Ahdaaf » Iraqi Premier League https://ahdaaf.me Your Gateway to Middle Eastern Football Fri, 27 Dec 2019 20:34:35 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=4.3.22 https://ahdaaf.me/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/Ahdaaf-logo-square.jpg » Iraqi Premier League https://ahdaaf.me 32 32 Al-Jawiya beat leaders Al-Naft to blow league title race wide open https://ahdaaf.me/2017/07/09/al-jawiya-beat-leaders-al-naft-to-blow-league-title-race-wide-open/ https://ahdaaf.me/2017/07/09/al-jawiya-beat-leaders-al-naft-to-blow-league-title-race-wide-open/#comments Sun, 09 Jul 2017 16:33:01 +0000 https://ahdaaf.me/?p=9419 A side-footed 58th minute finish from Al-Quwa Al-Jawiya striker Amjad Radhi was enough to end the 19 match unbeaten run of league leaders]]> A side-footed 58th minute finish from Al-Quwa Al-Jawiya striker Amjad Radhi was enough to end the 19 match unbeaten run of league leaders Al-Naft and cut their lead to just three points.

Leaders Al-Naft had started the day four points clear ahead of second placed Al-Shurta, their opponents Al-Quwa Al-Jawiya in third were six points adrift of Hassan Ahmed’s surprise package however had three games in hand and were vying to be the main challengers to the Oil Club for the title.

Both sides were protecting unbeaten league records going way back as December. Al-Naft’s last defeat in the league had come seven months ago in a 2-1 defeat to Al-Jawiya on December 31, while Basim Qasim’s Al-Jawiya had last been defeated on December 6 in a 1-0 loss to Al-Najaf with a last gasp goal from Syrian professional Uday Jaffal.

The victory over Al-Naft means the Air Force extend their unbeaten record to 35 matches in all competitions and the win puts them in pole position to win their sixth league title and their first since 2005, with three games in hand on their rivals Al-Shurta and Al-Naft.

The winning goal came before the hour mark when Amjad Radhi combined with Hamadi Ahmed and collected the ball on the edge of the box and coolly side footed the ball past the keeper that squirmed through the hands of Al-Naft’s Ali Yasin.

The scrappy and ill-tempered encounter at the Naft Stadium saw ten bookings and two red cards. Three minutes after Al-Jawiya had opened their account Al-Naft’s captain Ahmed Abdul-Majeed was shown red for a high and reckless challenge on Humam Tariq and in stoppage time winger Mazin Fayadh was sent off for striking Al-Quwa Al-Jawiya’s Ahmed Abdul-Amir in the face.

Al-Naft 0-1 Al-Quwa Al-Jawiya
Amjad Radhi 58’
Al-Naft: 31 Ali Yasin; 22 Hussam Kadhim (7 Ali Saad 79’), 12 Raad Fanar, 26 Ammar Kadhim, 6 Ahmed Abdul-Majeed, 14 Mazin Fayadh, 24 Qasim Zaidan (15 Laith Tahsin 73′), 25 Bashar Saadoun, 29 Mohammed Dawud, 18 Ali Qasim (5 Mohammed Maan 66′), 8 Ayman Hussein.
Al-Quwa Al-Jawiya: 1 Fahad Talib; 33 Ali Bahjat, 4 Saad Natiq, 2 Samal Saeed, 5 Ahmed Abdul-Ridha; 18 Zahir Medani, 13 Bashar Resan, 11 Humam Tariq (17 Ahmed Abdul-Amir 88′); 9 Emad Muhsin (3 Ali Abdul-Jabar 83’), 10 Hamadi Ahmed, 29 Amjad Radhi (24 Thamir Bargash 74’).
Referee: Wathiq Mohammed
Cautions: Amjad Radhi 9′, Ahmed Abdul-Majeed 19′, Ali Bahjat 37′, Ahmed Abdul-Majeed 61′, Bashar Resan 64′, Hussam Kadhim 68′, Thamir Bargash 77′, Ammar Kadhim 77′, Mazin Fayadh 80′, Fahad Talib 87′, Mazin Fayadh 90′ (+2), Ahmed Abdul-Ridha 90′ (+3)
Sendings-Off:
Ahmed Abdul-Majeed 61′,Mazin Fayadh 90′ (+2).

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Talking Points: Around the Middle East (December 10-15) https://ahdaaf.me/2015/12/16/talking-points-around-the-middle-east-december-10-15/ https://ahdaaf.me/2015/12/16/talking-points-around-the-middle-east-december-10-15/#comments Wed, 16 Dec 2015 06:20:46 +0000 https://ahdaaf.me/?p=7378 Al-Fraidi returns after 240-day injury to score in 30 seconds

In one of the 4 Saudi Clasicos, struggling Al-Nassr under recently appointed Italian]]> Al-Fraidi returns after 240-day injury to score in 30 seconds

In one of the 4 Saudi Clasicos, struggling Al-Nassr under recently appointed Italian manager Fabio Cannavaro faced the gritty task of Al-Ittihad and their large away fan base. While the latter aren’t in any better situation, they await the arrival of former manager Victor Piturca to take over the reins once again.

A drab encounter ended 0-0 at half time, before the tactically astute Al-Nassr deservedly took the 3 points from Al-Ittihad. Ahmad Al-Fraidi came on as a substitute and was one of the scorers in the match, taking a few touches before scoring his first goal in over 6 months without competitive football.

Al-Fraidi3

Photo: Naifinho, Al-Nassr Photographer

 

Al-Fraidi2

Photo: Naifinho, Al-Nassr Photographer

Al-Fraidi4

Photo: Naifinho, Al-Nassr Photographer

A drubbing by all means from the “Alami” (worldwide) as they scored 3 in 15 minutes to ensure the silencing of one of the biggest fan bases in Asian football. It’s only time before this Al-Nassr team starts clicking to a larger extent, but Al-Hilal and Al-Ahli, both of whom grabbed the 3 points in their respective matches against Hajer and Al-Faisaly, are miles ahead in terms of preparation and depth. Toe-to-toe at the top of the table, both Al-Hilal and Al-Ahli have to make sure of no slip-ups in their title runs.

Al-Rayyan triumph in round of shocks to finish as ‘Winter Champions’

It’s been a week of shocks in Qatari football as Round 13 of the QSL saw three of Qatar’s traditional bigwigs – Al-Sadd, Al-Arabi and Al-Gharafa – lose to lower ranked opposition. Recently impressive Umm Salal were also upstaged by a spirited Al-Kharaitiyat side.

RayyanAhli

But amidst all the surprises, it was business as usual for leaders Al-Rayyan, who dispatched Al-Ahli 3-1 to bounce back from the minor blip that was the defeat to Al-Sadd in the Clasico. Captain Rodrigo Tabata took his goals tally to 13 and led from the front as the Lions finished the 1st phase as deserved Winter Champions with a 10-point lead. The title is surely theirs to lose.

The Qatar Stars League Table after 13 weeks: http://bit.ly/1QsdwIQ

Esteghlal Khuzestan finally taste the top heading into mid-season 

Esteghlal Khuzestan dethroned Esteghlal Tehran from 1st place in the Persian Gulf Pro League, as the latter dropped points in a stalemate against Tractor Sazi while Esteghlal Khuzestan defeated Padideh with a 3-0 scoreline. It is important to remember that Esteghlal Khuzestan – now essentially the Leicester City of Middle Eastern Football – finished in 14th place last season, just one point away from automatic relegation. However, they did end up facing Mes Kerman in the relegation play-offs; winning 3-0 on aggregate with relative ease. Now the biggest question is, as with Leicester City, will Esteghlal Khuzestan hold out for another half-season to fight off the challenge of giants Esteghlal Tehran?

Taremi3

Mehdi Taremi – right – Photo: FIFA

In the meantime, Mehdi Taremi has finally lost his spot as top goalscorer in the PGPL after Beitsaei scored 2 goals against Padideh. Taremi has been on the end of significant social media abuse by his fans due to his lackluster finishing that is often magnificent with the Iranian National Team. However, the main issue is the fact that after 14 weeks of PGPL football, the top scorer – Beitsaei – has a mere 8 goals to his name.

Finally, it’s Igor Stimac’s Sepahan. The current league holders haven’t seen any joy since the departure of title winner Hossein Faraki, and are now behind in the title race. A 0-0 draw with relegation battlers Rah Ahan was in no way a good place to continue after the Hazfi Cup exit to Isfahan rivals Zob Ahan. The Asian Champions League group stages quickly approach, and Sepahan will be dreading the catch-up game…

Lebanese Football experiences tragic week

The Lebanese FA slapped a 6-match ban on Sagesse goalkeeper Nazih Tai, after a fight transpired in injury time during a match between Sagesse and Salam Zgharta. A 90th minute equaliser for Salam Zgharta resulted in the following, embarrassing incident:

That’s only the beginning, as the hotly anticipated match between Nejmeh and Nabi Chit resulted in Akram Moghrabi – Nejmeh’s striker – losing 2 phones and his wallet as a result of the changing room doors being unlocked thus allowing fans to enter without permission of anyone.

Moreover, while the players of both teams were communicating with their respective coaches at half time, the referees to informed them to stay indoors. The players questioned the main referee, asking him why, before referee Hadi Salameh claimed that there were men with guns outside and shooting at fans. One fan did get shot in the head, unfortunately…

Nabi Chit club were fined 2,000,000 Lebanese Pounds ($1,300) in the process, a number that is usually a fortune to Lebanese clubs. This is all happening when Nejmeh fans were supposedly banned from the stadiums. What could possibly make this week worse?

Al-Ansar fans allegedly chanted detained Ahmad Al-Assir’s name during their match against Racing, in what could be pinpointed as a satirical sectarian chant. With Sunni-Shia chants on the rise once again – Nejmeh fans chanted “What on earth?! What on earth?! The Shia have taken over the city of Sidon!” a few weeks ago – it is important to question the goals of the LFA. Fans are out of control, no security is provided at stadiums and the league continues to be marred by sectarian conflict… 

Referees the main talking point in UAE Football

It’s time for foreign referees to make their way to another Arabian League, this time the Emirati League. Or so fans say. A large portion of the footballing fan base in the UAE are angered with Youssef Al-Serkal’s insistence on holding out with local referees, but mistakes here and there are getting on the nerves of everyone – including managers.

Javier Aguirre was fined and banned for his actions towards referees.

Javier Aguirre was fined and banned for his actions towards referees.

Javier Aguirre was the latest staff member to be on the end of a ban, after attacking the assistant referee against Al-Wasl in a dreadful match refereeing-wise. While Al-Wasl did end up winning the match, they also had their own set of problems.

UAEFA Referees

Al-Ain were also scrutinized by fans across the nation, after the referee gave away a penalty against Al-Shaab. The only issue in this case being that the Al-Shaab defender who handled the ball, was completely outside of his own box. Unfortunately, referees have had trouble with those incidents consistently.

Finally, in the Dubai Derby between Al-Ahli and Al-Nasr, a very dubious first opening goal to the Red Knights was given despite the ball not clearly or fully crossing the line. To add more pain to the incident, Al-Nasr were denied a goal thanks to the assistant referee’s flag. The linesman insisted that Pitroipa was offside, despite replays showing the opposite.

 

Bahraini Champions devastated against dead last in topsy-turvy season

It was only time before local manager Khaled Taj would have his head called for during the proceedings of the VIVA Bahrain League. In this 10-team league, a win or a loss could see a change in as many as 4 places on the league table. Muharraq now drop to 5th after losing to the capital’s main club, Manama.

Manama were delighted with the return of legendary Bahrain striker Alaa Hubail for the 2015/16 season, but Hubail has one goal to his name after 7 game weeks. Boasting the only foreign manager in the league at the time, Miguel Olmo Forte hailed from Spain to take the capital’s club into the top spots. However, a thrashing to newly promoted Al-Ahli resulted in the immediate termination of Forte’s contract.

5 games later and young manager Ismaeel Karami failed to inject any winning mindset into a side that lacked quality all round. Subsequently, the appointment of Tunisian manager Chokri Bejaoui came a few days before the encounter with Muharraq – which Manama were bound to lose – and the Tunisian tactician successfully ruined Muharraq’s night.

ManamaMuharraq

After the departure of Iraqi striker Mustafa Kareem from the team’s ranks, Nigerian Efosa, Algerian Karim Boutadjine and Syrian Hamdi Al-Masri are all set to make their way out of Muharraq in January. Manama, on the other hand, are getting stronger thanks to the arrival of Chokri Bejaoui.

Administrative problems mar Kuwaiti football 

After Youssef Kareem, a board member at Al-Jahra, attacked a referee due to a couple of dubious decisions, he has finally come out and apologized – resigning from his role in the process. A very dark day in Kuwaiti football, in what has actually been the perfect way to end a tormenting year; with a moment that tops all of the bad things going on in Kuwaiti football.

During extra time in the Crown Prince Cup quarter finals, Al-Jahra and Khaitan’s players, managers, board members alongside the referees engaged in a brawl that spilled over the rest of the pitch. An embarrassing day for Kuwaiti football, but after the suspension from FIFA, Kuwaiti fans had little to cheer in the year of 2015.

Syrian league matches racking up with speed

Despite only starting on November 27, 7 game weeks have passed in the 2015/16 edition of Syrian Premier League Football. That’s right, despite war, threats and so much more, the Syrian FA have successfully accommodated the Syrian PL whose clubs continue to impress on the Asian stage after a quarter final appearance by Al-Jaish in the 2015 AFC Cup.

Rafat Mohammad’s Al-Wahda sit top of Group 2 with a 100% record, followed closely by Al-Shorta and Al-Ittihad of Aleppo. Meanwhile in Group 1, Al-Jaish are predictably dominating the group 4 points ahead of challengers Al-Majd and Al-Karama. Both Al-Majd and Al-Karama are good contenders for the top spots but are not quite there yet in terms of title contention.

It is Al-Wahda who have done a whole deal of good with their team, with Osama Aomry arguably the best player in the team – holding everything together from midfield to attack. Raja Rafe has been banging in the goal for Al-Wahda as usual, which is how he earned the title as the 2nd top scorer in Syrian League football history.

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Domestic Weekly Review: October 24-28 https://ahdaaf.me/2015/10/28/domestic-weekly-review-october-24-28/ https://ahdaaf.me/2015/10/28/domestic-weekly-review-october-24-28/#comments Wed, 28 Oct 2015 16:24:14 +0000 https://ahdaaf.me/?p=7053 This is going to be your weekly guide to Middle Eastern Football in English. Live happenings, it’s all on Ahdaaf. We]]> This is going to be your weekly guide to Middle Eastern Football in English. Live happenings, it’s all on Ahdaaf. We will be putting it into one weekly article regarding every single league in the Middle East. Of course, you will see more in-depth analyses with the bigger leagues and the leagues we have more writers for (if you would like to write for us, feel free to tweet us, Facebook message us or email us at [email protected]).

Hyperlinks

Persian Gulf Pro League

Arabian Gulf League

Qatar Stars League

Lebanese Premier League

Jordan

Oman

Iraq

Palestine

Bahrain

Kuwait

Team & Player of the Week

When a player’s name is in this colour, it indicates that he is part of the Ahdaaf Team of the Week. 

Arabian Gulf League – UAE

Game of the Week

Baniyas 2-2 Al-Jazira

Stadium: Baniyas Stadium, Abu Dhabi

Attendance: 2,276 

The Abu Dhabi Derby saw Baniyas succeed in returning from 2 goals down against Al-Jazira in the second half. This was due to the performances of their strikers Ishak Belfodil and Joaquin Larrivey (who now have 12 goals between them) and their substitute ‘keeper, on-loan Adel Abubakar Fadaq.

With late runs from deep, high pressing and speed; Al-Jazira successfully dominated the first half with two goals to none. Baniyas’ focus was on the duo of Ali Mabkhout and Mirko Vucinic up front, however Al-Jazira manager Braga added defensive midfielder Park to the frontline in an aim to trick the Sky Blues. This resulted in Mirko Vucinic dropping deeper into attacking midfield.

Photo: AGLeague.ae

Photo: AGLeague.ae

Baniyas didn’t show the required level needed to perform in the Derby during the first half, with their 3 lines (defence, midfield and attack) disconnected and leaving spaces for Al-Jazira to exploit. The midfield trio of Mark Milligan, Amer Abdulrahman and Fawaz Awana failed to protect the defence adequately.

However, Al-Jazira’s defence sat tight in the second half looking to keep the lead – but this was detrimental. The two goals that they conceded were in the 6 yard box and as a result of their poor positioning in tandem with their partners in the defensive line. Belfodil and Larrivey both scored a goal each, while Fadaq kept the goal empty of any goals for the rest of the game.

A talking point here is – once again – the fans. It is bizarre to see that the Baniyas Stadium saw an attendance of 3,000 against Dibba (a newly promoted team with no significance to Baniyas) yet they fail to show up in a match that can prove their title credentials; against their local rivals Al-Jazira. Not looking good in the AGLeague, that’s for sure. One thing is Al-Jazira’s possession game, that saw Park Jong Woo score after an 18-pass move.

Rest of the Games

Al-Wasl 5-1 Fujairah

Stadium: Zabeel Stadium, Al-Wasl

Attendance: 610

Photo: AGLeague.ae

Photo: AGLeague.ae

Al-Wasl haven’t seen a poor attendance such as this one since the 2013-14 season, but their performance was spectacular. The first half was an evenly matched one, with Fujairah providing a good defensive structure to isolate Al-Wasl’s dazzling winger Fabio de Lima. This was in the absence of Patrick Friday Eze, Fujairah’s foreign striker who came from the Serbian League.

A 0-0 draw beckoned and the teams went into the second half with fresh ideas. Salem Abdulla replaced Abdulla Kathim on the left wing for the Cheetahs, and that was a game winning change from Gabriel Calderon. Immediately, the midfield and attack clicked.

Suddenly, Al-Wasl were 2-0 up. A goal from promising attacking midfielder Khalil Khameis in between Al-Wasl’s romp was not enough to put them down. Al-Wasl continued and both Edgar Bruno and Fabio de Lima bagged a brace, with striker Caio adding in a goal of his own.

This led to Al-Ittihad newspaper waxing lyrical on the second half performance, calling it “tiki taka”. It was magical, it was dazzling and it looked like a title winning team against quite a decent side. Yet for all their options in attack, Fujairah have the worst defence (and goalkeeper) in the league.

Al-Dhafra 2-3 Emirates

Stadium: Hamdan Bin Zayed Stadium, Madinat Zayed

Attendance: 956

Photo: AGLeague.ae

Photo: AGLeague.ae

“The Greens’ balance claims victory over hasty Al-Dhafra”, read local newspapers. Balance between defence and attack played a big part in Emirates’ victory over Al-Dhafra. It was actually the latter that had the better attack, yet with a lack of concentration against the solid opposition defence.

Emirates continued to play on the counter attack while being wary of any mistakes from their opponents, a strategy which saw them take advantage of their defensive mistakes. Emirates opened the scoring and despite conceding 6 minutes later, took the lead via a brilliant Haitham Ali goal.

Makhete Diop went on to miss a penalty and this resulted in a loss in confidence for himself and the Dhafrawi players. Walid Amber of Al-Ahli (on loan at Emirates) scored his second of the game to widen the gap between Emirates and Al-Dhafra, only for Diop to bring the score back to 3-2.

Despite Barral and Diop’s efforts, Al-Dhafra continue their winless start to the season after 6 games and sit in 13th place, just ahead of Al-Shaab. The real props has to go to winger Mohammad Malallah, who went in goal to replace the sent off goalkeeper Ahmad Al-Shaji and made the game winning save in minute 97, to ensure 3 points.

