
Saudi football chief resigns as World Cup guillotine claims more heads
Yasser Al-Misehal stepped down after Saudi Arabia's group-stage exit, the latest in a cascade of federation presidents and coaches felled by poor results at the expanded 48-team tournament.
Saudi Arabia’s football federation president Yasser Al-Misehal resigned late Sunday, accepting full responsibility for the Green Falcons’ failure to advance beyond the group stage at the 2026 World Cup. The Saudis finished bottom of Group H with two points, having drawn 1-1 with Uruguay, held Cape Verde to a goalless stalemate, and suffered a 4-0 defeat to Spain. Needing a victory in their final match to progress, they could not break down a Cape Verde side that secured a historic first knockout-round berth as group runners-up. “The failure of the national team to qualify for the next round is a result that falls short of all our ambitions, and I bear full responsibility for it,” Al-Misehal wrote on social media, adding that he would not complete his current term.
His departure is merely the latest in a tournament that Arab media have termed a “guillotine” for underperforming officials. Even before a ball was kicked, Italy’s federation chief Gabriele Gravina quit after the Azzurri missed a third consecutive World Cup. South Korea’s president Mong Gyu Chung announced he would step down following the competition, while coaches have been sacked or resigned in quick succession: Tunisia parted ways with Sabri Lamouchi after a 5-1 loss to Sweden, Scotland’s Steve Clarke and South Korea’s Hong Myung-bo both left after group-stage exits, and Uruguay’s Marcelo Bielsa departed in dramatic fashion, telling his players he was “sad because you left me alone.” Panama’s Thomas Christiansen faces an uncertain future after his side exited without a point or a goal, and Haiti is reviewing Sébastien Migné’s position despite a second-ever World Cup appearance.
Viewed from Riyadh, the resignation carries particular weight given the kingdom’s vast football ambitions. Al-Misehal, 52, had led the federation since 2019 and played a central role in securing the 2034 World Cup hosting rights, a pillar of the country’s economic diversification strategy. Under his watch, Saudi Arabia invested nearly two billion dollars in the sport, luring stars such as Cristiano Ronaldo, Neymar and Karim Benzema to the Saudi Pro League, and staged high-profile events including the Spanish and Italian Super Cups and the 2023 Club World Cup. Yet on the pitch, the national team has now exited at the group stage in three consecutive World Cups, its only knockout-round appearance remaining the 1994 tournament in the United States.
Not every story has ended in severance. Turkey’s Vincenzo Montella refused to resign despite an early exit, while South Africa’s Hugo Broos, 74, hinted he might postpone retirement after the team reached the last 32 for the first time, losing to Canada with a stoppage-time goal. The most poignant narrative belonged to Dick Advocaat, who returned to coach Curaçao after his daughter’s cancer treatment improved, only to bow out with a heavy defeat to Germany. For Saudi Arabia, the immediate sporting consequence is a leadership vacuum at the federation just as the country prepares to host the 2027 AFC Asian Cup and the 2034 World Cup, with a new president now required to steer the next phase of an unprecedented football project.
How the same story is told elsewhere.
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The 2026 World Cup has become a merciless guillotine, cutting down federation chiefs and coaches with each failure. The Saudi football boss is the latest head to roll, his resignation framed as an unavoidable sacrifice after a humiliating group-stage exit.
The head of the Saudi football federation resigned after the national team's elimination from the 2026 World Cup. The side finished bottom of the group with two points, following draws against Uruguay and Cape Verde and a 4-0 loss to Spain.
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