Al-Ittihad fight back to keep pace with Al-Hilal in Saudi Pro League
Al-Ittihad fight back to keep pace with Al-Hilal in Saudi Pro League/node/2588679/sport
Al-Ittihad fight back to keep pace with Al-Hilal in Saudi Pro League
Al-Ittihad had to work hard to defeat Al-Kholood 4-3 on Saturday, in a win that put them on 46 points, behind the leaders Al-Hilal only on goal difference in the Saudi Pro League. (X/@ittihad_en)
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Updated 01 February 2025
John Duerden
Al-Ittihad fight back to keep pace with Al-Hilal in Saudi Pro League
Win puts Al-Ittihad on 46 points, behind leaders Al-Hilal
Title-chasing Tigers recover from 2-goal deficit to grab win
Updated 01 February 2025
John Duerden
EDDAH: Al-Ittihad had to work hard to defeat Al-Kholood 4-3 on Saturday and stay within striking distance of Saudi Pro League leaders Al-Hilal.
Two goals down early on, the Jeddah giants fought back for a win that puts them on 46 points, behind Al-Hilal only on goal difference.
The title-chasing Tigers had a terrible start, however, with William Troost-Ekong putting the visitors ahead after 15 minutes, and Myziane Maolida adding a second eight minutes later.
The hosts soon responded, with Abdulrahman Al-Oboud, a player in fine form, scoring within the half-hour. All the work was done by Houssem Aouar, who turned outside the box and dribbled through the defense only for his shot to be blocked. But his team-mate was there to bundle home.
Congratulations Tigersâ fans
â Al-Ittihad Club (@ittihad_en)
Then, nine minutes into added first-half time, Steven Bergwijn scored from the spot after Muhannad Al-Shanqeeti was brought down in the area to ensure that the teams went in level at the break.
Almost immediately after the restart, Al-Ittihad were ahead for the first time thanks to Hassan Kadesh, who volleyed home a NâGolo Kante cross from close range to the delight of the home fans.
The victory was sealed just after the hour as Bergwijn got his second, scoring from a rebound off a Karim Benzema shot that was initially saved.
Al-Kholood made it 4-3 inside injury time as Maolida got his second, but Al-Ittihad took the win.
Al-Qadsiah, the leagueâs in-form team, were shocked to be held to a 1-1 draw at bottom club Al-Fateh. The easterners, who had won nine of the last 10, took the lead after just two minutes, with Julian Quinones scoring.
Two minutes after the restart, however, Matheus Machado scored to earn Al-Fateh a share of the spoils and ensure that Al-Qadsiah, newly promoted, stay in fourth on 38 points â behind Al-Nassr on goal difference.
Pro-Palestinian march in Oslo ahead of Israel v Norway match
Many demonstrators wore Palestinian keffiyeh shawls draped over their shoulders and waved Palestinian flags
âThe message today is to say we give the red card to Israel, to apartheid, and to genocide,â said Line Khateeb, the head of the Norwegian Committee for Palestine
Updated 58 min 10 sec ago
AFP
OSLO: Hundreds of people attended a pro-Palestinian demonstration in Oslo on Saturday ahead of Israelâs World Cup qualifier against Norway, chanting âFree Palestineâ to protest against Israelâs âgenocide,â AFP journalists reported.
Many demonstrators wore Palestinian keffiyeh shawls draped over their shoulders and waved Palestinian flags as they gathered in the city center before walking in a procession to the Ullevaal stadium.
Smoke flares were lit but the atmosphere remained calm.
âShow Israel the Red Cardâ
Protesters marched in Oslo in solidarity with Palestine, calling to stop the national football match and demanding accountability for Israelâs crimes in Gaza.
â Quds News Network (@QudsNen)
âThe message today is to say we give the red card to Israel, to apartheid, and to genocide,â said Line Khateeb, the head of the Norwegian Committee for Palestine, one of the organizers of the protest.
âWe do not accept football being used to whitewash war crimes, as we see today when Israel participates in the World Cup qualification games,â she told AFP.
