Terengganu F.C. II

Terengganu Football Club II (Malay: Kelab Bola Sepak Terengganu II) is a professional football club based in Kuala Terengganu, Terengganu, Malaysia. The club currently plays in the MFL Cup, the u-23 development league of the Malaysian Football league.

Terengganu II
Full nameTerengganu Football Club II
Nickname(s)The Turtles
Short nameTFCII
Founded2006 (2006), as Kuala Terengganu Football Association
GroundSultan Ismail Nasiruddin Shah Stadium
Capacity15,000
PresidentAhmad Samsuri Mokhtar
Head coachHairuddin Omar
LeagueMFL Cup
2022Malaysia Premier League, 4th of 11
WebsiteClub website

The club was founded as T-Team on 14 July 2006, changed its name to Terengganu II in 2017 and become the reserve team of Terengganu Football Club. The club is widely known as The Turtles.

History

Early years (as T-Team)

The club was founded on 14 July 2006 as T-Team. The club was formed after Football Association of Kuala Terengganu District decided to send a football team to compete in Malaysian League as T-Team. They competed in 2008 Malaysia FAM League and achieved promotion to Malaysia Premier League for 2009 season.[1] The club was then also promoted to Malaysia Super League after just one season in second division and then competed in 2010 Malaysia Super League. The club was further rebranded as T-Team Titans to gather local support.

T-Team squad during their 2008 Malaysia FAM League title celebration.

The team quickly gained popularity among the local football fans as everyone's favourite underdog. As the team kept surpassing the pundits' and supporters' expectations season after season they also showed that they were more than capable of competing and beating Malaysia's heavyweights (JDT, Pahang and Kedah) even with their tight budget and often young squad.

Merging with Terengganu FA to become Terengganu FC

On 21 November 2017, T-Team management announced the club had been absorbed into Terengganu F.C., and the team status was changed to a reserve team of the newly restructured first team of Terengganu. As part of the change, T-Team changed its name to Terengganu II, and were automatically relegated to the 2018 Malaysia Premier League, despite finishing the season outside of the 2017 Malaysia Super League relegation zone.[2]

This was a controversial decision among Terengganu and Malaysia football fans as they felt that the decision was very unfair towards the club and the players of T-Team (currently Terengganu F.C II) at that time. As the club worked hard until the last day of the season to avoid relegation to the Malaysia Premier League but still ended up getting relegated due to the decision of the board. The fans felt that there was no need for the two clubs to merge as they would have preferred T-Team to exist as their club and management and be able to watch a Terengganu Derby in the Malaysia Super League between Terengganu F.C. versus T-Team. Coach Rahmad Darmawan openly criticized the decision of the Terengganu F.C. board as he felt that he and his players were betrayed. He stated that had the decision of merging the two clubs been announced before the start of the season, he and his players would not have wasted their time and energy to avoid relegation. He then resigned as the coach of Terengganu F.C. II with the reason that he was not interested in managing a reserve side.

Under new head coach, Mustafa Kamal, Terengganu II performed badly in the league, and finished 11th, in the automatic relegation to Malaysia FAM League zone. As a result of the poor performance, Mustafa Kamal resigned as head coach, and the head coach role were temporarily held by Tengku Hazman, his assistant, for the inaugural Malaysia Challenge Cup. Tengku Hazman succeeded in leading his charges to win the tournament, beating UKM F.C. 4–2 on aggregate in the final.

In December 2018, Terengganu II were granted a reprieve by Malaysia Football League and retained their place for the 2019 Malaysia Premier League, after 2018 Malaysia FAM Cup champions Terengganu City F.C. were denied promotion due to unpaid player and staff wages issues.[3]

Stadium

The club currently use the Sultan Ismail Nasiruddin Shah Stadium, Kuala Terengganu, Terengganu, Malaysia as their home venue.

Sultan Ismail Nasiruddin Shah Stadium July 2019

The capacity of the stadium is 25,000.[4][5][6]

Ownership and finances

Sponsorship

Period Kit manufacturer Shirt sponsor (chest) Shirt sponsor (sleeve)
2007 Admiral No Sponsor
2008 No Sponsor
2009 Streamyx & Admiral
2010 TM & Admiral
2011 Admiral
2012
2013 Kappa EPIC
2014 Line 7
2015 Eutag
2016–2017 Kobert Terengganu Incorporated
2017 Mizuno Chicken Cottage
2018 Kobert
2019 - recent aL by Al-Ikhsan Terengganu Incorporated

Head coaches

Year Head Coach Notes
2006–2007 Malaysia Hasnan Ahmad
2008 Malaysia Badrulhisham Abdullah
2009–2010 Malaysia Che Ku Marzuki
2011–2012 Malaysia Yunus Alif
2013 England Peter Butler
2013 Portugal Eduardo Almeida Caretaker
2013 Malaysia Che Ku Marzuki Caretaker
2013–2014 Malaysia Azraai Khor
2014 Malaysia Anuar Abu Bakar Caretaker
2015 Croatia Tomislav Steinbruckner
2016–2017 Indonesia Rahmad Darmawan[7]
2017–2018 Malaysia Mustaffa Kamal
2018–2019 Malaysia Tengku Hazman Raja Hassan[8]
2020–2021 Malaysia Roshaidi Wahab
2021- Malaysia Badrul Afzan

