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[merged] AFC Asian Cup 2007[FINAL:IRAQ 1 SAUDI 0]
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Sultan Ahmad Shah berkata, baginda juga akan mempengerusikan mesyuarat pada minggu depan bagi mencari 損enyelesaian terbaik |
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dah tua nak mampus pun dk terhegeh pegang jawatan ni lagi..Hangin aku |
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Reply #942 Ax's post
23 tahun tue nak tunjuk glamer dpt jd presiden ...skang bru nk push
bodo punye org |
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Menjawab soalan berikutnya, Sultan Ahmad Shah, bagaimanapun, berkata, baginda bersedia untuk menyerahkan jawatan presiden jika ada calon yang sanggup.
lol..lawaknye statement ..sape brani takeover dr sultan .. |
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Dorang tak letak jawatan la... semua nak bolot duit FAM tu:@ :@ |
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nampak sgt bongkak bebeno dan ego presiden fam ni begitu tinggi skali...xnak mengaku kalah dengan desakan org ramai...kononya jatuhla maruah klu menyerah kalah dgnpeminat2 bola msia ni...gdluck masa depan bola malaysia |
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BERUNDUR LAH TUANKU Sikit2 kata nak resign lepas tu tak jadik, Gohead Gostan, kedepan belakang .FAM , Ko pikir ni aper ? Dangdut ka?
Not coward Lah konon... lagi2 nak ambik hati |
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Saya bukan pengecut. Saya tidak akan tunduk kepada desakan ramai.擺/color]
Statement inilah yg paling pedas perit nak dengar takper besok lawan Iran kiter tengok camaner , 20 bijik nanti masuk baru semua FAM akan dibubarkan serta merta berikutan hari perlawanan tu juga! |
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Bagaimana Media Austalia Mengulas prestasi bolaspak Malaysia
Malaysia set to be whipping boys
Posted Tue Jul 3, 2007 2:17pm AEST
Updated Tue Jul 3, 2007 2:26pm AEST
Malaysia have little in their armoury to suggest they will be anything but the whipping boys of Group C where they face China, Iran and Uzbekistan.
A series of uninspired performances has seen Malaysia sink to a current FIFA world ranking of 149, the lowest of any team in the tournament. They are only at the Asian Cup because they are co-hosts.
The Asian Football Confederation will be thinking even this was a mistake after the Football Association of Malaysia (FAM) openly defied it by agreeing to host a Manchester United match on July 27 which clashes with the finals.
Ultimately, the match was dumped by the Red Devils, leaving the FAM, like the national team, floundering.
It is no surprise that fans would rather watch the Premier League champions. Football in Malaysia is in the doldrums.
They were a strong team in the 1970s and 1980s when they used to beat South Korea and Japan, but lack of government support and poor management has seen the team hit the skids.
The Malaysian Super League (MSL) was introduced in 2004 in the desperate hope of raising standards but international football wilderness continues to stretch as far as the eye can see.
Malaysia's pre-World Cup qualifying campaign in 2006 ended with them losing every match and their lead-up to the Asian Cup finals has seen little to suggest they can mount a challenge.
While Malaysia beat minnows Cambodia 6-0 in a warm-up, they lost 3-1 at home to fellow Asian Cup team United Arab Emirates last month in a better indication of their standard.
Indra Putra Mahayuddin has been brought back into the squad and will be leading the attack with Hairuddin Omar, Akmal Rizal Ahmad Rakhli and Safee Sali.
Former skipper Rosdi Talib also makes a comeback to the national team after three years.
Other seasoned hands include Kaironissam Sahabuddin Hussain, K. Nanthakumar, Norhafiz Zamani Misbah, Shukor Adan, Fadzli Saari and Eddy Helmi Abdul Manan.
Coach Norizan Bakar knows they have their work cut out and has urged his team not to squander any chances they might get.
"We cannot afford to miss scoring chances when you are playing teams such as China, Iran and Uzbekistan, as they will not give you the time or space to move around," he said.
Malaysia open their account on July 10 at Bukit Jalil Stadium against China, who finished runner-up to Japan at the last tournament in 2004 and which boasts several European-based players.
It is Malaysia's third Asian Cup finals appearance, and their first since 1980, with home-grown coach Bakar's job hanging by a thread.
They have not won a major international tournament since lifting the football title at the 1989 South East Asian Games. |
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Acuan yang sama hasilnya tentunya sama...dah 20 tahun rakyat Malaysia menunggu hasil pembangunan bolasepak FAM dalam tempoh itu kegagalan demi kegagalan dan semakin kronik era kejatuhan bolasepak kita. Nampaknya kita terpaksa menunggu 10 atau 20 tahun lagi untuk melihat hasilnya dengan acuan yg sama. Pemimpin2 dan pegawai2 FAM berundurlah dengan rasa terhormat dan bertanggung-jawab. Kerana sayangkan bolasepak tanahair beri lah peluang kepada muka baru bukan anda saja pandai orang lain pun mungkin lebih cerdik dgn wawasan dan idea baru utk mermartabatkan bolasepak negara ke peringkat tinggi. |
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apasal durjana2 FAM ni susah benor nak sedar diri...cukup2lah.......kasi pentadbiran baru...org baru.....jgn ler ikut keras kepala...ni bukan sebab maruah diri korang ajer...
ni maruah negara....RESIGN LA WEIHHH>>>>:@ |
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oh no... Siam pun kena titik jugak... di tempat sendiri...
