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Al-Ittihad sack coach Laurent Blanc after 2-0 loss to Al-Nassr

Al-Ittihad sack coach Laurent Blanc after 2-0 loss to Al-Nassr
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Updated 28 sec ago

Al-Ittihad sack coach Laurent Blanc after 2-0 loss to Al-Nassr

Al-Ittihad sack coach Laurent Blanc after 2-0 loss to Al-Nassr

Al-Ittihad have sacked manager Laurent Blanc, the Saudi Pro League club said on Saturday following their 2-0 defeat against Al-Nassr a day earlier.
“Al-Ittihad announces the termination of its contractual relationship with the first team’s head coach Mr.Laurent Blanc and his coaching staff,” the club said on X.
Al-Ittihad added that they were also looking for “new technical staff that matches the club’s ambitions.”
Blanc took charge of Al-Ittihad in July last year and led the team to a domestic double, winning both the league title and the King’s Cup.
However, the team began the new season by exiting the Saudi Super Cup in the semifinals following a loss to Al-Nassr, before suffering a second defeat to the Riyadh-based side in the league on Friday. They are third in the standings, three points behind Al-Nassr.


Al-Qadsiah beat 10-man Al-Fateh to go 2nd in SPL

Al-Qadsiah beat 10-man Al-Fateh to go 2nd in SPL
Updated 28 September 2025

Al-Qadsiah beat 10-man Al-Fateh to go 2nd in SPL

Al-Qadsiah beat 10-man Al-Fateh to go 2nd in SPL
  • Julian Quinones scores game’s only goal in 51st minute
  • Al-Khobar club now just two points behind league leaders Al-Nassr

RIYADH: Al-Qadsiah won 2-1 away at Al-Fateh on Saturday night to move into second place in the Saudi Pro League.

The win puts Spanish coach Michel’s team on 10 points after four games, just two behind leaders Al-Nassr, who maintained their perfect start to the season by beating Al-Ittihad 2-0 in Jeddah on Friday night.

The visitors were given a huge boost on 39 minutes when Al-Fateh goalkeeper Fernando Pacheco was given a straight red card. Amin Al-Bukhairi came on to take his place, with midfielder Othman Al-Othman sacrificed.

The game’s only goal came on 51 minutes, when Mexican forward Julian Quinones latched on to Musab Al-Juwayr’s long pass, charged into the penalty area and finished confidentially with his left foot into the roof of the net.

Earlier on Saturday, Neom won 3-2 away at Al-Riyadh to briefly go into third place, only to be leapfrogged by Al-Qadsiah, while Al-Fayha’s 2-1 win at Al-Najma lifted them to ninth in the table.


‘The people are amazing’: Al-Kholood’s new American owner relishes Ar Rass challenge

‘The people are amazing’: Al-Kholood’s new American owner relishes Ar Rass challenge
Updated 25 September 2025

‘The people are amazing’: Al-Kholood’s new American owner relishes Ar Rass challenge

‘The people are amazing’: Al-Kholood’s new American owner relishes Ar Rass challenge
  • American Ben Harburg talks to Arab News about his vision for the club’s future, the potential of the Saudi Pro League and ֱ’s sports sector

JEDDAH: On July 24, Al-Kholood Club was sold to the Harburg Group — a milestone for football in ֱ as the country accelerates efforts to privatize its sports sector.

The US-based company became the first overseas investor to control a Saudi Professional League team with a 100 percent stake.

Chairman and founding partner Ben Harburg, who has also invested in Spanish second division club Cadiz FC, brings a blend of global perspective and personal drive to the local football scene.

He moved to Ar Rass, one of the major cities in the Qassim region, in the summer and is now working to shape the team’s vision for growth both on and off the pitch. His staff comprises leading football, sporting, business and operations experts, including the group’s CEO, Robert Eeinhorn, who was previously CEO of Dutch Eredivisie club AZ Alkmaar.

In an exclusive interview with Arab News, Harburg spoke about his firm’s acquisition of Al-Kholood, his vision for the club’s future and the potential of both the Saudi Pro League and ֱ’s sports sector.

Acquiring Al-Kholood Club made Harburg Group the first foreign entity to own a Saudi football team. What was it about ֱ, Al-Kholood and Ar Rass city that made you believe in their potential?

We deeply believe in the growth trajectory of Saudi football. This is a country with the highest per capita football fandom in the world.

The national team are perennial participants in the World Cup. Saudi homegrown football talent is very strong and only getting better. The nation is investing in human and physical infrastructure ahead of the World Cup in 2034.

Al-Kholood was appealing because it was a smaller club without the burden of legacy fan expectations and history. We could be more experimental and creative with the process of building the club and its brand within the Saudi market.

