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Asian squash championships coming to Amman

By - Aug 09,2017 - Last updated at Aug 09,2017

AMMAN — The Jordan Squash Federation will host the 24th Asian Junior and Youth Squash Championships to be held at Al Hassan International Squash Centre from August 15-19, according to the Jordan Olympic Committee News Service.

The event will attract 13 countries including Sri Lanka, India, Malaysia, Iran, Iraq, Lebanon, Hong Kong, Macaw, Japan, Qatar, Pakistan, South Korea and Jordan who will compete for medals in U-13, U-15, U-17 and U-19 age categories.

“This is a big event for Jordan and we are looking forward to welcoming some of the best young players from across Asia to Amman,” said Ramzi Tabbalat, president of the Jordan Squash Federation, which has hosted the tournament twice before in 2011 and 2013. Jordan has named a squad of 11 players, with the big name undoubtedly being Mohammad Serraj who won bronze in the U-19 World Championships last month in New Zealand.

Jordan to take on Syria at Asian Basketball Cup

By - Aug 08,2017 - Last updated at Aug 08,2017

AMMAN — Jordan plays Syria on Wednesday in their opening match at the 2017 FIBA Asia Cup (formerly known as the FIBA Asia Basketball Championship) currently under way in the Lebanese capital.

Group A also includes former champs Iran as well as India with the top team from each group automatically moving to the quarters of the 29th edition of the tournament, which determines the FIBA Asia and FIBA Oceania qualifiers for the 2019 FIBA World Cup.

China is defending champion and has won 16 times, Philippines five times, Iran three times, South Korea and Japan twice each. 

Jordan’s best result was in 2011 when it lost the chance qualify to the 2012 Olympic Games losing 70-69 to China in the final match at the 26th FIBA Asia Basketball Championship in China.

Although the Kingdom’s team reached the World Championship in 2010 – and was the only Jordanian team to actually reach a world championship in a team sport alongside the junior team in 1995 (as well as the U-19 football team at the World Cup Finals in 2007), official support for Jordan’s second most popular game is seen as below par by most observers, leading to a decline in the game locally and less competitive advantage on the regional scene.

Due to financial constraints crippling the Jordan Basketball Federation, Jordan has stopped competing at Asian events like the William Jones Tournament or organising the King Abdullah Cup . The team only had a training camp in Turkey in preparations for the Asian event.

 

Jordan was previously at them at the forefront of Asian teams. Apart from qualifying to the 2010 World Championship, Jordan finished fourth at the Asian Games in Doha in 2006; and was the first Arab team to win the William Jones Cup in 2007. The squad later won the 17th Arab Basketball Championship for the first time and finished runner-up to Egypt at the Pan-Arab Games. 

Jordan’s FIBA ASIA record

1995 - out in Round 1

1997 - finished 7th

2003 - finished 10th

2005 - finished 7th

2007 - finished 5th

2009 - finished 3rd

2011 - finished 2nd

2013 - finished 7th

2015 - finished 9th

Sizzling Zverev takes 4th title of the year

By - Aug 07,2017 - Last updated at Aug 07,2017

Alexander Zverev of Germany celebrates his win over Kevin Anderson of South Africa at the men’s singles final of the Citi Open in Washington, DC, on Sunday (AFP photo by Tasos Katopodis)

WASHINGTON — Alexander Zverev issued a warning to top ATP rivals yesterday after winning the Citi Open for his fourth title of the year he is not the next generation, he is the now generation.

The 20-year-old German defeated South Africa’s Kevin Anderson 6-4, 6-4 to capture the $355,460 top prize at the US Open tuneup event on the Washington hardcourts.

World number eight Zverev dropped only nine points on his serve and never faced a break point in becoming the youngest player to win four ATP titles in a year, or take the Washington crown, since Argentina’s Juan Martin Del Potro did it at 19 in 2008.

