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Monday, October 31, 2011

SEA Games Provisional Squad List

Source

Date: 
Mon, 31 Oct 2011
Attached below is the squad list for the 2011 SEA Games to be held in Jakarta, Indonesia. Singapore is placed in Group A alongside defending champions Malaysia, host nation Indonesia, Thailand and Cambodia.
SEA Games Provisional Squad List
S/N
Full Name
DOB
Position
Club
1
Chan Yuhui (Jasper) 曾羽辉
7-Nov-1988
GK
CYL
2
Hariss S/O Harun
19-Nov-1990
MF
CYL
3
Mohamad Izwan Bin Mahbud
14-Jul-1990
GK
CYL
4
Mohammad Afiq Bin Yunos
10-Dec-1990
DF
CYL
5
Muhammad Al-Qaasimy Bin Abdul Rahman
21-Jan-1992
DF
CYL
6
Muhammad Faris Bin Ramli
24-Aug-1992
MF
CYL
7
Muhammad Fazli Bin Ayob
24-Jan-1990
FW
CYL
8
Muhammad Hafiz Bin Abu Sujad
1-Nov-1990
MF
CYL
9
Muhammad Irwan Shah Bin Arismail
2-Nov-1988
DF
CYL
10
Muhammad Khairul Nizam Bin Mohammad Kamal
25-Jun-1991
FW
CYL
11
Muhammad Safuwan Bin Baharudin
22-Sep-1991
DF
CYL
12
Muhammad Shahir Bin Hamzah
7-Apr-1989
DF
CYL
13
Muhammad Zulfahmi Bin Mohd Arifin
5-Oct-1991
MF
CYL
14
Navin Neil Vanu
11-Aug-1989
FW
CYL
15
Quak Jun Yi (Gabriel) 郭俊誼
22-Dec-1990
MF
CYL
16
Safirul Bin Sulaiman
12-Oct-1992
MF
CYL
17
Shahdan Bin Sulaiman
9-May-1988
MF
CYL
18
Mohammad Firdaus Bin Kasman
24-Jan-1988
MF
TRFC

Saturday, October 29, 2011

Coaches ready and well-equipped

Source

Date: Sat, 29 Oct 2011




In their last session with the kids, the trainee coaches, who were undergoing their AFC ‘C’ Certificate course, ran the show. Course instructor, Coach Mohamed Zainudeen, took a back seat and watched his trainees strut their stuff.

A total of 18 kids with special needs made their way down to Jalan Besar Stadium in the afternoon of 29th October 2011, to have their session of training with the trainee coaches. These coaches were undergoing their module – introductory course for coaching disabled footballers.

Head coach Zai, as he is affectionately known, was pleased with his charges. He spoke of them, “I am pleased with the trainee coaches. Not once I stepped in to interrupt their coaching sessions.”

He continued, “The trainee coaches are now equipped with skills to manage and engage these kids in any training situation.”

This however, was not the case just a week ago.

Commenting on his students, “The first time the trainee coaches had to train them, they had difficulty engaging them. But through experience and time spent with the kids, the coaches now have a better understanding on how to train kids with special needs.”

Course attendee, and national striker, Aleksandar Duric, also shared his thoughts on coaching these kids with special needs. “I am really honoured to have the session with the boys and girls. I think they enjoyed themselves immensely with me and other fellow national players like Fahrudin and Lionel.”

The 41-year-old target man, also commented on his quest to be granted his coaching licence. “Our job is to impart our knowledge of the sport to others. To see smiles on their faces and to see them enjoying themselves playing football is enough for us coaches. That is why we are here.”

One of the kids, who attended the session was 19-year-old, Muhammad Diroy. He too, like the coaches themselves, enjoyed the session tremendously. “I feel really happy and satisfied with today’s session. I play futsal on a regular basis and I am right legged. But the session taught me how to utilise both feet. Now I can play with my left foot, and I will be using more of it in time to come!”, said Diroy with a beam on his face.

Another participant of the training session, 21-year-old Yati, also echoed the same sentiments as her fellow mates. "It was a great experience being trained by these coaches, especially the national players. We have learnt a lot from them despite the short session, such as various techniques and skills that can be used during a match. We hope that there are more of these sessions for us!", said a satisfied Yati.

The course saw the trainee coaches taking turns in taking charge of the drills and games that was planned out for the kids, all under the watchful eye of Coach Zai. The coaches will be sitting for their theory and practical tests on 30th and 31st of October respectively.

S-League version 2.0's beta release scheduled for next week League's format and new CEO among details to be announced

Source

SINGAPORE - Singapore football is standing on the cusp of change. A return to Malaysian domestic competitions is just over two months away, and local clubs are already bracing for a revamp in the S-League.

Football Association of Singapore (FAS) chief Zainudin Nordin has put together a team to study changes required to generate fan interest and excitement in the domestic competition and, next week, the president and his men will announce key features of S-League version 2.0.

They will present policies designed to keep the 15-year-old S-League moving in the right direction.

Speaking to Today, Zainudin declared: "We'll set up a press conference at the end of next week and present the necessary information ... the key points like the new S-League chief executive officer (CEO), the format of the league, how the schedule will look like and the initiatives that we have planned."

Today had earlier reported that the 2012 season of the S-League is likely to see 14 teams battle it out for the title in a two-round format.

The current season features 12 teams competing over three rounds.

The Malaysian Young Tigers will join the S-League next year, as part of the deal signed between the FAS and their Malaysian counterparts, which will see a Singapore side play across the Causeway. And Brunei side DPMM FC, the first foreign team to win a domestic trophy here in 2009 when they lifted the League Cup, remain the frontrunners for the final spot.

Zainudin had earlier announced that there is a plan to improve training facilities for clubs, centred on increasing the number of artificial pitches, and a 2,000-seat expansion of the 6,000-capacity Jalan Besar Stadium.

But the FAS chief declined to reveal if those details would also be unveiled next week. He said: "As far as the stadium is concerned, I can say that there are no glitches, we are progressing reasonably well, and we are on the verge of making a decision on the expansion. We will provide updates very soon, for everything."

Friday, October 28, 2011

Izwan scare, as SEA Games strikers talk goals Nizam and Fazli believe they can click together as first group match against Malaysia looms

Source

SINGAPORE - An untimely slip by goalkeeper Izwan Mahbud (picture) yesterday sent shudders through the Singapore under-23 team preparing for next month's SEA Games.

Training on a soggy Geylang Field, the team were in the middle of a 30-minute friendly when the 21-year-old first choice custodian skidded and twisted his left ankle.

He limped off immediately, accompanied by the team physiotherapist, and the injured ankle was taped after extensive icing.

This was the same ankle Izwan twisted in Singapore's World Cup Asian Zone third round qualifier against China in Kunming eight weeks ago.

After his star turn with the national team, Izwan is regarded as a key figure in the SEA Games team as they aim to make the final of the tournament.

There was a sigh of relief when the initial assessment of the injury was a minor sprain.

"He'll go to the doctor tomorrow for a check-up so that we can know the full extent of the injury," Young Lions assistant coach Robin Chitrakar told Today.

Drawn in Group A, with matches against Malaysia, Thailand, Indonesia and Cambodia, the under-23s will have to be at their best to meet their target of at least a silver medal.

Their 90-minute training session yesterday was a serious affair under the strict gaze of head coach, Slobodan Pavkovic.

Said Chitrakar: "Even Cambodia's not shabby this time around, so we're in for a tough campaign. It has been tough for us to work around the S-League schedule but the team is looking good."

The biggest concern may well be goalscoring. Striker Khairul Nizam has recently returned after two months out nursing a hamstring injury and he will possibly start with Fazli Ayob when Singapore kick off their SEA Games campaign against arch-rivals Malaysia in Jakarta on Nov 8.

For Nizam, it is a matter of getting back to full fitness.

"I still need some time to get fully fit, so I'll be working extra hard in training," said the 20-year-old. "Of course there's a bit of pressure on me, being the lead striker, but Fazli and I are communicating well and building up a good partnership."

"He's been setting me up well but, at the same time, I know I can always lay off to him if I'm caught. I have the confidence that he too can score."

With five S-League goals this season, Fazli is the leading scorer for the Courts Young Lions in the competition.

The 21-year-old is enjoying himself.

"My natural position is at right midfield but I've adapted well to the forward role," said Fazli. "It's an achievement for me to surpass my personal target of three goals this season and I'm looking forward to banging in more at the SEA Games."

"The team have worked well together and I know I can count on the support behind me ... I really hope we can win the gold medal at the SEA Games," he added.



Last night's result:

Singapore Pools FA Cup final

Tampines Rovers Prime League 1 Singapore Recreation Club 1 (Tampines won 7-6 after penalty kicks)

New Lion ready to adapt quickly

Source

Date: Fri, 28 Oct 2011




Finally! That is probably the best word to describe feelings around Home United FC midfielder Firdaus Idros’ first call-up to the Singapore National Team.

Coach Radojko Avramovic released his squad list for the upcoming FIFA World Cup Qualifiers against Jordan away and China at home last week and one of two new faces in the squad was Firdaus Idros who has had a spectacular season in the Great Eastern Yeo’s S-League so far with nine goals.

