
After a substitute appearance almost two weeks ago, all eyes were on
the man in the No.9 as he lined up alongside his old and new Rovers
team-mates for the first time since that fateful Singapore Cup Final of
2007.
There had been doubts over his match fitness and
technical ability, having not played at this level for a long time, but
his two goals and numerous chances to convert were a testament to the
fact that his ability has not faded away with the seven-month ban.
Noticeable
missing figures in the lineup were veterans Rafi Ali and Zulkarnaen
Zainal, the former out with an injury while the latter served the first
of his two-match suspension.
Despite these absences, the
energetic Alam Shah was dangerous from the beginning, and as early as
the third minute threatened to score as Santi Chaiyaphuak’s cross was
headed down into his path by Ridhuan Muhammad, but his shot flew past
the left post.
On the ten-minute mark, Qiu Li bagged his
eleventh goal of the season with an easy tap-in, after Ang Bang Heng
failed to muster a proper save to Alam Shah’s overhead kick.
Alam
Shah then turned provider for Khairul Amri in a quick
counterattack after Fahrudin Mustafic volleyed the ball away from the
penalty box, out of Paul Bekombo’s reach, but Amri aimed for the middle
and sent his shot right into the goalkeeper’s safe hands.
The
28-year-old could have scored early when Ridhuan toe-poked a cross from
the extreme right which shaved past the top of his head and in front of
an empty goal. The loose ball landed at Amri’s feet, but even he failed
to contribute effectively to the scoreline.
Tampines’ failure
to convert their numerous chances was punished when the speedy Hironori
Saruta equalized for the away side in stoppage time at the end of the
first half.
Mba Vitus Onyekachi’s through pass down the middle
caused panic amongst the Stags defence, as Rezal Hassan came off his
line only to see Mustafic, Shariff Abdul Samat and Sutee Suksomkit
embarrass themselves in a three-way collision, allowing the Japanese
forward to volley the ball into an empty net.
However,
Tampines managed to raise their game in the second half, and five
minutes after the restart, Santi blazed through the middle and threaded
a pass to to Alam Shah, who beat his marker and shot past the keeper to
record his first goal of the season.
Not too long later,
Tampines were 3-1 up as Ridhuan tore down the right flank and sent in a
quick, low cross to Amri, who slammed the ball into the bottom near
corner.
Despite the attacking prowess, Tampines appeared weak at the back as they were exposed by Balestier several times in the match.
If Saruta’s
goal was not warning enough, they were tested again twice in the second
half, when Rezal smothered Rhysh Roshan Rai’s narrow-angled shot and
cleared away a loose ball.
When Mustafic then missed a
backpass and was pressured by Bekombo, Rezal saved his team again
by getting his hands to the powerful shot from outside the box by the
Cameroonian.
Alam Shah rounded off a wonderful evening for
himself and his team in the 72nd minute, faking a defender and adding
his second by slipping the ball in between Ang’s legs.
Aliff
Shafaein replaced Amri in the 80th minute and could have provided the
man dubbed “the Crown Prince” with a hat-trick in the closing stages,
but the latter saw his shot swerve just past the left post.
Despite not
making the game more memorable by scoring thrice, Alam Shah was happy
with two, and now looks set to reclaim his former glory as the king of
Tampines.
“I feel great, and it is good for a striker to get
early goals, and for his fellow strikers to score as well,” he said
after the match.
“I wouldn’t say we were very good for the first half, but this is a young squad and we need to take our time.”
Alam
Shah also likened his current role as a mentor-figure to the younger
Amri and Qiu Li to the one Mirko Grabovac played when he was still at
the club.
“I am now doing what Mirko did for me in the past,”
he said. “The three of us are doing very well together in training for
the past few days, but there is still a lot of work to do, and a lot of
understanding to be cultivated.”
On the other end, Balestier
coach Nasaruddin Jalil admitted that lack of experience was one of the
major deciding factors in the match.
“We all know Alam Shah is a good striker, but our defenders made it too easy for him,” said Nasaruddin.
“Experience
is experience. Our defending was not tight enough and we made simple
but fundamental mistakes which we should not be making. If you don’t
mark strikers properly, even the lousy ones would be able to score a
goal.
“For strikers, if you don’t score, you don’t lose matches, but it is different for the defenders.”
Nasaruddin
also commented on his team’s lack of ability to sustain a performance
for 90 minutes, as seen in the second half when they let in three goals
after a strong first period.
“We were able to reduce their
chances in the first half, because we managed to close them down and
shut them off, but the second half, we sat back and then they came at
us.
“When I decide to play an offensive and highly intense game,
we will be able to put pressure on any team if we are able to sustain
the intensity, but we cannot do so and because of this our confidence
drops.
“I can see players who are willing to push up, but if we
do too much offensively, we will expose our back, and the defenders
need to work on identifying this problem.
“We had our chances on goal, but we just don’t have enough experience.”
wtf.. I thought signed for wigan liao?![]()
Originally posted by chrisbenoit:wtf.. I thought signed for wigan liao?
thats BS from the TS. no sauce, nothing.
Originally posted by chrisbenoit:wtf.. I thought signed for wigan liao?
![]()
wa, ai zai
alam is good sia.can be the next fandi.