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| name = AF League | logo = | pixels = 200 | organiser = Football Association of Athen (FAA) | country = Athen | confed = Union of European Football Associations|UEFA | founded = 1998; 26 years ago (1998) | teams = 20 (2023) | relegation = AF B League (proposed from 2024) | levels = 1 | domest_cup = FAA Golden Cup
Jatian Cup | confed_cup = UEFA Champions League | season = 2022 | champions = Stonehill United F.C. (17th title) | top_goalscorer = Calvin Campbell Junior (91) | tv = ANTB
Sports Top (TV channel) | current = 2023 AF Football League }}

The AF Football League is the men's top professional football division of the Athenisian football league system Football Association of Athen The AF Football League is contested by 20 teams. Since 1988, it operated on a system of promotion and relegation with the AF B League, with the two lowest-placed teams relegated and replaced by the promoted top two teams in that division.

36 clubs have competed in the division since the inception of the AF Football League in 1988, with eight teams winning the title (United Stonehill F.C., Stonehill City F.C., North Plaza A.C., Real Russo F.C., Northseas Warriors F.C., Malese Herns F.C., Dove Country F.C. and Stollgard Red Bulls F.C.). The current champions are United Stonehill F.C., which won their 17th title in the 2022 AF Football League.

History

[edit]

Origins

[edit]

The AF Football League was formed in 1988 following a decision by the Football Association of Athen (FAA) to replaced the FAA Super League. The inaugural season started on 1 February 1988. As a result, the Football Association of Athen Trademark was created to oversee the marketing aspects of the league.

Foundation

[edit]

The professional football league in Athen was divided into two levels:

  • Top tier: AF Football League (20 teams)
  • Second tier: AF B League (12 teams)

The FAA owned, operated and ran the AF Football League. Besides that, other competitions in Athenisian football were also under its jurisdiction, which include the AF B League, the FAA Golden Cup and the Jatian Cup. It aimed to transform and move Athenisian football clubs forward to high-class talents

1997-98 season was canceled because of the terrorist attack going on in the whole country.

Competition format and regulations

[edit]

Competition

[edit]

The competition format follows the usual double round-robin format. During the course of a season, which lasts from February to July, each club plays every other club twice, once at home and once away, for 38 matchdays. Most games are played on Saturdays, with a few games played during weekdays. Teams receive three points for a win, one point for a draw, and no points for a loss. Teams are ranked by total points, with the highest-ranked club at the end of the season crowned champions.

Promotion and relegation

[edit]

A system of promotion and relegation existed between the AF Football League and the AF B League. The two lowest placed teams in the AF Football League were relegated to the AF B League, and the top two teams from the AF B League were promoted to the AF Football League. Below is a complete record of how many teams played in each season throughout the league's history:

Qualification for UEFA competitions

[edit]

The champions of the AF Football League qualify for following season's UEFA Champions League group stages. The top four teams of the AF Football League also qualify for the following season's UEFA Champions League play-off slots. If a club lost during the play-off slots and were unable to reach group stages, the club will play in the UEFA Europa League play-off slots.

The number of places allocated to Athenisians clubs in UEFA competitions is dependent upon the UEFA coefficients, which are calculated based upon the performance of teams competing in the [[UEFA Champions League[[ and the UEFA Europa League, as well as their national team's FIFA World Rankings in the previous 4 years. Currently, Athen are ranked 5th in the UEFA coefficient.

Champion

[edit]

36 clubs have played in the AF League since its inception in 1988, up to and including the 2023 season.

Season-by-season records

[edit]
Year Champion Runners-up Third place
2004 Pahang Public Bank Perlis
2005 Perlis Pahang Perak
2005–06 Negeri Sembilan TM Perak
2006–07 Kedah Perak DPMM
2007–08 Kedah Negeri Sembilan Johor
2009 Selangor Perlis Kedah
2010 Selangor Kelantan Terengganu
2011 Kelantan Terengganu Selangor
2012 Kelantan Singapore Lions XII Selangor
2013 Singapore Lions XII Selangor Johor Darul Ta'zim
2014 Johor Darul Ta'zim Selangor Pahang
2015 Johor Darul Ta'zim Selangor Pahang
2016 Johor Darul Ta'zim Felda United Kedah
2017 Johor Darul Ta'zim Pahang Felda United
2018 Johor Darul Ta'zim Perak PKNS
2019 Johor Darul Ta'zim Pahang Selangor
2020 Johor Darul Ta'zim Kedah Terengganu
2021 Johor Darul Ta'zim Kedah Darul Aman Penang
2022 United Stonehill F.C. Stonehill City F.C. F.C. Real Russo