A speed demon blessed with good finishing skills, Firdaus has been touted by fans and players alike to don the national jersey for the past few months.

Speaking to Kelvin Leong at the Bishan Stadium before his club training today,

Firdaus said: “I really don’t know what to be feeling at the moment. I guess when the day comes to report for national team training, everything will sink in. Now I am just focusing on tomorrow’s game against the Young Lions because we need to secure a win to get one hand on the trophy.

“In one way, it is good that through my performance for Home United, I am not given a chance to don the national colours but everything I have thought of this season is to focus on my club to win at least one piece of silverware because we have not been winning for the past few years.

With the S-League title one of his top priorities, Firdaus is also pleased to be given the opportunity to play alongside some of his old mates whom he reckons will help him feel very much at home when he reports for national team training.

He added: “I was previously from the Young Lions before and when I was at the SEA Games in Laos, he was there all along. And I am lucky that quite a few of my team-mates will be with me in the national team, about five of them so the atmosphere should be the same and even most of the players in the squad like Ismail Yunos and Fazrul Nawaz were all my ex team-mates from the Young Lions so I don’t think it will be hard for me to adapt. Actually all of them were hoping that I get called up in the past few months.”

With a hearty laugh, the nifty midfielder could not hold back his laughter when quizzed about how he found out about his Lions call-up.

“I first found out about the news from Mail (Ismail Yunos). I have been playing alongside him since 13 or 14 years old so he was the first one to message me and gave me the news before the club and the media told me about it. I was happy about the news and am excited at the opportunity to pull on the jersey.” said the Protectors’ midfielder.

We could not resist making a phone call to Ismail Yunos just to find out what he thinks of his pal’s call-up to the national side.

The Gombak United defender was full of praise for his good mate, “Firdaus finally got his chance! I am really happy and pleased for him to be involved with the national team. He has a lot of talent and it is all about showing it on the international stage. I’m looking forward to seeing him at our first training session!”

Arguably the best year of his footballing career so far, Coach Avramovic might want to give Firdaus his favourite jersey number to ensure that the player can translate club form onto the international stage.

He summed it up when he said: “If I get a chance to select my jersey number for the Lions, it has to be No.12 which I wear at Home United because it is also the date of my birthday and I have been scoring goals so I guess that will be my preferred number!”

Hard work and determination has gotten him this far. Now the stage is set for Firdaus Idros to stake his claim on a permanent spot in the Lions setup.

Monday, October 17, 2011

Home strike four but Lee demands more

Source

Neo Chee Seong
info@sleague.com

Home United head coach Lee Lim Saeng was an angry man despite his side strolling to a comprehensive 4-0 win over traditional rivals Singapore Armed Forces FC in Sunday evening’s Great Eastern-YEO’S S.League tie at Choa Chu Kang Stadium.

The former Korea Republic international was disappointed with the manner in which his team played out the second half, despite having gone three goals up in the first half during a 16-minute spell.

On several occasions, Lee was seen coming off his bench seat and shouting instructions to his players from the edge of the technical area – not at all a common sight for teams holding a commanding lead.

He duly explained himself afterwards in the post-match interview.

“I am happy to get three points, but I am also unhappy to watch the performance of the team after we scored three,” he said.

“We should try to show what good football is about. We had the possession, but we should have tried to attack and score more goals, which we didn’t! We simply lost the ball too much when we could have held on to it.

“I thought that after we scored three, the opponents pushed us, and I need to credit the opponents for trying hard.

“We should show quality football. This is my fault, I will correct it during training with my guys.

“We are not finished as yet, we will try and be champions at the end of the season. It’s not over, we have to play Etoile on Thursday, and I will have some homework to do for that match.”

Home got off to the perfect start when a well-worked free kick down the right led up to a controversial decision by referee Sukhbir Singh, who ruled that Shahril Jantan ‘illegally’ picked up a loose ball which came off SAFFC teammate Hafiz Osman’s shin.

Singh signalled for an indirect free kick about eight yards away from goal, and up stepped Canada Under-23 international Sherif El-Masri, who blasted the ball into the roof of the net after a tap by his teammate.

The Warriors were stunned by the early goal, but they came back strongly, having the better of the possession in the opening minutes until a second Home goal came along.

Masrezwan Masturi, operating as a wingback for the Protectors, was given all the time in the world on the right flank by Shaiful Esah when the former SAFFC man opted for pace to elude his old teammate before squaring a ball for Firdaus Idros to poke home from close range at the far post.

As the Warriors were trying to recover from the second goal, a Home counterattack virtually killed the game before 20 minutes were up.

Juma’at Jantan caused some trouble for Hafiz on the left flank before picking El-Masri out yet again, and the latter applied the finishing touch from ten yards out with a coolly-taken shot.

19 minutes in, and at three goals down, Richard Bok’s men were facing an uphill task to recover, not at all a normal situation at Choa Chu Kang.

The early goals seemed to unsettle the Warriors, as they struggled to string their passes together in the first half. Fazrul Nawaz had the best chances in that time for the Warriors as he hit a shot high and wide, and the Singapore international also had a goal disallowed for a spot-on offside call by the assistant referee.

Shahril had to ensure that the scoreline did not get any bigger in the last minute of the half, as he was at full stretch to palm away a Juma’at shot which seemed destined for the top corner.

After the restart, the former Singapore custodian was again imperious as he foiled a cutback by El-Masri to prevent the Protectors from going four up.

Fazrul, on the other hand, was the Warriors’ likeliest scorer on the night with an abundance of chances. On 51 minutes, he sent a thumping shot onto the crossbar with Lionel Lewis well beaten in the Protectors’ goal after being given too much space from 30 yards out.

Eight minutes after that incident, Taisuke Akiyoshi tried a one-man show when he sprinted the full length of the pitch before feinting past Valery Hiek and shooting just wide of the post.

Just when the Warriors were getting their act together, they faced an in-form Lewis, who had no intention of giving up a clean sheet when he was at his best to stop current S.League goal king Mislav Karoglan on no fewer than four occasions.

The most impressive of the lot came on 81 minutes, when he misjudged a shot which took a wicked deflection off Kenji Arai, but then recovered well to tip the ball away at full stretch.

It was not the Warriors’ night, and the misery was compounded when Mustaqim Manzur received his marching orders for two bookable offences, the second a desperate tackle on the wing on 77 minutes when the rest of the players were all at sea.

Home substitute Yasir Hanapi completed the rout in the last minute of regulation time when he instinctively ran after a loose ball coming off a mistake by the Warriors defence, before shooting past Shahril from inside the 18-yard box.

It was quite the night for the Protectors, not least El-Masri, who was instrumental in this thumping. Having faced an uncertain future at the start of the season, the Canadian will now play a major role in the remaining games as Qiu Li had been ruled out for the rest of the season with a knee injury.

Speaking to sleague.com after the match, El-Masri was visibly happy with his all-round contribution.

“I have been here for two years, and I really came to life this year,” he said.

“I feel that I fit here pretty well, and I have the confidence now to go for everything. I feel really good.

“When I came today, I kept telling myself that I would get a goal. I was trying really hard to get the hat-trick, but I guess it just wouldn’t come!”

A disappointed Bok was gracious in defeat, crediting his Warriors for a fighting second half which led to the only positives he could draw from the game.

“I am shocked that the referee blew for an infringement and said that it was a back-pass,” he confided on the opening goal.

“I thought Shahril took that as a loose ball when it came off our defender, as it took a deflection. That really affected us a lot, and we were on the back foot from that incident.

“I am not saying that he (referee Singh) is spoiling the game, but I personally do not think that he had a good game.

“We could have done a lot better with the second goal. Masrezwan beat one of our guys so easily, and the ball just went across the face of goal. I thought we could have done better there in defending.

“We did very well in the second half, and it was evident that we didn’t give up even after Mustaqim was sent off.

“You can say that our title challenge is now over. It is mathematically still possible, but we will need the rest to lose in order for us to stand a chance.”

With the defeat, it is back to the drawing board for Bok’s troops as they look for at least a top-three finish come the end of the current season.

Home meanwhile storm to the top of the table with 62 points, two more than second-placed Tampines Rovers and three ahead of Albirex Niigata (Singapore), leaving the title race evenly-poised with six games to go.

They may still trail SAFFC in terms of the overall record on uniform derbies in the S.League, having managed only 14 wins to the Warriors’ 21 in 45, but if the latest one should go a long way towards sealing the league title, it will definitely be one for them to remember fondly for some time.

Thursday, October 13, 2011

A prince fights for ASEAN's football dream Fifa vice-president Prince Ali will back region's bid to host 2030 World Cup final

Source

SINGAPORE - In January, ASEAN first floated the idea of a joint bid to host the 2030 Fifa World Cup finals at their foreign ministers' summit in Indonesia.

The ASEAN Football Federation (AFF) then revealed they would form a committee to study the viability of such a bid.

Now, ASEAN's desire to host the world's biggest sporting event is set to gain real momentum, with Fifa vice-president, Prince Ali bin Al Hussein of Jordan (picture), throwing his weight behind the effort.

