Al-Jabalain’s Leo Lacroix targeting another King Cup upset against Al-Raed

Al-Jabalain’s Leo Lacroix targeting another King Cup upset against Al-Raed
Al-Jabalain’s Swiss defender Leo Lacroix insists the pressure is off him and his teammates when they travel to Buraidah. (X: @aljabalainFC)
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Updated 06 January 2025
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Al-Jabalain’s Leo Lacroix targeting another King Cup upset against Al-Raed

Al-Jabalain’s Leo Lacroix targeting another King Cup upset against Al-Raed
  • The first division team have already beaten Al-Fayha and Al-Ettifaq in the competition to reach Monday’s quarterfinal

LONDON: Only twice in the history of the King Cup has a club from outside the Saudi Pro League made it to the competition’s final, with Al-Riyadh in 1978 and Al-Taawoun in 1990 doing so but suffering defeat at the last hurdle.

This year, Saudi First Division team Al-Jabalain is the unlikely outfit aiming to follow in those footsteps. Having already beaten professional league opposition in the first two rounds — Al-Fayha and then Al-Ettifaq — Jorge Mendonca’s players now face Al-Raed in the quarterfinals on Monday.

Al-Jabalain, currently seventh in the first division table — but just four points off the automatic promotion places — is the final second-tier side left standing in the 2024-2025 King Cup. Despite being the overwhelming underdogs, Swiss defender Leo Lacroix — scorer of the opening goal against Ettifaq in the last 16 — insists the pressure is off him and his teammates when they travel to Buraidah.

“We won our last league game (1-0 against Al-Jandal) and the team is feeling very confident,” Lacroix told Arab News in an exclusive interview. “We can’t wait to play the game and we know that, like the last rounds, we don’t have any pressure because normally the pro league team needs to win.

“I think it’s history for the club already to play a King’s Cup quarterfinal; to reach the semifinal will be something very massive for the players and for Al-Jabalain.”

When they faced Steven Gerrard’s Al-Ettifaq in the last 16 back in October, few gave Jabalain any chance of victory. Although Demarai Gray, Karl Toko Ekambi and Jack Hendry did not feature, Ettifaq still had an 11 stacked with Vitinha, Alvaro Medran, Gigi Wijnaldum, Seko Fofana and Joao Costa, while striker Moussa Dembele came off the bench.

But a spirited performance at their Prince Abdulaziz bin Musaed Sports City Stadium saw the team from Hail — in the Kingdom’s northwest — cause a major King Cup upset. Lacroix, the former Basel and Hamburg center-back, set Jabalain on their way with the game’s opening goal, before second-half strikes from Kaka Mendes and Saad Al-Selouli secured the historic victory.

“I think nobody except us believed that it was possible to win the game,” Lacroix said. “But the team was focused and ready to play a big match. On a personal level I really enjoyed this challenge because when I was playing in Basel, Hamburg, every weekend you had a big team with a top striker and you must be 100 percent focused.

“Obviously you see Steven Gerrard on the side of the pitch and then players like Moussa Dembele, who I played against when I was at Saint-Etienne and he was at Lyon. I love playing against these big strikers.”

Lacroix will have his hands full again on Monday, with Karim El-Berkaoui likely to be leading Al-Raed’s line. The Morocco forward has netted five goals in seven Saudi Pro League games this season, including one against reigning champions Al-Hilal last time out in December.

But this is nothing new for Lacroix, who has been required to mark some of the game’s best forwards during his career. He has also faced Neymar and Edinson Cavani at PSG and, most memorably, legendary Manchester City marksman Sergio Aguero.

Two years after helping FC Sion to a pair of creditable Europa League draws with Liverpool, Lacroix was on loan at FC Basel when the Swiss champions faced City in the 2017-2018 UEFA Champions League last 16. He played both legs of the tie, with the first ending in a 4-0 humbling but the second seeing Basel claim an impressive 2-1 win at the Etihad Stadium.

