Selangor F.C.

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FA Selangor
Full nameFootball Association of Selangor
Nickname(s)
  • Red Giants (Gergasi Merah)
  • Red Yellow (Merah Kuning)
Founded22 February 1936; 88 years ago (22 February 1936)
GroundShah Alam Stadium
Capacity80,372
PresidentAzmin Ali
CoachK. Gunalan (caretaker)
LeagueMalaysia Super League
2015Malaysia Super League, 2nd
WebsiteClub website
Current season

Football Association of Selangor (Malay: Persatuan Bolasepak Selangor), commonly known as FA Selangor or simply Selangor, is a Malaysian association football club representing the state of Selangor Darul Ehsan and currently play in Malaysia Super League, the top flight of Malaysian football. Since 1994, Selangor have played their home matches at the 80,372-capacity Stadium Shah Alam.[1]

Selangor is the most successful club in Malaysia, in terms of overall titles won. Domestically, Selangor won a record 33 Malaysia Cup, 7 Malaysia Super League titles, 2 Malaysia Premier League titles, 7 Malaysia FAM League titles, 5 FA Cup, 8 Charity Cup, 4 Malaysia President Cup, 2 Malaysia Youth League titles, and 1 Agong's Cup.[2]

1997 was the most successful year for them as they won four trophies (Malaysia Cup, FA Cup, and Charity Cup) and runners-up for the Agong's Cup.

History

Before the Football Association of Selangor was formally established, there were only associations that managed the internal state league, called the SAFL (Selangor Association Football League), which was founded in 1905. The first cup held was sponsored by the British Resident of Selangor, RG Watson. There were also reports the association was led by British Residents at that time.

In 1926, the internal political crisis had led some officials to withdraw the association set up a separate association named Selangor Football Association (SFA).

The dispute between the SAFL and the SFA continued almost ten years before the two sides back to the negotiating table for the betterment of Selangor state football. Finally, the two associations merged officially on February 22, 1936, under the name of the Football Association of Selangor (FAS) or Persatuan Bola Sepak Selangor.

But the outbreak of the Second World War slowed down FAS's efforts to develop domestic football. The effort was started aggressively as soon as the war ended, the first official FAS president was none other than the Tunku Abdul Rahman Putra Al-Haj.

Efforts to uphold the state football continued with FAS planning the construction of a typical football stadium for the team. Selangor who earlier used the Selangor Field Club (now Dataran Merdeka) as their home clearly requires a stadium in line with the association.

FAS met the Mayor of Kuala Lumpur several times for permission on construction of the stadium but has is still not found a solution absolutely yet. The dream to see Selangor in action in the stadium itself seemed fainter by the day.

However, the appointment of Tunku Abdul Rahman Putra Al-Haj (currently holds the presidency of both FAS and FAM) as the next Prime Minister of the newly independent Malaya pioneered back in the stadium construction business.

Tunku ordered the construction of the Merdeka stadium to celebrate the country's independence as well as the official Selangor FA stadium. Merdeka Stadium will also be the official national stadium in organizing international sports.

The name that is synonymous with football in Selangor on the 1960s is Datuk Harun Idris. He became president of the Football Association of Selangor for 21 years from 1961 to 1982. During his leadership, Selangor won 15 Malaysia Cups as well as doing a lot of positive changes to the association.

FAS was originally headquartered at the Old MCA building in Jalan Ampang long before the construction of Wisma FAS in 1973 at the Merdeka Stadium on Datuk Harun's own efforts (also Chief Minister of Selangor at the time) and team manager, Tan Sri Hamzah Abu Samah. In the mid-1990s, FAs moved to Wisma FAS in Kelana Jaya today.

Since its inception in 1936, Selangor has won 33 Malaysia Cups, most recently being in 2015 champions of Malaysia Super League 7 times, 5 times FA Cup winners and being the only Malaysian team that made it to the Asian Club Cup final making it the most successful team in local football arena.

Among those who are responsible for the success of Selangor are the presidents: Tunku Abdul Rahman Putra Al-Haj, Datuk Harun Idris, Datuk Aini Taib, Tan Sri Muhammad Haji Muhammad Taib, Tengku Ahmad Shah; team managers: Tan Sri Hamzah Abu Samah, Mohd Noor Khamis, Mazlan Harun, Dr Nordin Selat, Datuk Mokhtar Ahmad; coaches: M Chandran, Khaidir Buyong, Ken Worden and many others that are not mentioned here.

