Tag: S League

  • Pritam Singh: Football Association Of Singapore Needs Industry Transportation Roadmap, Plan To Help Players For Career After Football

    Pritam Singh: Football Association Of Singapore Needs Industry Transportation Roadmap, Plan To Help Players For Career After Football

    A shorter night of house visits this evening meeting many friendly residents. Ran into two S-League footballers after house visits who were shooting the breeze at the void deck of Blk 619 with whom I had a wonderful conversation about post-S-League careers.

    Jalil still plays for Tampines Rovers Football Club while Basit had four years with Hougang United Football Club (HGFC) and now works for Singapore Airlines.

    It is well known that every well-meaning soccer fan in Singapore has an opinion about the game and the S-League.

    The new team or any team in future at the Football Association of Singapore, who I wish all the success in the world, needs to consider post-playing careers for our professionals and create a system which rewards dedicated and disciplined players. In fact, like certain economic sectors, the Football Association of Singapore could do with an Industry Transformation Roadmap or ITM too! Ok, that’s my two cents about local football for today!

     

    Source: Pritam Singh

  • Tampines Rovers Chairman Krishna Ramachandra Resigns

    Tampines Rovers Chairman Krishna Ramachandra Resigns

    He took the S.League by storm. Within months of helming Tampines Rovers, chairman Krishna Ramachandra put the S.League on the world map.

    Internationally recognised names Jermaine Pennant, Gerard Houllier and even Ronaldinho were associated with the five-time league champions.

    But it has not been plain sailing for the 45-year-old corporate lawyer, who is relinquishing his post as Tampines chairman after less than two years in the job.

    The New Paper understands that Krishna has recommended a successor, who will need to be approved by the authorities.

    Said Krishna in a statement: “I intend to step down as chairman of TRFC in the coming weeks… after TRFC’s 2016 accounts have been audited and finalised. I will be dealing with all outstanding queries relating to TRFC’s statement of accounts before stepping down.

    “The high demands of my professional career have overtaken my ability to keep volunteering at the level of intensity that is needed to fulfil the role of chairman of TRFC,” added Krishna, who said he will remain as a committee member to assist in the transition phase.

    Financial issues also cropped up at the club. These include late payment of salaries to Stags staff, which raised the attention of the Central Provident Fund Board.

    Despite the woes, Krishna said he has derived joy from his involvement with the club.

    “It has been an honour and privilege to serve this wonderful club. I have enjoyed many memorable moments with the fans, players, coaches and staff – all of whom have been just an absolute joy to work with,” he said.

    “I have absolutely no regrets on the footballing experience I have had in the last six over years and I will certainly continue to support Singapore football.”

    Krishna is hopeful of a better future for S.League clubs, though.

    “Hopefully, in the near future, S.League clubs will be allowed the option to be privatised, and those that can, may possibly install a viable model,” he said.

    “This will take time but more importantly will need the support of all stakeholders.”

     

    Source: www.tnp.sg

  • Selangor Side Up For SOS Cup Challenge

    Selangor Side Up For SOS Cup Challenge

    It’s been almost three months since they last won a match.

    Despite a winless run of eight matches, PKNS coach E Elavarasan is hopeful of leading a Selangor Selection side to a win over a Singapore Selection side in the main match of the Sultan of Selangor’s (SOS) Cup at the National Stadium tomorrow.

    Previous Selangor Selection sides in the exhibition friendly usually comprised the Selangor FA squad with a few invited players, but Elavarasan will lead out essentially his PKNS side for tomorrow’s battle.

    The 52-year-old coach told The New Paper over the phone yesterday: “Pride is on the line (for us).

    “Being nominated to represent Selangor in the SOS Cup is an honour for PKNS.

    “Anyway, a one-off match like this is totally different from a league match… and on Saturday, both teams will go all out for the win.

    Among them are Liberian international striker Patrick Ronaldinho Wleh, who has scored 48 league goals in 4½ seasons in Malaysian football.

