March 15, 2025

[Preview] Lion City Sailors v Balestier Khalsa (Crucial Game for our Domestic Targets)

After the high of qualifying for the semi-finals of the ACL2 competition, our Sailors must now come back to Earth and re-focus on our Singapore Cup campaign. Let’s dive right into a short preview of tonight’s game. Domestic Treble a Priority You may remember that after winning the Community Shield last year, Technical Director Luka Lalic put up an IG post stating that 33% of a treble was done. If you don’t remember it, look at this. Now, I believe he wasn’t so optimistic at the start of the season to think that we would win the Shopee Cup or the ACL2, so I think he might well have been referring to the domestic treble – SPL, Singapore Cup, and of course, the Community Shield that we’ve already won. That being the case, tonight’s game is important, because BG Pathum has started well in this competition, and Balestier Khalsa are our direct rivals for qualification too. I have always maintained that for a team of our resources, we have to dominate every domestic competition. Of course, we have a game in hand, but we want to enter the game against Geylang with a 5-point lead so that regardless of what happens, they can’t catch us. Rotation Even though we don’t play till later on in the month, I have a feeling Coach Ranko will rotate some players into the starting 11. He will be aware that Wednesday’s game would have taken a fair bit out of certain players, while also taking into account the impending international window where our Singaporean players (ana Ali Alrina for Syria) will not have much of a break at all. Shawal came on and went off in the last game so might have his minutes managed again, while Maxime surely won’t be available after he looked to have dislocated his elbow on Wednesday. I think it’s also important to keep players sharp. With Maxime’s injury, we may have to lean on our bench a bit more, so I think it would be good for the bench players to get some meaningful minutes. Dangerman – Kodai Tanaka The dangerman is an obvious one. Kodai Tanaka, previously of LCS before his horrific knee injury, will be the one to watch out for. He has a whopping tally of 20 goals and 11 assists, 2 goals fewer than our very own Lennart Thy, but with 6 more assists to his name. In recent games, he seems to have added something into his arsenal – the ability to run with the ball over long stretches and provide a pass for his teammates. This wasn’t always the case with Kodai, who was most known for his penalty box prowess in the past. You can see the varied threat that Kodai Tanaka poses from the types of goals he is scoring. Of course, without Anton Fase alongside him, and Alen Kozar pulling the strings in midfield, it might be a little harder for Kodai to thrive, but that didn’t stop him in Balestier’s previous game, where he got a goal, an assist, and also forced an own goal as Balestier beat Geylang. He does however, have joint-top local scorer Ignatius Ang to look for on the pitch though. Ignatius is playing his best ever season in his long career, and we will have to look out for him as well. With 8 goals and 4 assists in the league, Ignatius is also in pretty good form, and was the matchwinner last time out against Geylang. Balestier’s Strange Form Balestier’s form is pretty strange. Losing to Young Lions and Albirex, but managing to pick up 2 wins over an impressive Geylang team, on top of securing all three points in an away trip to DPMM – you never quite know what you’re gonna get with Balestier Khalsa on any given day. Conclusion With Alen Kozar and Anton Fase out, we have to capitalise. I think we should have too much for Balestier Khalsa, and I predict us to get back to winning ways after two consecutive draws. COME ON YOU BOYS IN BLUE! My predicted line-up Izwan Mahbud Akram Azman, Ali Alrina, Bailey Wright, Toni Datkovic, Sergio Carmona Rui Pires, Anumanthan Kumar Abdul Rasaq, Shawal Anuar, Bart Ramselaar Score Prediction Joseph and I predict the scores and track our success in a table. Stay tuned to find out who is the prediction king! Eddy’s prediction: Sailors 4 Balestier Khalsa 1 Joseph’s prediction: Sailors 2 Balestier Khalsa 0 Written by Eddy Hirono If you’d like to support the work we do here at SailorFanTalk, you may want to visit https://ko-fi.com/sailorfantalk and leave us a tip!

