World’s best surfers riding Abu Dhabi’s perfect waves

World’s best surfers riding Abu Dhabi’s perfect waves
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Ramzi Boukhiam of Morocco surfs in a warmup session prior to the commencement of the Opening Round at the Surf Abu Dhabi Pro (Supplied)
World’s best surfers riding Abu Dhabi’s perfect waves
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Two-time WSL Champion Filipe Toledo of Brazil surfs in a warmup session prior to the commencement of the Opening Round at the Surf Abu Dhabi Pro (AFP)
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Updated 14 February 2025

World’s best surfers riding Abu Dhabi’s perfect waves

World’s best surfers riding Abu Dhabi’s perfect waves
  • Advanced wave pool places capital alongside famed destinations on elite surf circuit
  • Surf Abu Dhabi Pro hopes to inspire a new generation of surfers across the Mideast

LONDON: The world’s best surfers have gathered this week not on the North Shore of Oahu in Hawaii, or the sandy beaches of Australia’s Gold Coast, but in the unlikely location of Abu Dhabi for the second stop of the sport’s elite global tour.

Unlikely because until recently, the UAE capital, despite being surrounded by the Arabian Gulf’s waters, did not have surfable waves to speak of.

Advances in artificial wave technology, however, aligned with deep investment in sport by countries including the UAE and , has led to the creation of a world-class surf destination.

The Surf Abu Dhabi Pro, which got underway on Friday, features 18 women and 36 men battling it out as a part of the World Surf League’s Championship Tour.

Other stops on the WSL’s 12-leg circuit include the ferocious Teahupoʻo in Tahiti, which featured in last year’s Olympics, the long, peeling point break of Jeffreys Bay in South Africa, and the fabled reef pass of Cloudbreak in Fiji.

Abu Dhabi’s journey to add its name to this illustrious list began a decade ago when the race to build wave-pool technology entered a new era.

Wave pools have been around in surfing since the 1960s but they had always been a poor imitation of the real thing.

In 2015, however, the greatest competitive surfer of all time, Kelly Slater, posted a video from a secret site in Lemoore, California, that featured a perfect peeling wave lasting 45 seconds — a long ride in surfing.

The wave even included sections that allowed the rider to reach one of the sport’s sacred goals — getting “barreled” by disappearing behind the lip of the wave as it breaks onto the water in front.

It was a seismic moment for the surf world. Finally, someone had created an unending supply of world-class waves that were not dependent on storm-generated swells, tides and winds.

Surf Ranch, as it became known, hosted several WSL events and rumors began to circulate that an even bigger and better version was under development.

In June 2023, the Abu Dhabi developer Modon Properties announced it had partnered with Kelly Slater Wave Co. to create “the most advanced wave facility in the world” on Hudayriyat Island, and it was close to being finished.

Surf Abu Dhabi opened in October that year, offering rides of almost a minute-long on waves more than 2.5 meters high.

The technology involves a large, submerged hydrofoil that is pulled along a track at the side of the pool, causing the wave to break over carefully shaped contours beneath the water.

“I’ve surfed hundreds of incredible waves across the world and this wave in Abu Dhabi stacks up well against some of the best waves on earth,” Slater said at the time.

The WSL’s Deputy Commissioner Kayla Durden said the wave had been getting some final tweaks ahead of the contest.

“The wave’s incredible,” she told Arab News. “They actually changed the interval a week or two ago. They kind of found a way to perfect the barrel a bit more to counteract the wind.”

The advances in the Abu Dhabi pool have created something that feels more like a natural ocean wave.

It is the first saltwater wave pool, meaning surfers can use the same boards as in the ocean because the buoyancy is the same.

The developers have made the sections where the surfers carve their turns more like a natural wave, allowing them more time.

“It took what Surf Ranch started and made it that much better,” Durden added.

Wave pools are hotly debated in the often traditional world of surfing.

Some feel competing in them removes the unpredictable elements of surfing that make the sport unique.

It also takes away the physical challenge required to paddle through large waves in dangerous seas.

Others say the repetition of seeing the exact same wave can be dull compared to the lottery of Mother Nature.

It is that repetition, however, that has made the new generation of wave pools an essential training ground for surfers to practice progressive, often aerial, maneuvers that are advancing the limits of the sport.

The consistency of the artificial waves also provides a level playing field for competitors to go head-to-head in the same conditions.

“You can’t replicate an air 15 times in the ocean but you can in a wave pool,” Durden said.

With its differing sections requiring a full set of surfing skills to achieve a high score from the judges, wave pool skeptics may change their minds when they see how exciting the Abu Dhabi wave is, she said.

“The whole point of competing on the tour is to have the best surfer on the best waves crowning a world champion, and I think that includes every type of wave,” Durden added.