Al-Wahda 1-3 Al-Ahli

Stadium: Nahyan Stadium, Abu Dhabi

Attendance: 6,970

Photo: AGLeague.ae

Photo: AGLeague.ae

The biggest question before this game was not how disappointed Cosmin Olaroiu was, at the decision by Javier Aguirre to avoid postponing the match. It was, will Rodrigo Lima score? After 50 minutes, AGLeague fans began to worry. Would this be his first match to fail scoring in? No, fortunately. An assist by Everton Ribeiro helped him score the second against Al-Wahda in Abu Dhabi.

Everton Ribeiro, part of the team of the week due to his excellent performance, scored a brace and showed off his partnership with Lima. Both were fine on the ball, fine off the ball and phenomenal as a duo. Credit has to go to Habib Fardan and Majed Hassan though, both of whom protect the Al-Ahli defence.

Al-Wahda set out in an unorthodox 3-6-1 for the first time under Aguirre. Yet Abdulla Al-Noubi, sarcastically nicknamed “Danilo of the Gulf” was dire down the right flank. More so, Kuwaiti international Hussein Fadhel was easily outclassed by the Al-Ahli forwards. The only consolation came via Valdivia’s fantastic goal, but even he found no energy to celebrate it after going 3-0 down.

Al-Shabab 1-4 Al-Ain

Stadium: Maktoum bin Rashid Al-Maktoum Stadium, Dubai

Attendance: 3,893

Felipe Bastos proved his worth by scoring a superb brace that included one of his trademark free kicks against one of the better teams in the league, Al-Shabab. Just a minute into the affair, Omar Abdulrahman opened the scoring.

Felipe Bastos proceeded to make his mark on Emirati football with his free kick, before Jo found a hole in Al-Ain’s defence. Since his arrival from Atletico Mineiro in the summer, Jo has been a fine replacement for Edgar Bruno (now at Al-Wasl), who was known for his movement and teamwork. Jo took advantage of the spaces and despite calls for offside, went on to lessen the deficit to 2-1 before the break.

Yet, Al-Ain continued to cause havoc on the Greens’ defence. They ended up winning a penalty, which went to recent internationally retired striker Emmanuel Emenike. The latter slotted the ball past the ‘keeper Salem Abdullah, to keep the score two goals ahead for the Zaeem, Al-Ain.

Photo: AGLeague.ae

Photo: AGLeague.ae

Felipe Bastos re-emerged at half time to add a thorn into the backside of Al-Shabab’s defenders. A goal from outside of the box bounced in past Salem Abdullah to effectively end the game after 49 minutes.

Dibba 1-2 Al-Nasr 

Stadium: Fujairah Stadium, Fujairah

Attendance: 860

Dibba’s first half resilience under Theo Bucker wasn’t enough, once again. Despite earning their first win against big boys Al-Jazira a few weeks ago, the former Lebanese national team manager failed to help his team gain another three points to propel themselves away from a relegation battle.

Photo: AGLeague.ae

Photo: AGLeague.ae

Jires Kembo-Ekoko proved himself as a very valuable signing for Al-Nasr once again, linking up with his partner Johnathan Pitroipa. For all the talk of Kembo being an Al-Ain reject and Pitroipa the same with Al-Jazira, they have been doing quite well to push Al-Nasr to the top spots this season.

Sharjah 2-0 Al-Shaab

Stadium: Sharjah Stadium, Sharjah

Attendance: 4,890 

This match could have been the biggest match of the week had it seen more goals, but generally the match was entertaining to the big crowd. Both teams’ fans showed up in numbers for the “Smiling Emirate Derby” yet the strikers failed to produce anything of note. Michal Laurent N’dri, the man who score the 94th minute winner for Al-Shaab to promote them to the AGLeague has failed to score at the current time of writing. Sharjah hitman Wanderley was also off par, partly due to Al-Shaab’s resolute defence.

Photo: AGLeague.ae

Photo: AGLeague.ae

Yet in the end the mistake came from Celio dos Santos, a man who fans loved back in Tabriz, with Tractor Sazi. The centre back misjudged a clearance and lumped the ball into his own net with less than 20 minutes to go on the clock. Young central midfielder Muhain Khalifa assured the King’s fans’ of the win, with a blistering long shot late into the game. 2-0 it was to the Sharjawi who triumphed over their fierce rivals Al-Shaab.

Results and League table after 6 weeks of AGLeague play: http://bit.ly/1WcqIFh

Written by Hamoudi Fayad


Persian Gulf Pro League – Iran

Game of the Week

Perspolis 2-1 Siah Jamegan

Perspolis went into the game against Siah Jamegan with their fans expecting the Red Army to win the game in remembrance of Captain Hadi Norouzi who recently passed away, and that’s exactly what they did. They entered the game with massive confidence and although Sosha Makani (Perspolis’s first choice goalkeeper) and Reza Nourmohammadi (Perspolis’s captain) were missing from the game, they kept their composure and got the result.

The game started and although Perspolis were playing away from home in Siah Jamegan’s Samen Stadium, they were dominating the game. The wingers (Omid Alishah and Farshad Ahmadzadeh) were constantly crossing the ball to Mehdi Taremi (Perspolis’s first choice striker and current Persian Gulf Pro League’s Golden Boot contender) but he couldn’t make much from it. He played well and ran through Siah Jamegan’s defense but wasn’t Perspolis’s main star, as Farshad Ahmadzadeh and Omid Alishah were incredible on the wings and were constantly battling against Siah Jamegan’s defense.persepolis-players-celebrate-48330

The game went on with Perspolis having many attacks on Siah Jamegan’s goal without any major result, however the deadlock broke in the 39th minute as Farshad Ahmadzadeh saw Ramin Rezaeian (Perspolis’s right back) making a great run and crossed the ball exactly where he was for him to score with a beautiful header and make the game 1-0 to Perspolis.

The first half ended with Perspolis players scoring a good goal and getting more confident, and the second half started with the Reds hungry for more! However, Perspolis wasn’t the only motivated team, as Siah Jamegan was desperately looking for an equalizer. But while Siah Jamegan had some decent attacks and a quality free-kick from Reza Enayati (which could’ve gone in if Iman Sadeghi hadn’t punched the ball away), they couldn’t create much and Perspolis was dominating once again.iman-sadeghi-48331

Just as Siah Jamegan was getting composed, Perspolis got another goal in the 71st minute. Omid Alishah crossed the ball perfectly and Farshad Ahmadzadeh jumped high and headed the ball home for Perspolis to go up 2-0 against Siah Jamegan. After Perspolis’s goal, Siah Jamegan started to attack again but couldn’t make anything from their occasional attacks. Perspolis had a couple other attacks too, with the most notable one coming from Mehdi Taremi who ran through Siah Jamegan’s defense and got fouled in the box, but was shown the yellow card even though he should’ve been awarded a penalty.

After that controversial scene, Siah Jamegan went all out attacking and gave Perspolis’s defenders a hard time. And it only took a few minutes for Siah Jamegan to get a goal back in the 81st minute after they had a couple of serious attacks on Perspolis’s goal. Siah Jamegan’s throw-in was long, and Mohsen Bengar’s clearance was disastrous as the ball fell in front of Alireza Naghizadeh who was horrendously marked by Omid Alishah. Naghizadeh powered the ball in the back of Perspolis’s net and gave hope to his team who desperately wanted to at least snatch one point. Siah Jamegan, however, couldn’t do much after their goal, with Perspolis dominating once again. The Reds could’ve even scored another goal with Jerry Bengtson hitting the cross bar, moments before the game was over. So Perspolis won the game 2-1 against Siah Jamegan, in a game that the Reds were completely dominant and could’ve scored many more goals. It was a brilliant performance and a timely win in loving memory of Captain Hadi Norouzi.

Rest of the Games

Malavan and Sepahan drew 0-0 in a game that the defenders had a better showing than the attackers.

Tractor Sazi won 2-0 against Saipa who seem to have lost their rhythm in their recent games, with Hamza Younes (26’) and Bakhtiar Rahmani (53’) both scoring Tractor’s goals. This result has massively troubled the ex-Tractor boss, Majid Jalali (Saipa’s manager), who is threatened to get sacked if the team doesn’t go back on form.

Esteghlal Tehran drew 1-1 against Esteghlal Khuzestan, with the goals coming from Aghil Kaebi (36’) and Pero Pejić (44’). Esteghlal Tehran is still on top of the table, but their recent form and constant draws could hint at a problematic future.

Saba Qom won 2-1 against Foolad Khuzestan with Foolad’s goal coming from Saman Ansari (23’) and Saba’s goals being scored by Amir Hossein Sadeghi (64’) and Mohammad Ghazi (82’). Foolad is still struggling to get points and haven’t won any of their 9 games in the Persian Gulf Pro League. And however shocking it might sound, Foolad are already favorites to be relegated.

Zob Ahan drew 0-0 with Gostaresh Foolad, and while Yahya Golmohammadi’s Zob Ahan did mainly dominate the game, they were still extremely wasteful.

Naft Tehran won 2-0 against Rah Ahan, with Vahid Amiri (25’) and Arsalan Motahari (89’) scoring Naft’s goals which resulted in their first win in the ongoing Persian Gulf Pro League season!

Esteghlal Ahvaz (who have recently sacked Sohrab Bakhtiarizadeh and appointed Ali Hanteh) lost 2-3 to Padideh Khorasan who have contained a decent form throughout the current season. Saeed Salarzadeh (39’) and Farzad Ashoubi (64’) scored Esteghlal’s goals while Younes Shakeri (37’) and Mohammad Yousefi (59’ and 62’) scored Padideh’s three goals.

Written by Armin SH


Qatar Stars League

Game of the Week

Al-Rayyan 5-2 Al-Arabi

This tie is billed as the Clasico of Qatar and every fan of Qatari football saw why on Saturday night at the Al-Arabi Stadium. It had all the ingredients of a thriller, and it lived up to the hype that was being built over the week. The game saw 7 goals, 2 penalties, a red card, inspired performances from new signings, crazy celebrations, tears and even a bizarre botched substitution that left Gianfranco Zola bewildered. Last but not least, the 10,000 odd fans who attended the fans made for a brilliant atmosphere with tifos, huge banners and combined blinking of mobile flashes.

It was Al-Rayyan who took the lead and it came in the 22nd minute. Al-Arabi keeper Rajab Hamza was adjudged to have brought down Rodrigo Tabata in what was a controversial decision. The Rayyani fans didn’t mind and roared when Tabata converted the spot kick with ease. At the stroke of halftime, the lead was doubled when new signing Mohammed Jumua al-Alawi who marauded forward and poked the ball past Rajab.RayyanArabi

After the restart, Al-Arabi seemed to be a better team and they deservedly cut the deficit when Musaab Mahmoud finished off a pass from Dutra in the 55th minute. And then, the complexion of the match changed with a red card to Rajab. In the 63rd minute, the keeper brought down Soria in the box and the referee gave him his marching orders, leaving Al-Arabi with a heavy task to do with only ten men. Tabata scored from the penalty and then only a minute later, set up Sergio Garcia to make it 4-1.

By then, Al-Arabi fans had started leaving the ground in disappointment and many of them missed the goal that Yousef Ahmed created. The substitute won the ball from Nathan and poked it to Paulinho who finished into an empty net to make the score 4-2.

Al-Rayyan were sitting comfortably though and had no reason to worry. In the 84th minute, Mohammed Jumua got his second of the night and brought up the magical ‘5’ on the scoreline.RayyanArabi2

In the middle of the second half, there was a bizarre incident in the dugout when Dame Traore was not allowed to come on as he wasn’t able to remove a ring from his finger. This left Zola exasperated, adding to the woes of a woeful night for the Arabi gaffer.

Rest of the Games

Mesaimeer 2-1 Al-Kharaitiyat

Promoted Mesaimeer brought to an end their winless and goalless run of matches after triumphing 2-1 over Al-Kharaitiyat. Veteran striker Yahia Kebe had given Al-Kharaitiyat the lead in the 11th minute but the Flames of Mesaimeer shone brightly and never lost their spirit. Erivelto Silva score Mesaimeer’s first ever QSL goal before adding one more to register his team’s historic first ever QSL win.

Al-Wakrah 2-1 Al-Gharafa

Al-Gharafa suffered their second successive defeat after starting the season well. This time it was Mouhcine Moutouali and Al-Wakrah who did the damage. Although Anas Mubarak took the lead for Al-Gharafa in the 58th minute, Moutouali cancelled it out in the 74th. And then at the fag end of the match, he won and converted a penalty to break Gharfawi hearts.

El Jaish 2-0 Lekhwiya

Abderrazak Hamdallah just can’t stop scoring and after his brace against Lekhwiya, one might wonder if he will run away with the Top Scorer award. His goals in the 4th and the 12th minutes were his 7th and 8th in the league and gave his team a valuable victory over the close rivals and defending champions Lekhwiya. Djamel Belmadi has a lot to work on if he is to bring his underperforming team back to the top.

Al-Sadd 0-0 Al-Khor 

Xavi and his Al-Sadd team are not really having it their way in the QSL. They wasted an opportunity to put pressure on league leaders Rayyan when they were held to a goalless stalemate by a resolute Al-Khor. Khor keeper Baba Djibril was brilliant in goal with Al-Sadd simply unable to breach his guard, despite having a numerical advantage following the red card to Nayef al-Braiki.

Al-Ahli 3-0 Qatar SC 

It was the same story again for the black-and-yellow brigade of Qatar SC as they lost yet again. The 3-0 reverse against Al-Ahli consigned Qatar to the bottom of the table with no wins so far. Al-Ahli’s goal all came in the second half, with Mujtaba Jabbari and Meshaal Abdullah both netting from penalties before former Qatar SC striker Abdulla al-Kuwari scored with a fine finish. A few days later, Radhi Shneishil lost his job and Sebastiao Lazaroni was roped in once again.

Al-Sailiya 1-2 Umm Salal 

Al-Sailiya may have thought they were on the way to a third win of the season when they took the lead against Umm Salal through Mustafa Mohamed’s header. Syrian forward Ismail Mohammed equalised in the 47th before Sailiya star Fouzi Ayesh was sent off. After that, things went downhill for the Falcons. Ismail set up Jeremie Aliadiere to complete the comeback win in the 79th minute.

POSTPONED MATCH (ROUND 1)

Al Gharafa 1-1 Lekhwiya

The empire seems to be crumbling at Lekhwiya. Djamel Belmadi’s men have now failed to win in their last three matches following this draw against Al-Gharafa. The result did no favours to Gharafa either, whose captain Bilal Mohammed had put them ahead in the 60th minute only for Vladimir Weiss to equalise with a brilliant strike only two minutes later. In the 88th minute, Weiss had a chance to give his team a much-needed win after being given a penalty but to the shock of everyone at Lekhwiya, he messed it up. Some run of form this has been for the Cops.

Written by Ahmed Hashim


Oman Pro League

Omani fans broke the league record once again as 14,000 fans attended the huge match up between Al-Suwaiq and Sohar. The latter have been involved in their second crunch match in 7 days. They drew 0-0 with Saham in the Oman Derby, and now faced revitalised and undefeated Al-Suwaiq.

Both teams were aware of each other’s strengths, and started off with caution especially in midfield. Sohar earned the best of the chance in the first 15 minutes after taking their chances against Al-Suwaiq goalkeeper Suleiman Al-Buraiki.

Suwaiq SoharSuqSohar proceeded to take the lead before Mohammad Aflay equalised with a calculated free kick, only for Sohar to take the lead again. As Sohar were prepared to continue their rise towards the top spots Al-Suwaiq scored an equaliser in injury time to deny Sohar a valuable and extra two points. Both teams share their positions with 9 points, near the top 4.

The fans were the biggest talking point of the game. Abderrazak Kheiri (manager of Al-Suwaiq) and Abdulnasser Makees (manager of Sohar) both complemented the fans, whose performance was outstanding.

Results and League table after 6 weeks of Oman Pro League play: http://bit.ly/1H9LDwo


VIVA Bahrain Premier League

Riffa turned out victors in the “Riffa Derby” between themselves and East Riffa. A single goal separated both teams at the Bahrain National Stadium in the opening week of the VIVA Bahrain Premier League.

Riffa were able to score the only goal of the game in the second half, where East Riffa and Bahraini International Abdulla Al-Hazza scored an own goal. It was actually East Riffa who threatened to open the scoring via Saad Al-Amer in the 6th minute, who hit the post with a dangerous shot.

Mohammad Al-Tayeb came on just 12 minutes in to provide a spark in attack for (West) Riffa, replacing the injured winger Ahmad Jalal in the process. This worked as both Al-Tayeb and Onouha Ogbonna grabbed their chances in the 25th and 26th minute respectively, only to miss.RiffaDerby

Bahraini national team right winger Sami Al-Husseini, and new signing for East Riffa, had his pace and trickery on show as he powerfully struck a shot towards opposition ‘keeper Hamad Al-Dossary. The rest of the first half ended with nothing to note of, as both teams were limited to a 0-0 scoreline.

Onouha Ogbonna started the second half with a bang, only 6 minutes into the proceedings. A cross inside to threaten East Riffa defenders succeeded as Abdullah Al-Hazza put the ball in his own net. This saw Adam Alis Setyano exit the pitch in favour of Ali Abdulla in ’56, with the Indonesian attacking midfielder not providing anything of note

Famed Bahraini referee Nawaf Shukrallah only had one yellow card to pull out in this outing, which was very drab considering the weight of the derby. Abdulla Al-Janahi tried his best to equalise late in the game but Ali Khalil made a successful goal line clearance, to end the game at 1-0 for Riffa.

The rest of the results in the Bahraini League, which saw Bahraini Champions Muharraq strikers’ Ismail Abdullatif and Iraqi Mustafa Kareem grab two goals each in a 4-0 drubbing of Malkiya: http://bit.ly/1kQeLEr


Kuwaiti Premier League 

Al-Jahra grabbed a valuable 3 points from 2014/15 VIVA Kuwaiti League runner-up Al-Arabi, in a match on Sunday evening at the Mubarak Al-Ayyar Stadium. Only two weeks into the season, Al-Jahra will want to build on their 3rd place finish with now-Lebanon manager Miodrag Radulovic last season.

Al-Jahra scored two goals in the space of four minutes, via Elias. Syrian striker and Kuwaiti League icon Firas Al-Khatib continued his goalscoring, with a penalty in the 61st minute. Yet Al-Jahra, despite their win, only stand on 3 points currently after their loss to Salmiya in the opening week.

Qadsia are the league’s heavy starters after scoring their 8th goal in a recent match against Al-Sahel. A 5-2 win was enough to see off the challenge of Al-Sahel. Albeit the lackluster performance from Al-Sahel, they did score a fantastic goal in between the rest of Qadsia’s romp. Doris Salomo rised to the top of the goalscoring rankings with a hat trick.

Salmiya destroyed Kazma 4-1 at the latter’s home stadium in what could be described as an embarrassment for Florin Motroc’s team. Both Jordanians Oday Al-Saify (Salmiya) and Saeed Murjan (Kazma) scored in this game too, to the delight of Jordanian media outlets. However it was Hamad Al-Enezi who wowed the fans with his double-goal display.

This was Kazma’s second defeat, with the first coming against Kuwaiti League holders Kuwait SC (4-0) in the first round. The latter took a rest this week, due to the league’s odd number of teams after Al-Tadamon pulled out of the league and Burgan confirmed that they would only participate in cup competitions.

The rest of the league’s results, plus the league table: http://bit.ly/1Hb1RW1


Jordanian Pro League

A disastrous week for the Jordanian League’s managers it was. 6 managers (out of 12) have already been sacked just 4 weeks into the league season! Who will be next?

WehdatHussein

Photo: AlGhad

Moving on, after Hussein Irbid lost 5-1 to newly-promoted Kufrsoum in a shocking match, they went on to defeat Jordanian League giants and Champions Wehdat 1-0! This match had small effect though, with Wehdat staying on 9 points at the top of the table while Hussein Irbid moved up into 7th place with 5 points.

