Sports & Fitness

State FAs must prioritise local talents: Penang FA

The Football Association of Penang (FAP) says more attention should be given to grassroot-level talent development instead of relying on imported players

Updated 4 years ago · Published on 27 Dec 2021 10:00PM

State FAs must prioritise local talents: Penang FA
The Football Association of Penang (FAP) President says that the association will strive to identify and develop local latent in order to create more opportunities for them to play in Malaysian major leagues. - Pic courtesy of FA Penang Facebook, December 27, 2021

GEORGE TOWN - The Football Association of Penang (FAP) today suggested that state FAs push for more opportunities for locals to play in the Malaysian leagues.

FAP president Datuk Abdul Rashid Ismail said the country’s football arena should pay more attention to talent development from the grassroots level.

According to him, the culture of bringing in too many imported players can affect the chances of new local talents from playing in the country's football leagues.

“As associations (for football), we need to revitalise the football arena from the bottom up… If we don’t find talent at the grassroots level, we won’t be able to produce the best football players.

“To me, we don’t need to take on too many imported players but instead unearth the existing local talents in the country… at the same time, we need to appoint some import coaches to work with local coaches in an effort to expose different ways of playing and techniques to the players,” he told Bernama after chairing the FAP Annual General Meeting at the Penang State Sports Council (MSNPP), here yesterday. 

Abdul Rashid said the FAP would continue to strive to carry out talent search, organise competitions and training from the grassroots level in order to highlight local talents to have the opportunity to play in the major leagues in Malaysia.

He said that so far, there are 70 football teams registered with the FAP but there is less involvement from women and Persons with Disabilities (OKU).

“We are trying to find women and OKU talents and really expect cooperation from clubs and schools… for example, now we do not have a women’s team whereas before we had a great team,” he said. – Bernama, December 27, 2021

Related News

Malaysia / 2w

Cases of foreigners marrying locals for business licenses in Selangor getting serious

Malaysia / 3w

Johor PRN: Amanah fields 13 new faces

Malaysia / 1mth

Luxury MPV belonging to national football player seized by RTD

Malaysia / 4mth

Court dismisses suit by former student who hid iPhone in underwear

Malaysia / 4mth

Man seriously injured after being stabbed in front of shopping mall

Sports & Fitness / 4mth

Tengku Amir Shah not interested in FAM top job

Spotlight

Malaysia

Anwar congratulates BN on Johor victory, assures federal government support

Malaysia

Johor PRN: BN officially forms state government, wins 29 seats

Malaysia

Malaysia-Thailand open historic border crossing to deepen trade, regional integration

By Ian McIntyre

Malaysia

Gerak Khas drama actress, Tisha Samsir denies drug involvement

Malaysia

Student stabbing: Teenage girl sent to Hospital Bahagia for psychiatric evaluation

Malaysia

Anwar wishes Tun M a happy 101st birthday

World

Israel shares intelligence with US over alleged Iranian plot to assassinate Trump

You may be interested

Sports & Fitness

Racism row deepens as Paraguayan Senator claims Instagram hack after Mbappé clash

Sports & Fitness

Bellingham's extra-time brace sends England into first World Cup semi-final since 2018

Sports & Fitness

Argentina survives Swiss scare to set up blockbuster World Cup semi-final against England

Sports & Fitness

Merino's late winner sends Spain past Belgium into World Cup semi-finals