Inside Ittihad: How club CEO oversaw an on-pitch revolution at Jeddah giants

Inside Ittihad: How club CEO oversaw an on-pitch revolution at Jeddah giants
Al-Ittihad CEO Domingos Soares Oliveira (Supplied)
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Updated 17 February 2025
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Inside Ittihad: How club CEO oversaw an on-pitch revolution at Jeddah giants

Inside Ittihad: How club CEO oversaw an on-pitch revolution at Jeddah giants
  • In the final part of a series about the current Saudi Pro League leaders, Arab News spoke to Domingos Soares Oliveira about the club’s transformation since his arrival in 2023

Australia: When Domingos Soares Oliveira first walked through the doors at Al-Ittihad, on Oct. 1, 2023, the challenge in front of him was immense.

By that stage, the league had already attracted some of the world’s best talent as it began its rapid transformation. But the off-field operation had yet to catch up to the on-field capabilities. In some ways, the cart had been put before the horse.

The players had been signed without the requisite level of infrastructure, both physical and organisational, that they were accustomed to back in Europe. Quite hastily a new training headquarters was built at their training ground to bring the club up to the minimum standard required for an elite club in 2024.

Oliveira’s job as new CEO, therefore, was not only to transform the entire off-field operation, but to do so at a pace that allowed them to catch up with the ambition being shown on the pitch.

Everything was urgent. Everything was a priority. At the same time, he had to learn and adapt to his new surroundings and a new football culture, having spent his entire career in the more familiar surrounds of European football, spending close to 20 years with Portuguese giants Benfica before accepting the job with Al-Ittihad.

While the differences between the structures were vast, the passion for the game remained the same.

“There’re a lot of things that are different between clubs in Saudi and in our case, with Al-Ittihad, compared to Europe,” the 64-year-old told Arab News.

“But there’s something that is very similar, which is the passion from the fans. I’ve been in different parts of the globe, you have countries who are somehow trying to engage with the population around football, but there’s not a culture around football.

“But here, you have it, because you can see kids playing in the street in the morning or in the evening. You can see the passion in the stadiums. In our case, you have 60,000 people going to the matches. So, there’re a lot of similarities in the way people live football.”

But, as he explained, that is where the similarities end, which only underscores the size of the challenge that awaited Oliveira, one he described as the biggest of his career.

When he started, he estimates there were about 100 employees. Today he estimates that number at more than 300, which highlights the rapid rate of organisational growth that has taken place.

“The way clubs were organised,” he explained, “I don’t like to call it amateur, because, of course, coaches and players, have always been for the last, I would say, five decades, professionals. But in terms of organisation, it would rely very much on the people that were elected every year.

“So, there was not an organisation in the different departments, including football, the way we see in Europe with clubs organised in terms of having a proper scouting department, proper strategy and academies.

“When I joined the club, there was not a CFO (chief financial officer), there was not a sporting director, there was not a commercial director, there was not another sports manager.

“So the challenge since we saw the PIF (Public Investment Fund) acquisition of the four big clubs here in Saudi, the challenge was a big transformation from, let’s say, this way of organising things based on passion to something much more professional, which we have in place right now.”

He likened the job to that of a startup, albeit one with 97 years of history behind it.

“Following the PIF acquisition, in terms of strategy, in terms of value creation initiatives, in terms of defining KPIs, (key performance indicators) in terms of governance, in terms of compliance, we were a little bit like a startup,” he said.

“I always say we are a startup that is 97 years old, but we were like a startup. But inside an organisation like PIF, we need to prepare everything in terms of policies, in terms of procedures, in terms of strategy to fulfill the PIF requirements.

“We are not treated in a different way from a telecom company or from an airline company, the rules that we have to implement, the mechanisms that we have to implement, the reporting that we have to implement, the different committees we have inside the club, everything has to be done according to the PIF standards.”

Most urgent was an overhaul of the structures around the first team and the wider football department, which was made more challenging by the difficulties of the season, with the team struggling on the field, which led to Nuno Espirito Santo being replaced by Marcello Gallardo, who was then replaced at season’s end by Laurent Blanc.