Demonstrators carried banners reading âExclude Israel from International Football,â âFrom the River to the Sea,â âRed Card to Israelâ and âItâs a Genocide, Not a War.â
âIsrael has been committing genocide for the last two years and killing indiscriminately, doing the most horrible thing that could be imaginable,â one of the demonstrators, Munib Sarwar, a 40-year-old engineer, told AFP.
Around 1000 people are protesting the Norwegian national teams game against Israel in Oslo. There's also complete stop in public transport as the unions go on strike. Although Norway is a country of immense national pride in sports - football is not this important.
â Mona (@LockMona)
âWe need to show solidarity with the children and the people of Gaza who have been terrorized for the last two years,â he added.
Organizers decided to go ahead with the demonstration despite the Gaza ceasefire deal reached Thursday between Israel and the Palestinian Islamist movement Hamas.
âItâs not the end of the occupation. It doesnât mean the West Bank is free. It doesnât mean Palestine is free. We need to keep pushing and putting sanctions on Israel to hold them accountable in order to have a proper free Palestine,â Khateeb said.
Heavy security was in place for the match.
Dozens of police officers on horseback and others in riot gear were posted near the stadium, an AFP journalist at the scene saw.
The head of the Norwegian football association, Lise Klaveness, recently said she was pushing âfor Israel to be sanctioned.â
âPersonally, I think that if Russia is excluded, Israel should be as well,â she said in a Norwegian podcast.
Several days after Russiaâs full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022, UEFA and FIFA agreed to exclude Russian teams and clubs from all international competitions, a sanction that remains in place.
The Norwegian Football Association has previously said it would donate the proceeds from the ticket sales for Saturdayâs match to Doctors Without Borders.
With five victories in five matches, Norway top Group I of European qualifying with 15 points ahead of Italy and Israel, who both have nine points.
Mbappe and Konate out of Franceâs World Cup qualifier in Iceland
Mbappe took two knocks during Fridayâs 3-0 World Cup qualifying win over Azerbaijan
Liverpool defender Konate remained on the bench with a right thigh problem
Updated 11 October 2025
AFP
PARIS: Kylian Mbappe and Ibrahima Konate have been ruled out of Mondayâs 2026 World Cup qualifier in Iceland where France could book their ticket to next yearâs tournament.
Already suffering from a âsmall niggleâ in his right ankle from playing for Real Madrid, Mbappe took two knocks during Fridayâs 3-0 World Cup qualifying win over Azerbaijan in Paris, where he opened the scoring but was substituted before the end of the match.
Liverpool defender Konate remained on the bench with a right thigh problem with his place against Iceland now taken by Marseilleâs Benjamin Pavard.
Mbappeâs absence adds to the long list of forward unavailable for Octoberâs World Cup qualifiers, which includes Ousmane Dembele, Desire Doue, Marcus Thuram and Bradley Barcola.
After returning to the Clairefontaine training ground on Friday night, âthe French team captain spoke with (coach) Didier Deschamps who acknowledged his absence,â the French federation (FFF) said in a statement.
Mbappe âhas been released to his club (Real Madrid) and will not be replaced,â the FFF added, confirming hours later that Konate âhas returned to his clubâs availability.â
Konate had joined the team with a slight injury and âunderwent treatment and a specific protocol but will not be able to play Monday in Reykjavik,â the FFF said.
Mbappe scored on the stroke of half-time against Azerbaijan and was then struck by a tackle from Rustam Ahmedzade. He took another knock to the same ankle late in the game, and was replaced by Florian Thauvin.
âHe has a sore ankle and he took a knock there. He preferred to come off; the pain was quite significant,â Deschamps said after the French victory.
Adrien Rabiot and the substitute Thauvin were also on the scoresheet as Deschampsâs team remain unbeaten after three games and top of Group D.
Les Bleus will book their passage to the United States, Canada and Mexico next year if they win in Iceland on Monday and Ukraine fail to beat Azerbaijan.
