UFC Saudi Arabia in June set for bigger names on card

UFC Saudi Arabia in June set for bigger names on card
Riyadh Season announced hosting the first UFC Fight Night in cooperation with the leading international organization in the field of mixed martial arts (MMA). (Source: @ufc)
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Updated 29 January 2024
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UFC Saudi Arabia in June set for bigger names on card

UFC Saudi Arabia in June set for bigger names on card
  • Original lineup of fights will now take place on March 2 at the UFC Apex in Las Vegas

After a few days of uncertainty, it was recently confirmed that UFC Saudi Arabia, the promotion’s first event in the Kingdom scheduled initially for March 2, has been pushed to June 22.

The MMA Hour’s Ariel Helwani first broke the news on Jan. 15, citing a source that told him the UFC’s initial card needed to be “more exciting, with bigger names on it.” While this line has never been substantiated, the official Riyadh Season press release on Jan. 24 did confirm some fighters were not ready for the original date.

We previously wrote that the UFC would want to mark its inaugural event in Saudi Arabia with a bang. UFC president Dana White echoed this in the joint statement with Riyadh Season. Although the Fight Night cards are traditionally stacked with up-and-coming fighters, we speculated it could still host some big names. However, the card put together for March 2, which will now take place at the UFC Apex in Las Vegas instead, is shy of star power. Sure, it is great for those who know their kimuras from their Superman punches, but it lacks mass appeal.

Those in the lineup are all respected fighters in the UFC, but they are unlikely to fill the Kingdom Arena in Riyadh. White initially claimed that this card was never presented to Saudi Arabia. However, the subsequent postponement and peppering of Middle Eastern fan favorites in that lineup, including Mohammed Mokaev, Mohammed Yahya and Palestinian debutant Abdul-Kareem Al-Sewady, suggests otherwise.

Saudi Arabia’s Riyadh Season is packed with some of the biggest superstars in combat sports going head-to-head over the next few months. Francis Ngannou will take on Anthony Joshua, and Tyson Fury will finally get his much-anticipated dance with Oleksandr Usyk. The PFL/Bellator venture is putting on its most ambitious card ever as each promotion’s champion will face off. That is a hard act to follow for the UFC and not a position it has found itself in often.

Here is where things get interesting. As referenced above, UFC Fight Nights are the filler, non-title cards that sit between the organization’s main events. But White recently said: “This is just going to be a type of card that we’ve never done before; it’s going to be every fight is must-see.”

That statement opens the door to the showstopping fighters that will have fans scrambling for tickets. One of these fighters is lightweight king and regional favorite Islam Makhachev. It would demand that the UFC break its template of non-title bouts on Fight Night cards, but as White confirmed, this is new territory for them.

In December, the UFC’s No. 1 pound-for-pound fighter announced that he was ready to fight on June 8, via X. This was an odd thing to put out in isolation, as there was not a planned card for June, let alone a specific date, in the official UFC event schedule. Maybe Makhachev had insider knowledge, or it was a coincidence, but a headline bout in Saudi Arabia is now a real possibility. He certainly fits the unmissable profile. However, the opponent he picked out in his post, Justin Gaethje, has since been added to UFC 300 in April, which he would have to come through unscathed to make the Saudi Arabia event in June.

Conor McGregor also comes back into contention for this card. The undisputed superstar of the fight game also announced in December that he was ready to step back into the octagon in June 2024. He claimed the fight against Michael Chandler would be at International Fight Week on June 29 in Las Vegas. However, the UFC does not traditionally host two major cards in one month, let alone within one week of each other. So, either there will be a logistical nightmare for the UFC, or he makes his long-awaited comeback in the Kingdom.

McGregor attended the recent star-studded boxing event in Saudi Arabia, sitting ringside with Al-Nassr‘s Cristiano Ronaldo and the General Entertainment Authority’s Chairman Turki Alalshikh. After the bout, McGregor vented his frustration at the UFC for delaying his return.