But the structures that Oliveira had in mind were to exist regardless of who was in the hot seat; a system that remained consistent even were the club to change coaches.

The experienced Ramon Planes, a veteran of European football with the likes of Tottenham, Barcelona and Real Betis, was appointed as sporting director and given the remit of overseeing the entire football operation, from the first team to youth development and scouting.

Planes, Oliveira and the head coach, which this year is Frenchman Blanc, form the club’s sporting committee, with oversight of the club’s key football decisions, which include recruitment.

Where Planes led, others followed, with key personnel from Barcelona following him to Jeddah, including managing director, Franc Carbó, who was appointed head of strategy and football operations with Al-Ittihad.

Given Planes’ experience in Europe, particularly with Barcelona where he had an intimate insight into their famed youth development systems, it is no surprise to see Al-Ittihad adopt a similar strategy.

In the off-season the club targeted young Saudi players, completing the permanent moves for Faisal Al-Ghamdi (since loaned out to Beerschot) and Saad Al-Mousa, while their signing of Barcelona B star, Unai Hernandez, in January was a window into the future, one which is focused very much on youth development, according to Oliveira.

“We cannot only rely on players coming from abroad, because it’s not sustainable,” he said.

“It’s great that we can bring players like Karim Benzema or (N’Golo) Kante or Fabinho or Moussa Diaby or (Predrag) Rajkovic. We have very, very good international players (and) we want to keep some of them, but in terms of sustainability for the future, we need to develop the Saudi players.

“If we want to do something as a Kingdom, if we want to do something really relevant at the (2034) World Cup, it’s now that we have to start immediately developing this concept of having the best young Saudis trained the proper way.

“So, when you ask me about the long-term vision, that’s my long-term vision; it’s about having Saudi players that can feed the national team.”

Increasing on-field and off-field opportunities for those in Saudi Arabia is a key theme for Oliveira, who spoke frequently about his “Saudi-isation” push across the business.

“Part of my job is to increase the ‘Saudi-isation’ of the club,” he said.

“Our challenge at this stage in the football department is, in the coming two years, we need to increase the ‘Saudi-isation’ inside the football department, because at this stage, we rely very much on people coming from different countries.

“But we need to increase the Saudis, and we are doing this. We are bringing more Saudis in to train them so that they can run the football department in the future.”

Speaking of the future at Al-Ittihad, Oliveira, who cited increasing commercial revenues as a key area for improvement, would not put a limit on what was possible, but outlined more of his vision for Saudi Arabia’s oldest football club and again it came back to youth development.

“We need to develop the young Saudi players in a way that this club, in the future, can rely mostly on Saudi players,” he said.

“I do believe that in terms of commercial activities, in terms of TV rights, there will be a boost in terms of increasing the revenues that will allow the club to be financially sustainable. This will allow the club, in the next decade, to continue chasing the best players around the globe.

“But at the same time, we need Saudi players, different profiles in terms of Saudi players, and for that, you need to work with them at younger ages.

“Once they are under the Ittihad umbrella, we can take care of their education together with the parents. We can take care of their nutrition, we can take care of their physical development, mental development, competitive development. You can only do this if you have a very good youth strategy and very good people inside the youth department.

He continued: “I know that if we are able to put the best training facilities, considering that we’ll have the land for the new headquarters, together with a proper youth strategy, we will be able to have a gigantic centre of excellence here in Ittihad, which in my case, I deeply believe that we can fill the Saudi national team with probably the majority of their players, because we have the skills, we have the strategy, (and) we have the procedures to develop this strategy.

“If you ask me about 10 years from now, I want to develop the Saudi players the best way I can. And for that, I need facilities, I need a strategy, I need procedures, and I need something that we already have in Saudi, which is the raw material we have at the younger ages.

“We just need to take care of them and to develop them the right way.”

 


Algeria upset Uganda in CHAN opener

Updated 3 sec ago
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Algeria upset Uganda in CHAN opener

Algeria upset Uganda in CHAN opener
Man of the match Meziane was on target himself on 76 minutes
Three minutes later Sofiane Bayazid put the result beyond doubt

NAIROBI: Algeria thumped Uganda 3-0 in their opening African Nations Championships (CHAN) Group C match in Kampala on Monday.

