Professional Fighters League extends global reach with launch of PFL MENA after inaugural Riyadh event

Professional Fighters League extends global reach with launch of PFL MENA after inaugural Riyadh event
Saudi's Abdullah Al-Qahtani ahead of his fight against India’s Edukondal Rao at PFL Champions vs Bellator Champions. (AN Photo: Abdulrahman Shulhub)
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Updated 25 February 2024
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Professional Fighters League extends global reach with launch of PFL MENA after inaugural Riyadh event

Professional Fighters League extends global reach with launch of PFL MENA after inaugural Riyadh event
  • Top MMA fighters from the region will compete in a sport-season format across 4 live events in the Middle East starting in April

RIYADH: The Professional Fighters League has announced the launch of PFL MENA, the promotion’s second international league, which will make its debut in April 2024.

The official announcement was made following the PFL Champions vs Bellator Champions event in the Kingdom Arena in Riyadh, the first-ever MMA event in Saudi Arabia.

PFL MENA will introduce a thrilling four-event sport-season format featuring the region’s top fighters and a groundbreaking initiative with PIF-owned SRJ Sports Investments. The full roster of the league will be revealed in March.

CEO of SRJ Sports Investment, Danny Townsend, said: “The launch of the PFL MENA League is another incredible milestone for the sport of MMA, and one we are delighted to play a role in. Saudi Arabia is quickly emerging as the international home of combat sports; bringing world-class talent here and to the wider MENA region remains at the core of SRJ’s investment mandate.

“With the launch of a new PFL MENA League, we’re backing the development of the region’s exceptional talent, helping provide new pathways to the top. We are confident that investments like these will continue inspiring even more young people to take up sport and help grow the MMA fanbase on a global scale.”

PFL CEO Peter Murray announced the brand’s second international league with partners SRJ.

“Driven by the strategic importance of mixed martial arts in burgeoning markets, SRJ’s investment underscores the immense potential of the sport in the region,” he said. “PFL MENA expands the PFL brand and MMA footprint in the Middle East bringing events to the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia and the wider region.

“We’re very excited to be launching PFL MENA and providing up-and-coming athletes from The Middle East a global platform for them to be able to showcase their skills and potentially compete for a life-changing opportunity at a PFL Championship and a million-dollar purse,” Murray added.

Jerome Mazet, general manager of PFL MENA, said: “Through PFL MENA, we hope to be able to not only find and develop the next Middle Eastern MMA star, but we also want to be able to put the spotlight on MMA in the region and give it the attention and the exposure that it deserves.”

Ahead of the launch of PFL MENA, the PFL organized the first-ever international MMA event in Riyadh — PFL Champions vs. Bellator Champions — which featured world champions and some of the biggest names in combat sports.

To further highlight the launch of the PFL’s newest international league, selected fighters from the Middle East were in attendance in Riyadh, including Ahmed Amir, Mostafa Rashed Neda, Jarrah Al-Silawi, Abdullah Saleem, and Omar El-Dafrawy.

Abdullah Al-Qahtani, the first fighter to represent Saudi Arabia in the PFL, defeated India’s Edukondal Rao in a featherweight contest on the night.

The inaugural PFL MENA season will feature 32 fighters competing across four weight classes in a sports-season format, with a regular season, playoffs, and championship.

The league will also host showcase fights to develop local and regional talents, such as Hattan Alsaif, the first female fighter from Saudi Arabia to sign a contract with a major global MMA promotion. She will be making her amateur PFL debut in showcase bouts on the PFL MENA cards.


Mixed fortunes for Saudi golfer Khalid Walid Attieh in round 3 after making the cut in Thailand

Mixed fortunes for Saudi golfer Khalid Walid Attieh in round 3 after making the cut in Thailand
Updated 2 min 25 sec ago
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Mixed fortunes for Saudi golfer Khalid Walid Attieh in round 3 after making the cut in Thailand

Mixed fortunes for Saudi golfer Khalid Walid Attieh in round 3 after making the cut in Thailand
  • The Black Mountain Championship is second event in this season’s International Series at which the amateur from Riyadh has advanced to the final two rounds
  • After a 4-under 68 on Thursday and a 2-under 70 on Friday, in round 3 he had 4 birdies and a bogey on the front 9 but dropped 5 shots on the back 9 to card a 1-over 73

HUA HIN, Thailand: After making the cut at the Black Mountain Championship at Hua Hin in Thailand on Friday, Saudi golfer Khalid Walid Attieh had mixed fortunes as he faced challenging conditions during his third round on Saturday.

It is the second time in five events of this season’s International Series that the 29-year-old has advanced to the final two rounds, following his success at the season-opener in Oman in February when he became the first Saudi amateur to make the cut in a professional tournament.

