Brazil to play Green Falcons as Saudi Arabia host Neymar and Co.
RIYADH: Saudi Arabia hosting Argentina and Brazil in a four-nation
tournament in October has been hailed as the best possible preparation
for for the 2019 Asian Cup in January for the Green Falcons.
During the next international window, the Green Falcons will face Brazil
in Riyadh on October 12, while local fans will get a taste of one of
the fiercest and biggest rivalries in world football when the Samba Boys
and Argentina meet in Jeddah four days later.
“We have just signed a four-star international tournament in early
October with the participation of Brazil, Argentina and the Saudi
Arabian team in addition to a fourth team that will be announced soon,”
Turki Al-Sheikh, the president of Saudi Arabia’s General Sports
Authority, said on Friday.
The country’s leading sports official wants Egypt to complete the
quartet. “As president of the Arab Football Federation, I hope that
Egypt will be the fourth team.”
Whether the Pharaohs enter or not, the mini-tournament is good news for fans in Saudi Arabia.
“The most important part is that this gives the team the best kind of
test for the Asian Cup,” an official from the Saudi Arabia Football
Federation (SAFF) told Arab News.
“We saw at the World Cup that we need as much quality international
experience as possible and there can be nothing better than playing
Brazil in front of what should be a sell-out crowd in Riyadh.”
Saudi Arabia have reasons to be optimistic ahead of the tournament.
Coach Juan Antonio Pizzi is not only from Argentina but he led Chile to
the 2016 Copa America title. His knowledge of South American football
should provide even more of an advantage to the hosts.
“These are the kinds of games that coach Pizzi wants,” added the
official. “We don’t want to arrange games against weaker teams that we
can defeat comfortably, we want a real challenge.
“Not only that, but having Brazil at home gives all players in the
league real incentive to try and get into the team and play against some
of the best players in the world, such as Neymar. And it is also a
great chance for the fans to see the same stars in the flesh.”
Brazil are happy with the arrangement. The five-time world champions had
already arranged for the Saudi Arabia test but did not want to travel
back to South America to take on Argentina. Staying in Saudi Arabia is
also much easier for the Brazil’s European-based players, who will make
up an even greater percentage of the squad than usual.
While the Brazilian federation has agreed not to call any players from
the four Brazil Cup semifinalists — Flamengo, Corinthians, Palmeiras and
Cruzeiro — the SAFF expects both teams to bring all their stars for the
trip, though Argentine maestro Lionel Messi is currently on a break
from international football.
The tournament also marks another international sporting event in the
Kingdom. The GSA have recently organized the Riyadh marathon, the
Italian Super Cup final, the Royal Rumble in WWE as well as motorsport
events and chess championships. Football remains the most important
field however.
“It is commonplace for nations seeking to build a global presence in
football to establish new competitions or stage high profile matches,”
Simon Chadwick, Professor Sports Enterprise at Salford University in the
United Kingdom told Arab News.
“Qatar did it in the run-up to them winning the World Cup vote in 2010,
and China has done it recently with a new international tournament.
“Such initiatives raise profiles, provide an opportunity to prove
one’s expertise, and engage key stakeholders in football. As such, we
should therefore expect more of the same from Saudi Arabia as the
country seeks to become a leading football nation.”
Abdel Ezzat, who resigned as SAFF’s president in August in order to
prepare for a run at the presidency of the Asian Football Confederation
next year, added: “The country is going through an important change.
Football can be a catalyst for change. My country can play an important
role in football.
“Football is about growth and if you don’t grow economically, socially,
technically, you will not be moving,” Ezzat added. “It’s not enough for
us to be in the World Cup.”
Saudi Arabia, who take on North Korea, Lebanon and Qatar at the Asian
Cup in January, start preparations for the tournament with another South
American test against Bolivia on Monday before traveling to Amman in
November for a friendly with Jordan.
https://www.geezgo.com/sps/38473
No comments