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Author: bUtTeRfLy

>>>BoLaSePak MaLaYsIa<<<

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Post time 11-12-2008 04:34 PM | Show all posts
chit...gempaq ja lebey!!!!
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Post time 13-12-2008 01:29 PM | Show all posts

Reply #41 blueharp's post

bagi ah kredit sket

kalu tak kerana gk blunder aritu tak le teruk sgt kena kutuk

kalu seri ngan vietnam ari tu pun bungkos gak kita bila kalah ngan thailand
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Post time 4-8-2009 01:28 PM | Show all posts
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Post time 6-8-2009 07:40 PM | Show all posts
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Post time 30-12-2009 10:28 PM | Show all posts
mesia lead 3-1 syria.:pompom:.. hehehheheheh

friendly match
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Post time 30-12-2009 11:33 PM | Show all posts
full time

mesia 4-1 syria
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Post time 1-1-2010 08:59 PM | Show all posts
syria hantar pasukan muda juga kot
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Post time 14-6-2010 11:04 PM | Show all posts
Asian Angle : No Team At 2011 Asian Cup Is A Disaster For South-East Asian Football - What Has Gone Wrong ?


Football in the region is suffering...


By John Duerden

Mar 4, 2010 9:10:00 AM


As fans over South East Asia wake up this Thursday morning, they were hit by the realization that something wasn’t right. The region of over 500 million people will not have a single representative at the 2011 Asian Cup.

After four participants (OK, due the fact that there was a quartet of hosts) in 2007, this football-mad region has no team to cheer on next January in Qatar - the first time this has happened since 1988.

It has been on the cards for a while. Thailand held their fate in their own hands but came away, as expected, from Iran’s Azadi Stadium carrying nothing. That gave Singapore a chance to sneak in but the Lions lost at Jordan.

When Anas Bani Yaseen scored the winner in Amman, it was one that hurt football bosses all over the ASEAN region, one that had hoped to host the 2022 World Cup but is unable to send any team to the Asian Cup.

It has been a campaign to forget. After promising performances in 2007, the region’s big boys were supposed to take the next step and show that they could do the business away from home and out of their comfort zones. That just never happened and it was a dire qualification campaign.

Let’s just look at the facts.

Five teams started the journey to Qatar. Malaysia, something of a problem child in the region, was in a reduced group of three but still lost all four games. Banning foreign players from the domestic league looks more foolish by the week. It is another decision difficult to fathom by bosses in the country who are fond of talking of future potential rather than the depressing present.

Indonesia, impressive in 2007, failed to win a single match and suffered from a lack of leadership under Benny Dollo. It is hard to escape the conclusion that the team needs a foreign coach.

Vietnam, the region’s champions, won just one, a home victory over Lebanon and showed little of the verve, vigour, and on the road, fearlessness, of their 2008 campaign. Singapore, who actually finished bottom of their group, won two games, against Thailand and Jordan at home and Thailand had their chance at home to Jordan but blew it.

So South-East Asia’s five teams picked up only two wins between them against rivals from elsewhere on the giant continent. It is sobering stuff. Even if ASEAN’s best still don’t travel well, they didn’t win many games at home either.

I asked Peter Withe, ex-England international and former coach of Thailand and Indonesia if football in the region was going backwards.

“ No I do not think so, ” he replied. “ But I do think that teams all over Asia are getting stronger and there is a need to keep pace with the other teams. Some teams like Jordon the Uzbeks, North Korea and even India are getting the message that this is a worldwide sport, we need good teams to compete at this higher level so we must improve our standards. ”

India and North Korea are certainly lucky to be at the 2011 Asian Cup after qualifying through the AFC Challenge Cup, a practice that has not been openly discussed but it certainly dubious in football terms. The strongest South-East Asian teams may have had more luck in that weaker competition.

That shouldn’t be an excuse however. Standards are rising across the board but none from SE Asia has been able to break out of the region. This general disappointment comes when leagues such as Vietnam, Indonesia and Thailand are starting to thrive, attendances are rising and some money is starting to move around the domestic game. It isn’t yet systematic or widespread but it is a start.

