No home comforts for under-fire Nasr


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DUBAI // Al Nasr's woes at home show no sign of abating. They failed once again to break their jinx at the Al Maktoum this season, settling for a point against Al Dhafra in last night's 1-1 draw. Mohammed Abdulqader took advantage of a napping Nasr defence and a generous goal- keeper to put Dhafra ahead in the seventh minute, but Mahmoud Hassan Darwish salvaged a point with his equaliser in the 51st minute.

Nasr have yet to taste victory in their own den this season and this was their fourth draw in seven games at home. They deserved no better for a mediocre performance, especially in the first-half. The lone bright spark for the hosts in the first-half came in the third minute. Darwish, making a superb solo run down the right, crossed the ball and Musallam Ahmed Ghloum had just to tap it in to put Nasr ahead.

Instead, he took a wild heave and sent the ball into orbit from just a yard out. Following Ghloum's lead, the Nasr keeper Abdulla Moosa Ali added to the home supporters' woes with a howler in the seventh minute. Abdulqader broke the offside trap and took a shot more in hope than conviction, but, to his delight, the ball slipped through Abdulla's fingers and trickled into the net. Urged on by their fans, Nasr stepped on the gas after the break and Darwish restored parity six minutes after the restart.

He was in the perfect position to meet Mohammed Ibrahim's through ball, he placed a right-footer to the left of the Dhafra keeper Abdulbasit Mohammed. Nasr should have been pressing for the win, but instead they slipped back into mediocrity until Younis Ahmed tested Abdulbasit with a stinging volley in injury time. The Dhafra keeper punched the ball away to ensure his side finished with a well-deserved point while the Nasr fans went home seething.

arizvi@thenational.ae

Buy farm-fresh food

The UAE is stepping up its game when it comes to platforms for local farms to show off and sell their produce.

In Dubai, visit Emirati Farmers Souq at The Pointe every Saturday from 8am to 2pm, which has produce from Al Ammar Farm, Omar Al Katri Farm, Hikarivege Vegetables, Rashed Farms and Al Khaleej Honey Trading, among others. 

In Sharjah, the Aljada residential community will launch a new outdoor farmers’ market every Friday starting this weekend. Manbat will be held from 3pm to 8pm, and will host 30 farmers, local home-grown entrepreneurs and food stalls from the teams behind Badia Farms; Emirates Hydroponics Farms; Modern Organic Farm; Revolution Real; Astraea Farms; and Al Khaleej Food. 

In Abu Dhabi, order farm produce from Food Crowd, an online grocery platform that supplies fresh and organic ingredients directly from farms such as Emirates Bio Farm, TFC, Armela Farms and mother company Al Dahra. 

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W.
Wael Kfoury
(Rotana)

UAE currency: the story behind the money in your pockets
Company Fact Box

Company name/date started: Abwaab Technologies / September 2019

Founders: Hamdi Tabbaa, co-founder and CEO. Hussein Alsarabi, co-founder and CTO

Based: Amman, Jordan

Sector: Education Technology

Size (employees/revenue): Total team size: 65. Full-time employees: 25. Revenue undisclosed

Stage: early-stage startup 

Investors: Adam Tech Ventures, Endure Capital, Equitrust, the World Bank-backed Innovative Startups SMEs Fund, a London investment fund, a number of former and current executives from Uber and Netflix, among others.

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A – Dubai College, Deira International School, Al Ain Amblers, Warriors
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D – Dubai Exiles, Jumeirah English Speaking School, English College, Bahrain Colts

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2018 – Dubai College
2017 – British School Al Khubairat
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