Four years after Algeria captain Rais M’Bolhi thrust the trophy into the night air at Qatar’s iconic Al Bayt Stadium, the FIFA Arab Cup is back.
The four week-long football festival gets underway with the qualification phase to be held today and tomorrow before the 16-nation group stage swings into action on December 1.
Lusail Stadium, the site of the FIFA World Cup Qatar final in 2022, will then reprise that role for the Arab Cup decider on December 18. With nine nations seeded directly through to the tournament proper, the remaining seven slots at the regional showpiece will be settled through a series of one-off qualifiers in Qatar.
Three matches kick off today, with Mauritania facing Kuwait, Syria meeting South Sudan and Palestine taking on Libya. The remaining four fixtures — Oman v Somalia, Bahrain v Djibouti, Sudan v Lebanon and Comoros v Yemen — will be played tomorrow. Here is a preview of today’s matches of what is set to be a tense couple of days of action in Al Rayyan and Doha.
Mauritania v Kuwait (kick-off at 4pm)
Mauritania boss Aritz Garai has been able to call on the services of experienced European pair Lamine Ba and Bakari Camara as they look to reach the group stage for the second straight edition. Young Egypt-based attacking midfielder Maata Magassa is also a name to watch for the Northwest African nation. Garai said: "We have a very good generation of young players and this is an incredible opportunity to keep developing the national team and test ourselves against a strong opponent.”
New Kuwait coach Helio Sousa faces his first competitive match at the helm of the Blues and does so off the back of a productive Cairo camp where they downed Tanzania and drew with Gambia.
Fahad al-Hajeri, Kuwait defender, said: "Everyone probably knows that the Kuwaiti team has been in a state of flux recently and we haven't won a title in many years. But we're always a force, and we enter every tournament aiming to compete for the title.”
Syria v South Sudan (kick-off at 7pm)
Syria have been in sparkling form since the mid-2024 arrival of head coach Jose Lana and a thumping 5-0 win in Pakistan last week in an Asian Cup qualifier means that they have still only lost once this calendar year. Several of their European-based stars may be absent but in the likes of deadly marksman Omar Khrbin and electric winger Mohammad Al Salkhadi they still have plenty of quality.
Jose Lana, Syria head coach, said: "We know it is going to be very difficult for us as we have some players who will not be able to come, others who are injured or have just recovered. As we always do though we will remain focused on the next match, being aware of how important it is.”
By contrast, South Sudan remain winless in 2025 but they did pick up a credible draw at home to Togo last month in their final World Cup 2026 qualifier. Having been forced to withdraw on the eve of the qualifiers four years ago due to a Covid outbreak, the planet’s youngest nation are determined to reach the group stage at Qatar 2025. Majak Mawith, South Sudan goalkeeper, said: "The Arab Cup is a really important tournament for us, one that we've been targeting and a chance to show what South Sudan is all about. We’ve been together for the last three months, constantly playing matches and we feel that we’re ready.”
Palestine v Libya (kick-off at 7pm)
Palestine are fresh off a camp in Spain, where they lost narrowly to a pair of very strong, selective regional teams from Catalonia and the Basque Country last week. That followed on from an eye-catching 1-0 win against the defending Arab Cup champions Algeria last month that continued a strong run of form under coach Ehab Abu Jazar.
Palestine goalkeeper Rami Hamada said: "My family, my city, my people, all of them are so proud of us and we want to say to the world that we have a dream, and we're dreaming like everyone else and that is to now play football, especially after how difficult things have been over the past years.”
Likewise Libya have also had an impressive preparation, seeing off Mauritania 1-0 last week and drawing with World Cup-bound Cabo Verde last month. Forward Ezzeddin El Maremi looms as a major threat, having struck in four of the nation’s past six outings. Defender Ali Yousef said: "We respect every team, of course, but we fear no one. Right now we’re focused on the play-off, and only after that will we look at the group opponents."
November 24, 2025 | 07:59 PM