The Japan Times - Future hosts Saudi Arabia 'watch and learn' on Asian Winter Games debut

EUR -
AED 3.811358
AFN 76.137908
ALL 99.407031
AMD 408.831153
ANG 1.863185
AOA 947.961752
ARS 1095.381987
AUD 1.652828
AWG 1.869089
AZN 1.790002
BAM 1.958824
BBD 2.087332
BDT 125.603907
BGN 1.956812
BHD 0.391067
BIF 3060.639756
BMD 1.037662
BND 1.401671
BOB 7.144029
BRL 5.979733
BSD 1.033801
BTN 89.638384
BWP 14.32919
BYN 3.382929
BYR 20338.174026
BZD 2.076616
CAD 1.483436
CDF 2980.165134
CHF 0.945118
CLF 0.025987
CLP 997.172855
CNY 7.585422
CNH 7.589174
COP 4293.845108
CRC 526.014595
CUC 1.037662
CUP 27.498041
CVE 110.770088
CZK 25.084131
DJF 184.095093
DKK 7.458143
DOP 64.594757
DZD 140.456868
EGP 52.535685
ERN 15.564929
ETB 131.00527
FJD 2.401513
FKP 0.854605
GBP 0.833045
GEL 2.894797
GGP 0.854605
GHS 16.094434
GIP 0.854605
GMD 74.711343
GNF 8980.9643
GTQ 7.986329
GYD 216.824734
HKD 8.0821
HNL 26.647599
HRK 7.657476
HTG 135.399682
HUF 402.384432
IDR 16982.219663
ILS 3.727759
IMP 0.854605
INR 90.154765
IQD 1359.337142
IRR 43685.567465
ISK 146.601102
JEP 0.854605
JMD 162.780516
JOD 0.736224
JPY 159.370867
KES 133.858412
KGS 90.743815
KHR 4166.212096
KMF 493.045146
KPW 933.895861
KRW 1508.091154
KWD 0.320451
KYD 0.86153
KZT 523.17768
LAK 22543.205784
LBP 92922.626415
LKR 307.164199
LRD 204.989826
LSL 19.217716
LTL 3.063946
LVL 0.627672
LYD 5.110498
MAD 10.392163
MDL 19.461044
MGA 4887.387786
MKD 61.500147
MMK 3370.285505
MNT 3525.975384
MOP 8.29781
MRU 41.661786
MUR 48.559349
MVR 15.990673
MWK 1801.380925
MXN 21.339248
MYR 4.640452
MZN 66.316916
NAD 19.217081
NGN 1565.053447
NIO 38.134015
NOK 11.671642
NPR 143.422106
NZD 1.839282
OMR 0.399518
PAB 1.033796
PEN 3.851023
PGK 4.159961
PHP 60.318274
PKR 289.507304
PLN 4.171188
PYG 8149.620635
QAR 3.777606
RON 4.976837
RSD 117.126107
RUB 97.440252
RWF 1452.726716
SAR 3.891763
SBD 8.765093
SCR 14.997846
SDG 623.634702
SEK 11.278851
SGD 1.403925
SHP 0.854605
SLE 23.662574
SLL 21759.251971
SOS 593.020639
SRD 36.478994
STD 21477.507129
SVC 9.045965
SYP 13491.68053
SZL 19.217904
THB 35.4051
TJS 11.268396
TMT 3.642193
TND 3.309626
TOP 2.430304
TRY 37.459643
TTD 7.016833
TWD 34.081381
TZS 2697.92085
UAH 43.115469
UGX 3798.864679
USD 1.037662
UYU 44.909331
UZS 13479.228432
VES 63.249256
VND 26527.827499
VUV 123.193309
WST 2.906312
XAF 656.974401
XAG 0.032657
XAU 0.00036
XCD 2.804333
XDR 0.791526
XOF 659.431141
XPF 119.331742
YER 258.326271
ZAR 19.141335
ZMK 9340.204283
ZMW 28.920787
ZWL 334.126721
  • CMSD

