Mohammed Rashid: AFC Asian Cup about more than football for Palestine

Mohammed Rashid: AFC Asian Cup about more than football for Palestine
Defensive midfielder Mohammed Rashid and his teammates are footballers, not fighters; their role for many years has been to build awareness about the Palestinian struggle. (X: @persib)
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Updated 14 January 2024
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Mohammed Rashid: AFC Asian Cup about more than football for Palestine

Mohammed Rashid: AFC Asian Cup about more than football for Palestine
  • Palestinian team takes on Iran in their opening Group C fixture on Sunday night at Education City Stadium

Focusing solely on football is an impossible task for Palestine’s players. The build-up to the Asian Cup in Qatar has been marred by over three months of relentless attacks on Gaza, and while the recent escalation in violence has been shocking, playing against the backdrop of serious conflict is nothing new to those representing the Palestine national team.

Defensive midfielder Mohammed Rashid and his teammates are footballers, not fighters; their role for many years has been to build awareness about the Palestinian struggle — something even more vital in the current climate.

“Whenever we play for the Palestine national team, we are raising the name, raising the knowledge of our country and what is happening,” Rashid told Arab News, ahead of the team’s first match against Iran on Sunday night at Education City Stadium.

While most Palestinian players have historically tried to say out of politics, the current situation in Gaza has seen many use their voice to highlight the plight of their compatriots.

“As players we have always had to be careful what we say about politics because if you speak about it too much, they will stop you from playing,” Rashid said.

“It has happened before to my teammates; my friend Ahmed Abu Khadija was arrested the day we won the championship with Jabal Al-Mukaber last year. We try to focus on football, but it is difficult.”

Taking a clear moral stance is not something new to Rashid, who has been fundraising for those affected by the attacks on Gaza across his social media channels over the past couple of months. While playing for Persib Bandung in Indonesia, he refused to be photographed next to a FIFA anti-war banner in the wake of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

Rashid’s personal protest against the hypocrisy of the messaging won him many admirers worldwide and contributed to him being named Indonesian football’s Fans’ Player of the Year.

“We were told to stand in front of a ‘Stop the War’ banner, but it hurt because (even before the current Gaza conflict), bombings would happen every couple of months in Palestine and nobody cared, nobody spoke about it,” Rashid said.

“I took a step back as I didn’t want to take the picture because it felt that nobody sees who we are and nobody sees that we’re living or that we exist. That’s why I did it and I have never regretted that.

“In Indonesia, everyone was supportive because they love Palestine, but I also received support from countries around the world. I will always stick by my principles.”

Rashid was born and raised in Ramallah and never had designs on being a professional footballer. He went to college in the US on a soccer scholarship, graduated and was happily working in a warehouse in Chicago when he first heard about an opportunity to sign for Palestinian Premier League club Hilal Al-Quds.

He traded Chicago for Jerusalem and made his senior debut for the Palestine national team a year later.

“I went from being a forklift truck driver to a footballer quite quickly, which was obviously a big change,” Rashid said. “Life back in Palestine also felt very different from what I had experienced in America.

“Fundamentally in America there’s freedom. Nobody asks you anything there or tells you you can’t go somewhere. There aren’t barriers and checkpoints where you are asked why you sneezed.

“The basis of a good life is being free, which is not something that we have in Palestine.”

Rashid played for Palestine at the 2019 Asian Cup, coming on a substitute in the 3-0 group stage defeat to Australia before playing most of the following match — a 0-0 draw against Jordan that saw Palestine narrowly miss out on reaching the last-16 for the first time.

This time around, motivation is even higher for Rashid and his teammates to make history and qualify for the knockout stage for the first time. Standing in their way is Iran, UAE and Hong Kong — the latter of which offers Palestine’s best shot at three points and potential progress through the group.

“The 2019 tournament was a great experience for me as s first time in a big continental competition; it gave me a taste of how it could be and was a great feeling to be able to play against players that play in the Championship and some in the Premier League, too,” Rashid said.

“The goal is to be to get out of the group stage this year because for the past two times we haven’t done it. This time we want to qualify to the next round and we have to take it step by step.

“We played against Iran in a in a friendly before the 2019 Asian Cup and we drew 1-1. But you know, right now it’s different. They are a World Cup team, a tough opponent, but at the end of the day it is football and you never know what can happen. There’s no impossible in football.”