Coco Gauff overcomes 7 double faults to beat Jasmine Paolini and reach Wuhan final
Gauff edged Paolini winning the battle of converted breaks seven-to-five
The third-ranked Gauff fought back from three breaks in the second set
Updated 11 October 2025
AP
WUHAN: Coco Gauff had more struggles with her serve but overcame seven double faults to beat Jasmine Paolini 6-4, 6-3 and reach the Wuhan Open final on Saturday.
With both top-10 players struggling with their service games, Gauff edged Paolini winning the battle of converted breaks seven-to-five.
The third-ranked Gauff fought back from three breaks in the second set and won the final four games to advance to the final.
Gauff, who changed her serving coach in August, leads the womenâs circuit this season with 378 double faults, over 120 more than the next player.
Fifth-ranked Paolini had eliminated Wimbledon champion Iga Swiatek in the quarterfinals.
Top-ranked Aryna Sabalenka faces Jessica Pegula in the other semifinal on Saturday.
âFilling a moral vacuumâ: Ashish Prashar leads global campaign to eject Israel from football
Figure behind #GameOverIsrael tells Arab News about billboards popping up worldwide
Ban would send clear message: âNo to their crimes, no to apartheid, no to genocide, no to occupationâ
Updated 11 October 2025
Ali Khaled
DUBAI: On Sept. 17, New Yorkers and tourists in Times Square were greeted by a billboard that said: âIsrael is committing genocide. No genocide on the pitch.â
It was the opening gambit of #GameOverIsrael, a campaign launched by human rights activist Ashish Prashar aimed at getting FIFA and UEFA to ban Israel from football, both at club and international level.
The campaign went viral, and has continued to do so in the ensuing weeks. It was certainly noticed by those at the receiving end.
The billboard âwas pulled down after three daysâ due to pressure from the Israeli prime ministerâs office, Prashar told Arab News. âThatâs how important it is to them. If we knock them out of football, theyâre done culturally.â
Since then, billboards have appeared in major cities worldwide. On Oct. 11, a billboard targeting UEFA President Aleksander Ceferin was unveiled in Milan, saying: âPresident Ceferin, Israel is committing genocide. Suspend Israel now. Itâs your moral obligation.â
From Times Square to MILAN, football fans have had ENOUGH!Stop allowing football to sports-wash genocide. The world sees through it and weâre demanding a full Israeli boycott across football. The Federations canât hide anymore. Suspend Israel.
â gameoverisrael (@gameover_israel)
To explain the campaignâs impact, Prashar looks back to the days preceding its launch. âI always go back to what was going on in the world on Sept. 15. At scale, nobody in the mainstream media globally, especially in the West, was really talking about Israel, genocide and football, not together.â
The campaign aimed to âfill that moral vacuum,â he said, adding that it has changed the conversation primarily by focusing on individual football federations rather than politicians.
âWe all knew it was a genocide before we needed the UN to officially say it was one,â Prashar said, adding that instead of wasting time on political leaders whose policies will not change, âwe were reflecting where the public were already. You only have to see the stands of Europe, where there were Palestinian flags, banners, protests, people singing âweâre the children of Gazaâ across the streets of Europe.â
He said the feedback has been âphenomenal,â and people needed an attainable target to focus on. Football provided that target.
âPoliticians feel sometimes too out of reach for people, but ⊠UEFA doesnât feel too distant,â he added. âGetting them to do something doesnât feel too unachievable. Why would they not do anything about this injustice?
âOn the other side of this, UEFA, interestingly enough, and the federations have reacted with me in a positive way. Thereâs no one who doesnât want (Israel) kicked out of Europe in the federations.
âThe only two countries that really have drawn a line are England and Germany, but pretty much everyone on the UEFA executive committee â which is 19 members of the UEFA federation â want (Israel) gone.
âWeâve talked to federation heads from the likes of Norway to Greece to everywhere. They want them gone.â
Prashar confirmed that the launch of the campaign has triggered federations to write to UEFA and FIFA demanding Israelâs exit.