Akram Al-Zuwi scored the opener in the 17th minute for Hussein, after a cross that came from Ahmad Ghazi’s corner. It all began with Hussein’s new tactical blend, which helped them control the game. Mohammad Abu Zreiq and Anas Bani Yaseen provided a benchmark in central defence for Suleiman Al-Salman and Suleiman Al-Azzam to maraud down their respective flanks. Akram Al-Zuwi and Mohammad Abu Zeitoun switched between their positions (striker and attacking midfield, respectively) to avoid being marked by Wehdat’s defenders.

Wehdat’s 4-5-1 formation was organised, but inefficient especially in attack. The lone striker failed to work the channels adequately to threaten the opposition. Their changes in the second half saw a more dense attack that looked to pressurize the Hussein defenders. But it was the Irbid-based team who held onto the victory…

Newly promoted Kufrsoum are getting into their rhythm after the departure of their former manager Bilal Al-Lahham. Two losses under the former saw him leave the club after internal issues, but the fresher Kufrsoum have started to become visible with 4 points in their last two games.

Photo: AlGhad

Photo: AlGhad

Kufrsoum successfully got into this game with speed and intensity with thanks to their midfield quartet in the middle of the park. They provided the strikers with fast and smart passes. Kufrsoum played with freedom and were better at reaching the opposition’s goal. Baqa’a came into the match with a 4-5-1 formation that was highly defensive, afraid of the danger that Kufrsoum’s players could inflict, especially Marwan Obeidat.

However, Baqa’a overturned the dominance in the second half to a good start of their own and controlled the match better than their opponents, whose level worsened throughout the match. The goal scored by them saw the team become more urgent in their bid to win, but Kufrsoum’s defence positioned themselves perfectly to avoid a late loss. FT Score: 1-1.

In Amman, Al-Jazeera tied 0-0 with Al-Ahli – the team who eliminated Wehdat from the Jordan Cup early into the tournament. This was a game that was largely quiet due to both teams’ reluctance to open up and attack. The praise has to be given to Ahmad Abdulsattar, who saved everything in his way to help Al-Jazeera come out with a respectable point. His team were unable to produce anything threatening in attack, with 4 attacks the most they could do on a disappointing night.

The rest of the week’s results and matches: http://bit.ly/1WiJQfq


Wataniya Mobile Pro League – Palestine

The fourth matchday of Wataniya Mobile Pro League was played during the past weekend.
This matchday staged three ‘Mini Derbies’, what added some excitement and prestige for the atmosphere, which currently isn’t so positive with the Saudi-Palestinian World Qualifier Saga, and the ongoing conflict in the West Bank, between Palestine and Israel.Amari

The Refugees Camps’ Classic, Clásico Al-Mukhayamat, between Shabab Al-Am’ary of Al-Bireh and Al-Gid’an Markz Balata of Nablus, was held at the Faisal Husseini Stadium in Al-Ram. The game started in a little late, after local protesters from Al-Ram got into clashes with the Israeli Defense Forces near the stadium. During the match itself Adham Abu Ruys gave Balata the lead with a half-a-volley rebound, while Al-Am’ary tied the result with a brilliant free kick of Ahmad Khawity. On the 78’ minute Abd Al-Hamid Abu Habib managed to score from a close range, in order to secure Balata’s victory, 2-1.

Shabab Al-Khaleel continued their promising start for the season, and gained a 1-0 victory over Shabab Dora, at the ‘Small Derby’ of Hebron County, with a good performance from Haytham Dheeb in defence. Dora, hometown of Palestinian Football Association’s chairman, Mr. Jibril Rajoub, was hosting the match, which saw Mahmoud Abu Warda scores the winner for the Khaleelies. Shabab Al-Khaleel achieved important 3 points before next week Classic against Dahariya, while Dura was left disappointed and troubled at the lower side of the table.ShababKhaleel

Al-Khader stadium is home for the biggest teams in Bet Lehem area – Taraji Wad Al-Nes and Shabab Al-Khader. Taraji arrived at the match after their first win of the season last week, but couldn’t compete with Al-Khader’s quality squad. Sameh Mar’abeh, the new rising star of Palestinian football, scored one, while Ali Adawy added the second. Taraji’s play did not match the professional level, and it looks like the club will continue its struggle at the lower parts of Dauri Al-Mukhtarifin.

The main match of this matchday was the one involved Hilal Al-Quds and Shabab Dahariya. Dahariya took the lead after a good run and a cold finish by Mohammed Fodeh. Daharaiya was about to conquer the top of table, but at the 87th minute Fady Zidan nailed the equalizer for the Jerusalemites. Hilal Al-Quds is suffering a bad opening for the season despite some major investments in the transfer window, while Dahariya is sharing the 1st place with Shabab Al-Khaleel.

Written by Babagoaaal (Uri Levy) 


Fuchs Premier League – Iraq 

Al-Zawraa, the only unbeaten team in Iraq’s two group format, and last season’s league champions Naft Al-Wasat are on course to qualify from Group A as they both picked up victories on match day seven of the Fuchs Iraqi league. Loay Salah with two and Mohanad Abdul-Rahim with his sixth goal this season was enough to see Al-Nawaras beat Naft Al-Maysan.

Naft Al-Wasat who slipped to second in the league after a shock 3-1 defeat away to promoted Samawa last week, returned to winning ways with a comfortable win over bottom of the table Duhok, with goals from Amjad Walid, Jassim Mohammed and Syrian defender Alaa Al-Shbli, who also netted past his own keeper.

The next two rounds of matches will see the Iraqi champions take on this season’s surprise team in Group A, Al-Naft and leaders Al-Zawraa. Hossam Al-Sayed’s high-flyers Al-Minaa stretched their lead in Group B to four points with a convincing 1-0 win over Al-Shurta at the Al-Karkh Stadium.

Syrian striker Omar Khrebin rounded the keeper to score the winner, his fourth in three league games and he now tops the goalscorers’ charts with seven goals. Second placed Al-Quwa Al-Jawiya continued their slump with another defeat at Zakho. Amir Sabah’s double compounded Sabah Abdul-Jalil’s men to their 3rd defeat in the last four matches and looked to have lost the services of top scorer Hamadi Ahmed for a month after he was stretchered off with a broken jaw.

Four-time champions Arbil have been rejuvenated this season under Thair Ahmed and are up to third in the group. A 3-1 win at Al-Najaf has stretched their unbeaten run to five matches. The Yellow Citadel had been predicted to struggle after they were forced to release most of their squad in the close season due to financial problems but the league’s joint top scorers with 11 goals look on course to qualify for the final stage on current form.

Written by Hassanin Mubarak


Alfa Lebanese League

Al Safa 4-0 Sagesse

After a stunning performance in the first round, Safa won the first game of the second Round against Sagesse Achrafiye, 4-0 to keep themselves on top of the league.

As usual, Safa scored an early goal by National Team Player Zein Tahan (min. 4′). Ten minutes later, his teammate Hazimeh scored the second goal for the Yellow Castle after a huge mistake from Sagesse’s goal keeper Nazih Taha, which leave many question marks on Al Sagesse’s Shaky defensive performance. Al-Safa quickly killed Sagesse’s hope to come back in the game with a stunner in the 22th minutes by the talented Mohammed Haidar.

In the second half, the newly promoter team tried to coma back but Al-Safa’s defenders were brilliant and were able to keep another clean sheet this season, meanwhile Sheikh Dyouk scored the 4th goal in the game (min. 87).

Al-Ahed 3-0 Shabeb Al-Ghazieh

Moving to the second game, after a shocking loss in the first round against Nabi Chit everyone started wondering what happened to the champions but the ALFA Lebanese champions Al-Ahed defeated Shabab Ghazieh, 3-0.Safa

Al-Ahed finished the job in the First Half scoring three goals in 15 minutes, Starting with Hussein Dakik in the 13th minutes, then Khalil Khamis 7 minutes later while the 3rd goals was scored by Al-Ahed’s foreign The Senegalese striker Drame. In the second half, Al-Ahed kept their domination and could add more goals if their strikers were focused but at the end, Al-Ahed grabbed the first three points in the season.

Tripoli 1-1 Ijtimai
The awaited Tripoli Derby finished 1-1 after a great performance from both teams. Oboku scored for the Second Division Champions while Mostapha Kasaa scored for the Lebanese Cup holders. Ex-Salam Zgharta’s Striker Abu Baker Al-Mal showed an improvement in his second game with his new team and Tripoli FC fans are optimistic with the striker’s perfrormance and they’re sure that he will show his full potential in the upcoming games.IjtimaiFans

And one thing to spot was the game’s atmosphere, which was superb thanks to both team’s fans. Hopefully this will effect positively on the league this season.

Kanoute82On the other side, Al Nabi Chit won their second game against Shabab Al-Sahel 1-0, scored by the shining player Khaled Al-Saleh. It was marred by the fact that star striker Abdoulaye Kanoute broke his leg and had no first aid to help him! Players had to carry him off the pitch.

Written by Abed Aydin 

*Beirut Derby between Nejmeh and Ansar postponed until November 11.


Team of the Week 

TOTWOct25

Player of the Week

AhdaafPOTW4Lima

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DOMESTIC WEEKLY REVIEW: October 15-21 https://ahdaaf.me/2015/10/21/domestic-weekly-review-october-15-21/ https://ahdaaf.me/2015/10/21/domestic-weekly-review-october-15-21/#comments Wed, 21 Oct 2015 21:55:59 +0000 https://ahdaaf.me/?p=6922 This is going to be your weekly guide to Middle Eastern Football in English. Live happenings, it’s all on Ahdaaf. We]]> This is going to be your weekly guide to Middle Eastern Football in English. Live happenings, it’s all on Ahdaaf. We will be putting it into one weekly article regarding every single league in the Middle East. Of course, you will see more in-depth analyses with the bigger leagues and the leagues we have more writers for (if you would like to write for us, feel free to tweet us, Facebook message us or email us at [email protected]).

To make this simple for you, we have hyperlinks to any league you would like to read at your own pleasure. We also have live leagues and results, so feel free to use this tool that will be your guide for any of the teams in the league that you want to read: https://ahdaaf.me/fixtures-results/

Hyperlinks

Persian Gulf Pro League

Arabian Gulf League

Qatar Stars League

Saudi Arabian ALJ League

Lebanese Premier League

Jordan, Oman, Iraq, Palestine, Bahrain, Kuwait

Team & Player of the Week

Week 7 – Persian Gulf Pro League

Game of the Week

Rah Ahan 5-0 Esteghlal Ahvaz

Stadium: Rah Ahan Stadium

Attendance: 100

Newly promoted Esteghlal Ahvaz travelled to Tehran to face Rah Ahan in what was considered as the first relegation 6-pointer of the season. Prior to the game, there was a lot of controversy surrounding the Esteghlal Ahvaz camp, with some high profile players complaining about a lack of payment of their contracts and other broken promises by the club. Both teams only had one win to show for their season, so they both aimed to get maximum points in this clash.

After observing a minute’s silence in respect to the recently deceased Persepolis captain, Hadi Norouzi, Esteghlal Ahvaz got the game under way. Early stages of the game saw both teams trying to dominate midfield and create scoring opportunities from a more direct approach. But it was the home side who took the lead on 10th minute, it was Mehrdad Mohammadi’s great work down the left which created the goal after he found Amin Manouchehri across the goal as the latter tapped the ball in to break the deadlock. Esteghlal Ahvaz captain, Adel Kolahkaj, came close to putting the game back on level terms when he headed wide from a corner, it was a great opportunity as the Rah Ahan defence fell asleep but Kolahkaj may regret this huge miss. Minutes later, it was time for Rah Ahan’s captain, Bahador Abdi, to step up as his 7a6622cd3135825d9ceef87e98beebd0_1076_persistence in the penalty box created a havoc and Esteghlal Ahvaz’ failure to clear the ball gave Mehrdad Mohammadi an opportunity to volley home inside the 6 yards box, and he converted to double his team’s lead. Rest of the first half saw the visitors pushing for a goal, and they went close on a couple of occasions but Rah Ahan’s goalkeeper, Mohammad Ali Ramezanian, was on hand to make some crucial saves to keep the score at 2-0 before the break.

The game was indifferent in 2nd half, with neither team eager to push on to score. But on 70th minute, as Esteghlal Ahvaz pushed for a goal to get back into the game, Rah Ahan hit them on the counter and it was Amin Manouchehri on the right who noticed Mehrdad Mohammad running towards to the box and laid the ball at his feet as Mohammadi’s accurate side footed shot found the corner of the net to put the game beyond their opponents. The last few minutes of the game saw Esteghlal Ahvaz giving up as they allowed their hosts to score 2 more goals with some comical defending on the show. 23 year old Hossein Karimi and Captain, Bahador Abdi, scored the 4th and 5th goal respectively as Rah Ahan recorded their 2nd win of the season in emphatic fashion.

It was a terrible performance from Esteghlal Ahvaz, with their defence cutting open time and time again allowing their opponents to score 5. As a result, Siavash Bakhtiarizadeh, was sacked as manager and he has been replaced by Ali Hanteh. Rah Ahan, however, are looking good under their new manager, Mehdi Tartar, and aiming to get more points across the table in the coming weeks.

Rest of the Games

The most anticipated game of the week took place at the Azadi Stadium where Persepolis took on Saba Qom. There was a lot of eyes on this game but for non-football reasons. Persepolis, tragically lost their club captain, Hadi Norouzi, who passed away over a week before the game and the players were keen to get oe2a6c56a245151e854ca458f950fb001_1076_n the pitch and win a game in his memory. Before the game started, the fans held up a “Hadi24” tifo in the memory of their captain. Saba took the lead through former Esteghlal and Persepolis man, Mohammad Ghazi, before Persepolis’s man in-form, Mehdi Taremi, equalised in 2nd half as the game ended 1-1.

A crisis hit Foolad hosted Tractor Sazi in what turned out to be a game full of action. Tractor Sazi had to come back from 1-0 down to win 2-1 as Mohammad Iranpourian scored a 90th minute winner from the penalty spot. Omid Khaledi had given Foolad the lead on 65th minute before Augusto Cesar equalised 6 minutes later. Farid Karimi of Tractor Sazi and Esmaeil Sharifat of Foolad were sent off during the 2nd half, as Foolad find themselves at the foot of the table.

Zob Ahan took another leap towards the top of the table as they earned a hard earned 1-0 win away from home at Saipa. Masoud Hassanzadeh scored the only goal of the game on 16th minute which takes Zob Ahan up to 4th in the table just above Saipa.

Mehdi Kheiri scored the goal of the week as Padideh held league leaders, Esteghlal, to a 1-1 draw at home. Kheiri’s 40 yard spectacular goal gave Padideh the lead inside the first 5 minutes before Hossein Moradmand’s own goal gave Esteghlal an equaliser just before the hour mark. Esteghlal remain at the top of the table ahead with other results going their way.

Elsewhere in Esfahan, defending champions, Sepahan, faced Siah Jamegan as they aimed to put more pressure on leaders Esteghlal. However, Siah Jamegan’s resolute performance earned them a 1-1 draw in such a difficult away trip. Mehdi Sharifi scored for Sepahan just before the 1c697d170dea8b2eb6898fa20296162d_1076_break as Behrouz Afshar brought the game back to level terms in the 2nd half. Sepahan remain 2nd in the table only on goal difference ahead of 3rd placed Esteghlal Khuzestan.

Naft Tehran who have had a difficult start to the season, travelled to Tabriz to face Gostaresh. Aloys Nong gave visitors the lead but Omid Nezamipour earned his team a point at home as the game ended 1-1. Naft remain just outside the relegation zone as manager, Alireza Mansourian, aims to get his team back to winning ways sooner rather than later.

The only 0-0 draw of the week came in Ahvaz where Esteghlal Khuzestan welcomed Malavan. A point each way was a fair result as Esteghlal Khuzestan continue their incredible run this season, after surviving by the skin of their teeth last season, they are now 3rd in the table amassing 15 points from 8 games.

Ahdaaf Player of the Week:

Mehrdad Mohammadi’s performance in his team’s 5-0 win at home earns him the Player of the Week award. With two goals and an assist, he was instrumental in earning his team an invaluable 3 points.  The 22 year old midfielder has had a fantastic start to the season, he is the league’s joint top goalscorer with 6 goals and many assists.

Written by Sina Saemian 


Week 5 – Arabian Gulf League

Game of the Week

Al-Ahli 3-1 Sharjah

Stadium: Rashid Stadium, Dubai

Attendance: 3,300

Sharjah’s hopes dwindle weekly, as their attendance continues to dwindle too. The away fans were loud for the majority of the first half as new signing Maicosuel scored another league goal. However, the Al-Ahli attack was too good. The amount of times we’ve said, tweeted or written this…

Lima, Sow and Al-Hammadi proved a deadly trio as they all helped each other out to score. Obviously not forgetting Habib Fardan’s addition this time. The Al-Ahli side had next to no weaknesses despite going down 1-0. Overall, the game wasn’t entertaining as much itself. The week was very drab in the Arabian Gulf League, with two 0-0 draws taking over in the supposed ‘Games of the Week’! (Al-Jazira x Al-Shabab // Al-Nasr x Al-Wahda)

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Moussa Sow fights Muhain Khalifa off the ball. (Photo: agleague.ae)

However one thing that we should note is Cosmin’s reluctance to play a weakened squad. Even in the Arabian Gulf Cup – a second tier cup – the likes of Lima, Sow, Ribeiro, Fardan, Salmin and Kwon play. Nevertheless, that’s not to say young players aren’t getting their chances. Saeed Ahmed, Humaid Abbas, Humaid Salmin, Adil Al-Hammadi, Yousif Al-Sayed are some of the names that have seen game time across the course of the season.

Rest of the Games 

Al-Jazira 0-0 Al-Shabab

Stadium: Mohammad Bin Zayed Stadium, Abu Dhabi

Attendance: 3,120

To think that Al-Jazira’s attendances in the league over the past 5 seasons has always stayed above 6,000 at the bare minimum in terms of average attendances. Now, look at their level. This is taking into account an Abu Dhabi Derby (Al-Wahda), one of the biggest fan bases (Al-Wasl) and a top four challenger (Al-Shabab) have come to face them.

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Carlos Villanueva proving his excellence once again. (Photo: agleague.ae)

What if the likes of Dibba, Al-Dhafra and Fujairah come to play at the MBZ stadium? All we know is, the league attendances this season have been largely disappointing. Al-Jazira faced Fujairah, Emirates and Al-Ain in the first 3 games of 2014-15 to see an average attendance of 8,468 – only for it to deteriorate to 3,533 in the current season.

Nevertheless, the game was a very tight affair that saw an improved Al-Jazira defence with not much to note of. One move by Caio Junior that saw a difference is moving Jo to the wing and Villanueva into the centre: a tactical change not seen in the AGL.

Fujairah 1-1 Al-Dhafra 

Stadium: Fujairah, Fujairah

Attendance: 856

A game that lacked anything to begin with, it was all up to individual ability of Hassan Maatouk to create something out of nothing. Yet that wasn’t present in this game to everyone’s ultimate surprise. Defensive mistakes saw each team bag a goal, and that was the story of the game in essence.

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Patrick Eze slips in a pass before falling to the ground. (Photo: agleague.ae)

Patrick Eze stole the ball off an Al-Dhafra defender before opening the scoring, while Al-Dhafra’s fuzzy haired central midfielder Al-Naqbi scored a long-range goal that Al-Ruwahi (Fujairah GK) caught and let go of in between his own legs! Silly mistakes by the goalkeeper have continued. It is important to remember that Al-Ruwahi was the goalkeeper who conceded 8 against Al-Ahli in the opening game of the season.