Prince Ali flew into Singapore to watch Jordan beat the Lions 3-0 in an Asian Zone World Cup qualifier at Jalan Besar Stadium on Tuesday.

Speaking to Today after the match, he said: "We have to want to look at things, and I will take it to Fifa. Everything is possible ... it's all about means and capabilities."

Prince Ali, 35, is also the president of the Jordan Football Association and the West Asian Football Federation.

He stunned the football world in January when he beat South Korea's long-serving incumbent Chung Mong-Joon by 25 votes to 20 to become the youngest member of Fifa's executive committee. There are 24 members on Fifa's executive committee.

The number of countries involved in an ASEAN bid is considered a major hurdle, at least in terms of organisation and logistics, but the Asian Football Confederation's (AFC) experience with the 2007 Asian Cup illustrated the possibilities, with Indonesia, Malaysia, Thailand and Vietnam jointly-hosting the finals, which was won by Iraq.

ASEAN is made up of Brunei, Cambodia, Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, Myanmar, the Philippines, Singapore, Thailand and Vietnam, and Prince Ali said: "The question to ask is why not ASEAN? I will of course support Asia in every effort."

He will attend his first Fifa executive committee meeting as vice-president from Oct 20 to 21 in Zurich, where he will also speak on the memorandum of understanding signed by the Football Associations of Singapore and Malaysia.

Penned in July, the agreement will see a Singapore side compete in Malaysian domestic football competitions starting next year, with a Malaysian team going the other way.

"I spoke to Singapore and Malaysia officials and I will take this to Fifa, I think it's a good idea," he said.

The move effectively means there will be foreign teams playing in both domestic leagues, which will result in Singapore and Malaysia forgoing direct qualification into the AFC's premier regional competition, the AFC Champions League (ACL).

AFC rules stipulate that for direct entry into the ACL, the top league of any national association cannot feature a foreign team.

Singapore currently has two in the 12-team S-League - French side Etoile FC and Japan's Albirex Niigata - and withdrew its application for direct entry into the competition last October.

Prince Ali vowed to argue the case: "I will take that to the AFC, I think it's unfair. ACL qualification should be based on merit and ability. I will propose to discuss this."

Place in the SEA Games final a top priority for Singapore

Source

SINGAPORE - After bronze-medal showings at the last two SEA Games, the national under-23 team was set a target of silver by the Football Association of Singapore (FAS) for this year's Games, which will be held in Indonesia from Nov 11 to 22.

After Singapore's 3-0 loss to Jordan at the Jalan Besar Stadium, the Lions are all but out of the reckoning in Group A of the third round of Asia's World Cup qualifiers but they still have to play three matches - away to Jordan on Nov 11, China at home on Nov 15 and a date with Iraq yet to be determined.

The squad have eight players who are available for the SEA Games and, with the clash of dates, there are many wondering if preparations for the tournament in Indonesia will be disrupted.

But speaking to Today, FAS chief Zainudin Nordin said: "We've set a very clear target for the SEA Games and we are serious about it. We'll make our focus clear soon."

Zainudin had earlier said that a decision on which competition the under-23 players will play in would be made after the Jordan fixture and it appears that, after the loss, the target of a place in the SEA Games final is set to become the top priority.

"If we get the green light to go to the SEA Games, we must really achieve something there," said 20-year-old central defender Safuwan Baharudin, who has starred in the Lions' qualifying campaign thus far.

"It'll be good to win at least the silver and end the football year on a high, especially after the criticism that we have faced so far."

Hariss Harun (picture), another key figure for both the national team and the under-23s, does not know if the FAS have requested his release from his National Service unit to travel for the SEA Games.

He believes the under-23s must be able to deal with the target set.

He said: "After winning two bronze medals, getting to the final is something we should achieve.

"As we saw in the match against Jordan, we need to learn to handle pressure better."

S-League version 2.0 takes shape Matches next season to be held in a two-round format, with 14 teams likely to battle for honours

Source

SINGAPORE - The goal is to ensure the S-League does not suffer and, instead, flourishes when a Singapore side enters Malaysian domestic football competitions next year.

Football Association of Singapore (FAS) chief Zainudin Nordin had promised an S-League version 2.0 with changes, some radical, to help the domestic professional league.

A task force has been formed and, after a second meeting on Oct 7, the president's men have decided on the skeletal structure of the revamped S-League.

"We have come up with some new ideas ... and we'll be meeting with the club chairmen to inform them soon. There are a few areas that are very important: We're looking very seriously at the fixtures as well as riding on our Malaysian League participation to make sure the S-League flourishes," Zainudin told Today.

Today understands that the S-League will be expanded to 14 teams played over two rounds, instead of the current three-round format.

The seven weekly S-League fixtures will be played over three days. There will be three matches each on Thursday and Friday, with one match acting as a curtain-raiser to the Malaysian League fixture on Saturday.

Tonight's action in the S-League will see three matches played on a single day in what is understood to be a test run.

"It is jumping the gun to say that there will definitely be 14 teams in the league next year but there has been a lot of support to change things to a two-round format, it is an idea that will be positive for the league," said Zainudin.

The Malaysian Young Tigers will join the S-League next year and Today understands that Brunei side DPMM FC, the first foreign team to win a domestic trophy here in 2009 when they lifted the League Cup, are the front runners for the final spot.

The Brunei Football Association were banned from all football activity by Fifa in late 2009 for government intervention, with DPMM forced to leave the S-League without completing their fixtures.

But with Brunei reinstated by Fifa in May, DPMM have made an official application to the FAS to rejoin the S-League.

Training facilities have been a bugbear for local clubs. Most of them train and play competitive fixtures at their home stadiums and pitch over-use has been a constant worry.

In a move that will be warmly applauded by the clubs, Zainudin revealed that they are exploring ways to circumvent that problem.

He said: "There is a move to improve training facilities for clubs, and that will centre on having more artificial pitches."

With the 2012 S-League season projected to kick off next February, the challenge for the FAS is to implement the ideas.

Said Zainudin: "That's our next step, to come in early and concretely do what we have to."

Wednesday, October 12, 2011

Singapore vs Jordan [0-3] [3rd Round of the 2014 FIFA World Cup Qualifiers]

Dreams not over yet, says Singapore coach Raddy

Source

Singapore coach Raddy Avramovic refuses to believe the Lions' World Cup dream is over.
The Serb, who left the Jalan Besar Stadium without speaking to the media after the 0-3 humbling by Jordan last night, remains defiant.

'No (we are not losing hope),' he said on the phone when he spoke to The Straits Times two hours later. 'Iraq won in China and that will make a big difference in the group.'

The top two teams progress to the fourth round, which is the final phase of qualifying. Jordan lead Group A with nine points while Iraq are second on six. China have three and Singapore are last with zero points. There are three games left to play.

Singapore 0-3 Jordan

Source

Tuesday, 11 October 2011 17:06
wcq_sin_jor_action_3x2
Jordan's defender Abu-Hashhash (L) fights for the ball against Singapore's midfielder Hariss Harun (R) during their 2014 World Cup Asian qualifying round three football match in Singapore on October 11, 2011. Jordan were leading 1-0 as the game continues. (AFP PHOTO)
Singapore: Jordan maintained their 100% record in the third round of Asian qualifiers for the 2014 FIFA World Cup on Tuesday when the A leaders defeated bottom-of-the-table Singapore 3-0.
Jordan coach Adnan Hamad had expressed concerns about the artificial pitch at the Jalan Besar Stadium but the synthetic surface didn't appear to effect the 2011 AFC Cup quarter-finalists as they recorded their third successive win in the Brazil 2014 qualifiers.
Abdallah Deeb, who was one of nine Al Wehdat players absent from the warm-up match against Thailand due to their participation in the first leg of the AFC Cup semi-final against Nasaf, made a telling contribution on his return to the international fold when he put the visitors 1-0 up with 11 minutes played.
Anas Bani Yaseen, a scorer in Jordan's 2-1 victory over Singapore in the qualifiers for Qatar 2011, doubled the Hashemite Kingdom's lead nine minutes after the interval before Ahmad Ibrahim scored the third and final goal in the 63rd minute.

Lions suffer third World Cup qualifying loss

Source



SINGAPORE, 11 October 2011: In a match that could determine Singapore’s progression in their FIFA World Cup Qualifying campaign, the Singapore national team went into the match, full of confidence after two consecutive wins in the Sultan of Selangor Cup and against the Philippines in an international friendly.
Jordan were also riding high after scoring two back-to-back wins in the two group matches against Iraq and China.

The match got off to a slow start in front of 3,799 roaring fans with both sides seemingly content on stroking the ball around and waiting for an opening.

Singapore’s first chance at goal went to Fazrul Nawaz while the Jordanians were kept at bay with Izwan Mahbud putting in a good display between the sticks for the Lions.

Izwan was left staring into space when a dangerous cross from the right, found Abdallah Deeb totally unmarked at the far post as he headed the ball into the net to give the visitors a 1-0 lead in the 10th minute.

With head coach Radojko Avramovic suspended from the team bench, assistant coach V.Sundramoorthy tried valiantly to rally his troops and they did create a number of opportunities, only to be let down by the final ball before the referee blew for half-time.