Titles by club

[edit]
Rank. Club Wins Winning years
1 Johor Darul Ta'zim 9 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019, 2020, 2021, 2022
2 Kedah Darul Aman 2 2006–07, 2007–08
Selangor 2009, 2010
Kelantan 2011, 2012
5 Sri Pahang 1 2004
Perlis 2005
Negeri Sembilan FC 2005–06
Singapore Lions XII 2013

2023 season

[edit]
Club Position
in 2022
First season in
top division
First season in
Super League
Seasons
in top
division
Seasons
in Super
League
First season of
current spell in
top division
Title wins Last
title wins
Sri Pahang 7th 1982 2004 41 19 2013 5 2004
Perak 9th in Premier League 1982 2004 40 19 2023 2 2003
Selangor 5th 1982 2005-06 38 18 2005–06 6 2010
Johor Darul Ta'zim 1st 2002 2006–07 19 17 2006–07 9 2022
Terengganu 2nd 1982 2006–07 35 16 2018 0
Kedah Darul Aman 8th 1982 2004 33 15 2016 3 2007–08
Penang 12th 1982 2004 31 12 2021 3 2001
Sabah 3rd 1982 2004 26 8 2020 1 1996
Kuala Lumpur City 6th 1982 2010 29 8 2021 2 1988
Negeri Sembilan 4th 1982 2005-06 29 11 2022 1 2005–06
Kelantan 2nd in Premier League 1982 2009 28 11 2023 2 2012
PDRM 6th in Premier League 2007-08 2007-08 6 6 2023 0
Kelantan United 5th in Premier League 2023 2023 1 1 2023 0
Kuching City 3rd in Premier League 2023 2023 1 1 2023 0

Remark : Top-division means the highest football competition in Malaysia which includes the Malaysian League (1982–1988), Semi-Pro League Division 1 (1989-1993), Premier League (1994–97) and Premier League 1 (1998–2003).

Other clubs

[edit]

The following clubs that had competed in the Malaysia Super League or the top flight M-League before 2004 but are not competing in the Malaysia Super League during the 2023 season.

Club Current League Position
in 2022 season
First season in
top division
First season in
Super League
Seasons
in top
division
Seasons
in Super
League
Most recent
season in
Super League
Title wins Last
title wins
Melaka United Defunct (2023) 10th in Super League 1982 2006-07 20 7 2022 1 1983
Sarawak United M3 League 11th in Super League 2022 2022 1 1 2022 0
Petaling Jaya City Defunct (2023) 9th in Super League 2019 2019 4 4 2022 0
Perak II MFL Cup 2018 2018 2 2 2019 0
Perlis Banned by FIFA and Defunct (2019) 1982 2004 25 8 2011 1 2005
Selangor II MFL Cup 8th in Premier League 2012 2012 6 6 2019 0
UiTM Malaysia IPT League 7th in Premier League 2020 2020 2 2 2021 0
Terengganu II MFL Cup 4th in Premier League 2010 2010 7 7 2017 0
Sarawak FA Defunct (2021) 1982 2004 29 8 2017 1 1997
Singapore LionsXII Defunct (2015) 2012 2012 4 4 2015 1 2013
Felda United Defunct (2021) 2011 2011 8 8 2020 0
Armed Forces M3 League 3rd in M3 League (Group A) 1982 2013 9 3 2015 0
Telekom Malaysia FC Defunct (2007) 2003 2005-06 4 3 2006–07 0
Sime Darby Defunct (2017) 2014 2014 2 2 2015 0
UPB-MyTeam FC Defunct (2010) 2007-08 2007-08 2 2 2009 0
Brunei DPMM Singapore Premier League 2006-07 2006-07 2 2 2007–08 0
KL PLUS FC KLFA Division 1 2009 2009 2 2 2010 0
MPPJ FC Defunct (2006) 2005 2005 2 2 2005–06 0
Public Bank F.C. Defunct (2006) 2004 2004 2 2 2005 0
Johor Darul Ta'zim II MFL Cup 1st in Premier League 1982 2010 19 1 2010 1 1991
Harimau Muda A Defunct (2015) 2011 2011 1 1 2011 0
Kuala Muda NAZA FC Kedah League 2009 2009 1 1 2009 0
Singapore Singapore FA Defunct (1995) 1985 9 0 2 1994
Brunei Brunei FA Defunct (2006) 1982 14 0 0
NS Chempaka FC Defunct (2003) 2002 1 0 0
TUDM FC 1988 1 0 0
Olympic 2000 Defunct (1999) 1998 1 0 0

Remark : Top-division means the highest football competition in Malaysia which includes the Malaysian League (1982–1988), Semi-Pro League Division 1 (1989-1993), Premier League (1994–97) and Premier League 1 (1998–2003).

