Tag: SEA Games 2015

  • Man Gets 30 Months Jail For SEA Games Match-Fixing

    Man Gets 30 Months Jail For SEA Games Match-Fixing

    The first of four men charged with conspiring to fix a SEA Games football match was sentenced to 30 months’ jail yesterday.

    Nasiruddin, 52, an Indonesian, pleaded guilty to one charge of conspiring with two others to corruptly give S$15,000 to Timor Leste Football Association’s technical director Orlando Marques Henriques Mendes.

    Based on court documents, Nasiruddin became acquainted with a man called Raja in Indonesia. He met Raja and Singaporean Rajendran R Kurusamy, 55 — among the four charged — on March 16 for a talk. They met again four days later and Rajendran asked Nasiruddin whether he knew anyone in the Indonesia or Timor-Leste SEA Games football teams who could help fix matches.

    Nasiruddin later contacted former Timor-Leste player Moises Natalino de Jesus, who is also among those charged. Rajendran sought Moises’ help to fix a match involving the Timor-Leste SEA Games team. He also informed Nasiruddin that he would give money to players who helped ensure a defeat to Malaysia on May 30.

    Two days before the match, Raja took Moises to meet Rajendran and another person at Orchid Country Club. Moises later informed Orlando about Rajendran’s “business plan” to fix the match and told him to lose by a certain number of goals.

    Rajendran wanted Timor-Leste to not concede a goal in the first 20 minutes, but eventually lose to Malaysia by a few goals. He would pay each complicit player S$4,000 and told Orlando seven players would be enough to help lose the game, but it would be better if all 11 players were involved. The Corrupt Practices Investigation Bureau arrested the four before the match, which ended 1-0 in Malaysia’s favour.

    Deputy public prosecutor Navin Naidu urged the court yesterday to impose a jail sentence of 30 to 36 months. He said Nasiruddin’s only reason for entering Singapore was to arrange to fix the match. “There was no other reason for the accused to be in Singapore aside from committing the offences. A strong deterrent message … must be sent … to forcefully show Singapore’s intolerance against people who come to our country for the sole purpose of committing crimes”.

    The remaining three accused have yet to submit a plea.

     

    Source: www.todayonline.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

  • Singapore Sepak Takraw Player Recovering Well After Tragedy

    Singapore Sepak Takraw Player Recovering Well After Tragedy

    Singapore national sepak takraw player Muhammad Azreen Sairudin, who was involved in a motorcycle accident earlier this month that claimed the life of his brother, is now recuperating at home.

    Speaking to TODAY, his uncle Sairi Sani said Azreen, 25, who was to have been part of Singapore’s sepak takraw squad for the recent 28th SEA Games, has been discharged from Tan Tock Seng Hospital last Friday after spending close to two weeks in the intensive care unit.

    But Azreen, who required surgery on his injured arm, must wait at least a few more months before he can return to the sport.

    “He is doing well. He was discharged last Friday, we brought him to hospital on Monday (June 22) for further checks.” said Sairi, 50. “He is strong and recovering very well, but he also thinks about his brother and feels sad when he recalls what happened. But we (family) managed to cheer him up.”

    Azreen and his 21-year-old brother Aqil, who was riding pillion, were on the Seletar Expressway on June 7 when the accident happened.

    Azreen was to have played a key role for Singapore in the sepak takraw competition at the SEA Games.

    In the aftermath, national team-mates and officials from the Singapore Sepak Takraw Federation had rallied around the player.

    “His arm was badly injured when a vein ruptured,” said Sairi. “The doctor replaced the vein in the arm and now the arm is back to as per normal. His legs are okay. It’s just the arms which will take a few months to recover before he can play again.”

    One of Singapore’s more promising players, Azreen had been selected for Singapore’s sepak takraw team for the June 5 to 16 SEA Games, where the hosts finished with one silver and seven bronze medals.

     

    Source: www.todayonline.com

  • Singapore Silat Chief: Fear Of Losing Messed Up Fighters’ Minds

    Singapore Silat Chief: Fear Of Losing Messed Up Fighters’ Minds

    The Singapore silat team won eight medals, including a gold, at the recent SEA Games. But the team has not been faring well in the past few editions compared to their glory years in 1999 and 2003.

    One by one, their athletes faltered at the semi-final stages of the Games, except for Muhammad Nur Alfian Juma’en. He defended his gold in the individual Class F finals after beating world champion Tran Dinh Nam from Vietnam, and famously shed tears on the podium, overwhelmed by the moment.

