Category: Hiburan

  • Sportshub Pte Ltd And Bernd Stange War Of Words Over Pitch Readiness And Ability To Attract Quality Opposition

    Sportshub Pte Ltd And Bernd Stange War Of Words Over Pitch Readiness And Ability To Attract Quality Opposition

    The Republic’s national head coach Bernd Stange has claimed it is very, very difficult to attract big teams to play them as long as the National Stadium’s pitch is not ready.

    However, his controversial comments have been refuted by the 55,000-seater arena’s operators SportsHub Pte Ltd, which reiterated that the issue is being addressed, and the later stages of June’s SEA Games football tournament and July’s Barclays Asia Trophy, both to be held there, will show the playing surface to be up to the mark.

    Stange’s remarks came when he was asked at yesterday’s pre-match press conference for Singapore’s friendly against Guam at the Jalan Besar Stadium tonight why the Lions, who are 153rd in FIFA’s world rankings, are playing a world No 167 side instead of a higher-ranked team that could provide a stiffer contest.

    “It’s very, very difficult to convince top-class teams to play at Jalan Besar Stadium,” said Stange, referring to the venue’s artificial turf.

    “All my promises I gave to bring teams over with my personal contacts to speak with (Iran coach Carlos) Queiroz, with (Russia coach) Fabio Capello and others depend on a ready Sports Hub.

    “Unfortunately, a lot of teams refuse to play Singapore on the artificial pitch. Even Japan refused to make training sessions here (at the Jalan Besar Stadium) before they played Brazil (at the National Stadium last year) … As long as the (National Stadium’s pitch at the) Sports Hub is not ready, we cannot attract big teams. I did everything, but it’s difficult to convince teams to play there.”

    The National Stadium’s Desso GrassMaster pitch — a mixture of natural grass woven onto synthetic fibres — cut up badly during Brazil’s match with Japan in October last year, prompting a re-scheduling of events to allow the pitch to recover for the ASEAN Football Federation (AFF) Suzuki Cup in November.

    In December, SportsHub Pte Ltd, which operates the 55,000-seater National Stadium, announced a lay-and-play turf would be used for this June’s SEA Games to ensure an optimal playing surface.

    In response to Stange’s comments, SportsHub Pte Ltd’s senior director (corporate communications and stakeholder management) Jose Raymond said about the lay-and-play pitch: “Work has been ongoing and has been progressing very well, and will be implemented in time for the SEA Games in June.

    “The Barclays Asia Trophy, which will be held for the first time in Singapore, will involve top English Premiership sides Arsenal, Everton and Stoke City at the National Stadium in July. We look forward to having these world-class teams play at the National Stadium.

    “FIFA dates have been confirmed for the next three years till 2017. We have been engaging the Football Association of Singapore and we look forward to hearing their plans, and working with them to bring world-class international football teams to the National Stadium for the benefit of our football fans.”

    Singapore head into their first meeting with Guam on the back of last week’s 2-0 loss to Thailand, and a win will ease some pressure following their disappointing group stage exit at last November’s Suzuki Cup.

    Guam are without Los Angeles Galaxy defender Adolph Joseph DeLaGarza, but head coach Gary White insists they are not here to make up the numbers.

    “In the past two-and-half years, we’ve installed a belief to play football, rather than just sit back and hope for the best and keep the scores the low,” he said.

    Singapore will be without centre-back Afiq Yunos, who is out for three months with a knee injury, while goalkeeper Hassan Sunny, defenders Baihakki Khaizan and Madhu Mohana, and attacking midfielder Shahril Ishak remain doubtful.

    Nonetheless, Stange insisted he will field his strongest available line-up. “It’s a home game, we are responsible for our fans,” he said. “Hopefully we have fans to see this match against a team that is better than everyone believes.”

    Singapore midfielder Hariss Harun added: “Lapses in our focus cost us the two goals (against Thailand last week). We also need to get into positions to score goals. We get chances but don’t put them away.”

