Saudi Pro League 2024-25: The best, the hopefuls and the rest

Special Saudi Pro League 2024-25: The best, the hopefuls and the rest
Al-Hilal celebrate winning the 2023-24 SPL title. (X/@Alhilal_EN)
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Updated 21 August 2024

Saudi Pro League 2024-25: The best, the hopefuls and the rest

Saudi Pro League 2024-25: The best, the hopefuls and the rest
  • Al-Hilal will be favorites to take a record-extending 20th title but trio of Al-Nassr, Al-Ahli and Al-Ittihad will once again hope to stop another procession

The wait is over, and the 2024-25 Saudi Pro League season is upon us. The questions that have been flying around will start to be answered over the coming days, weeks and months. Here we look at the teams expected to challenge for the title and the ambitions of the rest.

The Challengers

Any team that finishes above Al-Hilal are surely going to be lifting the trophy. The Blues were dominant last season as they won a 19th league title and while they haven’t yet made any big signings, the return of Neymar from injury, perhaps next month, will feel like one. The ingredients are already in place, and coach Jorge Jesus obviously knows how to win in .

The firepower is impressive with 101 goals scored last season, but it is not just about the likes of Aleksandar Mitrovic, Neymar, Ruben Neves, Salem Al-Dawsari going forward but rather the tightest of defenses, which conceded just 23 goals in 34 games. After signing from Chelsea, Kalidou Koulibaly enjoyed his first season in and wants more.

“Last season, we had a good championship and didn’t concede many goals, but we believe we can improve,” Koulibaly told Arab News.

“That’s the beauty of football — there’s always room for growth. I hope this year we’ll concede even fewer goals. We’re determined to be even more solid, with Yassine (Bounou) in goal and our second goalkeeper ready when needed. All of our defenders work for the team, and we’re driven to be the best defense in the championship, maybe even one of the best in Asia and the world.”

The Senegalese defender is expecting a tougher challenge this time around as the Blues look to defend their title.

“The coach’s message echoed what I just said: Last season was tough, and this one will be even more challenging,” he said. “We’re going to be more focused because teams have studied us, and we’ll be more closely watched. However, we’ve also got our strategies. We’ll aim for a great season. We know winning a championship depends on a strong defense.”

In terms of points per game, Al-Nassr’s haul last season would have been just enough to win the title the previous year, but they were still 14 points behind their neighbors. For such a successful and ambitious club, it was disappointing.

Pressure is on coach Luis Castro to iron out defensive mistakes and ensure that the likes of Cristiano Ronaldo — who managed a league record of 35 goals — keep scoring. Castro may not get the time after the 4-1 defeat last weekend to Al-Hilal in the Saudi Super Cup final.

After a third-place finish last season, their first back in the top tier, Al-Ahli will want to mount a genuine challenge. With Riyad Mahrez still world-class, much depends on whether Roberto Firmino can rediscover his Liverpool form and whether Firas Al-Buraikan can keep scoring. Allen Saint-Maximin may have left for Turkiye, but there is still plenty of talent.

Al-Ittihad have changed more than most and understandably so. Last season’s fifth-place finish was hugely disappointing for the defending champions. The poor form cost Nuno Santo his job and then, recently, his successor Marcelo Gallardo returned to Argentina. Injuries to Karim Benzema did not help. It feels like the end of an era with the likes of Ahmed Hegazi, Romarinho, Marcelo Grohe and Abderrazak Hamdallah taking off the yellow and black shirt for the last time.

One of the biggest deals this summer has seen Moussa Diaby arriving from Aston Villa, and if the Frenchman can settle quickly alongside Saleh Al-Shehri and young international Ahmed Al-Ghamdi, then this season should be better than the last. New coach Laurent Blanc has won plenty in a stellar career both as a player and a coach, and there will be a lot of interest to see how he does.