He reportedly said: “The lads here (in Saudi Arabia) are talking Manny (Pacquiao in boxing), the UFC aren’t talking any. Give me something. You know what I’m saying? They’ve never treated anyone (like this). No one’s ever been treated (like this). For all the figures I’ve brought in this game — I sell more than all of them combined, yeah? I sell more than every one of them combined.”

Again, this rant on its own is typical of a fighter who appears desperate to get back to what he does best. But with the added context of a potential major card happening in June and McGregor’s talks with Saudi Arabia’s organizers over a fight with Pacquiao, the puzzle pieces seem to fall precisely for the Kingdom to bag the biggest UFC fight of 2024.

According to the aforementioned press release, the full UFC Saudi Arabia fight card will be announced “in the coming weeks”.

As of late January the card now set for Las Vegas on March 2 is:

Jairzinho Rozenstruik vs Shamil Gaziev

Mohammad Mokaev vs Alex Perez

Eryk Anders vs Jamie Pickett

Vinicius Oliveira vs Yanis Ghemmouri

Joel Alvarez vs Ludovit Klein

Javid Basharat vs Aiemann Zahabi

Abdul-Kareem Al-Sewady vs Loik Radzabadov

Vinicius de Oliveira vs Yanis Ghemmouri

Mohammad Yahya vs Brendon Marotte

Julia Polastri vs Josefine Lindgren Knutsson

 


Kluivert scores another hat trick as Bournemouth end Newcastle’s winning run in Premier League

Kluivert scores another hat trick as Bournemouth end Newcastle’s winning run in Premier League
Updated 56 min 32 sec ago
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Kluivert scores another hat trick as Bournemouth end Newcastle’s winning run in Premier League

Kluivert scores another hat trick as Bournemouth end Newcastle’s winning run in Premier League
  • Milos Kerkez added a fourth goal in the sixth minute of added-on time
  • Bruno Guimaraes had equalized for Newcastle

NEWCASTLE: Justin Kluivert scored his second hat trick of the season in the Premier League to inspire Bournemouth to a 4-1 victory at Newcastle, whose nine-match winning run in all competitions came to an end emphatically on Saturday.
The Dutch midfielder netted in the sixth and 44th minutes, and again in the second-half stoppage time to complete his hat trick at St. James’ Park.
Milos Kerkez added a fourth goal in the sixth minute of added-on time.
Bruno Guimaraes had equalized for Newcastle.
Kluivert also scored three goals against Wolverhampton in November. In that match, all of Kluivert’s goals were penalties, but he scored from open play each time against Newcastle.
Six of Newcastle’s nine straight victories had come in the league, helping to lift the Saudi-controlled team into the top four in their bid to return to the Champions League.
Newcastle striker Alexander Isak failed to score, having previously netted in eight league games in a row. That left him three games short of Leicester striker Jamie Vardy’s record for the longest scoring run in Premier League history.
Bournemouth climbed to sixth place, tied for points with fifth-place Chelsea.


Noman and Sajid help Pakistan dominate West Indies in spin battle

Noman and Sajid help Pakistan dominate West Indies in spin battle
Updated 18 January 2025
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Noman and Sajid help Pakistan dominate West Indies in spin battle

Noman and Sajid help Pakistan dominate West Indies in spin battle
  • The spin duo shared nine wickets between them to dismiss the West Indies for 137 in reply to the home team’s 230 all out
  • Skipper Shan Masood looked solid for his 52, hitting two sixes and two fours, before Warrican ran him out after attempting a quick single

