Home arrow Water Polo News arrow USA Waterpolo arrow Water Polo Team Claim Silver for Saudi Arabia
Water Polo Team Claim Silver for Saudi Arabia
Print E-mail

The Saudi team began their campaign for a gold medal in the four-team competition among Saudi, Algeria, Kuwait and hosts Egypt on a bright note. They beat Kuwait 8-6.
But Egypt threw a roadblock down the path of the Saudis and finished the round robin event as the only unbeaten team to clinch the gold medal, also beating Algeria 17-4.
The Egypt-Saudi match ended 8-4 in favor of the hosts. The Saudis wound up with a 2-1 card.

Serbian Vladmir Bajkovic, assistant coach of the Saudi national team, said the team’s determination to win the silver medal helped a lot.“They entered the match very confident and played very strong and though they did not do their best they did very well,” he said. The team coach said, “considering the Egyptians are getting paid monthly and trained daily, it was hard to beat them and the silver medal is excellent.”

He said the side had only two weeks of training because many of the good Saudi players were not able to get the acceptance letter to leave their work and undergo training camp. “They need more support from us, from the media and from their work to enable them to reach the World Cup and become professionals. We all need to cooperate,” he stressed.
Nasser Al-Deghaither, veteran water polo player at Al-Qadisiya club, missed the event. “It would have been an honor for me to represent my country but I had some difficulties and had to beg off, yet I made sure I follow up with the team and attend all their matches here.”
Nasser said the Saudis definitely dominated the game though they had two injured players Khalid Al-Harbi and Saleh.

“It was not an easy game,” said Khalid Al-Harbi adding, “we excepted Algeria to be tougher but thank God we managed to beat them with this big difference.”
Goal scorer Ahmed Al-Shammari said he was happy with the success and dedicated his medal to his Qadisiya teammate Al-Deghaither. “We lowered our expectations to the silver medal after the loss against Egypt and we prayed for it and did our best to get it. The team was very relaxed and optimistic,” said Adel Al-Malki.
Abdulhai Salman, Egypt swimming champion in the sixties and former Saudi national team technical consultant for 13 years, said Egypt was the top seed in this competition, while Kuwait’s performance dipped. Saudi Arabia he said used to be stronger, “ yet this team has some good talents though I do not know their names very well but they need to be supported and need more training camps to gain experience from playing with other national teams abroad because this is what helped Egypt reach the top.”