‘The pride I felt winning for my country was unparalleled’: Saudi Rocket League FIFAe World Cup winners share joy of victory

Team  pose for a photo with the trophy after being crowned champions following victory against Team France in the final of the FIFAe World Cup featuring Rocket League at SEF Arena on Dec. 8 in Riyadh, . (FIFA via Getty Images)
Team pose for a photo with the trophy after being crowned champions following victory against Team France in the final of the FIFAe World Cup featuring Rocket League at SEF Arena on Dec. 8 in Riyadh, . (FIFA via Getty Images)
Short Url
Updated 15 December 2024

‘The pride I felt winning for my country was unparalleled’: Saudi Rocket League FIFAe World Cup winners share joy of victory

‘The pride I felt winning for my country was unparalleled’: Saudi Rocket League FIFAe World Cup winners share joy of victory
  • Saudi stars reveal how it felt to become first-ever FIFAe World Cup winners on home soil
  • crowned first-ever FIFAe Rocket League world champions on home soil

RIYADH: The victorious team, who claimed victory on Dec. 8 in the inaugural FIFAe World Cup, featuring Rocket League, have been sharing their pride at securing the crown.

Cheered on by a raucous home crowd, they delivered a commanding performance to secure the title at the SEF Arena in Boulevard Riyadh City last Sunday.

Team captain Mohammed Al-Otaibi, known as TrK511, reflected on the triumph and said: “It’s an indescribable feeling to finally become world champions, winning the FIFAe Rocket League World Cup in our homeland, with our fans behind us every step of the way, makes the achievement unforgettable.”

dominated their opponents, topping the group stages before defeating Chile 4-0 in the quarter-finals, Brazil 4-0 in the semifinals and France 4-1 in the final.

Yazid Abdullah Bakhashwin, known as “Kiileerrz,” described the pride of representing on a global stage.

“This is the greatest achievement of my career,” he said. “What makes it even more significant is that it was the first Rocket League tournament for FIFAe, held here at home. The energy from the fans inside the SEF Arena was electrifying. Their cheers after every match and goal pushed us to perform at our peak.”

For coach Abdulrahman Al-Saad, the victory was the culmination of relentless preparation.




Mohammed Khalid Alotaibi (trk511) of Team celebrates against Team France during the Final of the FIFAe World Cup featuring Rocket League at SEF Arena on Dec. 8, in Riyadh. (FIFA via Getty Images)

“We’ve been working towards this tournament for so long,” he said. “Being the first of its kind and hosted in our homeland made it even more meaningful. It marked the end of a long year of tournaments — around 10 in total — where we learned from every match and improved on our mistakes, especially in international competitions.”

The victory was particularly sweet for the Saudi team, who had often come close in previous tournaments without taking the top prize.

“Reaching the finals and semifinals only to fall short was tough,” said Saleh Abdullah “Rw9” Bakhashwin. “But my family and friends never stopped believing in us. This win feels like the perfect reward for all our efforts, and I’m proud to have made them proud,” he added.

His teammate and captain, TrK511, echoed the sentiment.

“After so many close calls, this victory feels especially meaningful. We’ve learned from our past experiences, practiced relentlessly, and stayed focused as a team,” he said.

Eighteen nations competed in the tournament, one of three in the FIFAe Finals 2024. The event was part of a growing number of competitions hosted in , which included the inaugural Esports World Cup earlier this year. With 23.5 million gamers — almost 70 percent of the population — the Kingdom is rapidly establishing itself as a global leader in esports.

“The esports industry in is expanding at an incredible pace,” said coach Al-Saad. “The Kingdom is investing heavily in infrastructure and nurturing young talent. This win reflects the passion our country has for gaming and esports.”

For ’s world champions, this victory is just the beginning.

“We’re living in an era of esports, with tournaments happening year-round and so much support from our country,” said TrK511. “I’ve always wanted to achieve something for my family and my country, and now I’ve achieved the most important title of my career — but it won’t be the last.”


Sinner, Alcaraz set for South Korea exhibition ahead of Australian Open

Sinner, Alcaraz set for South Korea exhibition ahead of Australian Open
Updated 5 sec ago

