Monday, March 29, 2010

Peres De Oliveira - Brazilian wizard

Nationality: Brazilian

D.O.B: 7 Nov 1974

Club: Home United (2001-2005, 2008-2010) Tampines Rovers (2006-2007)

Position: Midfielder/Forward

Honour
S-league: 2003
Singapore Cup: 2001, 2003, 2005
S-league Charity Shield: 2008 (Shared)
Player of the Year: 2003
Top Scorer of the Year: 2003
FAM-FAS Cup Champions Cup: 2005

Player History
He was a Brazilian wizard and that is not even enough to describe one of the greatest players to grace the S-league but that is just no word in the vocabulary that can justify what this S-league legend has brought to the game.

Yet the way he, Peres De Oliveira, departed the S-league was, ironically, the same as he arrived. Quietly.
That year, in 2001, another Brazilian, Leandro, from Tampines and Thai, Kiatisuk Senamuang, from SAFFC were hogging all the limelight with nobody knowing the real gem was at Home United.

But this is the life story of Peres for with all his skill and abilities one has to ask how he had gone undetected by anyone connected by football thus plying his trade in one of Brazilian state league at the age of 26.

Luckily, a fellow Brazilian, at that point, noticed the massive talent of Peres and he knew, immediately, his club, and S-league, needed to get their hand on him.

That ‘scout’ was Egmar Gonclaves and S-league will be grateful to him - he is an S-league himself so what else can one say except another word of thank.

Peres may have arrived on the shore of Singapore quietly but he announced his arrival in fashion as in his every first S-league game, he will notched two goals – Both were beauty; especially the second one which was a rocket into the top corner from outside the area after dribbling past his defender – and had the commentator stating he was going to be a star.

It was no surprise then that by the end of the season, everybody knew who Peres was and what a talent Home United has recruited.

After all in 2001, alongside Egmar and Indra in a trio partnership, they will score a combined 71 goals in all competition and nearly brought the S-league title to Bishan.

But at the penultimate point of the season, the Protectors lost a pivotal game against archrival SAFFC at Bishan and it cost them dearly as it gave the Eagles the leadership from which they will go onto win the title.

As least, the Protectors will have their revenge in the Singapore Cup Final as they crushed Geylang United 8-0 and Peres has won his first medal of his S-league career.

In Asia that year, it was no different as the Brazilian will score a hat-trick in at Bishan to help Home United achieved history as they crushed Thai Royal Air Force 5-1 overall to be the first S-league side to not only beat Thai side but reach the quarter-final of an Asian club competition.

After such a good start, Peres will have a wobble second season as the Protectors saw the departure of Dutch coach Robert Albert and the arrival of Englishman Jason Withe and it was a disaster as the Englishman never got hold of which formation or even the first eleven he wanted to play.

Peres will suffer under that period as he was pushed out to the left and his attacking instinct was restricted by the new coach in charge.

The goals will dry up not only for the Brazilian but his partner in crime, Egmar and Indra, as well as Peres was not there in the middle to supply the assists.

With results not going the Protectors way and team morale in the dump under the Englishman, the management acted and, in a rare moment in Protectors history, they sacked Jason Withe in mid-season; showing how bad the situation was as Home United tends to let even ‘bad’ coaches finish their season.

It was a brilliant move though as another Englishman, Steve Darby, was appointed and the first thing he did was rebuild the partnership of Peres, Egmar and Indra.

The goals return to the Protectors and while it was too late to rescue the 2002 season, it set up Peres brilliantly for the next one.

Now released by Steve Darby, the, now, 29-year-old will played like he never play able and he was unplayable on the field in 2003 - the ball will stick to him like glue as he dribbles, every pass he makes find it target, every freekick he take find the top corner, every touch he make will lose his marker as though the defender was not there.

That was the form the wizard was in thus a League and Cup Double success at the end of it all was to be no surprise and alongside it was a top scorer award with 37 goals in 37 games.

No wonder his name was the only one mention that will win the Player of the Year and it turn out that way.
In 2004, Peres continued his remarkable form as Home United nearly achieved a Double Double but they ‘pay’ for their success in both S-league and Asia as this was the first year AFC started the group stage from the beginning and it meant a congested season thus a tired Home United, and Peres (He was nearly 30 already), allowed the Stags to sneak toward the Double.

However, the Protectors will have the consolation to know they make history again in Asia, thanks in part once again to their magician from Brazil, as they will, jointly with Geylang United, become the first teams from S-league to reach the semi-final stage of an Asian Club competition.

