Story by Les Tan/Red Sports. Pictures by Lai Jun Wei/Red Sports.
Chaiman Therdsak (SAFFC, #8) fires off a shot to score the first goal of the night. (Photo 1 © Lai Jun Wei/Red Sports)
Jalan Besar Stadium, February 25, 2009 – Singapore Armed Forces FC made footballing history when they qualified for the Asian Football Confederation (AFC) Champions League after beating PSMS Medan 2-1 in extra-time. SAFFC are the first team from Singapore to play in the AFC league for Asian club champions.
SAFFC had beaten Provincial Electric Authority of Thailand 4-1 in a first playoff qualifier last week to earn this final playoff game against Medan and with this victory tonight, they can now take their place in the AFC Champions League proper.
SAFFC will play in Group G alongside Shanghai Shenhua (China), Kashima Antlers (Japan) and Suwon Bluewings (South Korea).
Experienced playmaker Therdsak Chaiman gave the Warriors a good start when he slotted home from long-range in the 35th minute to give SAFFC a 1-0 lead after Latiff had set him going with a pass from the wing.
However, Medan came alive in the second half. Striker and captain Elie Aiboy ran half the field unimpeded on a counter-attack as the SAFFC defence backtracked. Elie found Costas on the left at the top of the penalty box unmarked and the latter coolly sidefooted past a stranded Shahril Jantan in goal for an equaliser.
SAFFC lacked the final offensive thrust to settle the game in 90 minutes and had to play their second extra-time game in as many weeks. This coming on top of their S.League game three days ago against Balestier Khalsa on Sunday night.
This time, it was Therdsak who played provider, releasing Latiff into space down the right side of the Medan penalty box. Latiff looked like he was running out of options as he raced towards the byeline but then he shocked everyone watching, including goalkeeper Markus, when he rammed home a goal from an almost impossibly tight angle to send the Warriors into the AFC Champions League.
Medan then self-destructed with two red cards although they did come close on one occasion.
Medan coach Liestiadi Lo was understandably an unhappy man.
“I’m very disappointed with the referee for sending off two of my players,” coach Lo said at the post-game press conference. “The second red card was ok. But the first I disagree. The players put in 100% effort. Because of the artificial pitch, the players couldn’t adapt.”
The emotions in the SAFFC camp were the opposite.
“I was going for goal,” said a grinning Latiff after the game. “No point crossing!”
On the Medan equaliser, SAFFC coach Richard Bok said: “It was a quick counter down the middle. Hafizul was a bit inside, tucked in too much. This is where he needs to learn. He’s a young player. He will learn from that.
“I think we started quite well, created a few chances, but didn’t convert it. There was a period where Medan were coming at us. As a whole, I’m quite satisfied with the ways we played. Some of the experienced players had some butterflies. Our fitness carried us in the last two games.”
Celebration as SAFFC go one up. (Photo 2 © Lai Jun Wei/Red Sports)
Rachma Dhany (PSMS, #26) tugs at the shirt of Ahmad Latiff (SAFFC, #7) to try and stop him… (Photo 3 © Lai Jun Wei/Red Sports)
… but the latter breaks free… (Photo 4 © Lai Jun Wei/Red Sports)
… takes a shot which bounced off the hands of goalkeeper Markus… (Photo 5 © Lai Jun Wei/Red Sports)
… and finds the top corner of the goal. (Photo 6 © Lai Jun Wei/Red Sports)
Jubilation as SAFFC finally break the stalemate in extra-time. (Photo 7 © Lai Jun Wei/Red Sports)
Ahmad Latiff gets taken down by Guillen Tejera (PSMS, #5). (Photo 8 © Lai Jun Wei/Red Sports)
Fukasawa Masahiro (SAFFC, #6) intercepts a pass while Agus Supriyanto (PSMS, #22) tries to get to the ball. (Photo 9 © Lai Jun Wei/Red Sports)
Aleksandar Duric (SAFFC, #9) charges down the flank. (Photo 10 © Lai Jun Wei/Red Sports)
John Wilkinson (SAFFC, #10) fires off a shot just as he gets tackled by Reswandi Sumaji (PSMS, #7). (Photo 11© Lai Jun Wei/Red Sports)
Aleksandar Duric takes a shot… (Photo 12 © Lai Jun Wei/Red Sports)
… and grimaces at a wasted opportunity. (Photo 13 © Lai Jun Wei/Red Sports)
John Wilkinson (SAFFC, #10) misses a cross from the flanks which bounced right over PSMS Medan goalkeeper Markus Harison. (Photo 14 © Lai Jun Wei/Red Sports)
Ahmad Latiff gets taken down by Edi Sukamto (PSMS, #11). (Photo 15 © Lai Jun Wei/Red Sports)
Daniel Bennett (SAFFC, #16) stretches out for the ball. (Photo 16 © Lai Jun Wei/Red Sports)
Ahmad Latiff protests his innocence after taking down a Medan player. The referee gave him a yellow card. (Photo 17 © Lai Jun Wei/Red Sports)
