5 things we learned from Saudi Arabia’s AFC Asian Cup win over Kyrgyzstan

Special 5 things we learned from Saudi Arabia’s AFC Asian Cup win over Kyrgyzstan
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Saudi Arabia’s Faisal Alghamdi celebrates after scoring his side’s second goal during the Asian Cup Group F game against Kyrgyzstan at Ahmad Bin Ali Stadium, Doha, Qatar, Jan. 21, 2024. (AP Photo)
Special 5 things we learned from Saudi Arabia’s AFC Asian Cup win over Kyrgyzstan
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Saudi players celebrate their 2-0 win over Kyrgyzstan. (X / @SaudiNT)
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Updated 22 January 2024
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5 things we learned from Saudi Arabia’s AFC Asian Cup win over Kyrgyzstan

5 things we learned from Saudi Arabia’s AFC Asian Cup win over Kyrgyzstan
  • 2-0 win left Roberto Mancini’s men with a maximum of six points, but performances have been modest
  • Mancini listed South Korea, Japan, Iran and Australia as those expected to lift the trophy

Saudi Arabia defeated Kyrgyzstan 2-0 on Sunday to advance to the knockout stage of the AFC Asian Cup in Qatar. Here are five things we learned from the game

On paper, perfect so far

Two games, six points and a place in the last 16, it could not have gone any better for Saudi Arabia in terms of results. The target was always to get to the next stage as quickly and smoothly as possible and that has been achieved. Coach Roberto Mancini can utilize his squad, rest some players and give others playing time in the final group game against Thailand and it is his job to get the team firing at full capacity when the knockout action starts.

He will not be judged at the group stage — where it is a results business — as results have been perfect. There are bigger challenges ahead and this is where the man who masterminded Italy’s European success in 2021 can earn his money. The former Inter Milan and Manchester City boss surely knows that the performances have not been great so far and he looked frustrated on the sidelines on Sunday but the platform for this tournament has been built and there is a real chance of winning three from three at the group stage.

Lack of intensity

After the game, Mancini said that the performance against 11 men was better than it was against ten and then nine. There was not, however, much time to make that comparison as the Central Asians saw their first red card after just eight minutes and the second soon after the break.

That is not Mancini’s fault and such developments do change the flow of a game but there was a distinct lack of attacking intensity from the Green Falcons. It is not always easy to play against a team that is focused only on defence and produced some physical challenges but there was not enough energy or urgency.

This should have been a time to use the advantage to create space and then opportunities for the attackers to get into the scoring habit. Instead, there were few chances created and not enough work done to find space. Compared to a team like Iraq, who never stopped running and working against Japan, Saudi Arabia need to bring more intensity to their game.

Kanno steps forward

In an attacking sense, this was one of the best performances from Mohamed Kanno for some time and in a game against an opponent struggling with red cards, the Al-Hilal midfielder could focus more on trying to get forward than usual.

His goal was superbly taken, getting himself in the right position at the far post to volley home with precision. He was a constant threat and came within inches of a second. The 29 year-old is now a senior player and needs to produce these sort of performances.

It helps other, less experienced players like Abdulrahman Ghareeb, who has looked Saudi Arabia’s liveliest attacking threat so far when he has played, and Faisal Al-Ghamdi who has also impressed and got a goal. Mancini has shown that he is prepared to select younger talent and this has, for the most part, paid dividends.

Al-Dawsari waiting to fire

Salem Al-Dawsari has been the team’s attacking talisman for some time but he was not at his best in this game. The Asian Player of the Year could not get going and lost possession time and time again. His movement and passing were also not at their usual levels.

It was not a surprise that he was taken off just after the hour. The game was virtually won — better to keep him as fresh as possible for the challenges ahead. It was noticeable, however, that as he walked off the pitch towards the bench, Al-Dawsari did not seem too happy — whether that was down to his own performance or a reaction to being substituted, only he knows. Everyone is aware that if Saudi Arabia are going to be successful in Qatar, they need their star firing.

Mancini right about favorites but…

After the game finished, Mancini was quick to point out to reporters that Saudi Arabia are not among the favorites at the tournament. He listed South Korea, Japan, Iran and Australia as those expected to lift the trophy. Few would disagree but then South Korea and Japan, the top two in Asia according to most, have not exactly been impressive so far. South Korea needed a last-minute own goal to get a point against Jordan. Japan lost to Iraq. Both of these teams would love to have Saudi Arabia’s record in the tournament while Iran only beat Hong Kong 1-0.

