
UFC Fight Night: Whittaker takes on rising star Reinier de Ridder at Etihad Arena in Abu Dhabi
ABU DHABI (WAM)UFC, the world's premier mixed martial arts organisation, in partnership with the Department of Culture and Tourism – Abu Dhabi (DCT Abu Dhabi), returns to the UAE capital with an epic middleweight fight as No.5 ranked Robert Whittaker takes on rising star Reinier de Ridder on Saturday, July 26, at the Etihad Arena.Five years ago to the day — July 26, 2020 — Robert Whittaker headlined the final card of the original Fight Island series, defeating Darren Till in a near-empty arena during the coronavirus pandemic.
Now, he is set to return to Abu Dhabi on the same date, in front of a roaring crowd, chasing another moment of glory in a place that defined his career.
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Al Etihad
7 hours ago
- Al Etihad
UFC Fight Night: Whittaker takes on rising star Reinier de Ridder at Etihad Arena in Abu Dhabi
8 July 2025 22:47 ABU DHABI (WAM)UFC, the world's premier mixed martial arts organisation, in partnership with the Department of Culture and Tourism – Abu Dhabi (DCT Abu Dhabi), returns to the UAE capital with an epic middleweight fight as No.5 ranked Robert Whittaker takes on rising star Reinier de Ridder on Saturday, July 26, at the Etihad years ago to the day — July 26, 2020 — Robert Whittaker headlined the final card of the original Fight Island series, defeating Darren Till in a near-empty arena during the coronavirus pandemic. Now, he is set to return to Abu Dhabi on the same date, in front of a roaring crowd, chasing another moment of glory in a place that defined his career.


Khaleej Times
14 hours ago
- Khaleej Times
UAE's Mohammad Yahya returns to the octagon at UFC Fight Night Abu Dhabi
UFC FIGHT NIGHT: WHITTAKER vs DE RIDDER is set to take place on Saturday, July 26, at Etihad Arena, Yas Island, and will feature Emirati featherweight fighter Mohammad Yahya making his highly anticipated return to the Octagon. Yahya is set to face Steven Nguyen in the prelims, marking his first UFC appearance since August 2024. This bout offers Yahya an opportunity to bounce back from a challenging fight against Brazil's Kauê Fernandes, where he suffered a first-round TKO loss. Fighting on home soil in Abu Dhabi, Yahya will be backed by a passionate crowd as he looks to secure his first UFC victory and put Emirati MMA on the global map. Headliners to watch The main event sees No.5 ranked middleweight Robert Whittaker take on Dutch submission specialist Reinier de Ridder. Whittaker, a former UFC middleweight champion with a 27-8-0 record, brings a wealth of experience and signature victories over names like Yoel Romero and Marvin Vettori. He aims to reassert his dominance after recent setbacks. Meanwhile, de Ridder (20-2-0), who joined the UFC in late 2024, is riding high after a massive win against Bo Nickal. Known for his elite grappling and relentless ground game, the Dutch fighter is climbing the rankings quickly and hopes to add a former champion to his résumé. The July 26 card also features an exciting lineup of international matchups: Each bout brings its own flavour of action and is expected to thrill fans in Abu Dhabi and beyond.