The Hopefuls

Breaking into the top four is no easy task as many clubs have found out over the years. Al-Taawoun finished fourth last season and still have the wily Brazilian coach Pericles Chamusca in charge. Al-Shabab had a poor season by their own high standards and while they have lost Ivan Rakitic, the addition of Hamdallah should mean goals. Ettifaq took sixth and if Steven Gerrard can lift the team any higher this time, then that would be his greatest achievement as a coach given the competition all around.

Al-Fateh and Al-Feiha both had decent seasons. The former lost Firas Al-Buraikan to Al-Ahli while the latter have the impressive Fashion Sakala who enjoyed his debut campaign. After two mid-table finishes, Damac will want to return to the top half.

And what of Al-Qadsiah? The Knights of the East won promotion and have been busier than most in the transfer market with the likes of Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang and Nacho joining what was already a decent-looking squad. If it all clicks, then they could be the ones to watch this season.

The Rest

The battle to avoid relegation is always fierce, and that was certainly the case last season. Al-Okhdood, Al-Riyadh and Al-Wehda were not far above the dropdoor. Of the newly promoted trio, Al-Qadsiah will be hoping for a top-half finish, but Al-Orobah and Al-Kholood, who have made the smart signing of goalkeeper Grohe from Ittihad, will surely be satisfied with getting that all-important 15th place, which means survival.


Man City sign France playmaker Cherki to usher in start of post-De Bruyne era

Man City sign France playmaker Cherki to usher in start of post-De Bruyne era
Updated 11 June 2025

Man City sign France playmaker Cherki to usher in start of post-De Bruyne era

Man City sign France playmaker Cherki to usher in start of post-De Bruyne era
  • Cherki is set to fill the role vacated by De Bruyne, the team’s long-time star who has been released after 10 years’ service
  • The transfer of Cherki comes a day after Algeria left back Rayan Ait-Nouri joined City from Wolverhampton for $42 million

Manchester City kickstarted the post-Kevin De Bruyne era by signing maverick France playmaker Rayan Cherki from Lyon for €36 million ($41 million) on Tuesday, in time to play in the Club World Cup.

The 21-year-old Cherki, regarded as one of the most exciting young talents in French soccer, scored a brilliant volley and starred as a substitute on his international debut for France against Spain in the Nations League semifinals last week.

A product of Lyon’s renowned academy like Karim Benzema, Cherki has been on the radar of Europe’s biggest clubs for a while. He came close to signing for Paris Saint-Germain in the last offseason but the move fell through.

Now he is headed for Pep Guardiola’s City and is set to fill the role vacated by De Bruyne, the team’s long-time star who has been released after 10 years’ service.

“He’s a player our scouts have watched for a long time, and we have all been impressed with his skill and creativity. I am convinced our fans will be excited to see him play,” City director of football Hugo Viana said.

“There’s no doubt that he’s now in the best place possible to develop further under Pep’s guidance and I really believe he can become a world-class player with our support and direction.”

With Netherlands midfielder Tijjani Reijnders also reported by British media to be joining City, the club appears to be re-energizing a midfield that was filled last season with players in their 30s like Ilkay Gundogan, Mateo Kovacic and Bernardo Silva.

Kovacic has undergone Achilles surgery and is unavailable for the new-look, 32-team Club World Cup, which starts on Saturday. City in the same group as Juventus, Al Ain and Wydad Casablanca and its first match is on June 18.

Cherki’s background

Cherki, the youngest-ever goal scorer for Lyon in a competitive match, quickly impressed in youth competitions. He made his Ligue 1 debut at just 16 years old in October 2019 and scored his first senior goal a few weeks later in a French Cup match.

The attacking midfielder scored eight goals and provided 11 assists — the most in Ligue 1 — this season and can play either on the wing or as a playmaker.

Cherki said he’s ready “embrace” the responsibility of helping City win more trophies.

“I would only leave Lyon for a project I really believe in,” said Cherki, who has signed a five-year deal, “and everything at City suggests I can develop my game and help the team be successful in the future.”

