Ronaldo hunts Asian Champions League glory in Saudi-hosted finals

Nassr's Portuguese forward Cristiano Ronaldo is marked by Riyadh's midfielder Faiz Selemani during the qualifying session for the Qatar Moto GP Grand Prix sprint race at the Lusail International Circuit on April 12, 2025. (Photo by Fayez NURELDINE / AFP)
Cristiano Ronaldo's Al Nassr are one of three big-spending
Saudi Arabian clubs hunting AFC Champions League glory on home soil when the
final knockout stages begin on Friday.
The desert nation hosts the quarter-finals, semi-finals and
the final of Asia's premier club competition -- given a new look and format
this year as the AFC Champions League Elite -- from April 25 to May 3 in
Jeddah.
The cash-rich Saudi clubs have lured stars from Europe,
meaning Jeddah's Al Ahli plus Riyadh clubs Al Hilal and Al Nassr are among the
favourites to lift the trophy on May 3 at the 62,000-capacity King Abdullah
Sports City Stadium.
Saudi teams dominated the West Zone league stages, with Al
Hilal and Al Ahli both unbeaten in eight games and Ronaldo's Al Nassr next best
as they filled the top three spots.
Portugal's Ronaldo, the former Manchester United and Real
Madrid star, is still going strong at the age of 40 and has seven goals in the
competition this season as he looks to win his first AFC Champions League in
the twilight of a glittering career.
Al Nassr coach Stefano Pioli believes his side, who lost in
the quarter-finals last year, can go all the way.
"I always have great confidence in the players because
of our hard work in training," said the former AC Milan boss.
"Sometimes the results do not do us justice but we know
that we are on the right path."
First his side must overcome last year's losing finalists,
Yokohama F-Marinos of Japan, who are in crisis after sacking manager Steve
Holland last week less than four months after the former England assistant to
Gareth Southgate took charge.
Yokohama are bottom of the J.League with just one win from 12
matches, but they topped the East Zone and then beat Chinese champions Shanghai
Port 5-1 on aggregate in the last 16.
"Things haven't been going well for us but it's about
what we do next," Yokohama midfielder Riku Yamane said after a defeat in
their first game under interim manager Patrick Kisnorbo last week.
"We need to all be on the same page about how we want to
play, including the small details."
The winners will meet either another Japanese club, Kawasaki
Frontale, or Al Sadd of Qatar in the semi-finals.
Al Hilal, who are looking to become Asian champions for a
record-extending fifth time, face South Korean debutants Gwangju.
The Saudi champions let Brazilian superstar Neymar return to
Santos but they can still call on players of the calibre of Serbia's Aleksandar
Mitrovic and the Portuguese pair Joao Cancelo and Ruben Neves.
"Al Hilal are a good team, like most West teams are and,
to be honest, are better than teams from the East," said Gwangju technical
director Jang Ki-bong.
"But we are not afraid and we will fight to defy the
odds and make sure that we do everything we can to compete against them."
Al Ahli also have an embarrassment of riches, including
former Premier League forwards Ivan Toney, Roberto Firmino and Riyad Mahrez.
They face Thailand's Buriram United with victory setting up a
potential all-Saudi semi-final against Al Hilal.
"Holding the finals in Jeddah will help us, and we will give everything we have to win the title," said former Manchester City attacker Mahrez.
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