The state also has many football stars who brought success to the state and the country such as Ghani Minhat, the late Mokhtar Dahari, Santokh Singh, Zainal Abidin Hassan, Wong Choon Wah, Khan Hung Meng, Azman Adnan and many others.[3]

Stadium

Stadium Shah Alam
LocationSection 13, Shah Alam, Selangor, Malaysia
OperatorShah Alam City Council
Capacity80,372
SurfaceGrass Pitch
Track
Construction
Broke ground1 January 1990
Opened16 July 1994
Construction costRM 460 million
ArchitectHijjaz Kasturi
Tenants
FA Selangor (1994–Present)

The stadium has been the home of Selangor since July 1994. It is the second largest stadium in Malaysia and owned by the Shah Alam City Council.

It has been the venue for several Malaysian international matches. The stadium is commonly used for exhibition matches against big European clubs such as Flamengo, Chelsea,[4] FC Barcelona [5] and Tottenham Hotspur.[6] The stadium was also chosen to host the final of the 2011 and 2015 Malaysia Cup

In 2011, RM 3.4 million was spent to renovate the stadium to upgrade the lighting system, roof repairs, new grass for the pitch as well as to replace vandalised seats, improving the sound system, upgrading the dressing rooms, repainting some parts of the stadium, repairing the washrooms as well as other facilities.[7][8]

Selangor have used several grounds during their history: after playing home matches at Selangor Club Padang (now known as Dataran Merdeka), the club settled at Merdeka Stadium during the era of Tunku Abdul Rahman as the club's president, their home for 38 years until 1994.

Stadium history

# Stadium Years
1 Dataran Merdeka (Formerly known as Selangor Club Padang) 1936–56
2 Merdeka Stadium 1957–94
3 Shah Alam Stadium 1994–Present

Training

Padang Latihan Stadium Mini Shah Alam is the club official training facility located beside the Shah Alam Stadium. The facility is founded by the Football Association of Selangor with the purpose to serve as a training ground for the Selangor FA team.[9]

Media coverage

Coverage

Selangor's domestic and international matches (depending on the location and the broadcast station) are broadcast either live or delayed on Malaysian free-to-air and satellite television channels. All broadcasting rights are controlled by MP & Silva.[10]

Publishing and internet media

Selangor owned subsidiary company named Media Selangor, that consists of two types of branches, SelangorKini for Newspaper Publishing and TVSelangor for the Internet and Social Media, owns all the rights in publishing news and media in Selangor, since the subsidiary company is owned by the Selangor State Government. [11][12]

Club culture

Crest and colours

The crest is shaped as a shield, while the emblem on the upper part of the crest is derived from the Selangor State Council coat of arms. The colour characteristics on the crest is the main colour of the state of Selangor which symbolizes Bravery for red and Royalty for yellow.[13]

Kit evolution

Home

2011–12
2014–15
2016–Present

Away

2011–12
2014–15
2016–Present

Third

2014–15
2016–Present

Kit manufacturers and shirt sponsors

Manufacturers

From the 1970s to 2015, the Selangor team kit was manufactured by various of companies including Admiral, Puma, Adidas, Lotto, Kronos and Kappa. Since 2011, the official Selangor FA kit has been manufactured by Kappa.[14] The home kit's design of red and yellow stripes is shaped by a red and yellow row of lines. The away kit features design of a white and light yellow base and yellowed-squares on the bottom of the jersey is shaped by a red row of line. The alternate kit is design reminisce of 2014 design of royal blue navy gradient jersey with a white-coloured overlay. Selangor is also believed to be manufactured by Lotto on a 3-year contract from 2016 until 2018.

Sponsors

From 1985 to 2015, the Selangor team was sponsored by various of companies including Dunhill, EON, Courts, Talam, Celcom, Syarikat Bekalan Air Selangor (SYABAS), Telekom Malaysia (TM), Kumpulan Darul Ehsan Berhad (KDEB), Datum Corp and Menteri Besar Incorporated (MBI). Since 2014, the Selangor FA kit has been sponsored by Menteri Besar Incorporated, also known as the Selangor government. The longest sponsoring company in the club's history is Dunhill from 1985 to 2004, Dunhill also sponsored all the Malaysian clubs during that time before being banned by the Health Ministry to show the country's boycott against smoking and tobacco.[15]

Below is a list of the former and current Selangor kit manufacturers and shirt sponsors :

Supporters

File:Selangor FA Supporters.jpg
Selangor supporters at Stadium Shah Alam

ultraSel is the largest and most vocal supporters' group of Selangor. Wherever Selangor play, the group will be there to support. They always gather at the Gate 2 (Pintu 2) stand in Stadium Shah Alam which they named it as Green Curva Nord.[16] Accompanied by the drumline, they will stand and chant passionately for the entire game and wave huge flags occasionally.[17]

