Sports
How the Middle East crisis has affected sporting events and athletes
The US and Israel’s conflict with Iran has led to sporting events being postponed in the region, while competitions elsewhere have been hit by travel disruption, with thousands of flights cancelled in some of the world’s busiest transit hubs.
Bahrain, Saudi F1 races cancelled, Qatar MotoGP postponed
Formula One’s Bahrain and Saudi Arabian Grands Prix will not take place in April due to the conflict in the Middle East, the sport announced on Saturday.
Meanwhile, MotoGP’s Qatar Grand Prix scheduled for next month has been postponed to November, with the dates for the Portuguese Grand Prix and the season finale in Valencia also changed as a result.
Spain Vs Argentina ‘finalissima’ match cancelled
The ‘Finalissima’ match between European champions Spain and Copa America winners Argentina that was scheduled to be held in Qatar later this month has been cancelled.
Trump says inappropriate for Iran to be at World Cup
US President Donald Trump said on March 12 that Iran’s soccer team were welcome to take part in this year’s World Cup but that he believed it was not appropriate they be there “for their own life and safety”.
Iran have qualified for the 48-team tournament to be held in the US, Canada and Mexico from June 11 and are scheduled to play two group matches in Los Angeles and one in Seattle.
Athletes’ arrivals at Paralympic Games disrupted
Several athletes were unable to travel to the Milano Cortina Winter Paralympic Games due to travel disruption at several Middle Eastern airports.
Moreover, Iran are not competing at the Milano Cortina 2026 Paralympic Winter Games, the International Paralympic Committee announced on March 6.
Tennis in UAE halted due to security alert
The ATP Challenger event in Fujairah was cancelled on March 3 due to safety concerns after a security alert halted play. The ATP Tour said a charter flight had been arranged “at no cost to players”.
Russians Daniil Medvedev and Andrey Rublev, who participated in the Dubai Tennis Championships, were among the players who faced difficulties before travelling to California for the Indian Wells Open.
Sindhu withdraws from Badminton’s all England open
Two-times Olympic medallist PV Sindhu withdrew from the All England Open after being stranded for days at the Dubai airport. She returned to India on March 3.
US withdraws from hockey World Cup qualifier
The US men’s hockey team withdrew from a hockey World Cup 2026 qualifier in Ismailia, Egypt after an official advisory from the State Department urging all US citizens to leave nations within or close to conflict zones.
Asian Champions League Matches postponed
Round of 16 clashes featuring Middle Eastern clubs in the Asian Champions League Elite in the first two weeks of March have been postponed.
Quarter-final clashes in the Asian Champions League Two and the Asian Challenge League, featuring clubs from the region, are also postponed, AFC, the continental soccer body, said on Wednesday.
Iranian female footballers given asylum
Australia granted humanitarian visas to five Iranian women soccer players on March 10 after they sought asylum, fearing persecution on their return home for their refusal to sing the national anthem at an Asian Cup match.
Australian police helped two more members of the Iranian women’s soccer delegation claim asylum on March 11, but one changed her mind and decided to go back to Iran.
Concerns about the players’ safety upon their return home grew after Iranian state television labelled the team “wartime traitors”.
Iraq coach calls for World Cup playoff game to be postponed
Iraq soccer coach Graham Arnold called for the team’s inter-confederation World Cup playoff in Mexico in March to be postponed amidst the travel chaos triggered by the conflict in neighbouring Iran.
The Iraqis are concerned they might not be able to get their players and staff over to Mexico for their scheduled clash with either Bolivia or Suriname in Monterrey on March 31.
Afghanistan vs Sri Lanka series postponed
The limited-overs series between Afghanistan and Sri Lanka scheduled for March in the United Arab Emirates has been postponed due to the crisis in the Middle East, the Afghanistan Cricket Board announced on March 11.
WEC postpones season opener in Qatar
The World Endurance Championship postponed its season-opening race, originally scheduled for March 28 at the Lusail circuit in Qatar.
Organisers announced new dates, with the race now set to take place between October 22 and 24.
Sports events cancelled in Iran, soccer resumes in Qatar
All sporting events in Iran have been cancelled until further notice, including the country’s top-flight Persian Gulf Pro League. The Bahraini FA has also halted all domestic competitions.
Qatar’s top-flight football league resumed on March 12 after a nationwide suspension of sporting activity imposed amid regional security concerns, the Qatar Stars League Foundation said.
Mancini unable to return to Qatar
Al Sadd coach Roberto Mancini was not present for Friday’s Qatar Stars League match against Umm Salal as he was unable to return to Doha.
Sports
Miami (Ohio): First Four win vs. SMU ‘proved doubters wrong’
DAYTON, Ohio — Miami (Ohio) found itself in a unique position Wednesday night at the First Four.
The RedHawks had been a polarizing 30-win team in the lead-up to NCAA tournament selections. Was Miami good, or just a product of a weak schedule? Were all the major conference teams that avoided the RedHawks being silly or smart? After a 31-0 start, Miami had made the NCAA field, but just barely as an at-large, and would tip off in the First Four, just 40 miles from its campus in Oxford, Ohio.
