Showing posts with label Singapore: Young Lions/Jalan Besar Stadium. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Singapore: Young Lions/Jalan Besar Stadium. Show all posts

Thursday, 8 January 2015

Young Lions/Jalan Besar Stadium (Singapore)



Young Lions FC
Ground: Jalan Besar Stadium
Capacity: 7,100
Club Founded: 2002
League: Singapore Premier League (current level)

Young Lions FC is the Under-23 side of the Singapore national side, based at the Singapore FA base at Jalan Besar Stadium. This page features both the club and the stadium.


Jalan Besar Stadium 

The stadium is the traditional home of Singapore football and home of the Singapore FA. The original stadium was built in 1929 and staged Malaya Cup games between 1932 and 1966, and then Malaysian Cup matches from 1967 until 1973, when the National Stadium at Kallang was opened.

Jalan Besar was closed in December 1999 for reconstruction. In June 2003, the new stadium was opened as part of a sports complex. Burnley and Atletico Madrid played friendlies at Jalan Besar. It became the home of Lions XII in the Malaysia Super League and Young Lions in the S League and Singapore Premier League.


Young Lions

Young Lions entered the S League in 2002 to expose the players to senior competition. The side was bolstered by a couple of experienced overseas players, adding strength. Khairul Amri's goals in 2006 helped the team to finish in third place. 

Some lower finishes eventually led to the team taking their full allocation of four foreign players. It did not see too much improvement in the final rankings. Aide Iskandar became head coach in 2013, with Sahil Suhaimi making an impact as a forward the following season. 

 

Jürgen Raab, Patrick Hesse, and Vincent Subramaniam were the head coaches of the side, which finished bottom for a second consecutive season in 2017. Fandi Ahmad, a Singaporean, oversaw an improvement in 2018 as the club ceased signing overseas players in the newly restructured Singapore Premier League.

Nazri Nasir was employed as head coach from January 2020, before being replaced by Philippe Aw a year later. Nasir returned as Ilhan Fandi topped his team’s scoring charts. Aw returned to lead the Lions in 2023, who signed foreign players once again to try to strengthen the club. 

 

Nasir returned before Firdaus Kassim was appointed in July 2025.

My visit

Tampines Rovers 2 DPMM Brunei 1 
S League Championship Round - Friday 31st October 2014
👨‍👨‍👧‍👧 c1000 🎟️ Complimentary


My planning had been just about perfect, with my final four games on consecutive evenings, which could feasibly see me at the game where the title was to be won.

The day had been top class once again. After a lie-in, I left my bags at the hotel for later collection and enjoyed a great Friday lunchtime drink in the historic old rooms of the pavilion at Singapore Cricket Club in the company of my sixes cricket pal Sanjaya, who had kindly taken time off to introduce me as a guest and to look after me. 


Unbelievably, we ended up in the Officials Meeting for that weekend’s International Rugby 7s Tournament being held at The Padang. To be honest, it wasn't too much better organised than some amateur cricket meetings I'd attended in the past.

My free boat trip up the Singapore River on my great-value three-day tourist pass was thoroughly enjoyed. I paid $30 £15 for three days of unlimited travel on public transport and got the boat and bus tours with it.


Following a look at the Harbour Front across to Sentosa Island, I caught a double-decker bus back to my hotel, so I could sneak a power nap while sitting upstairs. I later hailed a taxi, which took me to the Jalan Besar Stadium for 6pm.

I’m not one to get to stadiums so early, but I’d had a stroke of luck the night before on my way to the match at Woodlands Wellington, which I was definitely going to take advantage of.


I saw a young local lad sporting the shirt of Albirex Niigata, and I commented on this as we waited to cross the busy Geylang Road. It turned out that he worked for the DPMM club in Singapore, and he told me to be at the venue at my appointed hour so he could sort me out with a complimentary ticket for the game.

While the $6 ticket price wasn’t a problem, I’d hoped to pick his brain and learn a bit more about the S.League, as I am always eager to learn.