Uganda’s defeat means it is the only co-hosting nation to lose their CHAN opening match following twin victories for Tanzania and Kenya over the weekend.

Ayoub Ghezala rose high to head in an Abderrahmane Meziane cross at the near post for the Desert Foxes before the break.

Man of the match Meziane was on target himself on 76 minutes with a superb left-footed curler from the edge of the box.

Three minutes later Sofiane Bayazid put the result beyond doubt after a one-two combination
with left-back Naoufel Khacef.

Uganda were left ruing two missed chances when Joel Ssrunjogi and Patrick Kakande’s long range efforts were thwarted by Algerian keeper Zakaria Boulhalfaya.

Uganda next meet Guinea who got their campaign off to a winning start with a 1-0 win over Niger in a tie that required frequent use of video assistant referee (VAR).

Teenage striker Mohammed Bangoura atoned for an early miss with the only goal two minutes into the second half which was confirmed after a VAR review, having initially been ruled offside.

Reports: LAFC agree to terms with Tottenham for Son Heung-Min

Reports: LAFC agree to terms with Tottenham for Son Heung-Min
Updated 5 min 59 sec ago
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Reports: LAFC agree to terms with Tottenham for Son Heung-Min

Reports: LAFC agree to terms with Tottenham for Son Heung-Min
  • LAFC will pay a transfer fee of around $26 million, GiveMeSport and ESPN reported
  • Son, 33, announced over the weekend that he planned to leave Tottenham

LONDON: Son Heung-min, who spent 10 seasons with Tottenham Hotspur and stars for the South Korea national team, has a deal in place to join Los Angeles FC, according to multiple reports.

LAFC will pay a transfer fee of around $26 million, GiveMeSport and ESPN reported, which would break the Major League Soccer record of $22 million that Atlanta United paid to acquire Emmanuel Latte Lath last offseason.

Son, 33, announced over the weekend that he planned to leave Tottenham, saying he achieved everything that he could with the North London club and he was interested in a new challenge.

Tottenham faced Newcastle United in a friendly in Seoul, which served as Son’s farewell match. He received a standing ovation and a guard of honor and said he had “a huge respect and am very grateful” to his old club.

Son scored 172 goals and added 94 assists in 451 matches for Tottenham across all competitions, with 127 coming in Premier League play. A team captain, he helped the Spurs win the 2025 Europa League for the first major trophy of his career.

He previously played in Bundesliga for Hamburger SV and Bayer Leverkusen.

Son has also scored 51 goals in 134 matches for South Korea, the country’s second-leading goal-scorer of all time. Son played in the past three World Cups.

In LAFC — who also acquired defender Ryan Porteous from Watford on Monday — Son is joining a decorated MLS team that’s vying for another playoff berth. Los Angeles (10-6-6, 36 points) is sixth in the Western Conference.


Ibrahim Albassam: From school champion to Saudi eLeague competitor

 Ibrahim Albassam: From school champion to Saudi eLeague competitor
Updated 05 August 2025
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Ibrahim Albassam: From school champion to Saudi eLeague competitor

 Ibrahim Albassam: From school champion to Saudi eLeague competitor
  • The 16-year-old Saudi talent has signed for Twisted Minds following promising performances in the School eLeague
  • Progression from School eLeague to professional level propelled by Saudi Esports Federation’s investment in grassroots development

RIYADH: Few achieve their dreams by the age of 16. Yet, fresh from high school, Ibrahim Albassam has already achieved a key life goal, leveling up to go from a gaming fan to an electronic sports professional, joining Twisted Minds as a pro player.

While millions around the globe battle it out daily in “EA Sports FC 25,” only the best of the best get to cross the white line and go for glory as a professional player.

As in real football, goals win games in “EA Sports FC 25,” and Albassam knows how to hit the back of the net, but progressing to a pro was a steep learning curve as he balanced his studies with his newfound career.

