FIFA Arab Cup 2025 represents perfect opportunity for teams participating in the World Cup

Sports Sunday 30/November/2025 08:29 AM
By: QNA
FIFA Arab Cup 2025 represents perfect opportunity for teams participating in the World Cup

Doha: The FIFA Arab Cup Qatar 2025, in its eleventh edition to be hosted in Doha from Dec. 1 to 18, represents an ideal preparatory opportunity for Arab national teams, especially since seven of them will compete in the 2026 FIFA World Cup finals scheduled to be held in the United States, Mexico, and Canada.

Seven Arab teams have secured qualification for the World Cup. They are Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Jordan, Morocco, Egypt, Tunisia, and Algeria. Iraq meanwhile will play the intercontinental playoff, with high hopes of raising the historic number of Arab teams participating in the World Cup to eight.

The Arab Cup, which brings together Arab teams from Asia and Africa, is a true test for these teams in their pursuit of optimal readiness, particularly as the tournament may witness direct matchups between nations already qualified for the World Cup finals.

The importance of the Arab Cup for the qualified teams lies in its being a key preparatory station before the major global event, especially given the limited official international breaks listed on the FIFA calendar prior to the World Cup.

The last international window this year was from Oct. 10 to 18, while next year 2026 will include only two international breaks. The first will be from Mar. 21 to 31, and the second from Jun. 1 to 9, with only two matches allowed in each window.

Additionally, players will be released from their clubs on May 30 to prepare for the World Cup finals scheduled from Jun. 11 to Jul. 19, which makes the Arab Cup an important opportunity to prepare, given the tournament’s competitive strength and large fan attendance, helping the national teams maintain an ideal competitive atmosphere as a real test for players and coaches ahead of the world's most prestigious competition.

FIFA’s decision to classify matches of the Arab Cup in the next three editions (2025, 2029, and 2033) as international friendlies that count toward the monthly FIFA World Ranking gives the tournament additional value, as it allows teams to gain ranking points that influence their global positioning, commonly used when determining seeding levels before draws for international, continental, and regional tournaments.

Despite the long-term importance of this recognition, matches in the current edition will not affect team rankings ahead of the World Cup draw scheduled for Dec. 5, since the latest ranking (based on which the 48 teams were distributed across four seeding levels) was issued on Nov. 19 before the start of the tournament. However, points earned will be added to the teams’ totals for the next ranking to be published on Dec. 19.

According to the group allocations, the tournament features promising matchups between Arab teams qualified for the World Cup: Group A includes a clash between host Qatar and Tunisia, Group B features Morocco vs. Saudi Arabia, Group C includes a highly anticipated match between Egypt and Jordan, and Group D will see Algeria face Iraq.

The extent to which Arab teams benefit from the tournament will vary depending on the squads called up by coaching staff and the availability of players, especially since FIFA does not require clubs to release their players for the Arab Cup. Therefore, any decision to pause domestic leagues during the tournament remains at the discretion of national federations and is not mandated by FIFA.

African teams such as Algeria, Morocco, Egypt, and Tunisia will not be able to fully benefit from their European-based professional players during the FIFA Arab Cup Qatar 2025, even though those professionals make up the core of their main squads.

The reason is that clubs retain the option to release their players and may approve or refuse their participation.

In contrast, other teams, particularly those from the GCC and West Asia, will benefit more, as most of their players are concentrated in local and regional leagues, which will pause during the Arab Cup period, such as the Qatari and Saudi leagues. This will allow coaching staff to monitor and prepare players more easily.

The Arab Cup also gains additional importance for African teams, given that the 2025 Africa Cup of Nations in Morocco will begin on December 21. Thus, the Arab Cup becomes an opportunity to broaden coaching options in selecting ready players for the senior national teams participating in AFCON.

African national teams often participate in the Arab Cup with squads composed of local players or those competing in Arab leagues, particularly in the Gulf, with the possibility of integrating some of them later into the senior teams.

For the host nation Qatar, the Arab Cup represents an important stage for the coaching staff led by Spaniard Julen Lopetegui to test tactical plans and boost team readiness ahead of the World Cup, especially since the Qatari league will pause during the tournament. This opens the door for the coach, who assumed leadership of the national team recently, specifically since the last two matches of the third round of World Cup qualifiers, to introduce different tactical ideas in an effort to elevate the overall performance of the team.

The Arab Cup will be an ideal opportunity for Lopetegui to test the abilities of certain players, particularly the young ones called up for the tournament, before settling on the final squad for the World Cup

GCC teams, including Qatar, enjoy the advantage of having all their players in the domestic league, which gives coaching staff the ability to closely monitor them and test additional options through available tournaments, including the Arab Cup—a key competitive platform offering unique challenges through contact with different styles of play.