Tag: FAS

  • Quah Kim Song Opens Up About Girlfriend, Sylvia Lim

    Quah Kim Song Opens Up About Girlfriend, Sylvia Lim

    To many, it is an unusual relationship, astonishing even.

    He is a former footballer, and she, an opposition politician.

    He prefers privacy and she cannot avoid public scrutiny.

    Quah Kim Song, a widower, is a grandfather. Sylvia Lim has never been married.

    He is 63 and she, 50.

    Both are celebrities in their own right.

    His is a household name, famous for being fleet-footed and light on his feet.

    She draws thousands as a speaker at Workers’ Party (WP) election rallies. Her speeches draw roars of approval from supporters and ridicule from detractors.

    Defending her Aljunied GRC seat against the People’s Action Party (PAP), she is in the driver’s seat of her party’s political ambitions.

    And he is her personal chauffeur.

    Who would have expected them to be an item?

    He was a bright student at Naval Base Secondary School and Raffles Institution, but he devoted his energy to football after his A levels.

    The Manchester City fan held several corporate jobs before retiring early.

    Ms Lim – politician, lawyer and academic – had her early education at CHIJ Our Lady of Good Counsel, CHIJ St Joseph’s Convent and National Junior College.

    She graduated with a law degree and was called to the Bar in Singapore in 1991. She is a senior associate with Peter Low LLC.

    Ms Lim was not a sportswoman, but she enjoys watching sport.

    And Quah, from a famous footballing family, was once one of Singapore’s biggest stars.

    It has been more than two years since they met and, as Quah says: “We are very happy just going with the flow without any preconceptions about what the future might bring.”

    Ms Lim, the WP chairman since 2003, adds: “As both of us are not spring chickens, we accept each other totally and do not change the other.”

    Quah, who had to be persuaded to grant this interview, was put in the spotlight when Ms Lim, who has been extremely busy with the hustings, revealed at a rally that Quah “will act as her driver, ferrying her to rally sites and other places”.

    Quah says he enjoys doing that, adding: “When people see us, they do come up to say ‘hello’ or take pictures with us.

    “I must say that the police at the rallies have been quite nice to me.”

    Quah’s chauffeuring job is a way for them to see each other during the election campaign period, when Ms Lim is swamped with party matters.

    The affable Quah loves watching the rallies, but prefers to be low-profile, usually standing behind the stage but inside the barricades.

    FAS ISSUE

    The talk about town is that Quah encouraged Ms Lim to raise the issue of the Football Association of Singapore being run by PAP Members of Parliament, a move she said had stifled Singapore football.

    To that, Ms Lim replies: “No, he did not alert me. I have raised the issue of Singapore soccer slipping down the Fifa rankings in Parliament before I met Kim Song.

    “In the Workers’ Party manifesto in 2011 and earlier, we had already proposed that sports associations be led by persons from the fraternity (rather) than by politicians.”

    So what is it that attracts the star footballer, who speaks with a measured, soft tone, to the steely politician who is often known for making fiery speeches?

    The answer: Common interests in music and football.

    It was in January 2013 at a WP variety concert that love between the two blossomed.

    Mutual friends had coaxed Quah to sing and his rendition of Keith Locke & The Quests’ Don’t Play That Song impressed Miss Lim.

    Later, they danced on stage. A new romance was born.

    Quah, who loves the oldies and lists American icon James Taylor as his favourite singer, says: “I practise the guitar every day to familiarise myself with the chords to widen my repertoire.

    “I also have a guitar at Sylvia’s family home. We enjoy listening to live music and occasionally sing at home over some drinks.”

    These sessions help Ms Lim relax from the stress that comes with politics.

    She, too, enjoys the oldies and is a big fan of US singer-songwriter Carole King.

    As for their other passion, football, Ms Lim would make it a point to attend social matches when Quah is playing. He remains a drawcard among fanatical fans.

    Recently, at a social match at the Marina Floating Platform, Ms Lim made her presence felt by cheering for Quah’s team.

    Hers is not a new craze. She watched Quah during his heyday at the National Stadium, accompanying her brother Arthur to Malaysia Cup matches.

    So what is life like away from the heat of the hustings?