Ar Rass and the broader Qassim region is a vibrant core of the country. The people are amazing. I have never felt so welcome anywhere in the world. We are honored to be with them and represent them. Additionally, many clubs are in our periphery so it’s easy to commute to many of our away matches.

Are you investing in Al-Kholood because of our love for football or for business?

My primary objective is to make Al Kholood financially sustainable, meaning we don’t lose money each year. Beyond this, I plan to reinvest any proceeds back into the club. I make my money in venture capital and private equity. Thanks to God, we have been quite successful. Football is my love and passion, but it is also one that must be sustainable. We do believe there is an equity upside for the club as the league grows, but I did not come here seeking profit.

How did you feel when the last piece of paperwork was signed and the takeover became official?

A lot of people said congratulations around that moment. I do not feel that way — this is only the beginning of the journey. We have so much work to do and a very long road ahead.

In your view, what kind of challenge are you taking on at Al-Kholood?

Once we survive this season, the focus is on infrastructure development, academy development. We have many gaps to fill in our human and physical infrastructure. There’s a long road ahead.

What are your development plans for Al-Khlood?

We are working to bring community football back to our club. We engage with fans relentlessly to make sure they know they have a formal voice in our club and are the centerpiece of all we do. They are our “12th man” — without our fans, we are nothing.

The Saudi Pro League is seeing development and growth, and this takeover is another positive sign of that. Do you believe Saudi football has more potential for growth?

Absolutely. The league benefits from what I call “late mover advantage.” We can embrace new technology formats for distribution of our content to embrace a new local and global digital native population. I believe many of the leagues in Europe have flatlined or are on the decline. The timing is perfect for the SPL to take its rightful place among the top five leagues in the world.

On Aug. 17, you met with residents and Al-Kholood fans in Ar Rass. How were you received as an international owner?

They have been incredibly kind, welcoming and gracious. I am deeply grateful for the warm welcome I have received and their continued support of their club.

How do you plan to develop young Saudi football players at the club?

We want to be the place where young Saudi talent develops into national team caliber players. We want to be the place where national team players who are not getting playing time in their current teams get to see the pitch in preparation for the World Cup and other international tournaments. Our core key performance indicator is how many of our players — current and alumni — appear on the Saudi National Team roster.

In your recruiting vision, are you targeting high-level international players such as quality players from Public Investment Fund teams?

No. We need to build future stars, not buy them. It is a very dangerous game to try to compete with PIF, Aramco or Neom on spending for big-name players. You will always lose that fight. The “owners” in our league are the richest in the world. They make the spending power of owners in England or Spain look modest, in comparison.

Do you think you can finish in a better position than last year?

Last year will be hard to top. Teams that are recently promoted can often sneak up in the league and outperform in their first year. Often, other teams have not properly scouted them and underestimate them. At Cadiz in our first season up in LaLiga we finished 12th (out of 20) and beat Real Madrid away and Barcelona (with Messi in his prime). The next season with the same players we were fighting relegation. So we would be fortunate to come close to matching last year’s performance. This season is about survival.


Mayale the hero as Pyramids stun Al-Ahli in intercontinental clash

Mayale the hero as Pyramids stun Al-Ahli in intercontinental clash
Updated 24 September 2025

Mayale the hero as Pyramids stun Al-Ahli in intercontinental clash

Mayale the hero as Pyramids stun Al-Ahli in intercontinental clash
  • Cairo club ran out deserved 3-1 winners and will meet a team from South or North America in the next stage
  • DR Congo star Mayale brought down a long ball in the area and then shot the rebound home for his third goal after Mendy had saved his first shot

Fiston Mayele scored a hat-trick as Pyramids of Egypt defeated Al-Ahli 3-1 in the FIFA African-Asian Pacific Cup on Tuesday in Jeddah to move into the next stage of the 2025 FIFA International Cup. 

These winners of the Champions Leagues in Asia and Africa played out an entertaining affair, but the club from Cairo ran out deserved winners and will meet a team from South or North America in the next stage with European title-holders Paris Saint-Germain waiting in December’s final.

Just a few days earlier, Al-Ahli came back from 3-0 down against Al-Hilal to draw 3-3 but found the African champions a tougher nut to crack. 

The visitors, who had come close earlier, stunned the home fans after 20 minutes. Mayele, top scorer in the CAF Champions League last season, collected possession from Ibrahim Toure just outside the area, made a little space for himself and then sent a low shot arrowing into the bottom corner past Eduardo Mendy. 

Just after the half-hour, Al-Ahli came close to the equalizer. First, Enzo Millot had a one-on-one with the goalkeeper but his shot was saved by Ahmed El-Shenawy, and the resultant corner drifted across the face of goal with no green shirt able to connect.