Al-Ain 1-0 Dibba

Stadium: Hazza Bin Zayed Stadium, Al-Ain

Attendance: 3,148

Ryan Babel was the talk of a very boring game. He started off well to begin with, before getting a red card (sparking tweets to him claiming that he got sent off to watch Klopp’s debut at Liverpool against Tottenham!) during the proceedings of the first half.

It was up to Omar Abdulrahman to force a winner, as he crossed it towards goal only for recent internationally retired defender Bilal Najjarine scoring one of the best own goals we’ve seen in a while.

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Omar Abdulrahman. (Photo: agleague.ae)

Al-Nasr 0-0 Al-Wahda 

Stadium: Maktoum Stadium, Dubai

Attendance: 2,540

The match did not live up to its expected level, especially Al-Nasr who failed to grab the 3 important points that could have kept them at the top of the table. The international break clearly affected both sets of players.

The match lacked any chances to speak of, specifically from Al-Wahda who suffered from playing with a man down. Mohammad Bargash saw himself sent off in the first half. On the other hand, Al-Nasr players failed to take advantage of the extra space gained in the absence of an extra man.

Tariq Ahmed (left) fights off Sebastian Tagliablue.

Tariq Ahmed (left) fights off Sebastian Tagliablue. (Photo: agleague.ae)

Jimenez, Pitroipa and Kembo Ekoko have been fantastic since the beginning of the season. However, this was the first time that all three failed to make an impact on the match. They failed to threaten any of the Al-Wahda centre backs.

Al-Wahda closed the gaps in the second half with two banks of 4, however that didn’t change the course of the game either. This saw the game end in a stalemate.

Al-Shaab 1-2 Al-Wasl

Stadium: Khaled Bin Mohammad, Sharjah

Attendance: 2,962

The talking point of the game has to take into account the Al-Shaab fans who showed up in numbers once again. Numbers is on the level of Emirati football, where the average attendance is around 2,500.

Moreover, this season has seen Al-Shaab rank amongst the highest teams in the league in terms of attendance despite their poor start. When Al-Shaab have had a higher average attendance than Al-Ain, there is definitely a problem with the way the league is going attendance-wise.

The other Lima: Fabio Virginio (right). (Photo: agleague.ae)

The other Lima: Fabio Virginio (right). (Photo: agleague.ae)

Looking at the play, it was really both teams without a plan. Al-Wasl’s fans questioned the way Calderon – a manager who structured Al-Wasl very well last season – set up the team. It was only until the final half hour of the game where Al-Wasl took the lead. Fabio Lima opened the scoring, before Edgar Bruno ended his league goal drought. Former Waslawi Maher Jassem brought Al-Shaab’s hopes back in the 89th minute, however the Cheetahs saw the game out.

Emirates 0-3 Baniyas

Stadium: Emirates Stadium, Ras Al-Khaimah

Attendance: 1,750

Defensive mistakes played a big part in Emirates’ 3-0 loss to Baniyas. Poor positioning in their deep defensive block led to some great chances for Baniyas. The reason for this derives from Baniyas’ central midfielders’ freedom. Mark Milligan and Amer Abdulrahman were both allowed the space to dictate the game and this was visible in Amer’s brilliant assist to Joaquin Larrivey.

Royston Drenthe has been physically tormenting AGL defenders. (Photo: agleague.ae)

Royston Drenthe has been physically tormenting AGL defenders. (Photo: agleague.ae)

In the second half, Baniyas defended in numbers but were afraid of its implications considering that this resulted in Al-Shabab scoring a late equaliser in the previous game. Luis Garcia instructed his team to attack, and they grabbed the 3rd goal. Baniyas are the dark horses of this season.

Written by Hamoudi Fayad


Week 4 – Qatar Stars League

Game of the Week

Lekhwiya 2-3 Al-Arabi

Stadium: Abdulla bin Khalifa Stadium, Lekhwiya

Attendance: 3,300

In what could prove to be a very crucial result in the course of the 2015/16 season, Al-Arabi pulled off a major surprise by beating defending champions Lekhwiya 3-2 last Sunday. It was billed as the real litmus test for Gianfranco Zola’s men, facing the best team in the country but Al-Arabi showed no signs of being overwhelmed by the occasion.

Lekhwiya came into the match in the face of some controversy, after Ahmed Yasser’s suspension drama. They were looking to put it all behind them but were given a rude shock in the second minute of the game when Junior Dutra calmly struck the opener from the edge of the box. Al-Arabi then proceeded to play some of their best football so far, with a mature display in all areas until they suddenly capitulated just a few minutes before halftime. In a four-minute spell, Lekhwiya turned the tables. Youssef Msakni equalised in the 38th minute before Vladimir Weiss got the second for the Cops in the 41st with a long-range strike. Going into halftime, it seemed Al-Arabi’s good form was ill-fated and short. But after the restart, they returned as a different team.

Deservedly, the Reds equalized in the 62nd minute. Once again, it was Dutra, who played a delightful one-two with fellow Brazilian Paulinho, got into the box and slot the ball past Lecomte to spark a revival in the Al-Arabi stands. Five minutes later, there was more noise when Dutra completed his hattrick, latching on to a pass from Ashkan Dejagah before placing the ball beyond Lecomte’s reach.

To make matters worse for Lekhwiya, captain Karim Boudiaf was sent off for elbowing Dutra in the 75th minute. Boudiaf then proceeded to attack a second player, before throwing his armband at the linesman and gesturing to the fans before leaving the field. The QFA would go on to hand him a six-month suspension and a QR 300,000 fine. Watch Karim Boudiaf’s fit: 

Rest of the Games

Al-Khor 2-4 Al-Rayyan

RayyanKhorAl-Rayyan remained at the top of the table with a 100% record after yet another win, this time against struggling Al-Khor. Captain Rodrigo Tabata opened the scoring in the first minute before Mubarak Eid equalised for Al-Khor (19th). New signing Gonzalo Viera then regained the lead for Rayyan (21st), netting his third goal of the season. Youngster Abdulhamid Anad scored Rayyan’s third (25th) before teeing up Sergio Garcia for the fourth (45th). Al-Khor attempted to get back in the game but could only score once through Lee Yong (52nd).

Al-Ahli 2-2 Al-Kharaitiyat

The Hamad bin Khalifa Stadium witnessed a fine match when Ahli and Kharaitiyat went head to head. It was Kharaitiyat who took the initiative and two goals from Hassan Abdelfattah (42nd) and Anwar Diba (49th) seemed to have put them in the driving seat. However, Al-Ahli responded brilliantly with two penalties: Meshaal Abdullah reducing the deficit (70th) and Mujtaba Jabbari scoring late (92nd) to salvage a point. 

Al-Wakrah 1-2 Al-Sailiya

Al-Wakrah’s horrrible start to the season continued after a defeat at the hands of Al-Sailiya. Last season’s PGPL top scorer Edinho put Sailiya in the lead (28th) before Mouhcine Moutouali equalised for Al-Wakrah from a penalty (59th). Bahraini midfielder Faouzi Ayesh then produced a free-kick which didn’t seem dangerous before Wakrah keeper Inyass dropped what should have been an easy catch, gifting Sailiya the winner (64th). 

Mesaimeer 0-3 Umm Salal 

Promoted Mesaimeer are finding the Qatar Stars League too tough to handle, with this defeat by Umm Salal leaving them at the bottom of the standings with zero points and no goals scored after five rounds. This time, goals from Ismail Mahmoud (23rd), Theyab al-Annabi (89th) and Yannick Sagbo (90th) that did the damage.

UmmSalalMesaimeer

Al-Sadd 2-1 Qatar SC

Xavi Hernandez and his Al-Sadd team kept up the pressure on leaders Al-Rayyan with a victory over Qatar SC that left them two points behind top spot. Muriqui opened the scoring for the Wolves as early as in the 4th minute before Mohammed Kasola headed in a second in the 53rd. Al-Sadd’s defensive woes were exposed when Mouhcine Iajour penetrated quite easily to pull a goal back for Qatar (79th). Luckily for Al-Sadd, the score stayed 2-1 for the rest of the match. Qatar SC coach Radhi Shneishel will be feeling the pressure after a surprisingly bad start to the campaign, with no wins registered as of Round 5. To make matters worse, last year’s top scorer Hamdi Harbaoui has left the club over a dispute with the management.

 

Al-Gharafa 1-4 El Jaish 

Prior to this Matchday, Al-Gharafa hadn’t conceded a single goal in its first three matches and had a 100% record. All that came crashing down when they faced El Jaish last Sunday. Although Yassine Chikhaoui (31st) gave the Cheetahs the lead from the spot, El Jaish responded by putting four past the previously unbeaten Qasim Burhan. The goals came from Romarinho (45th), Abdelrazaq Hamdallah (72nd, 75th) and Sardor Rashidov (87th). Hamdallah’s brace gave him joint top spot in the scorers’ tally with 6 goals.

Written by Ahmed Hashim


Week 4 – Saudi ALJ League

Game of the Week

Al-Ahli 4-2 Al-Nassr

Stadium: Al-Jawhara Stadium (King bdullah Sport City), Jeddah

Attendance: 32,543

The Saudi ALJ League El Clásico between Al-Ahli and Al-Nassr turned out to be a one-sided match. Al-Ahli won with a sweeping victory against Al-Nassr in King Abdullah Sport City – Stadium, Jeddah, nicknamed The Jewel, with more than 32,000 spectators watching. Al-Ahli was playing at home with seven points at second place on the ALJ League standings and Al-Nassr with 5 points at fifth place. Al-Ahli’s win is not a matter of three points only, but they also were able to put Al-Nassr in more despair and push last season’s Champions and a very fierce rival a step farther away from the title. This win is also a new record, 38 matches undefeated!

As always, El Clásico between Al-Ahli and Al-Nassr was dramatic, full of goals and action. Al-Ahli head coach Christian Gross entered the match with a 4-2-3-1 formation, while Al-Nassr head coach Jorge da Silva had 4-3-1-2 formation at hand. With five quick and skillful midfielders from Al-Ahli on the pitch, the Al-Nassr defense, especially the left side, suffered tremendously. Al-Nassr left back Hussain Abdulghani, aged 38, and the centre back Muhammad Hussain, aged 35, could not keep up with Al-Ahli swift midfielders: Tayseer Al-Jasim, Salman Al-Moasher, and Hussain Al-Mqahwi. The match was on fire just right from the beginning. Omar Al-Somah executed a free-kick just outside the box brilliantly from beneath the wall, surprisingly, to hit the back of net. Al-Nassr goalkeeper, Al-Enezi, could only watch the ball waddling straight to the goal 6′.

AhliNasr

Adrian Miezerjewski trying to help Al-Nassr in any way possible. (Photo: MBC)

After Al-Ahli’s first goal, Al-Nassr tried to get back to the match and they were able to control the match for about 20 minutes but in vain. Another free kick a little bit farther this time, the mighty Omar Al-Somah was able to do it again and score the second goal 28′, this time Cristiano Ronaldo style! Few minutes later, Al-Somah scored a hat-trick making it in just 37 minutes after an excellent assist from Mustafa Bassas who was able to beat the defender, Muhammad Hussain. That goal just killed the match! Jorge da Silva who appeared clueless, replaced the robust central defensive midfielder, Abdulaziz Al-Jebreen, by the skillful playmaker Yahia Al-Shehri in a strange attempt to come back! That actually made things worse, it created more space for counterattacks. Maiga and Hazazi had two real chances to score at least a goal before half time, but Al-Ahli’s veteran defender, Osama Hawsawi, was able to save it. The first half ended with Al-Ahli leading the match with 3 goals to nil.

AlAhliAlNass

(Photo: Sanaa Press)

Al-Nassr started the second half more determined to do something, their efforts paid off a penalty. Adrian Mierzejewski scored Al-Nassr first goal 69′ from the penalty spot. That goal provoked Al-Ali players thus the match became more intense. While Al-Nassr was struggling to come back to the match, Tayseer Al-Jasim passed a superb through ball to Islam Seraj who unleashed an unstoppable right-footed drive into the back of the net scoring the fourth goal 72′ and securing the three points. In an attempt to save the face, Al-Nassr attacked in the last 20 minutes but it was too late. Omar Hawsawi, however, managed to do what the strikers could not. He scored the second goal 82′ for Al-Nassr after diverting a long pass from a free kick from Hussain Abdulghani. The final score was 4:2, Al-Ahli to the top of ALJ standings.

Christian Gross was able to outperform Jorge da Silva yet again. With such a clever coach and brilliant squad, Al-Ahli could finally win the title that has been away for 32 years now. The champions of the ALJ, Al-Nassr, for the last two years are in their worst shape since José Daniel Carreño managed the team in September 2012! Probably, Gross has put the final nail in da Silva’s coffin! So, will Al-Ahli continue its extraordinary performances to win the title? Or, is it going to be a replica of last season when Al-Ahli defeated Al-Nassr twice; but still, Al-Nassr won the title?

Written by Nasser Al Beshri

Rest of the Games

Hajer 1-2 Al-Khaleej

Things didn’t look promising for hosts Hajer early in their match against Al-Khaleej after veteran defender Rashid Al Raheeb had a penalty called against after forward Abobaker Sylla plunged to the ground from the slightest contact he could sense. Ibrahim Al Zawahreh’s penalty was saved brilliantly by captain Mustafa Malayekah, yet the daring save did little in the hosts’ favor as less than 20 minutes later Hajer’s defense produced a calamity of an effort of clearing the ball when Mansour Nammazi caught his team Ali Al-Zubaidi in the stomach which resulted in the ball to be deflected in his own net. Al-Zubaidi took to the ground although doubtful it was because of pain more than to hide his face.

Marwan Hussein extended the lead in favor of the guests just before halftime after Mustafa Malayekah perried a shot from Talal Majrashi only for the ball to find itself at the Iraqi’s feet for a tapin. It seemed Al-Khaleej were easily on their way to the first 3 points of the season. Dragan Ceran gave the match life again after he unleashed a rocket of a shot that went off the left post from just outside the semicircle of the 18 yard box. Unfortunately for Hajer, that wasn’t enough. Al-Khaleej claimed their first win as well as their first pair of goals in 3 months.

Al-Raed 0-0 Fateh

Not a lot to be said about this fixture other than dead last Al-Raed finally getting a point since the beginning of the season in a match that surprisingly saw them look sharper than their guests Fateh. The former champions from 2 seasons ago looked off sync after the international break and barely looked for a goal or a win at King Abdullah Sport City.

Al-Wehda 2-2 Al-Faisaly

Al-Wehda took the lead in the 37th minute after Ali Awaji took advantage of a shambolic attempt by goalkeeper Ibrahim Zaid to easily place it in the net. Al-Faisaly – still buzzing from their display against Al-Ittihad from the 3rd round came back flying after Hamza Al-Dardour’s cross found Javier Balboa only 3 minutes after conceding the match’s first goal. Like that was enough, Al-Wehda quickly charged back at Ibrahim Zaid’s goal in the 42nd minute. Goalscorer Ali Awaji passed the ball to Lima, who held the ball until Awaji found space and zig-zagged from the left side of the box to right. Lima threaded it back to Awaji, who dribbled his way to just a few yards before the goal-line and crossed it back to Lima who side-footed into the back of the net.

The second half was a different as it seemed to drag on forever until the 3rd minute of stoppage time when Fawaz Fallatah’s cross found Hamza Al-Dardour but his attempt shanked the ball awkardly in Al-Wehda’s box to find an unmarked Mohammed Salem who headed the ball towards the goal but was an inch high and deflected off the bar back to none other than culprit Al-Dardour but this time he was ready in headed it in easily giving Al-Faisaly a precious point in the dying seconds. 

Al-Qadisyah 1-3 Al-Ittihad

IttiQads

(Photo: Sport)

Al-Ittihad started their match in Khobar as Sulley Muntari cherry picked the ball in the middle of the park in the 20 minute mark and passed it over to Rivas who only needed a touch before he let loose of a screamer from the tip of the 18 yard box that had goalkeeper Faisal Masrahi in no-man’s land taking the lead for the guests in what looked like a one-sided affair to that point. Al-Qadisiyah were extended a lifeline 5 minutes afterwards after Ittihad forward Abdulrahman Al Ghamdi’s attempt at dribbling in front of his own box resulted in Diego Mauricio bolting in and taking a shot with his left foot only for goalkeeper Fawaz Al-Qarni to block it, but it didn’t end there. The ball rolled back to Mauricio who was losing his balance and edging out of the pitch, and in a desperate attempt to correct his mistake in came Abdulrahman AlGhamdi. The young forward attempted to clear the ball, but the ball went straight to Diego Mauricio’s hip – who was standing outside by then – and came rolling back into the pitch to find an unmarked Hassan Al-Amri who easily made it 1-1.

The moment of comedic fortune didn’t help the hosts in the 58th minute when Muntari found Rivas again – this time with a diagonal lob pass that the Venezuelan calmly controlled on his chest and whipped on the volley to make it 2-1 in favor of Al-Ittihad. Rivas had to claim his hat-trick, and that he did in the 83rd minute when he found Fahad Al-Muwallad’s ground pass from the right and sidefooted it make it 3 and over in favor of the Jeddah club who needed this win for confidence more than anything else. The starting lineup came on the pitch all wearing home kits with the number 44 printed on both sides in solidarity with their teammate Mukthar Fallatah, whom had become a villain in the eyes of the Ittihad faithful after a spat between the player and a fan turned sour because of Fallatah losing cool and resolving to profane insults. That same unity showed in the match. The young Ittihad could have collapsed again after Al-Ghamdi’s mistake but rose from the ashes looking to claim something they deserved.

Najran 0-1 Al-Shabab

Al-Shabab did what needed to be done in a match that saw more collisions and acts of force than it did actual playing of football. Diego Arismendi’s effort at heading it backwards from a Rafinha cross only resulted in it bouncing above Najran’s defense and finding bandaged countryman Mauricio Affonso unmarked and he headed the ball as strong as his damaged head could hit it. Goalkeeper Abdulaziz Takrouni got a hand on it but it wasn’t enough as that was the decider in a match that saw as many cards as it did shots on target (Yes, really).

Written by Othman At-Twaijri


Week 1 – Lebanese League

Televised games 

Ansar 1-1 Tripoli 

Stadium: Tripoli Municipal Stadium, Tripoli

Attendance: 1,000

Ansar started a new (revived) era under Jamal Taha, one of the better players in Lebanese football who has now become manager. His status in Lebanon is very high, despite almost getting Shabab Al-Sahel relegated last season. The Lebanese League started off with a cracker.

Ghanaians Abdulaziz Youssef and Michael Helegbe teamed up to create havoc on Ansar defenders, namely Hussein Al-Sayed. Al-Sayed, who went off before the end of the first half, missed the ball on a couple of occasions allowing the attackers on goal. Ansar quickly returned under the guidance of the low-tempered Rabih Ataya who helped Imad Ghaddar earn and score a penalty.

Ataya is national team quality, only his behaviour doesn’t represent that. He failed to play many games for the team last season and was on the verge of leaving, but Ansar need him if anything. A constant menace in central attacking midfield, it will only be time until we see him in the national team despite the circumstances…

Nabi Chit 2-1 Ahed

Stadium: Nabi Chit Stadium, Zahle, Beqaa

Attendance: 200

The Champions succumbed to a 2-1 defeat in the governorate of Beqaa. After summer changes that saw manager Mahmoud Hammoud look for ways to tactically enhance the team, a loss ensued.

Two trophies (Lebanese Elite Cup and Lebanese Super Cup) over the summer were enough to bring the Ahed fan base to a sense of optimism, especially with the AFC Cup a very important competition come February. They don’t want to fall into the same trap as Nejmeh, who embarrassed themselves in the tournament last year.