“I improved a lot in the last few months to get where I can win tournaments,” Zverev said. “The longer the tournament goes for me the better I’m able to play. Hopefully this can continue to be like that.”

Zverev won his first title last September in St Petersburg and added trophies this year at Montpellier, Munich and Rome, where he downed Novak Djokovic in the final.

He also ousted number four Stan Wawrinka at Miami and pushed Rafael Nadal to five sets in the third round of the Australian Open.

“I’m ‘Next Gen’ but the rankings say it for themselves,” Zverev said. “I think I showed I can play with the big guys this year.

“I think I showed I’m not an ‘in the future’ kind of guy. I’m right now.”

Only Wimbledon and Australian Open champion Roger Federer with five titles has won more ATP crowns this year than Zverev, and that’s only because the Swiss star handed the German his lone finals loss of 2017 at Halle in June.

“A lot of people are looking at him as the face of tennis and the next Grand Slam champion,” Anderson said of Zverev. “He seems to deal with it all pretty well. It will be interesting to see how the next little while progresses.

“I wouldn’t be surprised if he wins a few Grand Slams. He definitely seems to be on a path in that direction.”

Zverev, who will remain a career-best eighth in Monday’s rankings, made a slam-best fourth-round Wimbledon run, losing in five sets to Milos Raonic.

“Winning those types of matches is the next level I need to reach,” Zverev said. “To get far in those events is
my next goal.”

Zverev thanked new co-coach Juan Carlos Ferrero, the former World No. 1 from Spain who worked with him at an event for the first time this week.

“What a way to start together and hopefully we have many more years to come and many more titles together,” Zverev said. “It’s amazing what we’ve already accomplished.”

Zverev took the only break of the first set in the third game when Anderson netted a forehand overhead smash. Zverev broke to open the second set and held from there, winning after 69 minutes when Anderson sent a backhand wide.

“The couple of times I had small openings he played really well,” Anderson said.

Anderson, in his first ATP final since winning the 2015 Winston-Salem title, will jump from 45th to about 33rd in Monday’s rankings, his best mark since standing 25th last August.

 

“I played some of my best tennis here,” Anderson said. “That has been really encouraging.”

Faisali impressive in Arab Clubs Championship

By - Aug 07,2017 - Last updated at Aug 07,2017

AMMAN — Faisali lost a hard-fought final and conceded the title to Tunisia’s Esperance (Tarajji) in the final of the Arab Clubs Championship which ended in Alexandria, Egypt, on Sunday.

The Jordan Professional Football League and Jordan Cup champs came from 2-0 down to tie the game 2-2 and forced extra time. They seemed determined to win the Arab title for the first time, but eventually lost 3-2 in extra time. However, commentators seemed to agree that the winning goal was offside and that the referee left a Faisali player injured on the pitch with Tarajji players continuing to play.

“I do not know how to congratulate the winning team,” Faisali’s Montenegrin coach Nebojsa Jovovic told at a press conference. “ I know my guys played so well, and the match will provide a chance for lessons for many sides,” he said alluding to controversial officiating in the final.

Things got out of hand as Faisali fans took offence going on to the pitch to vent their frustration and complain about the “unjust” result of the match.

It was the second time Faisali played for the title of the elite Arab competition. 

They were impressive throughout the event. In the first round they topped Group A, after beating the UAE’s Wihdeh 2-1 and scoring 1-0 wins over Algeria’s Hussein Dey and hosts Egypt’s champion Ahli. In the semis, Faisali again beat Egyptian giants Ahli 2-1 while two-time champs Esperance beat Morocco’s Rabat also 2-1 to advance in the other semifinal.

No Jordanian team has won the competition that kicked off in 1980 and had different format under five different editions. Faisali were runners up to ES Setif in the Arab Clubs Championship in 2007, and were also runners up in the Arab Super Cup in 1996. 