But these teams know that these are still early days in the competition. In history, few teams manage to impress right from the beginning and win without hiccups.

Once the knockout stage starts, there are going to be those that step it up a level but at the moment, it is looking very open indeed.


Ruthless Liverpool spoil Alonso’s return to Anfield

Ruthless Liverpool spoil Alonso’s return to Anfield
Updated 06 November 2024
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Ruthless Liverpool spoil Alonso’s return to Anfield

Ruthless Liverpool spoil Alonso’s return to Anfield
  • Leverkusen remain on seven points from their opening four Champions League matches after another sobering night for their ambitions to match the heights they hit last season

LIVERPOOL: Xabi Alonso endured a miserable return to Anfield as Liverpool thrashed Bayer Leverkusen 4-0 on Tuesday, thanks to a Luis Diaz hat-trick, to go top of the Champions League table.
Cody Gakpo was also on target as the Reds maintained their 100 percent record in Europe after four games.
Alonso, a Champions League winner during his playing days in the Liverpool midfield, turned his back on succeeding Jurgen Klopp to remain at Leverkusen after leading them to an unbeaten German league and cup double last season.
Liverpool, though, are not left wondering what might have been as Arne Slot continued his stunning start as manager with a 14th win in 16 games in all competitions.
Leverkusen remain on seven points from their opening four Champions League matches after another sobering night for their ambitions to match the heights they hit last season.
Alonso’s men sit fourth in the Bundesliga, seven points adrift of leaders Bayern Munich, and failed to master what Alonso described pre-match as a “beautiful challenge.”
The Spaniard cut a frustrated figure on the touchline as his side struggled to get into the slick passing rhythm they have become famed for during his tenure.
The German champions, though, created the best of what chances there were in a first half short on goalmouth action.
Jeremie Frimpong saw appeals for a penalty waved away when he went down with a clear sight of goal under a challenge from Kostas Tsimikas.
Frimpong also had the ball in the net just before the break but handled before racing through to finish.
Liverpool’s best opening of the half came seconds later when Curtis Jones’ excellent pass finally found some space for Gakpo, but his powerful effort was repelled at his near post by Lukas Hradecky.
Just like in Saturday’s 2-1 win over Brighton that took Slot’s men to the top of the Premier League, it took until the second half for both Liverpool and the Anfield crowd to come to life.
Mohamed Salah should have done better when he sliced wide after a jinking run through the Leverkusen midfield by Ryan Gravenberch.
A cagey tactical battle was sparked into life on the hour mark by a moment of stunning quality.
Jones spun his marker before splitting the Leverkusen defense with a pinpoint pass for Diaz, who nonchalantly chipped the advancing Hradecky.
Moments later, Liverpool had killed the visitors off with another flowing move.
Salah’s driven cross was headed in at the back post by the flying Gakpo.
The linesman raised his flag to momentarily silence the celebrations, but a VAR review showed the Dutch forward was onside for his sixth goal of the season.
Victor Boniface headed wide with a huge chance to bring Leverkusen immediately back into the game.
Instead, Liverpool pulled further clear seven minutes from time when Diaz controlled Salah’s looping cross and fired home.
The Colombian then rounded off the scoring with his ninth of the season in stoppage time with another clinical finish after Darwin Nunez’s blocked shot fell into his path.
Liverpool’s return of 12 points means they are almost certainly already assured of a place in the knockout phase, but are closing in on sealing direct progression to the last 16 via a top-eight finish in the 36-team league.


Al-Nassr’s 5-star show blows Al-Ain away

Al-Nassr’s 5-star show blows Al-Ain away
Updated 06 November 2024
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Al-Nassr’s 5-star show blows Al-Ain away

Al-Nassr’s 5-star show blows Al-Ain away
  • Cristiano Ronaldo helps side to easy victory

Al-Nassr defeated holders Al-Ain 5-1 in the AFC Champions League Elite on Tuesday to move into third place in the group and give Saudi Arabia the top three positions in the 12-team table.

With Al-Hilal and Al-Ahli winning on Monday to stay perfect on 12 points after four games, Al-Nassr are just two behind thanks to a devastating performance against the UAE’s powerhouse side.

The last time Al-Ain met Saudi Arabian opposition was just 15 days ago and fans were treated to a nine-goal thriller as Al-Hilal ran out 5-4 winners.

The last time they met Al-Nassr was at the quarter-final stage of last season’s competition in March when the UAE team triumphed on penalties in what was a painful evening for the fans in Riyadh.