His campaign at Black Mountain Golf Club began with a solid, 4-under-par 68 on Thursday, followed by a 2-under 70 on Friday.

Battling tricky conditions in the third round, the Riyadh-born golfer recorded four birdies and a bogey on the front nine but dropped five shots on the back nine to card a one-over-par 73.

Reflecting on his performance in the tournament so far, Attieh said he is proud to be representing the Kingdom on a global stage.

“It’s such a great event,” he said. “I am very grateful to the Saudi Golf Federation and the International Series for giving me a spot, and obviously to represent my country, it’s been very special.

“Everyone here on the Asian Tour is super nice as well, and I got to play with some really nice guys and some good people, and then also the people running the tournament are doing an amazing job. So, nothing but positives here.”

It is the second time in five events of this season’s International Series that the 29-year-old has advanced to the final two rounds. (Supplied)

Attieh said he has been impressed by the sense of camaraderie on the Asian Tour, including the welcoming attitude of players and tournament officials alike.

“Everyone has been super supportive,” he said. “It’s a tight-knit community where once you’ve played with someone, they become a friend for life. That’s not something you find everywhere.”

Black Mountain marks the start of a demanding concluding run of six events in just eight weeks for the 10-event International Series. Despite the challenge this poses, Attieh remains happy with his progress so far and optimistic about his chances, especially after his tied-for-69th finish in Oman.

“It’s been great,” he said. “I’ve been playing some good golf so it’s nice finally to see all the hard work pay off. I have put in a lot of time, a lot of effort and finally I get to see some results.

“I think this week it definitely felt like that. At one stage I thought I could be even further up the leaderboard and I think it was just a few mental errors on the back nine that cost me a little bit. But I am happy, overall, with where the game is and I think that, moving forward, it’s going to give me a lot of confidence.”

When the Black Mountain Championship concludes on Sunday, Attieh’s focus will shift to next weekend and a second International Series event in Thailand, at the Thai Country Club from Oct. 24-27.


UAE’s Al-Qemzi struggles as Anderson claims powerboat F1 win in China to lead title race

UAE’s Al-Qemzi struggles as Anderson claims powerboat F1 win in China to lead title race
Updated 19 October 2024
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UAE’s Al-Qemzi struggles as Anderson claims powerboat F1 win in China to lead title race

UAE’s Al-Qemzi struggles as Anderson claims powerboat F1 win in China to lead title race
  • Team Abu Dhabi’s Thani Al-Qemzi, Sharjah Team’s Rusty Wyatt, Victory Team duo among casualties as championship heads for big finish in UAE

ZHENGZHOU, China: Sweden’s Jonas Andersson cruised to victory in Zhengzhou, China on Saturday to take the lead in the 2024 UIM F1H2O World Championship, setting up a tense climax in Sharjah in December.

Team Abu Dhabi’s Thani Al-Qemzi was among those who failed to finish an incident-paced race which saw Sharjah Team’s Rusty Wyatt lose his championship lead when halted by mechanical problems, while a collision between Victory Team drivers Erik Stark and Ahmad Al-Fahim took both of them out of the running.

Defending world champion Andersson now carries a three-point lead over Canadian rookie Wyatt into December’s final round in Sharjah, with Frenchman Peter Morin climbing to third in the standings following his second-place finish in Zhengzhou.

Al-Qemzi’s early retirement with technical issues completed a trail of misfortune in Zhengzhou for Team Abu Dhabi, for whom five-time F2 world champion Rashed Al-Qemzi (Thani’s cousin) was unable to start the Grand Prix following his problems in yesterday’s sprint race.

The team will now look to round off the season with a much-improved showing on Khalid Lagoon in Sharjah, where Thani Al-Qemzi made his F1H2O debut back in 2020, and where he finished third last year, one of his 45 podium finishes.

Andersson had already secured his second world title before the championship arrived in Sharjah last season. He went on to record his fourth successive race victory, and Wyatt will be aiming to prevent a repeat performance in two months’ time.

Sharjah Team’s Canadian rookie has been enjoying a brilliant debut season in the championship, with wins in Indonesia, Sardinia and most recently Shanghai.

He began to lose pace in the early stages in Zhengzhou, however, eventually coming to halt after 14 laps, but will look to quickly shrug off the setback in the hope of securing the drivers’ title for his team on home waters.

The penultimate round of the championship had barely got under way on Saturday when Stark and Al-Fahim collided, sending the two Victory boats out of the race, while the opening lap also saw American Brent Dillard barrel-roll to a halt.

China has been a happy hunting ground in the past for Team Abu Dhabi veteran Thani Al-Qemzi, with two of his 10 race wins arriving there, but his 157th career Grand Prix was brought to a halt after just two laps.

After securing his 13th pole position, followed quickly by victory in the sprint race on Friday, Andersson looked fully in control again on Saturday as he recorded his 15th Grand Prix win, with almost 10 seconds to spare over Morin. Finland’s two-time world champion Sami Selio took third place.


