2004 AFC Cup
In 2003, Qatari
Mohamed bin Hammam was elected as President of AFC and immediately the new
president implemented a new plan known as Vision
Part of this
plan divided Asian club football into three parts with the AFC Champion League restricted
to the top group of 14 countries considered 'mature’ with the next group of 14
countries considered 'developing' with their own competition known as the AFC
Cup. The last group of 17 countries were considered ‘emerging’ with a
competition known as 'AFC Presidents Cup' to start in May 2005.
Singapore
was grouped into the second group of 14 countries considered ‘developing’ and
participate in the 2004 inaugural AFC Cup. Other countries in the group are
Of
these 14 eligible countries, Jordan, Myanmar and North Korea opted not to enter
any teams at all, while both Hong Kong and Oman allocated only one of their two
slots to their clubs, meaning only twenty teams enter the inaugural AFC Cup
instead of the intend twenty-eight teams.
To
ensure the clubs get as many games as possible to develop and market
themselves, the old knockout format was discarded with the twenty teams divided
into five groups of four and in a home and away format for a total of six games
for each team. The five group winners and three best runner-ups qualify for the
knockout quarter-final stage.
The
honour of leading the Republic challenge in the inaugural AFC Cup fell to
Double Champions Home United and Geylang United.
The
Protectors, since their debut in Asia back in 2000, had been involved in every
While
for the Eagles, it was their second foray into
With
the vast difference in Asian experience between both sides, it was no surprise
they had two distinctly different start to their AFC Cup campaign with the
Eagles falling 2-3 to ASEAN & Indian NFL Champions at Bedok while the
Protectors thrashed Hong Kong League Champions Happy Valley 5-1 at Bishan.
The
Eagles new three-man defence were cruelly exposed by the ASEAN & Indian
Champions while their midfield had a hard time controlling the tempo of the
game. That was why, despite the Eagles taking the lead, the ASEAN & Indian
Champions could make a comeback hitting three-goal without reply before late in
the game when the Eagles pulled another goal back. It was not enough as the
Eagles went down in their opener in Bedok.
On the
next night though it was a completely different story as the S-league Double
Champions took apart Hong Kong League Champions Happy Valley at Bishan with
their record top scorer Egmar not only grabbing the club first ever goal in the
competition but also the first ever hat-trick. Getting in the act was
But
once the opener was over, the path for both teams took a more similar route as
both went on a goal scoring streak in their next match with the Eagles
thrashing Maldives FA champions Island FC 5-0 while 24 hours later the Double
Champions thrashed Maldives League Champion Club Valencia 3-0.
On
hindsight, it may not seem much as critics will no doubt point out Maldives is
not one of the top football side even in South Asia but try telling that to Negri Sembilan and Happy Valley who
fell to Maldives sides Island FC and
Club Valencia in Maldives. Even
In round three, the Protectors were still
neck in neck with M-League Champion Perak after a 2-2 draw in Ipoh while the
Eagles take a giant step towards capturing second spot, as then group leader
East Bengal were running away with the group with three straight wins, by
defeating the only creditable opposition Malaysian FA Champions Negri Sembilan
1-0 at KL.
Into the reverse fixtures, Protectors and
Perak still could not tear themselves apart with them grabbing another 2-2 draw
this time at Bishan. It should be Home United who feel more disappointed with
the points dropped as Perak was down to ten men and Perak equalizer came in
injury time and way before that the Protectors could have stretched their lead
further. Chance after chance fell to their hitmen Egmar, Indra, Peres and Sutee
but somehow they just could not finished especially Egmar who had scored in all
the three previous AFC Cup matches.
For the
Eagles though they saw themselves cement their second position with another win
over Negri Sembilan. The Malaysian
side had taken the lead in the first half but after the restart, under-pressure
Chinese import Chang Hui equalized for the Eagles before Eagles top hitman
Duric scored the winner like the previous encounter when it was also Duric who
notched the winner.