“I always wanted to play in a Champions League game and this was an amazing experience,” Lacroix said. “Just to listen to the music before the game was a big dream. Then you are playing against only big players: Aguero, (Ilkay) Gundogan, (Leroy) Sane, (Raheem) Sterling, (Kevin) De Bruyne, Fernandinho, (Vincent) Kompany.

“Aguero was of course challenging. With strikers like him, if you give them 10 cm they can do something that you have never seen before and score. You have to try to live in their mind and anticipate what they want to do but it is not easy.

“I will remember forever playing this game against a team that I think was the best in the Champions League, even though they didn’t go on to win it that year.”

With his extensive European experience — and the fact he speaks six languages — it is no surprise that Lacroix has emerged as a leader both in the Al-Jabalain dressing room and on the pitch for his Portuguese coach Mendonca. It is a responsibility that the defender relishes.

“I’m always talking with everyone and I don’t like it if you see a group of Saudi players and then a group of foreign players,” Lacroix said. “Any good team needs to feel this sense that you are a community together. When you do this in football you can achieve great things.

“I have really enjoyed working with the Saudi players. Guys like (midfielders) Eyad Madani and Abdulaziz Majrashi, and our striker Fahad (Al-Juhani) who really has such a great mentality. There is also our winger Khalil (Al-Habsi) — a player I think can have a really big career in Saudi Arabia or even outside.

“I want to help them but of course I can learn from them too and we can find solutions together.”

Lacroix and his teammates will certainly need to be united if they are to cause another King Cup upset on Monday, though with Al-Raed currently sitting 12th in the Saudi Pro League table it feels somewhat achievable for Al-Jabalain.

The center-back thinks his team has nothing to lose and hopes that another positive result can also help ignite a successful league promotion challenge.

“The great thing about football is that you never can say ‘this team is going to win for sure,’” Lacroix said. “Anything can happen and I think Monday we go there to play the best we can to make another special day for this club.

“I’m very glad to be here and hope in five months we can speak about promotion. We have shown in the Cup that we can compete with these teams and of course this is the goal.

“I think we are in good shape and I hope we can see that the players fight to make something historic for the club against Al-Raed. I am sure that if we can qualify for the semifinal, the people and other clubs in Saudi Arabia will start to see Al-Jabalain with different eyes.”


Two-time defending champion Sabalenka is into the fourth round at the Australian Open

Two-time defending champion Sabalenka is into the fourth round at the Australian Open
Updated 35 sec ago
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Two-time defending champion Sabalenka is into the fourth round at the Australian Open

Two-time defending champion Sabalenka is into the fourth round at the Australian Open
  • It was Aryna Sabalenka’s eighth match victory in a row to start the season after winning the Brisbane International 10 days ago
MELBOURNE: It wasn’t often pretty, but two-time defending Australian Open champion Aryna Sabalenka extended a few impressive streaks on Friday while becoming one of the first players to advance to the fourth round of the year’s opening Grand Slam tournament.
In a tougher-than-expected match, Sabalenka beat Clara Tauson 7-6 (5), 6-4 in a poor early serving display by both players to open the sixth day of play on Rod Laver Arena. It was Sabalenka’s eighth match victory in a row to start the season after winning the Brisbane International 10 days ago, and her 17th win in a row at Melbourne Park.
As well, it’s been nearly three years – the 2022 French Open – that the top-ranked Sabalenka has failed to advance past the third round of any Grand Slam tournament in which she played.
Both players lost their first three service games, and it became seven service breaks in a row when Sabalenka lost her fourth service game at love. After Tauson fired an unreturnable backhand cross-court to set up break point, Sabalenka managed a wry smile.
Tauson finally held a service game to lead 5-3 and Sabalenka also won her service game to stay in the first set. But no surprise – the Danish player lost her service while serving for the first set to leave it at 5-5, eventually going to a tiebreaker which Sabalenka won despite leading 4-1, taking the opening set in 63 minutes.
“The conditions are really tough to serve, heavy conditions,” Sabalenka said. “It was really important to get all of those breaks back. It could have gone either way.”
In mostly routine men’s play, second-seeded Alexander Zverev beat Jacob Fearnley 6-3, 6-4, 6-4 and No. 3 Carlos Alcaraz defeated Nuno Borges 6-2, 6-4, 6-7 (3), 6-2. Earlier American Tommy Paul beat Roberto Carballes Baena 7-6 (0), 6-2, 6-0 to also advance to the fourth round.
Sabalanka broke Tauson’s serve in the third game of the second set and from there the odds were in Sabalenka’s favor – when Sabalenka has an early break in a set, she wins it 88 percent of the time. But she still needed a break after seven deuces in the ninth game to put her in control and served out the match – after saving two break points in the final game.
“That was a great battle, she played unbelievable tennis,” Sabalenka said. “I am super happy I was able to push myself. I told myself, ‘well girl, you are tough.’ So many times I thought I was done.”
In another early match Friday, Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova beat Laura Siegemund 6-1, 6-2 to also advance to the fourth round. Siegemund beat Olympic gold medalist Zheng Qinwen in the second round.
Also advancing Friday were 11th-seeded Paula Badosa, who beat Marta Kostyuk 6-4, 4-6, 6-3, and 18th-seeded Donna Vekic, who defeated 12th-seeded Diana Shnaider 7-6 (4), 6- (3), 7-5.. And 14th-seeded Mirra Andreeva beat Magdalena Frech 6-2, 1-6, 6-2.

