Mixed martial arts is ‘the sport of our era’ in the Kingdom and beyond

Mixed martial arts is ‘the sport of our era’ in the Kingdom and beyond
Abdullah Al-Hazza, CEO of the Saudi Mixed Martial Arts Federation (Supplied)
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Updated 28 October 2024

Mixed martial arts is ‘the sport of our era’ in the Kingdom and beyond

Mixed martial arts is ‘the sport of our era’ in the Kingdom and beyond
  • Abdullah Al-Hazza, CEO of the Saudi Mixed Martial Arts Federation, writes for Arab News about the sport’s rapid growth in the country
  • recently held the globally successful PFL MENA’s ‘Battle of the Giants’ event in Riyadh featuring Francis Ngannou

RIYADH: When Francis Ngannou said felt like “family” after his historic Professional Fighters League’s “Battle of the Giants” victory over Renan Ferreira in Riyadh recently, it made me feel very proud.

I was proud that one of the greatest fighters in our sport has such love for this country, which is certainly reciprocated. And that the work we are doing to promote MMA across the Kingdom is bearing fruit.

Ngannou is aware of what we as a federation are doing, and he understands how passionate people are for MMA in . He wants to play his part in the growth of what we all believe is the sport of our era.

There has been a 21 percent increase in MMA participation this year from last year across — which includes not just fighters and athletes of various ages, but also coaches, referees and judges.

This is evidence of an MMA ecosystem in place, which we are constantly trying to expand and enhance.

With six PFL events in 2024, including three pay-per-views, is reinforcing its role as a leading destination for major MMA competitions, while increasing awareness and excitement for the sport among our local population.

Since the federation’s inception in 2018, ’s MMA fighters have won 35 medals — 19 gold, three silver and 13 bronze — in various international competitions. This includes world, Asia and other international championships.

We have three undefeated fighters in the PFL with Malik Basahel (3-0), Mostafa Nada (2-0) and Hattan Al-Saif (2-0). In addition, Abdullah Al-Qahtani has a 4-1 record. Overall, fighters now have a 11-1 record in reputable organizations such as the PFL.

There is also the financial aspect of MMA. has been highly successful in utilizing the sports industry as a catalyst for economic and social development.

This has connected us with global communities, attracted inward investment, contributed significantly to the nation’s gross domestic product, created jobs, and, essentially, encouraged healthy lifestyles.

We recognize the opportunities that MMA provides and our responsibility as a federation, working with relevant partners such as the Ministry of Sport, to ensure they are fully realized. Securing sponsorships for the programs we have created is but one example of this in action.

The next big international MMA event in takes place on Nov. 29 when Riyadh hosts the 2024 PFL finals.

The event will be held outside the US for the first time, with the federation, ministry, and the global PFL organization in charge of its management.

There is a $6-million prize pool, with $1 million awarded to each winner of the six main fights across various weight classes.

For us as citizens, however, perhaps the most exciting part is the inaugural Middle East and North Africa PFL finals, where Al-Saif will make history as the first woman from this nation to compete in a global PFL event.

The promotion of MMA among women is an integral part of what we do as a federation. We have organized two championships for women, and now have an increasing number of women fighters, coaches, referees and judges participating.

This means, I can assure everyone, that while Al-Saif is on an exciting journey, she is the first of many to come.

Speaking of which, I am often asked by members of the media if there will ever be a n Francis Ngannou — an elite, world champion from the Kingdom.

My answer is always the same: there will be. It is only a matter of time, and when it happens, I will be justifiably proud because of all the work we have put into this endeavor.


Messi’s last-second assist lifts Inter Miami over Atlas 2-1 in Leagues Cup

Messi’s last-second assist lifts Inter Miami over Atlas 2-1 in Leagues Cup
Updated 31 July 2025

Messi’s last-second assist lifts Inter Miami over Atlas 2-1 in Leagues Cup

Messi’s last-second assist lifts Inter Miami over Atlas 2-1 in Leagues Cup
  • It was Messi’s first game back since he and teammate Jordi Alba were suspended one match by Major League Soccer for skipping its All-Star game
  • Messi connected with Marcelo Weigandt for the winning score in the final minute of stoppage time

MIAMI GARDENS: Lionel Messi had two assists, including one in the final seconds of the match, to help lift Inter Miami over Atlas 2-1 in their Leagues Cup opener on Wednesday night.