Among the favorites at the three-day contest is the Brazilian two-time world champion Filipe Toledo, who is a master of small-wave surfing and technical aerial maneuvers.

A new generation of exciting young women professionals including Caitlin Simmers and Erin Brooks are expected to excel in the Abu Dhabi pool.

There will also be a focus on the Moroccan Ramzi Boukhiam, who is the first Arab to qualify for the WSL’s Championship Tour, which is dominated by Brazilians, Australians, and Americans.

It would be some story if Boukhiam could also become the winner of the first Championship Tour event held in the Middle East and North African region.

“This will be my first time competing in a pool, so it’s exciting, and there’s a lot of pressure,” Boukhiam said. “It’s such a stressful wave to surf, but as soon as you get your first turn in, the nerves go away."

While Abu Dhabi may not be a traditional surf hub, the WSL hopes that bringing the tour to the UAE will inspire surfers across the region.

There are already dedicated surf communities in Dubai, Lebanon, and Oman. Morocco, with its Atlantic coast, is the region’s premier surf destination.

This week the WSL ran surf sessions for girls in the UAE at the wave pool, hoping to inspire the next generation to take up the sport and maybe compete in future events.

The Surf Abu Dhabi Pro marks a key moment in the investment in sport that has taken place in the Gulf in recent years.

Less mainstream sports have started to see the benefits as host countries deploy advanced technologies and build high-end facilities beyond football, tennis and Formula 1.

Along with surfing, the UAE also hosts international events in high-performance sailing and urban cycling. hosts the Dakar Rally and plans to hold the Asian Winter Games in 2029 at a resort currently under construction.

“Their investment in world-class infrastructure and high-end technology makes an event like Surf Abu Dhabi possible in the Middle East and has attracted stakeholders to set up permanent bases in the region,” said Lloyd McMillan of the Dubai-based sport and entertainment marketing agency Dune 23.

“The focus on sport that we are witnessing in the Middle East is part of various strategic visions to create diverse economies for the young, technologically advanced populations.”

In Abu Dhabi, the athletes have spoken of the quality of the facilities aside from the pool and the level of hospitality for the contest.

“I think there’s going to be a lot of tickets booked to Abu Dhabi,” Durden said. “It’s going to be a big surf trip waiting to happen.”


Italy boost World Cup qualifying chances with 3-1 win in Estonia

Italy boost World Cup qualifying chances with 3-1 win in Estonia
Updated 12 October 2025

Italy boost World Cup qualifying chances with 3-1 win in Estonia

Italy boost World Cup qualifying chances with 3-1 win in Estonia
  • The group winners qualify directly for the World Cup with the runners-up going into the playoffs

TALLINN: Italy’s hopes of at least making the World Cup qualifying playoffs were given a boost with a 3-1 win away to Estonia on Saturday thanks to goals from Moise Kean, Mateo Retegui and Francesco Pio Esposito.
Italy failed to qualify for the last two World Cups, twice missing out in the playoffs, and the dreaded backdoor route now looks their most likely chance after Norway’s 5-0 hammering of Israel in Group I earlier on Saturday.
The Norwegians are top on 18 points from six games. Italy have 12 points with a game in hand on their rivals and are three points clear of Israel. Estonia remain fourth on three points.
The group winners qualify directly for the World Cup with the runners-up going into the playoffs.
Italy raced into a fourth minute lead when Federico Dimarco played the ball into the feet of Kean who twisted and turned his way into the area before unleashing a shot into the far corner.
That was Kean’s fourth goal in three games for Italy, but the striker was forced off through injury shortly afterwards, replaced by Esposito whose only previous international appearance also came off the bench against Estonia in September.
Retegui won a penalty when fouled by Marten Kuusk but failed to convert as Karl Hein tipped his effort onto the post.
“The important thing is to create — missing goals and penalties can happen,” Italy coach Gennaro Gattuso told RAI Sport. “The boys are eager and continuing on the right path.”
The Italian forward made up for that miss when doubling the visitors’ lead seven minutes before the break. Riccardo Orsolini played a pass back from the byline and Retegui smashed the ball past Hein from just outside the six-yard box.

ESPOSITO OFF THE MARK
The second half was a tamer affair until Leonardo Spinazzola’s ball into the area was met first time by Esposito to net his first international goal in the 74th minute.
“I’m very emotional, these are things you can’t explain or fully grasp in the moment,” Esposito told Sky.
“I still need to process it, but I’m incredibly happy, everything happened so fast.”
Two minutes later and after Italy’s Gianluigi Donnarumma had been an onlooker for much of the game, the visiting keeper spilled Markus Soomets’ cross at the feet of substitute Rauno Sappinen for the easiest of tap-ins.
Italy host Israel on Tuesday where a win would cement second spot and, while they can still mathematically catch Norway on points, the Norwegians’ far superior goal difference means a playoff spot likely beckons for Gattuso’s side.
“There are many positive things, we have to follow our own path,” Gattuso told Sky.
“We’re not thinking about Norway or Israel. We know what we have to do and we hold on to the good we’ve done.”