Poor visibility delays toss in Pakistan-West Indies Test in Multan

Poor visibility delays toss in Pakistan-West Indies Test in Multan
Updated 17 January 2025
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Poor visibility delays toss in Pakistan-West Indies Test in Multan

Poor visibility delays toss in Pakistan-West Indies Test in Multan
  • Pakistan regularly suffers from winter smog which has dire health consequences
  • Air quality in Multan was ‘unhealthy for sensitive groups’ and set to rise during the day

MULTAN, Pakistan: Toss in the first Test between Pakistan and the West Indies in Multan on Friday was delayed because of poor visibility, as air quality monitors recorded high levels of pollution.

Pakistan regularly suffers from winter smog which has dire health consequences.

“The visibility has been affected due to fog so the toss has been delayed,” Pakistan Cricket Board said in a statement.

“Once the visibility improves the two umpires will inspect the conditions.”

A pitch inspection was due at 9:30 am (0430 GMT).

The air quality in Multan was “unhealthy for sensitive groups” and set to rise throughout the day, according to monitoring site IQAir.

The two-match Test series is part of the World Test Championship’s third cycle (2023-2025) in which Pakistan are eighth and the West Indies ninth and last.

The second Test starts from January 25, also in Multan.


Amad Diallo scores late 12-minute hat trick to rescue Man United in 3-1 win over Southampton

Amad Diallo scores late 12-minute hat trick to rescue Man United in 3-1 win over Southampton
Updated 17 January 2025
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Amad Diallo scores late 12-minute hat trick to rescue Man United in 3-1 win over Southampton

Amad Diallo scores late 12-minute hat trick to rescue Man United in 3-1 win over Southampton