Privatisation of the league's football clubs

[edit]

The Pahang Football Association became the first FAM affiliate to separate itself from the management of its football team with the formation of Sri Pahang F.C. which was now under the management of Pahang FC Sdn Bhd starting from the 2016 Malaysia Super League season onwards.[1][2]

On 10 January 2016, Johor Football Association became the second FAM affiliate to follow suit when it separated itself from the management of its football team and changing its focus to state football development and the state league while the football team became its own entity as Johor Darul Ta'zim F.C.[3]

On 1 November 2016, Melaka United Soccer Association became the third FAM affiliate to follow suit with the privatisation of its football team as a separate entity known as Melaka United F.C. for the 2017 Malaysia Super League season onwards.[4]

On 6 November 2016, the FMLLP released an update regarding the club licensing progress where currently only Johor Darul Ta'zim F.C. obtained the CLR while others were still in progress with 80 percent of the requirements completed.[5][6] All member clubs in the Malaysia Super League and the Malaysia Premier League were required to obtain the CLR with the Malaysia Super League clubs required to obtain it by September 2017 while the Malaysia Premier League clubs were given an extended period from 2019 to 2020 as some clubs had only met 50 percent of the requirements completed.[5] The FMLLP had also suggested the FAM to ensure that clubs in the Malaysia FAM League to meet certain guidelines as this will allow them to get their license if they were to be promoted to the Malaysia Premier League.[5]

In February 2017, the FMLLP released a statement regarding the official status of Johor Darul Ta'zim and [[Johor Darul Ta'zim II F.C. ]] where Johor FA changed its name to Johor Darul Ta'zim II and became an official feeder club for Johor Darul Ta'zim when the feeder club agreement between both clubs were approved on 19 August 2016.[7] Through the agreement, both clubs were allowed an additional four player transfer quota which can be used outside the normal transfer windows for players between both clubs. The feeder club was also required to register a minimum of 12 players under the age of 23 for its squad from 2017.[7] A feeder club will be required to be in the league below the main club at all times which meant that Johor Darul Ta'zim II will never be allowed to get promoted even if the club managed to win the Malaysia Premier League. By 2018, the feeder club must field four players under the age of 23 in their first eleven during match day and the feeder club were allowed to play in other cup competitions where the parent club competed such as the Malaysia Cup and the Malaysia FA Cup.[7]

Organisation

[edit]

Logo evolution

[edit]

Since the inception of the league in 2004, numerous logos have been introduced for the league to reflect the sponsorships and naming rights. In its inaugural season, the Dunhill logo was incorporated as a title sponsor and it was the only season sponsored by the tobacco company before tobacco advertising was banned in the country.[8]

From 2005 to 2010, the Malaysia Super League incorporated the TM brand as part of its logo as the title sponsor.[9]

After the end of TM sponsorship's which lasted for seven consecutive years, FAM launched a new logo for the 2011 season where the league was partnered with Astro Media as a strategic partner for the Malaysia Super League's marketing.[10] The Astro brand was only incorporated as part of the Malaysia Super League logo from 2012 until 2014.

In the 2015 season, no title sponsor was incorporated when the league was sponsored by MP & Silva.[11] For the 2016 season a new logo was introduced as part of the takeover of the league by the FMLLP.[12] In 2018 and 2019, the Malaysia Super League logo included the Unifi brand logo as part of the league's sponsorship deal.[13]

In the 2023 season, Malaysian Football League (MFL) unveiled a new logo.