It was Messi’s first game back since he and teammate Jordi Alba were suspended one match by Major League Soccer for skipping its All-Star game. He connected with Marcelo Weigandt for the winning score in the final minute of stoppage time.

Messi also assisted on Telasco Segovia’s goal that opened scoring in the 58th.

Rivaldo Lozano scored the equalizer for the Guadalajara club in the 82nd before Weigandt’s goal in the 96th that had to be confirmed by VAR after he was originally ruled offside.

That meant five assists in July for Messi, who was named the Major League Soccer Player of the Month after netting eight goals and helping Miami go 4-1-1 in league play.

Both sides had their chances during a chippy first half, though neither was able to finish. Miami goalkeeper Rocco Ríos Novo had three saves in the first half, including one in which he slid over to deny Eduardo Aguirre on a header to the back post. Luis Suárez blasted a shot off the crossbar on the final play of the first half.

Argentine midfielder Rodrigo De Paul made his Inter Miami debut. De Paul, Messi’s national team buddy, officially signed with the club last week.


Lottie Woad rides wave of momentum into AIG Women’s Open

Lottie Woad rides wave of momentum into AIG Women’s Open
Updated 31 July 2025

Lottie Woad rides wave of momentum into AIG Women’s Open

Lottie Woad rides wave of momentum into AIG Women’s Open
  • Woad is the odds-on favorite to win this week at BetMGM and FanDuel Sportsbook
  • Korda remains atop the world rankings, but her winless season has come as a surprise after she won seven times in 2024

PORTHCAWL: As the world of women’s golf prepares for the final major of the year, an English prodigy has seized the limelight.

Lottie Woad is the hottest player in the game and will be among the favorites to land her first major championship when the AIG Women’s Open tees off at Royal Porthcawl on Thursday in Porthcawl, Wales.

Woad’s litany of accomplishments dates back to last year, when she won the Augusta National Women’s Amateur, rose to No. 1 in the world amateur rankings and tied for 10th at the Women’s Open at St. Andrews for low-am honors.

But July has seen the 21-year-old truly dominate the sport. Woad had a six- shot win at the Women’s Irish Open on the Ladies European Tour, then tied for third at the most recent major, the Evian Championship, all before officially turning pro.

Then came the Women’s Scottish Open last week, where Woad matched Rose Zhang’s feat in 2023 by winning her first start as a professional, three strokes clear of the field.

“I’ve really been just enjoying myself,” Woad said this week. “Enjoyed being in these events and competing and being in contention, just try to have fun with it and not add too much stress, really.”

Woad is the odds-on favorite to win this week at BetMGM and FanDuel Sportsbook. And she’s certainly caught the eye of her peers.

“Absolutely amazing,” said Nelly Korda, who played with her at the Scottish Open. “I was very impressed with her composure, her process.

“I think, when it comes to her shot routine, especially under pressure and in the heat of the moment, sometimes people seem to fidget and kind of doubt themselves. But she stuck to it, she stuck to her process every single time, and I think that’s one of the main things that I noticed is how mature she is for her age and how comfortable she was in the heat of the moment.”

Korda remains atop the world rankings, but her winless season has come as a surprise after she won seven times in 2024.

“I feel like I don’t really have anything more to prove to people ever,” Korda said. “For me it’s just I’m passionate about the game. I love the game. I love playing in these kind of conditions, testing my game, and getting to play against the best players in the world.”

Royal Porthcawl has hosted three Senior Open Championships since 2014, but this marks its first time hosting the women’s major. It is a par-72 course that will play 6,580 yards this week.

Lydia Ko of New Zealand is the defending champion thanks to her two-shot win at St. Andrews last year, shortly after she won the Olympic gold medal and clinched her place in the LPGA Hall of Fame.