Amad Diallo keeps coming up with big late goals for Manchester United.
There were three of them Thursday in a remarkable 12-minute flurry that rescued United from an embarrassing loss to the Premier League’s worst team.
Diallo, a 22-year-old winger from the Ivory Coast, scored a hat trick from the 82nd minute to earn United a 3-1 victory over last-place Southampton — just when it looked like his team was heading for a fourth straight home loss for the first time since the 1930s.
“In football you have to believe. We believed until the end,” said Diallo, who signed a new five-year contract with United last week as a reward for becoming one of its most important players.
That’s because Diallo is proving a man for the big occasion. Two weeks ago, he scored an 80th-minute equalizer at Anfield to secure a 2-2 draw against Liverpool; a month ago, he scored a 90th-minute winner at Manchester City; and who could forget his winner in stoppage time of extra time as United ousted Liverpool in the FA Cup quarterfinals.
Now he is a mainstay of the team, even trusted by manager Ruben Amorim to play the demanding position of right wing back. By the end of the game against Southampton, Diallo was playing like a forward and he equalized in the 82nd minute, scoring at the second attempt after his initial shot was blocked.
Diallo put United ahead in the 90th minute when he ran onto Christian Eriksen’s chip over the defense and volleyed home, and added a third goal in the fourth minute of stoppage time after dispossessing a Southampton defender in front of an empty goal.
“I am ready to play every position — I am ready to play as a wing back, No. 10, where the manager likes to put me,” said Diallo, the second-youngest scorer of a Premier League hat trick for United, after Wayne Rooney. “I am ready to fight for this club.”
Amorim said “good things are going to happen” for the Ivory Coast international if he continues to train well.
“He is in a great moment and he is having a very good season,” Amorim said.
The victory continued an uptick for the fallen English giant, which beat Arsenal in a penalty shootout in the FA Cup on Sunday and was impressive in a 2-2 draw at first-place Liverpool in United’s previous league game.
United climbed to 12th place in the league but was largely poor against Southampton, which took the lead thanks to an own-goal by Manuel Ugarte in the 43rd minute.
Southampton stayed on just six points for the season and looks a near-certainty for relegation. The team is 10 points from safety.
Ipswich drops into relegation zone
The three relegation places are now filled by the teams promoted last season after Ipswich lost at home to Brighton 2-0.
Kaoru Mitoma and Georginio Rutter scored second-half goals for Brighton, which climbed to ninth place.
Ipswich dropped below Wolverhampton into third-to-last place and is only ahead of Leicester and Southampton.


Kvaratskhelia posts farewell video to Napoli fans ahead of expected transfer

Kvaratskhelia posts farewell video to Napoli fans ahead of expected transfer
Updated 16 January 2025
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Kvaratskhelia posts farewell video to Napoli fans ahead of expected transfer

Kvaratskhelia posts farewell video to Napoli fans ahead of expected transfer
  • “I spent an amazing time here, we shared a lot of memories together, experienced a lot of amazing emotions,” a solemn-looking Kvaratskhelia said
  • Napoli coach Antonio Conte confirmed last Saturday that Kvaratskhelia requested a move

NAPLES, Italy: Khvicha Kvaratskhelia posted a farewell video to Napoli fans on Thursday ahead of a widely expected transfer away from the Italian league.
The 23-year-old Georgia winger, who starred in Napoli’s Serie A title-winning team in 2023, has been linked in France with a move to Paris Saint-Germain, while Premier League leader Liverpool also are reportedly interested.
Kvaratskhelia posted a video on Instagram, with subtitles in both Italian and English, to directly address Napoli fans who affectionately nicknamed him “Kvaradona” in homage to late Argentina great Diego Maradona, the club’s greatest-ever player.
“It’s hard for me, but it’s time to say goodbye. I spent an amazing time here, we shared a lot of memories together, experienced a lot of amazing emotions,” a solemn-looking Kvaratskhelia said. “Napoli was my home, where I felt wonderful thanks to each of you. The path we went through together is still in my mind and it is very emotional. I remember my first goal and feelings.”
Napoli coach Antonio Conte confirmed last Saturday that Kvaratskhelia requested a move.
“I spoke to the player who confirmed this decision to me,” Conte said at that time. “I am disappointed, it was a bolt from the blue, and I am taking a step back.”