But it was our friend Abdoulaye Kanoute who scored the winner against Ahed. That’s right, Kanoute was without a club the last time we wrote about him. Ultimately travelling to Bahrain after Malkiya’s trial offer, he returned to Mali citing technical reasons were the problem during his time in the Gulf nation. We sorted him out with the right people that linked him to preferred clubs in Nabi Chit, Safa and Shabab Sahel. Inevitably, he signed for Nabi Chit to replace Cheikh Diouck who left to Safa in the process.

Nejmeh 1-1 Shabab Sahel

Stadium: Sidon International Stadium, Sidon

Attendance: 3,000

Karl Max

Karl Max Dany grabs his first ever Nejmeh goal. (Photo: Al-Mustaqbal)

Moussa Kabiru started his first game for Shabab Sahel, this coming after a fantastic 8 goals scored in the pre-season Challenge Cup. How did he fare in his first game against the biggest club in Lebanon? By scoring, that’s how. Shabab Sahel saw fresh performances off the back of captain and veteran Zuheir Abdullah at right back too.

However Nejmeh came back into the game through new Chadian striker Karl Max Dany, scoring a powerful shot into the top corner. Joan Oumari’s brother and new signing Hassan Oumari excelled at left back where he create the adequate chances for strikers to take advantage of. Moussa Hojeij will be happy from the point gained in his first game as Sahel manager, ironically against the team he excelled at during his playing career.

Written by Hamoudi Fayad 

Non-Televised Games

Racing 1-3 Safa 

Al-Safa dominated the first half despite Racing players’ effort. The first 15 minutes of the game showed how Safa was dominating over the based in Achrafiyeh. Racing players were a bit lost against the huge performance by Safa and Lebanese national team winger Mohammed Haidar who scored the first goal (15th minute) of the game despite missing two easy chances later on, a header and a one-on-one in the 38th and 40th minute respectively.

Safa Racing

(Photo: Al-Mustaqbal)

In the second half, although Racing’s imports weren’t as good as expected the team came back in the game by keeping the ball more in Safa’s half but unfortunately Safa scored their second goal (78th minute) by Hazimeh on the goal keeper’s left after a long pass from his team mate Ahmad Jalloul ending Racing’s domination during the second half.

Later on, youngster Omar El-Kurdi scored a screamer (83rd minute) giving Safa a comfortable lead, 3-0. 5 minutes later, Adnan Melhem crossed the ball to Racing’s foreign player Dragic who scored Racing’s first goal. The match ended 1-3 and the White Castle fans weren’t satisfied by their team’s performance.

Written by Abed Aydin


Oman Derby fails to entertain despite record 12,000 attendance – Sohar, Oman

Week 4 – Oman Professional League

More than 12,000 fans on a blue and green night came to watch from the North Batinah region in Oman. Neighbours Sohar and Saham played at the Sports Complex in Sohar during the 4th round of the 3rd edition of the Oman Professional League.

Bader Al-Jaberi and Vedran Gerc brought in a lot of resentment towards their performances as both failed to grant Sohar the win in the last 10 minutes of the game. The fans saw that lack of concentration and urgency led to these problems, however Saham fans felt relieved with the scoreline.Saham1 Sohar1

A point in Sohar’s stadium (with the stadium situation in Oman this is technically a home game for Saham!) was enough for them to feel good considering their start to the league campaign. Fans were entertained with the atmosphere, which was a great addition to the league this season.

Sohar relied on playing the ball from deep into dangerous positions and getting their wide players involved, while Saham sat back relishing a chance on the counter. A 0-0 draw may have been fair for a game of such caliber. Sohar face Al-Suwaiq next in another match expected to bring in a large attendance.


Al-Faisaly’s rocky start continues – Amman, Jordan

Week 3 – Jordanian Pro League

Al-Faisaly could only gain a point in their match against Al-Asalah in a 1-1 draw during the third week of the Jordanian League. Al-Faisaly opened the scoring against the newly-promoted opponent in the 74th minute, via the Senegalese striker Alassane Diallo. This was only until Al-Asalah equalised during injury time via Saed Al-Daboubi.

Al-Faisaly now sit in mid-table with 4 points, as Al-Asalah gained their first point of the season. Meanwhile, Al-Ahli stole a win from That Ras to gain their first of them this season only for Wehdat to further their title credentials with a powerful win over Shabab Ordon.

Chathir arrives as Shurta manager, Younis Mahmoud scores first goal back at Talaba – Iraq

Week 6 – Fuchs Premier League

Sitting in 9th place in the Iraqi League at time of writing, Hakeem Shaker left his position as Al-Shurta manager in what was their 4th loss of the season. 6 points in 6 match days was not enough for a team who expect to challenge for the title. A loss to Nadi Amana Baghdad didn’t bode well with the board either, who went on to sign Qahtan Chathir in quick fashion after a week of speculation.

Qahtan Chathir

Qahtan Chathir welcomed at Al-Shurta. (Photo: الاخبار الانتقالات الدوري العراقي – Facebook)

In Group 1, a crazy game occurred between Younis Mahmoud’s Talaba and the struggling Al-Karkh, the latter whom have seen the latest managerial change. Abbas Attiya will take over after Essam Hamad’s resignation happened prior to the game due to financial problems and a series of losses. Abdulqadir Tariq got his name on the scoresheet twice for Talaba, but 1 point in two games will further them away from Zawraa and Naft near the top spot.

TalabaKarkh

(Photo: الاخبار الانتقالات الدوري العراقي – Facebook)

Home teams combined score of 0 in dreadful week for Kuwaiti football – Kuwait

Week 1 – Kuwaiti League

6 home teams opened their week with 0 goals in the 13-team league of Kuwait. The likes of giants Qadsia, Kuwait SC and Al-Arabi scored a combined total of 10 goals between them. Aziz Mashaan scored a fantastic header to register his first and the league’s first goal of the season, while also grabbing an assist.

Only Al-Fahaheel and Al-Sahel came away with a point this week. Both teams were limited to poor chances and led to an overall, drab score of 0-0 at the end. The cruciate ligament has affected a rising star (Ahmad Al-Zanki) and one of the best Kuwaiti players (Saif Al-Hashan). Both are reported to be out of the season, with the latter seeing his dream move to Al-Shabab (KSA) end in quick fashion after only 2 months with the club.

Kuwaiti football in general was dealt a big blow by FIFA after failing to solve internal association problems that led to their suspension from all external football competitions such as the World Cup Qualifiers, Asian Cup Qualifiers and the AFC Cup. This has resulted in the temporary suspension of the Kuwaiti national team, however both representatives in the AFC Cup semi-final – Qadsia and Kuwait SC – have been eliminated from the tournament.

Aziz Mashaan tweeted: “No comment”, regarding the dire situation.

Super Cup win gives Al-Hidd bragging rights – Manama, Bahrain

Bahraini Super Cup

A mediocre attendance watched a relatively fair game between Al-Hidd (Bahrain King Cup winners) and Muharraq (VIVA Bahrain League Winners) that ended in a penalty shootout. It ended in a fairytale way for the Al-Hidd faithful, seeing recently drafted national team goalkeeper Abbas Ahmad save Efosa Francis’ penalty; only to score the winner after his save.

The game itself during open play didn’t see much action until the second half where substitutions were made to change the course of the game. Hamad Al-Dakhil grabbed what looked set to be a winner for Khaled Taj’s men, before late substitute Ali Haram ensured a penalty shootout for the Hiddawi fans and Salman Shareeda.

The penalty shootout ended in 7-6 for Al-Hidd, who then went on to mock Muharraq on social media claiming that Al-Hidd “are the first ever team to defeat Muharraq and score 7 goals in the process, twice, in a season” (referring to Al-Hidd’s 7-0 win in the Bahrain FA Cup during pre-season). Muharraq fans replied with their 10-0 win seasons ago, but they came out losers without a doubt. Swearing at your own players on the megaphone: not a good idea.

Taraji Wad Al-Nes grab their first win of the season – Al-Khadar, Palestine

Week 3 – Wataniya Pro League

Taraji Wad Al-Nes earned their first win of the season after defeating Shabab Al-Samu in an entertaining game at the Al-Khadar Stadium during the third week of the Wataniya Mobile Pro League.

With this win, Taraji raise their total to 3 points after two losses while Samu are stuck with a single point. The first 25 minutes saw a series of random chances created before Taraji started to settle into the proceedings and force a goal.

Veteran Khader Youssef waited until the 42nd minute of the game to take advantage of the goalkeepers’ positioning and lobbed it ahead of him to announce the first goal of the game. It wasn’t long until Taraji scored again, with Jehad Saqr stealing the ball after a defensive mistake from the Samu defenders.

Samu didn’t back down that easy and attacked, aiming to lessen the deficit. With a brilliant piece of individual skill via Fadi Lafi, Samu were back in the game only 8 minutes later. The game increased in intensity.

After clear domination by Samu, they were able to equalise in the 68th minute with thanks to Abdulla Al-Tabal. This happened after a good passing move between Kaware’ and Abu Ghuneima.

It was the veteran Khader Yousef again, this time with an assist. A ball through to Samih, who got the better of two defenders ensured 3 points for Ashraf Numan’s former club.


Team of the Week

TOTWOct15

 

 

Player of the Week

OmarAlSomah

Omar Al-Somah: Al-Ahli Jeddah Hat-trick vs. Al-Nassr (KSA)

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DOMESTIC WEEKLY REVIEW: September 16-22 https://ahdaaf.me/2015/09/23/domestic-weekly-review-september-16-22/ https://ahdaaf.me/2015/09/23/domestic-weekly-review-september-16-22/#comments Wed, 23 Sep 2015 12:43:37 +0000 https://ahdaaf.me/?p=6483 Our weekly review will attempt to give you the lowdown on every single football league in the Middle East weekly. We didn’t want]]> Our weekly review will attempt to give you the lowdown on every single football league in the Middle East weekly. We didn’t want it to be a very simplified article, which means it goes to around 5000 words. To accommodate reading for you, we have hyperlinks for each league to make it easier for you to navigate through the article.

Arabian Gulf League

Qatar Stars League

Persian Gulf Pro League

Saudi Arabian ALJ League

Jordan, Oman, Iraq, Palestine

Team & Player of the Week


Arabian Gulf League – U.A.E

Game of the Week

Al-Jazira 3-2 Al-Wahda

Imagine your brother scoring a screamer in the 95th minute to hand your crosstown rivals in the win in a derby match after just coming back from a 2-0 scoreline in the space of 15 minutes? Well, that was what Emirati legend Ismael Matar had to endure as his lesser-known brother Yaser took the spotlight for once with a winner for Al-Jazira.

Complete domination for Al-Jazira at the start saw strike partners Ali Mabkhout and Mirko Vucinic bag their first goals of the season, but – understandably – Al-Jazira faltered and Ali Khaseif handed Al-Wahda the first gift as he mistakenly blundered Sebastian Tagliablue’s long shot into goal with less than 20 minutes on the clock.

Ismaeil Matar (burgundy shirt) disappointed.

Ismaeil Matar (burgundy shirt) disappointed.

Al-Jazira did not stop there in terms of gifts before the Eid break in the Middle East, with a penalty kick given in injury time. Sebastian Tagliablue was the man again, scoring under immense pressure to equalise the proceedings. Yaser Matar had ruined the day for all Wahdawis, unfortunately. 

Rest of the Games

Perhaps unfairly, Al-Shaab have been suffering in the Arabian Gulf League with their 3rd loss on the trot against Emirates of the Ras Al-Khaimah emirate in the UAE. Tarek Al-Ashry, who brought in fellow Egyptian Amro Al-Soulaya (apparently, Soulaya was eagerly wanted by Al-Ahly Cairo this summer) to strengthen the midfield this season. It is safe to say that the signing has started off dreadfully despite scoring a goal in this game, with the Commandos struggling to create clear cut chances for their vibrant attackers Michel Laurent N’dri and Matias Donoso (who has also started off with nothing to note in terms of attacking impact).

The game ended 2-1 to the Ras Al-Khaimah-based side via goals from Colombian import Wilmar Jordan and Brett Holman’s replacement for the time being, Mohammad Mallalah. The latter is an experienced yet technically lacking attacking midfielder who supports his teammates quite well, and knows the ins and outs of lower league football.

But it was Fujairah who took the spotlight with a 3-3 draw against Baniyas. As Ali Zeinnedine puts it “If Fujairah had better defenders and a decent goalkeeper, they would challenge for the Champions League places!” and he is certainly correct. The 8-1 drubbing at Al-Ahli in the opening week of the season was no indicator of their actual quality, and we predicted them to finish 9th as they still need to strengthen in the required areas to push into the top half of the table.

Hassan Maatouk a revelation once again, scoring alongside the slow starter Christophe Mandanne and the nimble attacking midfielder, Khalil Khameis. Baniyas on the other hand had hit man Joaquin Larrivey score a hat-trick, the second of those this season.

The Bur Dubai Derby between Al-Nasr and Al-Wasl disappointed, with the former scoring two goals through dynamic wingers Pitroipa and Kembo-Ekoko, who both were stars for their teams (Al-Jazira and Al-Ain, respectively) last season, can be considered rejects. They partnered Luis Jimenez (an Al-Ahli reject) in a “reject” trio just behind the front line, where they combined to create mayhem for the Al-Wasl defence.

NasrWasl3

Caio Canedo returned in time for the Bur Dubai Derby.

Luis Jimenez has scored 4 goals in 3 games, while both wingers scored their first goals of the season in the 2-0 win over Dubai rivals Al-Wasl who looked lackluster despite the return of Caio Canedo. Isolation of Al-Wasl’s full backs were key to the Blue Wave’s win. Not bad for a team who had signed “rejects” at the start of the season.

However the biggest disappointment of the season is AGL Champions Al-Ain’s fans, who came up against Sharjah. 1,897, the worst ever attendance at the Hazza Bin Zayed stadium, was the disappointing number that AGL never wished to see. No one really cares about the AGL anymore, or is this a case of something else? A whole book can be written about that, so let’s leave it for later.

Ryan Babel and Rashed Essa linked up excellently to score and assist each others’ goals, before Renato Caja added in a very late consolation for the King who seem destined for a relegation battle. Babel finally answered his critics, who have been pestering him since his dire pre-season form.

Props to Dibba manager Theo Bucker who set up his team to nullify the threat of Jo and co. of Al-Shabab, who should have won the game had it not been their very poor finishing. That is what they usually say, but Essa Abdulla of Al-Shabab missed an absolutely golden chance that skimmed past the post to the shock of the Green fans. But the belief, tactical organisation and resilience instilled into the Dibba team has been immense since their start to the AGL this season.

We end with Rodrigo Lima, who has now successfully scored in every single game for Al-Ahli since his arrival to the club in the summer. Asian Champions League, Arabian Gulf Cup, Arabian Gulf League – it doesn’t matter to Lima. He will just score. New signing Moussa Sow needs to be have it handed to him though, with his addition in the second half proving vital to Al-Ahli’s 2-1 win over Al-Dhafra.

Rodrigo Lima is unstoppable.

Rodrigo Lima is unstoppable.

He freed up space for Lima, drawing defenders out and taking them on before playing in the final pass to the attackers ahead. Al-Dhafra meanwhile, looked dire without options in attack. David Barral and Makhete Diop haven’t been the fastest duo on the counter attack and Al-Dhafra will need more runners from midfield to alleviate the attacking burden on the front 2. Young Hamad Raqe’ can be an option for that as he showed in the match against Al-Ain. Tactically, Banide needs to add a few more aspects in the attacking sense to help Al-Dhafra stay up. They have had a tough start to the season (3 losses: against Al-Ain, Al-Nasr, Al-Ahli).

ALL goals for Week 3 done by our friends at @AGGoals:

Written by Hamoudi Fayad


Qatar Stars League – Qatar

Round 2 of the Qatar Stars League culminated on Saturday with all 14 teams playing for the first time and bringing 20 goals. Here is a round-up of all the action starting with our Game of the Week – Al Sadd v Umm Salal, where Xavi Hernandez was the star of the show as expected.

Game of the Week

Al-Sadd 2-2 Umm Salal

Al-Sadd took to the pitch for their first home match of the season on Thursday, keen to show that they were up for the title challenge by beating Umm Salal, who were undoubtedly much better opposition than Mesaimeer who they beat 4-0 in Round 1. Things however, did not go according to plan for Hussein Amouta’s men.

SaddUmmSalal

Yannick Sagbo, fresh from a starring role in Umm Salal’s opening day win over Al-Khor, gave the lead to the Barzan Falcons in the 14th minute, when he headed in a Rami Fayez cross. It was goal that came against the run of play; Al-Sadd had dominated the game without much result and were stunned by Sagbo’s leap and finish.

For the rest of the first half, the Wolves of Al-Sadd attempted to get a goal of their own but they were toothless in attack, even with Xavi pulling the strings. Striker Muriqui, who had scored a hattrick in Round 1, was nowhere to be seen. The first half ended with Umm Salal’s one-goal lead intact and Al-Sadd went into the tunnel looking to regroup.

READ MORE: XAVI SPEAKS ABOUT QATAR, BARCELONA AND MORE

In the second half, Al-Sadd put further pressure on the Umm Salal goal and their efforts bore fruit in a remarkable 4 minute spell. First, in the 62nd minute, Xavi popped up in the box to finish off Hassan al-Haydos’ cross to mark his home debut with his first official goal for Al-Sadd. Three minutes later, the Catalan maestro turned provider when he lobbed the ball over the defence for the onrushing Musab Khodr to chest and finish past Baba Malik. Replays showed that Musab was offside but the goal stood.

Al-Sadd looked to consolidate their lead but no goal came for them after that and just when they thought they could close the game with a narrow result, Umm Salal spoiled everything for them. Sagbo was the menace once again, doing well to get into the box and square it for Nasser al-Khalfan to net the equaliser in the 84th minute. It was the final goal of the match, leaving both sides with four points from two games.
 SaddUmmSalal

Rest of the Games

Al-Wakrah 1 – 2 Al-Ahli

Al Ahli registered a deserved comeback win away at Al-Wakrah with captain Meshaal Abdullah taking on the mantle of the hero. Sebastian Saez opened the scoring for Al-Wakrah in the 24th minute from the penalty spot before Meshaal overturned the score with his two crucial strikes on either side of halftime. 

Al-Kharaitiyat 1-2 Al-Rayyan
Al-Rayyan followed up their opening day win with another three points in Round 2, this time beating Al-Kharaitiyat 2-1 away from home. The match was spiced up by the thousands of Rayyani fans who had made the trip to Al-Khor to support the team. However, the red-and-black hordes were stunned into silence in the second half when former Rayyan man Jarallah al-Marri scored just after the restart, to give Al-Kharaitiyat the lead. Rayyan attempted to get back into the game and supported by their demanding fans, managed to score twice in the space of six minutes to turn the score in their favour – Nathan Otavio and Victor Caceres doing the honours.
Al-Gharafa 1-0 Mesaimeer
Al Gharafa faced newly-promoted Mesaimeer at home in their first game of the season, after their Round 1 fixture against Lekhwiya was postponed. The Cheetahs missed many chances in the first half and were only able to score just seconds before halftime. Moayad Hassan finished past Basel Zaidan after a pass from Yassine Chikhaoui. Hassan then went on to hit the post in the 75th minute but Gharafa couldn’t add to their lead, even with two-time QSL top scorer Alain Dioko in their ranks. Mesaimeer did next to nothing to make a case for themselves and the match finished 1-0 to Gharafa, who celebrated winning their opening match.
 
El Jaish 4-0 Al Sailiya
El Jaish thrashed Al Sailiya 4-0 at home with Moroccan striker Abderrazzaq Hamdallah netting a brace. Jaish took the lead in the 10th minute when a Sardor Rashidov effort went in past Gregory Gomis. The Uzbek striker followed up his first goal for the club with his first assist, setting up partner Hamdallah in the 36th minute. Hamdallah got his second of the night in the 51st, when he finished well from an angle before Romarinho completed the thrashing of a woeful Sailiya with a strike in the 82nd minute. It was Hamdallah who assisted the final goal, thus ending the game with two goals and an assist.
 
