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Pakistan Football Team - Performance Watch

Arham_PakFan

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Today,after a gap of 3 years,the Pakistan Football Team returned to competitive senior team football.The 201st ranked team defeated Nepal,ranked 40 places above them, 2-1 after a last minute goal by Mohammad Ali.

How will the team do after the resumption of domestic and international football.
 
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We will only go up from here.

In football i can safely say there is no lack of talent.

Congrats on the win despite this being hardly our first choice team including Kallem Ullah our no 1 and star player.
 
Well the same guy has been head of PFF since Musharaf, when are we going to have accountability for him?
 
Pakistani should open up world class soccer academies across thr country, in every district and hold camps in remote areas. They should establish a grassroot system with under 7s,9s,11s,13s,15s and so on across the nation.
 
Guys for Saff cup their is a thread opened as well, and your welcome to post their as well :) Amazing victory today i know [MENTION=139765]Arham_PakFan[/MENTION] watched the game and so did I, was wondering if anyone caught it as well
 
Pakistani should open up world class soccer academies across thr country, in every district and hold camps in remote areas. They should establish a grassroot system with under 7s,9s,11s,13s,15s and so on across the nation.

To open world class academies, you need world class coaching staff. No top coach in his right mind would come and coach in Pakistan, when he can find work in 100+ better countries.

That is the biggest hurdle for PFF, and simply changing the head of the federation will not make a difference.

On the other hand, India have invested heavily in their football league, and they have be successful in attracting the right people because India can do that unlike Pakistan.
 
Guys for Saff cup their is a thread opened as well, and your welcome to post their as well :) Amazing victory today i know [MENTION=139765]Arham_PakFan[/MENTION] watched the game and so did I, was wondering if anyone caught it as well

Thanks will follow that thread too.
Do you know when is our next match?
 
ok here is the schedule

4 September: Pakistan vs Nepal at 3 PM PST
6 September: Pakistan vs Bangladesh at 6 PM PST
8 September: Pakistan vs Bhutan at 6 PM PST
 
According to Pakistan football Twitter page star player Hassan Bashir who scored the opening goal found out his grand mother passed away after the game may Allah grant her paradise and help Hassan and his family through this hard time
 
First Half was in Pakistan favor, second half was in Bangladesh is favor, and they truly deserved the win considering the chances they had, second half has truly been Pakistans issue, but its understandable, it will only get better with the more games they play. Pakistan need to convert more on their chances as well
 
Why isn't that Kaleemullah Khan guy playing? He looked quite promising. And also, why has he moved from the USL to some amateur league in Turkey?
 
Why isn't that Kaleemullah Khan guy playing? He looked quite promising. And also, why has he moved from the USL to some amateur league in Turkey?

He had some problems with PFF. Ghayas Zahid is another promising winger currently playing in Norway. PFF should try to rope him in.
 
Pakistan win 3-0 against Bhutan and qualify for the semi finals of the tournament.Big achievement.
 
Btw nice thread chotay bhai, we need more such threads on other games like hockey, volleyball etc.

With time interest will be developed and hopefully following will increase.
 
3-1 defeat to India.

All 4 goals came in the second half.

Pakistan were fatigied again in the second half and this can only improve with professionalism and playing for a period of time.
 
So question is when does the national team play again they need to play more games, get some friendlies going maybe even have like a two game type series with Sri Lanka or something play some clubs in the gulf as well if possible
 
Kaleemullah thrashes PFF for sending him show-cause notice

KARACHI: The Pakistan Football Federation (PFF) continues to intimidate former captain Kaleemullah Khan and embarrass itself as they sent out a show-cause notice to him for simply speaking his mind and for ‘not appreciating’ the national team at the South Asian Football Championship (Saff) where Pakistan lost to India 3-0 in the semi-final.

<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-lang="en"><p lang="ur" dir="rtl">پاکستان فٹبال فیڈریشن کوڈ آف کنڈکٹ ۔ فٹبال فیڈریشن کہتا ہے ہم لوگوں نے بارہ سال میں 20 سٹیڈیم بنائے بارسلونا کو پاکستان بلایا۔ اپ اتنے ایماندار شخص فیصل صالح حیات پر کیوں تنقید کیا۔ فیڈریشن نہ مجھے تنخواہ دیتی ہے نہ انکے ساتھ میرا کوئی کنٹریکٹ ہے نہ رجسٹریشن ہے <a href="https://t.co/hOx1eKTwxs">pic.twitter.com/hOx1eKTwxs</a></p>— Kaleemullah Khan (@Kaleemullah_10) <a href="https://twitter.com/Kaleemullah_10/status/1041640206133329920?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">September 17, 2018</a></blockquote>
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While Kaleemullah had been constantly showing his support through social media platforms before and after every match of the Saff Championship, cheering his former teammates, despite being sidelined from the national team because he spoke about the inconsistencies of the PFF and the fact that the federation had failed to built even one international standard stadium, the PFF left no stone unturned to make an example out of him.

The letter says, “violation of PFF code of conduct and discipline’, while adressing Kaleemullah as the ‘ex-national footballer’.

<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-lang="en"><p lang="ur" dir="rtl">اپ لوگ میرے اوپر غدار کا الزام لگادو وہ ٹھیک ہے میں بات کرو تو غلط ۔میں ڈرنے والو میں سے نہیں ہو <a href="https://t.co/qWLhPswRE8">https://t.co/qWLhPswRE8</a></p>— Kaleemullah Khan (@Kaleemullah_10) <a href="https://twitter.com/Kaleemullah_10/status/1041672267602829318?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">September 17, 2018</a></blockquote>
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The letter said that no officials or players or managers are allowed to talk to the media about the PFF affairs, but it contradicts itself when they call kaleemullah an ‘ex-footballer’. The federation quoted their Article 2 for the violation, then went on to say that kaleemullah was not ‘appreciative of the team’s performance’ at the Asian Games, where the U23 team lost to Vietnam 3-0 and Japan 4-0 only winning a match against Nepal 2-1, which was Pakistan’s first win in 44 years at the games, and also making a statement agaisnt PFF while Pakistan were playing Saff Championship.