With
this result, it was a ‘Cup Final’ for the Eagles in the next match as it will
be one match they cannot afford to lose but at the same time they cannot afford
not to win as AFC rules stated that in the event of two teams tied on same
points, the results from the two matches both teams played would be used as the
icebreaker. That mean the Eagles must win against East Bengal at their
The
Eagles though failed in their task as they were held to a 1-1 draw despite
taking the lead through a Daniel Hill header in the first period and holding it
until half time. The new crowned
Indian NFL Champion bombarded the Eagles goal after the restart but the once
fragile Eagles defence showed incredible efforts and commitments to shut them
out. It was in vain as the Indian finally got the equalizer late in the game.
It was a cruel blow but the Eagles still stood a chance to qualify for the
quarter-final stage as long as they won their last remaining game.
That was what the Eagles did as they
defeated
For Singapore other representative,
Protectors, they did what was required winning their last two matches – 2-0
against Happy Valley and 5-0 against Club Valencia – handsomely to qualify as
group winner alongside Perak in second spot on goal difference.
In the quarter-final, Protectors was drawn
against Olympic
But that can wait as there was now a four-month
break in action for the Asian Cup and during that time much happen to both
clubs.
First Home United lost their AFC Cup first
choice custodian Ridzuan Fatah Hassan in the transfer window to Jaguars as a
reason of the end of NS stint and with their other viable keeper, Sean Roberts,
a foreign player, they cannot hoped to play him unless they wished to weaken
other aspect of their team. Fortunately they got to loan Young Lions custodian
Lionel Lewis as replacement before the AFC Cup action restart. For the Eagles,
it was more a dramatic change with three of their four foreign players replaced
with only Duric left intact. Even on the local front, a few players were not
spared as changes were made.
Not that all transfers movements affected
the two clubs once AFC Cup action resume.
Perak was expected to offer much
resistance to the Eagles, with even Perak coach glad at the draw back in May to
have drawn the Eagles, but it did not turned out the case. Eagles defeated
Perak, both times over the two-leg winning 2-1 at
It was a remarkable result and a
testimonial of the strength of the S-league.
Further proof was the result Home United
got over Olympic
Olympic
In the second leg at Bishan, all Home
United needed was a goalless draw and they went out to achieve that by
harassing the Olympic Beirut players non-stop but it did not stop the
Protectors own attacking instinct as they could have taken the lead twice in
the first half through Peres.
Olympic Beirut made Home United pay for
not taking their chances as the Lebanon side took the lead from a freekick in
the second period but instead of a demoralized Home United from that point on,
the Double Champions showed their commitment to the cause in their comeback.
A cross from Fahmie Abdullah on the Home
United left was met by Peres and won. The header went 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
with 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 found anywhere near them. Peres got to the ball first and
dispatching it into the net.
Thus
the record book was rewritten with two S-league clubs reaching the semi-final
of an Asian Club competition for the first time ever.
But
that was where the road ended with Protectors stopped by Syrian side Al Jaish –
the team with the best defence – thrashing the Protectors – the team with the
best attack – in
The Eagles though had a creditable 1-1 draw also against Syrian
opposition, Al Wahda. It was yet
another sign that showed S-league clubs can stand up to Middle-East sides in
the Middle-East.
Unfortunately in the second leg, the
Eagles went down to an early goal due to poor defensive work as despite being
surrounded by three Eagles players, Iyad Mandou was allowed to send a through
ball that found Guinean striker Moussa Traore, who slid a low shot past
goalkeeper Shahril Jantan just inside the far post. Then in the last ten
minutes of the game, the Eagles found themselves with three golden chances to
draw level but wasted them all.