Lekhwiya 3-1 Qatar SC

Defending champions Lekhwiya began their QSL campaign with a 3-1 home win over Qatar SC. Their star-studded lineup were shaken by a Mohammed Omar strike in the 30th minute but recovered to equalise ten minutes later through a Youssef Msakni penalty. Lekhwiya had the upper hand during most of the game. Qatar had a couple of chances, which they failed to convert leaving Lekhwiya substitute Vladimir Weiss to give his team with lead with a superb volley than finished off Ismaeel Mohammed’s cross. Deep into injury time, Msakni put the cherry on the cake with a fine individual goal that saw him take on four defenders and slot the ball past Qatar keeper Mohammed Mubarak.

LekhwiyaQatar

Al-Arabi 1-0 Al-Khor

Gianfranco Zola got his second win in two matches as the Italian coach led Al-Arabi to a deserved 1-0 win over Al-Khor at home. Backed rising attendances, Al-Arabi’s lone goal came in the 24th minute when new signing Yousef Ahmed poked the ball past keeper Baba Djibril. Defender Naif al-Khater did come sliding in to save the ball off the line, but the referee decided that it had gone in. Rather lucky, but Zola and his men will take it after playing fairly well throughout the match.
Written by Ahmed Hashim

Persian Gulf Pro League – Iran

Game of the Week

Perspolis 1-2 Saipa

After two wins for Perspolis in the Persian Gulf Pro League and the Hazfi Cup, the fans expected Perspolis to achieve another win in home, and put all of the pressure behind. This however did not occur, as Perspolis lost the game to Saipa, partly to the players’ inexperience and also to the referee’s horrendous decision making.

Persepolis started the game well, and in a half that most of the opportunities were for the Reds, Saipa’s defender and goalkeeper both tried to stop Mehdi Taremi and gave away a penalty for Perspolis. At this time Persepolis’s fans were extremely happy that Mehdi Taremi who had shown that he could score penalties, was standing behind the ball. But when his shot slowly rolled into Fallahzadeh’s hands, and the goalkeeper caught the ball without breaking a sweat, Perspolis fans got worried once again.

PersepolisSaipa

Photo by Varzesh11.com

It was De Ja Vu all over again, a penalty for Perspolis and an opportunity to get ahead, but a poor shot from the spot and the game remained 0-0. The first half ended, and the second half opened with Perspolis’s fans expecting the players to play the game more offensively and try to score. The Reds, however, sat back and tried to defend as if they were content with the 0-0 draw. And in the middle of the second half, the most controversial scene of the game occurred, where Saipa’s player shot the ball against Ramin Rezaeian’s head in the penalty area, and the referee count the incident as a hand ball, resulting in a penalty for Saipa. This extremely wrong decision was questioned by the experts, and even outraged Persepolis’s players and fans of the referee. Wrong decisions had already changed many of Persepolis’s results this season, and had made the fans way more sensitive towards them. Reza Norouzi, an Ex-Perspolis striker stood behind the ball and scored the penalty to make the game 1-0 for Saipa.

Saipa

Photo by Varzesh11.com

It was then that Perspolis started to go forward, but they did it so carelessly that a huge gap was created in their midfield and defensive area. Mehdi Torabi, Saipa and Team Melli’s young, smart, and fast winger, saw the gap, and as soon as he got hold of the ball, he ran through Perspolis’s defense and passed the ball back to Gholamreza Rezaei, another Ex-Perspolis striker, who chipped the ball over Sosha’s hands and Umaña’s feet. The game was now 2-0 and the Perspolis fans were outraged with both their players and the referee. Persepolis’s attacks started to get more oriented after they conceded the second goal, but neither Taremi’s bicycle kicks went in, nor Farshad Ahmadzadeh’s horrendous attempt to power the ball into the net in an incredible one on one opportunity.

After this, Perspolis fans, who are known as one of Iran’s most passionate, and most populated throughout Asia, started to leave the Azadi stadium. It was the 90th minute and Perspolis was 2-0 behind against a much weaker opposition, so the fans were disappointed. But at least to consult the remaining fans, Taremi won another penalty in the 90th minute and this time powered the penalty kick past Fallahzadeh who dived the right way but couldn’t reach Taremi’s powerful shot.

Rest of the Games

Sepahan and Tractor Sazi drew 0-0 in a game that both sides were incredibly wasteful with their opportunities.

Foolad lost 0-3 to Zob Ahan at home, with all of the goals coming from the defenders; Hadi Mohammadi, Mohammad Nejadmehdi, and Mehrdad Ghanbari. Foolad still remains in the 16th position, at the bottom of the table, where many think it is a place where they don’t belong.

Rah Ahan lost 0-1 to Malavan at home as well, with Arash Afshin scoring the lone goal. And while Malavan won the game, many believe that they should’ve won 2-0, as the referee mistakenly called their 2nd goal offside. This loss for Rah Ahan, caused their manager, Farhad Kazemi to be sacked a few days later, and be replaced with Mehdi Tartar.

Padideh Mashhad won 1-0 against Siah Jamegan in the Mashhad Derby, with Mehdi Kheiri Mir scoring Padideh’s winner.

Gostaresh Foolad lost 0-2 to Esteghlal Tehran, with Sajjad Shahbazzadeh and Seyed Mohsen Karimi scoring Esteghlal’s goals, in a game that the refereeing was questionable and also controversial, as Gostaresh’s fans believed the referee’s decisions were in favor of Esteghlal.

Photo by Varzesh11.com

Photo by Varzesh11.com

Experts also believed that Gostaresh should’ve had a penalty. Esteghlal Khuzestan drew 1-1 against Ali Daei’s Saba Qom, with Farshad Janfaza scoring Esteghlal Khuzestan’s goal, and Mohammad Ghazi scoring Saba’s equalizer in the 96th minute.

Esteghlal Tehran also played Naft Tehran, in their postponed clash, and won 2-1. Milad Fakhrodini and Omid Ebrahimi scored Esteghlal’s goals, and Aloys Nong scored Naft’s lone goal. This game was also controversial, as experts suggested that Naft should’ve had a blatant penalty, and Alireza Beiranvand (Naft’s #1 goalkeeper, and Iran National Team’s second goalkeeper) was crossed out of the final squad list.


Saudi Arabian ALJ League – Saudi Arabia

Game of the Week

Al-Nassr 2-0 Najran

Al-Nassr, the champions of the Saudi Arabian ALJ League for two consecutive times in the last two years, finally won in the third round after a disappointing start to the season by losing 4 points playing against Hajer and Al-Qadisiyah. In the third week only, playing against Najran who had one point from two games, did Al-Nassr secure the three points. Al-Nassr players and president, HRH prince Faisal bin Turki, confirmed several times that this drop in performance is due to the suspension of six players and the injury of others. Despite that, the team captain who was also suspended, Hussain Abdulghani, said on a televised interview that they have to win their match against Najran; and they did.

It was obvious from the beginning of the match against Najran, that Al-Nassr were determined to win and reconcile with the fans, the ten thousand spectators that were rooting for them on at the Prince Faisal bin Fahad Stadium in Riyadh. With two superb strikers, Al-Sahlawi and Modibo Maiga – the new arrival from the English Premier League – and two skillful playmakers behind them, the Polish Adrian Meirzejewski and Yahia Al-Shehri, Al-Nassr could only see a win. After some pressure on Najran defense, Al-Nassr striker Maiga almost scored the first goal when he diverted a cross from Shaya Shraheali on the far post to the goal but Najran’s goal keeper, Abdulaziz Al-Tekrouni, was able to bravely save it. Few minutes later, Meirzejewski was able to cut a pass from the uneasy Najran’s players and pass it to Al-Sahlawi who passed it quickly to Al-Sheri. The defenders went to tackle Al-Shehri and cover Meirzejewski and Al-Sahlawi on the left side leaving Maiga unattained on the right side. Al-Shehri finally passed the ball to Maiga who was standing alone inside the box few meters from the goal keeper. Maiga sent a powerful shot to the other side of the goal keeper scoring the first goal of the match 36′.

NassrNajran2

The second goal came just five minutes after the kickoff of the second half from a free kick just outside the box. The foul was committed by Najran’s left back, Raed Al-Amri, when Al-Nassr right back, Khaled Al-Ghamdi, received a brilliant long pass from Meirzejewski and tried to run toward the goal but he was fouled few meters before entering the box. Adrian Meirzejewski took the free kick and sent the ball inside the box, but instead it reflected from Najran’s French central back, Mamadou Wague, to beat the goal keeper and hit the back of the net scoring the second goal 51′ for Al-Nassr. After the two goals, no real attempts threatened Al-Nassr goal keeper, Muteb Shraheali, most of them were either too easy for Al-Nassr defense and or just went wide. Al-Nassr, on the other hand, kept trying hard to seal the match, despite the fact that they already scored two goals. Head coach Jorge da Silva, in an attempt to add more energy on the front, pushed the famous Naif Hazazi and Youness Mokhtar coming from The Eredivisie – the top football division in the Netherlands – to the pitch.

The last ten minutes before full time was very exciting, Hazazi was all over the place trying to score the first goal for his new team. However, all of his attempts were either saved by the goal keeper or blocked by the defense. The match ended with only two goals for Al-Nassr and yet another defeat for Najran. This victory puts Al-Nassr back on the track and in sixth place in the ALJ League standings.

Written by Nasser Al-Beshri

Rest of the Games 

Al-Hilal 1-0 Al-Raed

After returning from Asian Champions League action in Doha, Al-Hilal faced Al-Raed who became the first team this season to sack their manager, Abdulkader Al-Omrani, replacing him with the Greek Takis Lemonis.

Unfortunately that failed to yield any result from the game, but they did limit Al-Hilal to one of their worst performances of 2015 – under Donis – and that is saying something considering the form Al-Hilal were in since the Greek’s arrival (Donis, not Lemonis).

Carlos Eduardo was signed for a reason, and that is to provide the match winning performances that Al-Hilal need at desperate times. His brilliantly struck free-kick was enough to grant Al-Hilal three valuable points.

Eduardo

Al-Ittihad 1-2 Al-Faisaly 

After continuous talk on the new look Al-Ittihad team under the guidance of Al-Balawi behind the scenes, they failed to provide anything of sort in their first home game of the season. 30,000+ fans attended making it the best attendance of the league season until now, but they certainly won’t be happy to see Al-Ittihad perform like this again.

Al-Faisaly replaced all of their foreigners – no, not their 2014/15 foreigners but foreigners they ACTUALLY signed this summer (terminating all of their contracts…) – to bring in Jordanian Hamza Al-Dardour and Togolese Sadat-Ouro Akoriko among others in bold moves that looked to shape up their bid to consolidate themselves in the league.

And Akoriko proved himself, starting off well with a goal before Fahad Al-Saqri scored a wonder goal to take Al-Faisaly into a shock lead. Al-Faisaly have been defeated twice in two games this season, to newly promoted Al-Qadisiyah and in-form Al-Taawon.

Al-Ittihad’s goal was nothing more than a consolation, and time will tell if this team can gel together in a very fast paced league. Before you know it, they’ll be out of the title race. Fans are already calling for Lazlo Boloni’s departure.

Al-Fateh 1-1 Hajer

The main talking point in this game is the beautiful free-kick of Elton, as he scored yet ANOTHER set-piece goal for former ALJ League Champions Al-Fateh. But that wasn’t enough to announce Al-Fateh as winners (they lost 3-0 to Al-Khaleej in the opening week after the appearance of Ali Al-Bleihi in that match caused them to forfeit the match; he was allegedly ineligible for the match) and help them return to challenging for honours.

Their full backs were caught out Mohammad Al-Saiari took advantage of silly positioning to guarantee Hajer a point.  

Al-Ahli 1-0 Al-Wahda

Another team that finally played at home were Al-Ahli, now with 7 points but yet to concede despite the alleged retirement of goalkeeper Abdulla Al-Mayoof. They now extend their undefeated streak in the league to over a season (over 29 games at the time of writing) yet the league title has been far away from them since the 1990’s.

Here they grabbed a narrow, but vital, win over Mecca-based side Al-Wahda. The latter have been struggling as of late with the board asking fans to be patient towards a tough time ahead. Will the fans be content with the work being done at the club? Time will tell, with Al-Wahda slowly emerging as a relegation contender. 

Al-Taawon 5-1 Al-Qadisiyah 

“At this rate, they could be Asian Champions League contenders!” tweeted Othman Al-Twaijri. The Saudi football enthusiast claims that Al-Taawon will definitely challenge some of the bigger teams towards the later stages of this season as Portuguese manager Jose Manuel continues to guide them into a positive rise.

One of the top scorers in the league, Efoulou, and the best creative outlet in the Middle East after Omar Abdulrahman and Bader Al-Mutawa (statistically) is Syrian Jehad Al-Hussain. These guys partner up at Al-Taawon and have been key to their undefeated start to the season. They did so by smashing a very decent Al-Qadisiyah side.

One player to notice is Abdulmajeed Al-Ruwaili. The previous winger has been doing wonders as a makeshift central midfielder for Al-Taawon. Scoring the equaliser and being the focal point of attack throughout Al-Sukkuri’s 5-1 thrashing of Al-Qadisiyah was one of the many things he produced throughout the last month. 

Al-Khaleej 0-0 Al-Shabab 

Drab, just drab. Al-Shabab drew with one of the worst teams in the league and will have missed out on a valuable two points in their fight for the top four. With another challenger for the top four in Al-Taawon they will need to make sure they can earn maximum points off the smaller teams.

Best Goals of Week 3:

  1. Carlos Eduardo (Al-Hilal)
  2. Abdulmajeed Al-Ruwaili (Al-Taawon)
  3. Elton Jose (Al-Fateh)
  4. Modibo Maiga (Al-Nassr)
  5. Fahad Al-Saqri (Al-Faisaly)

The Rest of ME: Jordan, Palestine, Iraq and Oman

The Khalil Derby – Hebron, Palestine

Ahli Al-Khalil and Shabab Al-Khalil played out a tense game full of attacking intent, only to be halted by the goalkeepers Abu Salim and Shweiki. Shabab needed to bounce back after a disappointing draw in the first week of the West Bank Premier League against Shabab Al-Khadar.

Nevertheless, it came down to Shabab winger and substitute Bassam Armeleh to decide the proceedings seconds after coming on as an 86th minute substitute. Armeleh ruined Ahli’s dominance in the second half with a fantastic move from outside of the box confirming Shabab’s win and sending the fans into delirium. A magical way to replenish last week’s mistakes against Palestine Super Cup winners and fierce rivals Ahli Khalil.

WOW! What a way to win the derby seconds after coming on. Bassan Armeleh scores this ‘worldie’ against Hebron rivals and…

Posted by Ahdaaf ME on Saturday, September 19, 2015

Palestinian winger Nu’man helps Wehdat stay top – Amman, Jordan

Just before the Eid break, Wehdat welcomed the challenge of newly promoted Kufrsoum. A team with high expectations after returning to the league in place of Manshiyat Bani Hassan, their fans would not be surprised with a win. They sought a win.

The players showed that character too as they successfully nullified the threat of Hajj Malick and Abdulla Deeb’s movements and interchanges, with Malik Al-Yassiry leading the back 4 to a compact first half. This in turn led to the confidence of the midfield players who crept up to help the attacking duo with runs and an excess of high-quantity/low-quality shots, pressuring veteran goalkeeper Amer Shafie.

This however, failed to lead them to taking the lead, before a set-piece ruined their organisation. Ashraf Nu’man successfully assisted the excellent centre back Mohammad Al-Basha to scoring the only goal of the game. Al-Basha, who already had a good game, added a goal to add himself as a member in our inaugural Team of the Week.

“Al-Affiyah” Derby disappoints – Sur, Oman

Al-Orouba and Sur battled it out in front of a small attendance in the Oman Pro League to see a drab 0-0 draw further mount pressure on the champions Al-Orouba. The league itself is seeing virtually no fans attending (besides the brilliant fan base of Sohar) games, with complaints made daily towards the preposterous work of the Oman FA.

Midfield work from both teams failed to produce anything of note, with Al-Orouba locked on 5 points after 3 weeks and Sur a point behind. Both don’t want to fall behind in the title race as the weeks go by, which is currently led by Sohar on 7 points.

Iraq

Mohammad Farhan claims that the refereeing team were unfair to his club, Amana Baghdad in their loss to Quwa Al-Jawiya which saw a 77th minute chip separate the sides. The feeling was different on the other side as Humam Tareq, who returned to the league from Al-Ahli Dubai, posed for pictures with a huge smile after the win. However in the other group…

HumamTareq

Photo: Quwa Al-Jawiya official Facebook page.

Another man came back, too. Yet this man was a figure in Iraqi football, one that saw one of the fights in the Iraqi national team a few weeks ago. Younis Mahmoud returned to Al-Talaba as they cruised to a 3-1 win over Kahraba, the former being his first professional club as a footballer. His return sparked lots of media attention in Iraq after the national team incident with Yaser Kasim.

Younis2

Al-Talaba in my blood and Younis is my brother. Photo: Al-Talaba official Facebook page.


Younis

Photo: Al-Talaba official Facebook page.


Team of the Week

TOTW1_FORMATION 1

Akhbari, Mohammadi, Ghanbari | Iran

Al-Basha | Jordan

Al-Ruwaili, Maiga | Saudi Arabia

Pitroipa, Babel, Larrivey | U.A.E

Xavi, Hamdallah | Qatar

Player of the Week

AhdaafPOTW4Lima

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People must know their history: The rise and fall of the Iraqi elite’s football teams https://ahdaaf.me/2015/07/21/people-must-know-their-history-the-rise-and-fall-of-the-iraqi-elites-football-teams/ https://ahdaaf.me/2015/07/21/people-must-know-their-history-the-rise-and-fall-of-the-iraqi-elites-football-teams/#comments Tue, 21 Jul 2015 15:20:00 +0000 https://ahdaaf.me/?p=4967 “Whoever wishes to foresee the future must consult the past; for human events ever resemble those of preceding times. “ – Italian Renaissance]]> “Whoever wishes to foresee the future must consult the past; for human events ever resemble those of preceding times. “ – Italian Renaissance writer Niccolò Machiavelli once penned.

His words speak true of the volatile history of Bilad Al-Rafidan or the Land between Two Rivers, a nation whose embattled and wronged people have seen turbulent struggles and bloody hardships throughout its modern day existence, a chain repeating itself. Formed from the three Ottoman vilayats of Mosul, Basra and its capital Baghdad, Iraq at first, was a British protectorate before it gained its independence as a Hashemite Kingdom. The monarchs ruled until 1958 when a coup d’état led by Brigadier Abdul-Karim Qasim and the Free Officers ushered in the New Republic. However this was followed by two further bloody revolutions which would see the Baathist Party take power for thirty-five years, as my own grandfather had predicted. In Iraq only the year and names of its leaders alter, King Faisal II, Abdul-Karim Qasim, and Saddam Hussein and today the President of the Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) Masoud Barzani and the current Iraqi Prime Minister Haidar Al-Abbadi – but history replicates, not only in the nation’s politics but also in its football.

There have been three football teams in Iraq that risen and fallen with the fortunes of the reigning elite, in the Kingdom of Iraq, and the Republic and present-day Iraq.

