Aminul Haque (footballer) explained

Aminul Haque
Birth Date:5 October 1980
Birth Place:Bhola, Bangladesh
Position:Goalkeeper
Height:1.85 m
Years1:1994–1995
Years2:1996
Years3:1997–1998
Years4:1999
Years5:2000–2004
Years6:2005–2006
Years7:2007–2010
Years8:2010–2012
Years9:2012–2013
Years10:2013–2014
Clubs1:Mohammedan SC
Clubs2:Farashganj SC
Clubs3:Muktijoddha Sangsad
Clubs4:Abahani Limited Dhaka
Clubs5:Muktijoddha Sangsad
Clubs6:Brothers Union
Clubs7:Mohammedan SC
Clubs8:Sheikh Jamal Dhanmondi Club
Clubs9:Team BJMC
Clubs10:Muktijoddha Sangsad
Nationalyears1:1998–2010
Nationalteam1:Bangladesh
Nationalcaps1:57
Nationalgoals1:0

Aminul Haque (Bengali: আমিনুল হক; born 5 October 1980), is a former Bangladeshi professional footballer who played as a goalkeeper. He is regarded as one of the greatest Bangladeshi footballers of all time, and has been described as the greatest goalkeeper to have represented Bangladesh. He is considered one of the most influential footballers of his generation in South Asia alongside Ali Ashfaq and Bhaichung Bhutia. Haque's positional sense and ability to read the game made him one of the greatest goalkeepers in South Asian football history.[1] Shebby Singh of ESPN Star suggested that Haque deserves to play in a better league, even in England with proper training.[2]

Early life

Aminul was born on October 5, 1980, in Bhola district but he spent his childhood living in Dhaka. His two brothers also played in the National League. In 1993, he played his first Pioneer League for MSPCC.

Club career

Aminul made his senior club debut with the Mohammedan team in 1994. Trying and failing to break into the starting eleven of Mohammedan, he ended up in Farashganj where he made his first division debut 2 years later in 1996. In 1997 he joined Muktijoddha Sangsad for the first time and won the Premier Division League. But in his second term, he spent his golden days with Muktijoddha from 2000 to 2004. He was the captain of the team that won the domestic football double in 2003. Aminul also played 2002 Asian Club Championship for them. For next two seasons he played for Brothers Union, and then in 2008 he came to Mohammedan. In 2007, he missed an entire season due to injury.[3] After his retirement from the Bangladesh national team, he joined Sheikh Jamal DC in 2010. Aminul finished his professional career in 2013 from Mutkijoddha.

Although he spent most of his football career in Bangladesh, in 2004 he was contacted by Newcastle United of Premier League for recruitment, but the deal fell through. When asked about it, he said, "yes I did get an offer from Newcastle United, but because of some communication problem, the deal did not progress."[4]

International career

In 1995, he earned a call up to the Bangladesh national squad, but couldn't break into the starting eleven right away. Finally, in 1998, his dream came true as he started against Qatar in a friendly match. He won the Gold in 1999 SA Games and 2010 SA Games.

His most influential game was probably against Maldives in the finals of 2003 SAFF Championship Cup squad. The game went on to the penalty shoot out and Aminul Hoque stepped up like a true leader. A true shot stopper, he won Bangladesh the game that night with a few fine saves. Aminul was also nominated as the best goalkeeper in the 2003 SAFF games. Aminul later stated in an interview that he was not supposed to play the final due to a back pain. However, he was determined to help the team lift the title, and played the whole game on painkillers.[5] He uninterruptedly captained the national side from 2005. Bangladeshi football fan cherish his extraordinary performance in SAFF 2005 final although Bangladesh were defeated 2–0 by India.[6] In 2010, when he was at the peak of his career he decided to retire from national team and make way for young players to come in. His last game for the national team was against Hong Kong at the Asian Games in Guangzhou.