    PKNS also have several players capped by Malaysia, such as defenders Amiridzwan Taj, Azmi Muslim and Sabre Mat Abu, midfielders Affizie Faisal and K Gurusamy, and forwards Safee Sali and Khyril Muhymeen.

     

    Singapore Selection coach Fandi Ahmad is not underestimating the quality of the PKNS players.

    “I still consider them a dangerous team because they have many experienced players,” said the local football icon yesterday.

    “As for us, making a new team gel with just two training sessions is not easy.

    “But whether we are underdogs or favourites is immaterial.

    “What matters is whether our players go out on game day, motivated and ready to perform to get the win.”

     

    SULTAN OF SELANGOR’S CUP 2017

    Where: National Stadium

    Who’s playing:

    • 4.45pm: Singapore Sports School v Selangor Combined Schools
    • 6.30pm: Singapore Veterans v Selangor Veterans
    • 7.45pm: Singapore Selection v Selangor Selection

    TICKET DETAILS

    Tickets for the match are priced at $8 for adults and $3 for concession holders, excluding ticketing fees.

    Concession tickets are applicable to students aged 16 and below, and senior citizens aged 60 and above. Children aged four and above must purchase a ticket for admission.

    Infants in arms and children under four years of age may be admitted free of charge, provided they do not occupy a seat.

    Tickets are available at www.sportshubtix.com, SportsHub Box Office, SingPost outlets and the Sports Hub hotline (+65 3158 7888).

     

    Source: www.tnp.sg

     

  • FAS Chief Lim Kia Tong Calms Job Fears Over Nasi Briyani And Teh Tarik

    FAS Chief Lim Kia Tong Calms Job Fears Over Nasi Briyani And Teh Tarik

    The newly-elected Football Association of Singapore (FAS) council began its first official day in charge by organising a lunch yesterday for the near-80 staff to allay any fears they might have after a turbulent few weeks prior to Saturday’s polls.

    Over nasi briyani and teh tarik, FAS president Lim Kia Tong assured the employees their jobs were safe and there would be minimal upheaval as the new administration sought to revive the ailing sport.

    “This lunch is important because looking back, the staff was hardly engaged previously,” Lim, whose team had beaten the Game Changers, a slate led by Hougang United chairman Bill Ng 30-13, at the election, told The Straits Times.

    The 64-year-old lawyer and former FAS vice-president added: “The election also created some psychological uncertainty in their minds as they could be worried who will come into power.

    “This might determine their tenure at FAS and it certainly created an air of uncertainty.

    “Having met them for lunch, this tells me a story that the staff is more relaxed now. They are pleased to know that a familiar figure will continue to lead them.”

    While the future of FAS general secretary Winston Lee, who attended the lunch, has been subject to intense speculation, both Lim and vice-president Edwin Tong stressed that Lee’s position was not being discussed yet and he will continue to help run the association.

    It echoed Lim’s post-election press conference words when he said: “We’ll deal with each staff behind closed doors. We have to respect the terms of their employment contracts.

    “We won’t make any comment on his (Lee) future and it is best left to be decided much, much later.”

    Lee, Ng and his wife Bonnie Wong, and former FAS president and former MP of Bishan-Toa Payoh GRC Zainudin Nordin were arrested two weeks ago as part of an ongoing police investigation. All are out on police bail.

    The atmosphere was more light-hearted at the FAS office at Jalan Besar Stadium yesterday.

    Lydia Lim-Goh, office manager of technical director Michel Sablon’s department, said that she felt relieved to see Lim elected.

    “I have known Kia Tong for a long time (Lim first joined FAS as a disciplinary committee member in 1992),” said the 66-year-old, who has been with the association for 44 years and has worked under numerous presidents including R. B. I. Pates, N. Ganesan, Teo Chong Tee and Major Abbas Abu Amin.

    “He has really grown into his role. He is very down to earth and even though he is a lawyer, he does not talk down to people.

    “The staff are looking forward to working with the new council and we are very happy to support Kia Tong and his team.”