     

    Source: www.todayonline.com

  • Aaron Aziz: I Want To Give Artistes The Break They Never Had

    Aaron Aziz: I Want To Give Artistes The Break They Never Had

    Aaron Aziz is glad that Singapore hasn’t forgotten him, because he hasn’t forgotten Singapore. This week, the actor and producer returns to MediaCorp TV Channel 5 to star in the new sitcom Meet The MP as Danial Razali, a newly elected Member of Parliament (MP) clearly out of his depth among the quirky residents of his constituency. The show also stars Oon Shu An, R Chandra and Zhu Mimi.

    Having spent the past decade growing his career in Malaysia, the 39-year-old jumps at opportunities to work here, as well as to use his influence to help other Singaporean entertainers expand their market. And for him, spending time here is always nostalgic.

    “It felt so good to be back. I’m just happy that I’m not totally forgotten,” he said.

    Far from it — even his original fan club is still intact. “They are still friends,” he revealed. “Back then, they were still in school. Some of them are now married with kids and hold professional jobs.”

    Neither has he forgotten his pre-movie-star years. Shooting Meet The MP in Housing and Development Board estates brought back lots of memories for Aaron (“we don’t have those kinds of blocks in Malaysia”), especially of the time he spent working on four seasons of the popular police TV series Heartlanders. He would reminisce: “I used to wait at this spot for cabs. This is where I used to play soccer. I used to run behind that block and steal Vincent’s perfume! Vincent Ng always brought his perfume everywhere.”

    “Danial in Meet The MP — I see the real me in him. He’s here, but he’s not really here. He has been missing out on so much and things are just not how they used to be. They don’t run things like how they used to. That’s where I feel I am right now.”

    Over in Malaysia, he said, things can get a little crazy. “It’s work, work, work — I don’t even have time to have flashbacks — old memories, sweet memories. Everything’s all about the future and, ‘Let’s do more, do more.’ But I don’t want to forget the past.”

    When one returns home after years abroad, even the disappearance of one’s favourite cafe can be rather symbolic. “There used to be a Delifrance at Wisma Atria. Is it still called Wisma? That was my spot,” Aaron recalled. “I would just sit there, especially during the Christmas season when Orchard Road was lit up, have a cup of coffee, and just look at people having nice conversations. I want to do that again — but I can’t. Where is my Delifrance?”

    He laughed: “I hope this is not some kind of turning-40 syndrome.”

    GIVING PEOPLE WHAT THEY NEVER HAD

    With the big 4-0 looming next year, Aaron doesn’t know if he’s feeling a crisis coming on. The only thing he’s sure of is that he has changed.

    “I just don’t see myself being angry any more,” he said. “I used to be someone who, for example, if I saw a dad spanking a child in public, I would want to go to the dad and smack him back. But now, I would go to the child and pacify him, then the father. I’ve gone in that direction: I’m not going to give you back what you’ve given to other people — I’m just going to give them what they’ve never had.”

    That’s why he feels it’s important for him to do his part for other Singaporeans looking for their big break. “I’ve always wanted for my fellow countrymen who are in the industry to expand their horizons. I want them to soar,” he said. “Knowing that some Malay actors here have not even done film — how sad does that sound? That’s why, whenever a director or producer in Malaysia says, ‘Aaron, do you know any new faces?’ I call my Singaporean friends. Like the MP, I have connections!”

    Some Singaporean names who owe their success across the Causeway to him are actors Adi Putra, Shah Iskandar and Suhaila Salam; stylist Fatimah Mohsin; and hip-hop duo Sleeq, whom he manages. “I always tell (Sleeq), ‘You come to Malaysia already sorted — you have a car and a manager’. I came here with nothing. I learnt the hard way,” he said. “I tell them, ‘Don’t ever stop working hard and don’t change.’