In reality, Kaleemullah had only been supportive of the team. Both claims by the PFF are invalid to begin with.

Kaleemullah had only spoke out about the PFF when the federation’s Vice President and the controversial president of Pakistan Punjab Association Sardar Naveed Haider called him a ‘traitor’, ‘selfish’, ‘greedy’ and unpatriotic for choosing to play in Turkey, without verifying that Kaleemullah went to the National team camp in Lahore and was told by the officials that he can join in later with the overseas players.

<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-lang="en"><p lang="pl" dir="ltr">V President Football federation muje Marne ki Dumki. Ab to me direct <a href="https://twitter.com/FIFAcom?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">@FIFAcom</a> or <a href="https://twitter.com/PAKSupremeCourt?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">@PAKSupremeCourt</a> Tak Le jao ga ! <a href="https://t.co/Ihdh42QOQJ">pic.twitter.com/Ihdh42QOQJ</a></p>— Kaleemullah Khan (@Kaleemullah_10) <a href="https://twitter.com/Kaleemullah_10/status/1041720449330229254?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">September 17, 2018</a></blockquote>
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Kaleemullah was meanwhile signing a contract in Turkey, and he had requested the PFF to let him join the team in Bahrain at the training tour.

The PFF technical director Shahzad Anwar was quoted in the local media as saying that Kaleemullah was ‘unfit’ and therefore was not in the squad for the Asian Games. However that itself was a harrowing statement to make as Kaleemullah was signing with a Turkish club that will not take an unfit player by any margin.

On the other hand, Haider is celebrated by the PFF as he is the chief guest in almost all the events that take place in Lahore now.

Kaleem asks for explanation

“I’m asking the PFF to explain why Haider called me a traitor, called me greedy, they should explain that first,” said Kaleemullah while talking to The Express Tribune.

He said that he did not receive the letter directly even.

“My former club K-Electric forwarded me this letter by PFF. The Federation sent the letter to them because they did not have my contact, so I got it after three days of its issuance, I’m surprised,” Kaleemullah said.

“I stand by my statements, I’m not backing off. After the camp in Lahore I knew I may not get a spot in the team, I thought PFF was parting ways with me, and I quietly walked away, till I was called unpatriotic by their officials, only then I spoke up,” added Kaleemullah.

He said that the lack of facilities and unprofessional attitude of the federation has only pushed the players back instead of helping them progress forward.

“Even if Messi comes in with Barcelona FC to play in Pakistan, they will not play the same way, because we have bad pitches, we don’t have player insurance, we don’t have professionals that run the federations, I’ll say what the truth and they have a problem with it. It is my right to say this, to tell them to improve the system, I’m not talking against the team, I’m talking against the system,” said Kaleemullah.

The PFF has given him the deadline to explain his comments in the media till September 29, but the Chaman-born striker concluded, “What explanation do they want from me, I’m not under any contract with the PFF, I’m not getting paid by them, they have just called me an ex-national footballer. Why are they asking for the explanation from me. I need them to explain this treatment. I need them to clarify this behavior. I don’t think any of the players know about the code of conduct either. I’d like them to explain it.”

The letter also said that Kaleemullah’s case can be taken to PFF’s Disciplinary and Ethics committee, that does not run according to the Fifa statutes. They names of the officials in the current disciplinary committee are not known either.

In 2015, Fifa mission had concluded that “PFF judicial bodies, including the disciplinary committee, were not properly formed because of the lack of separation of powers.”

https://tribune.com.pk/story/1806148/7/
 
I feel for Kaleemullah should not be treated like this he is an ambassador of the game of football for Pakistan and were ever he goes he represents our country with pride.
 
PFF is a failed and miserable organisation with no goal or work ethics behind its affairs. Only in Pakistan we can openly see a football official threatening to hang a professional footballer. So what’s the solution?
 
Funny that Faisal Saleh Hayat continues to be PFF head for the last 10+ years... IK needs to send him on his way ASAP
 
Funny that Faisal Saleh Hayat continues to be PFF head for the last 10+ years... IK needs to send him on his way ASAP

That would get PFF suspended again. FIFA strictly prohibits government interference.
 
That would get PFF suspended again. FIFA strictly prohibits government interference.

Need to catch him with his hand in the pot, he's quite obviously corrupt, just need to have him arrested for something unrelated to football and he's out of the way
 
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The Pakistan football team donated their prize money from SAFF Cup to the Dam fund.
 
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i do not know exaclty how the new system works for fifa rankings but i would assume, they would be higher considering they beat Bhutan, and Nepal whom are higher than them
 
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without any infrastructure in place and a glaring corruption and scarcity of resources , I really can't see any improvement in football in Pakistan in near future though against all odds the team did well in recently concluded SAFF Cup.
 
Pakistan men's national team will be in action on November 15 when they play a friendly Agaisnt Palestine. The match itself will be hosted in Palestine
 
AFC u23 championship 2020 will be held in Thailand and will act as the Olympic qualifier for the Asian region.

Today the groups have been announced for the qualification process to qualify for the u23 championship. Their is 11 groups of 4 teams each. The winner of each group will directly qualify for the tournament and the best 4 runners up on each group will qualify as well.

Pakistan is placed in a tough group they are paired Agaisnt Uzbekistan whom won the previous addition of this tournament , followed by Tajikistan which is strong team too and arch rivals India which is always a tough contest as well. Pakistan chances to qualify are slim but we hope for good results

Matches will take place in March 2019, were Uzbekistan will play host to this group
 
AFC u23 championship 2020 will be held in Thailand and will act as the Olympic qualifier for the Asian region.

Today the groups have been announced for the qualification process to qualify for the u23 championship. Their is 11 groups of 4 teams each. The winner of each group will directly qualify for the tournament and the best 4 runners up on each group will qualify as well.

Pakistan is placed in a tough group they are paired Agaisnt Uzbekistan whom won the previous addition of this tournament , followed by Tajikistan which is strong team too and arch rivals India which is always a tough contest as well. Pakistan chances to qualify are slim but we hope for good results

Matches will take place in March 2019, were Uzbekistan will play host to this group

First of all, thank you very much for postint such information in threads here. The hockey thread, the football thread, are all very important.