    Staff members, speaking on condition of anonymity, said that previously, employees were not allowed to interact with or have direct contact with council members.

    But Tong believes the new council will institute changes to make FAS a more transparent and more engaging organisation.

    He said: “One of the priorities after the election is to introduce ourselves (to the FAS staff) and reassure them that our style is quite different.

    “We want to reiterate the point that we are consultative and we want to invite all of them to share their views.

    “They are the domain experts and they see to it (the running of Singapore football) day to day.”

    Lim had promised that his team would hit the ground running and they were true to his word.

    The council gathered at the FAS boardroom at 6.30pm for its first official meeting yesterday.

    Apart from deputy president Bernard Tan, who is away in Chicago on a business trip, 14 of the 15 council members were present.

    Lee also attended the meeting but his position was not part of the agenda raised, noted Tong.

    Instead, over the course of three hours and 15 minutes, issues like the FAS’ administrative structure, governance and youth development were discussed.

    Another key area raised was the S-League, which has struggled to retain fans’ interest.

    To address it, a task force was formed and will be spearheaded by vice-presidents Teo Hock Seng, S. Thavaneson and council member Forrest Li.

    The purpose of the meeting, said Tong, was to come up with broad structures to reshape Singapore football.

    “The members were very forthcoming,” he said. “We have at least two names for each of the 16 standing committees (which touch on areas like administration, finance, facilities, women’s football, referees, competitions and audit).”

    On the back of the $500,000 donation saga, governance is an area the new council wants to tighten.

    “Partly,” Tong replied, when asked if the review was done in light of the controversy.

    “But also because the new council wants to start off on a clean slate. We want to make sure there are no blind spots.”

    At 9.45pm, the meeting was adjourned, marking the end to a very long day for many in the council. Yet their faces bore no hint of tiredness, only resolve to make good on their election promises.

     

    Rilek1Corner

    Source: http://www.straitstimes.com

  • Five Immediate Tasks For New FAS Council

    Five Immediate Tasks For New FAS Council

    Singapore football’s course over the next four years will now be guided by new Football Association of Singapore (FAS) chief Lim Kia Tong.

    The New Paper looks at some of the pressing issues they have to instantly deal with.

    1. S.LEAGUE

    The S.League has not been given the attention it deserves in the last few years.

    The LionsXII’s participation in the Malaysian Super League from 2011 to 2015 meant it became the FAS’ main focus, instead of Singapore’s own professional league.

    S.League administrators also made a major blunder in the proposed age-cap on players, a plan which was eventually scrapped because of the opposition it met with. Players, too, complained about the low wages and practice of 11-month contracts, and nothing has been done to improve the situation.

    Hyundai Motors coming on board as co-title sponsors in February has lifted the gloom somewhat, although there is still much to be done.

    Some in the local football fraternity have suggested increasing the number of clubs in the S.League, which currently has nine teams. Out of the nine clubs, six are local.

    John Yap, chairman of Gombak United, who have sat out the S.League since 2012, said: “When we were a part of the S.League, there were 12 teams, and one season (in 2012) there were even 13.

    “I feel a league with more teams is more vibrant, more competitive.

    “There is talk that Singapore is small, and that justifies just having just a few (local) teams… I think that is wrong.

    “I think our landscape can support a few more teams in the S.League.”

    2. NFL & GRASSROOTS FOOTBALL

    Considering the S.League’s woes over the years, imagine how bad the amateur National Football League (NFL) have it.

    From 2015 to last year, the FAS spent about $8 million on the various national teams’ training costs.

    During the same period, it spent about $250,000 on grassroots football, which includes the NFL.

    But the FAS has made moves to rectify the situation.

    Starting this year, the 23 NFL teams across Division 1 and 2 get seed money of $8,500 per club, group insurance from Great Eastern Singapore for their players, among other improvements.

    Gurbachan Singh, operations manager of NFL Division 2 side Singapore Khalsa Association, said he was pleased with the commitment by the new council to make improvements for all NFL sides, saying “the previous FAS council were more interested in only the S.League and Division 1.”