Twelve teams played in three groups, with Egypt’s Ahli finishing best runner up behind Faisali in Group A as Group B was led by Morocco’s Rabat which included Egypt’s Zamalek, Saudi Arabia’s Nasser and Lebanon’s Ahed while Tunisia’s Esperance topped Group C which included Sudan’s Marrikh, Saudi Arabia’s Hilal and Iraq’s Naft Al Wassat.

Faisali are twice winner of the Asian Football Confederation (AFC) Cup. In the 2016/17 season they won the Pro League and Jordan Cup titles, while Ahli beat Wihdat to win the 34th Super Cup and Shabab Urdun won the Jordan Football Association Shield.

Wihdat this year finished third in the league and failed in any of the four local competition titles. They were eliminated from the 14th Asian Football Confederation (AFC) Cup semifinals and the preliminary round of 2017 AFC Asian Champions League (ACL). Jordanian teams have never before made it past the ACL preliminary round. Wihdat were knocked out in 2016 and 2015, and Shabab Urdun in 2014.

The Arab Clubs Championship is an annual regional club football competition organised by the Union of Arab Football Associations and contested by elite clubs, all of which are either winners or runners-up of their country’s league or cup competition.

 

After being put on hold for three seasons, the tournament returned for the 2017 season.

Abu Ghaush settles for bronze medal in Moscow

By - Aug 07,2017 - Last updated at Aug 07,2017

AMMAN — Jordan’s Olympic champion Ahmad Abu Ghaush has continued to prove his worth as one of the world’s best by winning bronze at the season launching Moscow Taekwondo Grand Prix, according to the Jordan Olympic Committee News Service.

The 21-year-old started his campaign with a 25-15 win over Azerbaijan’s Mohammad Mammadov before beating Russia’s Konstantin Minin 21-7 in the quarter-finals.

Abu Ghaush then came up against the greatest fighter of his generation, Korea’s Dae-hoon Lee, and found him in formidable form by eventually going down 19-7. Lee went on to win the gold medal. It was an impressive start to the Grand Prix season though for Abu Ghaush who will next compete in September in Morocco.

Brilliant Farah maintains domination with epic 10,000m win

By - Aug 05,2017 - Last updated at Aug 05,2017

Britain’s Mo Farah celebrates with his children after winning the final of the men’s 10,000m athletics event at the 2017 IAAF World Championships at the London Stadium on Friday (AFP photo by Andrej Isakovic)

LONDON — Mo Farah launched the World Athletics Championships in scintillating fashion on Friday with another consummate 10,000 metres triumph that further embellished his claim to being the greatest distance racer in the sport’s annals.

With 55,000 of his home fans roaring their support at the London Stadium, the 34-year-old Briton sprinted away with his 10th consecutive gold medal in a global track final, a dazzling sequence that ranks among the greatest feats in sport.

Farah survived being clipped twice from behind in the final lap, nearly tripping over and being forced to take a step off the track, before unleashing a trademark burst down the home straight to speed away from Uganda’s Joshua Cheptegei and Kenya’s Paul Tanui.

The Briton clocked 26 minutes 49.51 seconds, the world’s fastest time in 2017, in what proved perhaps the hardest-earned of all his magnificent triumphs as he protected his six-year unbeaten streak in major championships.

Silver medallist Cheptegei, just 20, clocked a lifetime best 26:49.94, chasing Farah all the way to the line, and Tanui 26:50.60.

Yet, five years to the very night when he won the 25-lap title at his home Olympics on “Super Saturday” in the same London Stadium, Farah had still not lost that invincible aura, clocking a searing 55.63 seconds for the last lap in spite of his stumbles.

It was the perfect way for him to begin his final championship as a track runner before he turns his attentions to the roads as a marathon man. 

“What a way to end my career in London. It’s special,” Farah said, after hugging his children on the track.

“It was amazing. I had to get my head around it and I got a bit emotional at the start. I had to get in the zone.

“It wasn’t an easy race. I work on everything and it’s been a long journey.”

After an epic test in which the powerful Kenyan and Ugandan athletes combined with mid-race bursts to test Farah’s resolve more fiercely than ever before, the Briton had to show remarkable composure on the final lap.

