspiring golfers across Saudi Arabia.

Jacobson believes that events such as LIV Golf play a key role in inspiring youth-focused initiatives like ROSHN Rising Stars.

“LIV Golf is a young league, but it’s doing things like creating new formats and exposing new people across the world to the sport of golf,” he said.

“Traditionally, the sport has been more Westernized, so (allowing) Saudi youth to grow at this stage of the game is a huge opportunity,” Jacobson added. “You see it in our projects, in our communities. It aligns completely with Saudi Vision 2030.”

That quality-of-life aspect has been a strong selling point for golf in breaking into new audiences. In a world where sports are increasingly dominated by success, fame and money, golf also provides an opportunity to grow from a human perspective.

“Ultimately, your skills are not what truly matter,” Jacobson said. “What matters is the desire to learn, to commit and to grow. That’s what we value, and that’s what this program is about.”