Anak Selangor Fan Club is the second largest supporters' group of Selangor. The fan club was formed by a group of loyal Selangor FA fans from many states that always gather up when the Red Giants are playing soccer. The main colours for these supporter is red and yellow, which is the official colour for all the fan clubs in Selangor. The fan club's target is to create a football academy with the help and support of former Selangor players such as Shahril Arshad, Jamsari Sabian and many more large names.[18]

Other small fan clubs that's considered as a regular in the Shah Alam Stadium is the Selangor Soccer Fan Club,[19][20] Selangor Citizen Fan Club[21] and Selangor Sg Buloh Mari Fan Club[22]

Rivalries

Selangor has a historical derby with Singapore FA[23][24] known as 'North-South Rivalry' while matches with Kuala Lumpur FA were known as Klang Valley Derby.

The rivalry arises from the numerous times the two teams, have battled for the Malaysia Cup title. With 57 titles between them (33 for Selangor and 24 for Singapore) this fixture has become known as one of the finest Malaysia Cup match-ups in history.

  • Kuala Lumpur FA — Klang Valley Derby — The rivalry occurred due to the two state's geographical location. Selangor FA contests a local derby between the two most developed states in Malaysia; Selangor and Federal States of Kuala Lumpur. The rivalry goes back over 40 years when it started in the 80's. The rivalry was renewed when Kuala Lumpur FA got promoted to the Malaysia Super League after a seven-year spell in the second division. KL were then relegated back to the Premier League on 2012 which was also the last meeting of the two clubs. On the following year, 2013, Kuala Lumpur again got relegated to the third-tier FAM League for the first time in its history.[25]

Players

First-team squad

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Pos. Nation Player
1 GK Malaysia MAS Khairul Azhan Khalid
3 DF Malaysia MAS Mohd Azmi Muslim
4 FW Liberia LBR Patrick Wleh (on loan from PKNS)
5 DF Malaysia MAS Muhd Shahrom Abdul Kalam (Captain)
7 MF Indonesia IDN Andik Vermansyah
8 MF Malaysia MAS Saiful Ridzuwan Selamat
9 FW Malaysia MAS Adam Nor Azlin
10 MF Malaysia MAS Nazmi Faiz
11 FW Malaysia MAS Ahmad Hazwan Bakri
12 DF Malaysia MAS Mohd Bunyamin Umar
13 DF Malaysia MAS Mohd Razman Roslan (Vice-Captain)
14 FW Malaysia MAS Abdul Hadi Yahya
No. Pos. Nation Player
15 DF Malaysia MAS Mohd Raimi Mohd Nor
16 FW Argentina ARG Mauro Olivi
17 DF Malaysia MAS Mohd Rizal Fahmi Abdul Rosid
18 DF Nigeria NGA Ugo Ukah
19 DF Malaysia MAS S. Subramaniam
21 MF Malaysia MAS Mohd Hafiz Kamal
22 GK Malaysia MAS Norazlan Razali
23 MF Malaysia MAS S. Veenod
24 MF Malaysia MAS Mohd Fitri Shazwan Raduwan
25 MF Malaysia MAS Gopinathan Ramachandra
30 GK Malaysia MAS Zarif Irfan Hashimuddin
31 MF Malaysia MAS Muhd Faizzudin Mohd Abidin

[26]

Transfers

For recent transfers, see List of Malaysian football transfers 2016

Development teams

U21s

The team play in the President Cup, a national football competition for under-21 players.

