Tag: Zainudin Nordin

  • WANTED: New Chief To Shake Up Singapore Football

    WANTED: New Chief To Shake Up Singapore Football

    IS THERE such a man? If there is, will he step forward?

    Singapore football is sick. It has been for far too long. It has come to a point that with the elections for a new Football Association of Singapore president and council looming, there is a numbing fear nothing much will change. Meaning, it will be status quo.

    Not to sully the standing of the serving president and council members, but they’ve done what they could and it’s time to bid them on their way. Stay away from the elections.

    And this goodbye must be extended to advisers who have overstayed their welcome that memory forgets from when.

    When a new president and his team are picked, their first job must be to overhaul the management of Singapore football from top down. They need to clean house and those associated with it. He … or perhaps, she … must not be easily swayed.

    But who can this person be?

    A veteran football administrator I met recently was foreboding with his answer: We lack talent. By a long shot we have one person, but it is wishful thinking.

    And this is the sorry state of Singapore football. It has been run like a Soviet KGB secret service outfit for so long that only few know what is going on within its inner sanctum and are afraid to speak up.

    Those who can shake things up at Jalan Besar are sick to their stomachs with the sport that they want to stay away from it as far as they can.

    A few well-meaning people are putting teams together in a bid to stand for elections. They are passionate, and want Singapore football to succeed and bring fans back. But they are potentially a disaster in the making.

    You can’t run Singapore football on passion alone. That’s like trying to drive a car only on petrol fumes. It grounds to a halt immediately.

    Every passionate Singapore football fan has an idea on how to go about fixing the local game. Ideas are dime a dozen.

    Passion must come with an acute technical knowledge of the game. What drives it. What fuels it. What funds it. What motivates players. And at the end of it all, what excites fans to want to back it.

    And you must have the dare to act on them.

    The sitting football management has done some good things for Singapore football. Let’s not deny this. Bringing in Michel Sablon to chart a new course to return it to health was one of them.

    But overall, the current FAS lot has lost the plot. The empty stands say so.

    Is there a man, or woman, who dare turn Singapore football on its head and shake it up? You need some arrogance to get this done. The game really needs it.

    If you tick the boxes, stand up for the FAS presidential elections.

     

    Source: http://iandecotta.com

  • 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

  • PAP In Crisis As More MPs Resign

    PAP In Crisis As More MPs Resign

    In a press conference today (August 12), the PAP Bishan-Toa Payoh GRC team sees 3 more PAP MPs resigning signaling a succession crisis with the ruling party. MP Hri Kumar, MP Zainudin Nordin and Ex-Minister MP Wong Kan Seng have all announced their resignation today.

    Photo from Facebook

    The slew of resignations from PAP MPs started after the death of former Prime Minister Lee Kuan Yew and the current headcount is at 10, with more PAP MPs to announce their resignation before the National Day Rally speech next week.

    1) AMK GRC MP Inderjit Singh
    2) Tampines GRC MP Irene Ng
    3) Tampines GRC MP and Ex-Minister Mah Bow Tan
    4) Moulmein-Kallang GRC MP and current Transport Minister Lui Tuck Yew
    5) Bishan-Toa Payoh GRC MP Hri Kumar
    6) Bishan-Toa Payoh GRC MP Zainudin Nordin
    7) Bishan-Toa Payoh GRC MP and Ex-Minister Wong Kan Seng
    8) Sembawang GRC MP Hawazi Daipi
    9) AMK GRC Seng Han Thong
    10) AMK GRC Yeo Guat Kwang

    Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong is currently having a manpower shortage filling in these resigned positions and especially for the Transport Minister position as no PAP MP volunteered for the job.

     

    Source: http://statestimesreview.com

  • Implosion Of The Young Lions

    Implosion Of The Young Lions

    There was none of the usual slamming of the inept coach that one would normally see in the aftermath of a disastrous football campaign. Neither was there much of the blame game among players which one would expect to see the morning after a debacle that saw Singapore’s SEA Games football hopes end in the group stage.

    Instead, in the aftermath of the team’s surprise exit and the shock resignation of national Under-23 coach Aide Iskandar on Thursday night, fingers point to an implosion from within the Football Association of Singapore (FAS), caused by infighting among coaching staff and a lack of clarity on key objectives.

    While player injuries and wrong tactics ultimately contributed to the team’s failure, it was problems from within, or as Aide hinted on Thursday, “a lot of challenges”, that precipitated the Young Lions’ demise.

    Players and backroom staff The Straits Times spoke to talked about how the constant changing of coaches created an unsettling atmosphere within the side.

