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The inaugural HH The Father Amir Prix got under way at Al Shaqab yesterday, marking a strong start to the four-leg international showjumping series. The opening tour brought together leading international and regional riders across the CSI1*, CSI2* and CSI4* categories, with a total prize fund of €538,000. Across the full series, prize money exceeds €3.3mn.Saudi Arabia’s Abdullah Alsharbatly delivered an outstanding opening-day performance, claiming victory in the CSI4* 1.45m Faults and Time class aboard Boeckmanns Lord Pezi Junior after a clear round in 57.93 seconds. Italian rider Emanuele Gaudiano finished second in 59.04 seconds on Vasco, followed by Syria’s Ahmed Saber Hamsho in third on Frenchy in 59.42 seconds.Alsharbatly also topped the CSI2* 1.30m Special Two-Phase event with Dr Scarpo, producing another faultless ride. Egypt’s Mohamed El-Shenawy placed second on Camila in 38.49 seconds, while compatriot Abdullah Haitham finished third on Consagros in 38.65 seconds.“I’m pleased with how Boeckmanns Lord Pezi Junior performed today,” Alsharbatly said. “It was a smooth round and a positive start to the competition. We’ll take it step by step and stay focused for the rest of the tour.”Germany’s Janne F. Meyer-Zimmermann secured the CSI4* 1.40m Two-Phase title with My Lady Lavista after clear rounds in both phases. Qatar’s Rashid Tuwaim al-Marri placed second on Navarone in 27.78 seconds, while Italy’s Roberto Previtali finished third on Qashqai in 28.83 seconds. “It was a good day for us,” Meyer-Zimmermann said. “My Lady Lavista jumped very well, and we’re delighted to open Tour 1 with a win.”Gaudiano claimed the CSI2* 1.40m Two-Phase class aboard Diarouge Blue PS and also finished second with Aquino. Denmark’s Caroline Rehoff took third place on Polinis in 31.59 seconds. “Today was a positive start,” Gaudiano said. “Diarouge Blue PS felt focused and responsive, and we maintained a good rhythm in the second phase.”The CSI2* 1.25m Faults and Time event ended in a joint victory, with Jordan’s Ibrahim Hani Bisharat on El Nino Bull’s Eye Z and Egypt’s Yassin Khalifa on Camelija both posting clear rounds in identical times. Saudi Arabia’s Fahad al-Jaid finished third on Fatina in 60.80 seconds.In the CSI1* events, Saudi rider Hasan Alhadi won the 1.10m Special Two-Phase class with DSP Cessy. Egypt’s Abdelrahman Hussein placed second on Cox in 28.52 seconds, while Syria’s Sarah Al Masri finished third on Mazeltov in 29.30 seconds.Egypt’s Youssef Nassar topped the CSI1* 1.20m Faults and Time class aboard Orestes van het Tolhuis. Qatari rider Yaqoub Nasser Almas finished second on Hammond in 55.62 seconds, followed closely by compatriot Ibrahim Khalid Al Kuwari on Just in Time in 55.69 seconds.An opening ceremony marked the start of the event, featuring artistic performances under the theme “Where Nations Gather”, alongside a drone and light show and equestrian-themed activities across the venue.Competition resumes today with seven classes across the one-star to four-star categories. The first class begins at 9:15am, while the final CSI4* class, featuring 1.50m jumps and a jump-off, will take place at 5:45pm.The championship comprises four international rounds across one-star to five-star categories, in addition to events for junior and youth riders. The rounds will be held from January 2-4, January 8-10, January 22-24 and January 29-31, with the latter three also featuring qualifiers for the FEI Group VII Finals. Source link
Her Highness Sheikha Moza bint Nasser, Chairperson of Qatar Foundation, attended the opening day of the inaugural HH The Father Amir Prix at Al Shaqab yesterday. HE Sheikh Joaan bin Hamad al-Thani, President of the Qatar Olympic Committee, and HE Sheikha Al Mayassa bint Hamad bin Khalifa al-Thani, Chairperson of Qatar Museums, were also present on the occasion. Held over four rounds, the opening leg features CSI1*, CSI2* and CSI4* categories, offering €538,000 in prize money, and opened to a full house at Al Shaqab on its inaugural day. Source link