Secondly, as long as we start playing well all is good.
 
Organize some friendlies with Laloo teams at home and bash them repeatedly to score some cheap points and increase rankings like India have.

There's a reason why Indian team is ranked higher than WC Qualifying teams like New Zealand and North Korea.

our most recent match was a few weeks ago against China and it ended in a 0-0 draw . Last time we played WC qualifying team NZ , we lost marginally by 2-1 .
 
First of all, thank you very much for postint such information in threads here. The hockey thread, the football thread, are all very important.

Secondly, as long as we start playing well all is good.

Your very welcome I'm a big sports fan as much as I love cricket I love to follow Pakistan in other sports I love as well. I like to update this forum because I know most people like to hear about other sports as well, the more we know how our country is doing the more we can apperciate and even try to take some steps to help. My dream is too see Pakistan become a big sporting nation talent is their but right steps need to be taken.

In regards to this qualification process more than the results I'm looking to see improvement in Pakistans game and hope for the best
 
our most recent match was a few weeks ago against China and it ended in a 0-0 draw . Last time we played WC qualifying team NZ , we lost marginally by 2-1 .

NZ qualified back in 2010. DPRK is a much better team than India. The only reason why India is above them because they played laloo teams and defeated them.
 
our most recent match was a few weeks ago against China and it ended in a 0-0 draw . Last time we played WC qualifying team NZ , we lost marginally by 2-1 .

Your right Indian football has come a long way and they took the right steps to make that happen they will only get better
 
Why the hell we are lower than Nepal and Bhutan? Nepal has been our bunnies in Football yet they are above as by almost 30 rankings. FIFA rankings are farce just like ICC T20 ranking.
 
NZ qualified back in 2010. DPRK is a much better team than India. The only reason why India is above them because they played laloo teams and defeated them.

We beat teams in the range of 100-150 and drew with a team like china which is ranked in 70s , so the ranking seems fine to me . DRRK is better and should be ranked higher , its not really our problem that they dont play enough matches .
 
Your right Indian football has come a long way and they took the right steps to make that happen they will only get better

Our next batch( u-19s ) is much superior to the current lot playing in senior team .

Last month in Asian qualifiers we where one match away from qualifying for U17 WC , losing by a solitary goal to south Korea in quarters , but some great results like drawing Iran which was first ever for an Indian team at any level. I will be surprised if we arnt ahead of some of ME countries like UAE , Lebanon and Syria in 5-8 years time whom we beat convincingly at age group level .

Need to get rid of national team coach though , whos clueless .
 
Adnan Mohammed is likely to make his national team debut for Pakistan when they take of Palestine on the 15th of this month
 
Pakistan match Agaisnt Palestine which was suppose to take place yeaturday was postponed and will be played today 8:00 am eastern standard time good like to the boys in green
 
Pakistan goal scorer was Hassan Bashir who scored a nice goal. Fatigue was again an issue and cost Pakistan the match they had a good chance to equalize too. All in all considering the rankings of both teams not a bad result
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-lang="en"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">First game &#55356;&#56821;&#55356;&#56816; <a href="https://t.co/aATQVLCKyJ">pic.twitter.com/aATQVLCKyJ</a></p>— Adnan Mohammad (@Adnanmohammad96) <a href="https://twitter.com/Adnanmohammad96/status/1064106302207651840?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">November 18, 2018</a></blockquote>
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ISLAMABAD: Prime Minister Imran Khan on Wednesday invited the Federation Internationale de Football Association (FIFA) President Gianni Infantino to visit Pakistan.

According to the details, PM Imran extended an invitation to FIFA president in an effort to revive football and sports activities in the country.

Earlier in the day, Malik Amir Dogar, member Punjab Football Council, called on PM Imran Khan and discussed Pakistan Football Federation (PFF) elections and current situation of the games in the country.

He said that all sports federations in the country would soon have qualified professionals and no more favouritism or nepotism would be acceptable.

PM Imran told the Amir Dogar that promotion of games in the country included in the priorities of PTI government and added that they were devising a plan to uplift the stands of sports.

He said the future of players, coaches and referees will be secured in the new policy and football grounds of international standards will be built in all the major cities. He also directed to establish football academies across the country.

https://arysports.tv/pm-imran-invites-fifa-president-infantino-visit-pakistan/
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-lang="en"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">First game ���� <a href="https://t.co/aATQVLCKyJ">pic.twitter.com/aATQVLCKyJ</a></p>— Adnan Mohammad (@Adnanmohammad96) <a href="https://twitter.com/Adnanmohammad96/status/1064106302207651840?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">November 18, 2018</a></blockquote>
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This guy plays in the Danish first division. Only Pakistan player playing first division football in Europe.
 
KARACHI: In spite of the uncertainty about the future of Pakistan football because of the Supreme Court-ordered elections and world football governing body’s (FIFA) stance that it may impose sanctions, Pakistan Football Federation (PFF) was scheduled to send the national team to Qatar last night (Monday) from Karachi.

During a couple of weeks tour, Pakistan are expected to play a few friendlies against foreign nations who are scheduled to converge on Doha to prepare for the next month’s AFC Asian Cup to be held in the United Arab Emirates (UAE).

The Brazilian coach Jose Antonio Nogueira has finalised a 30-member squad with mostly those players who either have been tested in international circuit during the last few months or those who have been picked from the National Challenge Cup held earlier this year.

The squad also carries a bunch of foreign-based players who played against Palestine in the international friendly last month in Al-Ram which Pakistan lost 1-2.The team was scheduled to move to Doha silently as the PFF issued no press release about the team’s departure. The federation also did not provide the 30-member list to media.

The officials of the PFF and Pakistan team management also did not cooperate with this correspondent when they were contacted. They did not reveal any information about the team’s departure.

The sources said that the players were getting ready for departure. “I just came from a departmental team hotel and I saw that the players were preparing to go to Jinnah International Airport Karachi for departure for Doha,” a highly credible source told ‘The News’.

Former Pakistan coach Nasir Ismail said that the top-ranked players of the ongoing league had been ignored. “Top players of the Premier League such as Sher Ali, Murtaza, Iftikhar and Ansar Abbas have been ignored. Those who sit on benches in the league have been selected,” Nasir told ‘The News’ here on Monday.