    The bulk of the players had trained under fitness coach Aleksandar Bozenko in the build-up to the Games last year, only to face a new trainer late last year in Juergen Raab.

    The replacement was then replaced when former national player Kadir Yahaya was roped in to help get the team fighting fit just months before the Games.

    Said a senior player who declined to be named: “We found it puzzling that although a bronze medal (at the 2013 Games) was won with one trainer and we were working well with him, another was brought in.

    “Then, yet another came in.”

    Sources said that Aide had preferred Bozenko but was forced to work with Raab.

    The coaching merry-go-round continued right up to one month before the Games when goalkeeper coach John Burridge, who had worked with the goalkeepers in the build-up to the tournament, did not actually feature when the Games started.

    Insiders in the team said that the Englishman had asked to be excused to work with the senior squad for the World Cup qualifiers, forcing the SEA Games outfit to scramble for a last-minute replacement.

    Added a source close to the team: “It was strange that a coach could be allowed to leave so soon before a tournament. Perhaps what could have been made clear was which tournament was the main priority.”

    The blurred lines also meant players were not clear about what their key objectives were for the year – the SEA Games team or the LionsXII.

    Despite the FAS publicly announcing that the SEA Games had top priority, key attackers Sahil Suhaimi and Faris Ramli were released for LionsXII duty in the build-up to the Games, dealing a blow to Aide’s final preparations.

    Both Sahil and Faris scored in the Malaysian FA Cup win, but failed to show such form during the SEA Games.

    “The SEA Games team should have taken top priority as we believe the talent, if harnessed properly, was there to get the gold,” said a Young Lions official.

    “The FA Cup win was good for Singapore football but certain players came back to us with inflated egos, which made them harder to coach.”

    The lack of clarity also surfaced just before the tournament, when attacker Iqbal Hussain was dropped on the eve of the event for disciplinary reasons, only to be called up by national team coach Bernd Stange for the World Cup qualifiers.

    The move infuriated the Young Lions squad, 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 an insider: “The team lost the bench after that. Players weren’t convinced that being in the SEA Games squad was the best move for them.”

    The off-field problems, in turn, led to problems on it.

    Whether he was fickle or forced to do so because of injuries, Aide switched between route-one football and short but not always decisive passing – often in the same match.

    “We were playing long balls to a 1.7m striker (Sahil) – Aide always had a game plan but sometimes, it didn’t make sense,” said a player who declined to be named.

    Another added: “When we did have a big guy (1.87m-tall Irfan Fandi) up front, the crosses were not in sync with his runs.”

    Despite overseas trips to Turkey, Austria and Japan and their public avowal of overall unity, there were divisions within the squad. Since coming together two years ago, tensions have existed between the “veterans” with international caps and the younger players.

    “Some senior guys knew they were undroppable so they didn’t bother to train hard, eat well or follow the rules,” said one player.

    The team did not have luck with injuries either. Key midfielder Shahfiq Ghani, instrumental in the build-up to the Games as the team beat Laos 5-1 and Timor Leste 2-0, missed the whole tournament with injury. For Thursday’s must-win against Indonesia, Faris and striker Irfan were only half-fit.

    But as Aide continues to bear the brunt of criticism from a disappointed public dreaming of an elusive football gold, defender Amirul Adli best summed up the team’s feelings.

    He said: “Why blame the coach? He had his own issues to deal with behind the scenes.

    “The players just didn’t perform to their standards.”

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com

  • Zainudin Nordin: Thank You Fans, Now Back Our U23 Team For The SEA Games!

    Zainudin Nordin: Thank You Fans, Now Back Our U23 Team For The SEA Games!

    I am deeply touched by the scenes of celebrations at the final whistle at the Bukit Jalil Stadium in KL.

    Tears of joy from the players and officials on the pitch; fans embracing each other in the stands; and viewers and fans in Singapore posting congratulatory messages on social media – these clearly reflect the appeal of the beautiful game we love.

    I extend my congratulations to LIONSXII, Coach Fandi & Nazri, the back room staff and also the team behind the team including our colleagues from the various departments who have played their part to continue to develop football talents.

    And to our loyal fans, thank you for coming all the way to support our boys and also cheering our boys back home. Let us continue to come together and support our teams.

    Soon our U23 Young Lions will be in action at the SEA Games and the Singapore National Team will be playing two World Cup qualifier games against Japan and Cambodia.

    Together with your support, our boys will aspire to put up a good showing!

    Once again, congratulations to the LIONSXII and a heart-felt thank you to all our fans who traveled to KL for the match and also to those who had sent us words of encouragement. – Zaï

     

    Source: Zainudin Nordin