It remains to be seen if it is enough. One look at an academy like Aspire in Qatar shows just how finance can make a difference as does a trip to Korea’s pristine National Football Center. These sights are impressive but still absent in the south-east. Professionalism in Thailand, Indonesia and Vietnam is just starting to be felt (and is still fragile as a look at Indonesia’s problems show) and it will take time before this feeds through to the national team.

Money plays a part but is not everything. ASEAN teams play against each other too often and not enough against those from elsewhere. This problem is exacerbated as few players venture outside the region to play their club football. Football there is still insular, as the Malaysia domestic league shows, and long-term thinking is still rare.

A minimal representation in the Asian Champions League doesn’t help. A country with a tiny population such as UAE, one that doesn’t boast the most professional of leagues, has four clubs in the continent’s premier club competition, two more than the entire ASEAN region.

And then there is the problem of goals. Thailand coach Bryan Robson lamented the absence of a goalgetter in his team after the loss to Iran. It is always easy to point the finger at a misfiring marksman but Robson is just the latest in a long line of leaders to wish for more clinical finishers.

But a long line of South East Asian representation at the Asian Cup has now been broken. Just hours after it all happened, it is still too early for it to sink in but very soon, the region needs to take a look at what is going on elsewhere in Asia before it really starts to fall behind.


John Duerden

Asia Editor

john.duerden@goal.com


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Post time 18-7-2010 06:27 PM | Show all posts


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Post time 19-7-2010 06:38 PM | Show all posts
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Post time 19-7-2010 09:18 PM | Show all posts
SENARAI PEMAIN LWN REPUBLIC KOREA

Perlis
1. Mohd Farizal Marlias
2. Amar Rohidan
3. Ahmad Fakri Saarani

Kedah
4. Ahmad Shakir Md Ali
5. Baddrol Bakhtiar
6. Mohamad Azmi Muslim
7. Mohamad Faizal bin Abu Bakar
8. Mohd Khyril Muhymeen
9. Mohd Sabre bin Mat Abu

Selangor
10. Mohd Asraruddin Putra
11. Mohd Nasriq Baharom
12. Safiq Rahim

Negri Sembilan
13. Mohamad Aidil Zafuan Abd Razak
14. Mohamad Zaquan Adha Abd Razak
15. Kunalan Subramaniam

Terengganu
16. Mohd Sharbinee Allawee

Kelantan
17. Norshahrul Idlan Talaha
18. Khairul Fahmi Che Mat

Harimau Muda

19. Gary Steven Robbat
20. Gurusamy Govandar Kandasamy
21. Mahalli Jasuli
22. Mohammad Muslim Ahmad
23. Mohd Faizal Muhamad
24. Mohamad Fandi Othman
25. Wan Zack Haikal Wan Noor
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Post time 21-7-2010 11:35 AM | Show all posts
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Post time 21-7-2010 06:50 PM | Show all posts
harap baddrol boleh cocok pastu passing kat zaquan
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Post time 23-7-2010 11:43 AM | Show all posts
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Post time 23-7-2010 12:07 PM | Show all posts
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Post time 25-7-2010 12:39 AM | Show all posts




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Post time 25-7-2010 10:19 PM | Show all posts
Rajagobal's Boys Pull Off Famous 1-0 Victory Over South Korea

KUALA LUMPUR, July 25 (Bernama) -- The Malaysian Under-23 squad pulled off a famous 1-0 victory over the South Korean Under-23 squad in an international friendly match at the National Stadium in Bukit Jalil here today.

Playmaker Safiq Rahim was the toast of the Malaysian side after breaking the deadlock in the 50th minute when his thunderous shot beat  Lee Bum Soo in the South Korean goal after his initial free kick was parried onto his path by the goalkeeper.

A heavy downpour before the start of the match made playing conditions difficult for both teams but the Malaysian boys adapted better to the wet and slippery conditions to trouble the South Koreans.

Mohd Zaquan Adha Abdul Radzak drew first blood when his shot from inside the box went wide in the fourth minute.

Despite facing a side from a country that has reached the World Cup finals seven times since 1986, K. Rajagobal's boys who were a blend of players from the Under-21 and Under-23 squads, showed tremendous determination, commitment and skill throughout the match.

Stunned by the goal, the speedy Koreans launched a spirited wave of attacks but the Malaysian defence held on stoutly for the famous victory.