He said there was no need for such a tour with the uncertainty about the country’s football future. “Elections of PFF are going to be held, so it’s not a good time to send the team and spend millions of rupees,” Nasir pointed out.

The PFF elections will be held on December 12 in Islamabad.

Squad:

Goalkeepers: Saqib Hanif (SSGC), Abdul Basit (WAPDA), Ahsanullah (SSGC), Mohammad Faheem (Muslim FC)

Defenders: Umar Hayat (WAPDA), Arslan Ali (KRL), Naved Ahmed (Navy), Zeeshan Rehman (Southern, Hong Kong), Mehdi Hasan (PAF), Ali Khan Niazi (K-Electric), Waseem Asghar (PCAA), Mohammad Bilal (WAPDA), Abdullah Qazi (USA), Umair Ali (KRL)

Midfielders: Mehmood Khan (SSGC), Saddam Hussain (SSGC), Navid Rehman (Canada), Adnan Yaqoob (Lyngby Boldklub, Denmark), Zain-ul-Aabdeen Ishaq (PCAA), Rajab Ali (KRL), Zaid Umar (KRL), Ali Uzair (WAPDA), Habib-ur-Rehman (SSGC), Mohammad Riaz (K-Electric)

Strikers: Hassan Bashir (AB Taarnby, Denmark), Raziq (SSGC), Mohammad Ali (FK Odsherred, Denmark), Mansoor Khan (PAF), Yousuf Ahmed (KRL), Ahmed Faheem (WAPDA).

https://www.footballpakistan.com/2018/12/pak-football-team-leaves-for-qatar-quietly-the-news/
 
KARACHI: In spite of the uncertainty about the future of Pakistan football because of the Supreme Court-ordered elections and world football governing body’s (FIFA) stance that it may impose sanctions, Pakistan Football Federation (PFF) was scheduled to send the national team to Qatar last night (Monday) from Karachi.

During a couple of weeks tour, Pakistan are expected to play a few friendlies against foreign nations who are scheduled to converge on Doha to prepare for the next month’s AFC Asian Cup to be held in the United Arab Emirates (UAE).

The Brazilian coach Jose Antonio Nogueira has finalised a 30-member squad with mostly those players who either have been tested in international circuit during the last few months or those who have been picked from the National Challenge Cup held earlier this year.

The squad also carries a bunch of foreign-based players who played against Palestine in the international friendly last month in Al-Ram which Pakistan lost 1-2.The team was scheduled to move to Doha silently as the PFF issued no press release about the team’s departure. The federation also did not provide the 30-member list to media.

The officials of the PFF and Pakistan team management also did not cooperate with this correspondent when they were contacted. They did not reveal any information about the team’s departure.

The sources said that the players were getting ready for departure. “I just came from a departmental team hotel and I saw that the players were preparing to go to Jinnah International Airport Karachi for departure for Doha,” a highly credible source told ‘The News’.

Former Pakistan coach Nasir Ismail said that the top-ranked players of the ongoing league had been ignored. “Top players of the Premier League such as Sher Ali, Murtaza, Iftikhar and Ansar Abbas have been ignored. Those who sit on benches in the league have been selected,” Nasir told ‘The News’ here on Monday.

He said there was no need for such a tour with the uncertainty about the country’s football future. “Elections of PFF are going to be held, so it’s not a good time to send the team and spend millions of rupees,” Nasir pointed out.

The PFF elections will be held on December 12 in Islamabad.

Squad:

Goalkeepers: Saqib Hanif (SSGC), Abdul Basit (WAPDA), Ahsanullah (SSGC), Mohammad Faheem (Muslim FC)

Defenders: Umar Hayat (WAPDA), Arslan Ali (KRL), Naved Ahmed (Navy), Zeeshan Rehman (Southern, Hong Kong), Mehdi Hasan (PAF), Ali Khan Niazi (K-Electric), Waseem Asghar (PCAA), Mohammad Bilal (WAPDA), Abdullah Qazi (USA), Umair Ali (KRL)

Midfielders: Mehmood Khan (SSGC), Saddam Hussain (SSGC), Navid Rehman (Canada), Adnan Yaqoob (Lyngby Boldklub, Denmark), Zain-ul-Aabdeen Ishaq (PCAA), Rajab Ali (KRL), Zaid Umar (KRL), Ali Uzair (WAPDA), Habib-ur-Rehman (SSGC), Mohammad Riaz (K-Electric)

Strikers: Hassan Bashir (AB Taarnby, Denmark), Raziq (SSGC), Mohammad Ali (FK Odsherred, Denmark), Mansoor Khan (PAF), Yousuf Ahmed (KRL), Ahmed Faheem (WAPDA).

https://www.footballpakistan.com/2018/12/pak-football-team-leaves-for-qatar-quietly-the-news/

Which teams are they scheduled to play Agaisnt
 
Zahir, Sardar join hands to see the end of Hayat

KARACHI/ISLAMABAD: It was a question of when rather than if once Sardar Naveed Haider Khan decided to rebel against Faisal Saleh Hayat. All probability was that he would eventually join another dissident, another former ally of the Pakistan Football Federation (PFF) chief Hayat, Syed Zahir Ali Shah.

On Tuesday, on the eve of the Supreme Court-ordered elections of the country’s football governing body, the alliance was formally announced. Zahir and Sardar are backing Syed Ashfaq Hussain Shah in Wednesday’s presidential election in a bid to end Hayat’s 15-year reign as PFF chief.

“We agreed that the first goal is to bring fresh change at the helm of the PFF,” both Zahir and Sardar told Dawn on Sunday night, when the deal was first agreed. “Football in Pakistan needs professionals to take it forward.”

Hayat isn’t contesting the election after global football body FIFA indicated that any election held under the orders of the court would count as “third-party interference” and might lead to potential suspension of the PFF. However, Anwar-ul-Haq Qureshi is the representing Hayat’s group in the election.


Initially, there had been three groups.

Sardar, the president of the Punjab Football Association (PFA), was leading the campaign of Malik Aamir Dogar, a Member of National Assembly from the ruling party Pakistan Tehreek-i-Insaf.

Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Football Association (KPFA) president Zahir, meanwhile, was due to finally stand in a PFF election, three years after he first decided to run for the presidency.

That 2015 election saw Pakistan football mired in crisis and controversy in the coming years with the Supreme Court order for elections in April being welcomed by all parties — including Hayat’s — when it was first announced.

Sardar’s split with Hayat came as a surprise for many. It was his controversial election in 2015 as the PFA chief, with strong backing from Hayat, that sparked the row that saw Zahir go against Hayat.

The first part of the SC order had directed PFA elections to be held. In May, again with strong support from Hayat, he won that election but differences began to develop and he swiftly went his way.

In the lead-up to the election, there had been meetings between the groups of Zahir and Sardar. It had been suggested that with both parties’ grievances with Hayat, they might agree to form a simple majority in the election if would come down to that in order to oust Hayat.

Things changed on Saturday, though, when Zahir, Dogar and Sardar were rendered ineligible to run for the post of president, leaving Ashfaq — the back-up candidate from the Zahir group — as their unanimous choice.

“Our mission is to take football to the highest level in the country,” Ashfaq said at a news conference in Islamabad on Tuesday, flanked by Zahir, Doger, Sardar and Islamabad Football Association (IFA) president Chaudhry Mohammad Salim. “I have a lot of experience in the game and time will tell what we can deliver.”

He added that once the elections were conducted, they would try to “convince” FIFA.

With FIFA recognising Hayat’s body and having set a roadmap to hold elections by March 2020, convincing FIFA would be key if Ashfaq — who at the time of filing of this report seemingly holds a majority of the votes — wins the election.

The court order, a certified copy of which is available with Dawn, has asked FIFA to accept the result of the election.

“We are in no matter of doubt that the process adopted by the Returning Officer and approved by the apex Court of Pakistan and an election carried out by this Court carries the highest degree of sanctity,” it reads. “… the credibility of this election is beyond doubt. We are sanguine that the results of this election will readily be accepted by all concerned.”

Dogar, meanwhile, said that FIFA should accept the election since PFF secretary general Col Ahmed Yar Khan Lodhi was assisting the returning officer in the election process.

“I want to make it clear that there is no government interference in this election,” he clarified. “If that was the case, my nomination for president wouldn’t have been rejected.”

Doger, who is expected to take up the senior vice-president role according to the power-sharing agreement reached with Zahir’s group, added it was a new beginning for Pakistan football.

“A long tenure is ending,” he said. “… and a new team is coming which is devoted to working for the betterment of the game.”

In an apparent jibe at the Hayat group, Sardar said that the expected change is a breath of fresh air.

“We want to work from grassroots level but it cannot be done by sitting in air conditioned rooms,” he said. “We want to take football to the next level in Pakistan.”

Zahir, meanwhile, urged both FIFA and the Asian Football Confederation (AFC) to accept the result of the election since it was being held in agreement with all contesting groups.

“The game has already suffered a lot,” he said. “And today, we’ve united for one cause. That is to save the game.”

https://www.dawn.com/news/1450907/zahir-sardar-join-hands-to-see-the-end-of-hayat
 
ISLAMABAD: The expression on retired Lt Col Ahmed Yar Khan Lodhi’s face was of utter resignation. An era had just ended moments earlier, 15 years of Faisal Saleh Hayat’s uninterrupted reign as the chief of Pakistan football, when Ashfaq Hussain Shah was elected Pakistan Football Federation (PFF) chief in an election at the Supreme Court here on Wednesday.

“FIFA will take action,” Lodhi, Hayat’s long-time aide and PFF’s secretary general, said as he walked out of the premises. Stopped by Dawn for his reaction, he said he was “a neutral person” and had nothing to add. FIFA had earlier indicated that the Supreme Court-ordered election was “third-party interference” and that it would take action if it went ahead.

It went ahead as planned, despite Hayat’s vociferous appeals that the PFF risked a ban from FIFA to which the Supreme Court said the credibility of its election was beyond doubt and should be accepted by all parties. It ended with Ashfaq being elected with a 17-3 majority in the 26-member congress.

Hayat had earlier announced he wouldn’t contest the polls. Instead he fielded Anwar-ul-Haq Qureshi. Fearing defeat, with signs evident before the election that Hayat’s group had lost majority of their support, their confirmed voters — three members each from the provinces of Sindh and Balochistan — didn’t turn up. Lodhi, however, did and his appearance in a way is a validation of the election process.

ARTICLE CONTINUES AFTER AD

“A new era has begun,” Ashfaq said after being announced the winner by returning officer Amir Saleem Rana, flanked by his three vice-presidents, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Football Association (KPFA) chief Zahir Ali Shah, Punjab Football Association (PFA) chief Sardar Naveed Haider Khan and Malik Aamir Dogar. “It’s now time to take football forward following the years of crisis.”

The Supreme Court ordered the elections in March, after a long-running legal battle that followed disputed PFF polls in 2015. In its first part, it ordered the PFA elections from 2015 to be reheld, which saw Sardar Naveed elected president in April. At that point in time, the PFA election has only seemed to further strengthen Hayat.

But then in a surprising twist of events, Sardar Naveed broke up with Hayat over differences in how the PFF was being run. With elections approaching, he started a campaign for Dogar to run as president. But when he and Dogar were declared ineligible to contest after an appeal from Lodhi, they were left with little option than to back Ashfaq in the election.

Ashfaq wasn’t originally going to contest the election too. He was the back-up candidate for Zahir, who like Sardar Naveed was a former Hayat ally who rebelled in lead-up to the 2015 elections. He stepped into the fray once Zahir was also declared ineligible to contest on an appeal by Lodhi.

The election began with three women voters being elected to raise the Congress to 20 members. Farzana Rauf, Javaria Zafar and Tassawar Aziz were among those members before the vote for the president, vice-president and executive committee were held.