Twice as he led straight after the bell while still closely pursued by four hunters, Farah was clipped. The first time, his heel was caught by Tanui and on the second bend, the same Kenyan brushed his arm, sending Farah off balance so that he took one step into the infield.

 

Forge clear

 

Yet, despite momentarily losing his rhythm, the champion regrouped to take control on the back straight and he scorched off the final bend to forge clear and take his third successive world 10,000m title by a couple of metres.

It was the fastest he had run in any of his five global 10,000m victories by more than 11 seconds. 

Still, though, he has only done half the job with the 5,000 metres to come next week and the prospect of completing a fifth straight 5,000/10,000 distance double in global championships.

The 16th edition of the championships could not have been set up more ideally for Britain to celebrate a home triumph in the first medal event and Farah, as ever, did not disappoint his legion of fans.

After he crossed the line, he swore that the noise in the stadium matched the incredible din of his 2012 tours de force when he won the 10,000m and 5,000m here.

Down the years, his main opponents from Kenya have tried in vain to upset Farah’s equilibrium, sometimes working in teams and varying their pace and tactics but the master racer always has an answer in the sprint denouement.

Once again, the same scenario unfolded with, this time, two Ugandans teaming up with the Kenyan trio of Geoffrey Kamworor, Bedan Karoki and Tanui to pressurise him.

A couple of blistering 61-second laps were thrown in to try to shake him but Farah’s composure never wavered, as he moved up the field to join the leaders and gestured to the crowd to turn up the volume.

 

“I just wanted to play with the guys’ heads,” he said.

Faisali aim for Arab Clubs Championship title

By - Aug 05,2017 - Last updated at Aug 05,2017

AMMAN — Faisali play Esperance Tunis (Tarraji) in the final of the Arab Clubs Championship, which concludes in Alexandria, Egypt on Sunday.

It will be the second time the Jordanian team plays for the title of the elite Arab competition and observers are anticipating a hard-fought final.

Making it to the final was no easy feat and Faisali have been impressive since the first round when they topped Group A, after beating the UAE’s Wihdeh 2-1 and scoring 1-0 wins over Algeria’s Hussein Dey and hosts Egypt’s champion Ahli. 

In the semis, the Jordanian league and cup champs beat Egyptian giants Ahli 2-1 while two-time champs Esperance beat Morocco’s Rabat also 2-1 to advance in the other semifinal.

No Jordanian team has won the competition that kicked off in 1980 and had different competitions under five different editions. Faisali were runner- up to ES Setif in the Arab Clubs Championship in 2007, and were also runner-up in the Arab Super Cup in 1996. This year the winner will take home $2.5 million.

Twelve teams played in three groups, with Egypt’s Ahli finishing best runner up behind Faisali in Group A as Group B was led by Morocco’s Rabat which included Egypt’s Zamalek, Saudi Arabia’s Nasser and Lebanon’s Ahed while Tunisia’s Esperance topped Group C which included Sudan’s Marrikh, Saudi Arabia’s Hilal and Iraq’s Naft Al Wassat.

Faisali, had an exciting local season and now hope to take a regional title home. They are twice winners of the Asian Football Confederation (AFC) Cup, and did not compete on the Asian scene this year. The 2016/17 season competitions saw them combine the Jordan Professional Football League and Jordan Cup titles while Ahli beat Wihdat to win the 34th Super Cup, and Shabab Urdun won the Jordan Football Association Shield.

Wihdat, who this year settled for third in the league and failed to win even one of the four local competition titles, were eliminated from the 14th Asian Football Confederation (AFC) Cup semifinals.

Wihdat’s ambitions of competing among top tier Asian teams were dashed early when they were eliminated from the preliminary round of 2017 AFC Asian Champions League (ACL). Jordanian teams have never before made it past the ACL preliminary round. 