“I think it was just fun for me, and I was just trying to have more of an open mindset and just trying to be free rather than hit perfect shots,” Ko said. “I think that’s really important on these links-style golf courses. You could hit a really solid shot and be so far away from the pin, and that could be vice versa. It’s just more about creativity, and I hope that will be kind of the strategy that I’ll take toward this week.”

Three of the first four major winners this season were first-timers: Japan’s Mao Saigo at the Chevron Championship; Sweden’s Maja Stark at the US Women’s Open; and Australia’s Grace Kim at the Evian, where she had a comeback for the ages. Kim finished her final round birdie-birdie-par-eagle to force a playoff, where she beat Jeeno Thitikul of Thailand.

“I think just knowing that my game is there and good enough,” Kim said of this week’s test. “Just mentally preparing whatever could happen.”


Wirtz opens Liverpool account in friendly win in Japan

Wirtz opens Liverpool account in friendly win in Japan
Updated 30 July 2025

Wirtz opens Liverpool account in friendly win in Japan

Wirtz opens Liverpool account in friendly win in Japan
  • Wirtz equalized after Yokohama opened the scoring early in the second half
  • “I am really happy that I could score my first goal,” said Wirtz

YOKOHAMA, Japan: Florian Wirtz scored his first Liverpool goal as the Premier League champions beat Yokohama F. Marinos 3-1 in a pre-season friendly in Japan on Wednesday.

French forward Hugo Ekitike made his debut for Liverpool, one week after joining from Eintracht Frankfurt for a reported 69 million pounds ($92 million).

Wirtz equalized after Yokohama opened the scoring early in the second half, the German slamming home a right-foot shot from inside the box in front of over 65,000 fans.

“I am really happy that I could score my first goal. I hope there are more to come,” said Wirtz, who joined Liverpool from Bayer Leverkusen in a blockbuster deal.

Trey Nyoni and Rio Ngumoha also scored for Liverpool, who announced the sale of Colombian forward Luis Diaz to Bayern Munich on Wednesday.

Liverpool manager Arne Slot said he was happy to see his team come from behind to win but was not pleased with their missed chances.

“It could be with a tough training camp and it could be with the heat circumstances,” said the Dutchman.

“But that’s something that we definitely have to improve.”

Goalkeeper Alisson Becker missed the match after traveling home to Brazil “for private reasons,” Liverpool said.

Shortly before kickoff, an emotional tribute was given to Diogo Jota, who passed away this month in a car crash.

Liverpool dominated throughout but Yokohama opened the scoring when Asahi Uenaka pounced in the 55th minute to beat Giorgi Mamardashvili.

Wirtz levelled when he latched onto a Mohamed Salah pass.

Nyoni volleyed home a Jeremie Frimpong cross to put Liverpool in front, before Ngumoha dribbled from the halfway line and fired in a shot from the edge of the box.


Marchand breaks world record in 200 individual medley; US, Australia win more world gold

Marchand breaks world record in 200 individual medley; US, Australia win more world gold
Updated 30 July 2025

Marchand breaks world record in 200 individual medley; US, Australia win more world gold

Marchand breaks world record in 200 individual medley; US, Australia win more world gold
  • The Frenchman clocked clocking 1 minute, 52.69 seconds to surpass the 1:54.00 set in 2011 by American Ryan Lochte
  • He won four Olympic gold medals a year ago in Paris, but he’s swimming only the 200 and 400 medley – and relays – in Singapore

 

SINGAPORE: Léon Marchand smashed the 200m individual medley world record in Singapore on Wednesday with another breathtaking swim while Australia and the United States celebrated more gold.
Racing in the semifinals at the world championships, the Frenchman clocked clocking 1 minute, 52.69 seconds to surpass the 1:54.00 set in 2011 by American Ryan Lochte.