The start of the second half saw the introduction of Shahdan Sulaiman and Isa Halim replacing Hafiz Rahim and Shi Jiayi respectively.  Shahdan made an instant impact with an inswinging cross that was met by Fazrul. The resultant header forced the Jordan goalkeeper, Amer Shafi to tip the ball over the bar.

Jordan’s No.19, Anas Bani Yaseen extended his side’s lead in the 54th minute with a goal that gave the visiting fans more bragging rights. Within 11 minutes, they got themselves another goal through No.10, Ahmad Hayel and it was 3-0 to the visitors.

The Lions den started to fear the worse but credit to the Lions, they never gave up and continued to press forward in search of a consolation goal which almost came in the 77th minute when Hariss Harun played a quick free-kick to Shahril ishak who found the back of the net, only for the referee to rule it offside.

With the clock ticking away fast, the Lions did all they could turn the game around and keep their World Cup dreams alive. Unfortunately, it was just not meant to be. The match ended with the scoreboard reading, Singapore 0-3 Jordan.

Speaking at the post-match press conference, Assistant Coach V.Sundramoorty “I think we did not take our chances and it is important at this level to convert chances when you have them. I think with time, with these young boys, we have a future. We have three games left and mathematically, if we get maximum points from the remaining games, we will still have a chance.”

Adding on, he said “We are developing this team and they are a young team.  We started the game positively and should have minimised our mistakes.  The players fought till the end and they tried their best.”
Jordan’s Head Coach Adnan Ahmad “I am very happy that the team played well and got a good result. And we are closer to the fourth round now. We respect the Singapore team and that’s why we played a good game.  The players deserve the result.”

Final Score: Singapore 0-3 Jordan

Starting Line-up for Singapore: Izwan Mahbud, Safuwan Baharudin, Shaiful Esah, Shi Jiayi (Isa Halim 45’), Aleksandar Duric, Fazrul Nawaz (Khairul Nizam 61’), Hafiz Rahim (Shahdan Sulaiman 45’), Hariss Harun, Daniel Bennett, Shahril Ishak (C), Juma'at Jantan

Starting Line-up for Jordan: Amer Shafi, Baha' Abdelrahman, Bashar Bani Yaseen (C), Ahmad Hayel (Mahmoud Shelbaieh 81’), Khalil Zaid KH. Baniateyah, Abdallah Deeb, Shadi Abu Hashhash, Basem Fathi, Hasan Abdel Fattah (Anas Hijah 84’), Anas Bani Yaseen, Odai Al Saify (Amer Deeb 73’)

Lions crash and burn in match against Jordan

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Jordanian players celebrate after forward Abdallah Deeb (centre, #14) scored their first goal against Singapore in their 2014 World Cup Asian qualifying round three football match in Singapore on Oct 11, 2011. -- PHOTO: AFP
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Singapore's hopes of reaching the fourth round of World Cup qualifiers for the first time look all but over following a 0-3 loss to Jordan at the Jalan Besar Stadium on Tuesday evening.

The Lions' third successive defeat leaves them rock bottom in Group A, while Jordan have made a perfect start with three wins out of three.

Abdallah Deeb headed the visitors in front after just 11 minutes, before Anas Bani-Yaseen and Ahmad Hayel struck in the second-half to seal a comprehensive victory.

Playing in front of a partisan crowd of 3,799, Singapore's misery was compounded when skipper Shahril Ishak had a goal controversially ruled out for offside.

Tuesday, October 11, 2011

Home › FAS › The hot seat awaits the man we call Sundram Volunteering Jobs@FAS Sitemap Terms of Use Privacy Policy Contact Us The hot seat awaits the man we call Sundram

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Date: Tue, 11 Oct 2011
 
V.Sundramoorty


The Dazzler. The master winger. The famous bicycle-kick from yesteryears.

Singaporean fans will always remember V.Sundramoorthy as one of the most creative footballers of our time.

The man who we affectionately call ‘Coach Sundram’ has moved on from the player to take on a coaching role, as he passes on the wealth of knowledge he received in the past, onto younger players.

Brought in by the Football Association of Singapore as a Specialist Striker coach, Sundram will now take his place on the national team bench as an official for the first time in the FIFA World Cup Qualifier against Jordan on 11 September 2011, as Assistant Coach, to help motivate and deliver instructions to players in light of head coach, Radojko Avramovic’s four-match suspension.

Armed with a glass of coffee in one hand, coach Sundram smiled and said: “We are talking about the Singapore national team here. And any Singaporean will be proud to be part of the team, be it as an official or as a player. I just want to go out there and help the team in any way that I can.

“In training, as a coach you prepare the boys for the next game and you are there to make sure that they understand and follow the plan. During the game, if the players have gone all out and played their best according to instructions, you cannot ask for more.”

With two games out of the way in Group A and no points on the board, the players as well as coaches know the significance of this Jordan match. Coach Sundram is calm about being on the bench and will stay focused to provide that stability needed to keep the players minds on the game.

He added: “I have been a player before, sometimes in matches, you can lose a slight moment of tactical focus and my job as a coach is to remind and get them to concentrate throughout the 90 minutes. I am not the kind of coach who can sit down and watch the match go by. I tend to stand in the dugout and analyze the action and see if the plan is working. If not, then I will make changes along the way.”

Asked about the working relationship between him and coach Raddy, Sundramoorthy was full of praise for the Serb but also insists that he will be ready to use his experience to ensure Avramovic’s tactics are carried out accurately.

With a serious look on his face, coach Sundram said: “Basically I have been working with Raddy for a couple of years now, in different ways. He is a very well prepared and knowledgable coach who makes sure of every single detail. He prepares the players in detail before every game and that will be the same for the upcoming matches. As for me, my role is to ensure that the players follow the tactical instructions given.”

“To have qualified for the third round for a second time in a row is a good achievement. This has and will provide the boys with even more matches against quality opposition in a competitive environment to gain exposure and experience at this level.”

The Lions will need to show up and deliver a masterclass performance against a strong Jordan side. Can Sundramoorthy be the lucky charm for them as he takes his seat in the national team dugout for the first time?

Singapore U-23 claim last gasp win over Thailand U-23 in a pulsating encounter

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Date: Tue, 11 Oct 2011
 
Singapore U23

It was billed as a pre-tournament friendly which will show which team will go into the 2011 SEA Games as hot favourites for the gold medal. Choa Chu Kang Stadium was the venue, 7.30pm was the time. Once the referee blew the whistle to kick off proceedings, it was all guns blazing.

It took the Young Lions just 25 seconds to signal their intentions with Hafiz Sujad getting the first goal with virtually the first shot of the match. Capitalising on the early lead, The Singapore U-23 team surged forward in search of a second goal but were left to rue their luck when Thailand equalized through an Isarapong Lilakorn-inspired goal in the 35th minute.

The Young Lions continued their push for glory and were duly rewarded in the 41st minute when Fazli Ayob tapped in his team’s second goal after receiving a brilliant through pass from teammate Gabriel Quak.  The Young Lions went into the the break with a good lead whereas the Thailand U23 had to rethink their game plan. Coming out for the second half, the Thai were the better team as captain Ronnachai Rangsiyo led them in a bid to level the score. Rangsiyo’s industry was duly rewarded in the 70th minute when he found the back of the net to put the score evenly balanced at 2-2.

New legs were introduced by both sides to gain the upper hand as the clock ticked away. Fortunately, both custodians kept the ball out of their nets with tremendous displays of goalkeeping.

But it was the Young Lions who prevailed as substitute Shahfiq Ghani scored with a stunning shot that curled its way into the Thai net to seal the win in the 91st minute.

Speaking to at the post-match press conference, Head Coach Solbodan Pavkoic said “I am happy with the performance of all the players. It was important for us to see how we fare on the international stage. I am happy with the result.”

When asked which player impressed him the most, he confidently said “It will be unfair to say that as the team played well. Credit to all of them. And we work on a long period of fighting spirit and winning mentality, and it is not easy, you know. As a team, we improved.”

Final Score: Singapore U23 3-2 Thailand U23

Singapore U-23 Starting Line-up:Fazli Ayob (Fadhil Noh, 67th), Shahir Hamzah (Gary Loo, 83rd), Faris Ramli (Nigel Vanu, 67th), Hafiz Abu Sujad (Shahfiq Ghani, 75th), Irwan Shah (C) (Ali Hudzaifi, 84th), Raihan Rahman (Safirul Sulaiman, 75th), Gabriel Quak (Nazrul Nazari, 67th), Firdaus Kasman (Fairoz Hasan, 75th), Jasper Chan (Syazwan Buhari, 83rd), Al-Qaasimy Rahman (Yasir Hanapi, 84th), Abdul Hadi (Emmeric Ong, 84th)

Thailand U-23 Starting Line-up: Seeket Madputeh (Wasan Homsaen, 58th), Chalermkiat Boonnet, Sarach Yooyen, Ronnachai Rangsiyo (C), Isarapong Lilakorn, Natarid Thammarossopon (Adisak Kraisorn, 60th), Sutjarit Jantakol (Ekkasit Chaobut, 58th) (Anusak Laosangthai, 86th), Pokklaw A-Nan (N. Arromsawa, 59th), Somphong Yod-Ard, Komkrit Comsokcheak (Chalermsak Kaewsooktae, 59th), Phonlawut Donchui (Weerawut Kayem, 81st)

Monday, October 10, 2011

Surface tension in the Lions' den Jordanian coach Adnan unhappy with Jalan Besar pitch, but his team are in a confident mood

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Asian Zone World Cup qualifier, Group A

Singapore vs Jordan

SINGAPORE - Offering only a soft greeting, he walked right past everyone and onto the artificial turf at the Jalan Besar Stadium yesterday testing the surface with the soles of his feet.