MULTAN, Pakistan: Noman Ali and Sajid Khan guided Pakistan to a strong position against the West Indies after another spin-dominated second day’s play in the opening Test in Multan on Saturday.
The spin duo shared nine wickets between them to dismiss the West Indies for 137 in reply to the home team’s 230 all out.
By the close, Pakistan stretched their lead to 202 by scoring 109-3 in their second innings, with Kamran Ghulam and Saud Shakeel batting on nine and two respectively when bad light ended play 25 minutes early.
Left-arm spinner Jomel Warrican (2-17) dismissed Muhammad Hurraira for 29 after an opening stand of 67 and Babar Azam for a second failure, trapped leg-before for five.
Skipper Shan Masood looked solid for his 52, hitting two sixes and two fours, before Warrican ran him out after attempting a quick single.
“The weather is foggy so if we have continuous play and take our lead over 300 then we can win this Test,” said Sajid.
“It’s great to bowl with Noman, who always guides me.”
Warrican wants the target to be under 250.
“Obviously we don’t want to get the lead go over 250 because it’s a spin-favoring surface,” said Warrican.
“We need a good comeback in batting the second time around on this pitch.”
The dry and grassless Multan pitch has already produced 23 wickets in six sessions — 19 on day two — even though two-and-a-half hours were lost on day one and another 30 minutes on Saturday because of poor visibility.
Noman grabbed 5-39 for his seventh five-wicket haul in Tests while Sajid finished with 4-65 to dismiss the West Indies after lunch in a first innings that lasted just 25.2 overs.
Noman and Sajid, who shared 39 of the 40 wickets in the last two Tests against England in Pakistan’s 2-1 series win last year, were once again unplayable.
Sajid opened the bowling and removed Mikyle Louis (one), Keacy Carty (0), Kraigg Brathwaite (11) and Kavem Hodge (four) in his first three overs.
Noman then further jolted the tourists with another four wickets to leave them tottering on 66-8.
The tailenders showed more resistance, with number 10 batsman Warrican unbeaten on 31 and Gudakesh Motie adding 19.
Jayden Seales was the last wicket to fall for 22.
Seales hit three sixes before holing out off spinner Abrar Ahmed.
Earlier, Warrican took 3-69 as Pakistan lost their last six wickets for 43 runs after resuming at 143-4.
Shakeel top-scored for Pakistan with 84 off 157 deliveries, including six boundaries, while keeper Mohammad Rizwan added 71.
Shakeel added an invaluable 141 for the fifth wicket with Rizwan, lifting Pakistan from a precarious 46-4 on day one.


Noman and Sajid help Pakistan dominate West Indies in spin battle

Noman and Sajid help Pakistan dominate West Indies in spin battle
Updated 44 min 27 sec ago
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Noman and Sajid help Pakistan dominate West Indies in spin battle

Noman and Sajid help Pakistan dominate West Indies in spin battle
  • The spin duo shared nine wickets between them to dismiss West Indies for 137
  • Pakistan stretched their lead to 202 by scoring 109-3 in their second innings

MULTAN: Noman Ali and Sajid Khan guided Pakistan to a strong position against the West Indies after another spin-dominated second day’s play in the opening Test in Multan on Saturday.
The spin duo shared nine wickets between them to dismiss the West Indies for 137 in reply to the home team’s 230 all out.
By the close, Pakistan stretched their lead to 202 by scoring 109-3 in their second innings, with Kamran Ghulam and Saud Shakeel batting on nine and two respectively when bad light ended play 25 minutes early.
Left-arm spinner Jomel Warrican (2-17) dismissed Muhammad Hurraira for 29 after an opening stand of 67 and Babar Azam for a second failure, trapped leg-before for five.
Skipper Shan Masood looked solid for his 52, hitting two sixes and two fours, before Warrican ran him out after attempting a quick single.
“The weather is foggy so if we have continuous play and take our lead over 300 then we can win this Test,” said Sajid.
“It’s great to bowl with Noman, who always guides me.”
Warrican wants the target to be under 250.
“Obviously we don’t want to get the lead go over 250 because it’s a spin-favoring surface,” said Warrican.
“We need a good comeback in batting the second time around on this pitch.”
The dry and grassless Multan pitch has already produced 23 wickets in six sessions — 19 on day two — even though two-and-a-half hours were lost on day one and another 30 minutes on Saturday because of poor visibility.
Noman grabbed 5-39 for his seventh five-wicket haul in Tests while Sajid finished with 4-65 to dismiss the West Indies after lunch in a first innings that lasted just 25.2 overs.