The Protectors also had the added glory of being the first S-league team to beat West Asian opponents in the second leg of the quarter-final with Peres setting up the equalizer and then going onto score the winner.

A cross from Fahmie Abdullah on the Home United left was met by Peres and won; with the header going across the box into the path of Egmar and the ex-Singapore international, in between two Olympic players caught in no-man-land, leap up to place a firm header into the net. After that, a freekick on the flank swing in by Fahmie caught Olympic Beirut players napping with three Protectors – Indra, Egmar and Peres – attacking it but only one Olympic defender was anywhere near them. Peres got to the ball first and dispatched it into the net.

After two great years in a row, it was always tough to match such expectations again and, with an aging team, Peres will find 2005 to be an ‘average’ season with just a Singapore Cup medal but he continue to make history (what else is new) as he notched his 100 S-league goals when he score the winner in a 3-2 win over Paya Lebar Punggol at Hougang.

Even up to the point of writing, he remains the only midfielder to have score 100 S-league goals and that showcase the remarkable feat he has achieve.

As 2005 ended though Peres will find himself moving East to join Tampines Rovers as the Protectors decided it was time for him to move on.

In the two years with Tampines Rovers, he was good but not great with 35 goals in 75 games in all competition. He could not fully adjust to the Stags playing style thus the time has come to move once again.

That where the shock came. The Protectors admitted they make a mistake to let Peres go two years earlier and now he was back with the club where he makes his name but, like his two years with the Stags, one has to admit he was not the evergreen Peres anymore as performances range from brilliant to average and injuries were not helping the Brazilian.

He continue to make a fight of it though as one of his last brilliant performance came in his final season (It should be 2009 and not 2010 where two games hardly register) against his former club Tampines Rovers at Tampines Stadium.

With the Protectors struggling for form, Peres will take it upon himself to achieve a brilliant 3-2 victory against the Stags with a hat-trick and one of the goal was a trademark freekick of his.

That show Peres still had it in him to change the destiny of a game by himself and few in the match can match him when he is on that form.

In 2010, the curtain came down on him in the S-league after he fell out with his new Korean coach but there will be no masking the destiny he has with Home United which is synonymous with Peres name in the S-league. 

That why his departure of Home United will see the club struggling to find anybody half as great as him to fill the void he has left behind.

Peres De Oliveira – this will be a name that will never be forgotten when fans want to talk about Brazilians in the S-league. 

Home United
Year
League App
Goal
Cup App
Goal
2001
33
16
5
5
2002
31
15
3
1
2003
32(1)
30
5
7
2004
26(1)
15
5
5
2005
25(2)
11
4
0
2008
25(1)
9
2
0
2009
22(3)
14
3
1
2010
2
0
-
-
Total
196(8)
110
27
19
HOME UNITED vs SEMBAWANG RANGERS – 17/3/01 – 2 goals

Home United - Asia
Year
Asian App
Goal
Other
Goal
2001
-
?
-
-
2002
2
1
-
-
2004
10
5
-
-
2005
8
4
2
0
2008
6
7
1
0
2009
7
3
-
-
Total
33
20
3
0

Tampines Rovers
Year
League App
Goal
Cup App
Goal
2006
30
14
5
1
2007
28(2)
12
7
4
Total
58(2)
26
12
5
TAMPINES ROVERS vs SPORTING AFRIQUE – 17/3/06 – 3 goals

Tampines Rovers -Asia
Year
Asian App
Goal
2006
8
3
2007
7
1
Total
15
4

Tuesday, March 9, 2010

Kengne Ludovick

Nationality: Cameroonian 

D.O.B: 21 Jun 1983 

Club: Balestier Khalsa (2005–2006) Home United (2007-2009)

Position: Forward 

Honour
S-league Charity Shield: 2008 (Shared)
Young Player of the Year: 2006 

Balestier Khalsa
Year
League App
Goal
Cup App
Goal
2005
27
20
1
0
2006
26
15
6
9
Total
53
35
7
9
BALESTIER KHALSA vs HOME UNITED – 20/3/05 – 2 goals 

Home United
Year
League App
Goal
Cup App
Goal
2007
32
19
5
1
2008
33
24
5
1
2009
29(4)
14
7 (3)
1
Total
94(4)
57
17(3)
3
GOMBAK UNITED vs HOME UNITED – 19/3/07 – 2 goals  

Home United - Asia
Year
Asian App
Goal
Others
Goal
2008
8
2
1
1
2009
7
3
-
-
Total
15
5
1
1

