‘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’
AJ McKee, wearing a traditional Saudi thobe, speaking at PFL media day ahead of Battle of the Giants in Riyadh. (PFL)
Short Url
Updated 19 October 2024
Follow

‘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.”


Siraj’s 4-17 helps Gujarat to hat-trick of IPL wins

Siraj’s 4-17 helps Gujarat to hat-trick of IPL wins
Updated 06 April 2025
Follow

Siraj’s 4-17 helps Gujarat to hat-trick of IPL wins

Siraj’s 4-17 helps Gujarat to hat-trick of IPL wins
  • Hyderabad-born Siraj kept up his bowling form in the T20 tournament this season with nine wickets in four matches and kept down hosts Hyderabad to 152-8

HYDERABAD, India: Pace bowler Mohammed Siraj returned figures of 4-17 to set up a third straight IPL win for Gujarat Titans as they hammered Sunrisers Hyderabad by seven wickets on Sunday.
Hyderabad-born Siraj kept up his bowling form in the T20 tournament this season with nine wickets in four matches and kept down hosts Hyderabad to 152-8.
Skipper Shubman Gill hit an unbeaten 61 as Gujarat, champions in their debut season in 2022, overhauled the total with 20 balls to spare for their third victory in four matches.
Hyderabad, who lost the IPL final to Kolkata Knight Riders last year, remain at the bottom of the 10-team table with four successive defeats from five outings.
Hyderabad skipper Pat Cummins struck early to dent Gujarat’s chase when he had Jos Buttler out for a duck after fellow quick Mohammed Shami had removed opener Sai Sudharsan.
Gill and number four Washington Sundar, a left-hand batter who smashed 49 off 29 balls, put the chase on track in their stand of 90 after Gujarat slipped to 16-2.
Shami denied Sundar his fifty with Aniket Verma taking a good catch in the deep, a decision that left the batsman and the Gujarat camp disappointed.
Impact substitute Sherfane Rutherford, a West Indian left-hander, kept up the charge with a flurry of boundaries including four in a row off Abhishek’s left-arm spin to ease into the chase.
Rutherford smashed 35 off 16 balls laced with six fours and one six. Gill anchored the chase in his 43-ball knock and hit the winning run.
Siraj remained hero as he removed openers Travis Head, for eight in the first over, and then another left-hander Abhishek Sharma, for 18, to hurt Hyderabad.
Prasidh Krishna took down left-hander Ishan Kishan for 17 before Sai Kishore took charge with his left-arm spin to rattle the opposition middle-order.
Kishore sent back Heinrich Klaasen, for 27, and Nitish Reddy, for 31, as Hyderabad wobbled and Siraj came back with two wickets with the old ball in his final over.
Cummins smashed 22 off nine balls in a late blitz that got his team 17 runs from the 20th over off veteran pace bowler Ishant Sharma, who leaked 53 of his four.


No ‘killer instinct’ as Man Utd, Man City play out derby stalemate

No ‘killer instinct’ as Man Utd, Man City play out derby stalemate
Updated 06 April 2025
Follow

No ‘killer instinct’ as Man Utd, Man City play out derby stalemate

No ‘killer instinct’ as Man Utd, Man City play out derby stalemate
  • City’s hopes of Champions League qualification remain in the balance
  • A point leaves United languishing down in 13th

MANCHESTER: Manchester United boss Ruben Amorim said his side must improve “everywhere” after a dismal derby against Manchester City ended 0-0 on Sunday.
City’s hopes of Champions League qualification remain in the balance as they remain fifth in the Premier League, which should be enough to reach next season’s Champions League.
However, Pep Guardiola’s men are just two points above Newcastle, who have two games in hand on City.
A point leaves United languishing down in 13th, but they had the better of a game limited in chances as they missed out on a first league double over City since 2019/20.
“We have so many aspects to improve. Everywhere we need to improve in every aspect: build up, transition, decisions in the final third,” said Amorim.
“Every player can improve, they are here because they showed something at other clubs. They have the quality, but we are still a team that plays on transition, we need to spend more time in final third to have more opportunities.”
Never in the Premier League era have neither City or United finished in the top four but that record is under severe threat in the coming months.
A contest devoid of quality, intensity or fight summed up a dreadful season for both sides of the Manchester divide.
After a record four consecutive league titles, City’s form has fallen off a cliff to leave them at risk of not making the top four for the first time since 2009/10.
United’s only chance of Champions League qualification is by winning the Europa League as they are set for their worst ever Premier League finish.
The Red Devils have shown flashes of improvement this week but also failed to score in their 1-0 defeat at Nottingham Forest on Tuesday to underline their problem in front of goal.
“We just need to have a bit more of a killer instinct,” said United captain Bruno Fernandes. “In the first half we had to many touches when we just needed one. We were patient, very organized but the killer instinct was missing today.”
Kevin De Bruyne started just days after announcing this will be his final season at City.
But the Belgian’s performance was the latest example that he is now a shadow of the figure Guardiola said will be remembered as one of the Premier League’s all-time greats.
City had the majority of the ball, but United were the more threatening side on the counter-attack in a pedestrian first half.
“We were not good enough to punish them or hurt them a little bit more than what happened,” said Guardiola. “We take the point. It would be better to win but still we are there.”
Phil Foden had the game’s best chance just seconds after half-time, but fluffed his lines with only Andre Onana to beat.
The spectacle did marginally improve after the break as Omar Marmoush’s powerful effort from a corner stung the palms of Onana.
Joshua Zirkzee and Mason Mount’s introduction off the bench added more thrust to the United attack in the final 20 minutes.
Both had a chance to win it when Zirkzee’s shot was clawed away by Ederson and Rico Lewis did well to get in the way of Mount’s follow-up effort.
There were smiles during a warm embrace between Guardiola and Amorim at full-time but those pleasantries disguised the fact that neither man can be happy with the state of their sides after a disappointing campaign.


