Sunday, 30 November 2014

My Apologies


Hi All Rams Kakis,

I haven't been able to update this blog lately due to family commitments and some maid issues.  I know I had skipped many games & many features & stories, but p~l~e~a~s~e give me some time to update them & I promised to do them fast. 

Once again, sorry for the inconvenience, and do come back for more juicy news on the Rams. 

Thanks & have a great day!

Wednesday, 12 November 2014

Remember Each Member!



We, the fans gonna miss each and every one of you.... best of luck, take care & Best wishes to everyone!

Wednesday, 5 November 2014

No Merger!!


The picture tells a thousand words!!!

Jaguars To Sit Out Next S-League Season, Rams To Merge With Hougang


[This article was first published on The Straits Times, Nov 4, 2014]

The S-League has shrunk from 12 to 10 teams for the 2015 season, barely days after this year's campaign came to an end.

Woodlands Wellington - one of the eight founding members of the league in 1996 - will merge with Hougang United and compete as one team next season.

Meanwhile, Tanjong Pagar United, finalists in this year's League Cup and last year's Singapore Cup, announced that they will sit out the next campaign.

A post on the Jaguars' official Facebook page last night read: "It is confirmed that (Tanjong Pagar) will be sitting out of the 2015 S-League season. We thank all our supporters for your support from 2011 to 2014."

This is the second time the Jaguars - another S-League founding member - have sat out of the professional league. They withdrew from the S-League after the 2004 season, citing financial problems, before returning in 2011.

Once again, they are sitting out due to money. Said chairman Edward Liu: "We were unable to find a sponsor for this year after Field Catering, who came in with a $100,000 sponsorship last season, pulled out before this season.

"With our current resources, we were unable to do our utmost to challenge for glory. We finished ninth this year, when my target for the team was to better last season's sixth-position placing.

"We don't want to just make up the numbers. We want to fight for glory (but) we'll be rather challenged financially... if we take part in next year's campaign."

Liu said the plan was to sit out a year as he tries to locate a sponsor but added: "Anything can happen, depending on (finding) a sponsor."

Meanwhile, news of the Woodlands-Hougang merger was delivered in an hour-long meeting at the Woodlands Stadium yesterday, attended by Woodlands players, officials and S-League chief executive Lim Chin.

"Woodlands will be merging with Hougang United for the new season," said Lim. He declined to give further details.

Both Woodlands and Hougang officials declined comment when contacted by The Straits Times.

Woodlands personnel have no idea what the future holds, with the club giving no indication who will be released or retained.

Midfielder Goh Swee Swee may give up the sport for good if he does not find a new club.

"You're shrinking a pool from over 40 jobs to just over 20, so what are those who are left out going to do?" said the 28-year-old.

"I've got my family to consider so if I can't find a club, I'll have to find a job outside of football. Nobody likes a situation like this but we got to face this reality now."

The Rams finished at the bottom of the table from 2010 to 2012, and were second-from-bottom in the recent season, while Hougang have also struggled through several incarnations. Former Woodlands manager R. Vengadasalam likened the merger to "an attempt to mix oil and water".

He said: "Geographically, this won't work as the two clubs are so far apart. Will they train at Woodlands and play at Hougang, or vice versa?

"To me, they're killing off 19 years of history with Woodlands Wellington by merging the two clubs together.

"I may have left Woodlands (in 2004), but I never thought this day would come."

Only 10 teams In S.League Next Year

Photo Credit: Heinkel Heinz

[This article was first published in The New Paper, Nov 4, 2014]

Next year will mark the 20th edition of the Great Eastern-Yeo's S.League, and it will be ushered in with yet another slew of changes, the most obvious of which is the number of teams. 

Tanjong Pagar United, one of the eight founding clubs of the S.League in 1996 - under the banner of Tiong Bahru United - will not be in the mix next season, along with another pioneer outfit, Woodlands Wellington. 

From 12 teams this year, the 2015 S.League will see a reduced roster of 10 sides. Woodlands will merge with Hougang United to form a club whose shape and form has yet to be decided, while financial struggles will see Queenstown-based Tanjong Pagar sit out the league for the second time, after the club pulled out after the 2004 season - also due to monetary difficulties.

Next year will mark the 20th edition of the Great Eastern-Yeo's S.League, and it will be ushered in with yet another slew of changes, the most obvious of which is the number of teams. 

Tanjong Pagar United, one of the eight founding clubs of the S.League in 1996 - under the banner of Tiong Bahru United - will not be in the mix next season, along with another pioneer outfit, Woodlands Wellington.

From 12 teams this year, the 2015 S.League will see a reduced roster of 10 sides. 

Woodlands will merge with Hougang United to form a club whose shape and form has yet to be decided, while financial struggles will see Queenstown-based Tanjong Pagar sit out the league for the second time, after the club pulled out after the 2004 season - also due to monetary difficulties. 

The Jaguars returned in 2011, but beside a sixth-placed finish in 2013 that also saw them ending the year as runners-up in the RHB Singapore Cup, they have struggled.

They finished ninth among the 12 teams this year, while Woodlands ended the season in 11th spot.

"Presently the S.League is too big for the local environment... the demography of Singapore cannot support it fully, that is one of the key reasons for this initiative," said S.League chief executive Lim Chin.

"Naturally (the reduction in teams will mean) there will be more resources (subsidies) for the remaining clubs and in turn make the S.League even stronger and more competitive, and through that we will help to raise the overall standard of Singapore football."

Admitting that the club have been "a bit stretched" financially, Tanjong Pagar chairman Edward Liu told The New Paper that their inability to secure a main sponsor for 2014 has hurt them.

"After talking to our committee members, I am of the view that we can better contribute to the league by sitting out, and conducting a strategic review of our own resources and conserve to build a better resource base going forward," he said.

Woodlands' officials were uncontactable yesterday, while Hougang chairman Bill Ng declined to comment.

TNP understands that coaching staff and players of Tanjong Pagar, Woodlands and Hougang were only informed yesterday - three days after the end of the 2014 season - of the changes.

"My situation? Limbo," said Woodlands coach Salim Moin, the former Singapore midfield star.

"It's worse for my players but what can I do? We're still waiting for the management to sit down and discuss."

Clubs are required to submit a list of players they wish to retain on their roster for the next year to S.League administrators, usually within 10 days of the last matchday of the current season (Nov 14 this year).

It suggests a number of players from the three affected clubs may struggle to find employment in football.

While the norm is for clubs to only sign single-year contracts with most of their players, Tanjong Pagar have a group who are on two-year deals, including coach Patrick Vallee.

"We will honour all our contractual obligations with players and coaches," said Liu, with Lim asserting that both Woodlands and Hougang will do the same.

"The timing of announcement for any major change will be made only at the end of every season and this is similar to past seasons," said Lim, insisting that affected players will have enough time to find new clubs.

Tampines Rovers chairman Teo Hock Seng believes that some key elements of the league will stay the same, despite the changes to be implemented.

"Balestier Central and Clementi Khalsa merged in the past, and I thought that was a good marriage, and they came out stronger. I don't think there's anything wrong with a merger," he said, of the impending Woodlands-Hougang pairing.

That merger came at the end of the 2002 season.
"I don't think there'll be a drastic difference, it will be a shorter league, but four or five top teams will still compete for the title - we're going to compete," said Teo.

"The spirit of competition is still all there, and our local teams will beat the foreign teams."