PSG have lost superstars Lionel Messi and Kylian Mbappe and need to reinvigorate an attack lacking efficiency.
Kvaratskhelia fits the bill as both a scorer and skillful provider with both speed and devastating dribbling ability.
He scored 30 goals in 107 games overall for Napoli and had great chemistry with striker Victor Osimhen during the title-winning campaign — which ended a 33-year wait for the Serie A title, with Maradona starring in that 1990 team.
“Napoli is a football city, Napoli lives with football and I am happy to have been part of this great history,” he said, before stroking a ball attached to leg of a statue of Maradona, and then bowing his head. “It was a great honor for me to wear this journey.”
He pledged to explain the reasons for his decision to leave when the time is right.
“I say goodbye but you will always be in my heart,” said Kvaratskhelia, who wore the No. 77 jersey.
“I know that your heart is very broken but one day I will tell you everything.”
He ended the video with a visit to the Spagnoli district where Maradona’s giant mural is located. Maradona, who died in November 2020, is revered in the city.
“I could not leave without visiting this special place as this is where you get the most genuine feeling of what Diego means to this city. Here he is admired above all else,” Kvaratskhelia said. “I have to say goodbye to Diego. Goodbye Diego, Goodbye Napoli.”


Pakistan hopes its spin tactics work wonders against West Indies in test series

Pakistan hopes its spin tactics work wonders against West Indies in test series
Updated 16 January 2025
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Pakistan hopes its spin tactics work wonders against West Indies in test series

Pakistan hopes its spin tactics work wonders against West Indies in test series
  • Both Pakistan and West Indies are placed at bottom of World Test Championship table
  • Pakistan used industrial-sized fans to prepare spinning track in October to beat England

MULTAN: Pakistan hopes its tried and tested spin template will be successful against the West Indies as the two bottom-placed teams in the World Test Championship gear up for the two-test series starting from Friday.
The same pitch has been prepared for the first test in Multan on which Pakistan spinners Sajid Khan and Noman Ali neutralized England’s aggressive “Bazball” in October when the groundskeepers successfully dried out the 22-yard strip with the help of giant industrial-sized fans and patio heaters.
“We emphasized during the England series that home conditions are very important in test cricket,” Pakistan captain Shan Masood said on Thursday.
 “We adapted a style of play, style of pitches, (and) now we will try ... to carry forward the momentum of the England series.”
Pakistan came from behind to beat England 2-1 on engineered dry pitches in Multan and Rawalpindi after losing the first test by an innings when the tourists amassed a record 823-7 declared in the first innings.
Off-spinner Sajid and left-arm spinner Noman grabbed 39 of the 40 wickets in the last two test matches against England, and were in the 15-man squad after being overlooked for the away series against South Africa, which Pakistan lost 2-0.
Leg-spinner Abrar Ahmed, who missed the home series against England because of illness, was included as the third specialist spinner in the playing XI with off-spinner Salman Ali Agha giving the home team a fourth spin option.
Pakistan has lost eight of its last 10 test matches under Masood’s captaincy since he was elevated to red-ball skipper in December 2023. But the skipper believed Pakistan couldn’t capitalize a number of times against Australia, Bangladesh and South Africa after putting opponents on the back foot.
“There are lots of test matches during last year when we lost the games after coming into a winning position,” Masood said. “There were only one or two one-sided matches … we came into good positions but couldn’t finish it. The lesson for this team is how we can convert it into victories.”
Pakistan will be without its in-form opening batter Saim Ayub, who was ruled out of competitive cricket for up to six weeks after fracturing his right ankle during the series in South Africa. Ayub will be replaced by Mohammad Huraira, who scored half-centuries in both innings during the three-day warmup game against the West Indies in Islamabad.
The West Indies has yet to win a series in this WTC cycle. It has lost to India, England and South Africa while drawing 1-1 against Australia and Bangladesh.
But captain Kraigg Brathwaite was hopeful that his team could finish the WTC cycle on a high.
“This series is very important for us,” Brathwaite said. “It’s a new year … it is important to finish this cycle strong and that’s our focus.”
Fast bowler Shamar Joseph was ruled of the series due to shin splits while another pacer, Alzarri Joseph, preferred to play in the ILT20 league in the United Arab Emirates.
Brathwaite said the tourists have left out vice-captain Joshua Da Silva from the playing XI while fast bowler Kemar Roach misses out because of illness.
Multan will also host the second test, starting from Jan. 25 due to ongoing upgrades at Pakistan’s two main stadiums in Karachi and Lahore for next month’s Champions Trophy.