Warriors FC explained

Clubname:Warriors
Fullname:Warriors Football Club
Nickname:Rhino Warriors
Founded:


Dissolved:2019
Ground:Choa Chu Kang Stadium
Capacity:4,268
Chairman:Lam Shiu Tong
League:Singapore Premier League
Season:2019
Position:Singapore Premier League, 7th of 9
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Website:http://www.warriorsfc.org.sg

Warriors Football Club was a Singaporean professional football club based in Choa Chu Kang, Singapore, that played in the Singapore Premier League, the top division of football in Singapore. Before changing their name on 20 January 2013,[1] they were previously known as the Singapore Armed Forces Football Club (SAFFC) since their establishment on 16 February 1996. Despite their name back then, not all players from the team came from the Armed Forces. Some were internationals and others were foreign.

The club's original choice of mascot was a wolf, but club officials chose a rhinoceros, which represents discipline, spirit, courage and teamwork.[2]

Warriors are currently the most successful club in the history of the Singapore league since its inception, having won the league title a record 9 times in 1997, 1998, 2000, 2002, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009 and 2014 and finishing second on four occasions in 1996, 1999, 2001 and 2005.

History

1975–1995

The Singapore Armed Forces Sports Association (SAFSA) football team was formed in 1975 to provide talented footballers serving National Service with opportunities to play competitive football. That year, they won the President's Cup, a feat that they repeated in 1978, when they also captured the National Football League title to complete double. Their Under-19 team won the national Under-19 title in 1979, 1980 and 1983, while the 1981 season of the National Football League saw the SAFSA emerge as unbeaten champions. The President's Cup was won by them again in 1984 and 1986, the latter time as part of a second double, as they also won the National Football League on goal difference. In 1990, the Pools Cup went to the SAFSA and their convincing displays led to their selection as one of eight clubs to compete in the newly formed S.League.[3]

1996–2005

The club than revamp it named to Singapore Armed Forces Football Club (SAFFC) and also adopt a new mascot as in its club logo where they joined the inaugural S.League in 1996. The reserve team which still keep its old name and old logo also resulted in the withdrawal of SAFSA from the National Football League. SAFSA would not participate in Singaporean football leagues again until 1999, when they rejoined the league. SAFFC than finished second in 1996 in its debut season where they signed 5 Croatian players Ivica Raguž, Jure Ereš, Velimir Crljen, Davor Mioč and Goran Grubesic. With Grubesic leaving the club at the end of the 1996 season, SAFFC continued with 4 of the remaining foreigners where the club went on to win back-to-back S.League title in 1997 and 1998.

After retiring from football, club captain Fandi Ahmad took over from Mladen Pralija as the club head coach in 1999 where he guided them to win the S.League title in 2000 and 2002.

Three coaches were at the reins during this period, each lasting only one season. SAFFC finished second in 2005 but otherwise outside the top two.

2006–2012

Singaporean Richard Bok took over as SAFFC's head coach in 2006 and led them to four consecutive league championships from 2006 to 2009.

In 2008, SAFFC became the first Singaporean club to achieve a back-to-back domestic double, after winning both the S.League and the Singapore Cup in 2007 and 2008.

AFC Champions League debut

In 2009, SAFFC qualified for the AFC Champions League by defeating Thailand champions PEA and PSMS Medan of Indonesia in the Eastern zone play-offs, becoming Singapore's first-ever representative at the highest club competition in Asia.

SAFFC were drawn in a group with J.League champions Kashima Antlers, K League champions Suwon Samsung Bluewings and Chinese Super League runners-up Shanghai Shenhua. They lost all of their matches, except for a 1–1 draw against Shanghai Shenhua at home.

In 2010, SAFFC qualified for their second consecutive AFC Champions League by registering a 3–0 home win against Sriwijaya of Indonesia and defeated Muangthong United of Thailand in the Eastern zone play-off final, again at home. Against Henan Jianye of China in the group stage, they drew in the two teams' first encounter and won the return leg 2–1 in Singapore, finishing third in a group that also contained familiar rivals Suwon Samsung Bluewings and former champions Gamba Osaka.

2013–2019

On 20 January 2013, SAFFC announced that they had changed their name to Warriors Football Club ahead of the 2013 S.League season.