First a
poor clearance by the Al Wahda defence presented possession back to Eagles, who
worked the ball over to Mark Williams on the Eagles left flank. The defender
sent in an inviting high cross to the far post but Noor Ali headed well over
from point blank range with the keeper in no-man-land. Then with time running
out, Duric was presented with a glorious opportunity when Azowar dropped a high
cross from the right but it just dropped behind the Australian, who back now
faced the goal, so he had to hurry his shot but two defenders were already on
the line and it came off against the top of the woodwork and out of play. The
last golden chance fell back to Noor Ali who could have make up for his earlier
miss as Noor Ali then took the ball down the right
byline and got pass his marker before sending in a shot that curled and past
the keeper but it rattled off the top of the crossbar and out to safety, putting
an end to Geylang United’s AFC Cup hopes.
This was indeed
It left one wondering if it had been the result of not seeing the
disappointing Warriors lead the
In all, it seem the decision by AFC to spilt up Asian countries
into three groups could eventually produced the goods for Singapore as now
local teams have the chance to play decent oppositions throughout the year
instead of the limited actions over a few short weeks like the past. Also with
a decent chance to move into the knockout stage, the chance of meeting
Middle-East teams is highly probable and that can only aid the Republic as more
players are exposed to the
AFC Cup 2004 – Home United
Stage |
Home
Team |
|
|
Away
Team |
Date |
Group |
Home
United |
5 |
1 |
Happy
Valley (HK) |
11/2/2004 |
Group |
Club
|
0 |
3 |
Home
United |
25/2/2004 |
Group |
Perak
( |
2 |
2 |
Home
United |
6/4/2004 |
Group |
Home
United |
2 |
2 |
Perak
( |
20/4/2004 |
Group |
Happy
Valley (HK) |
0 |
2 |
Home
United |
5/5/2004 |
Group |
Home
United |
5 |
0 |
Club
|
19/5/2004 |
Quarter-final,
first leg |
Olympic
|
3 |
3 |
Home
United |
15/9/2004 |
Quarter-final,
second leg |
Home
United |
2 |
1 |
Olympic
|
22/9/2004 |
Semi-final, first leg |
Al Jaish ( |
4 |
0 |
Home Umited |
20/10/2004 |
Semi-final, second leg |
Home United |
1 |
2 |
Al Jaish ( |
27/10/2004 |
Home
United Scorers
8 goals |
Egmar Gonclaves |
7 goals |
Indra Sahdan |
5 goals |
Peres De Oliveira |
2 goals |
Suttee Suksomkit |
1 goal |
A Siva Kumar, Liew Kit Kong
(OG), Mohammed Nizam (OG) |
AFC Cup 2004 – Geylang United
Stage |
Home
Team |
|
|
Away
Team |
Date |
Group |
Geylang
United |
2 |
3 |
East
Bengal ( |
10/2/2004 |
Group |
Island
FC ( |
0 |
5 |
Geylang
United |
24/2/2004 |
Group |
Negri
Sembilan ( |
0 |
1 |
Geylang
United |
7/4/2004 |
Group |
Geylang
United |
2 |
1 |
Negri
Sembilan ( |
21/4/2004 |
Group |
East
Bengal ( |
1 |
1 |
Geylang
United |
5/5/2004 |
Group |
Geylang
United |
1 |
0 |
Island
FC ( |
18/5/2004 |
Quarter-final,
first leg |
Perak
( |
1 |
2 |
Geylang
United |
14/9/2004 |
Quarter-final,
second leg |
Geylang
United |
3 |
2 |
Perak
( |
21/9/2004 |
Semi-final,
first leg |
Al
Wahda ( |
1 |
1 |
Geylang
United |
19/10/2004 |
Semi-final, second leg |
Geylang United |
0 |
1 |
Al Wahda ( |
26/10/2004 |
Geylang
United Scorers
5 goals |
Aleksandar Duric |
2 goals |
Noor Ali, Hafiz Rahim,
Fazrul Nawaz |
1 goal |
Jeyapal, Razali Johari,
Nahar Daud, Chang Hui, Daniel Hill, Rudy Kharion, Hasrin Jailani |