If the Christians want to make a champion team, they have to get out of this complex with us and this against us, and this one loves us and this one hates us.
Arbitration and the "fugitive" and whoever chooses them is another complex that the Christians should overcome in the same way that Saud Al-Suwailem did.
Al-Hilal, which defeated Al-Nasr, is Al-Hilal, who lost from the bottom of the standings, so what has changed?
I know that the victory is targeted by the media, and I know that the victory was greatly damaged by the arbitration, but I know very well that the Nasrawis are not at the heart of one man as the Hilalis are, and this is a disaster.
The Christians, before accusing the competitors and the system, must fix their home situation. What I see, at least in my media space, are hearts that are not against each other, and this is an indicator that hides secrets behind it.
It is easy for me to do what others did and justify the loss with a generous judgment, but I am certain that whoever followed the match will not respect me, and I say that he will not respect me because Al-Hilal was superior, and had it not been for Al-Aqidi, Al-Nassr would have emerged with a crushing defeat.
Where is the victory? This should be the question for everyone who watched the match.
In the first half, there was no presence of victory without knowing the reason for this collapse, and in the second half there were attempts, but less than Al-Hilal.
Al-Hilal won, and perhaps this victory will keep victory away from the league championship, unless what is called a miracle happens, and I say the miracle that the triangle will determine the direction of the championship through direct confrontations.
Opinions differed about arbitration, and if I would go with those who say the Don goal is not offside, but this does not justify the shabby technical state of victory.
Finally, Al-Jamil Khaled Al-Jariwi says: “Unfortunately, after every important match, we see some fans who imitated the profession of journalism, making comments on social media or in interviews and television comments, to say the least, that they are personal polemics that heal and hate others. Why don't we see journalistic pens writing about the reality of the match with complete impartiality and a technical explanation of the reality of the match, away from prior mental tendencies and biases?
Our sports journalist reality is very shameful, except for the mercy of my Lord.
Ahmed Al-Shamrani