The only vice-president nominee from the Hayat faction, Mir Mohammad Jan Marri got just two votes and was well beaten. The executive committee, meanwhile, saw Mohammad Ashraf Khan and Mian Rizwan Ali being elected from the PFA and Said Rasool and Zulfiqar Ahmed being elected from KPFA. Azizullah and Dost Mohammad Khan were elected from the Balochistan Football Associatio (BFA) while Abdul Nasir Baloch Karim and Jamil Ahmed were elected from the Sindh Football Association (SFA).

They all will now be led by Ashfaq, the president of District Football Association Peshawar who is a mechanical engineer by profession. He has a big task on his hands ahead. “It’s a huge challenge ahead because football has been suffering for several years,” Ashfaq told Dawn. “We need to bring the PFF back and track and raise the standard of the game since we have both capacity and the talent to go further. We need to focus on the grassroots and have multi-faceted policies.”

The next challenge for him would be to take FIFA and the Asian Football Confederation (AFC) on board. “At the moment, our main concentration is to put the game here in order before going to FIFA and AFC,” Ashfaq added. “Luckily our teams had informed them about the election and we will wait for their response. I hope they will have no issues since they were held by the country’s apex court.”

The Hayat group is expected to continue to argument with FIFA having set a roadmap for the PFF to hold elections by 2020. The Supreme Court, however, by holding the landmark election has begun a new era for Pakistan football.

https://www.dawn.com/news/1451065/hayats-long-reign-ends-as-ashfaq-elected-pff-chief
 
Pakistan played their first match of their tour initially they were suppose to play Yemen which was going to be they only offical friendly how ever their still touring in Bahrain so instead Pakistan played Palestine

Pakistan lost the match by a score of 2-0 it is too note that this match was an official friendly
 
we really need to promote this sport and get a decentish team out there. Faisal Hayat is a traitor and should be sent packing or investigated by the NAB.
 
Pakistan played their first match of their tour initially they were suppose to play Yemen which was going to be they only offical friendly how ever their still touring in Bahrain so instead Pakistan played Palestine

Pakistan lost the match by a score of 2-0 it is too note that this match was an official friendly

Sorry meant to say the match was unofficial friendly
 
Hopefully FIFA does not ban Pakistan because of the PFF elections. I have a bad feeling they will.
 
KARACHI: The Pakistan Football Federation (PFF) of Ashfaq Hussain Shah has been left high and dry.

After the Asian Football Confederation (AFC) confirmed last week that it had suspended funding to the PFF in the wake of a newly-elected body led by Ashfaq taking over its Pakistan affiliate on the orders of the Supreme Court at the turn of the year, global football body FIFA said on Tuesday that it has done the same.

“Due to the current situation at the PFF, FIFA can confirm that funding from the FIFA Forward programme has currently been suspended,” a FIFA spokesperson told Dawn. “We have no further comment on the matter and that any further updates will be communicated in due course.”

Dawn understands that FIFA’s Members Association Committee will decide further course of action.

ARTICLE CONTINUES AFTER AD

Ahead of the election last month, FIFA had said that any election of the PFF on the orders of the Supreme Court is tantamount to “third-party interference” which is a contravention of the FIFA statutes.

It also threatened that Pakistan could be suspended for the second time in two years following the six-month ban on the PFF for the same breach from October 2017 to March last year.

In September last year, FIFA had given its recognised president Faisal Saleh Hayat a mandate till March 2020 to conduct fresh elections after reviewing the PFF statutes.

Last week, Ashfaq disclosed at a news conference that the PFF was faced with a cash crisis since taking control from Hayat, alleging that his predecessor had returned funds amounting to $530,000 back to FIFA and AFC.

Well-placed sources had told Dawn that the PFF had received $1,880,000 from FIFA and $750,000 from the AFC since March last year, when the Supreme Court restored Hayat as PFF chief whilst also ordering him to hold fresh elections following a dispute that began in 2015.

Out of that amount, the PFF had spent $2,100,000 till the end of last year, sources claimed. Ashfaq had called Hayat returning the amount to FIFA and AFC as a “criminal move” as he’d been ordered by the SC to give an account of every financial transaction by the PFF.

Both FIFA and AFC have not confirmed whether any amount had been returned to them.

Ashfaq had last week stated that his body will look to other avenues to raise funds and PFF vice-president Sardar Naveed Haider Khan confirmed on Tuesday that several options were being looked into.

“There are several plans on the table,” Sardar Naveed told Dawn. “We’re looking at domestic sponsors. One of the main plans is to launch a franchise-based inter-city league and for that naturally we’re looking at bringing some foreign players in.”

With a ban looming, Sardar Naveed was hopeful that FIFA would send a fact-finding committee to the country to confirm that last month’s PFF elections under the orders of the SC were held according to the PFF statutes.

He added that in case of a suspension, the PFF would continue to form a solid framework for the game domestically.

“It will offer us time to form a stable base locally,” said Sardar Naveed. “Strengthening the local structure will only help us when we return to international football.”

https://www.dawn.com/news/1457745/fifa-suspends-funding-to-cash-starved-pff
 
So after suspending funding for PFF the next step may be suspension by FIFA.
 
KARACHI: Regardless of whether the 2022 FIFA World Cup is a 32-team tournament or is increased to a 48-team one, Pakistan’s road to Qatar won’t be easy. While an increase in the number of teams is expected to make the qualification path less rigorous, Pakistan won’t be benefitting. Just like qualifying for the 2018 showpiece in Russia, two preliminary round matches — within a week of FIFA’s final decision on the number teams at the World Cup — could see them end up without competitive matches for the next four years.

The Asian Football Confederation (AFC) introduced a system in the previous qualification cycle that merged the road to the World Cup and the 2019 Asian Cup together. It will be the same this time around. “The qualifying draw is on April 17 in Kuala Lumpur and the format will be the same as last time with joint Asian Cup and World Cup qualification,” an AFC spokesperson told Dawn on Thursday. Last time out, Pakistan fell to Yemen at the first hurdle. That, combined with a dispute in the Pakistan Football Federation (PFF), meant Pakistan went more than three-and-half years without an international match.

