- Martin takes big step towards MotoGP title as Bagnaia crashes
- Japan urges 200,000 people to evacuate due to heavy rain
- Martin closes on MotoGP world title as Bagnaia crashes out
- UK's battered Tory party to reveal new leader
- Gill, Pant fight back for India in third Test against NZ
- UN nature summit agrees on body for Indigenous representation
- Bagnaia clinches pole for Malaysian MotoGP ahead of Martin
- Tatum propels Celtics over Hornets, Lakers hold off Raptors
- Talks on halting nature loss enter extra time in Colombia
- War decimates harvest in famine-threatened Sudan
- Trump says vaccine skeptic RFK Jr will have 'big role' in health care if he wins
- US-Israeli settlers hope to see a second Trump term
- 'Nobody cares about us': US election doubts in West Bank
- O'Brien bags two Breeders' Cup wins to match Lukas record for a trainer
- Man Utd said 'it was now or never', new manager Amorim says
- Black man convicted by all-white jury executed in South Carolina
- Trump, Harris clash over rhetoric as they battle for swing state votes
- Judge tosses New York plastic pollution lawsuit against PepsiCo
- Nuts! NY authorities euthanize Instagram squirrel star
- MLB star pitcher Snell opts out of Giants contract
- With stones and slings, supporters of Bolivia's Morales gird for battle
- Nvidia to join Dow Jones Industrial Average, replacing Intel
- Sacked Ten Hag wishes 'trophies and glory' for Man Utd
- Wasteful Leverkusen held by Stuttgart as Liverpool loom
- Wasteful Leverkusen held by Stuttgart
- Trump says RFK Jr will have 'big role' in health care if he wins
- US stocks rebound on Amazon results ahead of Fed, election finale
- Gauff backs WTA Finals in Saudi Arabia despite 'reservations'
- Spain flood deaths top 200, hopes fade for missing
- Famed Indian designer Rohit Bal dies: fashion group
- Piastri takes Brazil sprint pole but wary of team orders for Norris
- Trump, Harris clash over rhetoric as they battle for swing state Wisconsin
- Fake US election video signals sprawling Russian disinformation ops
- Spencer to end long wait for first England start against New Zealand
- Russian skater Valieva vows to compete again after doping ban
- Erdogan sues opposition chief, Istanbul mayor for slander
- Piastri takes Brazil sprint pole ahead of Norris
- Morales supporters storm Bolivia military barracks, take hostages
- Dodgers celebrate World Series win with long-awaited parade
- Tuipulotu says 'heart and soul' behind rise to Scotland rugby captaincy
- Amber alert as US figure skater leads French Grand Prix
- Black man convicted by all-white jury to be executed in South Carolina
- Last-ditch effort to solve funding deadlock at nature-saving summit
- Zverev downs Tsitsipas in Paris as Rune keeps ATP Finals bid alive
- France international Jegou resumes rugby after rape allegations
- Former Man Utd star Yorke named coach of Trinidad and Tobago
- Botswana's new president sworn in after historic election upset
- Death toll rises to 12 in Serbia train station roof collapse: minister
- US announces $425 mn in new Ukraine security aid
- Portraits of slain leaders watch out on Hezbollah's battered Beirut bastion
'Born of suffering': Jordan's Asian Cup heroics mask deeper issues
Jordan's run to Saturday's Asian Cup final is all the more remarkable for the decrepit state of football infrastructure at home and the financial struggles of domestic teams and players.
Hussein Ammouta's side are into the final for the first time in their history and will face hosts and reigning champions Qatar.
Before now, Jordan's best Asian Cup was the quarter-finals in 2004 and 2011. The team ranked 87 in the world by FIFA has never been to a World Cup.
There are hopes that no matter what happens on Saturday in Doha, Jordan's Asian Cup could be a turning point for the sport in the football-mad country of 11 million people.
But their achievements mask deep-rooted problems at home, with a lack of money in domestic football the biggest obstacle.
Jordan's top division, the Pro League, is professional but wages can be so low that players are forced to take up second jobs in security or government offices in the capital Amman.
Sixteen of the Asian Cup squad play in Jordan's domestic league, with others in Saudi Arabia, Lebanon, Iraq, Malaysia and Qatar. Mousa Al-Tamari is the only one playing in Europe, at Montpellier.
Underlining the lack of money in Jordanian football, the financial reward for the league champions is just 60,000 dinars ($85,000).
"The finances of the clubs are non-existent," Menem Fakhoury, secretary-general at professional side Al-Jazeera, told AFP.
- 'We need infrastructure' -
Samar Nassar, secretary general of Jordan's football association, acknowledges the many challenges.
"We need infrastructure and the private sector to rally around the national team," she told AFP.
"But clubs are the bedrock. We need support for domestic football as a whole and a re-examination of many matters."
The private sector is standing up and backing the national team, with banks for example offering financial rewards to the players for getting to the final.
But Nassar said: "We hope that they will support the process as a whole, and that the support will not be limited to just when the national team is doing well."
Following their stunning 2-0 semi-final win over South Korea, Jordan's Moroccan coach Ammouta made a public plea.
"We need to invest in infrastructure, in the training and formation of our players to reach higher levels," he said.
"We need to pay attention to age categories."
- 'Born of suffering' -
A change in government legislation is seen as one possible way of improving things. Currently, Jordanian clubs operate under the umbrella of the Ministry of Youth.
"Company owners must be convinced to adopt the clubs," said Fakhoury, adding that what money is currently in Jordanian football is more likely to go into the national team.
Outside the traditional big teams, some clubs can go several months without paying salaries because they don't have the financial means, said Fakhoury.
As well as pleas for private sector involvement, the government is now coming under pressure to find more money from Jordan's struggling economy to put into the domestic game.
"Demands are increasing about the need for the government to see this achievement (at the Asian Cup) and build on it," said the Al-Ghad newspaper.
It called the national side's historic feat "an achievement born of suffering".
"Is the government paying attention?" it asked.
The government on the eve of the final responded with an input of one million dinars into the football federation.
T.Ward--AMWN