Loud call for continuity

Progress seen but two key roles vacant after Yoshida resigns following Palatsides

Sign up now: Get the biggest sports news in your inbox

Head coach Tatsuma Yoshida instilled belief in the Lions, helping them overcome their diffidence to record several creditable results over the past 21/2 years.
Hence, when the Football Association of Singapore (FAS) announced Yoshida's resignation yesterday, there was a sense of frustration in the local football fraternity.
The Japanese, who was appointed in May 2019, will be leaving his post a year before his contract is up in December next year. He cited the need to be closer to his family - his wife and two daughters aged 11 and 14 - after being apart for most of the pandemic as a key reason behind his decision.
His departure comes less than two months after another top post in FAS became vacant, with technical director Joseph Palatsides quitting abruptly just five months after signing a contract extension until 2023.
Said former Balestier Khalsa coach Khidhir Khamis: "It's a pity that (Tatsuma) has chosen to leave. He's done all he can during a difficult period. At this moment, it has become very start-stop when it comes to our football. There is too much chopping and changing.
"If there are going to be changes at head coach or technical director level, it does not bode well. We need to ensure that we get stability with our next appointments. Five years of commitment is not too much to ask for."
Geylang International coach Mohd Noor Ali commended Yoshida for engaging with SPL coaches during his tenure. The Japanese had invited several local coaches to observe his training sessions.
Noor Ali admitted that he was taken aback by the abrupt nature of the resignation.
He said: "We all saw how good of a performance it was in the semi finals. There was a lot of fighting spirit and energy. So it's a surprise. But we need to look ahead now and focus on what we can do to ensure there is continuity."
FAS general secretary Yazeen Buhari said Yoshida's contract will be mutually terminated on Friday, and that the coach will leave Singapore today. The FAS will begin its search for the 47-year-old's replacement immediately and the priority is for the next coach to share the same playing philosophies as Yoshida, he added.
Singapore's next competition is next June's third round of the 2023 AFC Asian Cup qualifiers.
Lions captain Hariss Harun said the squad was "filled with sadness" after hearing Yoshida's decision. Before publicly announcing his departure yesterday, the head coach had spoken about his decision with the Lions, whom he said are "almost like his sons".
Hariss pointed to the Lions' first few competitive outings under Yoshida as a sign of what the Japanese coach was able to bring to the team.
Back then, the Lions played possession-based attacking football and yielded impressive results such as the 2-1 wins over Palestine and Yemen in September and November 2019. They were also able to hold their own against mightier opponents as shown when the Lions (ranked 157th at that time) held Jordan (No. 98) 0-0.
But the Lions were not able to sustain their form after the Covid-19 enforced break when the full national team were not able to train together or play an international for almost 18 months.
At the World Cup qualifiers in June, Singapore suffered heavy losses (3-0, 4-0 and 5-0) to Saudi Arabia, Palestine and Uzbekistan.
Said Hariss: "He transformed the team. He's been fearless in how he has approached the games and he put that mentality in us.
"We went into those games against better countries with the belief that we could do something. We as players saw the magic of the belief he had instilled in our squad. The momentum was disrupted with Covid but even till now, the players have a lot of belief when we go out onto the pitch."
While football experts and insiders reacted with frustration at Yoshida's departure, there is also optimism.
Former international R. Sasikumar said it was not the end of the world and suggested that Yoshida's resignation, coupled with the vacancy of the technical director (TD) role, could give Singapore football a chance to start on a clean slate. He said: "No one coach or TD is bigger than the organisation. We have two key roles to fill now and what we do with it will signal our intentions as to how serious we are.
"Indonesia have a coach who has coached at the World Cup in Shin Tae-yong and a club in the Singapore Premier League, the Lion City Sailors, have an Asian Champions League-winning coach in Kim Do-hoon.
"Let's think big, get the best people for the job and pay them the money they deserve."
See more on