Sinner, Alcaraz set for South Korea exhibition ahead of Australian Open

Sinner, Alcaraz set for South Korea exhibition ahead of Australian Open
  • Sinner, Alcaraz set for South Korea exhibition ahead of Australian Open
Jannik Sinner and Carlos Alcaraz will play an exhibition match in South Korea in January, organizers said on Monday, as the top two men’s players in the world ramp up their preparations for the Australian Open.
The pair, who have won nine of the last 10 major titles, will play in the Hyundai Card Super Match at Incheon’s Inspire Arena on January 10, eight days before the year’s first Grand Slam begins at Melbourne Park.
The exhibition has previously featured some of the biggest names in men’s tennis including Roger Federer, Rafa Nadal, Novak Djokovic and Pete Sampras, as well as women’s greats Maria Sharapova and Venus Williams.
Organizers have yet to release information on the prize money on offer for the one-off match.
Sinner and Alcaraz met in three of the four Grand Slam finals this season and faced each other in the title decider at last month’s Six Kings Slam exhibition tournament in Riyadh.
Sinner prevailed in that contest to secure a reported $6 million in prize money.
The Italian also lifted his first Paris Masters title on Sunday to reclaim the world number one ranking from Spaniard Alcaraz, who lost early in the tournament.
Alcaraz had taken top spot after beating Sinner in the US Open final in September to improve his career head-to-head record against his rival to 10-5 in official matches.
The pair also met in an epic French Open final in June when Alcaraz prevailed in five sets, before Sinner gained revenge in the Wimbledon title clash a month later.

Obiri sets women’s NYC Marathon course record, Kipruto wins men’s race by a fraction of a second

Obiri sets women’s NYC Marathon course record, Kipruto wins men’s race by a fraction of a second
Updated 33 min 16 sec ago

Obiri sets women’s NYC Marathon course record, Kipruto wins men’s race by a fraction of a second

Obiri sets women’s NYC Marathon course record, Kipruto wins men’s race by a fraction of a second
  • Obiri pulled away from her countrymate Sharon Lokedi in the final mile, surging ahead and winning easily by 16 seconds to best the previous course record of 2:22.31 set by Margaret Okayo in 2003
  • Kipruto, who was running the New York race for the first time, finished in 2:08.40. That finish topped the 2005 race that was decided by a second
  • Albert Korir, who won in 2021, was third, giving Kenya a sweep of the top three spots in both the men’s and women’s races

NEW YORK: The New York City Marathon made history on Sunday with a course record set in the women’s competition and the closest race ever on the men’s side, which was decided by a fraction of a second.

Hellen Obiri of Kenya broke the women’s record while compatriot Benson Kipruto won the men’s race by edging Alexander Mutiso by three-hundredths of a second.

Obiri, who also won the race in 2023, finished in 2 hours, 19 minutes and 51 seconds. She was running with 2022 winner Sharon Lokedi until Obiri pulled away from her countrymate in the final mile, surging ahead and winning easily by 16 seconds to best the previous course record of 2:22.31 set by Margaret Okayo in 2003.

“It feels so great. ... I am so happy to run the course record,” Obiri said. “With 1K to go I felt like I was so strong. I have something left in my tank.”

Defending champion Sheila Chepkirui finished third. All three beat the previous course best on a beautiful day for running, with temperatures in the 50s Fahrenheit when the race started.

Kipruto and Mutiso separated themselves from the chase pack in the men’s race heading into Mile 24. Kipruto seemed to have put the race away, pulling away from Mutiso in the last 200 meters. But Mutiso, who also is from Kenya, wasn’t done, surging in the last 50 meters before falling just short. Kipruto, who was running the New York race for the first time, finished in 2:08.40. That finish topped the 2005 race that was decided by a second.

“I was aware that Mutiso was behind,” said Kipruto, who also has won the Boston, Chicago and Tokyo marathons. “It was so close and I knew because I know Mutiso is a strong guy.”

Albert Korir, who won in 2021, was third, giving Kenya a sweep of the top three spots in both the men’s and women’s races. Joel Reichow was the top American, coming in sixth.

Eliud Kipchoge, who turns 41 next week, wrapped up a historic run as one of the most accomplished marathoners in the sport. Kipchoge, who has won 11 major world marathons, finished 17th in his first time running NYC.

On the women’s side, the trio of former champions separated themselves heading into the Bronx at Mile 20. American Fiona O’Keeffe and Dutch runner Sifan Hassan had made it a pack of five once the group entered Manhattan a few miles earlier but couldn’t hang on for the final 6 miles.

This was the first time that the previous three women’s winners had been in the same race since 2018. The trio didn’t disappoint, putting forth stellar efforts. It was the second straight year that Kenyans took the top three spots.

O’Keeffe finished fourth, breaking the American course record as she finished in 2:22.49.

“Really exciting. I can’t take too much credit for the time, that was all on the women ahead of me,” O’Keeffe said. “Grateful to be back in the marathon. Feels like coming home.”

Fellow American Annie Frisbie finished fifth as four of the top nine finishers were from the US. Hassan, who won the Sydney Marathon two months ago, was sixth.

Chelsea Clinton was also one of the finishers, completing the course in just under 3:45. She was greeted at the finish line by her parents — former President Bill Clinton and former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton.