The last time Malaysia played against South Korea was during the 1995 Merdeka tournament when the senior Malaysian side beat the South Korean pre-Olympic side 2-1.

Despite the rain, about 30,000 fans braved the wet conditions to see Malaysia, ranked 142 in the FIFA World rankings, beat South Korea, ranked 44th.

SOUTH KOREA : Lee Bum Soo, Park Hyung Jin, Jeong Dong Ho (Sin Se Gye), Kim Oh Kyu, Jang Suk Won, Lee Chang Yong, Jung Woo Young, Go Moo Yul (You Sun Gon), Jeong Hyun Cheol (Cho Yung Hoon), Park Hee Seong, Kim Dong Hee (Kim Dong Sub).

MALAYSIA: Mohd Sharbinee Allawee, Mohd Sabre Mat Sabu, Mohd Nasriq Baharom (Mohamad Muslim Ahmad), Mohd Aidil Zafuan Abdul Radzak, Amar Rohidan, Mohd Asraruddin Putra, Safiq Rahim, Mohd Zaquan Adha Abdul Radzak, S. Kunanlan (Ahmad Shakir Mohd Ali), Norshahrul Idlan Talaha (Baddrol Bakhtiar), Ahmad Fakri Saarani (Mohd Khyril Muhymeen Zambri). - BERNAMA


        TAHNIAH TAHNIAH
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Post time 26-7-2010 01:09 AM | Show all posts
Football : Rajagobal's Boys Pull Off Famous 1-0 Victory Over South Korea


KUALA LUMPUR, July 25 (Bernama) -- The Malaysian Under-23 squad pulled off a famous 1-0 victory over the South Korean Under-23 squad in an international friendly match at the National Stadium in Bukit Jalil here Sunday.

Safiq Rahim was the toast of the Malaysian side after breaking the deadlock in the 50th minute with his thunderous shot beat Lee Bum Soo in the South Korean goal after his initial free kick was parried into his path by the goalkeeper.

A heavy downpour before the start of the match made playing conditions difficult for both teams but the Malaysian boys adopted better to the wet and slippery conditions to trouble the South Koreans.

Mohd Zaquan Adha Abdul Radzak drew first blood when his shot from inside the box went wide in the fourth minute.

Despite facing a side from a country that has reached the World Cup finals seven times since 1986, K. Rajagobal's boys who were a blend of players from the Under-21 and Under-23 squads, showed tremendous determination, commitment and skills throughout the match.

Stunned by the goal, the speedy Koreans launched a spirited waves of attacks but the Malaysian defence held on stoutly for the famous victory.

The last time Malaysia played against South Korea was during the 1995 Merdeka tournament when the senior Malaysian side beat South Korea 2-1.

Despite the rain, about 30,000 fans braved the wet conditions to see Malaysia, ranked 142 in the FIFA World rankings, beat South Korea, ranked 44th.

When approached by reporters after the match, Rajagobal said the team needed more such exposure to maintain consistency ahead of the Asian Games in Guangzhou, China, in November.

He said tonight's win did not guarantee that the team would churn out victories consistently.

Meanwhile, South Korea's coach Hong Myung Bo said the wet pitch slowed down his charges pace but his boys gained much experience from the exposure.

SOUTH KOREA : Lee Bum Soo, Park Hyung Jin, Jeong Dong Ho (Sin Se Gye), Kim Oh Kyu, Jang Suk Won, Lee Chang Yong, Jung Woo Young, Go Moo Yul (You Sun Gon), Jeong Hyun Cheol (Cho Yung Hoon), Park Hee Seong, Kim Dong Hee (Kim Dong Sub).

MALAYSIA : Mohd Sharbinee Allawee, Mohd Sabre Mat Sabu, Mohd Nasriq Baharom (Mohamad Muslim Ahmad), Mohd Aidil Zafuan, Amar Rohidan, Mohd Asraruddin Putra, Safiq Rahim, Mohd Zaquan Adha, Kunalan Subramaniam (Ahmad Shakir Mohd Ali), Norshahrul Idlan Talaha (Baddrol Bakhtiar), Ahmad Fakri Saarani (Mohd Khyril Muhymeen).


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Post time 26-7-2010 01:55 AM | Show all posts
















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Post time 26-7-2010 02:06 AM | Show all posts
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