âThey were probably already there. They needed a campaign, they needed organization, they needed a political moment for everybody to actively do something,â he said.
âI believe Ceferin was already there. I believe that for slightly different reasons, as a father. I believe he, from what I understand, only put the âstop killing childrenâ (banner) at the UEFA Super Cup because his family wanted that.â
Prashar believes that unlike FIFA, there was a desire in UEFA to address the issue and that beyond going viral, the campaign has already provided concrete successes.
âStep one is most of the federations in the executive committee have written to the president to ask him to suspend (Israel). None of them were doing that before this campaign,â he said.
âFrom Turkey to Ireland and Belgium and everywhere in between, theyâve written to the president.
âSecond step, UEFA really wanted to do this. There was supposed to be a vote before (US President Donald) Trumpâs peace plan.
âUEFA even took concrete steps to make this happen. This is how I know itâs real. Itâs not just words.â
Billboards have appeared in major cities worldwide, including this one in Milan which directly appeals to UEFA President Aleksander Ceferin. (X/@gameover_israel)
Under normal circumstances, if a club was kicked out of European competition, opponents would be given an automatic 3-0 win and awarded three points.
Here, UEFA intended to change the rules so that a banned team would be replaced, meaning that smaller clubs would not suffer financially by losing gate money from an abandoned home match.
Prashar said taking such a step shows the seriousness with which UEFA is taking the matter, though political developments over the last week have held up progress on the vote.
âThey changed their rules and regulations to actually make that happen. The only reason ⊠it still hasnât happened is Trumpâs peace plan. Weâre reigniting that conversation right now,â he added.
Even if there is a ceasefire, âPalestinians are occupied and basically under the rule of the Israeli regime,â he said.
âWe didnât let the Nazis go and play a football game the day that the bombs stopped after the Second World War. We actually suspended them for eight years.â
FIFAâs stance is significantly different to UEFAâs, with the sportâs governing body having consistently shied away from taking major decisions due to political pressure.
FIFA President Gianni Infantino is âmorally consistent,â Prashar said. âHe didnât want to throw Russia out (in 2022). It was 12 European federations that made that happen ⊠They forced the initiative.
âThis is kind of what we want federations to do now â step into that moral void and force the initiative. FIFA on their own wonât suspend Israel.â
When Infantino says politics should not be in football, âgenocide isnât politics, itâs a crime against humanity,â said Prashar.
âWhen you decide that youâre not going to take a stand against something morally reprehensible that we as a society have said is the ultimate crime, youâve taken the side of the genociders. Youâre not being neutral.â
At club and international level, there have been demands to boycott teams representing Israel. Fan groups have urged Aston Villaâs Europa League match against Maccabi Tel Aviv in November to be called off.
Meanwhile, the football federations of Italy and Norway have expressed a clear desire not to face Israel in the 2026 World Cup qualifiers, said Prashar.
The football federations of Spain, France, Belgium, Portugal and others must âshow solidarityâ with Italy and Norway, he added.
âPeople need to understand ⊠why UEFA is super pivotal to this,â he said. âIt doesnât just mean the suspension of Israeli clubs. It means theyâre suspended from the Nations League, the European Championship, and under 21s, 19s and 17s football, which make a lot of revenue as well.
âBut also theyâre suspended from the UEFA subsidy. If they lost that, the (Israeli) league will be bankrupt.â
Prashar added: âIsraeli football has no way of coming back, even if theyâre not banned by FIFA. Theyâre finished as an entity. Thatâs why the UEFA push is really important.â
He believes that by banning Israel from football, the world would send a clear message: âNo to their crimes, no to apartheid, no to genocide, no to occupation.â
He added: âThe reason football is so important is itâs the only true global cultural item If the domino goes, every other domino goes. Every other cultural item goes.
âWe only have to look at apartheid South Africa to look at the domino effect. Thatâs exactly how it played out, and thatâs exactly how it will play out again.â
Prashar insists that speculative stories in the media reassuring Israel of its place in UEFA are mere propaganda.