Usman Khawaja said Friday he will retire from international cricket after the fifth and final Ashes clash against England, leaving a legacy as Australia’s first Muslim Test cricketer while lashing out at perceived “racial stereotyping” during his 15-year career.The 39-year-old will pad up for the last time, should he be selected, when the Test gets under way in Sydney on Sunday, ending months of speculation about his future.It would be an 88th Test for the classy left-hander, culminating a career where it began after making his debut at the Sydney Cricket Ground in 2011, also against England.”The number one emotion is contentment. I’m very lucky to have played so many games for Australia the way I have,” Khawaja said. “I hope I have inspired people along the way.”I’m a proud Muslim coloured boy from Pakistan who was told that he would never play for the Australian cricket team. Look at me now, and you can do the same,” he added.Khawaja immigrated to Australia from Islamabad as a child, battling the odds to become the country’s first Pakistan-born, and first Muslim, national player.At one point, he was the only Asian first-class player in Australia and is credited as a role model who opened doors for others.”Usman has made a huge contribution to Australian cricket both through his outstanding achievements as one of our most stylish and resilient batters since his Test debut 15 years ago, and off field, particularly through the Usman Khawaja Foundation,” said Cricket Australia chief Todd Greenberg.”On behalf of Australian cricket I would like to thank and congratulate Usman for all he has achieved.”Khawaja’s foundation helps youths from refugee, immigrant, Indigenous, and poor socioeconomic backgrounds through introductory cricket programs and educational support.– ‘Attacked me’ –Khawaja, a qualified pilot, has plundered 6,206 runs in Test cricket with 16 centuries, averaging 43.39.He smashed a career-high 232 against Sri Lanka a year ago, but has not made three figures since.The current Ashes series has been a rollercoaster ride, with the veteran batsman coming under scrutiny.He injured his back in the first Test in Perth and was replaced as opener in the second innings by Travis Head who blasted a match-winning century.Khawaja did not feature in the next match at Brisbane and was omitted from the team for the third Test in Adelaide, only to get a lifeline when Steve Smith dropped out ill just before the toss.He came in at number four and hit 82 and 40 before making 29 and 0 in the fourth Test at Melbourne.”I’m glad I get to leave on amy own terms, with a little bit of dignity, and go out at the SCG where I love,” he said, while expressing frustration at how he was treated.”When I did my back (in Perth), I hurt my back and had back spasms and it was something I couldn’t control.”The way the media and past players came out and attacked me. I could have copped it for a couple of days but it went on for five days.”The way everyone came out at me about my preparation, ‘he’s not committed to the team. Only worried about himself. Playing a golf competition. He’s selfish, he didn’t train hard enough. He’s lazy’.”These are the same racial stereotypes (I thought we had moved past).”But obviously we haven’t fully moved past that. I haven’t seen anyone treated like that in the Australian cricket team before.”He nevertheless admitted the writing was on the wall during the current Ashes series.”Going into Adelaide and then not being picked initially for that game was probably a sign for me to say ‘all right, it’s time to move on’,” he said.Khawaja also played 40 one-dayers and nine Twenty20 internationals. Source link
Qatari rally star Nasser al-Attiyah, a five-time Dakar Rally winner with three different manufacturers, has not claimed victory since 2023 but remains determined to fight for the top of the standings as the two-week grueling event kicks off in Saudi Arabia today.Partnered with new co-pilot Fabian Lurquin in one of the four Dacia Sandriders, al-Attiyah is unfazed by the strength of the competition. The annual endurance challenge, now in its seventh consecutive year in Saudi Arabia, spans 13 grueling stages and roughly 8,000km.The rally opens with a short prologue around Yanbu on the Red Sea coast, followed by a 305km special stage tomorrow. Competitors will face a mix of terrain, including towering sand dunes, canyons, and vast desert expanses, with stage six marking the longest stretch at 920km.On the eve of the event, al-Attiyah expressed confidence and excitement for the challenge ahead. “We’ve spent one week in the bivouac, testing our car, seeing old friends. I have a good feeling and I’m ready. It is also my dream to win with Fabien because we are prepared and we’ll do our best to win this race. The competition is high and we are happy to have this challenge,” he said yesterday.