The 26.2-mile course took runners through all five boroughs of New York, starting in Staten Island and ending in Manhattan’s Central Park. This is the 49th year the race has been in all five boroughs. Before that, the route was completely in Central Park. The first race had only 55 finishers while a record 55,642 people finished last year, the largest in the history of the sport until the London Marathon broke it earlier this year.

Wheelchair success

Marcel Hug and Susannah Scaroni both won the wheelchair races in dominant fashion. Hug, known as the Silver Bullet, has now won this marathon seven times. He finished 3:52 ahead of second-place finisher David Weir. Scaroni defended her title and was victorious for the third time in four years. She crossed the finish line 5:43 ahead of second-place finisher Tatyana McFadden, who has won the race five times.


Yamal and Rashford score as Barcelona rebounds from clasico loss

Yamal and Rashford score as Barcelona rebounds from clasico loss
Updated 02 November 2025

Yamal and Rashford score as Barcelona rebounds from clasico loss

Yamal and Rashford score as Barcelona rebounds from clasico loss
  • Barcelona is five points behind league leader Madrid

MADRID: Lamine Yamal scored early as Barcelona rebounded from its clasico defeat by beating Elche 3-1 at home to regain second place in the Spanish league on Sunday.
Ferran Torres and Marcus Rashford also scored for Barcelona, a week after it lost 2-1 at Real Madrid in the first clasico of the season.
Barcelona is five points behind league leader Madrid, which routed Valencia 4-0 at home on Saturday. Barcelona entered the match in third place, one point behind Villarreal, which defeated Rayo Vallecano 4-0 on Saturday.
Yamal, criticized by some after a lackluster performance against Madrid, put the hosts ahead with a shot from inside the area in the ninth minute after Alejandro Balde’s assist. Torres added to the lead three minutes later after a pass by Fermín López.
Elche hit back with a goal by Rafa Mir in a 42nd-minute breakaway, but Rashford added to Barcelona’s lead with a left-footed shot from a difficult angle in the 61st for his sixth goal of the season at his new club.
Rashford had a 52nd-minute goal disallowed for offside in the buildup, and Mir nearly equalized for the visitors in the 55th with a curling shot that brushed the crossbar with Barcelona goalkeeper Wojciech Szczesny beaten. Mir also struck the woodwork with his team down 3-1 in the 68th after a neat save by Szczesny.
Elche, sitting in ninth place, is winless in four consecutive league matches, with three losses.
Barcelona, which had lost three of its previous five matches in all competitions, is still playing at Montjuic stadium while waiting for the proper permits to reopen the renovated Camp Nou.
The loss to Madrid halted a four-game winning streak against its rival.
Playmaker Dani Olmo and striker Robert Lewandowski made their returns from injury for Barcelona, entering the match as second-half substitutes. They hadn’t played for the club since early October.
Other results
Eighth-placed Alaves scored first-half goals to beat Espanyol 2-1 at home and end a two-match winless run. Lucas Boyé, who scored one of the goals, was sent off with a second yellow card in second-half stoppage time. Fifth-placed Espanyol was coming off three straight wins across all tournaments.
Celta Vigo won its fourth match in a row in all competitions by beating 10-man Levante 2-1 on the road thanks to Miguel Romána’s stoppage-time goal. Óscar Mingueza had put the visitors ahead in the 40th and Kevin Arriaga equalized for Levante in the 66th.
Celta moved to 12th place.
Levante — winless in three league matches and coming off elimination in the Copa del Rey — was 17th, just outside the relegation zone.


Erling Haaland double powers Man City to win after Donnarumma mistake, West Ham sink Newcastle

Erling Haaland double powers Man City to win after Donnarumma mistake, West Ham sink Newcastle
Updated 02 November 2025

Erling Haaland double powers Man City to win after Donnarumma mistake, West Ham sink Newcastle

Erling Haaland double powers Man City to win after Donnarumma mistake, West Ham sink Newcastle
  • Bournemouth had equalized after Donnarumma attempted to punch clear an inswinging corner
  • West Ham’s fans had been waiting eight months for a home win in the Premier League

LONDON: Erling Haaland’s latest double covered over a bad mistake from Gianluigi Donnarumma in Manchester City’s 3-1 win over Bournemouth that lifted the team into second place in the Premier League on Sunday.

Haaland moved onto 13 goals for the campaign — more than twice any other player — by running clear from passes by the impressive Rayan Cherki to finish one-on-one chances in the 17th and 33rd minutes. Haaland pulled out a robot celebration after the first goal.

Between those goals, Bournemouth equalized after Donnarumma attempted to punch clear an inswinging corner, only to misjudge it and pat the ball down in front of him. US midfielder Tyler Adams swept home the loose ball and Donnarumma was booked for complaining too stridently that he had been fouled.