“Balancing my life as a student and with competitive e-sports was a critical part of my early journey,” he explained. 

“I always made it a priority to stay focused on my studies and exams, while also dedicating time daily for practise and improvement. That discipline helped shape my mindset as a player, learning how to manage pressure, stay consistent, and remain committed to both education and gaming.

“I truly believe that when you’re passionate about something, you’ll always find the time to pursue it and succeed. During that time, I practiced consistently for one to two hours each day to stay sharp and improve my performance.”

Albassam began his e-sports journey through the School eLeague. His talent quickly stood out leading him to represent the Eastern Province in the “EA Sports FC 25” tournament, where he delivered strong performances.

After winning first place in the School eLeague Championship, he was signed by Twisted Minds, one of the Kingdom’s leading e-sports organizations.

“The School eLeague was my first step into the professional scene and served as the gateway for me to join one of the top teams in Saudi Arabia, Twisted Minds and represent them in the Saudi eLeague ‘EA FC 25’ tournament,” explains Albassam. 

“The biggest difference I noticed was the level of intensity and seriousness. In the Saudi eLeague, you’re facing top-tier players from every club, each with their own achievements and experience.

“It’s a much more competitive environment, which forces you to grow, learn, and elevate your game quickly. On top of that, representing a team like Twisted Minds adds even more motivation to perform, win, and continue developing as a professional.”

Albassam’s success is one of many examples of the Saudi Esports Federation’s success in investing in grassroots development, creating pathways for talent to progress, compete at the highest level and represent Saudi Arabia in the global e-sports scene.

The Schools eLeague, organized by the Saudi Esports Federation in collaboration with the Ministry of Education, has become a hotbed for talent and a platform for aspiring players to learn, develop and showcase their abilities with opportunities to take the leap into careers in e-sports.

Albassam is grateful for the opportunities available to young players in the Kingdom and for the support of his family who were initially unsure about his ambitions but were quickly convinced that e-sports is a significant focus area for Saudi Arabia, with young players like him at the forefront of its progression.

“At first, my family had some concerns about me pursuing a professional career in gaming, which is understandable, as they hadn’t seen or experienced the opportunities in esports the way our generation has,” Albassam explained. 

“Over time, they began to recognize the potential of this industry and how a passion for gaming can evolve into a legitimate and promising career path, especially with the level of support e-sports is receiving here in the Kingdom.

“As always, they stood by me. Like with any emerging field, initial doubt is natural, but once it becomes real, it becomes normal.”

 


FIFA faces Dutch class action over player transfer regulations

FIFA faces Dutch class action over player transfer regulations
Updated 04 August 2025
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FIFA faces Dutch class action over player transfer regulations

FIFA faces Dutch class action over player transfer regulations
  • The foundation added that consultancy firm Compass Lexecon had estimated that damages could run into billions of euros
  • The Dutch football players’ group is seeking compensation over alleged loss of income due to restrictive transfer rules

Aug 4 : A Dutch football players’ group is preparing a “potentially billion-dollar” class action claim against FIFA and other football associations, seeking compensation over alleged loss of income due to restrictive transfer rules, it said on Monday.

The Dutch Foundation for Justice said world football governing body FIFA’s rules had affected approximately 100,000 players in European member states and the United Kingdom since 2002.

The foundation added that consultancy firm Compass Lexecon had estimated that damages could run into billions of euros, with the foundation’s board member Dolf Segaar telling Dutch news agency NOS that “it is a billion-dollar claim.”

The Dutch Football Association (KNVB) is among the associations to be named in the suit.

“This case is being brought in the Netherlands under the Dutch Act on the Settlement of Mass Damages in Collective Action (WAMCA), which allows this legal action to be launched by JfP on behalf of a large group of professional footballers,” it added.

FIFA and the KNVB did not immediately respond to emailed requests for comment.

The foundation added that a preliminary analysis from global economic consulting company Compass Lexecon estimated that professional footballers collectively earned around 8 percent less over their careers than they would have due to FIFA’s regulations.

“All professional football players have lost a significant amount of earnings due to the unlawful FIFA Regulations,” foundation chair Lucia Melcherts said in a statement.