    Zairi Ahmari, club secretary for Division 1 side Sporting Westlake, said he hopes the changes do not merely represent a false dawn.

    “What we have fought for has been given,” he said.

    “Definitely, we look forward to better things.”

    Whether the FAS will continue to make improvements to the long-neglected NFL, remains to be seen.

    3. FOOTBALL DEVELOPMENT

    During the campaign, Team LKT came up with the vision of building a national team that would consistently win the AFF Suzuki Cup and South-east Asia Games.

    Those are bold targets, considering the Lions went into the Suzuki Cup as underdogs in three (1998, 2004 and 2012) of their four successes, and the fact Singapore have never won a SEA Games football gold medal in the biennial competition’s 58-year history.

    The FAS believes the key to building a strong national team is to create a conveyor belt of talent, so in April 2014 it roped in Michel Sablon, who came up with a blueprint.

    Sablon was the man largely credited with developing Belgium’s current golden generation of players such as Vincent Kompany and Eden Hazard.

    Last October, the FAS also formed a new age-group national team – the Under-20s – with Fandi Ahmad taking the helm, in hopes of preventing late-bloomers from slipping through the cracks and disappearing from the game.

    Khairul Asyraf, technical director of NFL Division 1 champions Eunos Crescent and co-founder of the 2Touch Soccer School, said: “The exco of the new FAS council must decide matters in the future such as national coach, technical director and national playing philosophy, in consultation with the the technical committee.

    “As for Sablon, he came with a lot of promise, and on paper (his blueprint for Singapore football) has more ticks than crosses… I’m not completely convinced but I want to be, and someone with his credentials should be given the benefit of doubt.”

    4. FUTURE OF KEY FAS SECRETARIAT POSITIONS

    Barely an hour after being elected, Lim was asked about the future of FAS general secretary Winston Lee.

    Lee, who has been in his present role since 2008, was involved in a public war of words with Game Changers’ Ng over the controversial $500,000 the latter donated from Tiong Bahru Football Club’s funds for the Asean Football Federation’s (AFF) Football Management System.

    The 52-year-old Lee was present during Saturday’s election but left the venue before the post-election press conference.

    When asked about Lee’s future, Lim said: “We’ll deal with each staff behind closed doors. We have to respect the terms of their employment contracts… we won’t make any comment on his future and it is best left to be decided much, much later.”

    A week earlier, Bernard Tan, who was on Saturday voted in as Lim’s deputy president, said: “It’s as good as saying whether we will keep (national coach) Sundram or Fandi.

    “We do not discuss staff issues like that. It is highly inappropriate. To be fair to the people employed, they have contracts, and they deserve to be treated in a way that’s professional.”

    Besides the position of general secretary, the S.League chief executive’s seat is also vacant, after Lim Chin left the role last month.

    Lim, however, said he and his new council have not yet decided if it intends to find a new man for the role, or instead make structural changes to the S.League which might see the position become obsolete.

    5. TRANSPARENCY & ACCOUNTABILITY

    One of the 10 points on Team LKT’s manifesto was: Create a transparent FAS that has a high standard of administration.

    Cleaning up the FAS’ image and ensuring transparency will be high on its to-do list, especially after the controversy that shrouded Ng’s $500,000 donation.

    Ng claimed he had donated the money to FAS – who explained they had facilitated the donation to the AFF.

    But Lim, Tan, and the new council’s vice-presidents Edwin Tong, Razali Saad and S Thavaneson – who were all on the previous council – all claimed they had no knowledge of the donation.

    If this is true, then it shows major problems with accountability.

    Lau Kok Keng, who ran as deputy president on the Game Changers’ slate, said: “No one in this country would have imagined that the council was led by one man alone, and the rest did not know what was going on.

    “All NSAs are societies, and a lot of them – like FAS – have a lot of money.

    “So maybe (the whole donation saga) calls for some kind of examination… and we will see what the new council does.”

     

    Source: www.tnp.sg