Marchand set the mark swimming in the semifinals and, in theory, could break it again in Thursday’s finals.
He won four Olympic gold medals a year ago in Paris, but he’s swimming only the 200 and 400 medley – and relays – in Singapore. Planning the lighter schedule in what he calls a “transition year” keeps him fresh to chase the world marks.
Marchand didn’t just break the 14-year-old record, he shattered it.
“What’s crazy is that it’s a whole second — and it’s still hard to believe,” he said. “1:52 on the 200 meters — that’s insane.”
Marchand will swim the 400 IM on Sunday, the final day of the world championships. He holds that record of 4:02.50 set in the 2023 worlds in Fukuoka, Japan. And it seems likely to go.
“Today I felt really good before the race,” he said. “In the water, I felt light, I was taking in a lot of water and technically everything felt clean.”
Asked about swimming a lighter schedule he replied in an understatement: “It was probably the right decision.”
Marchand was about 1.8 seconds under the world record after 150 meters and powered home with the final freestyle leg.
Though this race did not yield a world title — that will come on Thursday in the final — it did win Marchand a check for $30,000.
“In the end I went out hard from the start,” he said. “But I stayed super-relaxed. I didn’t make many mistakes. I didn’t realize I was going that fast but I gave it absolutely everything. Arms at full speed all the way to the wall. At that point I wasn’t even thinking about technique anymore.”

More than Marchand
Despite being only a semifinal, Marchand overshadowed the five finals on Day 4 of the worlds — the halfway mark with four days more to go. Those finals produced medals for the United States, Australia, Italy, Tunisia, and the Neutral Athletes.
American Luca Urlando picked up the third gold medal for the United States in the championships, winning the 200 butterfly in 1:51.87. Krzysztof Chmielewski of Poland was second in 1:52.64 with bronze for Harrison Turner of Australia in 1:54.17.
Urlando has battled back from several surgeries for his first big title on the world stage.
“It was a great race – all great — a great moment,” he said. “I’m trying to have as much fun as I can with it.”
He was asked how he overcame the setbacks and he replied: “The belief that I could get back to a moment like this. Internal belief.”
Mollie O’Callaghan of Australia, the defending Paris Olympic champion in the 200 freestyle, repeated her title in the worlds, pulling away in the last 50 to finish in 1:53.48. Li Bingjie of China was the silver medalist in 1:54.52, with bronze going to American Claire Weinstein in 1:54.57.
O’Callaghan has had a difficult time coming back after the Olympic victory, dealing with the stress and the post-games letdown.
“I’ve had an amazing coach Dean (Boxall) to guide me through this difficult time,” O’Callaghan said. “It’s hard for a lot of people to come back after the Olympics.”
Weinstein, like many of the Americans, has been dealing with what team officials call “acute gastroenteritis” picked up at a training camp in Thailand before arriving in Singapore.
A new name, missing name
Ahmed Jaouadi of Tunisia won the 800 free, clocking 7:36.88 — the third fastest time ever swum in the event. Sven Schwarz of Germany claimed silver in 7:39.96 with fellow German Lukas Martens taking bronze in 7:40.19. American Bobby Finke, the three-time Olympic gold medalist, was fourth, far off the pace in 7:46.42.
Sam Short of Australia, who had the second-quickest qualifying time in the 800, pulled out of the race with what the team said was food poisoning.
One big shock came in the men’s 100 freestyle semifinals where world-record holder Pan Zhanle of China failed to reach the top eight for Thursday’s final. American Jack Alexy had the best time of 46.81 with David Popovici across in 46.84. Pan finished in 47.81, far off his world-record time of 46.40 set last year in Paris.
In the men’s 50 breaststroke, Simone Cerasuolo of Italy won in 26.54 with silver for Kirill Prigoda swimming as a Neutral Athlete, and bronze for Qin Haiyang of China.
McIntosh and Yu
In the women’s 200 butterfly semifinals, Canadian Summer McIntosh qualified in 2:06.22. Yu Zidi, the 12-year-old Chinese, swam 2:07.95 to make the final eight. Her time was the eighth best.
McIntosh has already won two gold medals and is trying for five in Singapore.
Yu finished fourth earlier in the championships in the 200 individual medley.
In the final event, the Neutral Athletes won the mixed 4x100 medley relay in 3:37.97. China was second (3:39.99) and Canada was third (3:40.90).
The United States failed to reach Wednesday’s final after finishing 10th in qualifying. They were Olympic champions last year in Paris.
Britain and France also missed reaching the final.