The prevailing situation in Pakistan football means there remains uncertainty whether Pakistan will send a team to the preliminary playoff round. For now, though, they have confirmed their entry. “Pakistan have entered the 2023 Asian Cup/2022 World Cup qualifiers,” the AFC spokesperson said, when asked if the PFF had confirmed the entry, nearly two weeks after they withdraw the team from the qualifiers of the 2020 AFC Under-23 Championship. The spokesperson added that they “don’t enter into speculation” when asked what would happen if Pakistan were to withdraw from the qualifiers.

At a dismal 199th in the FIFA rankings, as Asia’s second-worst team, Pakistan will start in the preliminary round which will feature Asia’s bottom 12 teams. Taking the FIFA rankings from April 4 into account, there will be six seeded teams that will be drawn against one of the six unseeded teams and they will play over two legs, home and away. The six first-round winners will join the 34 top-ranked teams in the second round which will see 40 teams divided into eight groups of five. From there, the eight group winners and the four best second-placed teams advance into the third round of World Cup qualifying whilst also confirming their berths at the Asian Cup. The second-round teams that don’t finish in the top 12, they will then continue to play for a place in the Asian Cup.

The final rounds of World Cup qualifying, however, could see a change if the number of teams are increased. A 48-team World Cup in 2022 will see Asia’s slots increased to eight from 4.5. It remains to be seen how that comes into play with FIFA proposals for expanding the Qatar World Cup including matches in its neighbouring Gulf countries. The World Cup hosts qualify automatically with their slot taken from their confederation’s quota, according to the allocation for the 2026 World Cup — the first confirmed 48-team World Cup. “The decision though on 32 or 48 teams may mean a review of the latter stages of the competition [if increased to 48],” the AFC spokesperson said.

FIFA will take a final decision at expanding the Qatar World Cup at its Congress in Paris on June 5. According to the AFC’s competitions calendar, Asia’s World Cup qualifying begins the very next day with the first legs of the preliminary playoff round. The second legs are scheduled for June 11.Just making it to the pitch for the first leg match seems like a tall order for the Pakistan team which is beset with problems off the pitch.

FIFA recognises the PFF of Faisal Saleh Hayat but the Hayat-led body isn’t recognised domestically after the Supreme Court ordered fresh elections of the country’s football governing body that saw Syed Ashfaq Hussain Shah elected as Pakistan’s football chief last December. The election did bring to a close a long-running legal wrangle that has afflicted Pakistan football since the last four years but a final decision rests in the hands of FIFA which called the court-ordered election as “third-party interference” in the affairs of its member associations.

FIFA’s Member Associations Committee will discuss the PFF case when it meets on April 3. In October last year, FIFA’s Member Associations committee had given the Hayat-led PFF an 18-month period — until March 2020 — to hold fresh elections. After a controversial PFF election in June 2015, that sparked a dispute in the football body, Hayat was earlier given a two-year mandate in September 2015 to ratify the PFF statutes and hold fresh elections. The Hayat-led body made no headway into those issues.

The PFF was banned for six months for “third-party intervention” before FIFA lifted the suspension in March last year after Hayat was restored as the PFF chief on the orders of the Lahore High Court, which had appointed an administrator to oversee PFF affairs in 2015. The case went to the Supreme Court the very next month with the country’s apex court ordering fresh elections. Ahead of the SC-ordered election, FIFA had warned that the PFF faces possible suspension.

A suspension, during the first week of June, would naturally rule Pakistan out of the World Cup qualifiers. Even with no suspension, Pakistan continues to miss out on football. Hayat’s body isn’t sending teams to play fearing Contempt of Court. Ashfaq can’t send the team because AFC or FIFA don’t recognise him. In that scenario, the Hayat-led body withdrew Pakistan’s entry from the qualifiers for the AFC Under-23 Championship, the tournament which was going to decide Asia’s representatives for the 2020 Tokyo Olympics. Pakistan went out of the race for the Olympics without kicking a ball. If the situation doesn’t change, they will be out of the World Cup race in similar fashion.

https://www.dawn.com/news/1471045/pakistan-to-learn-world-cup-asian-cup-qualifying-fate-on-april-17
 
KARACHI: Global football body FIFA intends to send a delegation to Pakistan to assess the situation of the Pakistan Football Federation (PFF) in a move that is hoped to be the first step in resolving the long-running crisis in the country’s football governing body.

FIFA’s intention, after nearly four years of Pakistan football being beset by problems off the pitch, was confirmed in an email, seen by Dawn on Tuesday, sent to PFF vice-president Sardar Naveed Haider Khan by FIFA’s Head of Member Associations Governance Services Luca Nicola.

Sardar, the president of the Punjab Football Association (PFA) had sought to meet FIFA secretary general Fatma Samoura in Zurich to apprise her of the situation of the PFF following elections ordered by the Supreme Court that saw longstanding president Faisal Saleh Hayat toppled from his post.

“Please kindly be informed that it is the intention of FIFA to send a joint FIFA/AFC delegation to Pakistan shortly to assess the situation of the PFF in view of the developments that have occurred over the last months,” Nicola wrote in the email. “On that occasion, the delegation will meet with all relevant stakeholders and listen to their views. Consequently, we deem that the mission will be the right platform for engagement.”

Last week FIFA had said that the PFF situation was on the agenda of FIFA’s Member Associations Committee which meets next month.

Asked about the delegation, a FIFA spokesperson told Dawn on Tuesday: “For the moment the situation of the PFF will be discussed at the upcoming FIFA Member Associations Committee meeting on 3 April. Further updates may follow thereafter.”

Dawn understands that FIFA’s Member Associations Committee will take the final decision on sending the delegation. It has been learnt that Asian Football Confederation (AFC) president Sheikh Salman bin Ibrahim Al Khalifa played a vital role in FIFA deciding to send a mission.

At the moment, FIFA recognises the PFF of Hayat but the body he leads isn’t recognised domestically after the Supreme Court ordered fresh elections of the country’s football governing body that saw Syed Ashfaq Hussain Shah elected as Pakistan’s football chief last December.

That election saw Sardar Naveed desert longtime ally Hayat and support Ashfaq. Sardar was elected PFA president in another court-ordered election earlier last year.

The PFF election did bring to a close a long-running legal wrangle but a final decision rests in the hands of FIFA which called the court-ordered polls as “third-party interference” in the affairs of its member association. In October last year, FIFA’s Member Associations committee had given the Hayat-led PFF an 18-month period — until March 2020 — to hold fresh elections.