A football team fit for a King – Haris Al-Maliki

In 1947, Iraq was a monarchy governed by the 12 year-old King Faisal II whose his uncle Abdullah served as regent until the young adolescent King became of age to rule, while in government was the Anglophile Nuri El-Said – who served eight terms as Prime Minister of Iraq. That same year the head of the Royal Guards Obaid Abdullah Al-Mudhayfi – who led the regiment which protected Iraq’s Royal family – formed the football team known as ‘Haris Al-Maliki’ or the Royal Guards. The organisers of the side, wanted to form a football, basketball and hockey team that would become the best in the country and they had the funds and prestige – with its royal connections and financial incentives – to sign the best footballers and sportsmen in the country to compete with the top teams, and by the early 1950s, Haris Al-Maliki were the undisputed champions of Iraq, not only in football but other sports.

harismaliki

The invincibles of Haris Al-Maliki

Their football team won league and Army Cup titles seven years in a row – their nearest rivals – the Royal Air Force could barely compete however in 1956 the tide turned after the Royal Guards won their last piece of silverware and the following season after a defeat to the Air Force, the team were subsequently disbanded by its founder Obaid Abdullah Al-Mudhayfi. Just over twelve months later the Royal family would be killed in their overthrow in the July 14 Revolution – with Al-Mudhayfi, a prominent officer in the Iraqi Army, and a key member of the elite at the time, fleeing for Saudi Arabia. In his era, Al-Mudhayfi not only held a high position in the Iraqi Armed forces protecting the Royal family but was also the President of the Iraqi Football Association and the Iraqi Olympic Committee. His name is long forgotten, and so is the name of his famed team Haris Al-Maliki, one of the greatest football teams of its era. Everything goes back to dust even history.

Saddam’s football team – Al-Rasheed

Twenty five years later, – many years after the dust had settled and past been forgotten – the son of the Iraqi President Uday Saddam Hussein formed the Al-Rasheed Sports Club – taking over the premises of the Al-Karkh Sports Club in the affluent Mansour district of the Iraqi capital to form the club. The concept was new or so they thought, the President’s son and his brother in-law Hussein Kamil wanted to form a club which featured the best sportsmen in the country (where have we heard this before), and the club with the ability to ‘sign’ any sportsmen in the country they wanted. With its links to the Iraqi government, the ruling elite and endless amounts of cash –  became the Iraqi league champions for three seasons running from 1987 and won the Arab Club Championships on three occasions – unmatched by any Arab club. There were stories of torture and imprisonments with Uday’s own methods of encouragement to get the best of his players, of course the players like the defunct Haris Al-Maliki were paid handsomely for winning however when they lost, the players would spend days in jail cells or face humiliation by having their heads shaved – some carrying a pillow onto the team bus on the way to a match knowing that there was a chance they would be sleeping in a cell if the result didn’t go their way! Once Al-Rasheed’s players were forced to draw lots to see which six players would be punished after a defeat to Uday’s rivals Al-Zawraa.  They were a club Uday hated losing to, because of its administration being headed by one of his father’s prominent bodyguards, with the president’s young and belligerent son often taking bets with key figures in the regime that his side would win. Al-Rasheed became known as the football team of the ruling Baathist regime, the very same thing the general public had charged its forerunner Haris Al-Maliki of being, more than three decades earlier.

But as they rise, they must also fall and after the Al-Rasheed team returned from playing in an AFC Club Championship tie in China, the players, some signed by force from rival teams were released and allowed to return to their original clubs. Al-Rasheed were disbanded and all of its property reverted back to Al-Karkh Sports Club and they suffered a relegation to the Iraqi second division (how the mighty fall).  Uday had his own troubles after he killed his father’s food taster in late 1989 – renouncing both the presidency of the Iraqi Football Association and the Iraqi Olympic Committee as he spent time in jail for the murder before he was pardoned by his father after an intervention from King Hussein of Jordan and later exiled in Switzerland to keep him out of trouble – he returned to Baghdad in early 1990 and was re-elected to his former positions at the head of Iraqi football association and the Olympic committee which he held until the US led invasion of Iraq in 2003. He would later be killed with his younger brother Qusay in a shootout with US forces in Mosul.

uday

Uday Saddam Hussein, the former President of the Iraqi FA and Olympic committee in the colours of the old Al-Rasheed Sports Club

The club of the north, KRG’s Arbil

They saying goes that lightening doesn’t strike twice but in Iraq it seems as if, it strikes in threes. After the fall of Saddam Hussein’s Baathist regime, the city of Arbil became the main capital of the Kurdistan Region of Iraq with the leader of the Kurdistan Democratic Party (KDP) Masoud Barzani holding the presidency since 2005. Despite his two terms in office having ended, the monarchic leader has managed to cling on for two more years with his current term ending next month.

242011

Arbil’s vice president and current President of the Iraqi FA Abdul-Khaliq Masoud with Ahmed Ibrahim after signing the defender in 2009.

 

The city’s top club was Arbil Sports Club, a middle of the table team in the Iraqi top division, a side who had never finished higher than sixth in the top flight and been relegated twice in their 35-year existence. But their fortunes and that of the emerging and burgeoning city of Arbil would change, as the region became labelled “the Other Iraq” by the western media and their supporters.

Things quickly improved for the city of Arbil, and over the space of a couple of years, with the vastly improving economic situation of the region and the comparative security to the daily car bombings and kidnappings some 350 km away in the Iraqi capital, Arbil came a popular destination for Iraq’s top footballers mainly based in Baghdad who were handed substantial contracts to sign for Hewlar (the Kurdish for Arbil). A key actor in the turn-over of some of the best players from the Iraqi national team, was moustachioed Abdul-Khaliq Masoud, known to his friends as Al-Mulla. He had held the presidency of the Arbil branch of the Iraqi FA for over two decades and after 2003, became one of the Iraq FA president Hussein Saeed’s closest officials along with Najih Humoud, and worked as treasurer and vice president of the Football Association, until he ousted both of the previous FA presidents Hussein Saeed and Najih Humoud by turning on them, gaining a majority in the cliques which governed the inner workings of the Iraqi Football Association, to be named president of the Association.

The increasing prosperity of the ancient city of Arbil – which became a sea of tower cranes after the 2003 War- and its regional significance with the KRG Parliament building sited in Arbil may have been the reason why billions of Iraqi dinars was ploughed into the main sports club, a symbol of the city’s growing political stature and perhaps an indication of the region’s future political ambitions as an independent state – with winning the Iraqi league giving a Kurdish club a window into the Asian club competitions.

arbil2007

Arbil’s 2007 Iraqi title winning team

With the introduction of some of the country’s best players, Arbil went from being a struggling top division club to Iraqi league champions, winning its first title in 2007 swiftly followed by two more league wins in 2008 and 2009. The Yellow Citadel – who became the first Iraqi club to sign foreign professionals to play in the Iraqi league – went onto win a record fourth title in 2012 and reached two AFC Cup finals, an exceptional feat. But late last year the Kurdistan Region, once seen as a beacon of hope after the fall of Saddam, was plunged into economic chaos after a combination of political instability and financial insecurity put the whole region in red, to the sum of $15 billion. Arbil’s main backers, the same people controlling the Barzani dominated empire, the elite hierarchy of the KRG region, were unable to keep paying the salaries of club officials or the playing staff at Arbil – with many of the players last season going unpaid for the whole season and this season the club nicknamed El-Emparator (“the Emperors”) by their fans could be forced to field a weakened squad in the Iraqi league. Empires rise and fall, and so it seems do Iraqi football clubs.

ahmedradhi

Ahmed Radhi lining up at the Al-Shaab stadium against Flamengo in 1986 after having his head shaved for losing 1-0 to Al-Zawraa in the Iraqi league

Though the names change and with it, the politics, there are deep engrained parallels with the history of the era that each of the three football teams that I have noted. Vacated in history, in each period, the rulers saw these teams as play things, an everyday hobby, their teams reached the pinnacles of their sports disciplines, they themselves received the fame and adulation, as leaders, rulers or monarchs of their time, so I go back to Machiavelli’s quote “’Whoever wishes to foresee the future must consult the past; for human events ever resemble those of preceding times. This arises from the fact that they are produced by men who ever have been, and ever shall be, animated by the same passions, and thus they necessarily have the same results.’

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Younis Mahmoud and Nashat Akram with Arbil club president Abdullah Majeed Dazabi after signing short-term deals to play for the club in the AFC Cup earlier this year.

The men who formed Haris Al-Maliki and Al-Rasheed were driven by the same passions the Italian writer spoke of and those Iraqi teams had the same successes and determined or predetermined results and its current incarnation may witness the same fate. Spanish-born philosopher George Santayana famously wrote “Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it,” and it seems Iraqi football, its past and now its present is condemned to repeating itself, over and over. Their successors of rulers or emperors oblivious of their predecessors’ failings or mistakes. Only when people know their history…

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Akram Salman: Iraq’s Impulsive Technical Director https://ahdaaf.me/2015/04/16/akram-salman-iraqs-impulsive-technical-director/ https://ahdaaf.me/2015/04/16/akram-salman-iraqs-impulsive-technical-director/#comments Thu, 16 Apr 2015 03:44:01 +0000 https://ahdaaf.me/?p=4560 Iraqi coach Akram Ahmed Salman stands on the side-lines at The Sevens Stadium in Dubai as the anthems are played, his team –]]> Iraqi coach Akram Ahmed Salman stands on the side-lines at The Sevens Stadium in Dubai as the anthems are played, his team – dressed in all-white – line-up together and prepare to sing Mawtini. At 69 years, he’s the eldest man to manage the Iraqi team, but Akram hasn’t shown any desire to slow down in his advanced age, throughout the game, he’s up on his feet in his classic pose with his hands behind his back sternly looking at the field, screaming or shouting out the players’ first names to correct their positioning or directing them to where he wants the ball to be played. It’s as if the veteran is mentally kicking every ball on the pitch in his own head. It’s a characteristic that cannot go unnoticed, obsessive to the extent that he wants whatever control he can over every slight or minuscule detail.

For Akram, he has seen it all before, the players he had sent out to play in his first game in charge against DR Congo, are the fourth generation of footballers he has trained at international level. He has managed the greats of Iraqi football, from the Fox Falah Hassan, the national team’s record goalscorer Hussein Saeed to Ahmed Radhi, the only Iraqi to score at a World Cup finals.

Akram Salman has had a successful career as a coach but his next assignment if he manages to achieve it, would outweigh any of the medals or trophies he has picked up in his 45-year coaching profession – and that is to qualify for the 2018 World Cup finals. But while Akram Salman has tasted an assortment of triumphs in football, it has always come hand in hand with sprinkling of trouble and tribulation.

And unsurprisingly his vetted appointment by the Iraq FA president as the replacement for Radhi Shanaishel, the man that had led Iraq to fourth at the 2015 Asian Cup at the turn of the year, didn’t come without its complications as his first training camp saw him reprimand three players for various forms of indiscipline as he saw it. It was like the coach had never been away.

Salman was appointed under the title of Technical Director by the Iraq FA – as he doesn’t hold a coaching ‘A’ certificate however the esteemed trainer has been allowed to sit on the bench as the AFC’s Technical Division recognised his qualifications to be equal to an ‘A’ level coach. This was a matter of contention for some officials of the FA after they quarreled over replacing him only hours after he was named coach!

Akram Salman – The Technical Director

Akram Ahmed Salman is a coach that simply splits opinion, and his appointment on the urging and full support of the Iraqi FA’s president, almost witnessed a complete revolt within the Iraqi Football Association. The trainer had been nominated by the FA’s Technical and Team Committees and from the moment his name reached the table, FA president Abdul-Khaliq Masoud made it clear that Akram was the only man he wanted to replace departing Radhi Shanaishel who excused himself from the role because of his current contract with QSL club Qatar SC, citing that it was impossible for him to concentrate on Iraq’s World Cup qualifying preparations in June while working full-time as a trainer at his Qatari club.

Radhi Shnaishel, the man who led Iraq to a 4th place finish at the 2015 Asian Cup.

Radhi Shnaishel, the man who led Iraq to a 4th place finish at the 2015 Asian Cup.

The meeting that was meant to discuss the nominations turned into Akram’s ascension to the national job in the absence of key officials, who voiced their disapproval to what they saw as a unilateral move by the FA president. Akram went on Iraqi State television and admitted he had been contacted by Abdul-Khaliq Masoud known as Al-Mullah, a couple of days before the meeting. It seemed that everything had been premeditated by the FA president.

There wasn’t only opposition from within the FA but also from the media and the fans, they hadn’t forgotten the coach’s last stint with the national side. Public pressure was so fierce that Akram Salman felt he had to come out to the media to declare that people were trying to foil his job before he had even taken charge. The FA officials lobbied Al-Mullah demanding a new vote to decide whether Akram should manage the team, but after a re-run vote, the FA president got what he wanted – Akram Salman was officially confirmed as the team’s new coach.

The past that will not die

Two recent events that will always be synonymously linked to Akram Salman came in the trainer’s previous spell ten years ago. The first of these incidents, what can only be termed as ‘the Singapore Brawl,’ looked almost to have ended his tenure. Muhammad Ali’s 1975 Heavyweight Championship victory over Joe Frazier in The Thrilla in Manilla is a legendary bout – but another fight in the same part of the world, the brawl in Singapore, kind of reads as a mythological story to the Iraqi jamhour– primarily for the reason that the whole tale has never been fully narrated by the protagonists involved.

It begins with the much-maligned Younis Mahmoud being appointed Iraq captain – traditionally in the Iraqi national side and many other football sides, the longest serving or most experienced member of the team would be named captain – but Mahmoud, not the eldest nor a long-serving player on the national side was unexpectedly handed the captaincy – ahead of Haidar Abdul-Razzaq, Hawar Mulla Mohammed and Nashat Akram. There has been some inconsistency over who actually named Mahmoud captain, the coach insists that it was he that made the decision to give him added responsibility on his immature shoulders, others allege the appointment was directed from above i.e. then FA president Hussein Saeed, while some key players insist that it was they as a group along with the FA that handed the now fabled striker the captaincy. What is known about the events leading up to Iraq’s embarrassing 2-0 defeat to Singapore, was that prior to the Asian Cup qualifier there were clashes were several players over the issue of the captaincy, at both the team hotel and in the dressing room. Two players were expelled from the team after the incident, but that was only after Iraq lost to Singapore, in what can be considered as one of Iraq’s most humiliating defeats of the past 40 years. The loss had been the third consecutive defeat of 2006.

At the time, Akram’s job was in danger, and if he had lost the next game the Iraq FA had been expected to wield  the axe. The seemingly splintering national selection then produced one of the best performances under him. With a limited group of players – after he ejected four first team players for a mixture of indiscipline and inadequate form – the trainer decided to change the team’s formation to a more rigid 4-5-1 and beat China 2-1 in Dubai in a unified team performance that was duplicated at the Asian Cup Final that following year. The win over China ultimately saved the coach’s job, well, kept him in his position for a while longer at least. But he wouldn’t survive the next scandal.

The 17TH Gulf Cup Scandal

One incident that has marred the coach’s fragile relationship with a section of the fans and the media and besmirched his own reputation, were the events that led up to the Gulf Cup tie with Saudi Arabia in Abu Dhabi in 2007. It’s another murky episode that after eight years continues to have legs, the testimonies of Salih Sadir and Hawar Mulla Mohammed to Waar Sport TV show Siri wa Al-Shakhsi recently reinforcing what was said by 2007 Iraqi captain Ahmed Kadhim, Razzaq Farhan and Emad Mohammed to be true, that the FA president Hussein Saeed and the head of the Saudi delegation at the 17th Gulf Cup had agreed for the final group game between the two nations to end in a draw so both teams would advance to the semi-finals! Salih Sadir claimed that Saudi centre back Hamad Al-Montashari told him to be patient as Iraq searched for an equaliser, telling him that they would give them opportunities to score after Iraq had conceded an early penalty. Then with time running out the Saudi defender made the outburst to Salih and his team-mates “Come on, tell me when are you going to score?”

Iraq lost 1-0 and after the final whistle, Ahmed, Razzaq, Emad and Nour Sabri went onto a number of Iraqi TV channels revealing that the Iraq FA’s ‘agreement’ with their Saudi counterparts. The allegations caused a storm in Iraqi football circles that even the Iraqi Prime Minister called for an investigation into the matter. After looking into accusations, the Iraq FA stated that there had been “a misunderstanding” between the coach and the players during the pre-match team talk, and the investigative committee recommended that Akram Salman be relieved of his duties while Ahmed, Razzaq and Emad were suspended from international football for two years. The fourth player, goalkeeper Nour Sabri, had been silenced after his earlier revelations, reportedly after pressure from other players and officials and avoided any sanctions.

No change

The only player still on the team from that era, is Iraqi captain Younis Mahmoud, who will play some part of Akram’s early plan, but there’s the bigger question whether he’ll be playing football by the time the 2018 World Cup in Russia comes around. The new coach has spoken frankly on Iraqi state television and commented that the Iraqi captain is either 35 or 36 years of age – acknowledging that Younis may not be 33 as his passport states. He’s not only a leader on the pitch but a mentor to the younger players and recently added the work of mediator to his increasingly expanding job description.

Younis Mahmoud celebrates after scoring a goal.

Younis Mahmoud celebrates after scoring a goal.

Loyalty and discipline are dualistic virtues that have been the fundamental mantra of Akram’s training career from his early days as player-coach at the first team he trained Esla Al-Mae and it hasn’t changed. Recently he was quick to banish Al-Shurta’s Dhargham Ismail – Iraq’s impressive left back at the Asian Cup in Australia – after he was absent from the first day of training. The player had spoken to the FA about allowing him to attend his brother’s wedding and had agreed on a day’s holiday to travel to his home city of Maysan. Akram however hadn’t been informed of the arrangements and in a stand-off at Baghdad Airport, the defender almost didn’t make it onto the plane for the training camp in Dubai. Even before he had taken charge of his first training session, he publicly called Swedish-based winger Ahmed Yasin “a liar” after a phone conversion with the player. Ahmed had told the Iraqi coach that he hadn’t trained with his team since the Asian Cup because of his mother’s illness. However the coach heard later from FA officials that he had played a number of games for his club Örebro SK in the Allsvenskan Swedish league and in another shotgun moment, immediately demanded the player be disciplined, calling it shameful that a player had lied to his coach. It was later explained by the player’s elder brother that there had been a mix-up– with Ahmed’s broken Arabic having been a barrier to explaining to the coach, that the player was travelling to and fro the hospital where he was sat by his mother’s bedside to either play or train with his club.

But Akram Salman’s quick-draw cowboy pistol shooting didn’t end there, when another tale of miscommunication between Yaser Kasim and the team doctor, after the player had come to see him complaining of fatigue. The Swindon Town midfielder had been told by the doctor that in the case of injuries or sickness, the doctor would sign him off but in any cases of tiredness, the decision would go to the head coach, meaning Akram Salman had the final say. The player left the doctor’s room, believing that the doctor himself would inform the coach and stayed in bed, missing the morning training session. And when Yaser missed the evening session, the irate Akram told the head of the delegation to hand the player his passport and tell him to return to London in the morning, thinking that he had missed training on purpose. Only a last minute intervention from Captain Younis Mahmoud saw Yaser reinstated.

The Golden Boy of Iraq, currently at Swindon Town - Yaser Kasim.

The Golden Boy of Iraq, currently at Swindon Town – Yaser Kasim.

There are stories involving Akram Salman and some players that are too extraordinary to be believed. Former Iraqi captain Haidar Mahmoud once claimed that the coach rejected the opportunity to recall him as he thought he still displayed loyalty to previous coach Adnan Hamad! While Salih Sadir was once dropped in 2006 after a player had a word in Akram’s ear alleging that the attacking midfielder then at Beirut-based Al-Ansar had bought a pair of new football boots that he would wear ‘only’ for Adnan Hamad, then his club coach in Lebanon. The story relayed to Akram Salman hadn’t been the complete truth but the coach known for his somewhat rash judgment dropped the player immediately. This degree of pettiness didn’t warm the rest of the group to the coach and in his two-year spell punished a handful of key players including Basim Abbas, Nashat Akram and Haidar Abdul-Razzaq and caused much resentment in the national team’s ranks. This is something he needs to avoid with the current batch of Lions to get the best out of them but the coach’s totalitarian attitude seems to be same as it has always been, seeing some of his players as spoilt little school children and is often too hasty to demand the stick when the carrot would do suffice in some situations.

