Riyadh is ‘fitting home’  for Esports World Cup, says Prince Faisal

Riyadh is ‘fitting home’  for Esports World Cup, says Prince Faisal
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Updated 10 July 2024
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Riyadh is ‘fitting home’  for Esports World Cup, says Prince Faisal

Riyadh is ‘fitting home’  for Esports World Cup, says Prince Faisal

RIYADH: At the official launch press conference of the Esports World Cup on Tuesday, July 2, I described it as “a defining day in esports history.”

As the inaugural event got underway over the past week, we have witnessed not just the players’ exceptional performances but also the adoring, insatiable reception of fans attending both in person and online. All of it has reiterated my belief that the launch of the Esports World Cup was truly a defining day.

Defining because Riyadh is a fitting home for the Esports World Cup, as Saudi Arabia pursues its ambitions of becoming a global hub for esports and gaming.

Defining because the world has fully woken up to the immense potential that this region — with Saudi Arabia very much at the forefront — offers the gaming and esports industry.

And defining because over the past few days I have imagined how my younger self would have felt about being given the opportunity to attend something as prestigious as the Esports World Cup in his home country. The youngsters of today do not have to imagine. It is a reality. Anything they want to do in the field of gaming and esports — professional player, coach, owner, broadcaster, lawyer, anything — is possible. There is an employment path available for any passionate gamer that wishes to pursue a career in the industry.

What child doesn’t grow up wanting to make their passion their career? I certainly did. In Saudi Arabia, now everyone can. And that’s a very powerful thing and a vital indication of not just progression but us building on the ambitions of the National Gaming and Esports Strategy.

The strategy was unveiled two years ago by Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman — marking the beginning of a new era where the Kingdom becomes a global hub for the gaming industry by 2030.

Importantly, the National Gaming and Esports Strategy also serves Saudi Vision 2030 objectives, which aim to diversify Saudi Arabia’s economy, create new job opportunities in different industries and provide world-class entertainment.

The three main objectives of the strategy are: Enhancing quality of life by improving players’ experience, providing new entertainment opportunities, and achieving an economic impact by contributing about SR50 billion — roughly $13 billion — to GDP.

Let’s break that down. That means the creation of 39,000 new job opportunities by 2030. It means the advancement of a global industry and other direct and indirectly related industries. And it means an aim to produce more than 30 competitive games in the Kingdom’s studios — and become one of the top three countries containing the highest number of professional esports players.

With 67 percent of Saudi Arabia’s population identifying as gamers, it gives us added drive to work tirelessly with our partners around the world to make the world of gaming even bigger and better. Quite simply, gamers in Saudi Arabia deserve it.

The Esports World Cup is the next step in that essential journey. Running for eight weeks until Aug. 25 at Boulevard Riyadh City, it is a global celebration of competitive excellence and esports fandom.

What makes it so magnificent for gamers is that it features a unique cross-game structure pitting the world’s top clubs and athletes against one another across 22 global competitions in 21 leading games. 

With a $60 million prize pool — the largest in esports history — it truly is a competition befitting the name Esports World Cup. After all, the World Cup is the World Cup.

But more than that, the Esports World Cup defines how we want to be seen by the gaming world — it defines our status as a nation where esports is a serious business, with abundant, fulfilling and essential employment opportunities. It defines our ambition for gaming and esports to become synonymous with Saudi Arabia across the globe. And it defines my ambition to remember July 2, 2024 in the years to come as a day pivotal in making all of that happen.


Frustrated Pakistan pacer Naseem Shah criticizes placid Rawalpindi pitch 

Frustrated Pakistan pacer Naseem Shah criticizes placid Rawalpindi pitch 
Updated 25 August 2024
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Frustrated Pakistan pacer Naseem Shah criticizes placid Rawalpindi pitch 

Frustrated Pakistan pacer Naseem Shah criticizes placid Rawalpindi pitch 
  • Pakistan and Bangladesh both amass over 1,000 runs in four days on a pitch that offered little to bowlers
  • Shah urges Pakistan to prepare pitches that produce results to extract “home advantage” against oppositions 

ISLAMABAD: Pakistani fast bowler Naseem Shah this week criticized the batter-friendly Rawalpindi pitch during the first Test match against Bangladesh after the visitors piled on plenty of runs on a track that offered little turn or bounce for bowlers. 

