The National - News

SPL’S STAR TURNS FLUFF THEIR LINES AND FAIL ON BIG STAGE

▶ Football in the kingdom is booming but that has not stopped players falling short at Afcon and Asian Cup

- IAN HAWKEY

A strong league likes its champions to be stars in all terrains. Think only of how the English Premier League enjoyed the reflected glory of Sadio Mane and Mohamed Salah, Liverpool colleagues, duking out the 2021 Africa Cup of Nations final for Senegal and Egypt. Or of how proud the same league was that it decisively shaped the club careers of Argentinia­n World Cup winners like Emiliano Martinez and Alexis Mac Allister.

The Premier League is seldom modest about its reach and the calibre of its stars. Nor is its boldest new challenger in the business of aggressive recruitmen­t, Saudi Arabia’s Pro League. Among the Pro League’s new arrivals in last summer’s huge spend were serially successful internatio­nal footballer­s with ambitions to keep adding to the honours they hold with their countries.

Yet, by the middle of this month, the Pro League will be looking at a disappoint­ing tally of medals being brought home from the major tournament­s, the Asian Cup and Afcon, where, between them, more than 50 Pro League players have been on duty.

The eliminatio­n of Saudi Arabia at the first knockout stage of the Asian Cup, on penalties to South Korea, has put into question aspects of the Saudi strategy of expensive hiring from abroad.

Roberto Mancini, brought in as stellar manager of the national team, has not met expectatio­ns. Mancini has, at the same time, asked legitimate questions about the detrimenta­l impact on the Green Falcons of so many foreign players coming into the Pro League, if it is at the cost of first-team opportunit­ies for Saudi talent.

It has not been a good month for most of the large fleet of Africans employed in the Pro League. Senegal, the title-holders, were ousted, on penalties, in the last 16, a heavy blow to Mane, captain Kalidou Koulibaly, Al Ahli goalkeeper Edu Mendy and striker Habib Diallo, all of whom moved from European clubs to Saudi Arabia.

It would be a stretch to assign a collective loss of competitiv­e

edge on their change of club environmen­t, particular­ly when both Mane, who had an unhappy 2022-2023 at Bayern Munich, and Koulibaly, who talks of his move from Chelsea to Al Hilal as “one of the best decisions I made in my life,” are clearly happier in Saudi Arabia than they were at their previous clubs.

Diallo, with two goals at Afcon, was sharp enough in Ivory Coast, indeed rather sharper than he has been for Al Shabab. Mane had a frustratin­g Afcon, but had entered it in form for Al Nassr, with eight Pro League goals and four assists in 18 matches since becoming Cristiano Ronaldo’s attacking partner.

But none of the Senegalese will be showing off new Afcon gold medals to colleagues in Riyadh or Jeddah. Nor can Riyad

Mahrez return to Al Ahli with a broad smile. His Algeria, inspired by Mahrez to the 2019 Afcon title, suffered a humiliatin­g group phase exit in Ivory Coast. Mahrez, the captain, had so little influence he was dropped from the starting lineup by match day three.

Mahrez, a treble winner with Manchester City last year, has strong numbers from his first five months in the Pro League (19 games, 15 goal contributi­ons) but by the account he gave to L’Equipe, the standards there are not as taxing as the English league.

“The Saudi league has real quality,” he told the French newspaper. “But you can’t compare it with Europe. But in the near future, at the current rate, it can be one of the five, six or seven best leagues in the world.” Mahrez has heard

criticism of his physical conditioni­ng since he left City, and of his work-rate, especially off the ball, chiming with the shrill criticism these last two weeks of his Afcon performanc­es.

Across the dismal Cup of Nations for the North African teams, other Pro League players have been singled out for failings. Romain Saiss, Morocco’s totemic defender and a summer addition to Al Shabab’s squad, was at fault for the first South African goal in the 2-0 upset that put Morocco out at the last-16 stage.

Ahmed Hegazy, a Pro League champion with Al Ittihad, has received criticism in Egypt for transformi­ng from a pillar of a famously mean Pharaohs defence to the senior man in a team that left Afcon, at the first knockout hurdle, having leaked seven goals in four

games. The Pro League has some star ambassador­s still at Afcon. If Ivory Coast are to build on their fortunate progress to the knockouts, they will continue to thank Franck Kessie, a league champion the last two years with AC Milan and Barcelona and now at Al Ahli.

Without Kessie’s two penalties, one a late equaliser in the last-16 tie against Senegal and the other the decider in the shoot-out that followed, Ivory Coast would be out.

Kessie and Seko Fofana, of Al Nassr, are the main cogs in the Ivorians’ midfield. It is an engine that has sputtered at times. But if they find their higher gears against Mali on Saturday, the hosts will be in the semi-finals and Kessie and Fofana two games away from bringing a little gold back to their new Gulf homes.

Saudi Arabia’s Asian Cup last-16 exit has put into question aspects of the SPL strategy of expensive hiring from abroad

 ?? AFP ?? Senegal’s Sadio Mane is challenged by Ivory Coast defender Odilon Kossounou during the Afcon last-16 match on Monday
AFP Senegal’s Sadio Mane is challenged by Ivory Coast defender Odilon Kossounou during the Afcon last-16 match on Monday

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