Englishmen Alex Weaver, in his first full season as coach of Warriors FC, clinched the 2014 S.League title on the last day of the competition for the Warriors. With DPMM of Brunei leading the table until the last day, the Warriors scored a 1–0 win over Albirex Niigata Singapore and received a favour from Tampines Rovers, who beat DPMM 2–1 to hand Warriors their first title in 5 years and their 9th title in the league's 19-year history.

However, good times did not last for the Warriors. In November 2019, the team were brought to court and charged with 107 counts of not paying salaries for their staff.[4] In total, they failed to pay more than S$350,000 in salaries to about 30 employees, including players, coaches and supporting staff.

2 days after the incident was reported, ST reported that there were 2 parties that were interested to take over Warriors FC.[5]

On 31 December 2019, the FAS had instructed the Warriors to sit out the 2020 Singapore Premier League season due to their financial and legal issues.[6] They applied to return to the Singapore Premier League and Singapore Cup competitions for 2021 to no avail.[7]

Stadium

The Warriors were initially based at the Jurong Stadium until 2000, before permanetely moving to the 4,268 capacity Choa Chu Kang Stadium in 2001.

Permanently sealed success into history at Choa Chu Kang Stadium

The stadium has become familiar for its elegant and soaring curved white steel roof, with supporting pylons, that covers the main grandstand. The football pitch itself consists of a self-watering "cell-system" turf pitch installation, supplied from Switzerland and approved by FIFA for international competition. The club has won 6 League titles during their time here.

Before the 2015 SEA Games commenced, they had to vacate Choa Chu Kang Stadium and instead played their home matches at the Woodlands Stadium for the 2015 season instead.

Seasons

SeasonName ChangedLeaguePos.PWDLGSGAPtsSingapore CupLeague Cup
1996-1align='center' rowspan="18"Singapore Armed ForcesS.League4th14 5 3 6 27 25 18
1996-2bgcolor=silver1st14 9 5 0 32 14 32
1997bgcolor=gold1st16 12 1 3 42 11 37
1998bgcolor=gold 1st20 14 4 2 46 1746bgcolor=silverRunners-up
1999bgcolor=silver2nd22 14 7 1 63 24 49bgcolor=goldWinners
2000bgcolor=gold1st22 16 4 2 53 15 52bgcolor=silverRunners-up
2001bgcolor=silver2nd33 24 2 7 101 46 74Third place
2002bgcolor=gold1st33 26 6 1 104 37 84Quarter-finals
20033rd33 20 2–5 6 68 37 69Group stage
20044th27 14 3 10 45 48 45Quarter-finals
2005bgcolor=silver2nd27 15 7 5 54 41 52Semi-finals
2006bgcolor=gold1st30 20 8 2 71 36 68Quarter-finals
2007bgcolor=gold1st33 25 4 4 95 38 79bgcolor=goldWinnersbgcolor=greyWithdrew
2008bgcolor=gold1st33 24 5 4 85 34 77bgcolor=goldWinnersQuarter-finals
2009bgcolor=gold1st30 22 1 7 73 31 67Round of 16bgcolor=silverRunners-up
20104th33 16 5 12 56 41 53Round of 16Quarter-finals
20113rd33 21 3 9 74 39 66Quarter-finalsQuarter-finals
20127th24 9 5 10 43 41 32bgcolor=goldWinnersSemi-finals
2013align='center' rowspan="7"Warriors7th27 9 8 10 38 38 35PreliminaryGroup stage
2014bgcolor=gold1st27 16 5 6 53 35 53PreliminaryGroup stage
20155th27 11 4 12 40 51 37Quarter-finalsGroup stage
20167th24 7 7 10 39 39 28PreliminaryGroup stage
20175th24 9 7 8 33 36 34Preliminarybgcolor=silverRunners-up
2018Singapore Premier League5th24 7 7 10 32 35 28Quarter-finals
20197th246513405622bgcolor=silverRunners-up

