Al-Hilal will meet Al-Sadd at Prince Abdullah Al-Faisal Stadium on Monday in the round of 16 of the 2025–2026 AFC Champions League, with the winner moving on to face Vissel Kobe in the quarter-finals. Jeddah will host the later rounds, adding another layer of weight to a tie already shaped by absences, travel and the smallest of margins.
Al-Sadd coach Roberto Mancini has named a 24-man squad built around 10 foreigners and 14 Qatari internationals, including Paulo Otávio, Giovanni Henrique, Claudinho, Roberto Firmino, Romain Saïss, Agustín Soria, Rafa Mochica, Younes El Hannash, Javiero Delroson and Mohamed Kamara. The Qatari club also brought a Tunisian chef as part of its 55-member delegation of players, coaches and administrators in Jeddah, with Saudi daily Al-Riyadiah reporting that the private chef was included to keep the squad on its prescribed diet.
That level of attention to routine stands in contrast to Al-Hilal’s injury list, which leaves the Saudi side without Mohammed Kanno, Malcom de Oliveira, Kalidou Koulibaly, Nasser Al-Dossari, Sultan Mandash and Youssef Akchichik. The missing names matter because this is the point in the competition where a single lapse can end a run, and Al-Hilal will have to manage the tie without several of the players it would ordinarily lean on most.
The backdrop also recalls another moment when preparation, discipline and execution defined a title chase: Italy’s 1982 World Cup final win over West Germany by 3-1 at the Santiago Bernabéu. Italy had already won in 1934 and 1938 before claiming a third crown in 1982, a reminder that knockout football often rewards the teams that arrive most organized and stay that way when the pressure rises.
For Al-Hilal, the immediate question is whether its depleted squad can absorb the absences and still control the game. For Al-Sadd, the test is whether the details around the camp translate into performance when Monday arrives and the road to Vissel Kobe begins.