No. Name Nationality Position(s) D.O.B
Goalkeepers
1 Damien Lim Malaysia GK 5/2/97
22 Amirul Aiman Amran Malaysia GK 28/4/96
25 Muhammad Haziq Ridwan Malaysia GK 11/1/96
Defenders
3 Muhd Syukri Azman Malaysia LB/LWB 18/3/97
5 Mohd Azman Mohd Nor Malaysia CB 4/1/95
9 Kannan a/l Kalaiselvan Malaysia LB/LWB 4/10/96
10 Daniel Ong Malaysia CB/DM 3/7/96
13 Muhd Azrul Razman Malaysia CB 10/10/95
18 Namathevan a/l Arunasalam Malaysia RB/RWB 26/7/96
21 Muhd Amir Asyraf Azhari Malaysia CB 25/3/98
23 Muhammad Amirul Ashraf Ariffin Malaysia CB 22/1/98
Midfielders
2 Muhd Hafizuddin Md Zuki Malaysia DM/CM 18/2/98
4 K. Sarkunan Malaysia CM/DM 4/8/96
6 Muhammad Syazwan Salihin Malaysia CM 2/3/98
12 Muhd Rizman Mahmud Malaysia RW/RM 15/10/95
14 Mohd Afiq Mohd Azam Malaysia RW/RM 2/5/97
15 Muhd Rizalul Azuwan Supandri Malaysia CM 26/4/97
16 Muhammad Hariz Saim Malaysia CM 1997
17 Mohd Amirul Syafieq Muhd Isa Sham Malaysia LW/LM 10/1/96
20 Muhammad Syahmi Safari Malaysia RW, LW, RM, LM 5/2/98
Forwards
8 Mohd Zulfahamzie Mohd Tarmizi Malaysia ST 24/2/96
19 Afiq Ahmad Razali Malaysia ST 10/9/95
24 Badrul Amin Ruslan Malaysia ST 24/7/97

Source:[27]

U19s

The team play in the Youth Cup, a national football competition for under-19 players.

No. Name Nationality Position(s) D.O.B
Goalkeepers
1 Muhammad Haikal Mohd Hisham Malaysia GK 1998
22 Ayyub Hakimi Saiful Affendi Malaysia GK 1998
23 Muhammad Aqil Fadhly Mohd Yusop Malaysia GK 1999
Defenders
2 Muhammad Syahir Ahram Roh Malaysia RB/RWB 1997
3 Mohd Afiq Abdul Ghani Malaysia LB/LWB 1997
5 Tamil Maran a/l Manimaran Malaysia CB 1997
6 Muhammad Alfeeq Zharieq Jasmi Malaysia CB 2/2/98
11 Mohd Asraff Hayqal Zainal Malaysia LB/LWB 1997
12 Muhammad Asyraf Mukmin Hazman Malaysia LB/LWB 11/3/98
14 Muhammad Amirul Haziq Rasmizal Malaysia CB 19/3/98
15 Muhammad Aniq Kamal Malaysia CB 6/9/97
18 Linggeswaran a/l P.Selvarajah Malaysia CB 7/1/98
24 Mohd Azrul Syafiq Norinukartapati Malaysia CB 3/3/98
26 Raj Kumar a/l Theeventhiran Malaysia RB/RWB 1998
27 Muhamad Aiman Firdaus Ahmad Azahar Malaysia RB/RWB 3/4/98
28 Kumaravel a/l Nalasamy Malaysia CB 1998
Midfielders
4 Ahmad Hijazi Mohd Muhyiddin Malaysia LM/LB 1997
7 Mohd Fazrul Fahriz Zeky Malaysia RW/RM 1998
8 Ainol Iskandar Mahsun Malaysia CM 10/7/97
13 Kalaiarasan a/l Murugan Malaysia CM 1998
16 Muhammad Fariduddin Zainal Malaysia CM 1998
17 Kugan a/l Dhevarajoo Malaysia RW/RM 11/1/97
21 Muhammad Faisal Mazlan Malaysia AM/CM 1997
29 Muhammad Irfan Bakhtiar Malaysia RW/RM 23/6/98
Wan Haziq Emir Wan Aminuddean Baki Malaysia CM 1997
Muhd Aidil Haziq Damanhuri Malaysia LW/LM 1998
Forwards
9 Muhd Fareez Mohd Jeffrey Malaysia ST 14/2/98
10 Muhammad Alif Saiddatul Azman Malaysia ST 1997
19 Muhammad Nor Iman Mazlan Malaysia ST 1/1/97
20 Deva a/l Rabisanthran Malaysia ST 1998
25 Muhamad Azizul Baharuddin Malaysia ST 27/2/98
30 Megat Amirul Imran Zulkifly Malaysia ST 28/9/98

Source:[28]

Club records

Update on 10 May 2016
*Note :

  • P = Played, W = Win, D = Draw, L= Loss, F = Goal For, A = Goal Against, D = Goal Difference, Pts = Points, Pos = Position

