Perak F.C.

Perak
Full namePerak Football Club
Kelab Bola Sepak Perak
Nickname(s)Seladang (The Gaurs)
The Bos Gaurus
Short namePFC
Founded1921 (1921) (as PAFA)
Dissolved2025 (2025)
GroundPerak Stadium
Capacity42,500
OwnerXOX Berhad
ChairmanAbdul Azim bin Mohd Zabidi
Head coachYusri Che Lah
2024–25Malaysia Super League, 7th of 13 (dissolved)

Perak Football Club was a professional football club based in Ipoh, Perak, Malaysia. Founded in 1921, it was one of the oldest football clubs in the country and last competed in the Malaysia Super League. Formerly overseen by the Perak Football Association, the club turned professional in 1989 and was privatised in 2021. [1] Known as The Bos Gaurus,[2][3][4] Perak played its home matches at Perak Stadium until its dissolution in 2025.[1]

History

Perak has been represented by a team in Malaya Cup since its inaugural season in 1921.[5] They were also one of the founding members of the Malayan Football Association (the predecessor to the modern Football Association of Malaysia) in 1926.[6] However, the team was not officially registered until 18 April 1951, when the newly formed governing body of Perak football, the Perak Amateur Football Association (PAFA), took over its management.[7][8]

Perak is the third most successful club in Malaysia Cup history, having won the competition a total of 8 times, with the last of those coming in 2018. It also won the inaugural FA Cup in 1990, a feat it repeated in 2004.

Since Malaysian football league competition was introduced in 1982, the team has emerged league winners twice (in 2002 and 2003) and was the last state team to have never been demoted to a lower division. However, in 2021, Perak had suffered their first relegation from the Malaysian top flight football and will be playing in the Premier League for the first time since 1989. Perak has yet to win the Super League since its foundation in 2004, with its best showing coming in the 2006–07 and 2018 seasons where they finished runners-up.

It made its continental competition debut as a professional team at the 2008 AFC Cup, making it to the Quarter-Final stage before being eliminated by Safa.

Stability and Malaysia Cup success (2016–2020)

In February 2016, the club rebranded as Perak The Bos Gaurus, or Perak TBG, as part of its privatisation plan to play in 2016 Malaysia Super League.[2][3][4]

Perak subsequently acquired its club license in 2017, in accordance with FMLLP's (currently known as Malaysia Football League) (MFL) requirement for all M-League clubs to acquire their licenses by the start of the 2018 season.[9]

The team won the Malaysia Cup in 2018, its first silverware in 12 years. The team also finished second in the 2018 Malaysia Super League season thus qualifying for the following season's 2019 AFC Champions League qualifying round. In order to be eligible for participation, Perak successfully acquired an AFC Club License in 2019.[10] Perak TBG made its AFC Champions League debut on 12 February 2019 in the preliminary round 2 against Hong Kong club, Kitchee which the game ended at 1–1 after extra time which saw the game moved on to penalties shoot out. Goalkeeper, Hafizul Hakim manage to save two penalties and Kenny Pallraj to scored the winning penalty to send Perak TBG to the third playoff round where it was defeated 1–5 by Korean club, Ulsan Hyundai.[11]

In 2020, the team was successfully privatised as Perak FC to meet the Football Association of Malaysia (FAM) requirement for state football associations (FA) to be separated from their clubs.

Financial struggles and relegation (2021–2022)

Due to change of government administration and lack of funding from the state .After the abrupt departure of head coach Mehmet Durakovic prior to the start of the 2021 season, it was revealed the team was suffering from serious financial difficulties from RM35mill budget to RM5 mill, with players having gone unpaid for months.[12][13] By May, the players were said to be refusing to train as a result of unpaid wages.[14]

As a result of poor performances caused by the off-pitch turmoil, Perak's slid towards its first-ever relegation to the Premier League, which was finally confirmed in September.[15]

In November 2021, it was announced that a private broker company called IMC becoming the caretaker of the Perak FC .[16]

In January 2022, Yusri Che Lah, a former Perak player, was appointed the team's fourth head coach in less than a year.[17]

XOX takeover and 2025 closure

In August 2022 XOX Bhd completed its 100% stake take over of the club through its subsidiary XOX Pro Sport Sdn Bhd.[18] Perak officially withdraw from 2025–26 Malaysia Super League, after they have serious financial problems and therefore they decide to not apply a national club licence for 2025–26 season.[19]

Rivalries

Perak has a historical derby with Selangor known as the Malayan El Clasico and their rivalry dated back as early as the establishment of the Malaya Cup (now Malaysia Cup) in the 1920s.