UAE move closer to World Cup as late goals seal win over Oman

UAE move closer to World Cup as late goals seal win over Oman
Updated 11 October 2025

UAE move closer to World Cup as late goals seal win over Oman

UAE move closer to World Cup as late goals seal win over Oman
  • Caio Lucas hit the fortuitous winner seven minutes from time
  • The win moves the UAE to the cusp of their first appearance at the World Cup since 1990

DOHA: The United Arab Emirates struck late goals through Marcus Meloni and Caio Lucas to earn a 2-1 win over Oman in Doha on Saturday as Cosmin Olaroiu’s side battled back to keep their hopes of qualifying for next year’s World Cup alive.
Caio Lucas hit the fortuitous winner seven minutes from time after Meloni scored with a 76th minute header to cancel out an own goal by Kouame Kouadio that gave Oman a 12th minute lead.
The win moves the UAE to the cusp of their first appearance at the World Cup since 1990 with Olaroiu’s team only needing a draw away to Qatar on Tuesday to progress as winners of Group A in the fourth phase of Asia’s preliminaries.


The Omanis threatened in the early exchanges when Issam Al-Sabhi stole possession inside the UAE half only for the attack to fizzle out when his shot was eventually blocked. But it was not long before Carlos Queiroz’s side had taken the lead.
Ali Al-Busaidi’s cross from the left flew across the area to the feet of Amjad Al-Harthi whose shot took a deflection off Kouadio’s heel to beat goalkeeper Khalid Eissa low to his left.
Harib Abdalla’s introduction at the start of the second half injected much-needed urgency into the UAE attack, the forward twice calling keeper Ibrahim Al-Mukhaini into action.
With 14 minutes remaining the UAE deservedly pulled level, Meloni rising highest to meet substitute Ali Saleh’s inswinging cross from the left to beat Al-Mukhaini.
Seven minutes later Caio Lucas scored the winner, sending in a cross from the left that swung toward goal, bouncing on the turf inside the six-yard box and skipping beyond the keeper to earn UAE all three points.
The loss ends Oman’s hopes of automatic qualification but the Gulf state could still advance to another round of playoffs if the UAE defeat the Qataris by a large enough margin.
Japan, South Korea, Australia, Iran, Uzbekistan and Jordan have already taken six of Asia’s eight guaranteed spots at next year’s 48-team World Cup.


Norway sweep Israel aside 5-0 as Haaland scores hat-trick

Norway sweep Israel aside 5-0 as Haaland scores hat-trick
Updated 11 October 2025

Norway sweep Israel aside 5-0 as Haaland scores hat-trick

Norway sweep Israel aside 5-0 as Haaland scores hat-trick
  • Norway have now won all six of their Group I matches, boasting a goal difference of plus 26
  • Haaland marked a special milestone by netting his 50th goal for Norway

OSLO: Norway secured a commanding 5-0 win at home to Israel in a World Cup qualifier on Saturday, as Erling Haaland struck a hat-trick to celebrate his 50th international goal and helped move his side to the brink of a place at next year’s tournament.
Norway had tightened security ahead of the match due to scheduled protests, closing off the stands around a section of roughly 100 Israel supporters waving national flags.
Norwegian fans are divided over Israel’s participation in the World Cup qualifying competition due to the war in Gaza.
Norway have now won all six of their Group I matches, boasting a goal difference of plus 26 ahead of their remaining two fixtures against Estonia and second-placed Italy, who sit nine points behind with two games in hand.
Despite missing a twice-taken penalty early on, Haaland found his rhythm, scoring once in the first half and twice after the break to reach his 50-goal milestone and finishing the night with an incredible 51 in 46 internationals.
Israel added to their own misery with two own goals in the first half from Anan Khalaili and Idan Nachmias.