That mistake will only be a footnote in the latest Haaland show, with the Norway striker making it 26 goals in 16 games for club and country this season. He has scored two goals in each of his last four home appearances in the Premier League.

“I try to help the team to win, that’s my goal,” Haaland said. “By scoring or helping by winning duels, doesn’t matter, as long as we win.”

Locally born left back Nico O’Reilly drove home the third goal in the 60th minute for City, which replaced Bournemouth in second to become the nearest challenger to Arsenal.

Arsenal, seeking a first league title since 2004, beat Burnley 2-0 on Saturday and now holds a six-point lead after 10 games.

Guardiola defends Donnarumma

While Donnarumma has impressed with his shot-stopping since joining from Paris Saint-Germain, a weakness in the Italy international’s game might be his punching from crosses.

In September, Donnarumma punched the ball into his own net when playing for Italy against Israel but that goal was ruled out after it was deemed an opposition player was fouling him.

On Sunday, Bournemouth captain David Brooks initially had a hold of Donnarumma’s left arm but let go before the goalkeeper attempted his punch.

City manager Pep Guardiola said it was “unbelievable” that the goal was allowed to stand.

“There are sometimes things that are difficult to understand why it was not disallowed,” he said.

Long wait over

West Ham’s fans had been waiting eight months for a home win in the Premier League.

They finally got it after their embattled team rallied to beat Newcastle 3-1 for just a second victory this season.

Jacob Murphy’s fourth-minute opener for Newcastle, which came seconds after Jarrod Bowen struck the post at the other end, failed to spark what proved to be a sluggish performance by the visitors.

Instead, West Ham grew more into the game and after Lucas Paqueta equalized in the 35th minute with a long-range shot that crept inside the near post, Newcastle defender Sven Botman stretched to block a cross but only succeeded in turning the ball into his own net in first-half stoppage time.

Substitute Tomas Soucek added a third for West Ham in second-half stoppage time.

West Ham’s last home win was against Leicester on Feb. 27.

The team stayed in the relegation zone but climbed above Nottingham Forest into third-to-last place. Forest was the only team West Ham had previously beaten this season.

West Ham manager Nuno Espirito Santo had collected just one point from his first four games in charge after replacing Graham Potter.


India win maiden Women’s World Cup title after Verma-Sharma show

India win maiden Women’s World Cup title after Verma-Sharma show
Updated 03 November 2025

India win maiden Women’s World Cup title after Verma-Sharma show

India win maiden Women’s World Cup title after Verma-Sharma show
  • Hosts rode half-centuries from Shafali Verma (87) and Deepti Sharma (58) to post 298-7

NAVI MUMBAI, India, Nov 2 : India’s agonizing wait for a maiden Women’s World Cup title finally came to an end as Harmanpreet Kaur and her teary-eyed teammates clinched the trophy by beating South Africa in a dramatic final at the DY Patil Stadium on Sunday.

Their 52-run victory before a full house was the perfect culmination of a campaign, which was nearly derailed after three defeats in a row, including one against South Africa, in the league phase.

Kaur’s team pulled off a record chase in their semifinal against defending champions Australia to reach the final against a South Africa side also gunning for their maiden 50-over World Cup title.

India found an unlikely hero in opener Shafali Verma, whose whirlwind 87 was key to their total of 298-7 even though 350 looked within their reach at one stage.

Verma also had a golden arm, claiming two quick wickets that turned the match on its head after South Africa captain Laura Wolvaardt (101) led their robust reply with her second successive hundred of the tournament.

Verma walked away with the player-of-the-match award in the final of a tournament where she was drafted in only before the knockout stage as a late injury replacement.

Deepti Sharma was equally impressive, smashing a run-a-ball 58 and following it with figures of 5-39.

The 28-year-old finished the World Cup with 22 wickets and 215 runs, which earned her the player-of-the-tournament award.

Wolvaardt kept South Africa, who were all out for 246 in the 46th over, in the chase but once she holed out in the deep, India took charge of the contest.

India opener Smriti Mandhana, their leading scorer in the tournament, summed up the feeling in their camp after they clinched victory following two previous final defeats.

“It’s still sinking in. I haven’t been emotional on a cricket field but just an unreal night,” she said battling tears.

“To be the champions, I’m not able to process it.

“Every World Cup we go in, there have been so many heartbreaks but we always believe we have a responsibility with women’s cricket and to see the last month and a half and the way we’ve been supported... I will take that 45 days of not sleeping every night.”

Wolvaardt finished as the tournament’s leading scorer but found little joy in personal milestones.

“I couldn’t be prouder of this team for the campaign that we’ve had,” the opener said.

“We’ve played some brilliant cricket throughout but we were outplayed today, India played fantastically well.

“We had a lot of different players stepping up, it was an amazing tournament for a lot of players. I’m just proud of the resilience we showed to get to the final.”