Kamarulzaman Hassan

Kamarulzaman Hassan (born 17 January 1979) is a former Malaysian footballer. He is a former member of the Malaysian national team. Currently he works as assistant coach and goalkeeping coach in the Petaling Jaya Rangers F.C. football team.[1]

Kamarulzaman Hassan
Personal information
Full name Kamarulzaman bin Haji Hassan
Date of birth (1979-01-17) 17 January 1979
Place of birth Penang, Malaysia
Height 1.85 m (6 ft 1 in)
Playing position(s) Goalkeeper
Youth career
1998–1999 Penang President Cup
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
2000–2003 Penang
2004 Sarawak
2005–2006 Penang
2006–2007 Melaka
2007–2008 Proton FC
National team
1999–2001 Malaysia under-23 (0)
2000–2001 Malaysia 8 (0)
* Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only and correct as of 28 February 2009
‡ National team caps and goals correct as of 31 August 2008

Career

He spend his majority professional career at Penang FA, his birthplace football team. He also played with Malacca FA, Sarawak FA and Proton FC.

National team

Kamarulzaman represented the Malaysia national football team 8 times in 2000, during the height of his career. He made his debut during 2000 Tiger Cup in Thailand.[2] He also represents Malaysia national under-23 football team for the SEA Games.

He, along with Muhamad Khalid Jamlus and Azmin Azram Abdul Aziz, was dropped from the national squad in early 2001 for staying out late at a disco before the 2002 World Cup preliminary games against Qatar, Palestine and Hong Kong.[3]

Perhaps his infamous claim to fame occurs during the 2001 SEA Games in Malaysia, when the Malaysia under 23 team were in the final match against Thailand. With the pressure of winning the first gold medal in football since 1989 SEA Games, also in Malaysia, and in front on the home fans, Kamarulzaman, who until then were playing the best football of his career, made a grave mistake. A harmless cross from Sarawut Treephan, was deflected by Kamarulzaman who try to clear it, into the back of his own net. The goal, three minutes from full-time, proved to be the winning goal for Thailand.[4] Kamarulzaman, blamed for the Malaysia loss, never played for Malaysia again.

gollark: BUT those things would incur a bunch of cost - either financial or time - and I don't need high uptime enough to pay that.
gollark: As an example, osmarks.tk isn't up all the time. This is probably because it runs off my home internet connection and such, and partly because I do server migrations in ways which leave services down a bit. If I actually *needed* more than the current ~99% (okay I'm wildly guessing) uptime, there are many ways I could improve it.
gollark: You *want* 24/7 uptime, but trying to squeeze out increasingly high uptime means increasingly high costs.
gollark: Again, you brought up the "definition" first.
gollark: YOu brought it up first.

References

  1. https://www.fourfourtwo.com/my/features/skuad-pemenang-pingat-perak-sukan-sea-2001-di-mana-mereka-sekarang
  2. "Kamarulzaman cari pasukan baru (Kamarulzaman search for new team)". SabahRhinos.net. 7 November 2006. Archived from the original on 2 October 2011. Retrieved 31 July 2011.
  3. "Malaysia axe disco trio". BBC Sport. 28 February 2001. Retrieved 31 July 2011.
  4. "Thai retain gold, thanks to fumbling M'sian goalie". Utusan Online. 16 July 2001. Archived from the original on 28 March 2012. Retrieved 31 July 2011.
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