Logo and trophy

[edit]

The 2018 Malaysia Super League logo was formed as a part of a rebranding due to title sponsorship reasons with TM under the Unifi brand. TM's Unifi brand was the new title sponsor for the Malaysia Super League and the Malaysia Cup following an eight-year partnership deal worth RM480mil until 2025.[14] But, TM pulled out as a sponsor at the end 2019 in order to save costs.[15]

The Malaysia Super League trophy is the prize for the twelve clubs that are competing for it in the league. Designed to be futuristic and elegant, the new trophy depicts a football on a pedestal, reflecting on the importance placed on winning the Malaysia Super League. It costs roughly close to RM200,000 (US$48597.00)[16]

Standing at a height of 63.3 centimeters and 25.2 centimeters in diameter, the 20 kilogram trophy is made of copper, silver and 24 carat pure gold. The trophy was designed and crafted to precision by the Royal goldsmith in Johor, taking eight months from the initial design phase to completion. The gold portions are to symbolise the exclusivity of winning the Malaysia Super League after enduring a tough long successful campaign. It inspires the teams to battle with all their might to get their name on the trophy.[16]

Sponsorship

[edit]
Season Sponsors Brand
2004 Dunhill Dunhill Liga Super[17][8]
2005–10 TM TM Liga Super[17][9][10]
2011 No sponsor Liga Super
2012–14 Astro Astro Liga Super Malaysia[9]
2015–17 No sponsor Liga Super Malaysia[12]
2018 Unifi Unifi Liga Super Malaysia
2019 No sponsor Liga Super Malaysia
2020 CIMB CIMB Liga Super Malaysia
2021–present No sponsor Liga Super Malaysia

Finances

[edit]

The FMLLP introduced a merit-point system in the 2016 season. Points will be awarded based on a team's league position, progress in the Cup competitions (Malaysia FA Cup and Malaysia Cup) and the number of live matches shown. A point in the season is worth RM41,000.[18]

The money will be distributed twice per season. First during the early part of the season where teams will receive a basic payment out of that particular year's league sponsorship and the second payment will be received at the end of the season where all the merit-points have been calculated.[19] For the 2016 season, the first basic payment consisted of a 30 percent cut out of RM70 Million in league sponsorship that equates to RM21 million which will be distributed among the 24 teams in the Malaysia Super League and Malaysia Premier League.

Teams in the Malaysian League have quite often been involved in financial problems as their spending was more than their revenue. The Professional Footballers Association of Malaysia (PFAM) is one of the active members in pursuing the issue of unpaid salaries. In January 2016, PFAM president suggested a couple of solutions to promote financial sustainability on the competing teams' part where the teams should make long-term investments by operating according to their budgets and requiring teams' wage bills to be no bigger than 60 percent of their total spending. Other suggestions included that salaries to be deducted directly from team grants and winning prizes, to points being deducted from teams experiencing payment issues, and a ruling that requires teams to settle all their late salary payments before the start of every new season.[20]

In response to these issues, the FMLLP decided that at the start of the 2016 season, football clubs would be given warnings with the deduction of three league points if they failed to pay a player's salary.[21][22] If the problem persists, it will affect the licence of the clubs. When the club licence is withdrawn, the team will not be able to compete in the next season. If the team does not adopt the right structure, they will be left behind and club licensing will be a problem for them, and the team will drop out from competing in the Malaysian Football League.

Other than this, each teams must gain revenue from sponsorship deals from local, regional and international sponsors for their team.

Media coverage

[edit]

Radio Televisyen Malaysia (RTM), a free-to-air channel have been broadcasting the Malaysian League for years even before the formation of the Malaysia Super League. They continued to broadcast the league most of the time exclusively until the end of 2010 where Astro Media were announced as sponsors and managed the broadcasting rights of the league for four years spanning from 2011 until the 2014 season.[23] During this time, the league was broadcast to one of the cable channels of Astro Media, which was Astro Arena alongside the RTM for the free-to-air broadcast.

In 2015, Astro lost the broadcasting rights for the league where the rights were given to Media Prima, a parent company of multiple free-to-air channels alongside RTM.[24][25][26]

The broadcasting rights for the 2016 season was given to Media Prima for three years with a maximum of three games in each matchweek that was shown live on television.[27]

In 2018, TM bought the exclusive rights of the coverage until 2025.[28] The coverage was aired by Unifi TV (excluding 2019), iflix (until 2019), Media Prima (until 2019), and RTM (excluding 2019).[29]

From matchweek 5 in the 2020 season, all remaining league matches were made available worldwide for free via the official Unifi YouTube channel.[30]

