ความคิดเห็นที่ 23
เทิดศักดิ์ ติด 11 ผู้เล่นที่ดีที่สุดใน S ลีกนะครับ
ใครบอกว่า ซีดานเมืองไทยไม่ฟิตกันเนี๊ย
Terdsak in 11 players S-LEAGUE of the year enjoy reading!!!!
sleague.com Dream Eleven
The sleague.com Crew info@sleague.com Referee Abdul Malik's whistle at the end of the RHB Singapore Cup final signaled the end of another S.League season - one full of twists and turns, drama and spectacle, genuinely emotional moments and thoroughly entertaining ones.
As ever, the principle actors in this rich tapestry of football were the players. From Player of the Year Noh Alam Shah at Tampines Rovers to Paya Lebar Punggol's Jafri Hashim, whose hattrick earned the Seahorses their first ever win, everyone had a hero.
Sleague.com's matchday reviewers have previewed and reported on every single league and cup match this season, and of course, we had our own heroes.
As dream eleven selections usually go, this one was as difficult as any other, and we even had a couple of controversial omissions - including a certain big-match headline hogger wearing the number 3 jersey who dominated the end of season transfer speculation.
But ultimately the crew managed to settle on these players, laid out in an attack-oriented 3-4-3 formation that is certain to wow the crowds if any club chairman (hear hear, Mr Teo) decides to splurge the cash to buy them all.
Here then, after many rounds of discussion - heated and otherwise -, always at a coffeeshop near an S.League stadium, is the sleague.com team of the season.
Lionel Lewis (Home United): It was no surprise that the Protectors surge of form in mid-season coincided with his arrival at Bishan from the Young Lions.
His commanding performances between the posts have been instrumental for club and country as both tasted glory this year. Not for nothing was Lionel voted the Tiger Cup's Most Valuable Player.
S Subramani (Home United): Steady as a rock, calm as ice, engine like an Energizer battery. The 1998 S.League Player of the Year is still a gem at the age of 33.
The Home skipper yells, cajoles and hammers his defence into shape and leads by example - you know it after you've been in a challenge with Subramani. A gift for the timely block and interception has also become one of his trademarks.
Sead Muratovic (Tampines Rovers) He sat out the first seven matches of the season after injury issues and a failure to pass the league mandatory fitness test, but Mookie returned in style with to assume his role as the anchor of Tampines' defence.
Fitter than ever and still exuding class, the dead-ball specialist is a fantasy football fan's dream pick - 11 goals from a defender is a fantastic return.
Kenji Arai (Albirex Niigata): Consistent performances throughout the season and outstanding leadership in a youthful Albirex side earns Arai the nod. His commanding presence at the back is an inspiration in the face of adversity. A calm and experienced head, the White Swans captain is also a model of consistency and steadfastness.
Goh Tat Chuan (Woodlands Wellington): Few others could have done the job Tat Chuan does for Woodlands Wellington, fewer still could have pulled it off with his charisma and charm.
Balancing the egos in a multi-talented outfit is no easy task, but Tat Chuan worked with coach Karim Bencherifa to gel the many differing personalities in the Rams dressing room to drive their challenge for honours in the league and Cup. Never one to shirk a challenge, Singapore and the S.League undoubtedly need more such midfield enforcers.
Ahmad Latiff (Woodlands Wellington): He's had his fair - and more -share of controversies, living up to his billing as Singapore footballs bad boy.
Away from the poor press and controversial incidents though, this season has seen the famously indisciplined Latiff blossom into a mercurial winger and a key part of Woodlands midfield engine. He has shown more than glimpses of his undoubted talent with added consistency, often running riot in the flanks.
Peres de Oliveira (Home United): The Brazilian maestro joined the Century Club of players with 100 goals to their bow in the S.League, but finding the net is only one of his many fortes.
A many times unpredictable, most times sublime creative force in the Home midfield, he never fails to light up a match with his silky skills and delightful passing. Missing out on the RHB Singapore Cup final through suspension was his only blemish.
Therdsak Chaiman (SAFFC): Fined before the start of the season for misrepresenting his age when he played for SAFFC in 2002, there was nothing misleading about Therdsak's billing on the pitch. Long regarded as one of the region's finest performers, Therdsak ran the show in midfield and attack for the Warriors.
Mirko Grabovac (Tampines Rovers): Top scorer in five out of his seven seasons here, Grabovac's goals say it all. While that thrusting burst of pace may have gone, his predatory instincts and hunger for goals remain.
Grabovac earns our vote for his consistency, as well as an unflagging, unquenchable desire for goals that has seen him become the deadliest striker in the history of the S.League.
Kengne Ludovick (Balestier Khalsa): The more lethal of Balestiers Twin Terrors, Ludovick's 20 goal haul propelled the Tigers to many a victory over a more fancied side.
A bargain signing from Cameroonian S.League wanna-bees Planet FC, the stocky 22-year-old has caught the eye with his bulldozing power, speed and knack for finishing chances upfront.
Noh Alam Shah (Tampines Rovers): For the first half of the season, Tampines' title charge belonged to Alam Shah. A blistering 15 goals in 16 games told the tale, before a jaunt to England and Latvia for trials somewhat took the wind out of his sails.
That he managed to battle back to his domineering form was characteristic of Alam Shah, for whom fighting the odds and defying the critics has become the norm. At 25, a bullish, never-say-die striker with the added quality of guile, Alam Shah is still Singapore's best bet to crack the foreign stage.
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9 ธ.ค. 48 06:27:53
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