Gabriel Obatola

Nationality: Nigerian

D.O.B: 24 Oct 1987 

Club: Gombak United (2006-2010)

Position: Forward 

Honours
League Cup: 2008
Young Player of the Year: 2009
 

Gombak United
Year
League App
Goal
Cup App
Goal
2006
25
11
1
0
2007
27 (3)
13
6
4
2008
27 (3)
16
4
6
2009
28 (1)
22
3
1
2010
3
0
-
-
Total
110 (7)
62
14
11
GOMBAK UNITED vs ALBIREX NIIGATA (S) – 27/4/06

Friday, March 5, 2010

Hidetoshi Wakui

Nationality: Japanese

D.O.B: 21 February 1983 

Club: Albirex Niigata (S) (2004-2005)

Position: Midfielder 

Albirex Niigata (S)
Year
League App
Goal
Cup App
Goal
2004
26
4
1
1
2005
26
5
3
0
Total
52
9
4
1
ALBIREX NIIGATA (S) vs GEYLANG UNITED – 11/3/04

Friday, February 5, 2010

Nazri Nasir - Leader and Player of his generation

Nationality: Singaporean

D.O.B: 17 Jan 1971 

Club: Sembawang Rangers (1996), SAFFC (1997-2001), Tampines Rovers (2002-2007)

Position: Defender/Midfielder 

Honour
S-league: 1997, 1998, 2000, 2004, 2005
Singapore Cup: 1997, 2002, 2004, 2006
FA Cup: 1997
Tiger Cup: 1998
ASEAN Club Championship: 2005
Player of the Year: 1997 

Player History 
The first ever Singapore captain to lift an international trophy. That is an accomplishment one cannot take away from Nazri Nasir as he looked back on his career.

Nazri Nasir talents were spotted way before the concepts of S-league were given birth as he was handpicked along with Rafi Ali as the first recipients of the Goh Chok Tong Scheme in 1991.

Under that plan, talented footballers were send to Czechoslovakia (Now Czech Republic and Slovakia) to train for 3 months with a club picked by the host FA and with all costs borne by FAS.

And, he showed he was the only one worthy of that scheme as he emerged to be player of his Generation; outshining every player that was send, even when at that time, Rafi Ali was considered the more talented one.

The short-lived scheme ended in 1993 due to cost cuttings with record losses in the Malaysia Cup but Nazir football career was just beginning.

In 1996 as S-league was given birth, then 25-year-old, Nazri Nasir opted to start out his S-league career with Sembawang Rangers but what a mistake it was to be.

The Yishun-based club clearly lacked the vision and ambition to match his own even as their chairman talked of big dreams.

He then decided to leave the club after just one season; feeling disappointed that the Stallions had finished in the bottom two for both Series.

Immediately, SAFFC came in for the midfielder and it resulted in a tussle for Nazri Nasir still had a 2-year contract with the Stallions but the lure of winning his first S-league championship medal was proving too much as he demanded a transfer.

The tussle was frontpage news as both sides were far apart in their valuation of the player and was willing to take the matter up to the Ministry of Manpower as no end was in sight.

FAS had to step in; knowing how FIFA dislike such matter being interpreted by the Government and a figure of S$30000 - still the record transfer fee at this moment in time - were settled.

Nazri, in wanting to prove money was not his main motivation, paid half of the Warriors S$30000 transfer fee to pave the way.

It soon saw him getting his due dividend as the Warriors won the domestic Treble that very year and along with that, he also wrote history once again as he became the first local to scoop the Player of the Year award.

More trophies followed in the following year with the S-league title once again won by SAFFC and he played an important part; for in the final game of the season, against Gombak United, he had clear a goal-bound goal from the line in the dying moment to ensure the crown go to SAFFC thank to a superior goal difference.

Just a mere few months later, the 1998 Tiger Cup trophy – Singapore first ever international trophy – followed and it was extra special as he has became the first ever Singapore captain to lead Singapore to international glory.

By now, 27 year of age, Nazri Nasir has accomplished much but he was still in tussle with Rafi Ali on which player should be crowned the Player of their Generation but that was no doubts as the years continue to past by, the SAFFC player was just that more hungry.

He continue to lead the Warriors to glory as he won two more trophies during his stay with the Warriors - the 1999 Singapore Cup and the 2000 S-league crown, which he lifted as the Warriors captain.

But, after the 2001 season, the Warriors management decided to release the international midfielder as they seek to revamp their team after a disappointing season which saw the Warriors lost a record 7 times – more than the combined total for 3 years.

