December 2025

[Preview] Lion City Sailors vs Shan United

Sometimes, football has a way of reminding us about the fragility of life, and we are still grieving over the sudden departure of our fellow Crew Jasper. In Myanmar, footballers may end up in the Resistance and sacrificed their lives for a better tomorrow, or give up their careers and escape overseas to avoid persecution. Meanwhile, some of their finest talents remain in imposed self exile from the national team due to a complex series of factors. It is an irony that Machida Zelvia’s reserve goalkeeper, Kaung Zan Mara, who is the first Burmese (and refugee) to win the Emperor’s Cup and feature in the ACL Elite as a J1 League player, will never earn a cap for the Myanmar national team because his family fled the country due to persecution (nor will he deign to, given how Japan gave his stateless family a home and recognition). Thankfully the Sailors don’t have to head over to the other side in Myanmar to play their Shopee Cup fixture in Yangon under surreal conditions. Football remains one of the few functioning institutions of an otherwise messed up country, one that is safe enough to host Danelle Tan and her Tokyo Verdy team mates and geopolitical rivals Naegohyang and Suwon FC in the AWCL (where the neutral host format offered the least bad option that sidestepped delicate diplomatic powder kegs within regional rivals). That said, here is a brief history of our opponents and a quick lowdown of our opponents: History Shan United was first founded in 2003 as Kanbawza, and was for a time managed by former Singapore NT manager PN Sivaji. By 2017 it was a rising force in Myanmar football, with some creditable performances in the Asian stage including appearances in the (old) AFC Cup and last season’s AFC Challenge League in the quarter finals. Currently their title defence seems to be on track after a slow start and losing all their matches in the Challenge League this season. Players Worth Watching Jordan Hamilton’s proven pedigree in three continents (the MLS in his native Canada with Toronto FC, Ireland with Sligo Rovers and now Myanmar) makes him the highest profile player to play in the local league since former Premier League star Caleb Folan signed for Kanbawza during the previous decade. The former Canadian international with 2 caps is naturally the focal point of the attack. Ghanaian midfielder Mark Sekyi adds some physicality in the engine room, having seen action in continental competition both in the Challenge League and Shopee Cup. Previous coach Hiroki Ono’s Japanese connections have also borne fruit with Yuki Aizu (DF), Ryuji Hirota (MF) and Efrain Rintaro (FW) occupying key positions in their continental exploits. The dual Brazilian-Japanese Efrain also helps to add coherence to the Brazilian flair that Mauricio and Matheus Souza provides for the team, with the latter scoring goals against Dewa United in the Challenge League. Matheus and Ryuji also spent a good number of seasons in the region, and their experience might come in handy for a rather limited team. Unsurprisingly Shan United also forms the backbone of the Myanmar national team, with Nanda Kyaw, Hein Phyo Win and Ye Min Thu being regulars for club and country in defence. Kyaw Zin Phyo has been favoured over the equally Phae Phyo Aung in goal while young midfielders Ye Yint Aung and Khun Kyaw Zin Hein rotate amongst themselves in the squad. Conversely, Hlaing Bo Bo provides experience in the middle of the park. Conclusion It’s our first game back at Jalan Besar this season, and the team will be banking on our good continental form at JBS to hopefully seal the first win of the Shopee Cup campaign (as Coach Rankovic said in the press conference: “Bishan is not a real football stadium”). It’s good to be home. SFT Score predictions Chin Heng – 4-0 Ernest – 4-1 Bryan – Reuben – 4-1 Joseph Chin – 4-1 Joseph Jireh – Phelan – 5-0 Anatolii – Written by Joseph Chin 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!

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[Post-Match Thoughts] Bangkok United vs Lion City Sailors – A Point to Prove