Batting first, Pakistan piled on 448-6 before declaring their innings and offering Bangladesh to bat on the Pindi surface. However, the visitors also amassed runs, scoring an impressive 565 runs before getting bowled out. 

Pakistan’s venues have become notorious for flat decks that fail to produce results from matches. In March 2022, only 14 wickets fell over five days in a Rawalpindi Test match against Australia when then-PCB chairman Ramiz Raja admitted to neutering a pitch that would go on to be rated below average by the International Cricket Council (ICC). 

“We need to be honest,” Shah said during a press conference after returning figures of 3-93. “It’s been too many series where we get these types of pitches. The groundstaff tried their best to make this pitch good for bowling, but perhaps because of the heat and sunshine there isn’t much help from the pitch.”

The right-arm pacer said Pakistan needed to think how it can extract home advantage and results from such games. 

“The kind of weather we have right now, it’s extremely hot, and we didn’t get the kind of help from the surface as a bowling unit as we expected,” Shah said. 

He said Pakistan needed to prepare spin-friendly tracks if it could not produce pitches that favored pace. 

“However you do it, you need to use home advantage,” he said. “People come to enjoy Test cricket in this heat, so you need to entertain them.”

 The South Asian country, traditionally known for producing lethal fast bowlers, hasn’t won a single Test match at home since 2021. 


Patrice Evra: ‘E-sports can be 10 times bigger than football’

Patrice Evra: ‘E-sports can be 10 times bigger than football’
Updated 24 August 2024
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Patrice Evra: ‘E-sports can be 10 times bigger than football’

Patrice Evra: ‘E-sports can be 10 times bigger than football’
  • Ex-Manchester United star: ‘This generation want gaming. It can be bigger than football 100%’
  • Final day of New Global Sport Conference takes place at Four Seasons Hotel Riyadh on Sunday

RIYADH: Electronic sports can be “10 times bigger than football,” former Manchester United player Patrice Evra said at the New Global Sport Conference 2024 on Saturday.
Evra, 43, a UEFA Champions League and five-time Premier League winner with Manchester United, spoke as a panelist at the NGSC, a two-day conference being held at the Four Seasons Hotel Riyadh.
The former left-back spoke at a session called “Becoming a Modern Sports Hero — Sports, Gaming and the Relentless Pursuit of Excellence” alongside Gabriel “FalleN” Toledo, the Brazilian national who is a star Counter-Strike II player for FURIA Esports.
The session explored how modern-day sports stars have redefined excellence in their respective fields, and parallels between traditional sports and competitive gaming, delving into the mindset, dedication and strategies that propel each to the pinnacle of their careers.
Speaking on the sidelines of the NGSC, Evra said: “Without hesitation, e-sports can be bigger than football — e-sports can be 10 times bigger than football.
“This is the new generation. Don’t forget, old school, our parents didn’t let us play (gaming), so we couldn’t do it. This generation want gaming. It can be bigger than football 100 percent.
“You can see the fans in the arenas where all these gaming competitions happen, like at the Esports World Cup in Riyadh … It’s serious. Kids have time to play and love it.
“The professionals train eight hours per day; footballers train two, maximum three hours per day. It’s going to be so big.”
FalleN, 33, told the conference: “I started playing when I was a kid. I was part of the first generation who knew what e-sports could be. I’m very happy I pursued my dreams and very happy to be here now.”
The second edition of the NGSC, themed “The Future of Fandom,” is hosting more than 60 global speakers, 200 CEOs and 1,200 attendees.