Team managers

Year Manager
2007–10 Malaysia Abdul Rasid Jusoh
2010–15 Malaysia Rozi
2016– Malaysia Mohammad Kamil

Club personnel

PositionName
ChairmanMalaysia Ahmad Samsuri Mokhtar
General ManagerMalaysia Che Wan Mohd Azlizan Che Wan Abu Bakar
ManagerMalaysia ZulFadli Rozi
Assistant ManagerMalaysia Mohd Syahrizan Mohd Zain
Head coachMalaysia Badrul Afzan Razali
Assistant coachMalaysia Sapian Wahid
Goalkeeping CoachMalaysia Syed Mohd Nasir Mat Akih
Fitness CoachMalaysia Mohd Efindy Mohd Salleh
Team DoctorMalaysia Marzuki Abdullah
Team DoctorMalaysia Mohd Shahrul Faiz Mohd Noor
PhysiotherapistMalaysia Mark Lee Soong Keen
MasseurMalaysia Asyraf Naim Ying
KitmanMalaysia Sukri Embong

Honours

League

Cups

Preseason Competitions

  • Shah Alam City Cup[9]
    • Winners (1): 2021[10]
  • Terengganu Chief Minister's Cup[11]
    • Winners (1): 2022[12]

Club record

As of 7 March 2020
Season League FA Cup Malaysia
Cup

/Challenge
Cup
Asia Top scorer
Division P W D L F A GD Pts Pos Name Goals
2008 FAM League 14 11 3 0 36 3 +33 36 1st R1 DNQ
2009 Premier League 24 17 6 1 58 11 +47 57 2nd QF DNQ Malaysia Haris Safwan 26
2010 Super League 26 10 8 8 33 26 +7 38 7th QF GR Malaysia Haris Safwan 15*
2011 Super League 26 9 4 13 35 40 -5 31 9th R1 SF Malaysia Indra Putra Mahayuddin 17
2012 Super League 26 10 5 11 35 36 -1 35 8th QF GS Malaysia Zairo Anuar Zalani 13
2013 Super League 22 5 4 13 19 33 -14 19 10th R2 GS Malaysia Abdul Latiff Suhaimi 7
2014 Super League 22 6 6 10 21 28 -7 24 11th R2 GS Indonesia Patrich Wanggai 6
2015 Premier League 22 12 6 4 50 27 +23 42 3rd R2 GR Uzbekistan Farhod Tadjiyev 18
2016 Super League 22 7 6 9 30 34 -4 27 7th R2 SF Brazil Patrick Cruz 13
2017 Super League 22 7 5 10 30 45 -15 23 9th R3 GR   Uzbekistan Farhod Tadjiyev
Uzbekistan Dilshod Sharofetdinov
Malaysia Nor Hakim
6
2018 Premier League 20 4 5 11 22 34 -12 17 11th DNQ Champions   Nigeria Akanni-Sunday Wasiu 20
2019 Premier League 20 8 6 16 21 24 -3 30 4th DNQ SF   Japan Bruno Suzuki 13
2020 Premier League 11 7 1 3 17 14 +3 22 2nd Cancelled Cancelled Ghana Jordan Mintah 7
Champions Runners-up Third Place Promoted Relegated

Affiliate clubs

References

  1. "Malaysia 2007/08". RSSSF.
  2. "T-Team FC bid farewell to M-League after 10 years | Goal.com".
  3. "MIFA get Super League spot, Perlis the same for Premier League | Goal.com".
  4. "Kapasiti stadium 2012". ammboi (in Malay). 26 May 2013. Archived from the original on 19 August 2012. Retrieved 18 August 2012.
  5. "T-Team FC in Soccerway". Soccerway. 25 November 2013. Retrieved 25 November 2013.
  6. "T-Team beraksi di Stadium Sultan Ismail". teganukite.net. 6 October 2016. Retrieved 20 October 2016.
  7. "T-Team signs new coach and announces new imports". sarawakcrocs.com. 3 December 2015. Retrieved 24 October 2016.
  8. "Mustaffa akui gagal bimbing TFC II". 3 August 2018.
  9. "TFCII juara sulung Shah Alam City Cup 2021" (in Malay). Cakap Sukan at Wayback Machine. 23 February 2021. Archived from the original on 4 March 2021. Retrieved 4 March 2021.
  10. "Terengganu FC II emerge champions of 2021 Shah Alam City Cup". Selangor Journal at Wayback Machine. 7 February 2022. Archived from the original on 24 February 2021. Retrieved 7 February 2022.
  11. "Tiga Pasukan Liga Super Bakal Berentap Dalam Piala Menteri Besar Terengganu" (in Malay). Vocket FC at Wayback Machine. 9 February 2022. Archived from the original on 25 January 2022. Retrieved 9 February 2022.
  12. Aksi 'panas' di Stadium Sultan Ismail Nasiruddin Shah. Harian Metro at Wayback Machine. Archived from the original on 9 February 2022. Retrieved 9 February 2022.
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