    “I am a retiree, so I have more freedom with my time. Sylvia is a busy person, so we occupy different time slots,” adds the grandfather of twins Renee and Ryan, three, from his daughter Leonora, 31.

    Quah, who was married to Madam Shirley Wang, a bank manager with OCBC, also has a son, Leon, 35, who is married but has no children. Madam Wang died of cancer in 2007.

    Quah adds that Ms Lim has a special relationship with his children and siblings and “she joins social gatherings involving my children, and my brothers and sisters”.

    When he was once asked how he feels about dating one of Singapore’s most prominent women politicians, Quah replied: “I know her as Sylvia Lim, and not Sylvia Lim, chairman of Workers’ Party.”

    For him, more importantly: “We are enjoying our time together and hope to be together for a long time.”

    But no, while they are a “couple”, marriage is far from their minds.

    In a newspaper interview recently, Ms Lim said: “People do ask us when we’re getting married. But we have discussed this and he’s already a grandfather.

    “We’re enjoying our relationship as it is now, so we have no plans to get married at this point.”

     

    Source: www.tnp.sg

  • Zainudin Nordin Steps Down To Spend Time With Family

    Zainudin Nordin Steps Down To Spend Time With Family

    Citing the desire to spend more time with their loved ones, two People’s Action Party (PAP) backbenchers from the Bishan-Toa Payoh Group Representation Constituency — including one who is known for not shying away from controversial topics — will be stepping down.

    Speaking at a press conference to unveil the PAP candidates for the coming General Election, Mr Zainudin Nordin, 52, who entered politics in 2001, and Mr Hri Kumar Nair, 49, who had served two terms in office, said they will be making way for new blood.

    Mr Hri Kumar said that he had to relook his priorities after his wife was diagnosed with lymphoma in 2012 and underwent chemotherapy.

    While she is “doing well” currently, Mr Hri Kumar noted that the condition is something that would not go away. “(Her illness) has sort of propelled me to rethink how I would spend my time and what my priorities are,” he said.

    He also hopes to have more time with his eight-year-old daughter. “She’s a great little girl, I’m looking forward to spending more time at home annoying her, that’s what she accuses me again all the time,” he joked.

    Recounting his time in office, he said he was glad to have had the opportunity to raise issues in Parliament. “I’ve never held back, I think the ministers don’t always agree with me, but they have always respected my right to speak up and to say what I want to say, I think that’s important,” he added.

    Mr Hri Kumar, who is currently the chairman of Bishan-Toa Payoh Town Council, also heads the Government Parliamentary Committees for law and home affairs.

    Speaking to TODAY, Mr Hri Kumar said he was proud that during his tenure as an MP, he did not shun from speaking about lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) issues, for instance, and voicing his disagreement with the National Library Board’s decision to pulp three children’s books deemed to contravene pro-family values.

    Among other things, he had also suggested the idea of a National Defence tax on permanent residents and foreigners, and abolishing the Primary School Leaving Examination.

    “But I’m not afraid of saying these things and asking people to debate and consider them,” he said.

    For Mr Zainudin, who will also be stepping down as the president of the Football Association of Singapore later this year, the “time is right” for him to focus on his family, he said.

    The former Mayor of the Central Community Development Council added that as an MP, there would always be a desire to do more. Nevertheless, he felt he has contributed by speaking up for low-wage workers. He also recalled that in his maiden Parliamentary speech, he spoke about the need for the Government to do more in early childhood education.

    At the municipal level, Mr Zainudin said his proudest project was setting up the Bishan Active Park which has since become “one of the most iconic community parks in Singapore”.

    On what he would miss about being a politician, he cited meeting residents and helping them.

    “Helping people has never been an easy journey. We always try our best … the fond memories are about the difficult things you do,” he said.

     

    Source: www.todayonline.com

  • Fandi Ahmad And Sundram As Co-Coaches Of National Team?

    Fandi Ahmad And Sundram As Co-Coaches Of National Team?

    They set pulses racing among football-crazy Singaporeans when they played together for the country, a dream attacking combination capable of unsettling many defences on the continent.

    Now, there is a possibility Fandi Ahmad and V Sundramoorthy, two of Singapore’s all-time greats, could lead the national team as co-coaches.