Presiden Persatuan Bolasepak Siam sepatutnya meletakkan jawatan... :@ :@
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antara tajuk2 berita hari ini
[url=http://www.utusan.com.my/utusan/content.asp?y=2007&dt=0717&pub=Utusan_Malaysia&sec=Sukan&pg=su_05.htm]Muktamad |
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betui.. betui.. yg top scorer pong org luar..
[quote]慡aya tidak setuju抂/color]
SHAH ALAM |
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Reply #955 conan's post
ape punya budussss k toyol.... |
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"Mohamad Khir berpendapat, FAM sepatutnya perlu ada kumpulan pemain khas dan ia boleh disewakan atau pun dipinjamkan ke negeri-negeri."
nih maner nyer mahzab nih? bengong betul la :@ |
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Malaysian malaise in Group C
Posted Fri Jul 13, 2007 3:28pm AEST
Once upon a time Malaysia's football team was the envy of south-east Asia, sweeping aside Japan and South Korea as it reached two Olympic Games and two Asian Cups.
Those glory days are now a distant memory with an unimpressive domestic league producing a national side ranked 149 in the world, lower than the likes of Chad, Lesotho and Swaziland.
The message was hammered home in Malaysia's opening game of the Asian Cup, when the co-hosts succumbed to the competition's heaviest defeat so far - a 5-1 drubbing by China.
Local media compared Malaysia to the giant-killing displays of fellow hosts Vietnam, Indonesia and Thailand, who have all impressed in early matches.
"Malaysia? Still as bad as ever," ran the headline in the New Straits Times.
Worse, the match was watched by a sparse crowd in the National Stadium, highlighting public disillusionment as Malaysia celebrates its 50th anniversary of independence from Britain.
"Malaysian football is in the dumps and every joke imaginable has been cracked about it," wrote newspaper columnist Vijesh Rai.
The result sparked furious recriminations with a senior official blasting the "shameless" and "inept" performance and blaming coach Norizan Bakar.
But the officials themselves were in the firing line recently over a bungled attempt to organise a Manchester United visit during the Asian Cup, breaking a deal with the Asian Football Confederation.
It is a far cry from the proud days when Malaysia was a founding member of the Asian Football Confederation, reaching Asian Cup finals in 1976 and 1980 as well as the 1972 and 1980 Olympic Games.
According to experts, the Malaysian malaise can be blamed on poor management, cronyism and lack of government support, with a healthy dose of bribery and corruption thrown in.
"State teams are basically being run by people who are connected to the establishment, meaning the state government," explained Rizal Hashim, a veteran sports journalist with the Malay Mail.
"The whole set up is basically being run by the [state] secretary," he said.
"The secretary will normally propose the name of the coach and the coach will pick his players based on favouritism. There's very little meritocracy."
Even co-hosting the Asian Cup has failed to lift spirits; with banners and advertising scarce, Malaysian TV coverage limited and many people unaware of the tournament's existence.
"The fans watch Malaysian football and they compare [Malaysia midfielder] Shahrulnizam Mustapha with Ryan Giggs. It's too vast a difference," said one prominent sports journalist.
"A 12-year-old boy can't name one player from the national team but he can name the first XI for Arsenal," he said.
Bribery scandals have sullied the name of Malaysian football, with more than 100 players banned for life in the mid 1990s.
In 1999, a Malaysian betting ring was found to have rigged the floodlights at a Premiership match in London.
This April, former national coach Chow Kwai Lam was convicted and fined for match-fixing in Singapore.
"Now Malaysian football has sunk so low that fans would rather watch European football on television than turn up for their own national team," said Hashim.
"We are so concentrated on the English Premier League and our former colonial masters," he said.
Malaysia will be keeping their fingers crossed they can get the public back on side against Uzbekistan on Saturday.
-AFP
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"A 12-year-old boy can't name one player from the national team but he can name the first XI for Arsenal," he said.
stupid boy |
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setuju tang nih gak
"According to experts, the Malaysian malaise can be blamed on poor management, cronyism and lack of government support, with a healthy dose of bribery and corruption thrown in.
"State teams are basically being run by people who are connected to the establishment, meaning the state government," explained Rizal Hashim, a veteran sports journalist with the Malay Mail.
"The whole set up is basically being run by the [state] secretary," he said.
"The secretary will normally propose the name of the coach and the coach will pick his players based on favouritism. There's very little meritocracy." |
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