Verstappen wins in Suzuka to close contest gap on Norris

Verstappen wins in Suzuka to close contest gap on Norris
Updated 06 April 2025
Follow

Verstappen wins in Suzuka to close contest gap on Norris

Verstappen wins in Suzuka to close contest gap on Norris
  • The win on a damp but drying track at Suzuka was Verstappen’s fourth straight victory in Japan

SUZUKA: Four-time world champion Max Verstappen led from pole to checkered flag to win the Japanese Grand Prix on Sunday, his first victory of the 2025 season, with McLaren’s Lando Norris second.

The Dutch Red Bull driver crossed the finish line almost 1.5 seconds in front of Briton Norris, who held off his McLaren teammate Oscar Piastri of Australia in third.

The win on a damp but drying track at Suzuka was Verstappen’s fourth straight victory in Japan and closed the gap on Norris at the top of the drivers’ championship to one point.

Norris now has 62 points after three races, with Verstappen on 61 and Piastri third on 49.

“It was tough. The McLarens were pushing me very hard,” said Verstappen.

“It was a lot of fun but not easy pushing the tires. I am incredibly happy.

“Starting on pole made it possible to win.”

Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc finished fourth ahead of the Mercedes pair of George Russell and Kimi Antonelli.

Ferrari’s Lewis Hamilton was seventh, with RB’s Isack Hadjar next ahead of Williams’ Alex Albon and Haas’s Oliver Bearman.

Yuki Tsunoda finished 12th in his first race for Red Bull since replacing Liam Lawson, having started from 14th on the grid in his home grand prix. Lawson was 17th for RB.

Norris said the race was won and lost in qualifying, where Verstappen pulled off a lap for the ages to claim his first pole of the season with a new lap record.

“Max drove a good race today, made no mistakes,” said Norris, who started from second on the grid.

“A flat-out race from start to finish, so it was tough but there was nothing we could get Max on.”

Verstappen and Norris were involved in a flashpoint midway through the race as the two front-runners emerged from
a pit stop.

Norris drew alongside Verstappen but the Dutchman refused to budge and Norris was forced onto the grass before sliding back onto the track.

Stewards reviewed the incident and decided not to investigate further and Norris admitted later it was just part of racing.

“Max is the last guy I expect to give me any space, in a good way, in a racing way,” he said.

Verstappen has struggled to get to grips with his Red Bull this season, finishing second in Australia and fourth in China.

But he set a stunning pole lap and Red Bull team principal Christian Horner hailed the way Verstappen has kept the team in the title race.

“There’s no better tonic for motivation than winning,” said Horner.

“Verstappen is like Mr. Motivator. It was a flat-out race, there was no tire saving.

“For us all priority is on the drivers’ championship, for us the constructors’ will be harder.”

McLaren’s double podium extended their lead in the constructors’ title race to 36 points over Mercedes. McLaren have 111 points, Mercedes are second on 75 with Red Bull third on 61, all scored by Verstappen.

Eighteen-year-old rookie Antonelli briefly took the mid-race lead while Verstappen and Norris were in the pits, to become Formula One’s youngest-ever race leader.

Verstappen, back in the lead after Antonelli’s stop, was given the green light to push until the end of the race.

Piastri told his team “I have the pace to get Max” but Norris would not cede second and Verstappen could not be caught.