Adnan Hamad's Jordan side had arrived on Friday but last night was their first taste of the arena which will stage their clash with Singapore tomorrow in their Group A World Cup qualifier.

He stopped in the middle of the park, hands akimbo and then look up at the stands.

It was clear Adnan was not a happy man.

Just like Iraq coach Zico, whose side came here and won 2-0 on Sept 6 in the Lions' previous qualifier, it was the plastic playing surface that was the source of Adnan's ire.

Speaking after putting his team through a 90-minute training session last night, he said: "For a national team playing in a Fifa World Cup qualifier you need a big stadium. And this field is not good for football.

From what I see, it will be difficult for us."

Adnan's charges did not look too bothered by the turf, though. The players were relaxed and comfortable on the ball. After wins over China and Iraq, they lead the group and goalkeeper Amer Shafia was confident of a good result tomorrow.

"We have pitches similar to this in Amman and we will be able to play on it. It is a good pitch," said Jordan's No 1, who played in the last two meetings between the teams.

"I'm confident that we can get a good result against Singapore."

Singapore beat Jordan 1-0 at the former National Stadium in 2009 but fell 2-1 in Amman in January last year, a result that saw the Middle Eastern outfit pip the Lions to a spot in the 2011 Asian Cup finals.

Tomorrow's match is a must-win fixture for Singapore after losing their opening two games.

Lions' coach Radojko Avramovic will serve the second of his four-match ban tomorrow, leaving assistant coach V Sundramoorthy to call the shots from the bench.

And "The Dazzler" was not convinced that the turf would be a big problem for Jordan, especially when there are artificial surfaces in Amman.

"It could be an advantage for us and if it is, we will take every advantage that we can get," he said.

Lions' defender Safuwan Baharudin was stretchered off in Friday's 2-0 friendly win over the Philippines but he appeared to get through a 90-minute training session just fine yesterday.

Said the 19-year-old: "I'm feeling okay but I'm scared to push myself. There are still two days to go and we'll see how I feel (today). "

But the hosts will have to do without the gifted Qiu Li and the Home United striker has been replaced by Courts Young Lions' Khairul Nizam.

Jordan have a full squad, and despite his complaints about the playing surface, coach Adnan said: "We are now on top of the group after two wins that have given us confidence. We hope to get a good result ... and go through (to the next round)."

Singapore vs Jordan Match Preview

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Date: Mon, 10 Oct 2011
 


The time has come where Singapore’s dream of making it to the next round of the World Cup qualifiers, could prove to be over at the final whistle. But knowing the Lions, they will never back down without a fight.

After two rounds of FIFA World Cup Asian Qualifiers in Group A, Jordan are perched comfortably at the top of the table with six points while Singapore are stuck at the bottom with no points.

Jordan started their campaign with a 2-0 win in Iraq before grinding out a 2-1 win at home to China.

The Lions on the other hand kickstarted their campaign with a painful 2-1 loss in Kunming China before Iraq claimed all three points at the Jalan Besar Stadium on match day two.

With four games to go, Radojko Avramovic’s men have a tough road ahead of them and a win at home over Jordan will be a much needed boost in the arm for the Lions.

Avramovic’s biggest problem is in midfield with the suspension of Mustafic Fahrudin, a huge loss for the home side but the return of Hariss Harun has somehow levelled the playing field.

Since the home loss to Iraq, Singapore has claimed consecutive wins against the Selangor Selection side before following that result up with a 2-0 win in an international friendly against the Philippines.

In both games, Avramovic tinkered with his central midfield options between Isa Halim, Shi Jia Yi, Noh Rahman and Hariss.

With ‘magic toes’ Qiu Li out through a knee injury, it seems like Geylang United winger, Hafiz Rahim will get the nod to start on the right while Fazrul Nawaz will roam the left-side of the pitch.

Spearheading the Lions’ attack will be 41-year-old goal-scoring machine, Aleksandar Duric while captain Shahril Ishak is likely to occupy ‘the hole’ while being given license to roam and find that killer pass to split the visitors’ defence.

On the opposite side of the pitch, head coach Adnan Hamad will be confident of claiming his third victory in a row to continue their stay at the top of the table.

A lot will depend on Amer Khalil who has been in great form for the Jordanians and he even found the back of the net against China.

Hamad is not known to be a fan of surprises and he has always relied on continuity as he continues to put faith in the 23 players he has selected.

With a top vs bottom clash awaiting the fans at Jalan Besar Stadium, will it be the start of a charge up the table by the Lions or will Jordan continue to dominate proceedings in Group A and realize their World Cup dream?

Saturday, October 8, 2011

Versatile Lions stand tall Hariss and Shahril shine, Avramovic pleased with team's progress ahead of Jordan clash

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Football friendly

Singapore 2 Philippines 0



SINGAPORE - There were doubts over his match fitness and ability to stay sharp throughout the 90 minutes, after missing two months of football due to National Service commitments.

But Hariss Harun proved he could still produce the goods even when played out of position, as he helped Singapore post a 2-0 win over the Philippines in a friendly last night at the Jalan Besar Stadium.

"I didn't expect him to last 90 minutes, but the game gave us the answer to that," said Singapore coach Radojko Avramovic, who was pleased with the performance.

"When he was in midfield you could see that he was (lacking) games, but in the stopper position he did extremely well.

"He did much better than what we expected, and I hope he gains more confidence ... I'm happy that I have a player that can play in two positions," added the Serb.

Hariss, 20, moved to central defence after Safuwan Baharudin pulled up with an injury two minutes before half-time.

With doubts cast over the availability of the 19-year-old defender for the must-win World Cup qualifier with Jordan on Tuesday, Hariss' return could not have come at a better time.

Safuwan's exit saw veteran Noh Rahman introduced to the Lions' midfield, with Hariss dropping into defence.

Singapore have lost their first two World Cup qualifying fixtures in Group A, to China and Iraq, and will go up against a Jordan side regarded as the best team in the pool.

Avramovic remained hopeful, taking heart from the attacking performance of his side in the second half.

"In the first half the attack was cut off in the midfield, and we couldn't keep possession in the opponent's half, and when you can't keep possession in the opponent's half you can't create chances. But when we changed the position of two or three players the team looked better," said the 61-year-old.

In attack it was skipper Shahril Ishak who stood out for the home side. He played key roles in both Singapore goals; it was his short corner that set up Shaiful Esah for the latter's opener in the 51st minute, and his smart pass to release Shahdan Sulaiman on the break led to Aleksandar Duric's goal in the 65th min.

From the left attacking midfield position to the centre and even taking over the main striker's role from Duric, Shahril proved his mettle across the park.

"During the game we changed Shahril in three positions, and he did well in all those positions, and that's good. It's important for me that (all of the players) are trying," said Avramovic.

And looking ahead to the crunch game next week, he added: "There has been continuity after the (Sultan of Selangor's Cup win) in Malaysia, these have been two excellent games and I hope it gives us more confidence and more belief in ourselves for the game against Jordan."

Lions erase 2010 memories with 2-0 win over Philippines

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Date: Sat, 08 Oct 2011




Singapore beat Philippines 2-0 in an International friendly that was played at Jalan Besar Stadium on 7 October 2011.

A match that was aimed as a preparation tune-up to Tuesday’s crucial FIFA World Cup Third Round qualifying campaign, proved to be something else altogether when the referee signaled the kick-off.

Both teams were raring to showcase their passing game from the get-go and it showed as the match progressed by the minute. Philippines got the honors of having the first shot at goal from striker Angel Guirado.

They almost took the lead in the 14 th minute but the linesman waved his flag for an offside call. It was Singapore’s turn to go on the offensive as they created chance after chance before Shi Jia Yi rifled the first genuine chance for the Lions in the 33rd minute which proved to be a routine catch for Philippines Custodian, Neil Etheridge.

The first half came to an end with both teams still on level terms and coach Radojko Avramovic made the changes as expected with Izwan Mahbud coming on for Lionel Lewis in goal.

If the first-half was a game of few chances, the second-half was a different ball game altogether. Both teams were all out to attack and the home side were duly rewarded in the 51st minute with a brilliant goal from Shaiful Esah after his shot was deflected into the net by a Filipino defender.

Philippines responded with two shots in quick succession in the 52nd minute but Izwan was on hand to produce two amazing saves.

As the clock ticked down, the Lions went on the rampage with captain Shahril Ishak darting in a powerful header which tested stopper Etheridge in the 61st minute before Aleksandar Duric doubled the advantage in the 65th minute after some good build-up play by the Lions.

Substitute, Shahdan Sulaiman laid off a well placed pass that split the Azkal’s defence to allow Duric an opportunity to put the ball into the bottom left corner.