The 11th-seeded RedHawks were 6.5-point underdogs against SMU, even though neither they nor the thousands who came to support them felt that way.
“The reason people love March Madness is they love to see quote, unquote, upsets,” coach Travis Steele said. “This wasn’t an upset tonight, at all.”
Miami left no doubt about its tournament viability, or the historic path it has taken, beating SMU 89-79 at UD Arena. The RedHawks led for most of the game, recorded their largest victory margin in an NCAA tournament game, made their most 3-pointers (16) in the tournament and posted their highest scoring total in a tournament game since 1958. They advanced to face No. 6 seed Tennessee in a first-round Midwest Region matchup Friday in Philadelphia.
Steele said he felt his team was better than SMU coming into Wednesday’s game, and his players proved him right.
“All the doubters that doubted us, all saying we don’t have Quad 1 wins, two wins, all that stuff, I don’t know what they’re going to say now,” star guard Peter Suder said. “We proved the doubters wrong. To win by double digits against a really good team, athletically, physically talented players, it’s huge for this program.”
Miami did not face a power conference team in nonleague play — the school repeatedly stated that those teams did not want to schedule the RedHawks — and went 30-0 in the regular season before falling to UMass last week in the Mid-American Conference tournament quarterfinals. Despite all of Miami’s winning, a schedule strength that hovered near the bottom of Division I created an odd at-large profile for the tournament selection committee to consider.
“I mean, we had to basically be perfect in the whole regular season to get that at-large,” Steele said.
A MAC team had not earned an at-large berth since 1999, when Miami rode All-American Wally Szczerbiak to the Sweet 16. The RedHawks were one of the last at-large teams in and began their first tournament appearance since 2007 in nearby Dayton.
The positive was Wednesday’s crowd, red and raucous, erupting with every 3-pointer and scoring burst from the RedHawks. Former Miami and NBA star Ron Harper was among the supporters and celebrated in the locker room.
Miami players frequently acknowledged their supporters, including Luke Skaljac, whose 3-pointer with 7:15 left forced SMU to call timeout.
“That was a great crowd, a home game for Miami,” SMU coach Andy Enfield said. “They probably had 12,000 fans here. Felt like 40 or 50 thousand.”
The crowd included Miami’s men’s swim and dive team, some wearing only Speedos and caps, who sprinted down the aisle behind SMU’s basket early in the second half to distract free throw shooter Corey Washington, just as they do at Millett Hall, Miami’s home court.
“What really surprised me was the swim team, when they came out,” forward Antwone Woolfolk said. “That was elite.”
Miami’s willingness to take and make 3-pointers propelled its offense, as the team had more made 3s (10) than 2-point attempts (9) in the first half. But the undersized RedHawks also held up inside, as the rebounding was even at 35-35. They collected 12 offensive boards, including Suder’s with 3:08 to play that set up a 3-pointer by Eian Elmer that increased the lead to 81-68.
Steele challenged his team after the UMass loss, as the RedHawks were outrebounded 41-24 and allowed 54 points in the paint and 23 second-chance points.
“We crashed the glass,” said Woolfolk, Miami’s tallest starter at 6-foot-9. “We put pressure on the rim, instead of letting pressure get put on us.”
The rebounding performance reinforced Steele’s pre-game theme: Attack.
“Our guys deserve to be in this position,” he said. “I felt like we were the better team going into the game was. And I think our guys have that real belief. That’s the most powerful thing you can have.”
Miami now gets another power conference opponent in Tennessee, and further success means similar opponents will follow. But the RedHawks had the tournament stage to themselves Wednesday night.
How many more people know about Miami (Ohio) now?
“I don’t even know, I can’t even count,” Suder said, smiling. “But it’s definitely a lot.”
Sports
Howard holds off UMBC in First Four for first NCAA tournament win
DAYTON, Ohio — When Kenny Blakeney arrived at Howard, he took over a program that had lived in the lower rung of Division I for decades.
“Howard was, like, for the last 20 years, the 354th-ranked team in the country,” Blakeney said. “For me, that was great, because there was nothing else to do but go forward and make this a better program.”
Despite only four wins in his first season and a second campaign limited to just five games by the COVID-19 pandemic, Blakeney started making Howard better. A winning season followed. Then back-to-back NCAA tournament appearances.
But Howard had still not won a game in March Madness. The Bison had a “box to check,” which Blakeney emphasized to his team before Tuesday’s First Four Matchup against UMBC at UD Arena.
Despite a late scare, No. 16 seed Howard finished the night with a checkmark next to its name, outlasting No. 16 UMBC 86-83. The Bison are now headed to Buffalo, New York, where they will face No. 1 seed Michigan on Thursday in a first-round Midwest Region matchup.
“Being on this stage and being able to check this box, it’s the only game going on right now, and the whole college basketball world, I’m pretty sure, was locked in on this,” Blakeney said. “So, what a wonderful accomplishment.”