It was a different story this time with Al-Nassr going ahead in the fifth minute with an impressive goal, though Al-Ain’s coach Hernan Crespo was left asking questions of his defenders.

Mohamed Simakan has impressed since joining from RB Leipzig, but there seemed to be little danger when the center-back picked up the ball inside his own half. The French defender was allowed to cross the halfway line, though, and with the opposition falling back, a short pass found Talisca who made space for the shot with his first touch and then fired home with his second.

Cristiano Ronaldo fired just wide from a similar position at the edge of the area after 10 minutes, but given Al-Ain’s scoring capabilities there was a feeling that more was needed.

Al-Nassr kept pushing and probing and Ronaldo had a goalbound shot blocked before the five-time Ballon d’Or winner got the all-important second with one of his less spectacular strikes. Khalid Eisa failed to hold on to a long-range effort from Sadio Mane and there was Ronaldo to slot it home from close range.

It was just the cushion that the Riyadh club wanted but they kept coming forward and, soon after, moved further ahead.

Angelo broke into the left side of the area after 37 minutes and his low cross was deflected off the leg of Fabio Cardoso to loop over Eisa and into the net.

The home fans were in dreamland and it could have been even better three minutes before the break had Eisa not got a foot to a Talisca shot that seemed goalbound.

There was just a hint of danger from Soufiane Rahimi in added time to remind Al-Nassr that the Moroccan had scored 13 in the last tournament and four already this time around, but at the break it was looking very good indeed as Al-Nassr had probably produced their best 45 minutes of the season.

They also started brightly after the restart, but after 10 minutes Al-Ain were on the scoresheet and back in the game with a goal from nowhere. Park Yong-woo’s powerful low shot from outside the area bounced off the post but then hit the diving Bento and rebounded into the goal.

A few nerves resulted and Bento was the busier of the two goalkeepers, although, at the other end, Aymeric Laporte headed over from a corner.

Al-Ain went closer when, with 13 minutes remaining, Rahimi rolled the ball across the face of goal for Abdoul Traore to net, but he somehow miscontrolled and the massive chance went begging.

It was his side’s last chance as Wesley sealed victory with nine minutes remaining, the Brazilian curling the ball home from inside the area.

There was no coming back from that, and there was even time for Talisca to grab his second and his team’s fifth as he lifted the ball smartly over Eisa to end a perfect evening for Al-Nassr and a perfect round of games for Saudi Arabia.


Gauff defeats Swiatek to reach the semifinals at the WTA Finals. Sabalenka is assured of No. 1

Gauff defeats Swiatek to reach the semifinals at the WTA Finals. Sabalenka is assured of No. 1
Updated 05 November 2024
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Gauff defeats Swiatek to reach the semifinals at the WTA Finals. Sabalenka is assured of No. 1

Gauff defeats Swiatek to reach the semifinals at the WTA Finals. Sabalenka is assured of No. 1
  • The result means that Swiatek can’t move up from No. 2 in the rankings this week, so Aryna Sabalenka will finish the year at No. 1 for the first time
  • It was Gauff’s first victory over Swiatek since the 2023 Cincinnati Open, snapping a four-match losing skid head-to-head

RIYADH: Coco Gauff earned her second victory over Iga Swiatek in 13 career matchups, winning 6-3, 6-4 at the WTA Finals on Tuesday to reach the semifinals of the season-ending tournament.
The result means that Swiatek can’t move up from No. 2 in the rankings this week, so Aryna Sabalenka will finish the year at No. 1 for the first time.
It was Gauff’s first victory over Swiatek since the 2023 Cincinnati Open, snapping a four-match losing skid head-to-head. Gauff, the 2023 US Open champion, also put an end to five-time Grand Slam champ Swiatek’s six-match unbeaten run at the WTA Finals, an event the Polish star won a year ago.
The win moved Gauff to 2-0 in the Orange Group, while Swiatek fell to 1-1. Swiatek had rallied to beat Barbora Krejcikova in three sets on Sunday in her first match in two months.
Krejcikova, the Wimbledon champion, kept her chances of advancing alive with a 6-3, 6-3 win over Jessica Pegula. That eliminated Pegula, who lost in straight sets to Gauff in their opening match in Saudi Arabia.
Krejcikova was the last player to qualify for the event for the top eight players on the women’s tennis tour, earning her berth thanks to her Grand Slam title at the All England Club in July. At No. 13, she became the lowest-ranked player to win a WTA Finals match since Magda Maleeva 22 years ago.