Outside of football, many of Rashid’s fellow Palestinians face impossible situations amid the daily horrors in Gaza. The midfielder and his teammates know that the Asian Cup provides a platform to continue conversations about what is happening in Palestine.   

“Football has been important because it puts Palestine on the map. It makes people recognize where Palestine is, that it exists. The Asian Cup gives us another opportunity to make sure people are talking about Palestine.”


Pogba has doping suspension cut to 18 months, eligible to play next March

Pogba has doping suspension cut to 18 months, eligible to play next March
Updated 04 October 2024
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Pogba has doping suspension cut to 18 months, eligible to play next March

Pogba has doping suspension cut to 18 months, eligible to play next March
  • “The suspension is now 18 months, starting Sept. 11, 2023,” CAS director general Matthieu Reeb
  • The France international was provisionally suspended by Italy’s national anti-doping organization in September 2023

PARIS: French soccer player Paul Pogba’s doping suspension has been cut to 18 months from an initial four years, the Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS) said on Friday.
“The suspension is now 18 months, starting Sept. 11, 2023,” CAS director general Matthieu Reeb told Reuters.
The France international was provisionally suspended by Italy’s national anti-doping organization (NADO Italia) in September 2023 after testing positive for DHEA — a banned substance that raises levels of testosterone.
The 31-year-old Pogba, who has a contract with Italy’s Juventus until June 2026, denied any wrongdoing and said in February he would appeal to CAS.
The doping test was performed after Juve’s 3-0 season-opening victory in Serie A at Udinese on Aug. 20, 2023.
The tribunal said it had detected prohibited “non-endogenous testosterone metabolites,” adding that the results were “consistent with the exogenous (external) origin of the target compounds.”


Three of Liverpool’s biggest stars are out of contract soon but Arne Slot is still smiling about it

Three of Liverpool’s biggest stars are out of contract soon but Arne Slot is still smiling about it
Updated 04 October 2024
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Three of Liverpool’s biggest stars are out of contract soon but Arne Slot is still smiling about it

Three of Liverpool’s biggest stars are out of contract soon but Arne Slot is still smiling about it
  • Manager Arne Slot still found time to joke about the situation on Friday when quizzed about their futures
  • Questions about Salah, Van Dijk and Alexander-Arnold will only grow as the season goes on and their contracts run down

LIVERPOOL, England: Mohamad Salah, Virgil van Dijk and Trent Alexander-Arnold have entered the final months of their contracts at Liverpool and can leave as free agents at the end of the season.
Yet, manager Arne Slot still found time to joke about the situation on Friday when quizzed about their futures.
“It’s the same boring answer as always and I could really understand if you ask me this once every two weeks but if you ask me this after two or three days again then you still get the same answer and people feel that I’m boring them,” Slot told reporters at his media conference ahead of Saturday’s game against Crystal Palace. “So, try it after the international break again.”
Questions about Salah, Van Dijk and Alexander-Arnold will only grow as the season goes on and their contracts run down. All three will be able to talk to potential suitors outside of England from January.
All three are Liverpool icons given their roles in leading the Merseyside club to its first league title in 30 years in 2020 and having won the Champions League the season before.
Alexander-Arnold is a home-grown talent and, at the age of 26, a player whose best years are likely ahead of him.
In the cases of Salah, 32, and Van Dijk, 33, Liverpool are dealing with players at the latter stages of their careers, who are unlikely to have any sell-on value if handed long-term deals.
Those are factors that Liverpool executives such as football CEO Michael Edwards will have to consider.
Salah, who has consistently been linked with a move to the Saudi League, has been in outstanding form this season, with six goals in nine games as Liverpool has risen to the top of the Premier League and made a perfect start in the Champions League. If he is not to be offered a new deal, a January move would be a final chance to realize a financial return on the forward, who cost around $50 million when signed from Roma in 2017.
That would have a potentially detrimental impact on Liverpool’s season, while Salah would also miss out on a hefty signing bonus he would be able to negotiate as a free agent.
The same applies with Van Dijk, who is Liverpool’s captain and remains a rock at the heart of the defense.
Salah said he is treating this like his last season at the club, while Van Dijk has said he is calm about his position.
Liverpool spent around $150 million in total to sign the duo, who were so pivotal to its success under former manager Jurgen Klopp, and it would likely cost well in excess of that to replace them with like-for-like players.
All three players have been important to what has been such a promising start for Slot since he succeeded Klopp in the offseason.
And Slot was keen Friday to focus on maintaining that form, rather than contract discussions.
Liverpool can move four points clear at the top by beating Palace in the early kickoff, before defending champion Manchester City and Arsenal play later in the day.
There was no danger, he said, of his team getting carried away with its early success under him.
“We are Liverpool, so players are used to being on top of the league,” he said. “It would be very weird if a player at Liverpool is all of a sudden with his head in the clouds.”