    Current Singapore coach Bernd Stange’s contract is understood to be up at the end of September and the two local coaches are among the front-runners to take over, should the Football Association of Singapore (FAS) choose not to extend the German’s tenure.

    Sundram and Fandi both have expressed their desire to take on the national job, but the prospect of the duo handling the role together is an intriguing one.

    Most football brains The New Paper spoke to, however, don’t seem convinced a co-coaching system will work.

     

    Source: www.tnp.sg

  • Wanted: Thinking Footballers For The Lions

    Wanted: Thinking Footballers For The Lions

    An important piece in the plan to fix Singapore football was put in place on Tuesday (Jul 21) with the appointment of Richard Tardy as head coach of all the national youth teams from under-18 and below.

    The 65-year-old Frenchman, who has extensive experience coaching youth sides and worked with former Liverpool manager Gerard Houllier in France’s triumph at the 1996 European Under-20 championships, has been contracted by The Football Association of Singapore (FAS) for two years.

    But the most impressive item on his resume is talent-spotting and helping to groom French footballer Zinedine Zidane, who went on to inspire the national team to World Cup victory in 1998.

    Tardy’s job in Singapore is to work with the respective age-group coaches to implement technical director Michel Sablon’s blueprint to reverse the poor state of youth development, cited as a major cause of Singapore’s current football ills.

    Making the point that he shares the football philosophy of Sablon, the Frenchman served notice that the axe will fall on youth coaches who resist the new master plan.

    “I am the boss of the youth national coaches,” said Tardy. “So they must think and do what I want. I must adapt the quality of the players and team, but I want to give them my philosophy of training and playing the game, and to talk to the players. If they are not okay with it, I will stay, not them.”

    In an interview with TODAY earlier this month, Sablon, who was appointed to the FAS post in April, pointed out that young children playing football are under too much pressure to win. They are also playing too many matches and have no time to learn the basics of football.

    Agreeing with Sablon, Tardy said the focus should be in building the mental toughness of the young players. The goal, he added, is to help them take the initiative to think and adapt to different situations that develop on the run of play rather than just following their coaches’ instructions.

    “My job is not only to helping a team to win but to push players to take more responsibility and have their own answers to what happens on the field,” he said. “This way may take more time but it yields better results in the long run.”

    Ultimately, players who make the national team must have three key qualities: Talent, intelligence, and motivation.

    He added: “We need to build the mental ability of our players when they are young, so that when they reach 18 or 20 it will be easier for them to think on what needs to be done to succeed on the pitch.”

     

    Source: www.channelnewsasia.com

  • Aide Iskandar: Internal Clashes Contributed To SEA Games Failure

    Aide Iskandar: Internal Clashes Contributed To SEA Games Failure

    It was a resignation which raised more questions than it answered about Singapore’s dismal SEA Games campaign, one which ended in a disappointing group-stage exit and without an expected medal.

    But after staying silent for a month following his shock resignation as coach of the ill-fated national Under-23 football team, former national skipper Aide Iskandar has decided to speak out on a national project that, he said, conceded too many “own goals” within the Football Association of Singapore (FAS).

    “At times it felt like we were battling each other instead of the opposition,” said the 40-year-old of the challenges he faced at the FAS, in his first comments since stepping down immediately after his side’s final group match against Indonesia on June 11.

    In an exclusive interview with The Straits Times, Aide made it clear that he was more than prepared to take the SEA Games fallout solely on his shoulders. But after weeks of soul searching, in which he replayed the events of the past two years in his mind, the former defender has decided to speak out for the sake of the sport.

    He said: “The resignation was my way of taking responsibility for what happened. I was the coach and the buck stops with me. I wanted to protect the team, especially the players, who are still young.

    “But I asked myself, ‘In the end, how is Singapore football benefiting from this episode?’ What happened at the SEA Games would be an even bigger disappointment if we didn’t learn from it and avoid making the same mistakes .

    “Yes, I could have done things better as a coach. But ultimately, my job was also made unnecessarily challenging.”

    “Challenging” was the word he used to describe his tenure as coach when he resigned. It was also the term sports administrators picked up on, as they sought to meet the former coach in the last few weeks to find out just what went wrong.

    For Aide, the “challenges” all arose from the FAS – especially the national teams’ department under head coach Bernd Stange – not being clear about what its key objective for the year was.