According to L’Equipe newspaper, Lyon will retain 15 percent of the rights to any capital gain from a future transfer and can expect a further 2 million euros ($2.3 million) in bonuses between now and 2030.

The transfer of Cherki comes a day after Algeria left back Rayan Ait-Nouri joined City from Wolverhampton for $42 million.

Bettinelli signs as backup

Also Tuesday, City signed Marcus Bettinelli from Chelsea as a backup goalkeeper.

City made the move after announcing the departure of long-term No. 3 goalie Scott Carson on Monday with his contract due to expire.

Bettinelli has joined on a one-year deal and in time to be involved in the Club World Cup in the US starting on Saturday.

“His experience and mentality will hopefully complement our other senior goalkeepers while ensuring he’s always ready to perform when called upon himself,” Viana said.


England beat West Indies by 37 runs to secure T20 series sweep

England beat West Indies by 37 runs to secure T20 series sweep
Updated 11 June 2025

England beat West Indies by 37 runs to secure T20 series sweep

England beat West Indies by 37 runs to secure T20 series sweep
  • The match aggregate of 459 runs is the highest in a T20 international in England, as the home side added win to their sweep of the three-game One-Day International series
  • Duckett raced to his highest T20 international score but was bowled around his legs by Akeal Hosein

SOUTHAMPTON, Britain: Ben Duckett blasted a whirlwind 84 from 46 balls as England posted their second highest T20 International score of 248 for three before restricting West Indies to 211 for eight to win by 37 runs and sweep the three-game series on Tuesday.

West Indies elected to bowl but could not find consistency in line and length on a flat batting wicket and were carted around the Rose Bowl as England smashed 15 sixes in the innings on the way to their imposing score.

Opener Jamie Smith contributed 60 from 26 balls for his first T20 international half-century as England reached 135-1 at the midway point of their innings, their highest 10-over score.

West Indies were always struggling in their chase as they lost wickets at regular intervals but their total was boosted by a fine unbeaten 79 from 45 balls by Rovman Powell before they ran out of deliveries.

The match aggregate of 459 runs is the highest in a T20 international in England, as the home side added win to their sweep of the three-game One-Day International series, a perfect start for new white ball captain Harry Brook.

“Very pleased, the lads put a really good shift in and played some exceptional cricket,” Brook told Sky Sports. “I like the depth in the batting, it gives the lads at the top the license to get us off to a fast start and we saw that tonight.”

Openers Smith and Duckett put on 120 in 63 deliveries for the first wicket. No line or length was safe as the pair used invention and daring to move around the crease and find boundaries at will.

Duckett raced to his highest T20 international score but was bowled around his legs by Akeal Hosein.

Brook (35 not out from 22 balls) and Barbados-born Jacob Bethell (36 from 16 balls) added 70 in the final 31 deliveries of the innings to take England to their massive score.

The 25 dot balls that West Indies bowled are the fewest England have faced in a completed innings.

West Indies never looked like getting close to their target despite an enterprising 45 from 27 balls by captain Shai Hope, until Powell came in at number six and gave them a late boost.

England seamer Luke Wood was the pick on a difficult night for the bowlers with 3-31 in his four overs.

“We have not grasped those crucial moments in the game, whether it is with bat or ball. We have not managed to put that complete game together in this series. We have to improve everywhere,” West Indies captain Shai Hope said.


England stunned by Senegal to put Tuchel under immediate pressure

England stunned by Senegal to put Tuchel under immediate pressure
Updated 11 June 2025

England stunned by Senegal to put Tuchel under immediate pressure

England stunned by Senegal to put Tuchel under immediate pressure
  • Boos rained down from the disgruntled home support to leave Tuchel with plenty to ponder