SAFFC goalkeeper Sharil Bin Jantan grabs hold of the ball before Leonardo Martins (PSMS, #17) can get to it. (Photo 18 © Lai Jun Wei/Red Sports)
Markus Harison has the ball safely in his arms while SAFFC captain Aleksandar Duric laments the misplaced pass. (Photo 19 © Lai Jun Wei/Red Sports)
Kenji Arai (SAFFC, #3) tries to head in a corner. (Photo 20 © Lai Jun Wei/Red Sports)
Markus Harison expresses relief after his team equalised in the second half. (Photo 21 © Lai Jun Wei/Red Sports)
John Wilkinson (SAFFC, #10) gets taken down in the penalty box but referee decides it was a fair tackle and did not give a penalty. (Photo 22 © Lai Jun Wei/Red Sports)
Reswandi Sumaji tries to stop Aleksandar Duric in extra-time. (Photo 23 © Lai Jun Wei/Red Sports)
Mohamad Shaiful Esah (SAFFC, #2) gets stretchered off after a late tackle. (Photo 24 © Lai Jun Wei/Red Sports)
SAFFC coach Richard Bok was quite pleased about his team’s performance. (Photo 33 © Lai Jun Wei/Red Sports)
I just want to say something about the website of S-League clubs. The irony is, the best maintained is by, Balestier Khalsa (http://www.balestierkhalsafc.com/), the bottom club last season.
I think what S-League can do is to look at what probably the Football League of England or the A-League of Australia has done, which is to use the same format for all the clubs in the league. The league seems to assist the club to maintain their website in the same format, while the club provides the information.
It will be good if S-League itself can have a team to help maintain the club’s website. Some economies of scale (can cut manpower), plus the fact that we only play one or two match per day. It should not take too much resources.
CORRECTION:
….and I dont’s even know your face)
EDIT: added ‘don’t’
@Gale
You are right if you think a ‘team’ only comprise those on the field.
Obviously most S-League club think so.
Webpages can reach out to the masses (like what Redsports does,
and how it can connect you to me, and I even know your face)
But they are so backdated to make use of this technological innovation.(doesn’t sound very professional isn’t it?)
poor attendance and fan support is what they get now, no matter what achievement they made on the field.
except for their cheerleaders and from mainsteam media.
nobody knows what’s going on in their club!!
They don’t even update their website.
Do you think they even checks email?
I don’t see the rationale to judge a team’s professionalism with just a simple website. Not just that, how about telling Richard Bok, the team coach about this topic? You might want to send an email to SAF FC’s service personnel instead, it might be more effective.
cannot lah… later the opponents get their info from the website and knows saffc inside out :p
Well, since there is some demand, look out for the Red Sports profile story on the SAFFC team in the next few weeks.
les… no time is not an excuse.
(I’m sure Mr.Bok will have no time to update the website,
and he will have to time to clean the dressing room either)
here they are complaining not enough Singaporean support their team during matches.
they blame it on the mainstream media sometimes.
but in the age of the internet where you can bypass the mainstream media to reach out to the fans directly.
no time is not an excuse.
it’s mere outlooking the potential self-marketing instead of being spoon-feed.
it’s so amateurish for a team playing in S-League and more so in ACL.
it’s just show that they are not interested in reaching out to the heartland football fans especially attracting the new ones with their success.
I get the impression that they are contented with just the manufactured loyal fans and drummers.
if that’s so, yes, they shouldn’t waste their time updating the website.
player profile for the key player will be interesting.
especially so for Therdsak Chaiman, who have past record with Shanghai Shenhua!
(FYI, he’s responsible for eliminating Shanghai Shenhua from 2003 ACL, sadly I read this from the Chinese media, rather than local sports news)
PHoto 6 is outstanding, Jun Wei. Wonderful. Wish I shot it myself.
To Kar-Teck and Moon,
Maybe they have no time.
Anyway, I was thinking of doing up a profile of each SAFFC player. You think anyone is interested?
Agree with Moon.
Not just SAFFC, all s-league clubs should maintain their club webpage!
Update your team’s website Mr.Bok
As a first representative of S-league in ACL.
your PR management is such a shame!
The Chinese, Japanese, Korean footballs fans will be checking out
your website, especially their own countrymen playing in your club.
and all you have is last year’s stats and cheerleader’s achievement to show ?
it’s already 1 week from S-League and 2 weeks+ to your first group match in ACL.
Don’t shame us…even before the match start.