  1st or Champion   2nd or Runner-Up   3rd Place   Promotion   Relegation

Season League Cup Asia
Division P W D L F A D Pts Pos Charity Malaysia FA Competition Result
1994 MP1L 28 12 8 8 53 42 +9 44 6th Semi-Finals Quarter-Finals
1995 MP1L 28 15 9 4 58 34 +24 54 2nd Champions Semi-Finals
1996 MP1L 28 14 7 7 54 36 +18 49 4th Champions Champions Semi-Finals
1997 MP1L 28 14 4 10 45 35 +10 46 4th Champions Champions Champions
1998 MP1L 22 7 4 11 28 32 -4 25 10th Runner-Up Quarterfinals Quarterfinals Asian Club Championship Round 1
1999 MP2L 18 7 6/4 1 36 18 +18 37 2nd Group Stage Round 2 Asian Club Championship Round 2
2000 MP1L 22 14 3 5 45 25 +20 45 1st Semi-Finals Round 2
2001 MP1L 22 8 10 4 36 22 +14 34 4th Semi-Finals Champions
2002 MP1L 26 17 5 4 43 27 +16 56 2nd Champions Champions Quarter-Finals Asian Club Championship Round 1
2003 MP1L 24 4 6 14 32 44 -12 18 12th Runner-Up Group Stage Group Stage
2004 MPL 24 16 2 6 52 35 +17 50 2nd Quarter-Finals Round 3
2005 MPL 21 16 3 2 61 25 +36 51 1st Champions Champions
2005–06 MSL 21 5 3 13 31 46 -15 18 8th Runner-Up Group Stage Round 2 AFC Cup Quarter-Finals
2006–07 MSL 24 8 4 12 28 35 -7 28 8th Quarter-Finals Semi-Finals
2007–08 MSL 24 14 3 7 46 36 +10 45 4th Runner-Up Runner-Up
2009 MSL 26 20 3 3 64 21 +43 63 1st Champions Quarter-Finals Champions
2010 MSL 26 20 3 3 62 23 +39 63 1st Champions Quarter-Finals Semi-Finals AFC Cup Group Stage
2011 MSL 26 16 4 6 42 24 +18 52 3rd Runner-Up Semi-Finals Semi-Finals
2012 MSL 26 12 7 7 40 26 +14 43 3rd Semi-Finals Round 2
2013 MSL 22 10 10 2 31 17 +14 40 2nd Group Stage Quarter-Finals AFC Cup Round 16
2014 MSL 22 12 5 5 28 19 +9 41 2nd Quarter-Finals Round 2 AFC Cup Group Stage
2015 MSL 22 11 6 5 43 28 +15 39 2nd Champions Round 2
2016 MSL Runner-Up Round 3 AFC Cup Group Stage

[29]

AFC Club record

Update on 10 May 2016   Win   Draw   Loss

AFC Champions League / AFC Cup
Season Competition Round Nat Club 1st Leg 2nd Leg Aggregate
1967 Asian Club Championship 1st Round Vietnam Vietnam Customs 0–0 2–1 2–1
2nd Round Thailand Bangkok Bank FC 1–0 0–0 1–0
Semi-Finals Korea Korea Tungsten Company FC 0–0 0–1 0–1
Finals Israel Hapoel Tel Aviv F.C. 2–1
1970 Asian Club Championship Group Stage Iran Taj Club 3–0
Lebanon Homenetmen 4–2
1986 Asian Club Championship 1st Round Thailand Port Authority of Thailand FC 1–0
Port Authority of Thailand FC 1–0
2nd Round Japan Furukawa Electric FC 2–1
Macau Hap Kuan 5–0
1997–98 Asian Club Championship 1st Round Hong Kong South China AA 0–0 0–2 0–2
1998–99 Asian Club Championship 1st Round Singapore Singapore Armed Forces FC 1–4 1–0 2–4
2nd Round Korea Pohang Steelers 6–0 4–1 10–1
2001–02 Asian Club Championship 1st Round China Dalian Shide 0–2 0–5 0–7
2006 AFC Cup Group Stage Singapore Tampines Rovers 1–0 3–2 2nd
Hong Kong Happy Valley AA 4–3 2–3
Maldives Hurriyya SC 1–0 1–3
Quarter-Finals Lebanon Nejmeh SC 0–1 0–0 0–1
2010 AFC Cup Group Stage Vietnam Bình Dương F.C. 0–0 4–0 3rd
Indonesia Sriwijaya FC 0–4 6–1
Maldives Victory Sports Club 5–0 2–1
2013 AFC Cup Group Stage India East Bengal FC 2–2 1–0 2nd
Singapore Tampines Rovers FC 3–3 2–3
Vietnam Xuân Thành Sài Gòn F.C. 3–1 2–1
Round of 16 Maldives New Radiant 2–0 (a.e.t.)
2014 AFC Cup Group Stage Indonesia Arema Cronus 1–1 1–0 3rd
Maldives Maziya S&RC 4–1 1–1
Vietnam Hanoi T&T 3–1 1–0
2016 AFC Cup Group Stage Philippines Ceres F.C. 0–0 2–2 3rd
Singapore Tampines Rovers 0–1 1–0
Bangladesh Sheikh Jamal Dhanmondi Club 2–1 3–4