Khaleej Times
a day ago
- Khaleej Times
Look: Abu Dhabi-based runner who ran 250km in deserts 9 times, says it 'saved his life'
The first time Ammar Sabbah ran 250km across the Sahara desert, he didn't do it for the glory. He did it because it sounded like fun. 'I love the desert and I love camping,' says the Abu Dhabi-based ultra-runner. 'So, when I heard about the Marathon des Sables — 250km, self-supported, sleeping in tents, carrying everything on your back — I thought, why not?' That casual 'why not' has since turned into nine finishes of the world's toughest footrace, with a tenth on the horizon. Now 57, Sabbah speaks about running like others speak of meditation — or religion. In fact, running has brought him closer to both life and death than he ever imagined. 'It saved my life,' he says. 'Twice.' Running into the void — and finding clarity The Marathon des Sables isn't a regular race. Held in Morocco, it's a week-long ultra-marathon through sand dunes and scorching temperatures, with competitors carrying their own food and gear. 'You get water stations. That's it,' says Sabbah. 'Everything else — sleeping bag, food, safety equipment — you carry on your back. It's not just a physical challenge. It's mental. Emotional. Spiritual.' During the longer stages, he often slips into a trance. 'Your brain goes into places. I've had full conversations with people who aren't here anymore. My late mother, my uncle. Sometimes it feels like I'm dreaming with my eyes open.' It's also when he writes — not with a pen, but in his mind. 'I love writing. I get poetry ideas during runs. Business ideas too. The basics of a piece just start to flow. Some of them I remember. Some get lost in the sand.' Desert highs and near-death lows Sabbah isn't driven by competition. 'I never trained to win,' he says. 'My goal was just to break into the top 150 once. My best was 242 out of 1,200. And I was thrilled.' But even as he pushed through race after race — Oman, Jordan, Morocco — something started to feel off. 'In 2016 I wasn't improving anymore,' he says. 'I thought, okay, maybe it's age. Maybe it's the ACL tear I'd had. I just wasn't getting faster.' Then came Al Marmoom Ultra Marathon in Dubai — another 250km. Sabbah wasn't planning to enter, but the organiser reached out directly. 'He said, 'How can we not invite the guy with the most desert ultras in the UAE?' So, I agreed.' The entry required a cardiologist's clearance. Sabbah wasn't worried. 'I'd just done a 100km race in Jordan. I felt fine.' But during the test, the doctor paused. Something was wrong. 'He told me, 'I don't think I can let you run.' Later, we discovered I had over 90 per cent blockage in a major artery. I was one heartbeat away from collapse.' He underwent urgent surgery. 'I went from being 'fit' to nearly dying, just like that. And it was because I signed up for a race. That's how running saved me the first time.' Training in sandstorms and city limits For Sabbah, training has never been about long hours. 'Daily runs are short. Never over 10km. Weekends we go longer — 30km maybe. And before a big race, we'd do a five-day desert camp: Run in the morning, rest, run again at sunset.' When he moved to Dubai in 2014, he lived near Al Marmoom and trained between office meetings. 'I'd go out for 45 minutes in the sand, then go back to work.' Now based in Abu Dhabi, he drives out to Al Wathba's artificial mountain area to run. 'You can still find that nice heavy sand, or gravel, or uphill. You train your mind more than your legs.' Still, he admits he sometimes overdid it. 'There were years I'd do two or three of these races in one season. I remember running in Oman, then Morocco three weeks later. Not a smart idea.' The second scare — the valve that almost stopped everything Years after his first surgery, Sabbah began feeling the same decline. 'I wasn't getting faster. The fatigue was back. Something felt off.' A second opinion confirmed it: the previous stent was fine, but his aortic valve was calcifying. Eventually, it was opening just 20 to 25 per cent — far from what the heart needs. In September 2023, he underwent open-heart surgery to replace the valve. 'I told my doctor, let's just do it. I don't want to lose my performance slowly. Let's fix it properly.' A year later — almost to the day — he was back in Jordan, running a 250km trail race through Petra and Wadi Rum. 'It wasn't my best performance. I was still in rehab. But emotionally? It was everything. The nostalgia. The silence. The people asking, 'Where have you been for so long?' It was like coming home.' No carbs, no gels — just grit and fat-burning A clinical nutritionist by training, Sabbah has re-thought everything about endurance fuelling. 'For years, we all followed the high-carb diet. Energy gels, pasta loading — all of it. Now, I've switched to low carb. I run without sugar. Without gels. I go straight into fat-burning.' He's careful not to push extremes. 'I'm not fully keto. And I worry the new trend is the same mistake — just in the other direction. But for me, this works.' He adds: 'I have degrees in biochemistry, clinical nutrition, exercise physiology. And after all that, I still believe everybody is different. You've got to find what works for you.' Sabbah now owns Arena Fitness in Abu Dhabi, where he combines decades of ultra-running experience with professional expertise in clinical nutrition and exercise physiology. But he's careful not to glorify suffering. 'We've made overachievement look glamorous. But if you're running ultra-marathons just to prove something on LinkedIn — that's not it.' His advice? 'Only do this if you love it. If you don't have the passion, the pain won't be worth it. But if you do — it's the most beautiful experience you'll ever have.' And if he's not enjoying it? 'I don't run. I haven't run in six weeks,' he said, laughing. 'My mind's busy with business. I'll get back to it when I feel like it.' When asked what's next? Sabbah says he hasn't picked his next race yet, but Morocco is calling. 'I want my tenth Marathon des Sables; it would be the 40th anniversary; I'm not sure I'm ready… but I might just go anyway.'