Lessons in resilience from football legend Patrice Evra and esports star FalleN

Lessons in resilience from football legend Patrice Evra and esports star FalleN
Updated 24 August 2024
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Lessons in resilience from football legend Patrice Evra and esports star FalleN

Lessons in resilience from football legend Patrice Evra and esports star FalleN
  • The message of the two stars to the next generation of athletes and gamers included being passionate about life

RIYADH: A footballing icon and esports star have revealed the untold truths of maintaining excellence in traditional and modern sports at the New Global Sports Conference in Riyadh.

In a discussion on the “Becoming a Modern Day Sports Hero” panel, former Manchester United star Patrice Evra and Counter-Strike titan Gabriel “FalleN” Toledo shared their personal struggles and triumphs.

While reaching the pinnacle of success may be challenging, staying at the top demands unmatched resilience, discipline and an unwavering commitment to personal and collective growth, they said.

“The key words are resilience and discipline,” said Evra, who also played for the French national team for more than a decade. “It’s easy to reach the top of the pyramid, but to stay at the top, that’s when it’s difficult.”

Toledo, of Brazil’s FURIA Esports, discussed the parallels between traditional sports and esports with Evra. The two stars highlighted the personal and external motivators that led them to decorated careers.

The Brazilian said that for the 10 ten years of his career, his parents were against the idea of their son going into professional gaming. Toledo admitted he had doubts and believed that “gaming wasn’t a reality at the time.” But his hobby soon began to feel like a real opportunity, though no one else could see it at the time.

Starting out in Brazil, Toledo began by watching established European gaming competitions and professional players. “Then I was able to start competing against them,” he said. “Then I was able to be part of the best team in the world for two years in a row.”

When asked how players maintain the physical and mental requirements of professional sport, both stars admitted to suffering a mental toll due to the immense pressure of outperforming themselves every single day.

However, Evra added: “Being depressed when you play at the highest level is a luxury. You can’t afford that because you have too much responsibility, and too many people counting on you. You can’t let them down.”

The players also talked about the necessary sacrifices that go along with ambition — the dark side of success.

Evra told a short story about his son, Lenny, who, aged three, said that he hated Manchester United because “they took my dad away.”

For Toledo, there was a surprising physical toll in practicing Counter-Strike for hours on end. The Brazilian star has suffered recurring lower back issues due to sitting, and advised all young gamers to take physical fitness and ergonomics seriously.

He touched on the importance of etiquette as well, warning that gamers often forget they are talking to other people who have real reactions and emotions.

Toledo warned aspiring esports players to avoid “losing yourself in the ecstasy of gaming.”

The message of the two stars to the next generation of athletes and gamers included being passionate about life, dedicating all efforts to achieving the best possible outcomes for themselves and the people around them, pushing for the collective good as they strive for individual success, and, most importantly, forgetting about a plan B.

“I never fix a goal in my life,” Evra said. “Sometimes you don’t reach it, you get disappointed. So, I just push myself, push myself to be the best every single day.”

Evra added that at the beginning of his career, he made his first promise to his mother: “Mom, when I sign my first professional contract, I will buy you a house.”

That promise was kept when Evra went from a kid playing on the street to a decorated footballer.


Erling Haaland hits hat-trick as Manchester City put Ipswich to the sword

Erling Haaland hits hat-trick as Manchester City put Ipswich to the sword
Updated 24 August 2024
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Erling Haaland hits hat-trick as Manchester City put Ipswich to the sword

Erling Haaland hits hat-trick as Manchester City put Ipswich to the sword
  • Szmodics shot had just enough power to beat Ederson to register Ipswich’s first top-flight goal in 22 years for a shock opener
  • City bounced back and asserted dominance afterward

