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Sports

Qiddiya and Populous share details of Saudi Arabia’s National Tennis Centre

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By Magali Robathan    01 Jul 2026

Populous designed the National Tennis Centre to integrate into its surroundings / Qiddiya Investment Company

Populous has unveiled the design for the National Tennis Centre at Qiddiya City, Saudi Arabia — a 30-court complex that will become the future home of international tennis in Saudi Arabia.

The National Tennis Centre is owned and developed by Qiddiya Investment Company, and is a core pillar of Saudi Vision 2030.

Designed by Populous as lead architect, lead interior designer and lead masterplanner, the National Tennis Centre will be the region’s largest tennis centre, built to ATP, WTA and ITF standards across all courts. 

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Located at Qiddiya City, around 45km from Riyadh, the National Tennis Centre features layered landscapes and green facades linking the facility to the surrounding Tuwaiq Mountains. 

The centre features 30 courts – 28 hard courts and two clay courts – integrated into the landscape of Qiddiya City. It combines world-class competition infrastructure with elite training and wellness facilities, a vibrant public realm, and two multi-purpose arenas. 

The 15,000-seat flagship Centre Court arena and 8,000-seat Court 3 arena both have retractable roofs for climate control, and have been designed to be multi-use, suitable for hosting sports, concerts and major events. 

The National Tennis Centre is located next to a Sir Nick Faldo signature designed 18-hole Championship golf course set to open later this year, as well as future homes, offices, and retail as part of a new city planned to be three times the size of Paris.

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A key role
The centre will play a major role in the broader ambitions led by the Ministry of Sport to further elevate sports in Saudi Arabia and encourage increased participation, supporting all levels of the game, from grassroots initiatives introducing tennis to children for the first time, to supporting elite talent. 

“The National Tennis Centre at Qiddiya City will become a major new destination for elite tournament tennis not just in Saudi Arabia, but across the wider region and indeed globally,”  said Shireen Hamdan, global director at Populous and general manager of Populous KSA.

“Its approach to community integration is unique — at no other elite sports facility whether for tennis or any other sport do you see such a seamless integration of community and elite sporting facilities. It will serve not only this generation of Saudis, but many generations to come.”

National Tennis Centre: Key Facts and Figures

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•        30 tennis courts (28 hard courts, two clay courts)

•        Centre Court: 15,000 seats. A flagship arena with a retractable roof

•        Court 1: 5,000 seats

•        Court 2: 2,000 seats

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•        Court 3 (Arena): 8,000 seats. Multi-use arena with retractable roof

•        Outdoor match courts: 450 seats per court

•        6 competition/match courts; 6 indoor courts; 14 practice courts including clay

•        Total seating across the centre: 33,000

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World Cup 2026: England struggle against DR Congo, Belgium beat Senegal

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Harry Kane rescued England’s campaign by scoring a brace to beat DR Congo (2-1). Belgium came from behind to overcome Senegal (3-2).

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EJ Obiena rules Austrian pole vault meet for second straight gold

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FILE– Filipino pole vaulter EJ Obiena in action during the Czesław Cybulski Memorial in Poland.

FILE– Filipino pole vaulter EJ Obiena in action during the Czesław Cybulski Memorial in Poland. –EJ OBIENA/INSTAGRAM

MANILA, Philippines — EJ Obiena nabbed another gold medal, ruling the Raiffeisen Austrian Open in Eisenstadt, Austria on Thursday (Philippine time).

In a span of days, Obiena won back-to-back gold medals in his ongoing outdoor season.

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The Filipino Olympic pole vaulter cleared 5.75 meters to rule the competition and set a new meet record.

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A post shared by Ernest Obiena (@ernestobienapv)

Obiena eclipsed the previous meet record of 5.74 meters, set by Austin Miller in 2024, while also matching his outdoor personal best, which he set during his runner-up finish in Düsseldorf, Germany, last month.

“5.75m here at Eisenstadt. For the win and new stadium record,” said Obiena.  “After many, many, many runs and 3rd attempt makes, we needed to call it a night after 11pm.”

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Great Britain’s Owen Heard placed second, while Czech Republic’s Dan Barta settled for bronze after both cleared 5.55m.

It took three attempts for Obiena to clear 5.75m.

He recently won the Czesław Cybulski Memorial in Poland, leaping 5.72m last Monday.

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“It was self-destruction” – Saba Karim on Ishan Kishan’s dismissal in ENG vs IND 2026 1st T20I

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Former India player Saba Karim has opined that Ishan Kishan pressed the self-destruct button in the first T20I against England. The analyst highlighted that the wicketkeeper-batter was responsible for his run-out as he attempted a non-existent run.

Kishan was run out for a two-ball duck as India set England a 190-run target in Durham on Wednesday, July 1. However, with rain preventing England from starting their chase, the game ended as a no-result.

During a discussion on JioHotstar, Saba noted that there would have been a slim chance of Kishan and Abhishek Sharma completing the run had the latter responded to the call immediately.

“It was self-destruction. Both Abhishek Sharma and Ishan Kishan were watching the ball. They should have been looking at each other. There might have been a possibility had Abhishek Sharma responded very quickly, but normally, the non-striker waits for the ball to beat the fielder in the infield, and he runs after that only,” he said.

The former India wicketkeeper-batter reckoned that Abhishek would have struggled to reach the striker’s end, urging the visiting batters to improve their communication.

“In my opinion, there was no run there. Even if Abhishek Sharma had tried, it would have been difficult for him to reach the other end because Jos Buttler did an excellent job. He came to the stumps very quickly. Both batters need to work on their communication. It happened in Ireland and here as well,” Saba observed.

Ishan Kishan was run out after being sent back by Abhishek Sharma, with Harry Brook’s throw to Jos Buttler finding him short of the crease. He was run out in the second T20I against Ireland as well after a mix-up with Tilak Varma.


“There was no run at all” – Irfan Pathan on Ishan Kishan’s run-out in ENG vs IND 2026 1st T20I

In the same discussion, former India all-rounder Irfan Pathan also reckoned that Ishan Kishan attempted to steal a non-existent run.

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“There was no run at all. You would have heard Abhishek saying that he (Kishan) should have allowed the ball to pass the midwicket fielder, and then the mid-on fielder also wasn’t standing on the 30-yard circle. He was standing slightly ahead. When that happens, he is also attacking the ball,” he said.

The cricketer-turned-commentator concurred with Saba Karim that Abhishek Sharma would have gotten run out had he responded affirmatively to Kishan’s call.

“You played the ball softly. You have to take the run only after the ball passes the fielder who is trying to cut the ball. In my opinion, there was no run. I totally agree with Saba bhai. Abhishek would have gotten run out. It means you took a high-risk run, and when you do that, someone will be sacrificed. You got run out yourself. So it was a wrong decision from Ishan Kishan,” Pathan observed.

Ishan Kishan’s run-out reduced India to 6/2. Abhishek Sharma (59 off 24) and Shreyas Iyer (68 off 47) then bailed the team out of trouble with an 82-run third-wicket partnership before Shivam Dube’s unbeaten 21-ball 42 took them to a fighting total.