NOTTINGHAM: United Kingdom, June 10, 2025 : England slumped to a 3-1 home friendly defeat by Senegal on Tuesday to ramp up the scrutiny on boss Thomas Tuchel one year out from the World Cup.
Goals from Ismaila Sarr, Habib Diarra and Cheikh Sabaly inflicted England’s first ever defeat against African opposition at Nottingham Forest’s City Ground after Harry Kane had given the hosts an early lead.
Tuchel was scathing in his criticism of his side’s dreary display in beating minnows Andorra just 1-0 in World Cup qualifying on Saturday.
The German, who was appointed with the task of ending England’s wait since 1966 for a major tournament win, has so far failed to spark a star-studded squad into looking like contenders for the World Cup, even if this was his first defeat in four games.
Tuchel responded by making 10 changes, with Kane the only player to retain his place.
It took just seven minutes for the England captain to maintain his record of scoring in every game since Tuchel took charge.
Former Chelsea goalkeeper Edouard Mendy should have done better when he could only parry Anthony Gordon’s shot into the path of Kane, who tapped in his 73rd international goal.
Dean Henderson was given a rare chance to impress in the England goal as Jordan Pickford was relegated to the bench.
The Crystal Palace stopper made impressive saves from his club team-mate Sarr and Idrissa Gana Gueye.
But he was helpless when Sarr made the most of a lack of concentration from Kyle Walker to meet Nicolas Jackson’s cross and fire into the bottom corner.
England had never lost to African opposition in 22 previous matches but Senegal had been beaten just once from open play since losing to the Three Lions at the 2022 World Cup.
Diarra was afforded acres of room to run in behind the England defense and slot between the legs of Henderson to put the visitors in front just after the hour mark.
Mendy made amends for his role in the opening goal with fine saves to deny Bukayo Saka and Morgan Gibbs-White a swift equalizer.
England thought they had levelled late on when Jude Bellingham smashed home from a corner.
But the goal was ruled out for a handball by Levi Colwill before the ball broke to the Real Madrid midfielder.
Senegal made the most of that reprieve to seal a famous win in stoppage time when Sabaly rounded off a slick counter-attack.
Boos rained down from the disgruntled home support to leave Tuchel with plenty to ponder before England are next in action in September.


Jon Rahm: Smaller fields make top 10s easier at LIV Golf

Jon Rahm: Smaller fields make top 10s easier at LIV Golf
Updated 11 June 2025

Jon Rahm: Smaller fields make top 10s easier at LIV Golf

Jon Rahm: Smaller fields make top 10s easier at LIV Golf
  • Rahm tied for eighth last week in Virginia without ever having a serious chance of winning over the final few holes