Chelsea not ready for Premier League title tilt, says Maresca

Chelsea not ready for Premier League title tilt, says Maresca
Updated 04 October 2024
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Chelsea not ready for Premier League title tilt, says Maresca

Chelsea not ready for Premier League title tilt, says Maresca
  • “I really don’t think we can compete with City and Arsenal,” Enzo Maresca said
  • “The reason why is that City are working with the same manager for nine years, Arsenal for five years“

LONDON: Enzo Maresca says Chelsea are not ready to compete with Manchester City and Arsenal for the Premier League title despite their impressive start to the season.
The Blues are fourth in the table and, with 15 goals, are the division’s top scorers after winning four of their six league games under the Italian.
Cole Palmer, who scored four first-half goals against Brighton last week, is one of the form players in the top-flight.
Maresca demonstrated Chelsea’s enviable strength in depth by fielding an entirely changed starting line-up for Thursday’s 4-2 Europa Conference League win over Gent.
However, three months into his tenure, the former Leicester boss dismissed suggestions Chelsea could challenge the league’s established top two and win a first title since 2017.
“I really don’t think we can compete with City and Arsenal,” he said. “I really think that, because we are not ready.
“The reason why is that City are working with the same manager for nine years, Arsenal for five years. It’s something that if you want to compete for important things, you need that time.”
Chelsea host Nottingham Forest on Sunday seeking their fourth league win in a row.
The mood around the club has been transformed since Forest’s last visit to Stamford Bridge a year ago when they won 1-0 during a poor run for Chelsea, who ultimately finished sixth after a strong finish.
Chelsea have spent lavishly over the past two years, compiling a huge squad with mixed results, but there are signs they may have turned a corner at last.
“When you win games it always creates energy, trust, confidence,” said Maresca. “It’s helping the process.
“But the players are the first to recognize when the team plays well or not. The results are helping but they are convinced because they can see clearly the purpose and identity we have.”


Judge me at the end of the season, says under-fire Man Utd boss Ten Hag

Judge me at the end of the season, says under-fire Man Utd boss Ten Hag
Updated 04 October 2024
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Judge me at the end of the season, says under-fire Man Utd boss Ten Hag

Judge me at the end of the season, says under-fire Man Utd boss Ten Hag

PORTO, Portugal: Erik ten Hag pleaded to be given until the end of the season as Manchester United boss after needing a late Harry Maguire equalizer to salvage a 3-3 draw at Porto in the Europa League on Thursday.
Ten Hag was under major pressure before the trip to Portugal after just two wins from United’s first six Premier League fixtures of the season left them languishing in 13th place in the table.
The Red Devils have also drawn their opening two Europa League games to sit 21st in the 36-team table.
“We will get there, don’t judge us in this moment,” said Ten Hag.
“Judge us in the end of the season. We will improve, we have two seasons where we achieved finals. Just wait, we will develop and progress this team.”
Ten Hag has fiercely defended his record after winning the League Cup and FA Cup in his first two seasons in charge at Old Trafford — ending United’s six-year trophy drought in the process.
A shock victory over Manchester City in last season’s FA Cup final was widely credited with saving his job despite finishing eighth in the Premier League.
But the United hierarchy could be forced to act in the upcoming international break after they travel to face Aston Villa in the Premier League on Sunday.
Ten Hag could not have asked for a better start in Porto as goals from Marcus Rashford and Rasmus Hojlund put United 2-0 up inside 20 minutes
However, the English giants have failed to win any of their last four away European games despite scoring three times in each of them.
Last season they crashed out of the Champions League at the group stages after losing 4-3 at Bayern Munich and FC Copenhagen plus a 3-3 draw at Galatasaray.
Another six-goal thriller took place at the Estadio do Dragao as Pepe and Samu Omorodion brought Porto level before half-time.
Omorodion smashed the home side in front early in the second half before United captain Bruno Fernandes was sent off for the second consecutive game.
But Maguire’s header from a corner at least salvaged a point for Ten Hag.
“When you get 2-0 away from home you have to be a little bit more solid and there were far too many gaps,” said Maguire.
“Too many crosses were coming into the box for sure and they ultimately punished us for it.”
The England international has lost his regular starting spot in the side to Matthijs de Ligt, who previously worked under Ten Hag at Ajax.
Maguire said the pressure his manager was facing is what comes with the “privilege” of being in the spotlight at one of the world’s biggest clubs.
“I’ve played for this club for six years, I know how it works. When you go on a bad spell players come under pressure and also the manager does,” added Maguire.
“He’s experienced enough and been at this club long enough so I’m sure he knows how to deal with it. It’s part of the privilege you have playing for this club.”