Current

[edit]
Season Languages Broadcasters Channel(s)
2018, 2020 and 2021–present Malay Malaysia RTM Sukan RTM
2020–present TV Okey
2006–2015, 2018, 2020 and 2023–present TV2
2023–present Malaysia Astro Astro Arena Bola
Astro Arena Bola 2

Former

[edit]
Season Languages Broadcasters Channel(s)
2004–2015, 2018 and 2020 Malay Malaysia RTM TV1
2005 Malaysia Media Prima NTV7
2015–2017 TV3
2015–2019 and 2022 TV9
2011–2014 Malaysia Astro Astro Arena
2018, 2020–2022 Malaysia Unifi TV Unifi Sports
2019 Malaysia Brunei iflix Football Malaysia

on iFlix

Players

[edit]

All-time top scorers

[edit]
As of 10 April 2023
Indra Putra Mahayuddin is the top scorer in Malaysia Super League history.
Rank Player Malaysia Super League Club(s) Goals
1 Malaysia Indra Putra Mahayuddin Kelantan (41), Sri Pahang (29), Terengganu II (11), Kuala Lumpur City (12), FELDA United (6), Selangor (3), Kelantan United (1) 103
2 Malaysia Ashari Samsudin Terengganu (82), Sri Pahang (3) 85
3 Malaysia Mohd Amri Yahyah Selangor (60), Johor Darul Ta'zim (10) Sabah (9) 79
4 Malaysia Baddrol Bakhtiar Kedah (68), Sabah (6) 74
5 Malaysia Norshahrul Idlan Talaha UPB-MyTeam (14), Kelantan (36), Johor Darul Ta'zim (8), Armed Forces (1), Terengganu (2), FELDA United (4), Pahang (5) 70
5 BahrainIfedayo Olusegun[31] Felda United (5), Melaka United (15), Selangor (50) 70
7 Saint Vincent and the Grenadines Marlon Alex James Kedah (43), Armed Forces (17) 60
8 Liberia Francis Forkey Doe[32] Terengganu (14), Selangor (18), Kelantan (5), FELDA United (15), Pahang (5) 57
9 Malaysia Safee Sali Selangor (36), Johor Darul Ta'zim (6), PKNS (9), Petaling Jaya (4), Kuala Lumpur City (1) 56
10 Brazil Bergson Johor Darul Ta'zim (55) 55
11 Guinea Mandjou Keita Perak (49), Kelantan (5) 54
12 MalaysiaMohd Fadzli Saari Sri Pahang, KL Plus, Selangor 53
13 ZambiaPhillimon Chepita Perlis FA (52) 52

Golden Boot winners

[edit]
Season Player Club Goals
2004 Malaysia Indra Putra Mahayuddin Sri Pahang 15
2005 Brazil Júlio César Rodrigues
Zambia Zacharia Simukonda
Sabah
Perlis FA
18
2006 Guinea Keita Mandjou Perak 17
2007 Guinea Keita Mandjou
Brunei Shah Razen Said
Perak
DPMM
21
2008 Saint Vincent and the Grenadines Marlon Alex James Kedah 21[33]
2009 Malaysia Mohd Nizaruddin Yusof Perlis FA 18
2010 Malaysia Ashari Samsudin Terengganu 18
2011 Malaysia Abdul Hadi Yahya Terengganu 20
2012 Cameroon Jean-Emmanuel Effa Owona
Liberia Francis Forkey Doe
Negeri Sembilan
Terengganu
15
2013 Saint Vincent and the Grenadines Marlon Alex James ATM FA 16
2014 Brazil Paulo Rangel Selangor 16
2015 Mali Dramane Traoré PDRM 20[34]
2016 Argentina Jorge Pereyra Díaz Johor Darul Ta'zim 18
2017 Lebanon Mohamad Ghaddar Kelantan
Johor Darul Ta'zim
23
2018 Spain Rufino Segovia Selangor 19
2019 Liberia Kpah Sherman PKNS 14
2020 Nigeria Ifedayo Olusegun Selangor 12
2021 Nigeria Ifedayo Olusegun Selangor 26[35]
2022 Brazil Bergson Johor Darul Ta'zim 29

Foreign players and transfer regulations

[edit]

The Foreign players policy has changed multiple times since the league's inception.[36] In 2009, FAM took a drastic measure when they changed the foreign players policy that banned foreign players from playing in the league until 2011.[36] Foreign players were only allowed be back into the league starting from the 2012 season onwards.[36]