“Our sport is becoming very strong with a lot of constructors, which is also a big point. We are ready and we’ve been driving together for a long time now since Morocco: we did the Qatar Rally in an SSV and won the race. It’s going really very well and we’re trying to do our best. I feel more experienced and I feel calmer. I’m still good on this kind of sandy and rocky terrain. This year, if you look at the two marathon stages, it’s not easy. The second marathon is a long stage with plenty of hours in the car. On some sides, some people think it’s just four hundred kilometres on a marathon day but if you go deep it’s a change in mindset, you need to see how the organisers read it, it’s different from before,” al-Attiyah added.Meanwhile, Saudi Arabia’s first winner Yazheed al-Rajhi will try to defend his Dakar Rally, with Toyota’s 2025 runner-up Henk Lategan predicting the closest battle yet.Toyota have won three of the last four Dakars in the top T1+ car category, last year with al-Rajhi in the customer Overdrive team, but face a tough challenge from Ford and Dacia’s array of champions in what is also the first round of the World Rally-Raid Championship (W2RC) season.Al-Attiyah is with nine-times world rally champion Sebastien Loeb, Brazil’s W2RC champion Lucas Moraes and Spaniard Cristina Gutierrez in the Dacia Sandriders team.Loeb, whose world rally title record was equalled by fellow Frenchman Sebastien Ogier last season, is chasing his first Dakar win at the 10th attempt and this time has Al-Attiyah’s former co-driver Edouard Boulanger alongside.Spain’s four-times winner Carlos Sainz, 63, and compatriot Nani Roma, a winner on two wheels and four, are driving Ford Raptors along with former German Touring Cars (DTM) champion Mattias Ekstroem.French veteran Stephane Peterhansel, the 60-year-old winner of a record 14 Dakars on two wheels and four, returns with debutants Defender in the Stock production category.”I think there’s some very, very strong teams and everybody’s starting to get their cars settled now. A lot of the teams are getting to the end of the development cycle of some of the cars,” Lategan said.”The rules are written quite well, so I think this is probably the closest field of cars you’ll ever see in the Dakar. Also, one of the biggest fields you’ll ever see, so definitely there’s massive competition. There’s a lot of guys that can win and can fight for the podium. So, I’m expecting a really good battle.”The Dakar always claims some big names early on and al-Rajhi may want to show patience at the start after breaking two vertebrae last April in an incident that kept him out of competition until September.”Our target is to win again, that’s most important. We’ll see how it is but sure the speed is there,” he said.In the motorcycle category, Red Bull KTM rider Daniel Sanders will seek to become the first Australian to win back-to-back titles.In a field of more than 100 bikes, Spaniard Tosha Schareina — last year’s runner-up — could still be Sanders’ biggest rival while two-times winner Ricky Brabec of the United States is also back on a Honda.The Dakar began in 1978 as a race from Paris across the Sahara to the Senegalese capital but switched to South America in 2009 for security reasons. It moved to Saudi Arabia in 2020. Source link
The Arabian Gulf Cup Football Federation (AGCFF) has announced that the Saudi city of Jeddah will host the 27th Arabian Gulf Cup from September 23 to October 6, 2026.The AGCFF welcomed Saudi Arabia’s hosting of the tournament, writing on its official X platform: “The Bride of the Red Sea (Jeddah) will host Gulf Cup 27.” For its part, the Saudi Arabian Football Federation (SAFF) announced in an official statement that the tournament matches will be held at King Abdullah Sports City Stadium (Al Inma Stadium) and Prince Abdullah Al Faisal Stadium. The statement included praise from President of the Arabian Gulf Cup Football Federation (AGCFF) Sheikh Hamad bin Khalifa bin Ahmed al-Thani, for the capabilities and potential of Saudi Arabia, which promise an exceptional edition of the Gulf Cup, one of the long standing tournaments in the Middle East. For his part, President of the Saudi Arabian Football Federation (SAFF) Yasser Al Misehal expressed the Kingdom’s pride and welcome in hosting the participating teams in this tournament, which returns to Saudi soil once again. He wished the teams success and a pleasant stay in their second home. Al Misehal added that the Saudi Arabian Football Federation will continue working to prepare for a historic edition of the tournament on Saudi Arabian soil.It is worth noting that the previous edition of the Gulf Cup was hosted by Kuwait, with Bahrain winning the title after defeating Oman 2-1 in the final. Source link