Howard saw an 11-point lead with less than two minutes to play dwindle, but Bryce Harris‘ turnaround jumper before the shot clock expired pushed the Bison’s advantage to four with 13 seconds left. UMBC had a chance to tie in the closing seconds, but DJ Armstrong Jr.‘s 3-point attempt missed.
“We’ve been in games like this before, we practice for these situations,” said Ose Okojie, who led Howard with a career-high 23 points and played most of the final 12:33 with four fouls. “It wasn’t anything like we were worried or anything like that. Because at this big stage, there’s no time for fear. There’s no time for worry.
“You’ve got to trust your work.”
Too overwhelmed to address the team afterward, Blakeney turned things over to Harris, the fifth-year leader who has witnessed Howard climb every rung toward respectability. Harris, who posted 19 points and 14 rebounds against UMBC, reminded the team about the previous season, when Howard tumbled to 12-20 and both he and Okojie were sidelined with injuries. Okojie had suffered a concussion against UMBC, of all opponents.
“It’s a full-circle moment,” Harris said, “how you’re winning your first NCAA tournament game against a team that you got hurt against.”
Howard surged to a 49-41 halftime lead behind Okojie and others, and it led by as many as 14 in the second half. But a UMBC team making its first NCAA tournament appearance since its historic takedown of Virginia in 2018 — the Retrievers were the first No. 16 seed to beat a No. 1 — wouldn’t go away.
“They are such a talented team,” Harris said.
Blakeney grew up near Howard in Washington, D.C., but his basketball career, unlike the program he would eventually coach, was linked to success. He won Gatorade Player of the Year in Maryland, playing for decorated coach Morgan Wootten at DeMatha Catholic High School. Blakeney then went to Duke and was part of its national championship teams in 1991 and 1992, before captaining the squad as a senior.
Blakeney took over at Howard admittedly not knowing how to build a winning culture, only to follow one. He learned through the lean years then lifted the program to the Big Dance. But after falling short, including two years ago in the First Four against Wagner, Blakeney didn’t minimize what a win would mean Tuesday.
“I went to Duke to win championships, and I want our young men to come to Howard to win championships, because I’m having opportunities from 1991 and 1992 at the age of 54 that are still present,” he said. “If you have a chance to win a championship … there’s not going to be an alum in the country that won’t take your phone call.”
The Bison might have to fend off the phone calls as they move on. As they exited the court, several fans implored them to take down Michigan.
“It’s kind of surreal,” said Okojie, who will play near his hometown of Brampton, Ontario, in the next game. “You kind of watch this tournament as a kid, and to win a game is crazy.”
Sports
Tebas: LaLiga smarter about transfers than Premier League
Javier Tebas claimed LaLiga clubs are “more effective at spending” than their Premier League rivals, in a week which has seen three head-to-head matchups between Spanish and English clubs in the Champions League round of 16.
Real Madrid eliminated Manchester City 5-1 on aggregate on Tuesday — after Vinícius Júnior scored twice in a 2-1 second leg win in Manchester — while Barcelona host Newcastle on Wednesday, and Tottenham play Atlético Madrid.
There were six Premier League teams in the last 16 compared to LaLiga’s three, with Arsenal through to the quarterfinals after knocking out Bayer Leverkusen, while Chelsea are out after being well beaten by Paris Saint-Germain.
“It’s not me saying it, there are reports that say it,” Tebas said, when asked if Spanish clubs were being smarter in their transfer policy. “[The reports] say that the teams which are most effective in spending on players are Spanish. It is what it is.
“There are a lot of examples. Look at the case of Antony, the money he cost [Manchester United, €95 million], and then what he cost Real Betis… How many players sign for Premier League clubs and then end up playing here? In my opinion, yes, [they’re more efficient].
“And the Spanish football model is more focused on academies. We don’t need that spending.”
LaLiga presented its financial report for the 2024-25 season on Wednesday, which included a record total income of €5.464 billion — up 8.1% on the previous campaign — with commercial income at €1.584 billion, as well as a prediction of continued growth for 2025-26.
The league also highlighted the value of its production of academy players, assessing the total value of homegrown players in Spain’s top flight at €1.46 billion, compared to a Premier League figure — according to LaLiga’s analysis — of €1.076 billion, and €419 million in the Bundesliga.
Five LaLiga teams qualified for the Champions League this season, with Athletic Club and Villarreal being eliminated in the league phase.
“Our teams are competitive, and I think they will be for many years,” Tebas said. “We fight so that the clubs that don’t play fair, the ‘state clubs’ [can’t do so] and I’d like to get more support, because when we criticise it, we do so alone.”
Tebas said he was concerned about the impact of uncontrolled Premier League spending on the transfer market.
“I worry that spending controls aren’t followed, that there isn’t a financial rationale to the management,” he said. “It’s a worrying model, because it generates losses, and the clubs can only be saved if they qualify for European competitions, but it creates a debt bubble.”
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