Photo Credit: Lion City Sailors FC BG Stadium has been home to memorable visits for the Crew, including an unfortunate postponed fixture due to inclement weather. Interestingly, we have yet to face BG Pathum United here, although that might still happen in the Shopee Cup semi-finals. To keep ourselves in the running for qualification, we had to get a positive result against the co-tenants. Easier said than done, we’ve lost 4 times on the bounce against Bangkok United. Friendly Foes Many of the Crew recently travelled to Hong Kong to witness our historic Asian Cup qualification, and one important player during the campaign was Kyoga Nakamura. Despite his past endeavours with our rivals BG Tampines Rovers, his amicable personality has endeared himself to all local football fans. Some of us ended up purchasing Kyoga jerseys at the merchandise store, such was his popularity. We even sang his name post-match as a show of appreciation. The friendliness was largely extended to our opponents, whom we have to rely on for ACL Two progress as well. Lest we forget, we need Bangkok to beat Persib in Bandung for us to have any semblance of hope. This resulted in light-hearted banter throughout the evening, requesting the home team to do us a favour next week. Deep down, we wanted a competitive match to ensure both teams were sharp and raring to go for the next fixture. The home fans were not particularly interested in this fixture, with a meagre 500+ pax in attendance. This paled in comparison to the previous ACL Two match at the same ground, which had double the amount of fans present. I discussed this on A Thai Football Podcast post-game, and it appears the Shopee Cup is low on their agenda. Hopefully this improves over time as it is in our interests for ASEAN football to be successful in its own right. Foreign Firepower The much-maligned Shopee Cup has had several criticisms, with some attributing lower attendances to the foreign quota that is similar to SPL rules. Despite missing key players like Lennart Thy and Bart Ramselaar for various reasons, it was our foreign attackers that put us 2-0 up within 21 minutes. We had not scored more than 1 in each of our 4 previous meetings, which made the fast start all the more sweeter. Discussion about Maxime Lestienne’s looming exit has been rife, but his quality on the night proved yet again why the Sailors are going to miss him. In typical fashion, the Belgian cut in on his stronger left foot, unleashing a dipping far-post effort that caught out Patiwat Khammai. His ball striking technique is unmatched in our squad and I hope we get to see a few more magical moments from him this month. Can we deliver a capacity crowd for the Singapore Cup semifinal home leg? It will only be fitting for our best ever player. It was even more encouraging to see Anderson Lopes extend the lead with a measured run and finish after receiving the ball from deep. Despite some initial wobbles, it seems Anderson has been able to deliver on the continental stage, following his winning goal against Persib. Our no.18 looked sharp on the ball, and was unfortunate to be withdrawn with a knock in the second half. It remains to be seen if Anderson or even Lennart would be available for our final ACL Two group stage game. Familiar Frailties Unfortunately, chants of ‘Oh Anderson Lopes’ were marred by a quick response from the hosts. Jakkaphan Praisuwan picked up the ball in a fairly innocuous position, but managed to deceive Ivan Sušak who did not react to his near post finish. From then on both sides had plenty of goal mouth action, but it would prove to be in vain for the Sailors come the 77th minute. Former Stag Seia Kunori pounced in the box to equalise in front of the away fans. It was a hard pill to swallow, and continued a recent trend of defensive fragility. I have to sympathise yet again with Coach Rankovic for the lack of options off the bench to see out this game in a proactive manner. We did not even manage to fill the bench, only naming 7 substitutes compared to Bangkok’s 12. Among those 7, only 1 was an attacker in the form of Abdul Rasaq. The rest of the slots were 4 fullbacks and 2 goalkeepers, hardly what is required in a high stakes regional game. One notable omission was Safuwan Baharudin, who has not been seen since his contributions at Kai Tak Stadium. We know of his obvious quality especially when starting for the national team, but those levels have not been matched in a Sailors shirt since the start of his loan stint. The curious absence has not been helped by cryptic social media activity, with keen observers pointing out the removal of LCS content from his Instagram profile. Some have even speculated he would be returning to his parent club. This situation is not ideal for both club and player and hopefully it gets sorted out sooner rather than later. Edit: In the hours after this paragraph was written it has been officially announced that Safuwan has requested to prematurely terminate his loan. He didn’t look settled in our colours and has since returned to Kuala Lumpur to settle personal matters. Rather surprisingly, it has also been revealed he was on a 6-month loan after all. Anyway, it would be best for all parties to move on and we wish him all the best. Speaking of Selangor… Final Fantasy It would be accurate to say everyone has had an eye on the next game for the past few weeks. Fans need no reminder of the bleak permutations we face to continue our ACL Two journey. In lieu of a preview article, which would be a mere repeat of points, here’s a small segment that would suffice: Lion City Sailors beats Selangor. Bangkok United beats

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[Preview] Bangkok United vs Lion City Sailors – Not Sian Meh?

Sian. While regular games against high-quality foreign opposition is certainly a privilege, this is our 3rd time playing against Bangkok United in 5 games so I’m not even sure what to write about anymore. The only new development since the last time we met is that Bangkok United secured their place in the ACL2 knockout stage on Matchday 5. There are still some interesting facts that I wish to highlight though, so to avoid too much repetition, I’ll try out a new article format with this preview. We’ll be highlighting some key information in point form for yet another must-win game against Bangkok United (of which we have won none so far☹). Key Facts Conclusion Bangkok United’s progression to the ACL2 knockout stage last week will allow them to turn their focus to the Shopee Cup and the Thai League for now, although they will also be thinking about getting a result against Persib to secure their position as group winners. The Sailors will have to take advantage of their extra rest days and good recent form in Thailand if we want to pick up our first ever win against Bangkok. Most of us at Sailorfantalk will either be in Bangkok for the game or at the watch party at Mattar, so join us as we back our Sailors to finish an incredible 2025 on a high! SFT Score predictions Chin Heng – 2-1 Ernest – 1-2 Bryan – 1-2 Reuben – 1-1 Joseph Chin – 1-0 Joseph Jireh – Phelan – 1-2 Anatolii – 2-1 Written by Chin Heng 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!