India’s postponed six?match white?ball cricket tour of Bangladesh will take place in September, Bangladesh’s Cricket Board said Friday.The series, including three one-day and three T20 matches, originally due to be played in August 2025, was delayed after both countries’ boards “mutually agreed to defer” the series.India will now play three ODIs and three T20s between September 1 to 13.The postponement last year came as political relations between India and neighbouring Bangladesh turned frosty, after a mass uprising in Dhaka in 2024 toppled then prime minister Sheikh Hasina.Hasina fled to India, where she has remained, straining relations between Dhaka and New Delhi.Bangladesh has repeatedly requested Hasina’s extradition.She was sentenced to death in absentia in November for orchestrating a deadly crackdown on the uprising.But New Delhi is also closely watching the upcoming elections on February 12, the first vote in the South Asian nation of 170 million people since the uprising.On Wednesday, India’s Foreign Minister Subrahmanyam Jaishankar visited Bangladesh to attend the funeral of former leader Khaleda Zia, the most senior visit by an Indian official since the overthrow of Hasina.Zia’s Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP) is widely seen as a frontrunner in elections, and her son Tarique Rahman, who returned last month after 17 years in exile, is seen as a potential prime minister if it wins a majority.Bangladesh will also host series against Pakistan, New Zealand, Australia and the West Indies, across all three formats. Source link
Greece’s Stefanos Tsitsipas celebrates after winning his round of 32 match against Italy’s Lorenzo Sonego at the Dubai Tennis Stadium, Dubai, UAE, Tsitsipas won 7-6 (4),…
Belarus’ Aryna Sabalenka reacts after a point against Spain’s Jessica Bouzas Maneiro during their singles match on day four of the Australian Open in Melbourne yesterday.…
Japan’s Naomi Osaka attends a training session ahead of the Brisbane International tennis tournament at Pat Rafter Arena in Brisbane on December 27, 2023. (Photo by…
Lusail Boulevard brings together over 250,000 people to watch Qatar’s largest fireworks display
Lusail City stole the spotlight during Qatar’s New Year celebrations on Wednesday evening, as Lusail Boulevard hosted a grand event marking the close of the year. The city’s skyline was illuminated by the largest fireworks display in the State of Qatar, officially welcoming the New Year 2026 in a spectacular celebration that attracted more than 250,000 citizens, residents, and visitors. Festivities began at 6:00 PM with advanced laser light shows inspired by the city’s modern architectural identity, followed by live artistic and musical performances that continued until midnight. The vibrant atmosphere highlighted Lusail’s capability to host major events and deliver them to the highest international standards. A standout drone show featured 4,000 pyrotechnic shots launched by 1,000 “Pyrodrone” units from 46 different locations, alongside a total of 15,300 individual fireworks synchronized with the main display. Together, they created a breathtaking visual scene across the city’s sky, reflecting Lusail’s spirit of innovation and creativity. The event witnessed an exceptional public turnout, underscoring Lusail’s growing status as a leading destination for national celebrations and major events in Qatar. The city has increasingly become a focal point for high-profile occasions representing the country at both local and international levels. On this occasion, CEO of Qatari Diar, Sheikh Hamad bin Talal Al-Thani stated: “The success of this New Year 2026 celebration at Lusail Boulevard highlights the city’s standing and capabilities today as an integrated urban hub and a most important spot for the Qatar’s important events. This achievement is the result of a clear vision to develop a city that brings together quality of life, advanced infrastructure, and distinctive events that meet the aspirations of the community.” For his part, CEO of Visit Qatar, Eng. Abdulaziz Ali Al Mawlawi emphasized that choosing Lusail to host such celebrations reflects its emergence as a new tourism icon in the country, saying: “Lusail today confirms its presence as a main platform for major events in the State of Qatar. These celebrations align with Visit Qatar’s strategy to diversify tourism offerings and deliver world-class entertainment experiences that enhance the country’s appeal and position it among the leading regional and global destinations.” This event comes as part of joint efforts between Qatari Diar and Visit Qatar to reinforce Lusail’s position as a city of the future and to strengthen its role as a key driver of Qatar’s tourism and entertainment landscape, through major events that reflect the nation’s ambitions and aspirations. Source link