In the 43rd minute, Millot spun away from Osama Galal in the area and was caught by the defender. The referee rightfully pointed to the spot and up stepped Ivan Toney to send the goalkeeper the wrong way.

Pyramids came within a whisker of retaking their lead on the stroke of half-time but Mahmoud Zalaka’s powerful shot from inside the area came back off the post, and there was still time for Abu Al-Shamat to shoot right at El-Shenawy from close range.

Mayele had a second-half goal ruled out for offside just after the hour and within a minute or two, Toney’s close-range header was well-saved. However, the Egyptians retook the lead in the 71st minute thanks to Mayele once more as he turned in a Zalaka cross from the right at the near post.

It was 3-1 soon after as the DR Congo star brought down a long ball in the area and then shot the rebound home after Mendy had saved his first shot. 

There was no coming back from that for the Asian champions and the Pyramids advance to the next stage. 


Ronaldo celebrates Saudi National Day, saying Kingdom is ‘safe place’ with ‘very good’ tourism and culture

Ronaldo celebrates Saudi National Day, saying Kingdom is ‘safe place’ with ‘very good’ tourism and culture
Updated 23 September 2025

Ronaldo celebrates Saudi National Day, saying Kingdom is ‘safe place’ with ‘very good’ tourism and culture

Ronaldo celebrates Saudi National Day, saying Kingdom is ‘safe place’ with ‘very good’ tourism and culture
  • Portuguese Al-Nassr striker says he and his family love being in Saudi “because it is a great country”
  • “Wishing you a day filled with pride, unity, and celebration with your loved ones,” he wrote on X

BEIRUT: Al-Nassr’s superstar Cristiano Ronaldo described the Kingdom as a “safe place” with “very good” tourism as he wished the Saudi fans, citizens and leadership a Happy Saudi National Day on Tuesday.
Celebrating with citizens the 95th Saudi National Day, the Portuguese striker said that ֱ was a fantastic place to live, and “for me it’s the most special thing, it’s a safe country!”
The Roshn Saudi League is “good” and it “is our job to come in here, and to play football.”
He said that he and his family love being in ֱ “because it is a great country.”

 

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 


In a 52-second-long video that he posted as a story, and on his Instagram profile, 40-year-old Ronaldo talked about the positives he sees in the Kingdom.
“I think they have many things to do … tourism is very good. The schools for the kids are very nice. The tourist parts are very beautiful.”
“I recommend that the people who don’t know ֱ should come to visit because tourism is fantastic and the culture is amazing,” he said.
His Instagram post garnered about 748,000 likes within six hours.

 

Meanwhile, the Al-Nassr forward wrote on his X handle: “Happy Saudi National Day to everyone in ֱ … Wishing you a day filled with pride, unity, and celebration with your loved ones.”
The Portuguese international shared images of himself dressed in Saudi attire (white traditional kandura) with a green and white (colors of the Saudi flag) scarf around his neck and shoulders, in a post that was viewed more than 15.5 million times.
His post on X garnered 307,000 likes, 33,000 retweets and 7,300 comments.
Ronaldo shared a photograph of himself with Al-Nassr’s coach, Jorge Jesus, who also donned a traditional outfit.


Al-Ahli coach Matthias Jaissle hopeful for a win over Pyramids FC

Al-Ahli coach Matthias Jaissle hopeful for a win over Pyramids FC
Updated 23 September 2025

Al-Ahli coach Matthias Jaissle hopeful for a win over Pyramids FC

Al-Ahli coach Matthias Jaissle hopeful for a win over Pyramids FC
  • Sides meet in crucial Africa–Asia–Pacific Cup game
  • Matthias Jaissle wants to bring ‘joy’ to the club’s fans

JEDDAH: Al-Ahli’s coach Matthias Jaissle faces a tough matchup against Egypt’s Pyramids FC on Tuesday and is hopeful his side will emerge victorious.

The teams are meeting in the Africa–Asia–Pacific Cup, part of the FIFA Intercontinental Cup 2025.

At a press conference on Monday Jaissle said he wanted fans to feel the same way they did when the team won the AFC Champions League.

“It is a special day for ֱ and I hope our fans leave the stadium with joy,” said the German.

Pyramids’ Croatian coach Krunoslav Jurcic said: “I am very happy and extremely proud of the stage my team has reached, playing for the title of the Intercontinental Cup of the three continents.

“This is a very important step in the history of Pyramids, a club that has now reached the world stage in a very short period of time.”

He added: “This is another challenge against a strong opponent. I have watched their last two matches in the AFC Champions League and the Saudi league, and they showed great strength and strong reactions.

“But in the end, I have full confidence in my players and their ability to win.”