Pakistan’s Noman Ali, center, celebrates with teammates after taking the wicket of West Indies Kevin Sinclair during the day two of the first Test cricket match between Pakistan and West Indies, in Multan on January 18, 2025. (AP)

Noman and Sajid, who shared 39 of the 40 wickets in the last two Tests against England in Pakistan’s 2-1 series win last year, were once again unplayable.
Sajid opened the bowling and removed Mikyle Louis (one), Keacy Carty (0), Kraigg Brathwaite (11) and Kavem Hodge (four) in his first three overs.
Noman then further jolted the tourists with another four wickets to leave them tottering on 66-8.
The tailenders showed more resistance, with number 10 batsman Warrican unbeaten on 31 and Gudakesh Motie adding 19.
Jayden Seales was the last wicket to fall for 22.
Seales hit three sixes before holing out off spinner Abrar Ahmed.

West Indies Jomel Warrican, center, celebrates with teammates after taking the wicket of Pakistan’s Salman Ali Agha during the day two of the first test cricket match between Pakistan and West Indies, in Multan on January 18, 2025. (AP)

Earlier, Warrican took 3-69 as Pakistan lost their last six wickets for 43 runs after resuming at 143-4.
Shakeel top-scored for Pakistan with 84 off 157 deliveries, including six boundaries, while keeper Mohammad Rizwan added 71.
Shakeel added an invaluable 141 for the fifth wicket with Rizwan, lifting Pakistan from a precarious 46-4 on day one.


Hillier leads from Hatton at Dubai Desert Classic with McIlroy 7 shots back

Hillier leads from Hatton at Dubai Desert Classic with McIlroy 7 shots back
Updated 18 January 2025
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Hillier leads from Hatton at Dubai Desert Classic with McIlroy 7 shots back

Hillier leads from Hatton at Dubai Desert Classic with McIlroy 7 shots back
  • Tyrrell Hatton shot 68 and was the closest challenger to the No. 223-ranked Hillier

DUBAI: Daniel Hillier of New Zealand birdied the final two holes to shoot 2-under 70 on Saturday and take a one-stroke lead into the final round of the Dubai Desert Classic.
Tyrrell Hatton shot 68 and was the closest challenger to the No. 223-ranked Hillier, whose only win on the European tour came at the British Masters in July 2023.
Hillier was 13-under par for the week.
Rory McIlroy, seeking a third straight title at the prestigious tournament, was seven shots off the pace in a tie for 12th place after a round of 69.


FIFA bans Venezuelan soccer official for 5 years and orders near-$1M fine for financial wrongdoing

FIFA bans Venezuelan soccer official for 5 years and orders near-$1M fine for financial wrongdoing
Updated 18 January 2025
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FIFA bans Venezuelan soccer official for 5 years and orders near-$1M fine for financial wrongdoing

FIFA bans Venezuelan soccer official for 5 years and orders near-$1M fine for financial wrongdoing
  • FIFA’s ethics committee had also charged Álvarez with breaching “duty of loyalty”
  • The verdict can be challenged on appeal

ZURICH: FIFA has banned a Venezuelan soccer official from the sport for five years for financial wrongdoing and fined him nearly $1m.
Manuel Álvarez was secretary general of the Venezuelan soccer federation when his conduct enabled the “misappropriation and misuse” of its and FIFA’s money, soccer’s world body said announcing the verdict late Friday.
FIFA’s ethics committee had also charged Álvarez with breaching “duty of loyalty” and “general duties” under its code.
FIFA, which makes at least $2 million available in funding each year to all 211 member federations, gave no details about the financial misconduct. The verdict can be challenged on appeal.
It is unclear how FIFA can enforce payment of the fine if Álvarez does not return to soccer.
Venezuela is the only member of the 10-nation CONMEBOL group of South American federations that has never qualified to play at the men’s World Cup.