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NST Online: Sports


Safee to boost Bandung

Posted: 04 Feb 2011 09:26 AM PST

2011/02/04
Devinder Singh
devinder@nst.com.my


Safee Sali will be the first Malaysian to play in the Indonesian Super League.

Safee Sali will be the first Malaysian to play in the Indonesian Super League.

SAFEE Sali is set for an unchartered waters after sealing a deal with Persib Bandung to become the first Malaysian to play in the Indonesian Super League.

The striker confirmed his departure from Selangor yesterday ahead of a press conference by the FA of Selangor on Monday when details of the move, including the transfer fee, will be announced.
Safee, 27, did not want to reveal too much but said all the loose ends have been tied up as and will mark his farewell with Selangor on Feb 12 in the Klang Valley derby against Kuala Lumpur, the team where he first came to prominence.
"Everything will be clear on Monday when Selangor hold a press conference to announce my future. I've got my family's consent about my next move," said Safee hinted when met after the national team's training session at Wisma FAM in Petaling Jaya yesterday.

Bandung club officials have visiting FAS offices several times since Safee scored five goals to help Malaysia lift the AFF Suzuki Cup last December to arouse the interest of several Indonesian club.
Selangor have agreed to release Safee from his contract which ends this November for an undisclosed fee with the player set to turn out for Bandung when the second half of the 2010-11 Indonesian Super League season starts on March 7.
Bandung certainly need all the firepower they can find after winning just two of their 11 league games and scoring 11 goals to sit in 14th place in the 18-team league.

The Indonesian club already have two foreign strikers in Brazilian Hilton Moreira and Argentine Pablo Frances on their books besides two Singaporeans, midfielder Shahril Ishak and defender Baihakki Khaizan.
When asked if his last game with Selangor will be against KL, Safee said: "Yes, that's about right."
Safee will also turn down a proposed trial with a J-League club being arranged by the FA of Malaysia and gave an assurance that he will always make himself available when called up for national training.

"Where the national team is concerned, there should be no problems but that is a matter between FAM and my club. As for the J-League trial, I believe at my age it would not make sense to go on an attachment.
"It would be better for a younger player to take my place," said Safee, who had been identified along with Kelantan duo Norshahrul Idlan Talaha and Khairul Fahmi as the three players to go on trial with an unidentified Japanese club.

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Steady Sammy facing mission impossible

Posted: 04 Feb 2011 07:49 AM PST

ST. JOHN'S: Egos to the left of him, record-setters to the right: Darren Sammy, unheralded captain of the West Indies, faces mission impossible at the World Cup.

In a squad which features four former captains, three of whom can boast over 20,000 ODI runs between them, and a host of players who went on strike two years ago, Sammy has a disparate bunch to unite.

If he feels like an outsider, rubbing shoulders with ex-captains Chris Gayle, Shivnarine Chanderpaul, Ramnaresh Sarwan and Dwayne Bravo, then it's hardly surprising.


He is the first international cricketer to emerge from St Lucia, breaking the dominance of Jamaica, Trinidad, Guyana, Barbados and Antigua. Appointed as skipper at the end of last year -- despite having played just eight Tests -- when Gayle refused to sign a central contract in a long-running dispute with the West Indies Cricket Board, Sammy was not the obvious choice.

However, the 27-year-old certainly arrived with a bang when he made his Test debut against England at Old Trafford in June 2007, his seven-wicket haul in the second innings giving his team a fighting chance in a losing cause.

"One guy called to say the last time he had felt this way was when St Lucia got independence in 1979," said Sammy after his memorable debut.


Sammy admits he's a jack-of-all-trades cricketer, making the most of modest talents.

"I have to do that little bit extra than somebody who's more potentially capable won't have to do," he said.

"I have the term all-rounder because I bowl, I bat and I field, but in reality I'm not really one thing or the other.


"I have to work really hard on my batting, and I'm not an express fast bowler so I have to try to contain batsmen, and sometimes work them out to get wickets at the other end." His career statistics bear out his own assessment.

Eleven Tests have yielded just 29 wickets while, before the current series in Sri Lanka, his 43 ODIs, played over a seven-year period, brought him only 31 victims. With the bat in ODIs, he was averaging just over 24.

Gayle, who is closing in on 8,000 ODI runs, insists that he has thrown his full support behind the new captain ahead of the World Cup.

"He is the one who will have to take charge and lead from the front and we all know he is capable. We are all there to try and guide and help him," said Gayle, who reminded West Indies of his importance with his 333 in the drawn Test series in Sri Lanka in November. -- AFP

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