Perak also had its main rivalry with its northern region's counterpart, known as the Northern Region Derby. Perak's main rivals are Kedah Darul Aman and Penang. Although Perak's main rivals mostly are from the northern region of Malaysia, especially Kedah, but there is also a strong supporter of friendship with Kedah and there are good relations with the fans of Penang and Perlis. "This is Utara” or in English “This is the northern region", is a slogan which shows their good friendships.

Players (2024)

First-team squad

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules; some limited exceptions apply. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Pos. Nation Player
1 GK  MAS Firdaus Irman
2 MF  NGA Sunday Afolabi
3 DF  MAS Tommy Mawat Bada
4 DF  BRA Luiz Henrique
6 MF  MAS Azfar Fikri
7 FW  BRA Clayton
8 DF  MAS Shivan Pillay
11 MF  MAS Wan Zack Haikal (vice-captain)
12 DF  MAS Afif Asyraf
14 MF  MAS Firdaus Saiyadi
16 MF  MAS Fadhil Idris
17 MF  KGZ Adilet Kanybekov
20 GK  MAS Haziq Nadzli (on loan from Johor Darul Ta’zim)
21 DF  MAS Kamal Arif
22 GK  MAS Ramadhan Hamid
No. Pos. Nation Player
23 FW  MAS Alif Zikri
26 DF  MAS Nik Umar
27 MF  MAS Firdaus Fuad
28 MF  MAS Ariff Ar-Rasyid
31 DF  MAS Hafizy Daniel
32 DF  MAS Fadhil Azmi
33 FW  MAS Syahmi Shamsudin
34 MF  MAS Akmal Hazim
35 MF  MAS Daniel Hakimi
36 MF  MAS Danish Haikal
37 DF  MAS Che Mohamad Suhairi
39 MF  MAS Farris Izdiham
40 DF  MAS Aiman Khairul Yusni
41 MF  MAS Afifin Arfa
42 GK  MAS Syazwan Syazani

Coaching staff (2023)

[20]

Position Name
Team manager Nurmaulan Mohd Said
Head coach Yusri Che Lah
Assistant coaches V. Saravanan, Shahrulnizam Mustapa, Muhammad Azim Abdul Rahim
Goalkeeping coach Mohd Azlen Ahmad Jabri
Fitness coach Sam Pakiaraj
Team doctors Cheng Wern Loong, Ahmad Hazwan Ahmad Shushami
Physiotherapists Muhammad Rozairen Hairudin, Mohd Noradam Mohd Azam
Masseur Muhammad Shaffiq Mokhtar
Kitmen Mohd Azzan Shah Azman Shah, Mohd Suhaimi Mohd Abidin
Security Mohd Nasha Bunari
Media officers Faidzal Shahril Alang Abdul Rahman, Zubir Shaharani

Stadium

Perak FC's home ground was the Perak Stadium. Perak TBG used the alternative Lumut Stadium.[21] In September 2017, the construction of a new training ground was announced.[22] Originally scheduled for completion in February 2018, the training ground dubbed the Perak Football Complex, was eventually completed in 2020.[23]

Coat of arms and colours

Coat of Arms of Perak FA (1921–2015)

Perak has historically utilised one primary coat of arms (CoA). The first, adopted when the club was founded, was the image of a Malayan Tiger, where it is famous in Malaya and remained for more than half-century. In 2015, in effort to modernise the club, a new coat of arms was introduced to replace the old arms as the club main coat of arms. The club replaced the old coat of arms with new logo and adopted the image Seladang which is more synonym with the Perak football team.[24] After being criticized for the lack of quality for the logo, Perak The Bos Gaurus launched a new version of the logo chosen from the logo competition held by the team for 2016 season onwards.[25] Perak reused previous coat of arms for 2019 season for all competitions until 2020 season.

Coat of Arms of Perak The Bos Gaurus (2016–2018)

Perak The Bos Gaurus have always worn yellow with a bit of black or white colour shirts as their home kit as it is an iconic colour for the club.

Perak The Bos Gaurus's away colours are usually white and black or various combination colours of white, yellow and black as it represent the colour of Perak's Flag.