Philippines became more offensive in search for a consolation goal as the match wore on while Singapore caught them offguard with a few counter-attacks through the likes of Hafiz Rahim and Jia Yi.

The match ended with a 2-0 scoreline for Singapore to give them a winning mentality, going into their crucial game against Jordan next Tuesday.

Speaking at the post-match press conference, Singapore Coach Radojko Avramovic said “I looked at this game as continuity from the two excellent matches against Malaysia, and I hoped that in this game, they will give us more confidence and belief in ourselves for the match against Jordan.’’

“It is always difficult when you try to make some changes. In the first half, our attacks were cut from midfield and we couldn’t keep possession in the opponent’s half. And when you can’t do that, you cannot create chances, we then changed the positions of a few players during the break, and the team looked a lot better.” He replied when asked what he said to his players who were different in the second half.

Coach Hans Weiss paid tribute his players who had to travel from Europe and other countries to play in this International Friendly. He added “They were tired and jet-lagged but they played well despite that fact. We were compact in the first half and played quite ok.”

Speaking on the first goal his team conceded, “I warned my players of Singapore’s set pieces as they have a few variations and we were punished by Singapore’s No.3 Shaiful Esah. But we had a couple of chances in the second half but it was not enough.”

“Singapore and Thailand are considered the best teams in the South East Asian region and we need more of such games to grow and become better. With time, we will only get stronger.”

Final Score: Singapore 2-0 Philippines

Goalscorers: Shaiful Esah 51’, Aleksander Duric 65’

Starting Line-up for Singapore: Lionel Lewis (Izwan Mahbud 45’), Safuwan Baharudin (Noh Rahman 45+3’), Shaiful Esah (Delwinder Singh 90+1’), Isa Halim (Hafiz Rahim 76’), Shi Jiayi, Aleksander Duric, Fazrul Nawaz (Shahdan Sulaiman 54’), Hariss Harun, Daniel Bennett, Shahril Ishak (C), Juma'at Jantan

Starting Line-up for Philippines: Neil Etheridge, James Younghusband, Dennis Cagara, Philip Younghusband, Alexander Borromeo (C), Angel Guirado (Ian Araneta 28’(Nathaniel Burkey 65’), Emelio Caligdong, Paul Mulders, Jerry Lucena, Jason De Jong, Ray Jonsson (Misagh Bahadoran 87’)

Friday, October 7, 2011

International Friendly Match Preview - Singapore vs Philippines

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Date: Fri, 07 Oct 2011
 
Singapore Lions 2011


One year ago, Singapore was held to a 1-1 draw by the Philippines national team at the 2010 AFF Suzuki Cup.

Fast forward to 2011, Radojko Avramovic’s Lions have been revamped into a good mix of youthfulness and experienced heads.Youngsters like Izwan Mahbud and Safuwan Baharudin have been blooded into the starting eleven and both have repaid coach Raddy’s faith with some stellar performances against the likes of Malaysia, China and Iraq in recent months.

Having secured a second consecutive outing in the third round of the FIFA World Cup Asian Zone Qualifiers after beating Malaysia over two-legs with an aggregate score of 6-4, the Lions were drawn into Group A alongside Asian powerhouses like China, Jordan and Iraq.

The first two matches of the campaign were halted by a 2-1 loss in Kunming to China, followed by a 2-0 loss at Jalan Besar Stadium to Zico’s Iraq team.

With a crucial third group game against Jordan coming up on 11 October, the Lions will take to the pitch on their home turf today against a Philippines team consisting of many players who ply their trade in the European world of football.

Coach Avramovic has recalled Singapore Armed Forces FC defender, Noh Rahman back into his side and coupled with the suspension of midfield general Mustafic Fahrudin and the return of Hariss Harun, the Serb tactician will have his hands full, tinkering with his possible central midfield partnership that looks like a tussle between Isa Halim, Hariss, Noh Rahman and Shi Jia Yi.

Upfront, evergreen hitman Aleksandar Duric looks likely to continue as the main offensive threat with the support of captain Shahril Ishak and Fazrul Nawaz. Home United forward Qiu Li will sit out the Philippines game in hope of returning injury-free for the decisive Jordan match next Tuesday.

Over on the other side, Philippines head coach Hans Michael Weiss will have the luxury of all his European-based players like Fulham goalkeeper, Neil Etheridge and Paul Mulders in his team.The Younghusband brothers who rose to prominence in the 2010 Suzuki Cup tournament will once again be out to prove that they have what it takes to cut it on the international level.

Coach Avramovic who spoke to the media at training on Thursday said: “This game is a good preparation for the boys ahead of the Jordan match. There are a few possible options in midfield and I will see what the best solution is. It is an important time for the team and the players will have to step up and try to secure the results in the remaining few games.”

Also in the limelight is Assistant coach, V.Sundramoorthy who will take the hot seat on the bench next Tuesday, to be the vocal point in Avramovic’s absence through suspension.He is undaunted by the huge task and is confident of getting the message across.

“It is an honour for any Singaporean to be on the national team, be it as an official or a player. My job is to ensure that the players focus and keep the tactics that coach Raddy has been putting them through in training. They have been training hard ahead of the friendly against Philippines and this match will help prepare the boys for the crucial game against Jordan next Tuesday.” said Sundram.

The match will kick off at 7.30pm at the Jalan Besar Stadium in front of a full capacity crowd.

Referee is Shukri Suhaizi from Malaysia.

'LIVE' telecast of the International Friendly between Singapore and Philippines

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Singapore Die hard fans
SINGAPORE, 6 October 2011: The Football Association of Singapore and Starhub have confirmed plans for the ‘LIVE’ telecast of the International Friendly between Singapore and Philippines that will be played at Jalan Besar Stadium, 7 October 2011 at 7.30pm.
‘Live’ Telecast Details
Date: Friday, 7th October 2011
Time: 7.30pm
‘Live’ on SuperSports Arena, Starhub Channel 201 

We thank you for your support! Majulah Singapura!!!!!

Prepare and prevent, don’t repair and repent

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October 7, 2011

In years past, they ruled arenas like these, asserting their dominance on the lush green stage, god-like gladiators performing for their adoring horde.

Brute physicality, grace and tactical acumen were always part of the spectacle then, but last Saturday night, their time on stage was sepia-tinted, moving photos reclaimed from a time-capsule.

After losing 3-1 to the Selangor veterans, in the curtain-raiser of the Sultan of Selangor’s Cup (SOS) last Saturday, the ex Singapore internationals walked one by one to the stands at the Shah Alam Stadium to witness the gladiators of today clash – their own descendents in the line of Lions.

It is these modern Lions who will return to famous arenas of the past in just three months, to do battle like it was done before in the Malaysia Cup, at Shah Alam and Alor Star, in Sarawak and Kota Bahru.

On Saturday, when the younger Lions got their first taste of that action in the 1-0 win over Selangor, those sitting in the stands were given a stark reminder of yesteryear, and the dark undertones that came hand in hand with nostalgic sepia.

A large plastic bottle was hurled from the home fans into the section where the travelling Singapore supporters were seated, striking a toddler who was perhaps tasting his first morsel of a Singapore side taking on a Malaysian state.

The incident, occurring some 10 minutes from the end of the second match on the night, was only scratching the surface of crowd violence buried under tons of fond memories of days gone by.

But it was no less abhorrent, especially considering the fixture was just a friendly encounter in honour of Selangor Sultan Sharafuddin Idris Shah, in celebration of his 10th anniversary of his reign in the Malaysian state.

The 50 or so Singapore fans were promptly escorted into a fenced up area at the grandstand clearly designated for the away crowd, but the five-foot fence hardly provided better defence against missiles.

The rest of the night passed without incident, but if alarm bells were not already clanging in the heads of officials in the Football Associations of Singapore and Malaysia, then gear up for trouble when the Malaysian Super League kicks off in January.

The fanatical fervor of football fans in Malaysia is much more seductive than the placid support seen at S-League stadiums, and the Singapore Lions players will swoon when performing in front of packed stadiums.

But they too will not be left unfettered, and Saturday provided reminder of that too.

Before a bottle was thrown at Singapore fans, one was hurled onto the pitch when Lions’ left back, Shaiful Esah was lining up a corner in the 35th minute, and credit to the player who ignored it and got on with the game.

But the signs are already clear.

Security must surely be high up on the agenda for organisers both sides of the Causeway.

From the constant cacophony of deafening noise inside the stadium, to the nasi lemak and watered down soft-drinks, and the less than sterile toilet facilities (a Shah Alam sink was grave to a wet bat!), this blog post was initially intended as a re-introduction to familiar Malaysia Cup scenes.

But other pictures unfortunately sprung to mind, on a day intended to nurture a friendly rivalry and celebrate a Sultan.

One ex international related a story of a coach who was hit on the head by a flying brick, and of team busses being pelted by stones, bits of wood and all manner of missiles; and of Singapore cars parked at stadium lots being vandalised.

Another old warrior spoke of travelling fans being sent to hospital after suffering similar fates.

These old gladiators survived those times, and now look back, somewhat fondly, to those crazy days.