After a controversial PFF election in June 2015, that sparked a dispute in the football body, Hayat was earlier given a two-year mandate in September 2015 to ratify the PFF statutes and hold fresh elections. The Hayat-led body made no headway into those issues.

The PFF was banned for six months for “third-party intervention” before FIFA lifted the suspension in March last year after Hayat was restored as the PFF chief on the orders of the Lahore High Court, which had appointed an administrator to oversee PFF affairs in 2015.

The case went to the Supreme Court the very next month with the country’s apex court ordering fresh elections. Ahead of the SC-ordered election, FIFA had warned that the PFF faces possible suspension.

Our Sports Reporter from Islamabad adds: At a news conference earlier on Tuesday at a local hotel after the PFF Congress meeting, Ashfaq, along with PFF vice-presidents Mohammad Amir Dogar and Syed Zahir Ali Shah, was hopeful that a resolution of the PFF matters was in sight.

“We’re hopeful that the Member Associations Committee will finalise a mission to visit Pakistan so that all the PFF-related matters are sorted out,” he said.

He also informed that the Federal Investigation Agency (FIA) had started an investigation into PFF corruption and had summoned the office-bearers of the previous regime.

Football activity in the country has come to a halt due to the current situation of the PFF as well as the previous regime returning FIFA and AFC funds following the election.

Ashfaq, meanwhile, rejected the notion that the Senate Committee constituted for the promotion and development of football had an influence on PFF affairs. “We are working independently,” he said. “I’m glad however that Chairman Senate Mohammad Sadiq Sanjrani, who is heading the committee, is making all-out efforts for the game.”

https://www.dawn.com/news/1472070/fifa-intends-to-send-delegation-to-assess-pff-situation
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">Dear <a href="https://twitter.com/FIFAcom?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">@FIFAcom</a>,<br>Pakistani footballers are currently in a limbo in regards to their participation in the upcoming <a href="https://twitter.com/FIFAWorldCup?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">@FIFAWorldCup</a> qualifiers<br><br>I request the council to look into the matter so our nation cheers for the National team of the fastest growing sports in Pakistan iA 🇵🇰</p>— Shoaib Malik 🇵🇰 (@realshoaibmalik) <a href="https://twitter.com/realshoaibmalik/status/1113130753481682945?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">April 2, 2019</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
 
KARACHI: The intentions have now got a seal of approval. A week after it was disclosed that FIFA intended to send a delegation to Pakistan to assess the situation of the Pakistan Football Federation (PFF), its Member Associations Committee has decided to do exactly that.

It could very well be the first step towards resolving the dispute in the PFF that has afflicted the game in the country for the best part of four years. However, the situation would only be closer to resolution if the global body actually goes by the mission’s findings.

FIFA had also sent a mission to the country when the dispute broke out in 2015 and Dawn very reliably learnt that it had serious reservations over how Faisal Saleh Hayat, the PFF chief recognised by FIFA, conducted presidential elections that year.

However, the Asian Football Confederation (AFC) put FIFA under a lot of pressure to accept Hayat’s election with then FIFA secretary-general Jerome Valcke writing to the AFC that there was no way that FIFA could uphold those contentious polls.

In the end, however, Hayat was given a two-year mandate in September 2015 to ratify PFF statutes and hold fresh elections. That didn’t happen with Hayat not in control of the PFF domestically during a legal wrangle that saw an administrator appointed by the Lahore High Court (LHC) to oversee PFF matters.

Hayat eventually regained control of the PFF in March last year — a move that saw FIFA lift a six-month suspension on the PFF. However, that wasn’t the end of the dispute. The matter went to the Supreme Court, which ordered fresh elections and Ashfaq Hussain Shah elected PFF chief in December last year.

With FIFA not accepting the court-ordered election, and having last year extended Hayat’s mandate — till March 2020 — to hold fresh elections, it has left Pakistan football in a limbo. FIFA prohibits any interference from local courts or the government in the affairs of its member associations.

Upon lifting the ban on Pakistan last year, FIFA had said it would send a mission to the country. Sanjeevan Balassingam, FIFA’s Director of Members Associations Asian and Oceania, did visit Pakistan in March last year but FIFA did not confirm whether it was a part of the mission.

FIFA didn’t disclose on Thursday who will be in the mission or when it would arrive in Pakistan, however, a source has told Dawn that it will be in the country from April 24 to 25.

“The Member Associations Committee has decided to send a FlFA/AFC fact-finding mission to Pakistan to discuss with all parties, assess the situation and at a later stage make concrete proposals for the way forward,” a FIFA spokesperson told Dawn a day after the meeting was held. “Further updates will be provided in due course.”

Both parties in the PFF dispute had been appealing to FIFA to send a mission to ensure all the stakeholders were heard. The AFC, this time, played a vital role in ensuring that and preventing an immediate ban on Pakistan, which FIFA had warned of ahead of the court-ordered election.

“Taking into consideration the recent developments, we would like to propose a joint AFC-FIFA fact-finding mission to the PFF to meet with all the stakeholders and assess the current situation,” AFC general secretary Dato Windsor John had written to retired Col Ahmed Yar Khan Lodhi in a letter, seen by Dawn, on March 25. “We look forward to hearing from FIFA on our proposal so that we can coordinate further regarding the dates and logistics of such a mission.”

The letter came as a reply to Lodhi’s letter to the AFC and FIFA’s Member Associations Committee four days earlier in which he informed FIFA of the Supreme Court’s order to their appeal against the December elections.

With the Supreme Court having allowed the appellants to “avail the remedy, if available to them, before the appropriate forum in accordance with the law,” Lodhi wrote that a mission should be sent to “have detailed discussions in order to adopt a consensus on the way forward”.

The news that FIFA was intending to send a mission came to the fore when FIFA’s Head of Member Associations Governance Services Luca Nicola sent an email to PFF vice-president Sardar Naveed Haider Khan last week.

https://www.dawn.com/news/1473929/fifa-committee-decides-to-send-fact-finding-mission-to-pakistan
 
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