Honours

Domestic competitions

League

U21 team

  • President's Cup
    • Winners (4): 1988, 1994, 1997, 2007–2008
      • Runner-up (4): 1987, 1999, 2000, 2001

U19 team

Cups

  • Charity Cup
    • Winners (8): 1985, 1987, 1990, 1996, 1997, 2002, 2009, 2010
      • Runner-up (6): 1991, 1998, 2003, 2006, 2011, 2016
  • Malaysia Cup
    • Winners (33): 1922, 1927, 1928, 1929, 1935, 1936, 1938, 1949, 1956, 1959, 1961, 1962, 1963, 1966, 1968, 1969, 1971, 1972, 1973, 1975, 1976, 1978, 1979, 1981, 1982, 1984, 1986, 1995, 1996, 1997, 2002, 2005, 2015[35]
      • Runner-up (15): 1921, 1924, 1925, 1930, 1932, 1933, 1937, 1939, 1948, 1957, 1965, 1980, 1983, 1991, 2008
  • FA Cup
    • Winners (5): 1991, 1997, 2001, 2005, 2009
      • Runner-up (2): 1990, 2008

Performance in AFC competitions

Asian Club Championship / AFC Champions League: 6 Appearance

AFC Cup: five appearances

Double and treble

Treble

Season Winning titles
2005 Premier League, Malaysia FA Cup, Malaysia Cup

Double

Season Winning titles
1997 Super League, Malaysia Cup
2005 FA Cup, Malaysia Cup
2009 Super League, FA Cup

Awards

Malaysia League Golden Boot Winners

Season Players Nat Goals
1989 Zainal Abidin Hassan Malaysia 12
1999 Rusdi Suparman Malaysia 15
2004 Brian Diego Fuentes Argentina 25
2005 Bambang Pamungkas Indonesia 23
2014 Paulo Rangel [47] Brazil 16

Malaysia League Top Goalscorers

Season Players Nat Goals
2004 Brian Diego Fuentes Argentina 25
2005 Bambang Pamungkas Indonesia 23
Brian Diego Fuentes Argentina 17
Muhamad Khalid Jamlus Malaysia 9
2005–06 Bambang Pamungkas Indonesia 11
Brian Diego Fuentes Argentina 6
2006–07 Akmal Rizal Ahmad Rakhli Malaysia 9
2007–08 Frank Seator Liberia 15
Safee Sali Malaysia 11
2009 Mohd Amri Yahyah Malaysia 13
Safee Sali 12
2010 Safee Sali Malaysia 12
Amirul Hadi Zainal Malaysia
2011 Mohd Safiq Rahim Malaysia 7
2012 Boško Balaban Croatia 12
2013 Francis Doe Liberia 10
Mohd Amri Yahyah Malaysia 8
2014 Paulo Rangel Brazil 16
2015 Guilherme de Paula Lucrécio Brazil 8
Afiq Azmi Malaysia 7
Ahmad Hazwan Bakri Malaysia

All time Top Goalscorers

Year Nat Player Caps Goals
1972–87 Malaysia Mokhtar Dahari 375 177
1993–98 Malaysia Azman Adnan 279 147
2001–13 Malaysia Mohd Amri Yahyah 374 118
1955–68 Malaysia Abdul Ghani Minhat 108 97
2007–08, 2010–12 Malaysia Safiq Rahim 182 56
2006–12 Malaysia Amirul Hadi Zainal 136 53
2004–06 Argentina Brian Diego Fuentes 48 46
2005–07 Indonesia Bambang Pamungkas 62 42
1987–90 Malaysia Dollah Salleh 76 39

Ranking

Asian World Club Ranking

As of 12 April 2016 [48]
World Rank Asia Rank Nat Team Points
591 101 Malaysia Selangor FA 216.95

AFC Club ranking

As of 26 November 2015 [49]
Current Rank Nat Team Points
88 Malaysia Selangor FA 12.295

Club Officials

Executive committee

Position Nat Name
President Malaysia Mohamed Azmin Ali
Deputy President Malaysia Abdul Mokhtar Ahmad
Vice President Malaysia Emran Kadir
Subahan Kamal
Palanisamy Karuppan
Samin Sarmin
General secretary Malaysia  –
Assistant secretary Malaysia Raja Restam Azhar
Amir Shariffuddin bin Samat
Treasurer Malaysia  –
Executive Committee Members Malaysia Sivasundaram Sithamparam
Razak Abdul Karim
Thalayasingam Vairamuthu
Mustafa Ahmad
K. Sathanaraju
Noor Hisham Mohd Ghouth
Suntharasagaran Yatier
Sekar Chandra
Omar Ali
Ariffin Hamid
P. Sugumaran
Abdul Rauf Ahmad
Adanan Sarrif