The Arab Clubs Championship is an annual regional club football competition organised by the Union of Arab Football Associations and contested by elite clubs from the Arab world. The tournament is played by teams from the Asian Football Confederation and Confederation of African Football, all of which are either winners or runners-up of their country’s league or cup competition.

Founded in 1980 as the Arab Club Champions Cup, the tournament’s first ever champions were Iraqi giants Al Shorta. Iraq’s Al Rasheed (Karkh) are the most successful club in the competition’s history.

 

Saudi Arabian clubs won the title eight times and Tunisian clubs five times. Since the tournament was merged with the Cup Winners’ Cup, only ES Sétif of Algeria have managed consecutive wins, successfully defending their title in 2008. The reigning champions are USM Alger from the 2013 final. After being put on hold for three seasons, the tournament has returned for the 2016–17 season.

Finally respected, Klitschko announces retirement

By - Aug 03,2017 - Last updated at Aug 03,2017

Undated photo of retiring Ukrainian professional boxer Wladimir Klitschko (AFP photo)

Wladimir Klitschko ruled the heavyweight scene with a steel glove for more than a decade yet it was a defeat by Anthony Joshua which ensured the Ukrainian retired on Thursday with the universal respect that eluded him for so long.

Often denigrated for a robotic style, short on flair, Klitschko reigned supreme in a heavyweight era suffering from a dearth of box office names.

The 41-year-old dispatched a regular supply of average fighters to reach 64 career victories yet few, if any of them, will feature in a showreel of the sport’s greatest contests.

Instead it will be his final fight, against Britain’s Joshua, that will be define Klitschko’s legacy.

Despite a 14-year age gap and fighting in front of a partisan 90,000 Wembley Stadium crowd, Klitschko produced arguably his best performance before being stopped in the 11th round of a sensational fight.

Had he finished off a wobbling Joshua in the sixth round Klitschko would have become only the second fighter after George Foreman to win a recognised version of the world title as a 40-something.

Yet, even in defeat, a global audience finally gave the Germany-based fighter the acclaim he deserved for a career in which he carried the a sport so often dragged into the gutter with professionalism and dignity.

An eagerly anticipated Las Vegas rematch with Joshua was in the pipeline, yet Klitschko, who had lost his WBA, IBF and WBO heavyweight belts in a disappointing defeat by Britain’s Tyson Fury in 2015, has decided enough is enough.

 

‘Fresh challenges’

 

“Twenty-seven years ago I started my journey,” he said in the video announcing his decision to retire on Thursday. “And it was the best choice of profession I could have ever made.

“At some point in our lives we need to, or just want to, switch our careers and get ourselves ready for the next chapter and chart a course towards fresh challenges. Obviously I am not an exception to this and now it’s my turn.

“I’m doing this with... tremendous excitement, dedication, passion; expecting and hoping that my next career, which I’ve already been planning and working on for some years, will be at least as successful as my previous one, if not more successful.”

Klitschko’s manager Bernd Boente said his man had not lost his powers, but was no longer prepared to put himself though the 10-week training camps needed to prepare for big fights.

“It took him time to make a decision but he realised that the motivation and fire was not there any more,” he told Sky Sports. “I don’t think it was that he felt past his best.”

Ukraine’s prime minister, Volodymyr Groysman, said on Facebook: “Thank you for the all-time great fights and victories! I wish you successes and achievements on new fronts.”

Klitschko turned professional in 1996 shortly after winning super-heavyweight gold at the Atlanta Olympics.

He won his first 24 fights before losing to American Ross Puritty in 1998 — his only fight in his native Ukraine.

Klitschko won his first world title in 2000, beating American Chris Byrd to claim the WBO title.

He suffered defeats at the hands of South Africa’s Corrie Sanders and American Lamon Brewster in 2003 and 2004.

After teaming up with trainer Emanuel Steward, Klitschko became a far greater all-round fighter and went 11 years unbeaten before losing to Fury.