    0.0700

    23.89

    +0.29%

  • RIO

    -0.6000

    61.65

    -0.97%

  • SCS

    0.2900

    11.98

    +2.42%

  • NGG

    -0.0100

    61.48

    -0.02%

  • RYCEF

    0.0800

    7.69

    +1.04%

  • RBGPF

    1.8700

    66.72

    +2.8%

  • VOD

    -0.0700

    8.5

    -0.82%

  • CMSC

    0.0450

    23.46

    +0.19%

  • RELX

    0.7700

    51.33

    +1.5%

  • GSK

    -0.4000

    36.07

    -1.11%

  • BCC

    0.0600

    123.32

    +0.05%

  • JRI

    0.0300

    12.87

    +0.23%

  • BCE

    0.3700

    22.88

    +1.62%

  • AZN

    0.0700

    72.73

    +0.1%

  • BTI

    0.2200

    42.52

    +0.52%

  • BP

    0.1300

    34.55

    +0.38%

Future hosts Saudi Arabia 'watch and learn' on Asian Winter Games debut
Future hosts Saudi Arabia 'watch and learn' on Asian Winter Games debut / Photo: Jade Gao - AFP

Future hosts Saudi Arabia 'watch and learn' on Asian Winter Games debut

Saudi Arabia made their debut at the Asian Winter Games in China this week and will controversially host the next edition in a move derided as "awful" by one Olympic skier and denounced by environmental groups.

Text size:

The Olympic Council of Asia (OCA) in 2022 unanimously approved the desert kingdom's bid to stage the Games at its $500 billion megacity NEOM in 2029.

"It is awful for our sport," Olympic downhill silver medallist Johan Clarey previously told French radio.

Saudi Arabia will also host the football World Cup in 2034, part of a splurge on sports events which has triggered accusations of "sportswashing" of its rights record.

Saudi officials deny that and were in Harbin this week, with the vice president of the country's Olympic committee in the Chinese city to "watch and learn".

"Of course it would be a first for us, organising such an event," Prince Fahd bin Jalawi bin Abdul Aziz said in an OCA news release.

"But I can assure everyone that we will put on a good show."

Planners for the futuristic but far-from-finished NEOM, which has sought to wrangle support from Chinese investors, say it will feature a year-round winter sports complex in the mountains of Trojena.

NEOM executive Denis Hickey said at Davos last month that Trojena was "deep into construction", including a man-made lake and "frameworks for the village that will hold the Asian Winter Games".

Temperatures have yet to dip below zero this year in northern Saudi Arabia's Tabuk province, which covers NEOM.

Saudi officials did not respond to an AFP request in Harbin for comment about how it plans to prepare for the 2029 Games.

There were eight Saudi athletes in China and even though none won a medal, they were having a "great" time at the country's first Asian Winter Games, they said.

- 'We're doing great' -

Saudi Arabia exited the Games after the men's curling team failed to advance out of the round robin to the elimination bracket.

They were thrashed 15-1 by Hong Kong on Wednesday.

But curler Hussain Hagawi, who picked up the sport in 2017, remained upbeat after his team "almost beat Japan".

They had led Japan by one point after the first end but lost 9-4 on Tuesday.

"So far we're doing great!" he said.

They began preparing for the Harbin Games in November, training on indoor ice in Saudi Arabia, including at ice hockey rinks.

"Of course, no rink is compared to the ice in the international arenas," said Hagawi, 46.

"But it does the job."

His teammate Suleiman Alaqel said he did some of his training in front of his television, squeezing his workouts into a busy schedule as a full-time data engineer.

The team met every other weekend for practice, the 39-year-old said, clarifying: "Sometimes every three weekends."

"We do have some limitations with having competition-level ice, obviously, but we do train a lot," Alaqel said.

"As long as the team has the passion, we can use anything to prepare."

In number, the Saudis paled in comparison to this year's hosts, who received the loudest cheers at the opening ceremony as China's delegation of about 170 athletes were last to enter the stadium in front of a waving President Xi Jinping.

But Saudi Arabia's Olympic committee vice president has pledged to have a far bigger squad in Trojena.

In Harbin, their delegation comprised a five-man curling team and three alpine skiers -- one man and two women.

"We will be trying our best to have athletes in every sport by 2029," he said.

The Saudis plan to add mixed doubles and women's teams for curling in 2029, Hagawi said.

There are also ongoing negotiations for more intensive local training programmes.

"In NEOM, well, we will try as much as we can," added Alaqel. "We will also try to introduce a lot more people to the game."

While Saudi Arabia's desert project has raised questions about the feasibility of running ski and snowboard events that require the cold, Alaqel was upbeat about the weather.

"I think it's maybe minus five degrees (Celsius), not minus 30," Alaqel said.

"So hopefully it's a little nicer, weather-wise."

T.Ueda--JT