All foreign players must obtain the International Transfer Certificate from their previous national football governing bodies that their previous clubs were affiliated to before they can be register with the FAM in order to play in the Malaysia Super League.[36]

  • 2009–2011: foreign players banned.
  • 2012: 2 foreign players.
  • 2013: 3 foreign players.
  • 2014: 4 foreign players and only 3 can be on the field at a time.
  • 2015–2017: 4 foreign players including 1 Asian quota.
  • 2018–2022: 5 foreign players including 1 Asian quota and 1 Asean quota.
  • 2023: 9 foreign players including 1 Asian quota and 1 Asean quota but allowed only five import players to be fielded, which is three plus one Asian player and one ASEAN player

Records and achievements

[edit]

Crowd attendance

[edit]

All data available to the public starting from the beginning of 2015 season.

Season Overall Attendance Top 3 Bottom 3
Total Average Club Attendance Average Club Attendance Average
2015 883,225 6,691 Johor Darul Ta'zim 184,198 16,745 ATM FA 22,750 2,068
Kelantan 108,696 9,881 PDRM FA 22,300 2,027
Pahang 107,693 9,790 Sime Darby FC 17,960 1,633
2016 902,643 6,838 Johor Darul Ta'zim 191,982 17,453 PDRM 32,950 2,995
Perak The Bos Gaurus 121,687 11,062 Sarawak 22,892 2,081
Kedah 103,421 9,402 Terengganu II 20,210 1,837
2017 872,108 6,607 Johor Darul Ta'zim 187,557 17,051 Sarawak 35,206 3,201
Kedah 161,626 14,693 PKNS FC 30,234 2,749
Pahang 82,964 7,542 Terengganu II 11,995 1,090
2018
2019
2020
2021
2022 623,384 4,723 Johor Darul Ta'zim 181,316 16,484 Kuala Lumpur City 15,105 1,374
Sabah 98,954 8,996 Sarawak United 12,181 1,108
Terengganu 72,790 6,618 Petaling Jaya City 7,867 716

Source: Football Association of Malaysia Management Database[37]

Clubs ranking in Asia

[edit]

The final ranking position(s) for each participating MSL clubs in AFC Club Competitions.

Year Rank Points Club
2015[38] 59 20.295 Kelantan
68 18.294 Johor Darul Ta'zim
88 12.295 Selangor
96 10.961 Pahang
108 9.295 Terengganu I
2016[39] 45 30.142 Johor Darul Ta'zim
79 14.477 Selangor
93 10.809 Kelantan
100 9.476 Pahang
2017[40] 34 38.95 Johor Darul Ta'zim
94 9.951 Selangor
98 9.617 Pahang
120 5.284 Felda United
132 4.617 Kelantan
2018[41] 23 48.70 Johor Darul Ta'zim
95 12.99 Pahang
108 9.66 Selangor
114 8.66 Felda United
2019[42] 33 40.77 Johor Darul Ta'zim
112 9.06 Selangor
122 8.06 Felda United
125 7.39 Perak

*Bold denotes the highest ranked club for each year at the end of the season.

Coaches

[edit]
Current coaches
Nat. Coach Club Appointed Time as coaches
Argentina Esteban Solari Johor Darul Ta'zim 1 December 2022 1 year, 347 days
Croatia Tomislav Steinbruckner Terengganu 1 December 2022 1 year, 347 days
Malaysia Nafuzi Zain Kedah Darul Aman 6 December 2022 1 year, 342 days
Croatia Bojan Hodak Kuala Lumpur City 11 January 2021 3 years, 306 days
Malaysia Lim Teong Kim Perak F.C. 13 September 2022 2 years, 60 days
Malaysia Mansor Azwira Hassan Penang 1 June 2022 2 years, 164 days
Malaysia K. Devan Negeri Sembilan 1 December 2020 3 years, 347 days
Malaysia Ong Kim Swee Sabah 11 September 2021 3 years, 42 days
Singapore Nazri Nasir Kelantan United 0 days
South Korea Kim Moon-sik Kelantan 19 November 2021 2 years, 359 days
Malaysia Tan Cheng Hoe Selangor 25 September 2022 2 years, 48 days
Singapore Fandi Ahmad Sri Pahang 21 July 2022 2 years, 114 days
Malaysia Irfan Bakti Abu Salim Kuching City 21 January 2021 3 years, 296 days
India IM Vijian PDRM 3 September 2022 2 years, 70 days