It was an era dominated known as the “Klitschko era” with his older brother Vitali also holding the WBC belt from 2008 to 2012 before retiring in 2013.

 

Klitschko is second on the all-time list for successful title defences with 23, behind the 25 of Joe Louis, while his 29 heavyweight title fights remains a record.

Jordan tops Arab 3x3 rankings

By - Aug 03,2017 - Last updated at Aug 03,2017

AMMAN — Jordan’s rapid progress in 3x3 Basketball has been highlighted by the latest FIBA rankings that rate the Kingdom as the leading Arab nation in the sport.

On a global level, Jordan is ranked 43, three ahead of Bahrain, and in Asia the Kingdom is ranked sixth, following Japan, Kazakhstan, China, Kyrgyzstan and Turkmenistan.  It is an astonishing rise considering Jordan was ranked 113 in the world a year ago.

It has been a similar rise for the women who are now 37th in the world, up from 93 last year. The U-18 male team is 34th in the world and second Arab country after Bahrain, while the U-18 ladies rank 40th. The U-23 males are up eight places to 41, while the ladies are 39th.

The move is welcome recognition for the hard work carried out over recent months when Jordan was quick to reignite the sport after it was included in the next Olympic programme in 2020. A new 3x3 Basketball Committee has been created under Jordan Olympic Committee supervision and in coordination with the Jordan Basketball Federation.

A number of national tournaments have been well supported and Jordan sent delegations to compete internationally, including the recent U-18 World Championship in China.

Faisali aim to advance in Arab Clubs Championships

By - Aug 01,2017 - Last updated at Aug 01,2017

AMMAN — Faisali will play Egyptian giants Ahli on Wednesday in the semis of the Arab Clubs Championships with a hope of having a shot at the title after an impressive first round.

The other semifinal will see Morocco’s Rabat play Tunisia’s Tarraji on Thursday with the winners playing for the title on August 5.

Jordanian league and Cup champs Faisali topped Group A, after they beat the UAE’s Wihdeh 2-1 and scoring 1-0 wins over Algeria’s Hussein Dey and hosts Egypt’s champion Ahli. 

With 12 teams playing in three groups, Ahli finished best runner up, Group B was led by Morocco’s Rabat which included Egypt’s Zamalek, Saudi Arabia’s Nasser and Lebanon’s Ahed. Tunisia’s Tarraji topped Group C which included Sudan’s Marrikh, Saudi Arabia’s Hilal and Iraq’s Naft Al Wassat.

No Jordanian team has won the Arab Clubs title before, and Faisali were runner-up in 1996, 1999 and 2007 in the competition that kicked off in 1980 and had different competitions under five different editions. This year the winner will take home $2.5 million.

Faisali, twice winner of the Asian Football Confederation (AFC) Cup, did not compete on the Asian scene this year. They had an impressive local season and now hope to take a regional title home. The 2016/17 season competitions saw them combine the Jordan Professional Football League and Jordan Cup titles, while Ahli beat Wihdat to win the 34th Super Cup and Shabab Urdun won the Jordan Football Association Shield.

Wihdat were eliminated from the 14th Asian Football Confederation (AFC) Cup semifinals as the former Jordanian champs went through one of their most disappointing seasons in years. After combining all four local competitions in past seasons, and following three successive years at the helm, Wihdat this year settled for third in the league and failed to win even one of the four local competition titles.

It was Wihdat’s 10th time in the AFC Cup while Ahli, who represented Jordan in the AFC Cup for the first time, were eliminated in the first round. The AFC Cup, as was previously won three times by Jordanian teams: Faisali won titles in 2005 and 2006 and Shabab Urdun won in 2007.

 

Wihdat’s ambitions of competing among top tier Asian teams were dashed early when they were eliminated from the preliminary round of 2017 AFC Asian Champions League (ACL). Jordanian teams have never before made it past the ACL preliminary round. Wihdat were knocked out in 2016 and 2015, while Shabab Urdun were eliminated in 2014.

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