Spurs run riot to beat West Ham

Spurs run riot to beat West Ham
Updated 19 October 2024
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Spurs run riot to beat West Ham

Spurs run riot to beat West Ham
  • A third win in four Premier League games lifted Ange Postecoglou’s men to sixth in the table ahead of the later kick-offs but heaps the pressure on new West Ham coach Julen Lopetegui
  • Victory for Spurs comes after they blew a 2-0 lead in a 3-2 defeat at Brighton in their final league game before the international break

LONDON: Tottenham roared back from behind to beat West Ham 4-1 on Saturday, overrunning their London rivals in the second half to ease the pain of their recent collapse against Brighton.
A third win in four Premier League games lifted Ange Postecoglou’s men to sixth in the table ahead of the later kick-offs but heaps the pressure on new West Ham coach Julen Lopetegui.
Victory for Spurs comes after they blew a 2-0 lead in a 3-2 defeat at Brighton in their final league game before the international break.
The teams were level at half-time at the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium after Mohammed Kudus’s opener against the run of play was canceled out by the impressive Dejan Kulusevski.
But the match changed complexion in a frantic spell early in the second half when Yves Bissouma, an own goal from Alphonse Areola and a fourth from Son Heung-min took the game away from West Ham.
Tottenham were in control of the match early on and in-form Brennan Johnson flashed a shot narrowly wide on six minutes.
But West Ham played their part in an absorbingly open contest, giving their hosts a scare when Jarrod Bowen surged down the right and cut back to Kudus, whose stinging shot was palmed away by Guglielmo Vicario.
Tottenham captain Son went close shortly afterwards after creating space for himself but it was the visitors who broke the deadlock, making their opponents pay for not learning their lessons.
Kudus found the net for the second successive game in the 18th minute following more good work down the right by Bowen, whose shot deflected into the path of the Ghana international.
Johnson should have equalized shortly before the half-hour mark but he mistimed his header from close range, with the ball coming off his shoulder.
As Tottenham continued to press, Pedro Porro unleashed a shot from range, which took a wicked deflection but West Ham goalkeeper Areola reacted sharply to keep it out.
But Spurs got the equalizer they deserved about 10 minutes from half time.
West Ham lost the ball while on the attack and James Maddison surged forward to feed Kulusevski, whose shot came off the goalkeeper’s hand and the inside of both posts.
A measure of Tottenham’s dominance during the first half was that they won 12 corners to two for West Ham.
Postecoglou replaced Maddison with Pape Sarr at half-time in a tactical switch and Tottenham were quickly in charge.
Son played a lovely pass with the outside of his right foot to find Destiny Udogie, whose calm cut-back was met by Bissouma, who stroked the ball home in the 52nd minute.
Lopetegui prepared to make a triple change but did not have time before an own goal from Areola following a mix-up in the penalty area made the score 3-1 three minutes later.
South Korean international Son extended Tottenham’s lead when Sarr sent him clear and he beat the defender before squeezing his shot past Areola.
Kudus was shown a straight red in the final minutes after a VAR check following a melee, compounding a bad day for the visitors, who have just two wins from eight Premier League matches this season.


Gavi back from long-term injury for Barca: Flick

Gavi back from long-term injury for Barca: Flick
Updated 19 October 2024
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Gavi back from long-term injury for Barca: Flick

Gavi back from long-term injury for Barca: Flick
  • The 20-year-old has been absent since suffering a severe knee injury playing for Spain in November 2023
  • “For Gavi it’s the next step, it’s an important step, all the coaches, the whole club are happy, that is the next step, and he is on the bench,” Flick told a news conference

BARCELONA: Barcelona midfielder Gavi will be part of the La Liga leaders’ squad to face Sevilla this weekend after a long injury lay-off, coach Hansi Flick confirmed Saturday.
The 20-year-old has been absent since suffering a severe knee injury playing for Spain in November 2023, missing his country’s Euro 2024 triumph this summer.
“For Gavi it’s the next step, it’s an important step, all the coaches, the whole club are happy, that’s is the next step, and he is on the bench,” Flick told a news conference.
The tenacious midfielder burst into Barcelona’s first team in the 2021-22 season and became Spain’s youngest ever player at 17, but was soon usurped by team-mate Lamine Yamal.
Barcelona will also be boosted by the return of Dani Olmo and Fermin Lopez after their recent injuries, while Flick confirmed teenage star Yamal is fit after a minor hamstring issue.
“The rest and the treatments for him were really good, so thank you to the national team,” said Flick. “He is ready to play.”
Flick said Dutch midfielder Frenkie de Jong, who also recently made his comeback from an ankle injury, felt discomfort in training and was a doubt for the game on Sunday at the club’s temporary Olympic stadium home.
Barcelona still have several players out injured including Ronald Araujo, Ferran Torres and Andreas Christensen.