    “The problem with youngsters these days is that after they’ve been in the industry for two years and they get popular, they turn diva. You’re killing your own career. I say, ‘Don’t come to Malaysia and be a diva and make people start to hate Singaporean actors.’ There is a lot of damage repair that I’ve done (for the reputation of Singaporean actors in Malaysia), so don’t go f*** it up. When I do meet these people, I give them my two cents’ worth. They just need to stop thinking that once you’re up, you can never go down. No way, man.”

    ‘I’M LIKE JENGA’

    There’s no doubt that Aaron himself is still “up” there and influential. But the idea of going into politics for real cracks him up. “I’d make a screwed-up MP,” he laughed. “I would not run the place properly. We would have chewing gum back. Let’s have chewing gum back! You need to chew your misery away!”

    However, there’s one aspect in which he would make a good candidate for political office: He’s famously scandal-free, although he isn’t so sure that’s a plus point. “There’s a danger there, you know. I’m like Jenga. They’re just waiting for me to drop one brick, so they can see me tumbling down,” he said. “It doesn’t stress me because I don’t see the need to go in that direction, but because they are waiting for the slightest mistake, the dumbest thing can be made into an issue.

    “Come on, find something else to talk about instead of writing rubbish, lah.”

    He can think of another reason not to run for office: “People wouldn’t take me seriously.” In fact, people already don’t take him for who he is. The reason being that he has done so well in two genres – romantic comedies such as Ombak Rindu and action flicks such as KL Gangster. His image in people’s minds is either that of the romantic hero or the tough guy.

    “Some people see me as loving husband and father: ‘Aaron, you cannot fight. You have to do love scenes.’ Other people are like, ‘No! You have to do action!’ So, no one is going to take me seriously, because no one takes me for who I am. They think I am the person they see onscreen. I’ve become – I don’t know what you call it – a product, or whatever.”

    The real Aaron Aziz, he said, is a bit of both the lover and the fighter. “Some actors tell me they get carried away because they just don’t know how to get out of their character, even after the show is done. I say, ‘Bulls***.’ You get cast because they see something that is you in the character. If everybody could act in that role, they wouldn’t have to do casting,” he stated.

    Going forward, there’s nothing he would like more than to break out of those two stereotypes, although that may take some time to achieve: He’s going to start shooting another romantic film soon. “I used to do roles that people want. I don’t want to do that any more. I want to do roles that I’ve never even given myself the opportunity to like or dislike,” he said. “It has always been, ‘You should and you must. You did too many love stories; let’s do action. Oh, too much action — let’s do a love story.’ There has been a whole team planning what to do with my life. Now, I want to do what I want.”

    And what does he want? “I want to play a character based on a factual event,” he said. “But not as someone famous. Someone nobody even knows about until you learn about him, like the guy who walked 50km to work in the United States every day until somebody gave him a car. Characters that make you think, ‘My gosh, I didn’t know this kind of suffering existed.’”

     

    Source: www.todayonline.com

  • Bernd Stange Will Be Offered A New Contract By FAS

    Bernd Stange Will Be Offered A New Contract By FAS

    The future of Singapore national coach Bernd Stange has been the subject of much speculation after Singapore’s unsuccessful defence of their ASEAN Football Federation (AFF) Suzuki Cup title on home soil last November.

    But in the biggest indication yet that the German will be offered a new contract, Football Association of Singapore (FAS) President Zainudin Nordin said Stange’s work has been positive for the local game since he was recruited in May 2013. More specifically, he has injected new life into the Lions with younger players, upping their technical skills and guided younger coaches.

    Zainudin was speaking to TODAY after the launch of PlayPal yesterday, a local app that helps football enthusiasts search for players and locate places they can get together for kickabouts.

    After Singapore failed to reach their semi-final target in the AFF Suzuki Cup, the FAS announced on Dec 29 that Stange’s two-year contract, which was to have originally expired in May, had been extended until after the SEA Games.

    This is to allow the 67-year-old to guide national under-23 coach Aide Iskandar at the biennial event, which Singapore will host from Jun 5 to 16. TODAY understands the FAS is likely to enter talks with him on a two-year extension to his existing deal.