Fulham end Liverpool unbeaten league run to delay title party

Fulham end Liverpool unbeaten league run to delay title party
Updated 06 April 2025
Follow

Fulham end Liverpool unbeaten league run to delay title party

Fulham end Liverpool unbeaten league run to delay title party
  • Arne Slot’s men were unbeaten in 26 league games and looked set to take another step toward the title
  • Liverpool still enjoy an 11-point lead at the top with seven games remaining

LONDON: Liverpool slumped to just their second Premier League defeat of the season as Fulham struck three times in 14 first-half minutes to boost their own European ambitions with a 3-2 win on Sunday.
Arsenal’s 1-1 draw at Everton on Saturday left Liverpool needing just 11 points from their final eight games to secure a record-equalling 20th English top-flight title.
Arne Slot’s men were unbeaten in 26 league games and looked set to take another step toward the title when Alexis Mac Allister’s stunning strike opened the scoring.
But poor defending allowed Ryan Sessegnon, Alex Iwobi and Rodrigo Muniz to turn the game around for Fulham.
Liverpool still enjoy an 11-point lead at the top with seven games remaining.
Victory lifts Fulham to eighth and within three points of the top five, which is almost certain to be enough for a place in next season’s Champions League.
Despite a stellar first season under Slot, Liverpool have shown signs of slowing down in recent weeks and came off the rails in west London.
After a Champions League exit to Paris Saint-Germain and League Cup final defeat to Newcastle, Liverpool edged out Everton 1-0 in a feisty Merseyside derby on Wednesday to get back to winning ways.
But the Reds appear to be running out of steam after challenging in four competitions for most of the season.
Mac Allister’s blistering long range strike into the top corner after 14 minutes gave Liverpool the dream start.
The Reds wilted in the Craven Cottage sunshine, with a series of individual errors leading to Fulham’s three quickfire goals.
Curtis Jones, deputising out of position at right-back, failed to control Andreas Pereira’s cross and the ball fell kindly for Sessegnon to fire home his third goal in five games.
Andy Robertson then had a nightmare for Fulham’s second.
The Scotland captain gave away possession deep in Liverpool territory, then could only head an attempted clearance into the path of Iwobi, whose shot deflected in off Robertson.
The normally unflappable Virgil van Dijk was at fault for the third as Muniz outmuscled the Dutchman and produced a brilliant low finish under Caoimhin Kelleher.
Diogo Jota was denied by Bernd Leno early in the second half with a big chance to reduce Liverpool’s deficit.
It was not until Slot turned to his bench to introduce Luis Diaz, Connor Bradley and Harvey Elliott that the visitors sparked into life.
Mohamed Salah has not scored in his last four league games and wasted a big chance to break that drought when he turned Diaz’s inviting cross over.
Bradley teed up Diaz to find the bottom corner and set up a grandstand finish 18 minutes from time.
Elliott hit the bar against his former club as Liverpool pushed for an equalizer.
Fulham, though, stayed strong to see out six minutes of added time and delay Liverpool’s title celebrations.


Chennai coach Fleming struggles to find the balance after third straight loss

Chennai coach Fleming struggles to find the balance after third straight loss
Updated 06 April 2025
Follow

Chennai coach Fleming struggles to find the balance after third straight loss

Chennai coach Fleming struggles to find the balance after third straight loss
  • Chennai’s top order collapsed as they lost three wickets in the first six overs after Delhi Capitals had posted 183-6 on Saturday

Chennai Super Kings coach Stephen Fleming said they have yet to get the balance right at the top of the order after they slipped to a third straight loss in the Indian Premier League while chasing after poor starts in the powerplay.
Chennai’s top order collapsed as they lost three wickets in the first six overs after Delhi Capitals had posted 183-6 on Saturday.
An unbeaten 84-run partnership between Vijay Shankar (69 off 54) and Mahendra Singh Dhoni (30 off 26) for the sixth wicket was not enough to get the hosts over the line as Delhi won by 25 runs.
The defeat mirrored Chennai’s previous two matches, where they also scored less than eight runs per over in the powerplay.
Fleming told reporters that finding the balance was a “conundrum.”
“To get more solidity at the top we have to remove, obviously, an overseas player, so we’re grappling just with the combination that we need,” Fleming said.
IPL rules allow only four overseas players in the playing 11.
Chennai openers Rachin Ravindra and Devon Conway are both overseas players, while overseas bowlers Noor Ahmad and Matheesha Pathirana are among their top-three wicket-takers this season, leaving Fleming with a difficult choice.
Fleming also said Chennai had to improve during powerplays.
“We felt that our batting in the powerplays has been below par and going too hard was probably not the way, particularly on our wicket, which is a little bit tricky,” he said.
“So we’re looking just to settle that with guys that have been in good form and have done it before, so that’s the theory behind that and that’s what we’ll possibly continue with.”