‘Sky’s the limit’ for Saudi Arabia as Riyadh prepares for PFL’s ‘Battle of the Giants’

‘Sky’s the limit’ for Saudi Arabia as Riyadh prepares for PFL’s ‘Battle of the Giants’
Updated 19 October 2024
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‘Sky’s the limit’ for Saudi Arabia as Riyadh prepares for PFL’s ‘Battle of the Giants’

‘Sky’s the limit’ for Saudi Arabia as Riyadh prepares for PFL’s ‘Battle of the Giants’
  • Fighters share their thoughts ahead of Saturday event featuring Francis Ngannou v Renan Ferreira and Cris Cyborg v Larissa Pacheco

RIYADH: PFL’s “Battle of the Giants: Brace For Impact” takes place in Riyadh on Saturday, headlined by Francis Ngannou fighting Renan Ferreira for the heavyweight world title, and Cris Cyborg versus Larissa Pacheco in the women’s featherweight world title fight.

Other fights on the card at the Mayadeen on Saturday night include the middleweight fight between Johnny Eblen and Fabian Edwards, the featherweight fight between Husein Kadimagomaev and Zafar Mohsen, and the lightweight clash between AJ McKee and Paul Hughes. The preliminary card also features the featherweight fight between Ibragim Ibragimov and Nacho Campos and the bout between Tariq Ismail and Taha Bendaoud.

Some of the fighters sat down with the media to speak about the big fight night in Riyadh on Saturday. Here are some of their thoughts:

Paul Hughes (Ireland)

“As a youngster growing up in Ireland, I obviously looked up to Conor McGregor. Nobody from Ireland had ever made it before on the world stage of MMA and he came and completely took it over and changed it. How could I not take inspiration from that? I hope he comes back victorious.

“I don’t have too much of a relationship with Conor. I think most people would have seen my interaction with him after my Bellator debut in Dublin when he was down cage side and I thanked him after my fight for inspiring me. I had dinner one time with him at the Black Forge and that was cool, that was a real full circle moment for me. He’s always been supportive, it’s all good.”

Johnny Eblen (US)

“Honestly, I don’t know what he thinks. I don’t really care. I know what I’m doing in the gym and I’m training with the best guys in the world. I travel gyms and train with other guys who have fought for other titles and I’m truly trying to evolve every single day. I don’t care what other people think or what they’re trying to do. I’ll dig deep until I die. That’s the only mode I know.”

AJ McKee (US), wearing a traditional Saudi thobe 

“It’s part of the culture and obviously I want to respect the culture. And I also have a struggle picking out outfits. So, it’s way easier, I don’t have to worry about what I’m pick out, and it’s comfortable.

“I think Riyadh can become the fight capital of the world. I think if you look at the history of the fights in Riyadh they have promoted and put on, they have all been the biggest cards — from boxing to MMA. If Saudi Arabia continues on that journey, then the sky’s the limit.”

Fabian Edwards (Jamaica/UK)

“I feel like the last fight I beat him. It wasn’t any errors, or he was outclassing me. I don’t hate him. I’ve matured over the past year. I feel in my younger days I was like ‘oh, I need to hate him’ but I don’t. Regardless, my job is a fighter and I need to go in there and try and break his face. It sounds violent but that’s the sport we’re in and on Saturday night I’ll go in there and try and break his face.”

Tariq Ismail (Sudan)

“When it comes to me being a part of this event, I think it goes both ways: the event is very lucky to have a fighter like me and I’m very lucky to be a part of such a big platform in Saudi Arabia. The training camp for this fight has been absolutely phenomenal. I had a training camp out in Thailand at a very credible gym, one of the best gyms in the world. You’re going to see balance between my striking routes and my grappling routes and it’s going to be an incredible performance for people tuning in.”

Zafar Mohsen (Germany/Afghanistan)

“I’m focused, prepared and ready to fight — this is a battle that will show who’s truly ready for the top. I’m fully prepared to step into the cage — this is a highly anticipated featherweight clash. My opponent is a dangerous training partner of Khamzat Chimaev and he will be standing across from me, but I am prepared. This is a great stage to show my talent.”

Taha Bendaoud (Morocco)

“It’s always been my passion. I’ve been doing martial arts since I was three years old. I have competed in Muay Thai and jiu jitsu since I was a little kid. For sure I didn’t have as much experience this past year as I had some problems that happened this past year, but MMA has been life changing for me. MMA has given me life. I’m just going to go in there on Saturday and bang. Nothing is going to hold me back. I’m not going back until I get the win. I love Riyadh. It has always been a dream of mine to fight in Saudi Arabia. I feel the energy and calmness of being here. It’s very special.”