The then 30-year-old opted to join Tampines Rovers and it proved no different as the hunger remained; for in the very first year, he lead the Stags to their first ever trophy, the Singapore Cup.

He was an inspiring captain to his teammates for he was willing to defend them even with cost to himself.

For, after the Tiger Cup exit later that year, he found himself the subject of some scathing attacks from sections of the Lions supporters as he was willing to stand up for his ex-Warriors team mate Shahril Jantan.

He did a captain job and stood in front of his younger and thus inexperienced teammate to take the bows.

Nazri retired from international football soon afterward having amassed 100 international caps with Singapore.

At this junction, fans then started to question if he had lost his football abilities but there was nothing like doubters and critics to relit the fire in Nazri Nasir; even as he started to play in defence now and not the engine room.

That was why it was no surprise, in 2004, when the critics decried the Tampines Rovers team as the ‘Daddy Army’, he managed to rally his troopers to the finishline as the Double Champions to prove the Stags were a force to be reckon in the coming years.

A year later, it was even better as history beckon again for Nazri as he added the honour of being, yet again, the first Singaporean captain to lift an international club trophy as the Stags won the 2005 ASEAN Club Championship in Brunei; defeating Pahang 4-2 in the Final.

The S-league champions also successfully defended their S-league crown, fencing off a tough challenge from SAFFC and Home United, and Nazir has now led the Stags to the pinnacle of their power.

They can claim to have joined SAFFC and Home United as the Kingpins of Singapore football and be recognized as one of the Big 3 and their captain, Nazir, deserved his accolades.

In 2006, despite challenging SAFFC all the way to the finish line, Tampines Rovers failed to win their third S-league crown but won their third Singapore Cup defeating Chonburi 3-2 in the Final.

In 2007, the Stags failed to finished above third in the league but they further cemented their place as a force of Singapore football and looking back it all started with Nazir Nasir leadership on the field just like SAFFC own rise a decade ago in 1997.

The 36-year-old then decided to hang up with boots after the season ended.

He has had a remarkable S-league career winning five S-league, four Singapore Cup and one FA Cup medal in his 12 years in the S-league while at the international front, he lifted both the 2005 ASEAN Club Championship and 98 Tiger Cup as captain; which no other before him has done.

A Leader and the Player of his Generation – That is the hallmark of Nazir Nasir. 

SAFFC
Year
League App
Goal
Cup App
Goal
1997
-
4
-
0
1998
-
1
-
0
1999
20
2
5
0
2000
22
10
6
0
2001
30
11
5
0
Total
52
28
16
0

Tampines Rovers
Year
League App
Goal
Cup App
Goal
2002
31
5
5
0
2003
27 (1)
1
3
0
2004
25 (1)
1
5 (1)
0
2005
24
0
4
0
2006
22
1
6 (3)
1
2007
28 (4)
2
6 (1)
0
Total
157
10
29 (5)
1
TPUFC vs TAMPINES ROVERS – 4/5/02 

Tampines Rovers - Asia
Year
Asian App
Goal
Others
Goal
2005
12
0
2
0
2006
8
0
-
-
2007
6
0
-
-
Total
26
0
2
0

New category - Others - introduced

I have introduced a new category named Others.

It is meant to differentiate S-league, Singapore Cup and League Cup from other competitions like Charity Shield and FAM_FAS Series as well as the 2006 Malaysian FA Cup which the Young Lions played in.

Others will meant I can put these competitions - which do not appear on the Singapore calender every year - there as they should still be counted as official as they are recognised and endorsed by FAS.

Masahiro Fukasawa

Nationality: Japanese

D.O.B: 12-Jul-1977

Club: SAFFC (2008-2009)

Position: Midfielder 

Honour
S-league: 2008, 2009
Singapore Cup: 2008
S-league Charity Shield: 2008 (Shared)

Bangkok University
Year
League App
Goal
Cup App
Goal
2007
-
-
6
3
Total
-
-
6
3
BALESTIER KHALSA vs BANGKOK UNIVERSITYSingapore Cup – 24/7/07 – 3 goals

SAFFC
Year
League App
Goal
Cup App
Goal
2008
27
3
6
0
2009
29
1
6
0
Total
56
4
12
0
SAFFC vs HOME UNITED – 21/4/08

SAFFC - Asia
Year
Asian App
Goal
Others
Goal
2008
8
0
1
0
2009
8
0
-
-
Total
16
0
1
0