Supporters

Perak TBG was one of the most widely supported football clubs in Perak. Perak TBG's traditional fanbase come from 11 districts in Perak.[26] Silver State Ultras (SSU) was a supporter club founded in April 2009.[27][28]

Head coaches

There have been 16 coaches of Perak Darul Ridzuan Football Association since the appointment of the club's first professional coach, Dato' M. Karathu in 1989. The most successful coach of Perak Darul Ridzuan Football Association is Toni Netto from Brazil who had achieved 4 trophies.

Name Period Trophies Total
Domestic International
SLC PLC MC CS FAC ACL UCWC UC USC IC
Abdullah Yeop Noordin 1989 0
M. Karathu 1989–90, 2001, 2008–09 1 1 2
Marco Bilic 1991 0
Chan Sze Onn 1992 0
Milous Kvacek 1993–94 0
Ken Shellito 1995 0
Khaidir Buyong 1996 0
Karl Heinz Weigang 1997–99, 1999, 2000 2 1 3
Chow Kwai Lam 1999 0
Torsten Spittler 2000 0
Toni Netto 2002–05 2 1 1 4
Steve Darby 2005–08 2 2
M. Karathu 2009–10 0
Raja Azlan Shah Raja So'ib 2010–11 0
Norizan Bakar 2011–12 0
Jang Jung 2012 0
Mohd Azraai Khor Abdullah 2013 0
Abu Bakar Fadzim 2014 0
Vjeran Simunic Sept 2014 – Jan 2015 0
M. Karathu Jan 2015 – Aug 2015 0
Vjeran Simunic Sept 2015 – Nov 2015 0
Syamsul Saad Nov 2015 – May 2016 0
Karl-Heinz Weigang May 2016 – Feb 2017 0
Mehmet Durakovic Feb 2017 – Feb 2021 1 1
Chong Yee Fatt Feb 2021 – Aug 2021 0
Yusri Che Lah Dec 2021 – Sept 2022 0
Lim Teong Kim Sept 2022 – May 2023 0
Yusri Che Lah  Oct 2023 – May 2025 0
Total 1989–23 2 0 3 5 2 0 0 0 0 0 12

Managers

Years Name Nationality
1992–1993 Safri Nawawi Malaysia
1998–2000 Raja Ahmad Zainuddin Raja Omar Malaysia
2001–06 Jamal Nasir Rasdi Malaysia
2007–08 Mohammed Mahiyuddin Abdullah Malaysia
2008–10 Nor Azli Musa Malaysia
2011–13 Khairul Azwan Harun Malaysia
2014 Azhar Ahmad Malaysia
November 2014 Vjeran Simunic Croatia
2015 M. Karathu Malaysia
2016 Shahrul Zaman Yahya Malaysia
2017–2018 Ahmad Shahrul Azhar Sofian Malaysia
2019–2020 Adly Shah Ahmad Tah Malaysia
2021 Rizal Naizali Malaysia

Continental record

Season Competition Round Club Home Away Aggregate
1969 Asian Champion Club Tournament[29] Group B Kowloon Motor Bus 6–2 4th out of 5
Persepolis 2–4
Maccabi Tel Aviv 1–1
Toyo Kogyo 0–2
1971 Asian Champion Club Tournament[30] Group A Al Arabi 0–3 4th out of 4
ROK Army 0–3
Taj Tehran 0–3
2003 ASEAN Club Championship Group B Singapore Armed Forces 2–0 1st out of 3
DPMM FC 3–0
Quarter Final Samart United 2–0
Semi Final BEC Tero Sasana 1–3
3rd Place Playoff Petrokimia Putra 0–3
2004 AFC Cup[31] Group D Club Valencia 2–0 1–0 2nd out of 4
Happy Valley 2–1 2–1
Home United 2–2 2–2
Quarter Final Geylang United 1–2 2–3 3–5
2005 AFC Cup[32] Group D Tampines Rovers 2–1 2–4 4th out of 4
Club Valencia 1–2 1–1
Sun Hei 0–1 1–2
2019 AFC Champions League[33] Preliminary Round 2 Kitchee 1–1 (a.e.t.)
(6–5 p)
Play-off round Ulsan Hyundai 1–5

Honours

Domestic competitions

League

Cup

  • Malaysia FA Cup
    • Winners (2): 1990, 2004
    • Runners-up (4): 1991, 2002, 2005, 2019
  • Malaysia Cup
    • Winners (8): 1926, 1931, 1957, 1967, 1970, 1998, 2000, 2018
    • Runners-up (11): 1923, 1951, 1959, 1960, 1961, 1964, 1971, 1972, 1974, 2001, 2007
  • Malaysian Charity Shield
    • Winners (3): 1999, 2005, 2006
    • Runners-up (2): 2001, 2019

Preseason competitions

  • Unity Shield[34][35]
    • Winners (1): 2020[36]
    • Runners-up (1): 2019
  • Federal Territory Minister Cup
    • Runners-up (1): 2023

Club records

Updated on 19 October 2023 (Malaysian football league was established in 1982).