[50]

Coaching and technical staff

Position Nat Name
Manager Malaysia Amirudin Shari
Assistant Manager Malaysia Hisham Mohd Ghouth
Head Coach Malaysia K. Gunalan (caretaker)
Assistant Coach Malaysia
Fitness Coach Malaysia Norhudahiroshi Razak
Goalkeeping Coach Malaysia Azlisham Ibrahim
Physiotherapist Sudan Khidir Abd El-Karim El-Fadly Ali
Kitman Malaysia Zurshydee Abu Samah
U-21 Manager Malaysia Abdul Rauf Ahmad
U-21 Head Coach Malaysia Omar Ali
U-21 Coach Malaysia Nazliazmi Mohd Nasir
U-21 Fitness Coach Malaysia Khairulanwar Mohd Isa
U-21 Goalkeeping Coach Malaysia Shuhaimi Abdul Hamid
U-21/U-19 Physiotherapist Malaysia Mohd Fikri Hakim Said
U-21/U-19 Kitman Malaysia Mahathir Mohamad
U-19 Manager Malaysia Datuk Sugumaran a/l Parthasarathy
U-19 Head Coach Malaysia Noor Zaidi Rohmat
U-19 Assistant Coach Malaysia V. Yogeswaran
U-19 Goalkeeping Coach Malaysia Azizul Abdul Aziz
U-19 Fitness Coach Malaysia Mohd Sazuan Zainal

Former senior positions

Former presidents

Name Nat Period
The Hon. Dr.C.P. Rawson Malaysia 1949–50
Tunku Abdul Rahman Malaysia 1951
S.C.E Singam Malaysia 1952–53
Dr. K.Sundram Malaysia 1954–60
Dato' Seri Harun bin Haji Idris Malaysia 1961–83
Tan Sri Ahmad Razali Mohamed Ali Malaysia 1984–89
Tan Sri Hj. Muhammad Muhammad Taib Malaysia 1990–97
Dato' Hj Mohd Aini bin Taib Malaysia 1996–00
Tengku Idris Shah Malaysia 2000
Tengku Datuk Seri Ahmad Shah Malaysia 2001–04
Dr. Haji Mohamad Khir Toyo Malaysia 2005–07
Tan Sri Dato' Abdul Khalib Ibrahim Malaysia 2008–14
Dato' Seri Mohamed Azmin Ali Malaysia 2015–Present

[51]

Former managers

Name Nat Period Notes
Datuk Seri Ahmad Shah Malaysia 1989
Dato' Dr. Nordin Selat Malaysia 1990–91
Mazlan Datuk Hj Harun Malaysia 1992
Dato' Hj Mohd Aini bin Taib Malaysia 1993–98
Dato' Abdul Mokhtar bin Ahmad Malaysia 1993–03
Dato' Dr. Hj. Mohamad Satim bin Diman Malaysia 2004–08
Zakaria Abdul Rahim Malaysia 2009
K. Devan Malaysia 2010–11
Dato' Abdul Mokhtar bin Ahmad Malaysia 2012
Irfan Bakti Abu Salim Malaysia 2013
Mehmet Durakovic Australia 2014
Amirudin Shari Malaysia 2015–present

[52]