    Nur Alfian said: “The thing that was running through my mind was that everything was worth it. Like the sacrifices that I’ve done in terms of diet, school, time with family and the training was very tough. To be able to achieve the win, I can’t describe the emotions.”

    The 18-year-old first took up silat when he was five. Initially it was just for fun, but now, he is part of the elite team which has over 22 athletes.

    “The main thing is discipline because you have to take care of your diet. And you must also give 100 per cent in training every single time,” Nur Alfian said.

    He was one of 13 silat athletes fielded at the recent Games and the team ended with a haul of one gold, one silver and six bronze.

    Mr Sheik Alau’ddin, head of the Singapore Silat Federation, said: “I asked them, ‘What is the problem with you guys? Why are you so scared?’ And they said ‘I’m scared of losing. I’m scared because I might fall.’ So, all these things messed up their minds. The main priority now is to have the mental strength, how we need to develop individual athletes.”

    The team seems to fare better at other international and regional competitions. Singapore was crowned overall champions in the 5th Southeast Asian Pencak Silat Championships in April, defeating powerhouses like Malaysia and Indonesia along the way. The team received seven gold, two silver and 10 bronze in the competition. And Singapore’s silat exponents won one gold, three silver, and three bronze at the world championships in Phuket earlier in January.

    At the SEA Games though, they have only bagged four gold in the past five editions.

    Sheik Alau’ddin said the sport’s glory years at the Games were in 1999 and 2003. They had won three gold medals each in those years. But he said the sport is not losing its shine.

    “I’m not worried about all that. It’s just the individual athletes, whether they’re hungry enough, whether they want to be on the highest podium,” he said. “You see, like Alfian, he fought in the finals and his toe was split open and there’s blood everywhere. If it’s someone who is not strong enough and they look at the blood, they might not continue.”

    This hunger to win will be put to the test when they compete at the International Malaysia Open Silat Championship in September.

     

    Source: www.channelnewsasia.com

  • SINGSOC Apologise For Chaos, Tickets Not Oversold

    SINGSOC Apologise For Chaos, Tickets Not Oversold

    The Singapore SEA Games Organising Committee (SINGSOC) has apologised for the confusion that led to many spectators being locked out of the 28th SEA Games closing ceremony at the National Stadium on Tuesday.

    While SINGSOC acknowledged it could have done better in managing the situation, it rejected suggestions that tickets to the closing ceremony were oversold.

    In a statement on the SEA Games Facebook page yesterday, SINGSOC said it had invited groups of Team Nila volunteers and voluntary welfare organisations to the event based on the turnout from the opening ceremony on June 5, where about 30 percent of ticket holders did not turn up.

    SINGSOC added: “After accounting for these complimentary tickets, we would like to confirm that there were still sufficient seats in the stadium for all those who came for the event (closing ceremony).”

    “There are some very clear lessons to be drawn from this experience that did not surface during the opening ceremony, like how to have better informed everyone on arrival timings, and how to better manage the rapid build-up of crowds and the ushering at entry gates,” SINGSOC said. “We acknowledge that we should have done a lot better.”

    While it is unclear exactly how many spectators, most of whom had purchased tickets — which cost up to S$40 each — were locked out of the closing ceremony, it is believed to be in the hundreds.

    They were prevented from entering the stadium as many of those already inside had waited around the inner concourse area after they failed to locate their seats due to the stadium lights having gone dark for the ceremony.

    But safety concerns meant the gates had to be closed to prevent the congestion from worsening if more were allowed in. That led to tempers boiling over, with some shouting at the volunteers for being unable to help the situation.

    SINGSOC also said they could have accommodated those at the stadium if there was more time to seat them, but a surge over a short period just before the ceremony started eventually led to the situation.

    The organisers also clarified that the last segment of the show, which saw Dutch DJ Ferry Corsten playing his set from a console suspended from the National Stadium’s retractable roof as spectators entered the field below, was pre-planned and co-ordinated with stadium operators, crowd safety and security personnel.

    SINGSOC also stressed that the safety limit on the number of people on the pitch was not breached.

    Those affected can contact SINGSOC at https://feedback.sportsingapore.gov.sg/new_feedback.aspx or 1800 344 1177 during office hours from 9am to 6pm on Mondays to Fridays to process the refunds and follow up with service recovery.

     

    Source: www.todayonline.com