    On the one hand, the FAS had announced that the SEA Games would take top priority this year. Yet, at times, it was as if it was merely paying lip service to the idea.

    Initial plans to keep the SEA Games team together for the year went awry when key players Sahil Suhaimi and Faris Ramli were allowed to join the LionsXII in the Malaysia Super League instead of staying as part of Aide’s Courts Young Lions team, who play in the S-League.

    Then came a series of puzzling moves from within the national teams’ department.

    For one thing, fitness coaches were switched late last year, even though the U-23 team were progressing well under Aleksandar Bozenko.

    Bozenko had worked with the team and Aide when they won a SEA Games bronze in 2013 and narrowly missed out on making the next round at last year’s Incheon Asian Games. In South Korea, the team held their own against stronger sides, losing narrowly to Tajikistan and drawing against Oman before beating Palestine, the first win by a Singapore team at the Asian Games since 1990.

    But Aide was instructed to take on German Juergen Raab as his new fitness coach, a move he never signed off on and one which he strongly objected to. Raab, who joined the FAS last October, had previously worked with Stange in Germany.

    Aide was told that Raab had to be assigned to the SEA Games team because funding had been sought from Sport Singapore for him to work specifically with the team.

    Said Aide: “Even when I pointed out how the team did not seem to be responding to Raab and his methods, which resulted in declining fitness levels, I was still asked to keep him on.”

    It was not until April that Aide managed to push the FAS into bringing in former international Kadir Yahaya to help oversee the players’ fitness. Yet, with only two months to go to the Games, there was only so much that could be done.

    It resulted in the team banking on a long-ball game during the SEA Games, a move for which Aide came under heavy criticism.

    Explaining the decision, he said: “The coaches (Kadir and S. Subramani) and I decided that we did not have the fitness levels to play a possession-based game. It would have left us prone to the counter-attack and we would not be able to recover in time.”

    Coaching changes also hampered the team’s preparations just before the tournament. U-23 goalkeeper coach John Burridge asked to be reassigned to the senior team just weeks before the SEA Games. It forced Aide to scramble for a replacement, but more importantly, the change affected his players’ confidence.

    Said Aide: “First-choice goalkeeper Syazwan Buhari actually came up to me and asked, ‘What did I do wrong that John wanted to leave?’”

    Added Syazwan: “John’s departure affected my confidence because it was quite abrupt. When he left, the way we trained changed and it was too late and sudden to adapt to the new training style.”

    Syazwan had a decent Games but made two mistakes in their second match that resulted in both Myanmar goals in the 1-2 loss on June 4.

    Team confidence also took another blow just days before the Games when attacker Iqbal Hussain was dropped from the squad for disciplinary reasons, only to be promoted to the senior squad by Stange for the Lions’ World Cup qualifiers.

    The move infuriated the Young Lions, who felt the German was undermining Aide and creating unnecessary drama at a crucial time. The reserve players on the SEA Games team were also unsettled, wondering if perhaps it would have been better for them to have been excluded from Aide’s team so they could also feature in the senior side.

    Said Aide: “This was the most puzzling move. I told coach Bernd and the management and we decided that it would not have been wise to call up Iqbal given the circumstances. Yet he was called up.”

    The three-time Asean Football Confederation Cup winning defender, capped 121 times by the nation, acknowledged that eyebrows will be raised over his decision to speak up about the torrid campaign.

    Sources acknowledged that there was also a falling out between Stange and Aide, the German’s former assistant. It got to a point where the FAS’ senior management had to step in to prevent the German from upsetting the SEA Games team’s preparation. At times, Aide was more involved in meetings to resolve disputes than coaching.

    When asked about the alleged breakdown in the relationship, Aide declined comment but said he had submitted a report to the FAS about the SEA Games failure.

    “Don’t get me wrong, I am grateful for the opportunity and the resources the team got in terms of training trips to Japan and Turkey,” said Aide of the reported $3.5 million which had been invested in the team to help them at least reach the SEA Games final.

    “But I feel it does not serve Singapore football best if I don’t raise all that went wrong at the SEA Games. This is why I hope lessons can be learnt from the SEA Games disappointment. Many of the problems my team faced could have been avoided.”

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com