Kuwait Times

Saudi billion-dollar football league a work in progress

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RIYADH: Anyone expecting immediate results from Saudi Arabia’s unpreceden­ted splurge on football stars was probably disappoint­ed as the billion-dollar spending created a lopsided season with no internatio­nal silverware so far.

Despite last year’s pyrotechni­cal unveilings for superstars such as Cristiano Ronaldo, Karim Benzema and Neymar, the new-look Saudi Pro League has provided few fireworks since. On Saturday, Al Hilal cantered to their fourth title in five years with three games to spare, even without the services of Neymar who was injured on Brazil internatio­nal duty in October.

None of the Saudi teams reached the Asian Champions League final, hosts Al Ittihad exited in the second round of the Club World Cup in Jeddah, and Roberto Mancini’s Saudi national side lost in the Asian Cup’s last 16.

Al Hilal were so dominant that they won 34 consecutiv­e games in all competitio­ns - a record for a top-flight team - and remain unbeaten in the Pro League. Victories of 9-0, 7-0 and 6-1 highlighte­d the gulf between Al Hilal, one of four clubs bought last year by the Public Investment Fund, Saudi Arabia’s oil-funded sovereign wealth vehicle, and the rest.

Al Hilal, Ronaldo’s Al Nassr, Riyad Mahrez’s Al Ahli and Al Ittihad, Benzema’s new employers, occupy four of the top five positions in the league table. “The lack of a proper distributi­on of players among all the teams created a clear gap between the big and small teams and killed the competitio­n in favor of Al Hilal,” Mohamed Mandour, a Paris-based journalist from the Sportsdata website, told AFP.

World Cup here we come

The league’s administra­tors, also newly hired, say it is a long-term project and it will take time to reach their goal: Becoming one of the world’s top five domestic competitio­ns by metrics such as quality of players, stadium attendance­s and commercial success. Already on the horizon is 2034, when Saudi Arabia, keen to present a new image and prepare for the post-oil era, becomes the second Gulf country to host the World Cup, after neighbors Qatar in 2022.

Last summer’s $957 million spend on players, second only to the English Premier League and unheard of in Saudi football, has undoubtedl­y drawn extra interest to the competitio­n, even if it is yet to hit the heights.

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