Unfortunately, my pal hadn’t turned up, so I set about taking some snaps at the back of the Main Stand. I then received a tap on the shoulder from him with an apology and my ticket. What wonderful people live in Singapore!

The poor stewards were in a bit of a quandary when I approached the gate with my two large travelling bags. After some gentle persuasion, I was let in without them emptying them out to see if I had any concealed food or drink.


I really liked the Jalan Besar. Only the Main Stand side was open. This had a large lower tier with offices dividing this from a steep upper tier and its curved roof. The far side was a fair-sized block along the length of the pitch with open seating raised above the playing surface. Each S. League club had a board displaying its badge at the rear. 

Behind the King George’s Avenue End goal was a semi-permanent bank of open seating like the ones found around the greens at major golf tournaments. The other end had no spectator access. Just a large wall separated it from the Swimming Complex.


The lads doing the PAs and playing the music at the back of the lower tier kindly looked after my bags while I wandered around taking photos. I decided to push my luck and took a lift to the top floor and the corporate area, as I was in jeans and a dress shirt. I was inside without any questions to be handed a team sheet and wander around as I liked. 

I decided to call it quits without pushing my luck too far. Back downstairs, I took up a seat and watched the teams warm up while DPMM’s former Sunderland player, Roy O’Donovan, looked on disconsolately. He had been sent off in the game I went to on Tuesday evening in stoppage time.


The live TV cameras were in attendance for the game. A Friday night game was played at the Jalan Besar each week as a neutral ground for the watching audience.

The teams came out, and the national anthem was played as it was the final game of the season. Before kick-off, Tampines' retiring striker Aleksandar Đurić received the plaudits with presentations and a video on the screen showing his career highlights while on the island. The veteran started the match on the bench.


My friend from the night before, Richard, a Portsmouth and Whitley Bay supporter, joined me to view the action. I think he was favouring Tampines. I would have preferred to see Brunei win and the league title with it.

The first half was a tense affair on the artificial surface, which wasn’t as giving as the more modern versions. Jozef Kapláň, the Stags' Slovakian forward, was causing plenty of problems for the DPMM defence, whose goalkeeper Azman Noor had to be at his best.


Richard and I had slightly misread the positions going into the game. We presumed a draw for Rovers would secure them the title, whereas DPMM had to win. It later transpired that a Tampines win would get them a third-place finish.

My pal re-joined me after his half-time smoke, with the good news that the nearer south gate was open to enable me a quick exit at full time for my 11.05 flight back to Bangkok.


The very popular Đurić was introduced after the interval to try and force the breakthrough. Although he wasn’t the fastest, his first touch and awareness were exemplary. Meanwhile, I saw a similar pattern emerging as in DPMM’s Tuesday night victory, as Irishman Joe Gamble controlled play in a deep midfield role, as he never gave the ball away before making himself available again.

However, the Brunei boys were missing someone to open Rovers up. Someone like the suspended O’Donovan, perhaps? Out of nowhere, Tampines took the lead as Kapláň beat Noor on his near post.


The goal knocked the stuffing out of Steve Kean’s side for a while. Just eight minutes later, it was 2-0 as Đurić was denied a dream farewell, but teammate Miljan Mrdaković fired home the rebound. DPMM had just seventeen minutes to salvage their title aspirations.

The big Brazilian Rodrigo gave the smattering of visiting fans hope by pulling one back after eighty-one minutes. However, it was to be too little too late. I said my farewell to Richard as the fourth official showed the board, revealing that there would be four minutes of stoppage time. 


I exited just before the final whistle and managed to pull up a taxi quicker than I had initially feared. The driver knew exactly the quickest route as he deposited me at Changi Airport with over an hour to spare. Like everything else in Singapore, the airport was clean, spacious, and ultra-proficient.

My trip to the island had gone like a dream. I’d possibly overdone it with the dashing around, but it was worth every bit of tiredness and pain at times. I was so glad I’d used up my time properly and got a proper insight into both life on the island and the S League.


I recommend it to any traveller. I certainly slept well when I eventually reached my bed at the Chana Hotel in Minburi back in Bangkok.