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Al-Nassr

Saudi-Arabia · Founded 1955

Latest news

transferESPN· 3 Jul 2026

Postecoglou announced as Al Nassr head coach

Ange Postecoglou has signed a two-year contract as coach of Saudi Pro League champions Al Nassr, linking up with Cristiano Ronaldo at the Riyadh-based team.

transferSky Sports· 3 Jul 2026

Postecoglou to coach Ronaldo after being named new Al Nassr boss

Ange Postecoglou has been named as the new Al Nassr boss in the Saudi Pro League, where he will coach Cristiano Ronaldo. 

otherBBC Sport· 3 Jul 2026

Ex-Spurs boss Postecoglou takes over at Ronaldo's Al-Nassr

Former Tottenham boss Ange Postecoglou is appointed the new head coach of Al-Nassr in the Saudi Pro League.

transferThe Guardian· 3 Jul 2026

Ange Postecoglou to manage Cristiano Ronaldo after landing Al-Nassr job

Former Tottenham manager signs two-year contractAl-Nassr won the Saudi Pro League last seasonAnge Postecoglou has been appointed as the new head coach of the Saudi Pro League champions, ⁠Al-Nassr, on a two-year deal as the Australian attempts ⁠to revive his ⁠career ​after two bruising stints in the Premier League.“A new chapter. Mr Ange Postecoglou appointed as ⁠head coach of the Al-Nassr first team. The contract spans two seasons,” the club said in a statement. “We ⁠wish him and his staff every success in their journey.” Continue reading...

opinionThe Guardian· 3 Jul 2026

Football Daily | Time waits for no man, nor Cristiano Ronaldo’s football legacy

Sign up now! Sign up now! Sign up now? Sign up now!Before Football Daily’s inbox is flooded by an angry reader with fingers busier than Arsenal fans at a Viktor Gyökores lookalike contest, we would like to shout from the rooftops that Cristiano Ronaldo is one of the greatest male football players of all time. How far up or down that list is another matter, but there is no denying his place at the top table of our sport. Clutch moments, sublime bits of skill and athleticism, a trophy cabinet big enough to holiday in: Ronaldo has done (almost) everything for club and country. But time waits for no man.Football died a bit yesterday, didn’t it? No one actually saw the ball touch Igor Matanovic’s head for Croatia against Portugal. The ball’s trajectory didn’t change significantly, even the ball’s spin didn’t change. Yet the computer sensor felt something, and thus we must all bow to it. What’s objective to a machine is more objective than our own sense apparatus. This feels momentous – not a ‘paradigm shift’ or anything so dramatic, but it does encapsulate in a neat anecdote how our attitude to technology has been changing over the decades, how we feel happier and happier to delegate important decisions to it, how we become, in a literal way, ever more irresponsible. The GWC, as several of your own writers have already described it, is a weirdly warped microcosm of the world at large. And what happened yesterday can be read as a very ill omen” – Fábio Ribeiro. Continue reading...