Performance in AFC competitions

2009

Group stage

2010

Group stage

2015

Second qualifying round

1999

First round

2000

Second round

2002

First round

4 appearances

2007

Quarter-finals

2008

Quarter-finals

2013

Group stage

2015

Group stage

2 appearances

1998

Second round

2001

First round

Awards

Player of the Year Award

SeasonName
1996align='left' Ivica Raguž
2000align='left' Mirko Grabovac
2002align='left' Therdsak Chaiman
2007align='left'Aleksandar Đurić
2008align='left'Aleksandar Đurić
2011align='left' Mislav Karoglan
2014align='left'Hassan Sunny

Top scorers

Season NameGoals
1996 Jure Ereš28
1999 Mirko Grabovac23
2000 Mirko Grabovac19
2001 Mirko Grabovac39
2002Mirko Grabovac34
2007Aleksandar Đurić37
2008Aleksandar Đurić28
2009Aleksandar Đurić28
2011 Mislav Karoglan33

Honours

League

Cup

Reserve

Records and statistics

Top 10 all-time appearances

RankPlayerYearsClub appearances
1 Rezal Hassan1996–2004,2010–2013312
2 Daniel Bennett2002, 2003–2004

2007–2016

234
3 Shahril Jantan2002–20032006–2012167
4 Zulfadli Zainal Abidin2009,2011–2014

2016–2017

156
5 Hafiz Osman2003–20112016–2017153
6 Therdsak Chaiman2002,2005–2009145
7 Shaiful Esah2005–20112016–2017131
8 Mustaqim Manzur2005–2011127
9 Marin Vidošević2012–2015112
10 Emmeric Ong2015–2019111

Top 10 all-time scorers

RankNameClub AppearancesTotal goals
1 Therdsak Chaiman14574
2 Mislav Karoglan9866
3 Aleksandar Đurić7457
4 Jonathan Béhé7550
5 Fazrul Nawaz9443
6 Nicolás Vélez5130
7 John Wilkinson9925
8 Miroslav Pejić5219
9 Park Tae-won6117
Indra Sahdan Daud58

Former managers

!Manager!Career!Achievements
Hussein Aljunied7 March 1983 – 31 December 1988– 1984, 1986 President's Cup
Ivan Raznevich1 January 1996 – 11 June 1996
Vincent Subramaniam11 June 1996 – 31 December 19981997, 1998 S.League
Mladen Pralija1 January 1999 – 30 November 19991999 Singapore Cup
Fandi Ahmad1 January 2000 – 30 November 20032000, 2002 S.League
Jim Shoulder1 December 2003 – 30 November 2004
Kim Poulsen1 January 2005 – 31 October 2005
Peter Butler1 January 2006 – 9 May 2006
Richard Bok9 May 2006 – 31 December 20122006, 2007, 2008, 2009 S.League– 2007, 2008, 2012 Singapore Cup2008, 2010 Singapore Community Shield

As Warriors

Vengadasalam Selvaraj1 January 2013 – 12 June 2013
Alex Weaver12 June 2013 – 24 October 20152014 S.League2015 Singapore Charity Shield
Razif Onn26 October 31 – 1 December 2015
Karim Bencherifa1 December 2015 – 6 January 2016
Jörg Steinebrunner6 January 2016 – 14 May 2016
Razif Onn (2)14 May 2016 – 1 January 2018
Mirko Grabovac15 January 2018 – 1 November 2018
Azlan Alipah1 January 2019 – 31 December 2019

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: SAFFC renamed as Warriors FC . dead . https://archive.today/20130216001131/http://www.espnstar.com/football/sleague/news/detail/item922996/SAFFC-renamed-as-Warriors-FC/ . 16 February 2013 . ESPN Star.
  2. Web site: Origins . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20090813215022/http://www.safwarriors.com.sg/home/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=10&Itemid=11 . 13 August 2009.
  3. Malathi Das and Palakrishnan (1996), "S.League: the kick-off", Singapore Professional Football League Pte Ltd, p. 38
  4. Web site: Warriors Football Club charged with not paying players, staff salaries of more than S$350,000 . CNA.
  5. Web site: November 9, 2019 . SPL club Warriors up for foreign takeover? . The Straits Times.
  6. Web site: Football: FAS instructs Warriors FC to sit out 2020 SPL season, club asks for urgent meeting . CNA.
  7. Web site: 12 October 2020 . Warriors FC seek return to Singapore Premier League and Cup for 2021. . The Monitor SG.