MANCHESTER: Erling Haaland struck a hat-trick as Manchester City bounced back from conceding a shock opening goal to beat newly-promoted Ipswich 4-1 on Saturday.
Sammie Szmodics had given the visitors a dream start at the Etihad, but order was quickly restored as City struck three times in four minutes through Haaland and Kevin De Bruyne.
The Norwegian then fired in from outside the box late on to complete his seventh Premier League hat-trick in just 68 games.
Victory takes City top of the table with a maximum six points from the opening two games of their title defense.
There was a mood of celebration before kick-off as City marked their fourth consecutive league title and welcomed back former captain Ilkay Gundogan, who took his place on the bench.
Yet, the champions were stunned with just seven minutes on the clock.
Ben Johnson’s pass split a static City defense and Szmodics shot had just enough power to beat Ederson to register Ipswich’s first top-flight goal in 22 years.
Kieran McKenna’s men have been given a baptism of fire by facing Liverpool and City in their opening two matches and the gap in quality between the Championship and Premier League quickly showed.
The lively Savinho won a penalty on his home debut, which was duly converted by Haaland to level.
Ipswich goalkeeper Arijanet Muric had a return to the Etihad to forget as he was then caught in possession by Savinho, who teed up De Bruyne to roll into an empty net.
Haaland beat Muric to a sumptuous De Bruyne ball over the top and stroked into the unguarded net.
De Bruyne smashed a shot from range off the crossbar as City threatened to run riot.
But to Ipswich’s credit they held out for over an hour before Haaland set the seal on another ruthless personal display and three points.


New Global Sports Conference brings ‘incredible assembly of leaders’ from gaming and sports, says Ralf Reichert

New Global Sports Conference brings ‘incredible assembly of leaders’ from gaming and sports, says Ralf Reichert
Updated 24 August 2024
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New Global Sports Conference brings ‘incredible assembly of leaders’ from gaming and sports, says Ralf Reichert

New Global Sports Conference brings ‘incredible assembly of leaders’ from gaming and sports, says Ralf Reichert
  • Esports World Cup Foundation CEO spoke to Arab News about the conference that concludes 8-week star-studded tournament

RIYADH: As the New Global Sports Conference takes place in Riyadh over the weekend, one man in particular will look back on the summer with immense pride.

Ralf Reichert, the CEO of the Esports World Cup Foundation, has just overseen a tournament of 22 competitions, across eight weeks, with prize money of $60 million on offer.

The theme of the second edition of the NGSC is “The Future of Fandom” and, appropriately for Reichert, the fan engagement at the Esports World Cup exceeded all expectations.

“I think every sport is as good as its fans are, if you really think about this,” Reichert told Arab News. “So, the fans are almost the result of the success of the sport. So, us bringing an incredible assembly of leaders from gaming, esports and sports together in one place, at a quality that has never happened anywhere in the world before, is a testament to the Esports World Cup and its draw, and its relevance already in the industry. But as well, it is an incredible opportunity to think about how these three industries can continue to foster and grow their collaboration.”

Reichert says it is important to appreciate the “additional” value that the Esports World Cup brings to the market.

“It’s not replacing anything, it’s not competing with anything,” he said. “It’s adding something to make esports and gaming, as a whole, bigger. And conferences are a unique opportunity to really collaborate and work together to try to design the future, to improve the future.”

As the Esports World Cup entered its final weekend, Reichert declared the organizers “incredibly happy” with how the event had gone.

“I think, first and foremost, the players and the clubs, the core of the sport, worked super well,” he said. “We have an amazing winner with Team Falcons — they truly deserve it. We have changed the lives of many of these players for the better, and gave them career opportunities they would have never had.

“The fans turned up for the tournament itself; we had full stadiums most of the time, we had an incredible experience on the festival. We had many, many viewership records broken, and, last but not least, the mainstream media and international coverage has been way beyond everything we ever expected.

“We knew that the Esports World Cup will make a difference for the sport and the public perception of video games and esports. But I think it’s much, much bigger and faster than we ever hoped for.”

The summer-long Esports World Cup saw a major upscale, in terms of length, prize money and number of competitions, over its predecessor, Gamers8.

“We designed it in a way that it can survive the eight weeks and we made sure that we treat every week like it’s the last week,” said Reichert. “We really tried to add clear stories, clear highlights from the sport and beyond the sport. That included many visits of international celebrities, specifically from the football world, which just shows how close these are together, how big the cultural impact of video games is these days, because all of these international sports stars are younger than 30, Millennials, Gen Z almost.”