Tottenham and Lazio stay perfect in Europa League with second straight wins

Tottenham and Lazio stay perfect in Europa League with second straight wins
Updated 03 October 2024
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Tottenham and Lazio stay perfect in Europa League with second straight wins

Tottenham and Lazio stay perfect in Europa League with second straight wins
  • Tottenham manager Ange Postecoglou made seven changes to the team that beat Manchester United 3-0 at Old Trafford in the Premier League on Sunday
  • Lazio captain Mattia Zaccagni finished off the win from the penalty spot

ROME: A youthful Tottenham side maintained a perfect record in the Europa League with a 2-1 victory away at Ferencváros on Thursday, while Lazio also made it two wins out of two by routing Nice 4-1 at home.
Pape Sarr gave Tottenham the lead midway through the first half when he reacted quickly to a loose ball in the area and slotted it into the net with a right-foot shot for his second goal in two games in the second-tier European competition.
Brennan Johnson came on as substitute in the second half and scored the second four minutes from time with a left-footed strike off the far post. It was the fifth goal in five games in all competitions for the Wales international.
Parnabas Varga pulled one back for Ferencváros in the final minute.
Tottenham manager Ange Postecoglou made seven changes to the team that beat Manchester United 3-0 at Old Trafford in the Premier League on Sunday.
Four teenagers started for Spurs, with the 19-year-old Will Lankshear making his senior debut and 17-year-old teammate Mikey Moore making his first start.
In torrential rain at Stadio Olimpico in Rome, Taty Castellano scored twice for Lazio, first making it 2-0 in the first half by lobbing the ball over goalkeeper Marcin Bulka in a one-on-one situation and then making it 3-1 in the second half with a shot into the roof of the net.
Lazio captain Mattia Zaccagni finished off the win from the penalty spot.
Substitute Tomáš Chorý headed in a second-half equalizer for Slavia to hold Ajax to a 1-1 draw in Prague. Ajax went ahead after Branco van den Boomen sent Slavia goalkeeper the wrong way from the spot in the 18th. The visitors were reduced to 10 men in the 75th after defender Youri Baas received his second yellow card.
Anderlecht came from a goal down to beat Real Sociedad 2-1 away, with Theo Leoni scoring the winner late in the first half.
Ayoub El Kaabi scored two and Santiago Hezze added another one for last year’s Conference League winner Olympiacos to beat visiting Braga 3-0.
Hoffenheim, which are struggling in the Bundesliga, recorded a 2-0 win over Dynamo Kyiv.
Manchester United were playing at Porto later Thursday.

Conference League
The third-tier UEFA Conference League saw a couple of high-scoring games as Cercle Brugge routed St. Gallen 6-2 after a hat trick from Kevin Denkey, and Omonoia beat Vikingur Reykjavík 4-0 at home in Cyprus.
Legia Warsaw edged Real Betis 1-0.
Scottish side Hearts traveled a long way to Sumgayit, Azerbaijan, to take home a 2-1 victory over Belarusian champion Dinamo Minsk.
UEFA banned Russian clubs from all its events over the country’s invasion of Ukraine but has allowed Belarusian teams to keep playing despite the country’s support of Russia, as long as the games are hosted outside of Belarus without a crowd.