Tag: FAS

  • Aide Iskandar Is Recovering From Dengue Scare

    Aide Iskandar Is Recovering From Dengue Scare

    National Under-23 Head Coach Aide Iskandar has tested positive for dengue, the Football Association of Singapore (FAS) said in a statement on Monday (Apr 27).

    He has been hospitalised and National U-23 assistant coaches S Subramani and Kadir Yahya will take charge of the daily training of the SEA Games squad in his absence, it added.

    In a Facebook post on Tuesday, FAS said Aide is recovering and said he is “grateful to everyone for their concern”.

    “I am feeling better, and I hope to be able to get out soon and join the team for centralised training,” he wrote. “To my players, I just want to say stay focused and keep working hard. I’ll see you guys soon.”

    An update: National U23 Head Coach Aide Iskandar is recovering, and he is grateful to everyone for their concern and the well-wishes he has been getting.

    Posted by Football Association of Singapore on Tuesday, April 28, 2015

    Source: www.channelnewsasia.com
  • FAS Set Football Final Target, Coach Aide Out With Dengue

    FAS Set Football Final Target, Coach Aide Out With Dengue

    The goal was to end all confusion over player movement between the Singapore Under-23 team and the LionsXII, as the country enters the final straight of its preparations for the 28th South-east Asia (SEA) Games, which it will host from June 5 to 16.

    In a shock development, however, it was announced at a media briefing by the technical team of the Football Association of Singapore (FAS) yesterday that Under-23 head coach Aide Iskandar had been warded for dengue fever.

    It is not known how long Aide (below), 39, will be out, but the FAS stated that assistant coaches Kadir Yahaya and S Subramani will lead the team while he recovers.

    Despite the setback, national teams head coach Bernd Stange said in no uncertain terms that the SEA Games target was a place in the final, which will be played at the National Stadium on June 15.

    Speaking to The New Paper, the German said all parties – the players, coaches and the FAS – are convinced it is an achievable target.

    “We cannot say we don’t have a high objective; we want to deliver at the SEA Games, and that is to play in the final,” he said.

    “That target is important for the fans, the players, the whole country.

    “This Under-23 team are the base of our future, and so we need a top performance from them.”

    Stange, along with Aide and LionsXII coach Fandi Ahmad, have agreed on a strategy involving four players that are wanted by both teams.

    A 30-man Singapore Under-23 squad will enter centralised training on Friday and the SEA Games team will then head to Japan on May 10 for a week-long tour which includes two friendly matches.

    LionsXII players Faris Ramli, Sahil Suhaimi, Christopher van Huizen and Zakir Samsudin will be made available, though, for the Malaysian Super League’s side FA Cup semi-final first leg against Terengganu on May 9 at the Jalan Besar Stadium.

    They will leave the Under-23s camp on May 7 and return to the fold before flying off for Japan three days later.

    The quartet will not be available for the second leg of the Malaysian FA Cup semi-final on May 16 in Kuala Terengganu, but will be released again should Fandi’s side qualify for the final on May 23.

    Subramani said it was important to have all 30 players together for Japan – the squad will be reduced to 20 upon the team’s return – but the coaches recognised the psychological boost the four players would gain playing in the first leg of the semi-final, and possibly the final.

    Fleet-footed attacker Faris, 22, had been prepared to miss the cup-ties, and is over the moon over the decision.

    “As players, we always give our best to whichever team we are playing for, so I was prepared to miss out on the FA Cup.

    “But now, I hope to do all I can to ensure the team carry a good result into the second leg.”

    Similar to the 2013 campaign, Stange will play an active role in the make-up of the final 20-man squad.

    The football tournament will begin almost a week before the opening ceremony on June 5, with the hosts kicking off Group A action against the Philippines on June 1 at the Jalan Besar Stadium.

    The Young Lions will also play Indonesia, Myanmar and Cambodia in the group stage, and Stange warned that they could not afford to underestimate any opponent.

    “Other than playing on home ground, it is a small advantage to be in a group which has one less team (from Group B),” he added.

    Group B features reigning champions Thailand, Malaysia, Vietnam, Laos, Brunei and Timor Leste.

  • Challenging Road To World And Asia Cup Finals For Lions

    Challenging Road To World And Asia Cup Finals For Lions

    The road to qualification for the 2018 World Cup final in Russia is set to be a challenging one for Singapore’s national football team.

    The draw for the second round of the FIFA World Cup Asian Zone qualifiers was conducted in Kuala Lumpur yesterday, with Singapore — ranked 162nd in the world — placed in Group E with Cambodia (179), Afghanistan (135), Syria (126), and four-time Asian champions Japan (50).

    With the draw also serving as qualifiers for the 2019 Asian Cup Finals in the United Arab Emirates, Lions coach Bernd Stange admitted yesterday that Singapore can expect a tough ride in their bid for both tournaments.

    The team will open their campaign in Cambodia on June 11 before hosting Japan five days later.