Among those who visited Boulevard Riyadh City were Al-Hilal and Brazil star Neymar, Liverpool’s Portuguese forward Diogo Jota and former Netherlands midfielder Wesley Sneijder.

“We know for a fact that all of them are gamers,” Reichert said. “It shows how this is a cultural place for relevant athletes to meet from within the sport segment and then beyond it. It gives us great and very authentic content, which it seems like the world enjoyed and wanted to take part in.

“That’s what we tried to give to the people of Riyadh and to the world.”

With 22 tournaments taking place across the summer-long tournament, the Esports World Cup provided opportunities for male and female gamers in greater numbers than ever before.

“If we look at what we tried to create in terms of the environment, the number one priority was that the players come here, have a great time, have the environment to be at their best as an athlete, while at the same time, learn about the country and enjoy the hospitality,” said Reichert.

“They’re celebrities in their own regards. I have still to find any negative feedback from any of these athletes. It’s the opposite. I think, number one, we are clearly seen to be the tournament that takes best care of the players. And to a degree where we almost spoil them — and that’s a good thing, that’s our intent.

“Number two, a lot of them said that this was one of the best, if not the best tournament they ever attended in terms of coverage, and how it’s done and access as well, including the mainstream media coverage,” he added.

“And three, which is super important, we have the highest prize money that has ever been in esports, with $60 million. So, we could really change the lives of many of these players. There are players who have won more this summer than they have in their entire career before. We have many people who will go home and have a better life for their family. And that is a very, very good feeling.”

Fan engagement, at Boulevard Riyadh City and online, has been one of the successes of the event, according to the 49-year-old German national.

“I think that a sport creates moments that, you know, almost no other sort of entertainment can do, because you’re celebrating a moment with other people live in an event,” Reichert said. “This is the ultimate experience for any sport event, and it’s new to the Kingdom at that scale.

“So, to build this culture, to build this as the epicenter of esports, where we’re going to fill stadiums, full stadiums in the future, this is a super important milestone. We got it done with only 1,000 people at once in the venue this year, but that is still significantly bigger than anything else that ever happened in the region. So, we see this as an intermediate step to continue to grow the culture of fandom.”

Reichert said that the NGSC conference will be “super important” for the how sports will be consumed by fans in the future.

“The best games, the best players, part of the best clubs. But then the fans really complete the experience and the product. We built it and they came, and that makes us a full success.”

Reichert reserved special praise for Saudi Arabia’s Team Falcons, who claimed the Esports World Cup Club Championship.

“I think Team Falcons, from day one, they were favorites in the competition and specifically in the first two weeks, where they won two games. They outperformed the competition.

“The Esports World Cup Club Championship is a new format where it’s really about winning as many games as possible. Think about them like disciplines. Falcons basically went all in on this. They took a much higher risk. They doubled down on this competition.”

Reichert said that Team Falcons fielded 18 rosters throughout the 22 tournaments that were on offer, while the second team, Twisted Minds, and the third team, Fnatic, offered 13 and 10, respectively.

“I think it (the Falcons victory) means the world for the region,” he added. “It’s probably the first time that a Saudi sports team wins the competition at that scale. So, it is incredible for the sports.”

Reichert said that he is “incredibly excited” at the list of speakers taking part in the NGSC as well as some of star guests and athletes who will be present.

“Magnus Carlsen is a GOAT of Chess, FalleN is a GOAT of Counter-Strike, which is one of our most important games. We’ll have people from the Olympics speaking about the Olympic Esports Games. We’ll have many people from the sports sector, the CEO of the Saudi Olympic Committee, and many, many of the most important people from the game publisher scene, the people who create these games.”

The announcement of the Esports Olympics, to be held in Saudi Arabia in 2025, holds particular significance for Reichert and the organizers of the Esports World Cup.

“It couldn’t come at a better time,” he said. “It’s the summer of sports, almost. The Esports World Cup is on its way to be successfully culminated, and the Olympics, as the oldest and largest traditional sports competition, announcing that it will have an esports edition, is fantastic for everyone involved. It will be one of the key drivers in bringing even more fandom to the sport.”