Since then, his longtime national teammate and rival Biplob Bhattacharya took his place as both the captain and goalkeeper of Bangladesh national football team. In 2011 Bangladesh Football Federation's appeal to reconsider his retirement decision to represent the country in the FIFA World Cup pre-qualifiers against Pakistan. He said,"I stick to my decision of retirement from the international arena as I discussed the issue with my family members and well-wishers after getting a comeback call from the BFF on Monday",[7]

Date Home TeamAway TeamResult EventYCYRCRC
2010-02-20Sri LankaBangladesh3:0Asian Cup 2011 - Group A0001
2010-02-18BangladeshMyanmar1:2Asian Cup 2011 - Group A0000
2010-02-16TajikistanBangladesh1:2Asian Cup 2011 - Group A0000
2009-12-08BangladeshSri Lanka2:1SAFF Cup 2009 - Group B0000
2009-12-06BangladeshPakistan0:0SAFF Cup 2009 - Group B0000
2009-12-04BangladeshBhutan4:1SAFF Cup 2009 - Group B0000
2009-04-30BangladeshMacau3:0Asian Cup 2011 - Group A0000
2009-04-28BangladeshMyanmar1:2Asian Cup 2011 - Group A0000
2009-04-26BangladeshCambodia1:0Asian Cup 2011 - Group A0000
2008-11-13BangladeshIndonesia0:2Friendly0000
2008-11-11MyanmarBangladesh0:0Friendly0000
2008-10-18MyanmarBangladesh1:0Friendly0000
2008-05-09KyrgyzstanBangladesh2:1Asian Cup 2011 - Group C0000
2008-05-05BangladeshAfghanistan0:0Asian Cup 2011 - Group C0000
2006-11-15Hong KongBangladesh2:0Asian Cup 2007 - Group F0001
2006-10-11BangladeshUzbekistan0:4Asian Cup 2007 - Group F0000
2006-09-06QatarBangladesh3:0Asian Cup 2007 - Group F0000
2006-08-16BangladeshQatar1:4Asian Cup 2007 - Group F0000
2006-04-10BangladeshTajikistan1:6Friendly0000
2006-04-05BangladeshPalestine1:1Friendly0000
2006-04-03BangladeshGuam3:0Friendly0000
2006-04-01BangladeshCambodia2:1Friendly0000
2006-02-22UzbekistanBangladesh5:0Asian Cup 2007 - Group F0000
2005-12-26PakistanBangladesh0:1Asian Cup 2007 - Preliminary Round0000
2005-12-22BangladeshPakistan0:0Asian Cup 2007 - Preliminary Round0000
2005-12-17IndiaBangladesh2:0SAFF Cup 2005 - Final0000
2005-12-14PakistanBangladesh0:1SAFF Cup 2005 - Semi Finals0000
2005-12-10BangladeshNepal2:0SAFF Cup 2005 - Group B0100
2005-12-08BangladeshBhutan3:0SAFF Cup 2005 - Group B0000
2003-11-30TajikistanBangladesh2:0World Cup 2006 - Preliminary Round0000
2003-11-26BangladeshTajikistan0:2World Cup 2006 - Preliminary Round0000
2003-03-30Hong KongBangladesh2:2Asian Cup 2004 - Group 40000
2003-03-27LaosBangladesh2:1Asian Cup 2004 - Group 40000
2003-01-20BangladeshMaldives1:1(5:3)SAFF Cup 2003 - Final0000
2003-01-18BangladeshIndia2:1SAFF Cup 2003 - Semi Finals0000
2003-01-13BangladeshMaldives1:0SAFF Cup 2003 - Group B0000
2003-01-11BangladeshNepal1:0SAFF Cup 2003 - Group B0000
Total0102

Honours

Bangladesh

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Bhutia savours record third title . 2018-09-08 . https://web.archive.org/web/20180909035651/https://www.fifa.com/live-scores/news/y=2005/m=12/news=bhutia-savours-record-third-title-102282.html/ . 2018-09-09 . dead .
  2. Web site: গোলবারের নিচে কেউ আমাকে নার্ভাস করতে পারেনি | কালের কণ্ঠ. May 10, 2018. Kalerkantho.
  3. News: Aminul sticks by decision . The Daily Star . 2020-05-28.
  4. Web site: The Best Bangladeshi Footballers of All Time. Md Ashequl Morsalin Ibne Kamal(Team Leader)| Niloy Saha(Sr Web Developer)| Shohana Afroz(Web Developer)| Jobayer Hossain(Web. Developer). unb.com.bd.
  5. Web site: খেলারই কথা ছিল না, তিনিই হয়ে গেলেন নায়ক!. নিজস্ব. প্রতিবেদক. Prothomalo. 21 December 2015 .
  6. Web site: SAFF CHAMPIONSHIP: List of winners (1993–2018) | Goal.com. goal.com.
  7. Web site: Aminul sticks by decision. Sports. Reporter. June 22, 2011. The Daily Star.