    “I think the group we are in is a challenging one and we are not in any position to underestimate any of the teams,” Stange told TODAY.

    “My overall aim is to qualify and the importance will be on the first two matches, to gain momentum. We will go game by game as it is going to be a marathon.

    “Japan will be a difficult match. (But) I am absolutely optimistic of beating Syria since we have done it before, in 2013. I will tell every one of my players to take up the challenge we have ahead.”

    Singapore have never qualified for the Asian Cup Finals — except for 1984 when the Republic hosted the event — and the team’s previous best outing in the World Cup Asian Zone qualifiers was in 2011/2012, when the team made it to the third stage.

    The Lions have endured a string of poor performances in recent months, including a 2-2 draw with lower-ranked Guam in a friendly match last month, and were eliminated at last year’s AFF Suzuki Cup in the group stage.

    Forty Asian countries, including newly-crowned Asian champions Australia, will contest the qualifiers. Eight group winners and the four best runners-up will advance to the next stage of World Cup qualifying and earn a spot in the Asian Cup.

    The remaining teams will go into another phase of Asian Cup qualifiers.

     

    Source: www.todayonline.com

  • Michel Sablon: Youth Development In Singapore Needs To Be Addressed

    Michel Sablon: Youth Development In Singapore Needs To Be Addressed

    Michel Sablon, who was officially unveiled as the new technical director of the Football Association of Singapore (FAS) on Thursday (Apr 9), has said youth development in Singapore is an area that must be addressed.

    The 67-year-old Belgian, who has been appointed by the FAS on a two-year contract, said this during his official presentation at the Jalan Besar Stadium on Thursday.

    “First of all, I need to analyse. We first need to look out for the positive things and elaborate from there,” said Sablon. “Let me give you an example, we have academies which are in clubs and the FAS to develop youths and the way we do things here could be changed or improved.”

    He added: “It’s a plan which is first of all based on the different age categories. We start from under-7, under-8, till under-18. That will be the basic thing, what we can learn from each level. Each level has its specific learning points. A child of nine years is not the same as the child at 12 years old.”

    Part of Sablon’s plan is to improve the quality of coaches, through workshops and conferences – and he is confident that the efforts will lead to better results.

    “I cannot imagine when you do all these for two years, that we don’t see the difference. I think you can see the difference after one year, from the way of playing. I saw some games from the national youth teams and so on, I think it can be improved,” he said.

    “We have to give the coaches the opportunity to learn more and to be better coaches. When they improve themselves, they improve the players. And when the players are better, the teams are better.”

    Sablon is best known for his stint as technical director at the Royal Belgian Football Association, where he drew up their long-term strategic blueprint that transformed Belgium’s footballing fortunes which had dipped in the nineties.

    The system has since produced the likes of Premier League stars Eden Hazard, Vincent Kompany, Marouane Fellaini and Thibaut Courtois – all part of Belgium’s golden generation that reached the quarter-finals of last year’s World Cup in Brazil, where they lost 1-0 to eventual finalists Argentina.

    Sablon was also assistant to then-Belgium national coach Guy Thys at the 1986 World Cup, where they finished fourth, and was part of his country’s coaching staff at the 1990 and 1994 World Cups.

     

    Source: www.channelnewsasia.com

  • Abbas Saad And Rafi Ali Slam Lions’ Dismal Showing Against Guam

    Abbas Saad And Rafi Ali Slam Lions’ Dismal Showing Against Guam

    Two of Singapore’s former football heroes, Abbas Saad and Rafi Ali, have slammed the national team following their abysmal 2-2 draw with Guam on Tuesday night (Mar 31).

    They were speaking on the sidelines of the launch of a global seven-aside football tournament, 24Sevens.

    167th-ranked Guam lie 14 places below Singapore in the FIFA rankings, but the difference did not show at Jalan Besar Stadium. The Lions trailed the visitors twice, and it took a second-half leveller from Faris Ramli to spare the hosts further embarrassment.

    Singapore have now won only four times in their last 12 games, including matches at their AFF Suzuki Cup run.

    Abbas Saad, who was part of the Singapore team in the Malaysian League in 1990 and from 1993 to 1994, said: “2-2, Guam and the Singapore national team, in your home den. That is embarrassing, that is not good enough. There have got to be changes here. The coach has got to answer what is going on with the results.

    “And again, it is not the results, it is the way they have been playing the game. Are you getting the best out of the players, are you identifying the best players, are you getting the right set-up or the right formation out there? I do not think so.”

    Meanwhile, Rafi Ali, who was in the Singapore national team from 1995 to 2003, said: “When you have that flag, you must be proud of that flag. And some of the players, when I watch some of the games, they have it. But we need to have this on a consistent basis, week in, week out. Just give your best and give your 100 per cent. Because you are playing for your country. Because not many people have the privilege to put on the jerseys.”

     

    Source: www.channelnewsasia.com