“’Justice for Players’ is bringing this claim to help achieve justice for footballers and fairness.”

The foundation added that the case was launched following a ruling on French player Lassana Diarra, who was fined 10 million euros ($11.56 million) by FIFA for leaving Lokomotiv Moscow one year into a four-year deal.

In October 2024, the Court of Justice of the European Union said some of FIFA’s rules on player transfers went against European Union laws and free movement principles in the case linked to former Chelsea, Arsenal and Real Madrid player Diarra.

Following the ruling by the EU’s top court, FIFA in December adopted an interim framework concerning the Regulations on the Status and Transfer of Players.

The interim regulatory framework affects the calculation of compensation payable if there is a breach of contract and the burden of proof in relation to both compensation payable and an inducement to breach a contract.

Justice for Players said it will be advised by law firm Dupont-Hissel, founded by Jean-Louis Dupont.

Dupont is the same lawyer who took the landmark case of Belgian Jean-Marc Bosman, which in 1995 cleared the way for players in the European Union to move to other clubs at the end of contracts without a transfer fee being paid.

Dupont-Hissel also represented Diarra in his case against FIFA, with Dupont saying in 2024 that a judgment backing the player would be a milestone in modernizing football governance.

He added that it would allow players’ unions and club associations to regulate their employment practices.


Denver set to host Global Champions Arabians Tour for first time

Denver set to host Global Champions Arabians Tour for first time
Updated 04 August 2025
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Denver set to host Global Champions Arabians Tour for first time

Denver set to host Global Champions Arabians Tour for first time
  • Elite competition and cultural celebration will take place at National Western Complex on Aug. 8-9

DOHA: The Global Champions Arabians Tour, or GCAT, makes its debut in Denver, the US, with the fourth stage of the 2025 Americas Series taking place from Aug. 8-9 at the National Western Complex.

Following the success of GCAT’s events in Scottsdale, Miami Beach and Sao Paulo, the Denver stage brings the world’s leading Arabian horse championship to the heart of the American West.

The two-day event will showcase more than 100 purebred Arabian horses competing across yearling, junior and senior categories.

The Denver stage offers a total prize purse of $270,000 and qualifies winners for the GCAT Americas overall ranking, which awards $1.275 million to the top 20 male and female horses and top 20 handlers, with an additional $50,000 bonus for the highest-scoring horse across the series.

“We’re thrilled to bring the Global Champions Arabians Tour to Denver for the very first time,” said Sheikh Mohammed bin Nasser Al-Thani, deputy CEO of the Global Champions Arabians Tour.

“This stage reflects the tour’s mission of expanding the reach and impact of Arabian horse sport across new territories,” he said. “We look forward to welcoming the Denver community to witness excellence and heritage come alive in one of America’s most iconic equestrian settings.”

The event begins on Friday, Aug. 8, with a day of qualifying rounds across yearling, junior and senior categories, with each class evaluated by a panel of international judges.

In addition to the competitions, Friday will also feature cultural displays, retail booths and interactive experiences.

Saturday, Aug. 9, marks the pinnacle of the weekend for the championship, where the top qualifiers return to compete for gold, silver and bronze titles.

The day will include formal award ceremonies, the official honoring of GCAT officials, and opportunities to meet the winning horses and handlers. The arena will then transform into a concert venue for a closing performance by country music artists Big & Rich.

After Denver, the tour continues to Las Vegas, for the final stop of the GCAT Americas series from Sept. 26-28, as GCAT moves closer to its grand finale, the World Arabian Horse Championship Supreme in Doha, on Dec. 3-6.

Rankings after last event in Sao Paulo:

Top female horses

1. Exxaltress – 40 pts

2. SedonaAS – 37 pts

3. Vixxen K – 30 pts

Top male horses

1. Tasheem PMA – 40 pts

2.  SVBCalais – 37 pts

3. Rhaphael SBA – 35 pts

Top handlers

1. Sandro Pinha – 153 pts

2. RicardoRivero – 131 pts

3. Andy Selman – 120 pts