âThe reason theyâre doing that is they know UEFAâs policy is not to respond to rumors,â he said. âI believe theyâd rather be in football than have a seat at the UN.â
Prashar said whatever happens with Trumpâs plan, the campaign is ânot over,â adding: âI think the thing that the Israelis would like is the momentum of this to go out. And with the pause because of the ceasefire, they think itâs gone.
âWe have a whole second-wave plan that includes actual footballers who are current and retired.
âWe have more iconic billboards going up across Europe this time, from Madrid to London, which will make it very clear that people have now decided to pick the side of occupation and genocide if they donât make this decision.â
Prasharâs campaign is also launching a legal case against the European federation. âI think UEFA is morally obliged to remove Israel, but theyâre also legally obliged,â he said.
âA lot of people donât know that last year, the ICJ (International Court of Justice) ruled that Israel should leave the Occupied Territories, which includes the West Bank, and that every state, entity, organization, business should guarantee that thereâs no normalization with occupation ⊠There are two Israeli football teams in the West Bank illegally,â he added.
âRight now, unless UEFA suspend Israelâs league, theyâre literally breaking international law. And Ceferin, an international lawyer, should be fully aware of that.â
It will become increasingly difficult, if not impossible, to justify Israelâs participation in club football at the very least, according to Prashar.
UEFA will âreally struggle,â he said. âAlso, one of our legal partners has found a soldier who actually did go to Gaza at Maccabi Haifa.
âSo if they can prove his war crimes, weâre just going to throw that everywhere. They're literally letting a guy who killed children play football.â
Schauffele grabs share of Japan lead in bid to break drought
Schauffele won the British Open and the PGA Championship in 2024 but has yet to lift a trophy this year
The 31-year-old, part of the losing US Ryder Cup team two weeks ago, said confidence was âa tricky thingâ
Updated 11 October 2025
AFP
YOKOHAMA: Xander Schauffele closed in on his first win of the year after grabbing a share of the lead Saturday heading into the final day of the US PGA Tourâs Baycurrent Classic in Japan.
The American carded a third-round four-under-par 67 at a rain-soaked Yokohama Country Club to move level with Max Greyserman on 12-under, three shots clear of their nearest challengers.
Schauffele won the British Open and the PGA Championship in 2024 but has yet to lift a trophy this year and has only finished in the top 10 three times.
The 31-year-old, part of the losing US Ryder Cup team two weeks ago, said confidence was âa tricky thing.â
âIt takes a while to grow and then it goes away quickly,â he said.
âIâm just trying to put one walk after the other and slowly grow that confidence. So far weâve been doing that.â
Schauffele hit six birdies and two bogeys to close the gap on fellow American Greyserman, who led by four shots at the start of the day.
Constant rain presented the players with a different challenge after strong wind on the opening day was followed by mild conditions for the second round.
âThe weather has been tricky, so Iâm proud of the fight to stay in it today,â said Schauffele.
âRound one felt like survival, round two felt like the course was pretty gettable and today felt like a bit of survival with pockets of a little bit less rain.â
Greyserman saw his lead slip away with a double bogey on the seventh hole and he finished with an even-par 71.
The 30-year-old went into the final day of last yearâs tournament in Japan in contention for the title before finishing runner-up to Colombiaâs Nico Echavarria.
Greyserman said he would take the positives from last yearâs experience as he looks to win his first career title.
âI played a good round last year on Sunday and I got beat, I donât think I gave up the tournament by any means,â he said.
âI thought I handled everything well and competed well and executed well, so thatâs the plan for tomorrow.â
Defending champion Echavarria was in a group three shots behind the leading pair, along with South Koreans An Byeong-hun and Kim Si-woo, South African Garrick Higgo and American Michael Thorbjornsen.
Schauffeleâs Ryder Cup team-mate Collin Morikawa was 10 shots off the pace on two-under while Japanâs Hideki Matsuyama was four-under after a late double bogey.