Former coaches

Name Nat Period Honours
Abdul Ghani Minhat Malaysia 1970–73 1972 Malaysia FAM League
1971 Malaysia Cup
1972 Malaysia Cup
1973 Malaysia Cup
M. Chandran Malaysia 1975–78 1975 Malaysia Cup
1976 Malaysia Cup
1978 Malaysia Cup
Chow Kwai Lam Malaysia 1979–83 1979 Malaysia Cup
1980 Division 1
1981 Malaysia Cup
1982 Malaysia Cup
Abdul Ghani Minhat Malaysia 1983–85 1984 Malaysia Cup
1985 Charity Shield Malaysia
1984 Division 1
M. Chandran Malaysia 1986–88 1986 Malaysia Cup
1987 Charity Shield Malaysia
Steven Bena Czech Republic 1989
Khaidir Buyong Malaysia 1989–90 1989 Division 1
1990 Division 1
1990 Charity Shield Malaysia
Ken Worden Australia 1991 1991 Malaysia FA Cup
M. Chandran Malaysia 1992
Bernhard Schumm Germany 1993 1993 Malaysia Premier 2 League
Ken Worden Australia 1994–96 1995 Malaysia Cup
1996 Charity Shield Malaysia
1996 Malaysia Cup
Steve Wicks England 1997–98 1997 Charity Shielad Malaysia
1997 Malaysia Cup
1997 Malaysia FA Cup
Ismail Zakaria Malaysia 1998
Mike Pejic England 1999
K. Rajagopal Malaysia 1999–00 2000 Malaysia Premier 1 League
Abdul Rahman Ibrahim Malaysia 2001–02 2001 Malaysia FA cup
Ken Worden Australia 2002–03 2002 Charity Shield Malaysia
2002 Malaysia Cup
Omar Rubén Larrosa Argentina 2004
Ismail Ibrahim Malaysia
Ken Worden Australia
Dollah Salleh Malaysia 2005–08 2005 Malaysia Premier League
2005 Malaysia Cup
2005 Malaysia FA Cup
K. Devan Malaysia 2008–11 2009 Charity Shield Malaysia
2010 Charity Shield Malaysia
2009 Malaysia Super League
2010 Malaysia Super League
2009 Malaysia FA Cup
Irfan Bakti Abu Salim Malaysia 2012–13
Mehmet Durakovic Australia 2014–15 2015 Malaysia Cup
Zainal Abidin Hassan Malaysia 2016
K. Gunalan Malaysia

[52]

Former captains

Captains Nat Period Honours (as captain)
Shukor Adan Malaysia 2007–08 2007–08 Malaysia Cup Runner Up
2007–08 Malaysia FA Cup Runner Up
Mohd Amri Yahyah Malaysia 2009–12 2009 Malaysia Super League Champion
2009 Charity Shield Malaysia Champion
2009 Malaysia FA Cup
2010 Malaysia Super League Champion
2010 Charity Shield Malaysia Champion
2011 Charity Shield Malaysia Runner Up
Asraruddin Putra Omar Malaysia 2013 2013 Malaysia Super League Runner Up
Mohd Bunyamin Umar Malaysia 2014 2014 Malaysia Super League Runner Up
Muhd Shahrom Abdul Kalam[53] Malaysia 2015–Present 2015 Malaysia Super League Runner Up
2015 Malaysia Cup Champion
2016 Charity Shield Malaysia Runner Up

Former players

Coach and manager achievements

There are 16 coaches who managed Selangor FA since the appointment of the club's first professional coach, Datuk Abdul Ghani Minhat in 1970. The longest managing coach by year is Chow Kwai Lam (1979–1983). Here is a list of coaches who managed Selangor FA.

Name Period Title Total
Domestic International
MSL MPL MasC SHAHC FAML ACL ACW AFC ASC IC
Malaysia Abdul Ghani Minhat 1970–73, 1983–85
1
-
4
2
-
-
-
-
-
-
7
Malaysia M. Chandran 1975–78, 1986–88, 1992
-
-
4
2
-
-
-
-
-
-
6
Malaysia Chow Kwai Lam 1979–83
-
-
3
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
3
Czech Republic Steven Bena 1989
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
0
Malaysia Khaidir Buyong 1989–90
2
-
-
1
-
-
-
-
-
-
3
Australia Ken Worden 1991, 1994–96, 2002–03, 2004
-
-
3
1
1
-
-
-
-
-
5
Germany Bernhard Schumm 1993
-
1
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
1
England Steve Wicks 1997–98
-
-
1
1
1
-
-
-
-
-
3
Malaysia Ismail Zakaria 1998
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
0
England Mike Pejic 1999
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
0
Malaysia K. Rajagopal 1999–00
1
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
1
Malaysia Abdul Rahman Ibrahim 2001–02
-
-
-
1
1
-
-
-
-
-
2
Argentina Ruben Omar Larrosa 2004
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
0
Malaysia Ismail Ibrahim 2004
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
0
Malaysia Dollah Salleh 2005–08
-
1
1
-
1
-
-
-
-
-
3
Malaysia K. Devan 2008–11
2
-
-
2
1
-
-
-
-
-
5
Malaysia Irfan Bakti Abu Salim 2012–13
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
0
Australia Mehmet Durakovic 2014–15
-
-
1
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
1
Malaysia Zainal Abidin Hassan 2016
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
0
Malaysia K. Gunalan 2016
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
0
Total 1970–16 5 2 17 10 5 0 0 0 0 0 39

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External links