Note:

Pld = Played, W = Won, D = Drawn, L = Lost, F = Goals for, A = Goals against, Pts= Points, Pos = Position

  1st or Champions   2nd or Runner-up   3rd place   Promotion   Relegation

Season League Cup Asia
Division Pld W D L F A Pts Pos FA Malaysia Challenge Charity Competition Result
1982 M-League 15 13th Not Introduced Yet DNQ to Quarter Final
1983 M-League 15 1 3 11 18 38 6 15th Not Introduced Yet DNQ to Quarter Final
1984 M-League 15 3 7 5 14 20 16 12th Not Introduced Yet DNQ to Quarter Final
1985 M-League 15 6 3 6 24 27 21 9th Not Introduced Yet DNQ to Quarter Final
1986 M-League 15 5 0 10 21 38 15 13th Not Introduced Yet DNQ to Quarter Final
1987 M-League 16 4 5 7 22 31 17 11th Not Introduced Yet DNQ to Quarter Final
1988 M-League 16 6 3 7 25 34 21 12th Not Introduced Yet DNQ to Quarter Final
1989 Semi-Pro League Division 2 14 8 2 4 25 12 26 2nd Not Introduced Yet Semi-final
1990 Semi-Pro League Division 1 18 10 4 4 20 14 24 3rd Champion Semi-final
1991 Semi-Pro League Division 1 18 8 4 6 29 25 20 3rd Runner-Up Group stage
1992 Semi-Pro League Division 1 18 4 9 5 23 21 17 6th Quarter-Final Group stage
1993 Semi-Pro League Division 1 18 9 7 2 22 12 34 3rd Quarter-Final Group stage
1994 Liga Perdana 28 10 5 13 45 46 35 10th 2nd round Group stage
1995 Liga Perdana 28 12 4 12 27 29 40 7th 2nd round Group stage
1996 Liga Perdana 28 9 13 6 29 24 40 8th Quarter-finals Group stage
1997 Liga Perdana 28 12 5 11 51 41 41 8th 2nd round Group stage
1998 Liga Perdana 1 22 8 5 9 27 24 29 7th Quarter-finals Champion
1999 Liga Perdana 1 18 6 5 6 22 31 23 9th 2nd round Group stage Champions
2000 Liga Perdana 1 22 11 5 6 33 21 38 3rd Quarter-finals Champion
2001 Liga Perdana 1 22 8 5 9 38 34 29 7th Quarter-finals Runner-up Runner-up
2002 Liga Perdana 1 26 19 3 4 42 15 60 1st Runner-up Semi-finals
2003 Liga Perdana 1 24 13 8 3 38 22 47 1st Quarter-finals Semi-finals
2004 Super League 21 10 6 5 35 27 36 4th Champions Group stage AFC Cup Quarter-finals
2005 Super League 21 9 3 9 33 25 30 3rd Runner-up Semi-finals Champions AFC Cup Group stage
2005–06 Super League 21 9 3 9 32 29 30 3rd Quarter-finals Semi-finals Champions
2006–07 Super League 24 16 5 3 58 22 53 2nd 2nd round Runner-up
2007–08 Super League 24 13 2 9 46 34 41 5th 2nd round Quarter-finals AFC Cup Quarter-finals
2009 Super League 26 9 5 12 27 36 32 10th Quarter-finals Group stage
2010 Super League 26 8 6 12 25 30 30 11th 2nd round Group stage
2011 Super League 26 10 10 6 31 24 40 6th Quarter-finals Quarter-finals
2012 Super League 26 13 3 10 40 43 42 4th 2nd round Group stage
2013 Super League 22 8 5 9 23 27 29 7th 1st round Group stage
2014 Super League 22 8 2 12 22 27 26 9th 1st round Group stage
2015 Super League 22 8 4 10 32 33 28 8th Quarter-finals Group stage
2016 Super League 22 7 7 8 29 30 28 6th Semi-finals Group stage
2017 Super League 22 9 7 6 30 31 34 5th 3rd round Semi-finals
2018 Super League 22 10 6 6 35 27 36 2nd Quarter-finals Champions
2019 Super League 22 8 9 5 36 31 33 5th Runner-up Quarter-finals Runner-up AFC Champions League Play-off round
2020 Super League 11 5 3 3 21 19 18 4th Cancelled[a]
2021 Super League 22 4 4 14 20 45 16 11th Cancelled Group Stage
2022 Premier League 18 5 2 11 16 30 8 9th 2nd Round DNQ
2023 Super League 23 6 4 13 25 47 22 9th 1st round Semi-finals