Akram Salman has a trying job on his hands to get the Lions of Mesopotamia to only their second World Cup finals– and the Iraqi supporters will be quick to point out that bygone national team successes typically arise after the current incumbent Iraqi coach is given the boot – with Iraq only qualifying for the 1986 World Cup and lifting the 2007 Asian Cup in Jakarta after the technician was shown the door in his previous stretches with Al-Montakhab.

The new Technical Director of the Iraqi team will want to rectify that fact and make his own history with the team, and still find himself in the hot-seat once the next World Cup comes around, preferably with the Lions of Mesopotamia as one of Asia’s representatives in Russia. But be sure, from here on, it will be a bumpy ride with Akram Salman at the helm.

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The Tale of Two Clubs https://ahdaaf.me/2015/03/23/the-tale-of-two-clubs/ https://ahdaaf.me/2015/03/23/the-tale-of-two-clubs/#comments Mon, 23 Mar 2015 14:00:25 +0000 https://ahdaaf.me/?p=4403 At the halfway point of the AFC Cup group stage, Iraq’s two representatives in the second tier of the Asian club competitions are experiencing vastly]]> At the halfway point of the AFC Cup group stage, Iraq’s two representatives in the second tier of the Asian club competitions are experiencing vastly different fortunes. One, the Police club Al-Shurta, sits top of their group and the other, Arbil, is bottom after two defeats and look likely to struggle to qualify for the next stage after just three group games played – in a competition they reached the final of last season.

Who would’ve believed that four-time Iraqi league champions and two-time AFC Cup finalists Arbil– at this stage of the season – would be out of contention in Asia and look likely to miss out on one of the four places for the final stages of the seemingly never-ending Iraqi league championship (the club are currently in seventh place in their 10 team group, five points off the pace fourth-placed Al-Karkh).

How did this all happen? Well political turmoil and austerity in the region at the near end of last year (the Kurdistan Regional Government is reportedly in debt to the tune $15 billion and are paying wages of state officials with foreign loans) – forced the club to cancel the contracts of their best players, Iraq goalkeeper Jalal Hassan returned to Baghdad, top scorer Amjad Radhi is scoring for fun in the Saudi League, fan favourite Hawar Mulla Mohammed decided he wanted to play out his playing days with the club where he made his name Al-Quwa Al-Jawiya, even the Spaniards Jorge Gotor and Víctor Ormazábal who helped guide the club to the AFC Cup final in Dubai last October have left.

However the club’s coach, one of Iraq’s best, the vocal Ayoub Odisho (who can often be heard berating his players on the sidelines), hasn’t jumped ship even though the Iraqi FA president and vice president of the Arbil club (whose membership has been frozen after he won the FA elections last May), offered the 54-year-old the opportunity to escape the madness at the Franso Harriri to manage the Iraqi side for the forthcoming World Cup qualifying campaign. But the coach who is never one to give up, has decided to stay put and attempt to stir the Yellow Citadel through the turbulent storm.

Last month they signed stars Younis Mahmoud and Nashat Akram on short-term contracts to play for the club. However their deals were variably different than the rest of the players they signed, with the two legends donning the yellow shirts in the AFC Cup only and not in the Iraqi league. However the big name signings haven’t proved fruitful for Ayoub Odisho or Arbil, with Nashat, clearly lacking match fitness, only making his first start in the recent defeat in Ashgabat, while the Iraqi captain Younis Mahmoud has spent more time flying to and fro the Gulf after an administration error meant he wasn’t registered to play for the first two matches in the AFC Cup. The player stated that the mistake was rectified but he wasn’t on the plane flying out to Turkmenistan earlier this week.

After a last minute goal in Turkmenistan inflicted a third straight defeat in the AFC Cup for Arbil, former Iraqi captain and midfielder Nashat Akram told the Arab media that the players were “giving their all,” but with the team managing just one win in their last 12 league matches, giving their all may not be enough to qualify for the next stage. There are more difficult times ahead for Ayoub Odisho and Arbil.

The Other Iraqi Club

In complete contrast are one of Iraq’s inform teams Al-Shurta under Egyptian trainer Mohammed Youssef topping Group B and looking likely to reach the knock-out stages after their emphatic 6-2 win over Palestinian side Wad Alness, finally demonstrating the true potential of Al-Qithara on the Asian continent. The win in Doha is a timely reminder of what this club, which for the past two seasons has been the best side in the Iraqi league, is really capable, after unconvincing performances in their opening two matches against Al-Hidd and Al-Jazeera.

The club lost club captain Nashat Akram after he the club release when it became apparent that his father in-law, Ayad Benyan, the much beloved club president would be ousted by former Al-Shurta midfielder of the 80s and 90s, Riyadh Abdul-Abbas, after an baffling coup d’état led by former Iraq national coach Hakim Shaker against the man that had brought Al-Shurta their first league title in 15 years, only a couple of years after narrowly avoiding relegation from the top flight on goal difference.

However the loss of their club president and his legendary son-in-law haven’t affected the team’s results in the Iraqi league as they sit pretty on top of Group 2, still unbeaten, with an impressive nine wins from eleven matches so far this season, with their nearest rivals Al-Minaa having played two games more, 11 points behind the 2013 Iraqi league champions. Their aim like other Iraqi teams in the past is to make their mark in an Asian club competition – where no Iraqi club has never won any silverware.

This Iraqi team comes well-equipped. Al-Shurta is a club stacked with Iraqi internationals, currently there are 10 players in the Iraqi national side, with even their first team and reserve goalkeepers named in the recent squad for the friendly with DR Congo this month. A suggestion of how strong this team is, however dominance in the domestic league and achieving something in an Asian competition is two very different things, as former Iraqi champions Arbil demonstrate, the club were the dominant club in the Iraqi league for the past eight years but have failed to add the AFC Cup to their trophy cabinet. Amjad Kelaf, Alaa Abdul-Zahra and Marwan Hussein will have to do something special to help Al-Shurta become the first Iraqi club to lift the AFC Cup.

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What is going on with Middle Eastern Football? https://ahdaaf.me/2015/03/08/what-is-going-on-with-middle-eastern-football/ https://ahdaaf.me/2015/03/08/what-is-going-on-with-middle-eastern-football/#comments Sun, 08 Mar 2015 13:00:16 +0000 https://ahdaaf.me/?p=4340 With the Middle East producing marvelous performances (with a sense of disappointment in Qatar and Saudi Arabia) at the Asian Cup, things were looking bright for the controversy-stricken region.

Yet, the current state of Middle Eastern football isn’t auspicious. Why is that? South Korea and Australia are teams that can battle, even possibly outsmart European teams on their day – not Andorra and San Marino – but Belgium and Portugal to a certain extent. The problem lies in the depths of the scarcely covered domestic leagues in the Middle East.

Relative to this perception are players who shone at worldwide tournaments but endured tougher times at their clubs. Jozy Altidore and Miroslav Klose fall into the category of top players for their national teams, but have they been world-class with their day-to-day football efforts? Klose never hit the heights expected at Bayern Munich while Jozy Altidore flopped massively, with players such as Milan Baros and Asamoah Gyan also fitting into that group of players who never fulfilled their expected goals during their time in European football. This is where the notion is visualised, where even though we saw a proud and spirited performance from a few Middle Eastern sides at the Asian Cup it’s extremely different and lethargic behind the scenes.

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Al-Wahda and Al-Sadd players engage in a fight which sees 3 players sent off.

 

In Iraq, players are abused by their own fans for poor performances despite the fact that the country is already marred by bloodshed in addition to the players who are doing their best to construct a living through terrible conditions; likewise in Syria. Lebanese Football is marred by semi-professionalism and politics, Yemen affected by war too. Those countries are regarded as minnows in the Middle East, but what about the bigger countries?

The UAE have been atrocious continentally with no wins as of yet in the AFC Champions League – heavily affected by the elimination of Al-Wahda and Al-Jazira in the qualifiers – while the Saudi Arabian National team has deteriorated since 2006. Qatar, realistically, have been the only nation to improve in terms of players, the league system and results but that has been overshadowed by the naturalization policy practiced by the 2022 World Cup holders. And finally the progress has been stale in Oman, Bahrain, Kuwait, Jordan and Palestine. The only country that has been doing well in terms of club football is Iran with Persepolis leading the pack despite an appalling season domestically, much to the delight of Esteghlal fans.

Dinner with a prominent figure

Moving on to the point that I wanted to highlight, I recently had dinner with a former UAE FA Vice-president. It was very interesting, this talk that we had. We were watching Al-Ain in the AFC Champions League against Naft Tehran and we began with criticism of the analysis on Arabian Sports Channels (excluding BeIN Sports). “Al-Ain have a very good defence, Al-Jazira have a very good attack, Team X makes use of the flanks, Team Y doesn’t”. These phrases are constantly repeated about teams and games in the Arabian Gulf League, where one would expect that with the money being paid for players and staff there would be a significant improvement in terms of analysis for fans on TV to enjoy and dissect.

The most recent game between Al-Wasl and Al-Ain was a tense encounter and it was obvious from a tactical point of view that Al-Wasl were vulnerable to ground balls. Their defenders were extremely comfortable with defending crosses but once Kembo-Ekoko, the dynamic Al-Ain right-winger, encompassed the box with his trademark cut in from near the byline the Al-Wasl defence would look flabbergasted and that move exactly resulted in the winner for Al-Ain from Mohammad Abdulrahman, brother of the more famed Omar. A low cutback cross was drilled into the box and the tactical deficiencies were obvious with Al-Wasl, only for there to be no mention from the analysts. This is not a one-time occasion, rather it is a continuous occurrence.

As we rambled on about the problems the former UAE FA Vice-president told me that he was disappointed with the “mentality, discipline and style of our players”. Word by word translation from what he said in Arabic: “Fans expect Omar Abdulrahman and Ali Mabkhout to move to Europe but it’s all about the money, the cars and the fame. The mentality, discipline and style of our players are substandard. They come in to train just for physical enhancement, and that only happens after Salat Al-Asr (afternoon prayer). In Europe there is a whole system based on training and how important it is to the game itself, it is non-existent here.”

“Us Arabs, our players have mentalities that do not suit the European game. Ali Mabkhout’s style fits Germany or England as a fast, dangerous and potent player. But is his mindset good enough for even the Portuguese or Belgian league? That is the question.”

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Ali Mabkhout won the Golden Boot at the 2015 Asian Cup and is recognised by the Guinness World Records for scoring the fastest ever goal at an Asian Cup.

“[A player who is not to be named] earns 1,000,000 AED a month (equivalent to $68,000 p/w or £44,000 p/w) when he hasn’t even completed elementary school! Imagine a European team allowing a star youngster to drop out of school from the 6th grade to end up earning millions when he has not even earned a full schooling career.”

“To show you how the European teams are much more developed, I was with the Emirati team at the 2011 u-17 World Cup in Guadalajara where I was sitting next to an England committee member. I asked ‘How much do your players get as winning bonus?’, he looked at me with astonishment. ‘Nothing’, was his reply, ‘these pitches and tournaments are a bonus for them’. I proceeded to ask him ‘how about winning the whole tournament, what does that result in as bonus?’, the man replied with a smile and said ‘a 10-day trip around a foreign country’. Our players are used to bonuses in cash if they get past the group stage or win a game, but the European players do it for the love of the game. Sure, there is money as incentive for many players but the discipline is there. No smoking, no late nights and no showing off with their fancy cars, a very rare trait amongst them.”

“Mahdi Ali’s last chance for the U.A.E is to get them to qualify for the 2018 World Cup, and if that doesn’t happen; the Golden Generation is gone”.

At this moment I knew where the Middle East stood in terms of football. After finding out a few of Arabian Gulf League players’ wage numbers, learning about drug cases and jail sentences for players that happened behind the scenes, I knew that there was a huge problem that needed commitment above all to be fixed. From all the Middle Eastern teams at the Asian Cup, only Ali-Al Habsi and Yaser Kasim play in England albeit in the Championship and League One. A few other players serve their clubs in Scandinavia, but that’s it. The experience from Europe is lacking. The Javad Nekounams, the Nashat Akrams, the Sami Al-Jabers, the Ali Karimis are all gone (almost). The Middle East, as a region, needs to take a stand. Without consistent youth production, sellout games and commitment we may never see the dawn of a region filled with uncovered potential.

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Are Police & Army Teams Killing Fan Culture in The Region? https://ahdaaf.me/2015/02/15/are-police-army-teams-killing-fan-culture-in-the-region/ https://ahdaaf.me/2015/02/15/are-police-army-teams-killing-fan-culture-in-the-region/#comments Sun, 15 Feb 2015 11:11:18 +0000 https://ahdaaf.me/?p=4104 Do you support a club called Jaish? you may want to look away now!

If you happen to be a long]]> Do you support a club called Jaish? you may want to look away now!

If you happen to be a long time follower of the Qatari Stars League (QSL) or even the AFC Champions League, you may have noticed the emergence of two clubs in the past five years, El-Jaish SC & Lekhwiya SC. The former was established in 2011 while the latter is just two years its senior.

In the past four seasons, Lekhwiya won three league titles, only missing out on the 2012/13 title after finishing second, 5 points behind the country’s most successful club, Al-Sadd. In turn El-Jaish upon its foundation in 2011 played in the QatarGas League, the second (and lowest) tier of Qatari football and instantly won promotion to the QSL. In the following season, they finished second, 2 points behind Lekhwiya and went on to finish third and second respectively in the following two seasons. At the time of writing this article, Lekhwiya are second in the league while El-Jaish are third with more than half the season played already.

This would have been an extraordinary story, worthy of multiple headlines had it happened in a top European League. However, it is not completely unprecedented in this part of the world. In fact, it becomes all the more familiar when you know that El-Jaish is Arabic for “The Army”, and Lekhwiya is the local Qatari name for “Internal Security Forces”.

Lekhwiya Unveil defender Chico Flores & manager Michael Laudrup, both signed from English Premier League side, Swansea City.

Lekhwiya Unveil defender Chico Flores & manager Michael Laudrup, both signed from English Premier League side, Swansea City.

The enrollment of Police, Military & Security Force football teams in professional leagues is a common phenomenon not only in the Middle East, but in most developing countries where those state armed units have a significant influence on the political scene as well as on the everyday lives of ordinary citizens. Thailand is one example outside the Middle East where clubs like Army United & Air Force Central have regularly featured in the top flight and competed for honours with varying degrees of success. Thailand’s troubled history of military coups is well documented, and the link between the two is anything but arbitrary. Pakistan is another good example.

Within the Middle East, names like Jaish and Shurta “The police” are repetitive across various domestic leagues, the most famous being Al-Jaish FC of Syria who have won a record 12 Syrian League titles (including 5 in the new century) and were crowned champions of the inaugural AFC Cup (Asian equivalent of the Europa League) in 2004. In turn, Al-Shurta of Iraq are a regional powerhouse based in Baghdad, they have won the Iraqi league 4 times and were the first ever winners of the now obsolete Arab Champions League in 1982. Al-Shurta play a local rivalry with Al-Quwa Al-Jawwiya “Air Forces FC”, another state force team from Baghdad. The now suspended Egyptian Premier League features no less than five teams representing various Police and Army units including Haras El-Hudood “Border Guards” & El-Entag El-Harbi “Military production”. Three of those teams made their Egyptian Premier League debut in the new millennium.

 

Ittihad fans Saudi Arabia football

Saudi Arabia’s Al-Ittihad boasts one of the largest follower bases in the region, even our own Dan Pascual is a fan!

 

Fandom as a concept is largely associated with loyalty and the warmth of belonging to a particular entity, and football clubs have always offered just that for millions across the globe. Kuper and Szymanski argued in their book “Soccernomics” that European teams with largest fan bases in their countries came from industrial cities like Manchester, Liverpool, Turin, Glasgow, St. Petersburg and Munich as opposed to traditional capitals like London, Rome, Edinburgh, Moscow and Berlin; this was directly attributed to blue-collar workers in these cities finding a sense of community and belonging in the local football team.

Of course, Middle Eastern cities are different and the concept of a 19th century industrialised city is largely inapplicable here. But let us take a look at some of the most supported teams in the region. Clubs like Al-Sadd in Qatar, Al-Ittihad in Saudi Arabia and Al-Ain in the UAE. Those three teams have all been established even before their respective nations became independent sovereign states and have thus long been engraved in the living memory of the local residents, those teams have been part of their local communities through thick and thin, long before corporate culture and concepts like CSR came to the region. Their legendary players and coaches were all once the kid next door, anthems and chants became a heritage and were passed from generation to the next. They brought trophies and joyous celebrations to their towns and neighbourhoods for decades.

For all their recent successes and massive wealth, the Al-Jaishes and Al-Shurtas of this region are unable to manufacture this unique link. Not many outside the military or police institutions identify with those teams. In fact, in many Middle Eastern countries, the army and even more so the police have traditionally been tools for repression, used by authoritarian regimes to silence dissidents; hence there is an unshakable negative connotation surrounding those institutions and ordinary citizens are unlikely to associate with football teams representing them. The gulf to be bridged is even wider when the vast majority of the state unit’s members are foreigners such as in the case of Lekhwiya.

Police aren't exactly fan favourites in the Middle East!

                                                     Police aren’t exactly fan favourites in the Middle East!

 

The 2011/12 QSL season epitomised a worrying trend; Lekhwiya & El-Jaish finished in the top two positions respectively. Meanwhile, Al-Ahly, one of the nation’s most supported historical clubs, was relegated. Al-Ahly was founded in 1950 which may not seem old when compared to many European clubs, but to put that into perspective, Qatar only gained independence 21 years later and was yet to even have a currency back then and the club used to rent their base from a local landlord for 70 Indian Rupees.

The pattern continued with the same two teams finishing in the top three last season and yet another one of Qatar’s legendary clubs, Al-Rayyan, arguably the most popular alongside Al-Sadd & Al-Arabi, dropping into first division’s obscurity.

El-Jaish came into the picture in 2011 and as they won promotion to the QSL, they went on a spending spree signing numerous local stars such as former Al-Sadd captain, Wesam Rizq and Al-Gharrafa veteran Saad Al-Shammari. They didn’t stop there, but naturalized a number of Arab and African players and registered them as locals and recruited a couple of foreign players to allow them to compete with the likes of Al-Sadd and Lekhwiya.

 

One thing El-Jaish could not buy was fans. While QSL is known for its comparatively low attendance levels, perspective is vital here. For a nation of 2 million people, only 300,000 of whom are locals, to expect a 50,000 crowd week in, week out is certainly unrealistic. But when Al-Sadd, Al-Arabi and Al-Rayan played each other, they regularly drew crowds in the region of 7,000-10,000 fans. Those figures are now becoming a thing of the past despite the best efforts of the league committee. Free entry, raffle draws and matchday family events have all been tried to no avail. The fact remains that outside a few hundred foreign workers who are paid by clubs’ officials to attend the matches, there is very little interest in going to stadiums.

QSL attendance

8215 fans may not look impressive, but when adjusted for population, this is the equivalent of 200,000 fans attending an EPL match!

 

Teams like El-Jaish and Lekhwiya regularly mobilize off-duty soldiers and officers to cheer for the players. Sometimes it is a bus load of school students or workers but manufactured presence aside, the emergence of these clubs is badly hurting an already dying fan culture in Qatar and the region. Increased TV coverage and the growth of luxury lifestyle among the nouveau riche of the oil boom have already taken their toll on matchday attendance levels, but this new phenomenon of state affiliated departmental teams is threatening to kill whatever is left of it.

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