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[Post-Match Thoughts] Lion City Sailors vs Persib Bandung – Bandung-tinted Glasses

Photo Credit: Lion City Sailors FC After weeks of online chatter, we did our talking on the pitch and beat Persib fair and square. Though you wouldn’t think so if you glanced at the comments section post-match. Allegations of offside and fouls in the buildup to Shawal’s goal would have you believe Persib were robbed. Home and Away WHO? The true robbery was the purchase of home tickets by away fans. As per competition regulations, 5% of tickets were allocated to the away side. Despite this, it was publicly known and in some instances paraded that Bobotoh purchased home tickets instead. This led to a match advisory post that warned against away support in the home stands. The advisory went viral, with swarms of comments criticising the ban of away jerseys and support in the home sections. The misinterpretation was echoed by Marc Klok in the pre-match press conference, with him questioning the rationale of such rules. Bojan Hodak then doubled down with his criticism of Bishan Stadium, likening it to a ‘training ground’ and ‘not a professional stadium’. It remained to be seen how these rules would be enforced on matchday, and some fans found their own workarounds. One group printed white t-shirts with the phrase ‘Lion City Sailor’ prominently plastered, which to me was a hilarious attempt at circumventing the restrictions. Others prepared white flags with blue Xs to not raise suspicions. What transpired was reasonable in the end. There was one overzealous fan who celebrated Persib’s equaliser while seated in the home section, he was promptly escorted out after some taunting from the crowd. Thankfully, that was most of the commotion that night and fans were well behaved otherwise. Direct Football En-route to the final last season, we had much success playing direct, even gaining a penchant for scoring quick goals from kick-off. There wasn’t to be such an early goal this game, but in the 9th minute we struck again. Lionel Tan played a great ball in behind, the Persib centreback let it bounce which gifted Lennart Thy the opportunity to lob the onrushing keeper. The advantage would be undone two minutes later, with a well-worked short corner routine trickling into the net, the entire Sailors defence ball-watching. It helped that this was when the rogue fan made himself known; our frustrations were largely vented at him instead. Perhaps the most frustrating concession was the second goal that came after the break. Beckham Putra found Thom Haye who had made an underlapping run, who crossed at the byline for Andrew Jung to head home. Here, you can see the replay courtesy of @bandungfootball. As beautiful as it was, there were questions to be asked as to why Thom was given so much space to fashion the chance. That goal had us staring at elimination from the ACL Two, and we responded by bringing on Maxime Lestienne for fresh impetus. Our Belgian wizard made an instant impact, his delivery from deep allowing Shawal Anuar to ghost in behind the defenders and finish in the bottom corner. It was just what we needed and seemed to inject self-belief in the team. We would grab the lead in the 71st minute, with fellow substitute Hami Syahin showing composure in our own box before releasing Anderson Lopes with a typical ball over the top. The Persib defenders let the ball bounce again, allowing Anderson to finish with aplomb. Cue wild celebrations in the stands. Rose-Syrup Tinted Glasses This result, coupled with Bangkok’s draw against Selangor, make for pretty clear optics going into MD6. Beat Selangor, and hope Persib lose again. It’s out of our hands, but the chronic optimist in me says it’s going to happen. After all, we’ve recovered from more dire situations (Hiroshima’s administrative error comes to mind :D). Surely the footballing gods will smile upon us to condemn Persib to another elimination. As fate would have it, we’re due to face Bangkok again next Thursday in the Shopee Cup. In an ideal world, we beat them handsomely to set off a chain of events that sees us progressing in both competitions. Despite the apparent insignificance of the Shopee Cup, the next fixture is pivotal for our season. Other than the obvious benefit of an elevated group standing, it would also represent a marked improvement against our bogey team, whom we have lost to in 4 previous meetings. Our local rivals BG Tampines Rovers have already qualified for the ACL Two RO16, in a group containing Pohang Steelers and BG Pathum United. That is no mean feat and the Singaporean in me is happy to see their improvement on the continental stage. There has been much discussion about coefficients and it appears we could catch other nations if the positive results are kept up. Fingers crossed yet again we have more to cheer about when reporting from Bangkok!

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