 

SINGAPORE : Leon Marchand smashed the 200m individual medley world record in Singapore on Wednesday with another breathtaking swim while Australia and the United States celebrated more gold.
Racing in the semifinals at the world championships, the Frenchman clocked 1min 52.69sec to wipe more than a second off the previous record of 1:54.00 set by Ryan Lochte in 2011.
Marchand beat Michael Phelps’s long-standing 400m medley record at the world championships in Japan two years ago.
“Actually I can’t believe it right now,” said Marchand, who won four individual golds in front of his home fans at the Paris Olympics a year ago and was the face of the Games.
“I knew I was going to be close to my PB (personal best) because I felt really good today and preparation has been pretty good.
“But 1:52 is unbelievable for me.”
Marchand, 23, took an extended break from swimming after Paris and only returned to competition in May.
He is focusing on the individual medley events in Singapore and had said he was gunning for Lochte’s record.
Marchand got his world championships campaign under way on Wednesday morning, clocking a time of 1:57.63 in the heats.
He said he would go all-out for the record in the semifinals rather than conserve his energy for Thursday’s final.

 


Taif Derby Prep takes center stage at King Khalid Racecourse

Taif Derby Prep takes center stage at King Khalid Racecourse
Updated 30 July 2025

Taif Derby Prep takes center stage at King Khalid Racecourse

Taif Derby Prep takes center stage at King Khalid Racecourse
  • Runners from the Saudi 2000 Guineas poised to do battle this weekend
  • Ninth event on the 10-race card has assembled a field of 15 with Faal Khair bidding to continue on an upward curve

TAIF: Several key trials are taking place at King Khalid Racecourse this weekend with 2000 Guineas fourth Faal Khair (USA) and fifth Mhalhal (USA) set to clash once again in Saturday’s 1600m Taif Derby Prep.

The ninth event on the 10-race card has assembled a field of 15 with Faal Khair bidding to continue on an upward curve following a successful season in Riyadh, peaking with his effort in the 2000 Guineas on Jan. 25.

Camilo Ospina’s mount is one of two in the race carrying the white stable colors of the Sons of King Abdullah bin Abdulaziz, and both he and Jeddah Beach are trained by Ahmed Mohamoud.

Mhalhal, representing Kuwaiti owner Sheikh Abdullah Homoud Al-Malek Al-Sabah, trainer Thamer Al-Daihani and Saudi Cup International Jockey Challenge-winning rider Mohammed Al-Daham, was another improver last season and is out to cement his claims on the Taif Derby on Aug. 23.

Race 10 is the Taif Derby Cup Preparatory for Arabian horses, also staged over 1600m, and features a couple of highly rated individuals including Wasib (FR) from the Safwat Aladyat Stable, trained by Abdulaziz Al-Mosa and ridden by Naif Al-Anazi.

He will clash with HM Al Nasrallah (FR), trained by Salem Al-Ruwais and ridden by Abdullah Al-Hussain, in the 12-strong field with the mare having just her second start since finishing seventh in the Group 1 Al Mneefah Cup on Saudi Cup weekend.

Also on Saturday is the preparatory round for the Taif University Cup, over a distance of 1400m, and sees the quick reappearance of the Sami Al-Harabi-trained Saodad (KSA) after he finished fourth last week with Adel Al-Fouraidi taking over in the saddle.

The main event on Friday’s program is the Makkah Almokarramah Reg. Gov. Cup Prep over 1600m where Al-Dihani again looks to hold a big chance with Uncle (GB), who was a Listed winner earlier in the year and ran eighth in the G2 1351 Turf Sprint.

One of his main rivals will be Tuwaiq Cup second Waqtuk (USA) for Al-Fouraidi and trainer Abdulaziz Al-Mosa, while Nicolas Bachalard sends out Henry Q under Alexis Moreno for owner Prince Saud Bin Salman Bin Abdulaziz.