Dawn Logo Dawn

E-Paper | June 06, 2026

Home Latest Budget 2026-27 Violations Tracker Pakistan Opinion Business Images Prism World Sport Breathe Magazines Tech Videos Popular Archive Flood Donations

Pakistan meet Saudi Arabia in U-16 football clash

Published October 21, 2009
comments
Join our Whatsapp Channel
Add Dawn as a trusted source
Google Preferred Source

LAHORE Pakistan take on powerful Saudi Arabia in Group 'A' of the 14th Asian U-16 Football Championship on Wednesday.

Malaysias Shah Alam Stadium, the largest in the Selangor State, will host the match to kick off at 5.00pm local time. The top two teams and best third-placed side from groups 'A'-'G' qualify for the finals along with the Group 'H' winners.

PAKISTAN

Goalkeepers Ahsanullah (Sindh), Danyal Naeem (Sindh).

Defenders Sher Mohammad (Sindh), Asif Waris (Sindh), Mohammad Sajid, Hasnain Arshed Butt (Sargodha), Shahram Babar, Mohsin Ali, Sibtain Abbas (Faisalabad Whites), Mudassar Mukhtar, Hassan Saleem Khan (Lahore).

Midfielders Abdul Waheed, Irfan Younus (KPT), Mohammad Salman (Wohaib FC).

Strikers Basit Hassan (Karachi Yellow), Mohammad Fazal (Khuzdar), Faheem Ahmed (Punjab), Asad Irfan (Sialkot).

SAUDI ARABIA

Goalkeepers Alshmri, Raed Ali M.Alharbi, Ahmad Ali S.

Defenders Alfahad, Abdullah Fahad A, Zahim, Fahad Ghazi S, Alammar, Abdullah Khalid M, Alqarni, Mohammed Ahmed S, Albukhari, Abdulelah Abdulaziz A, Mobarki, Muath Hassan M, Almithn, Abdullah Mohammed A, Aljarad, Ziyad Abdulmohsen S.

Midfielders Jahfali, Amer Yahya S, Ayman Abdullah F. Ali, Alnakhli, Mohammed Qasem H, Fares Homoud Ayed Al Ahmadi, Alrashdi, Lotfi Alhomair S, Alshelali, Gosay Saad A, Hakami, Mohammed Ali A, Alharbi, Rayan Khalid A.

Strikers Almuwallad, Fahad Mosaed M, Sanani, Emad Hamad H, Hakami, Ahmed Mohammed A, Alghamdi, Raed Abdullah S, Dalbouh, Yazeed Mohammed S.—PPI

Our readers are at the heart of everything we do.
Do you have a thought to share or a way we can improve? We’d love to hear it. Reach out to us at
feedback@dawn.com.

US proposes new tariffs on 60 economies, including Pakistan, over failure to act on forced labour Next Story