OAKMONT, Pennsylvania: Two-time major champion Jon Rahm comes into the US Open off another top 10 at LIV Golf, which is nothing new. The Spaniard has never come in lower in the 20 events he has finished since joining the Saudi-backed league at the start of last year.
Is that a big deal?
“I would happily trade a bunch of them for more wins, that’s for sure,” said Rahm, who has two LIV victories but has yet to win this year. “But I keep putting myself in good position.”
One of the criticism of LIV is the 54-man fields over 54 holes, especially with a half-dozen or more considered past their prime and several unproven young players.
Rahm delivered some context on his streak.
“Listen, I’m a realist in this case,” he said. “I’ve been playing really good golf, yes, but I’d be lying if I said that it wasn’t easier to have top 10s with a smaller field. That’s just the truth, right? Had I been playing full-field events, would I have top 10 every single week? No. But I’ve been playing good enough to say that I would most likely have been inside the top 30 every single time and maybe even top 25.”
He considered that impressive, and he figures most of those would be top 10s.
Rahm tied for eighth last week in Virginia without ever having a serious chance of winning over the final few holes. He said against a full field, he doubts that would have been a top 10.
“I think winning is equally as hard, but you can take advantage of a smaller field to finish higher,” he said. “As much as I want to give it credit personally for having that many top 10s, I wouldn’t always give it as the full amount just knowing that it’s a smaller field.”
DeChambeau and LIV
Bryson DeChambeau says the contract he signed to join Saudi-funded LIV Golf is up next year and he’s already looking ahead to a new one.
“We’re looking to negotiate end of this year, and I’m very excited. They see the value in me. I see the value in what they can provide, and I believe we’ll come to some sort of resolution on that,” DeChambeau said Tuesday. “Super excited for the future.”
LIV contracts are confidential and there has been ample speculation whether the Public Investment Fund will shell out the kind of signing bonuses that helped lure players away from the PGA Tour in 2022.
Meanwhile, unification with the PGA Tour and LIV Golf appears at a standstill as PIF officials want any future to include team golf.
“I think that LIV is not going anywhere,” DeChambeau said.
He said Yasir Al-Rumayyan, the PIF governor behind the rival league, “has been steadfast in his belief on team golf, and whether everybody believes in it or not, I think it’s a viable option.”
DeChambeau believes LIV is going in the right direction and referenced the indoor tech-infused TGL as having teams making money.
“I believe there is a sustainable model out there,” he said. “How it all works with the game of golf, who knows? But I know my worth.”
Xander and YouTube
Xander Schauffele might spend less time on his phone than anyone, usually only scrolling through the news. A few weeks ago at the Memorial, during a rapid-fire series of random questions, he was asked who he would take with him on “The Amazing Race” reality show.
“What’s ‘The Amazing Race,’” he asked.
So when he was told about Tommy Fleetwood’s latest venture with YouTube and asked if he would considering doing something like that, Schauffele replied, “Is that like a serious question?”
But he has spent time on YouTube for a reason. Schauffele made his US Open debut in 2017, the year after the Open at Oakmont. What better way to check out the course than watching a US Open at Oakmont?
“I watched some of the ‘16 coverage on YouTube. I would have watched it on any platform that would have been provided, but I watched some of that coverage there just to see sort of how guys were hitting shots and how the ball was reacting,” Schauffele said.
Turns out that wasn’t his first experience on YouTube.
“I’ve been in dark places where I’ve looked up swing tip things on YouTube as well, trying to make sense of it, just like every golfer has. I’ll confess to it,” he said. “I’m luckily not there anymore, which is probably healthy for myself and my family.
“Yeah, there’s a lot on there, I can tell you that much.”
Rory and his driver
Rory McIlroy expressed concern about his driver after badly missing the cut in the Canadian Open, his last tournament ahead of the US Open.
He said he worked at home over the weekend and realized he was using the wrong driver. And he was coy about which one he was using, suggesting that people could always go to the range to find out for themselves.
McIlroy got plenty of attention with his driver when it was leaked at the PGA Championship that his driver did not pass inspection. It’s a common occurrence, and testing takes place randomly at every major. Scottie Scheffler also had to change drivers after his didn’t pass the test. He wound up winning by five shots.
So was that a problem for McIlroy at the PGA Championship?
“It wasn’t a big deal for Scottie,” McIlroy said. “So it shouldn’t have been a big deal for me.”
The best honorary member
Dustin Johnson had not played Oakmont since the won the US Open in 2016. That’s not to say he hasn’t been back to the fabled club. Oakmont Country Club honors its major champions by offering them honorary membership.
Johnson went back a few years later for the honor, going to a dinner and getting his green jacket .
Honorary membership has its privileges that Johnson doesn’t use.
“I’m probably their favorite member because I never come,” he said.
Oakmont need not to be offended. Johnson was asked how many clubs he had honorary membership and he didn’t bother counting.
“Quite a few,” he said. “And I don’t use very many, either.”


Australia qualify for 2026 World Cup

Australia qualify for 2026 World Cup
Updated 10 June 2025

Australia qualify for 2026 World Cup

Australia qualify for 2026 World Cup

PARIS: Australia booked their place at the 2026 World Cup in North America with a 2-1 win over in Jeddah on Tuesday.
The Socceroos will play in a sixth consecutive World Cup finals after finishing second in Group C in the third round of Asian qualifiers, as the Saudis head into the fourth round.