Krejcikova ends Pegula’s last-four hopes at WTA Finals

Krejcikova ends Pegula’s last-four hopes at WTA Finals
Updated 05 November 2024
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Krejcikova ends Pegula’s last-four hopes at WTA Finals

Krejcikova ends Pegula’s last-four hopes at WTA Finals
  • The crafty Czech fired 11 aces and broke Pegula four times to wrap up the win in 69 minutes

RIYADH, Saudi Arabia: Barbora Krejcikova ended Jessica Pegula’s chances of qualifying for the semifinals at the WTA Finals in Riyadh, defeating the sixth-seeded American 6-3, 6-3 in Riyadh on Tuesday.
A runner-up at the WTA Finals last year, Pegula suffered her second straight-sets defeat of the week and enters her final round-robin match against Iga Swiatek on Thursday anchoring the Orange Group with zero sets won.
Meanwhile, eighth-seeded Krejcikova bounced back from her opening loss to Swiatek to keep her hopes of making the final four alive.
“I was fighting for every ball and I felt that I really have to play my best tennis and I was trying to be really solid and trying to put as many balls to the other side as I could,” said Krejcikova, who picked up just her 20th match win of the season.
“I’m definitely proud. I had some very high parts of the season, especially winning Wimbledon, that’s something indescribable. And being here in the Finals is a huge privilege. It’s nice to get the win and still be part of the event.”
Despite being ranked number 13 in the world, Krejcikova qualified for these WTA Finals thanks to a new rule introduced by the WTA that gave priority to a player who has won a Grand Slam this season, while maintaining a ranking between 9 and 20, over a player ranked number eight in the Race.
As the reigning Wimbledon champion, Krejcikova claimed the final qualifying spot in Riyadh over world number eight Emma Navarro.
Krejcikova squandered a 6-4, 3-0 lead against Swiatek in her opener two days ago and made sure there was no repeat scenario against Pegula on Tuesday.
The crafty Czech fired 11 aces and broke Pegula four times to wrap up the win in 69 minutes.


Dybala left out of Argentina squad for World Cup qualifiers while Martínez is back from suspension

Dybala left out of Argentina squad for World Cup qualifiers while Martínez is back from suspension
Updated 05 November 2024
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Dybala left out of Argentina squad for World Cup qualifiers while Martínez is back from suspension

Dybala left out of Argentina squad for World Cup qualifiers while Martínez is back from suspension
  • Martínez was suspended by FIFA for the last two qualifiers for “offensive behavior”

BUENOS AIRES: Roma striker Paulo Dybala was left out of the Argentina squad for their upcoming World Cup qualifiers, while goalkeeper Emiliano Martínez is back after a suspension.
Coach Lionel Scaloni announced his squad on Tuesday, with the absence of Dybala and the inclusion of Valencia midfielder Enzo Barrenechea the two big surprises.
Martínez was suspended by FIFA for the last two qualifiers for “offensive behavior” in two previous matches in September, but he will be available for the match at Paraguay on Nov. 14 and the home game against Peru five days later.
Argentina lead South American World Cup qualifying with 22 points from 10 matches. The top six teams will get direct spots at the 2026 tournament.

Squad:
Goalkeepers: Emiliano Martinez (Aston Villa), Walter Benítez (PSV Eindhoven), Gerónimo Rulli (Marseille).
Defenders: Gonzalo Montiel (Sevilla), Nahuel Molina (Atletico Madrid), Cristian Romero (Tottenham), Germán Pezzella (River Plate), Nehuén Pérez (Porto), Leonardo Balerdi (Marseille), Nicolás Otamendi (Benfica), Lisandro Martínez (Manchester United), Nicolás Tagliafico (Lyon).
Midfielders: Leandro Paredes (Roma), Alexis Mac Allister (Liverpool), Enzo Fernández (Chelsea), Giovani Lo Celso (Real Betis), Nicolás Paz (Como), Exequiel Palacios (Bayer Leverkusen), Rodrigo de Paul (Atletico Madrid), Enzo Barrenechea (Valencia).
Strikers: Thiago Almada (Botafogo), Lionel Messi (Inter Miami), Nicolás González (Juventus), Alejandro Garnacho (Manchester United), Julián Álvarez (Atletico Madrid), Facundo Buonanotte (Leicester), Valentín Castellanos (Lazio), Lautaro Martínez (Inter Milan).