But today, with the benefit of hindsight, the powers that be must ensure that security issues are addressed from the start, or risk making the same mistakes all over again.

Fans, players and coaches should have worn helmets, a breastplate and brought sturdy umbrellas along when travelling north for away fixtures said an ex Lion, laughing about the old days.

The hope is that his statement doesn’t become relevant again in 2012.

Veteran Lion to exorcise recent ghosts Bennett still remembers how tonight's opponents and Jordan derailed Singapore last year

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SINGAPORE - It was a draw with the Philippines that kicked off Singapore's humiliating run at the AFF Suzuki Cup last year. The three-time champions failed to even get past the opening group stage, a result that ultimately proved fatal for some of the Lions in the squad.

The 1-1 draw set in motion events that led to changes in the national squad, with several of the old guard losing their spot to younger players.

Singapore will face the Philippines tonight in their final warm-up match at the Jalan Besar Stadium, before a must-win third round, Group A World Cup qualifier against Jordan here on Tuesday.

Veteran defender Daniel Bennett (picture), who is the most capped player in the team with 101, is aiming for two wins.

Speaking to Today before the Lions' final training session at Jalan Besar yesterday, Bennett said: "These next two games we hope we can get good results. Wins are important, obviously, but we also want to win because of what happened in the past. We have something to prove against both teams."

In January last year, the Lions faced Jordan in Amman only needing a draw to qualify for the 2011 Asian Cup finals for the first time in Singapore football history.

They lost 2-1.

"It would have been the perfect thing if we had got that result to qualify for Asian Cup ... and they're (Jordan) to blame," Bennett said.

"We're to blame for that too, of course, but we want a result against them."

This time, the Lions need to beat Jordan to keep alive their slim hopes of advancing to the fourth round of the Asian Zone of qualifiers for the 2014 World Cup finals.

Radojko Avramovic's side lost their first two matches - 2-1 to China and 2-0 to Iraq - in the group and are desperate for a win.

The current Singapore team is much changed for the one that faced the Philippines and Jordan last year, and 33-year-old Bennett is best-placed to describe the latest version of the Lions.

"Last year, we had players on the bench who were just as experienced as those who were playing. It's very different now, but that's part of transition," he said.

"We play a more open game of football now. In the past ... we played a very defensive system where we did not expose ourselves so much ... now we have players who are able to get forward more so we're pressing forward a bit more than we're used to," he added.

The Philippines are no longer whipping boys in the region and Jordan will start the game on Tuesday as favourites despite playing away, but Bennett believes the Lions can pull off two wins.

"We must show the desire that we desperately want to win.

"Something was missing against Iraq and hopefully we find it against Jordan (and the Philippines)," he said.



Probable Singapore first XI

Izwan Mahbud, Juma'at Jantan, Daniel Bennett, Safuwan Baharudin, Shaiful Esah, Hariss Harun, Isa Halim, Shi Jiayi, Shahril Ishak, Fazrul Nawaz, Aleksandar Duric

Better late than never

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October 7, 2011



Earlier this week, the Football Association of Singapore (FAS) announced it would be expanding the seating capacity of the Jalan Besar Stadium from its current 6,000-capacity.

While no official figure was given as to what might be the new seating capacity, sources say it could be increased to about 8,000. The move to finally expand the stadium, belated it might be, is very much welcomed, particularly as Singapore does not have a mid-sized football stadium for international matches in the interim while we wait for the $1.33 billion Sports Hub to be ready by April 2014.

For a long time, the design of the present Jalan Besar Stadium seemed odd to many of us, particularly with the “emptiness” behind the two goals. We understand that a spectator stand will be built at the area next to the stadium’s south entrance, although I’m not sure if there will be another one at the northern end of the pitch as it is next to a swimming complex.

In any case, Jalan Besar Stadium has the ingredients to become a real football stadium, where fans can seat really close to the pitch and not be separated by a running track.

And what better way to welcome that news if the Singapore national side can beat the Philippines in Friday’s friendly there, although apart from getting a morale boosting result, I won’t be surprised if coach Radojko Avramovic chooses to use this match to give some of his fringe players, such as Fazrul Nawaz, Shukor Zailan and Hamqaamal Shah a run out to see how they react to certain formations and tactics in preparation for next Tuesday’s World Cup qualifier against Jordan, as well as a chance for Hariss Harun to get his rhythm back after spending the last couple of months out due to National Service commitments.

Qiu Li out

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POWER forward Qiu Li will not play in the international friendly against the Philippines tonight.
The more worrying news for the Lions is that the Home United striker is also highly likely to be ruled out of next Tuesday's World Cup qualifier against Jordan.

National football coach Raddy Avramovic confirmed this yesterday and revealed he could be calling up Courts Young Lions striker Khairul Nizam today to take Qiu Li's place in the squad ahead of the Jordan match.

More in The New Paper on Friday (Oct 7).

Wednesday, October 5, 2011

Singapore vs Philippines tickets SOLD OUT!

The tickets booth at Jalan Besar Stadium for the match Singapore vs Philippines are SOLD OUT!
Expect a full house for this Friday 7/10/10 match!
It is not sure whether the match will be telecast live on Channel 5.
For the Azkals fans out there, stay tune to our tweet https://www.twitter.com/SGfootball or Like on Facebook! Singapore Football for the updates of the match.
For Live Streaming of the match, details will be out soon.
Watch this space for further updates.


SGfootball

Young Lions target SEA Games final But it will be no easy task if they are drawn in a group with regional giants

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SINGAPORE - After bronze-medal showings in the last two editions of the SEA Games, a spot in the gold medal match is the target set for the Singapore under-23 football team at the Nov 11-22 Games in Indonesia.

But the Republic's Young Lions have their work cut out for them.

The SEA Games news Facebook page has released the groupings for the football competition, with Singapore lined up in Group B alongside regional giants Thailand, Vietnam, the Philippines and Cambodia.

Group A will see hosts Indonesia play Malaysia, Myanmar, Laos and Timor Leste.

The page has also released competition schedules of various sports including taekwondo and equestrian, information that is not yet available on the Games' official site.

While the Football Association of Singapore (FAS) have yet to receive official word of the draw from organisers, the grouping, if true, will indeed pose a challenge.

FAS technical director Slobodan Pavkovic will be the head coach at the Games, and speaking to Today he admitted as much: "The grouping is tough. Vietnam have a good under-23 team, and they will be difficult opponents for us ... and Thailand have a good team as well."

Pavkovic has just returned from Ho Chi Minh City where the under-23 side finished bottom in the four-team Eximbank Cup, losing all their games, including a close 2-1 defeat to the Vietnam team they will face at the Games.

"The boys who were there did well, but we went to Vietnam without 14 of our players, because of injuries, school and National Service commitments.

"If we have our key players, we can do something in Indonesia, but if we don't then we are in trouble, the target of a silver medal will be difficult to achieve," said Pavkovic.

The senior national team's continued participation in the FIFA World Cup qualifiers will have a big impact on what the Republic can achieve at the Games.

Four under-23 players - Hariss Harun, Safuwan Baharudin, Izwan Mahbud and Shahdan Sulaiman - are part of Radojko Avramovic's side, and are key figures in Pavkovic's team.

The Lions are staring at an early elimination after losing their opening two games to China and Iraq last month, but if they rescue their qualifying campaign by beating Jordan on Oct 11, then it is very likely the foursome will continue to stay with the senior side who have two fixtures in November (Nov 11, away to Jordan; Nov 15 hosting China), while the under-23s will be in the midst of the Games football tournament.

Said Pavkovic: "We are playing the Thailand under-23 team on Oct 10, and the picture will be clearer after that and the national team's match against Jordan on Oct 11."

Monday, October 3, 2011

Filip for Lions as Hariss Harun returns to training

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SINGAPORE - His presence has been sorely missed since he enlisted with the Singapore Police Force on Aug 10. His time in National Service has corresponded with two defeats for Singapore in the 2014 World Cup qualifiers.

But in a timely boost to Singapore's flailing Group A campaign, midfield star Hariss Harun has returned to training with Radojko Avramovic's squad.

He was at Jalan Besar Stadium for Monday's training session, which kicked off at 5.30pm, as the team prepared for their final warm-up fixture against the Philippines on Oct 7, before the must-win Group A tie against Jordan here four days later.

Singapore will miss midfielder Mustafic Fahrudin, who is suspended for the fixture, with 31-year-old veteran Noh Rahman recalled to the squad for the first time since December's poor showing at the AFF Suzuki Cup.

With two S-League fixtures on Monday night, only 19 players were present at training, including goalkeeper Hassan Sunny.

He has been in rehabilitation following a torn anterior cruciate ligament, but was fit enough to join the team on the pitch. Injured striker Qiu Li looks unlikely to feature against the Philippines, though.

The Home United star had sneakers on instead of boots, and was just walking across the length of the pitch.

Teenager Delwinder comes face-to-face with nostalgia

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Delwinder Singh was all of two years old when a Fandi Ahmad-inspired Singapore side demolished Pahang 4-0 and lifted the Malaysia Cup way back in 1994.