Source:[37][38]

Individual player awards

Favourite Striker Award

Season Player
2006–07 Muhamad Khalid Jamlus

Overall Favourite Player Award

Season Player
2006–07 Kaliappan Nanthakumar

M-League Golden Boots – Top Goalscorer Overall

Season Player Goals
1997 László Répási 19
2001 Norizam Ali Hassan 13
2002 Muhamad Khalid Jamlus 17
2005–06 Keita Mandjou 17
2006–07 Keita Mandjou 21

M-League Perak FA's League Top Goalscorer

Season Player Goals
1995 Marshall Soper 11
1996 Noel Dodo Kipee 13
1997 László Répási 19
1998 László Répási 8
1999 Azrul Amri Burhan 6
M.Nagaraja
2000 Muhamad Khalid Jamlus 7
2001 Norizam Ali Hassan 13
2002 Muhamad Khalid Jamlus 17
2003 Muhamad Khalid Jamlus 9
2004 Frank Seator 14
2005 Keita Mandjou 11
2006 Keita Mandjou 17
2007 Keita Mandjou 21
2008 Carlos Arturo Caceres 17
2009 Razali Umar Kandasamy 13
2010 Mohd Nazri Mohd Kamal 6
2011 Akmal Rizal Ahmad Rakhli 9
2012 Michal Kubala 13
2013 Paulo Rangel 11
2014 Abdulafees Abdulsalam 5
Milan Purović
2015 Charles Chad 9
Namkung Woong
2016 Elias Fernandes 9
2017 Yashir Pinto 6
2018 Gilmar Filho 11
2019 Careca 7
2020 Shahrel Fikri 10
2021 Nana Poku 5
2022 Luciano Guaycochea 2
Farid Khazali
Hakimi Mat Isa
Nazmi Ahmad
Wan Zack Haikal
2023 Seo Seonung 7

All-time top goalscorer

As of 21 July 2020
# Name Years League FA Cup Malaysia Cup Charity Cup AFC Cup Total
1 Muhamad Khalid Jamlus 1999–2004, 2007–2008 78 14 35 0 5 132
2 Keita Mandjou 2004–2007 49 12 14 4 2 81
3 Frank Seator 2003–2005 26 12 12 0 6 64

Club captains history

Years Name Nationality
1985–1994 Azizol Abu Haniffah Malaysia
1995–1997 Raja Azlan Shah Raja So'ib Malaysia
1998–1999 Roslan Hamid Malaysia
2000–2008 Shahrul Azhar Malaysia
2009–2010 S. Subramaniam Malaysia
2010–2011 K. Nanthakumar Malaysia
2011–2013 Shahrulnizam Mustapa Malaysia
2014–2016 Nasir Basharudin Malaysia
2017 Shahrom Kalam Malaysia
2018 Nasir Basharudin Malaysia
2019–2021 Shahrul Saad Malaysia
2021 Hafizul Hakim Malaysia
2022 Indra Putra Mahayuddin Malaysia
2023 Hafizal Mohamad Malaysia
2023-2025 Luciano Guaycochea Argentina

Presidential history

Years Name
1957–1972 Teoh Chye Hin
1999–2006 DYTM Raja Dr. Nazrin Shah ibni Sultan Azlan Muhibbuddin Shah
2008–2010 Mohamad Nizar Jamaluddin
2010–September 2015 Zainol Fadzi Paharudin
September 2015–August 2018 Abdul Puhat Mat Nayan
August 2018–October 2018 Hasnul Zulkarnain Abdul Munaim
November 2018–January 2021 Ahmad Faizal Azumu
December 2021– Mohd Azhar Jamaluddin

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

References

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