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "Pahang serba baru hadapi saingan 2016" (in Malay). Gawang.my. 5 January 2016. Retrieved 4 December 2017.
  2. ^ "CEO Pahang FC letak jawatan" (in Malay). Berita Harian. 7 March 2016. Retrieved 4 December 2017.
  3. ^ Zulhilmi Zainal (10 January 2016). "JDT now under TMJ's ownership". Goal.com. Retrieved 9 September 2016.
  4. ^ Sharenaanes Murad (1 November 2016). "Musa kini dikenali sebagai MUFC" (in Malay). Stadium Astro. Archived from the original on 1 November 2016. Retrieved 1 November 2016.
  5. ^ a b c Zaid Ramli (6 November 2016). "Charting the path to Malaysian football's future: FMLLP discusses key topics of the seasons ahead". FourFourTwo. Retrieved 4 December 2017.
  6. ^ Hasriq Amiruddin (10 November 2016). "Pelesenan Kelab Penting Demi Masa Depan Bola Sepak Negara - FMLLP" (in Malay). mStar. Retrieved 4 December 2017.
  7. ^ a b c "Perjanjian 'Feeder Club' di antara Johor Darul Ta'zim dan Football Malaysia LLP sebagai langkah positif ke arah Pelesenan Kelab (Club Licensing)" (in Malay). Football Malaysia LLP. 10 February 2017. Archived from the original on 5 December 2017. Retrieved 4 December 2017.
  8. ^ a b Amran Mulup (23 October 2004). "Negeri terhimpit". Utusan Malaysia (in Malay). Retrieved 4 December 2017.
  9. ^ a b c "Liga M dapat tajaan lumayan RM220 juta". Utusan Malaysia (in Malay). 3 January 2011. Retrieved 4 December 2017.
  10. ^ a b Wan Fakhrul Bakar (22 January 2011). "Logo baru Liga M dilancar Rabu" (in Malay). Kosmo!. Retrieved 4 December 2017.
  11. ^ Seng-Foo Lee (4 February 2015). "MP & Silva in for the long term, says Managing Director". FourFourTwo. Retrieved 4 December 2017.
  12. ^ a b Zulhilmi Zainal (5 February 2016). "New MSL and MPL emblems revealed by FMLLP". Goal.com. Retrieved 4 December 2017.
  13. ^ Azharie, Farah (17 January 2019). "Unifi remains as Super League title sponsor". NST Online. Retrieved 11 March 2020.
  14. ^ "Unifi sponsorship a boon for M-League fans". The Star (Malaysia). 4 February 2018. Retrieved 9 January 2019.
  15. ^ "Unifi tarik diri daripada Liga-M?" (in Malay). Stadium Astro. 21 December 2018. Retrieved 23 January 2019.
  16. ^ a b Vijhay Vick (20 September 2017). "Malaysia Super League's shiny, pricey new trophy: What you need to know". FourFourTwo. Retrieved 9 January 2019.
  17. ^ a b Cite error: The named reference MSLSdnBhdFounded2005 was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
  18. ^ Cite error: The named reference domesticfootball was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
  19. ^ FMLLP jamin bayaran pertama selesai Februari (02:45) (in Malay). Astro Awani. 6 February 2016. Retrieved 4 December 2017.
  20. ^ Zulhilmi Zainal (12 January 2016). "Hai-O claims FMLLP neglects player salary issues". Goal.com. Retrieved 4 December 2017.
  21. ^ "FAs warned over non-payment of salary". Bernama. Daily Express. 16 January 2016. Retrieved 4 December 2017.
  22. ^ Suryati Mohd Nor (16 January 2016). "Gaji Tertunggak, FMLLP Sedia Potong Mata Pasukan" (in Malay). mStar. Retrieved 4 December 2017.
  23. ^ K. Rajan (22 February 2014). "Football: Fox Sports Asia eyeing M-League rights?". The Star. Retrieved 4 December 2017.
  24. ^ "Media Prima insider defends their M-League telecasts". Goal.com. 6 March 2015. Retrieved 4 December 2017.
  25. ^ "Plans underway to improve Media Prima's match telecasts". Goal.com. 9 March 2015. Retrieved 4 December 2017.
  26. ^ "RTM to broadcast JDT vs Pahang". Goal.com. 29 January 2015. Retrieved 4 December 2017.
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