He has no personal memory of that match, much less any of Singapore’s much-told epic battles with many a Malaysian state team, including the famed rivalry with Selangor in a Malaysia Cup era that, for the Lions, came to an abrupt end weeks after that night at Shah Alam Stadium.

It was in memory of that rivalry that the Sultan of Selangor’s Cup series was inaugurated about a decade ago, intended as an annual event to maintain the close ties across the Causeway and celebrate the talents of stars of yesteryear like Fandi, Samad Allapitchay and Soh Chin Aun.

But nostalgia is a concept that seems awkward to a generation that has nothing to reminisce, a generation which Delwinder, now a strapping 19-year-old and a player in this year’s Singapore Selection squad for the tenth edition of the Sultan of Selangor’s Cup, represents.

The Tanjong Pagar United defender is the baby of the Singapore contingent, eight months younger than Courts Young Lions centreback Safuwan Baharudin and over two decades behind Tampines Rovers coach Steven Tan, the youngest of this year’s Singapore Veterans at age 40.

Sitting down for an after-dinner interview on the eve of this year’s showpiece – appropriately enough at Shah Alam – he was forthright in showing how much of a blank canvas he was.

“I heard from my dad about it, but I was so young then, so even if I watched anything, I wouldn’t remember,” said Delwinder.

“I know this is a prestigious tournament, but I didn’t know the meaning of it. I had to ask my dad, who explained to me that the rivalry between the states was intense, and that every match between Singapore and Selangor had great crowds.

“All of that is second-hand knowledge to me, though. When I went through the National Football Academy, the lowest level I had played in was against Malaysia’s national age group teams, so I’ve never faced a state team before.

“Anyone like me will feel lost, like I was when I realised that all the other players and the Veterans know what this is all about. Players like me, the younger generation, we don’t really know what the meaning behind all of this is.”

Not only did Delwinder have no first-hand experience of the rivalries that very much made up the fabric of Singapore’s Malaysia Cup story, he also had no previous involvement in the Sultan of Selangor’s Cup, even as a spectator.

Furthermore, unlike the case for previous generations, many Singaporeans born in the last two decades would have little affinity with most of Malaysia, beyond the cheap grocery shopping at Johor Baru and beach resorts down the Malayan west coast.

Delwinder might be ignorant, but he was not content to stay that way. Curiosity on the subject led him to do some research, reading up and listening to people who had all sorts of stories to tell.

“Judging from what I heard from my dad and friends, and from what I read in articles, I now know how prestigious this is,” he said of his findings.

“When past S.League Selections and Singapore Selections went for this tournament, people around Singapore would know about it. So for me, it’s an honour to be part of all this at the age of 19.

“To don the colours of Singapore is already an honour. But to be at this prestigious tournament will always be a special memory and a lovely experience.

“It’s a complete first experience for me – I’ve seen pictures of past editions, but then they didn’t really speak much. Within my own age-group, I’ll be the first to go through this, and a very close friend was very happy for me when he knew I was called up for it.”

Incidentally, Delwinder had been in the country only a couple of months earlier, as a member of the Lions squad that had held Malaysia’s Tigers to a 1-1 draw at Bukit Jalil Stadium.

For a player still going through his maiden professional season in an S.League where match attendances have seldom pushed beyond 2,000 this year, getting exposed to a crowd 40 times that in his first international trip out of Singapore was, unsurprisingly, a jolt.

That was between two national teams, though, and Delwinder acknowledged that facing very much the same kind of attendance at the Sultan of Selangor’s Cup will leave quite an impression in his young mind.

“At first I thought that, even with all the prestige, it wouldn’t turn out like Bukit Jalil and its 85,000 crowd,” he remarked.

“But then, from what I learnt now, Shah Alam has an 80,000 capacity, and a lot of people told me it’ll be easily a full house tomorrow. Judging by what I saw at the stadium, it’s going to be an experience even though I might not be playing at all.

“Definitely I will be a bit nervous, but I cannot let it take over me. If I’m given a game and I let my nerves take over me, I’ll not have a good game and I’ll not enjoy the experience!”

The experience of playing against Selangor could become a regular one for Delwinder and other Generation Y tail-enders, following the July announcement that Singapore will field a team in the Malaysian Super League once more starting from the 2012 season.

Much of the reaction from the general public has fed on the memories of the older folk, many of whom are more than happy to bring back something they had plenty of emotional investment in, almost to the point of ritual in some cases.

Delwinder was aware of the huge responsibility such fans have placed upon the virgin shoulders of people like him, but he once again expressed his wish to get a proper chance to get a feel of things for himself should the chance indeed come for him.

Sunday, October 2, 2011

Selangor 0-1 Singapura | Piala Sultan Selangor 2011

Singapore Selection Side retains Sultan of Selangor Cup 2011

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Date: Sun, 02 Oct 2011
 

SINGAPORE, 1st October 2011: The main show of the Sultan of Selangor Cup 2011 saw the Singapore Selection side taking on the Selangor Selection which included the likes of guest players like Safee Sali, Jesper Blomqvist and Jason McAteer. The match was a highly anticipated one with the Shah Alam Stadium packed to capacity. 75,000 spectators filled the stadium and the occasion was also graced by dignitaries from a few Malaysian states, namely the Sultan of Selangor himself.

The match started off with both sides playing cautiously and passing the ball around and the first few minutes saw them testing each other out with shots from afar.

Selangor had an early scare in the fourth minute when a through ball from Singapore forward, Fazrul Nawaz found Aleksandar Duric. The 41 year old looked set on goal but Selangor’s keeper, Jeevanantaham was quick off his line to get to the ball first.

Selangor replied quickly a minute later when Malaysian striker, Safee Sali had a crack at goal. He pounced on a loose ball just outside the penalty box as the Singapore defence failed to close down on him, fortunately, his shot was straight at Singapore custodian, Lionel Lewis.

Geylang United striker, Hafiz Rahim then showed what he was made off with a shot from way out in the 18th minute. After spotting Selangor’s Jeevanantaham off his line, Hafiz decided to go for goal with a well-weighted lob but his attempt just sailed over the crossbar.

Selangor almost broke the deadlock a few minutes later after a mix-up in the Singapore defence. The back-four failed to clear the ball inside the penalty area and was almost punished but Amri Yahyah’s shot was blocked off once again by Lionel.

Singapore came close themselves in the 31st minute but Aleksandar Duric’s header was just wide off the post.
The Lions then wasted another chance to break the deadlock in the closing stages of the first half when once again, Duric had a great chance on goal. His one-on-one attempt was quickly closed down by the Selangor keeper and it was another chance gone begging.

The second half saw Izwan Mahbud, replacing Lionel Lewis in goal for the Lions.

Izwan was soon called back into action again in the 52nd minute, after a low ball was driven across the Singapore goal mouth to find Safee Sali unmarked. The shot from the marksmen caused Izwan to be at full stretch and the latter’s fingertips denied Selangor once again.

Singapore was next to test the abilities of Selangor’s keeper when a carefully placed shot that was goal-bound from substitute, Isa Halim was tipped over by Jeevanantaham.

Singapore then piled on the pressure for the next couple of minutes and was duly rewarded for their efforts in the 66th minute. A cross came in and attempts were made by the host’s backline but it ended up in the back of the net after a deflection from a defender.

With the lead in hand, Singapore continued in search for another goal that will see them seal the game.
After Selangor had a goal disallowed for hand-ball, Singapore played cautiously and knocked the ball around to run the clock down and retain the cup in front of their adoring traveling fans who were seen chanting and singing for the players even after the match.

Speaking of the game, coach Radojko Avramovic stated, “It was an intense game despite it being a friendly. It was a very good game of football and we will use it as an opportunity to try out some players in certain positions. This match was also a good preparation leading up to the upcoming international matches.”

The match ended with the Singapore Selection Side victorious and the Sultan of Selangor Cup, returning back to the trophy cabinet at Jalan Besar Stadium.

Final Score: Selangor Selection 0 – 1 Singapore Selection

Singapore Starting Line-up: Lionel Lewis (Izwan Mahbud 45’), Daniel Bennett, Safuwan Baharudin, Shaiful Esah, Juma’at Jantan, Shahril Ishak (C) (Shahdan Sulaiman 69’), Hafiz Rahim (Ruzaini Zainal 57’) (Ismail Yunos 73’), Shi Jiayi, Fazrul Nawaz, Aleksandar Duric, Noh Rahman (Isa Halim 57’).

Substitutes: Delwinder Singh, Ismail Yunos, Ruzaini Zainal, Izwan Mahbud, Hamqaamal Shah, Shahdan Sulaiman, Isa Halim

Selangor Strating Line-up: Razman Roslan, Asraruddin Omar, Safiq Rahim, Bunyamin Umar, P. Gunalan, Amri Yahyah (C) (Rudie Ramli 82'), Amirulhadi (Azidan Sarudin 88'), Jeevanantaham, Safee Sali (Fitri Shazwan 71'), Jason Mc Ateer (Nazri Ahmad 71'), Jesper Blomquist

Substitutes: Nazri Ahmad, Rudie Ramli, Hardi Jaafar, Yosri Derma Raju, Azidan Sarudin, D. Surendran, Iqbal Suhimi, Fadzil Saari, Fitri Shazwan.