[Preview] Lion City Sailors v Balestier Khalsa (Crucial Game for our Domestic Targets) Read More »

[Post-Match Thoughts] History Made? No, History in the Making (Sailors 1 Sanfrecce Hiroshima 1)

You’ve read the preview – I thought our Sailors would hang on and survive and just about squeak through to the semi-finals. But we did much more than that. Coach Ranko delivered on his promise, and the tactics were spot on. We didn’t just sit back and weather the storm, we forged forwards at times against the wind, with our sails proudly hoisted. Can we, without batting an eyelid say we definitely deserved progress? No, I think that would be a stretch. We were soundly beaten 6-1 in the first leg in Hiroshima. Valere Germain or not, I don’t think the result would have been much different, even if he did get one of the six goals. However, I think the circumstances being what they were, we did our best to prove to Singapore and the rest of Asia that we are at the same time not an imposter team that doesn’t belong in the final four. And that’s important – I discuss why, and more, in the post-match thoughts. Don’t Name Your Son or Daughter Germain First, let’s not escape the elephant in the room. We didn’t qualify for the semi-finals purely based on on-field merit – we progressed because the name of the elephant was Germain. Ryo or Valere? Both, I say. Valere Germain’s contribution was obvious: his introduction meant his club’s 6-1 win was transformed by AFC into a 0-3 loss, handing us a vital advantage ahead of the second leg. However, even then, you will see how apprehensive I was in the preview article. I wasn’t alone, some other fans also were very nervous, given the footballing lesson Sanfrecce Hiroshima delivered last week to us. And then Ryo Germain happened. Rendered ineffective in the first half, he must have been frustrated at the start of the second when he inexplicably swiped at Bailey twice, connecting with his face in the second swipe. Red card. He tried explaining to the ref that it was accidental, that the swipe wasn’t deliberate – like a man mass-swiping on Tinder without really looking closely at the pictures. But that excuse was never gonna fly. Off he went. With the score locked at 1-1, there may have been hope of Sanfrecce scoring 3 goals in the second half to take the tie to extra time. However, without their main striker, and playing with 10 men, it was gonna be impossible. Moral of the story? Germain is an unlucky name. But one thing that had nothing to do with luck? Coach Ranko’s decision to start with Lennart upfront. Excellent Tactics + Starring Performance Upfront from Lennart 5 at the back is something we’ve come to expect from our Sailors team, but there was one notable omission from the lineup which must have surprised even our opponents. Goalscoring hero from the first-leg 3-0 win (heh), Shawal Anuar, was not in the starting eleven. In his place, Lennart Thy. This proved to be a tactical masterstroke, not only because he scored, but because of his physical presence and hold-up play. Being 3-0 up, we didn’t really need a goal, but we knew that we couldn’t just defend the whole 90min – if you do that, Sanfrecce are bound to score. And so Lennart Thy was unleashed on our opponents as a defensive forward, a physical wrecking ball up front designed to disrupt and disturb. He set the tone right from the start – in the 2nd minute he chased down a long ball from Izwan and shoved a Sanfrecce defender to the floor. Lennart’s physical strength and aerial prowess came to the fore many times during the game, and one of those occasions led to our goal. From a goal kick, Izwan launched it onto the head of Lennart. Lennart got up into an aerial duel with his marker, and not only won the ball, but continued his run, seeing that his header had gone to Shawal. If you look closely, you can see that his defender is still smarting from the duel, and is clutching his face a little. Shawal chests the ball up to himself, and then pulls off a sepak takraw-style flick to Lennart. There’s still a lot to do at this point because Shawal’s pass is slightly behind Lennart given the pace he is running at. However, Lennart’s first touch from almost behind his body is a perfect one, flicking it into his stride where his next touch is a well-placed shot into the back of the net. Coach Ranko promised that we wouldn’t just park the bus, that we would defend well, but also pick the right moments to attack. His plan worked perfectly. Mentally, this moment must have really discouraged Sanfrecce. They were 4 goals down away from home. Lennart continued to impose his physicality on the Sanfrecce defence, and was almost rewarded further in the second half when he exerted just enough pressure on a Sanfrecce defender, forcing him to play a terrible back-pass to his keeper. Though he really should have scored. He tried to go around the keeper here, but he really should’ve gone keeper’s right if he really wanted to, given that there was a defender breathing down his neck. Or he should really just have shot from here. The keeper was coming out, and had hidden his arms behind his back for fear of giving away a handball foul. Any placed shot or chip would have been very hard to defend. But that’s not what I will remember from this game. When I think back to this game, I will remember his perfect first touch and how important the goal was. And I will also remember how a big-name foreign signing of a striker ran around like a man possessed to fight for every loose ball, and put his opponents under pressure. So often you will get a foreign player who is a bit of a primadonna – I am so glad that Lennart isn’t one. Hariss Harun Rolling Back the Years

[Post-Match Thoughts] History Made? No, History in the Making (Sailors 1 Sanfrecce Hiroshima 1) Read More »