HIGH SECURITY

Ahead of Saturday’s game, hundreds of pro-Palestinian supporters gathered to protest outside the Norwegian parliament, with many wearing the jerseys of the Palestine national team.
Marching toward Ullevaal Stadium with Palestinian flags and flares, the protesters gathered outside, vowing to continue until kickoff as nearby buildings displayed pro-Palestinian banners hanging from balconies.
As Israel’s anthem played, loud boos echoed around the stadium, while large Palestinian flags and a banner reading “Let children live” were displayed in the stands.
On the pitch, Haaland came close to scoring early on when Israel goalkeeper Daniel Peretz showcased his brilliance. First, he produced a sharp reflex save, then denied Haaland from the penalty spot twice after the kick was ordered to be retaken.
The match was briefly halted when a pitch invader ran onto the field, capping off a chaotic opening 10 minutes.
Relief finally came for the home fans in the 18th when Alexander Sorloth broke down the flank and sent in a low cross that deflected off Israel forward Khalaili and looped into the net, giving the Norwegians a deserved lead.
In the 27th minute Haaland made up for his penalty miss and doubled the lead after a through pass from Sorloth.
A minute later Norway went three goals up as a panicked clearance from Peretz struck his defender Nachmias and rolled into the net for Israel’s second own goal of the match.

HAALAND REACHES FIFTY-GOALS MILESTONE
In the second half, Haaland marked a special milestone by netting his 50th goal for Norway, heading in Antonio Nusa’s cross in the 63rd. Nine minutes later an almost identical move saw Haaland score again to complete his hat-trick and seal a memorable night for the Manchester City striker.
The home fans stayed behind after the match, singing ‘Norway will go to the World Cup’ to the tune of Twisted Sister’s ‘We’re Not Gonna Take It,’ as they celebrated in the belief that the long wait since 1998 to reach the finals again is nearly over.
“We still have two matches left to go. It’s great to execute such a solid game today,” Nusa told TV2. “We just have to enjoy it. There’s still a lot of work to do but I’m just enjoying it.”


Pro-Palestinian march in Oslo ahead of Israel v Norway match

Pro-Palestinian march in Oslo ahead of Israel v Norway match
Updated 11 October 2025

Pro-Palestinian march in Oslo ahead of Israel v Norway match

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
  • “The message today is to say we give the red card to Israel, to apartheid, and to genocide,” said Line Khateeb, the head of the Norwegian Committee for Palestine

OSLO: Hundreds of people attended a pro-Palestinian demonstration in Oslo on Saturday ahead of Israel’s World Cup qualifier against Norway, chanting “Free Palestine” to protest against Israel’s “genocide,” 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.

“The message today is to say we give the red card to Israel, to apartheid, and to genocide,” said Line Khateeb, the head of the Norwegian Committee for Palestine, one of the organizers of the protest.
“We do not accept football being used to whitewash war crimes, as we see today when Israel participates in the World Cup qualification games,” she told AFP.
Demonstrators carried banners reading “Exclude Israel from International Football,” “From the River to the Sea,” “Red Card to Israel” and “It’s a Genocide, Not a War.”
“Israel has been committing genocide for the last two years and killing indiscriminately, doing the most horrible thing that could be imaginable,” one of the demonstrators, Munib Sarwar, a 40-year-old engineer, told AFP.

“We need to show solidarity with the children and the people of Gaza who have been terrorized for the last two years,” 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.
“It’s not the end of the occupation. It doesn’t mean the West Bank is free. It doesn’t 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,” 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 “for Israel to be sanctioned.”
“Personally, I think that if Russia is excluded, Israel should be as well,” she said in a Norwegian podcast.
Several days after Russia’s 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 Saturday’s 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 France’s World Cup qualifier in Iceland

Mbappe and Konate out of France’s World Cup qualifier in Iceland
Updated 11 October 2025

Mbappe and Konate out of France’s World Cup qualifier in Iceland

Mbappe and Konate out of France’s World Cup qualifier in Iceland
  • Mbappe took two knocks during Friday’s 3-0 World Cup qualifying win over Azerbaijan
  • Liverpool defender Konate remained on the bench with a right thigh problem

PARIS: Kylian Mbappe and Ibrahima Konate have been ruled out of Monday’s 2026 World Cup qualifier in Iceland where France could book their ticket to next year’s tournament.
Already suffering from a “small niggle” in his right ankle from playing for Real Madrid, Mbappe took two knocks during Friday’s 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 Marseille’s Benjamin Pavard.
Mbappe’s absence adds to the long list of forward unavailable for October’s World Cup qualifiers, which includes Ousmane Dembele, Desire Doue, Marcus Thuram and Bradley Barcola.
After returning to the Clairefontaine training ground on Friday night, “the French team captain spoke with (coach) Didier Deschamps who acknowledged his absence,” the French federation (FFF) said in a statement.
Mbappe “has been released to his club (Real Madrid) and will not be replaced,” the FFF added, confirming hours later that Konate “has returned to his club’s availability.”
Konate had joined the team with a slight injury and “underwent treatment and a specific protocol but will not be able to play Monday in Reykjavik,” 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.
“He has a sore ankle and he took a knock there. He preferred to come off; the pain was quite significant,” Deschamps said after the French victory.
Adrien Rabiot and the substitute Thauvin were also on the scoresheet as Deschamps’s 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.