    Pointing to the target the FAS gave Stange when hiring him in 2013, Zainudin said: “The KPI (key performance indicators) we set for Bernd is very simple: Focus on revitalising the team, which he has done and a lot of players have been brought into the team, improving technical expertise and guiding young coaches such as Fandi, Aide and Richard Bok.

    “If you ask me, I am very clear that the objectives and the work he has done have been very positive for Singapore football and we need to look at this from a more holistic perspective in moving on subsequently.”

    NO “KNEE-JERK” REACTION FOR “RESPONSIBLE” FAS

    Last year’s AFF Suzuki Cup was the first major senior international tournament for Stange as Singapore coach, but the Lions did not get past the group stage after losses to Thailand and Malaysia. There were calls for Stange to step down, while the FAS also came under fire in the aftermath of the exit.

    But Zainudin stressed that as a “responsible organisation”, the FAS could not resort to a “knee-jerk” reaction.

    “People were also asking for Raddy’s (former national coach Radojko Avramovic) head in 2010, after Singapore also failed to get past the AFF group stage,” he said. “This is not our style; we don’t hire and fire people for one tournament because we have a role for Bernd to play and there are KPIs for him to meet and I think this is how we should handle human resource.”

    Since the tournament, Stange has kept a low profile, but even if the FAS is extending its hand for a new deal, it needs his nod to continue their partnership.

    “That is his choice, but we believe we need to sit down subsequently to see what more can be done,” said Zainudin.

    “Now, he has a duty to carry on until after the SEA Games is over and we have to make sure we respect this. Bernd is still with us and it is important to give him the stability and ensure he is able to do his job well.”

     

    Source: www.channelnewsasia.com

  • Arif Dollah: I Did Not Sexually Abuse Sufie Rashid And Tegar Septian

    Arif Dollah: I Did Not Sexually Abuse Sufie Rashid And Tegar Septian

    The Singaporean former manager of Indonesian child singer Tegar Septian has been accused of sexually abusing the 13-year-old boy while they were in Malaysia for shows from last November to January this year.

    Following the allegations at a press conference in Indonesia on Wednesday, a police report was made against Mr Arif Dollah, 30. He had allegedly made Tegar sleep in his underwear while sharing a bed with him and would accompany him to the bathroom for showers.

    In a twist, local singer Sufie Rashid, 24, also came forward to accuse Mr Arif of sexually abusing him for about a year when he was 13. Mr Arif was in a relationship with Sufie’s mother at the time.

    Sufie told The New Paper he decided to end his silence after all these years as he wanted to help Tegar. He made a police report in Singapore last month.

    When contacted by TNP, Mr Arif strongly denied the allegations made against him by Tegar and Sufie.

    In Tegar’s case, he said the boy was forced to make the allegations because “someone was unhappy with him”.

    “It’s simple – all this is a plot to bring me down. The stories are made up,” he said.

    As for Sufie, Mr Arif said: “It is possibly a tactical move to further his career overseas.”

     

    Source: www.tnp.sg

  • Safuwan Baharudin Scores, Not Enough To Avoid Defeat To Western Sydney Wanderers

    Safuwan Baharudin Scores, Not Enough To Avoid Defeat To Western Sydney Wanderers

    It all seemed promising for Safuwan Baharudin 30 minutes into his team’s A-League clash with reigning Asian club champions Western Sydney Wanderers at the Pirtek Stadium in Sydney yesterday.

    The 23-year-old Singapore football star struck a classic poacher’s goal for Melbourne City when he nodded in a 28th-minute header past ex-Liverpool reserve goalkeeper Dean Bouzanis — his second goal for the club since joining on a three-month loan last month.

    But it went downhill for Safuwan and City after that, as they ended up losing 3-2 after conceding two late goals.

    Worse, Safuwan, who played the whole 90 minutes, is now a doubt for City’s next game because of a head injury.

     

    Source: www.tnp.sg