
JDT set for total dominance again after productive pre-season in Alicante
PETALING JAYA: Johor Darul Ta'zim (JDT) are returning from Spain with valuable lessons and a clearer sense of direction after completing a productive pre-season stint in Alicante.
The Southern Tigers recorded three wins, two draws and two defeats from seven friendly matches.
On Tuesday, they defeated Saudi Arabian club Riyadh 1-0, which was their last match in the series.
Their other wins were against Spanish clubs Real Murcia (4-1) and Costa City 1-0.
They drew with La Liga club Levante (1-1) and English Championship side Cardiff City (2-2) and lost to Valencia (0-1) and Qatar club Al-Rayyan (0-1).
The club's chief executive officer (CEO) Luis Garcia of Spain said the results had given them a balanced mix of confidence and reality checks ahead of the new season starting on Aug 8.
'We have identified areas to work on to continue our good run in Malaysian football,' he said.
JDT will enter the season as the heavyweights, having won a triple quadruple – Charity Shield, Super League, FA Cup and Malaysia Cup from 2022 to the 2024-2025 season.
'The game against Al-Rayyan was a demanding match where we controlled and performed well for most of the game, though we missed the final touch,' said Garcia.
'The pre-season has allowed us to identify areas for improvement, to sharpen our game, and to prepare ourselves for the challenges of a long season ahead.'
Despite the mixed results, Garcia emphasised that pre-season was more than just scorelines.
'Moments like these build more than fitness as they build connection, unity, and a stronger bond within the group. We work, we play, we align. One objective, one direction. Let's keep growing together.'
Garcia, in his first full campaign at the helm of JDT, has unveiled a long-term vision.
'A new season begins, not just with a team, but with a vision. At JDT, every year is a new chapter to dream bigger, push harder, and lead with purpose.
'This is more than football. It's a project built on ambition, unity, and belief.
''The best is yet to come.'
JDT, who will kick off against Selangor in the Charity Shield on Aug 8, have set a clear mission – to write their next dominant chapter in the game.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Star
4 minutes ago
- The Star
Soccer-English grit beats Spanish skill to secure Euro glory
Soccer Football - UEFA Women's Euro 2025 - Final - England v Spain - St. Jakob-Park, Basel, Switzerland - July 27, 2025 England's Ella Toone with teammates celebrate with the trophy after winning the UEFA Women's Euro 2025 REUTERS/Denis Balibouse BASEL, Switzerland (Reuters) -England were on the ropes often at the Women's Euros, and they always found a knockout blow, before beating Spain in a final penalty shootout to show that skill may be a way to dominate games, but it takes the heart of a lioness to win them. Chloe Kelly was the hero, firing in the spot-kick to ensure the defending champions retained their crown, but every English player had to dig deep to thwart a Spanish side who were best everywhere except on the final scoreboard. Down 2-0 at the break, England's tournament almost ended in the quarter-finals as Sweden looked set to cruise through, but Kelly and Michelle Agyemang dragged the champions back into the game with late goals before they won the penalty shootout despite having four kicks saved. They made heavy weather of Italy in the semis and again Kelly came to the rescue, scoring a 119th-minute winner to send them into the final despite another flawed performance. In contrast, Spain cruised, purring like the engine of one of the many sports cars that can be seen zipping along city streets in the more affluent parts of Switzerland. They beat the host nation, and eased past Germany in the semis to make the final. They met England in the 2023 World Cup final when a first-half goal set Spain on course for victory and their first major title. The story was almost a carbon copy on Sunday as they took the lead through Mariona Caldentey in the 25th minute. Led by playmaker Aitan Bonmati, the Spaniards sensed a weakness on England's left flank and probed it relentlessly until Ona Batlle came up with the cross for Caldentey to score. KELLY INTRODUCTION The introduction of Kelly before the break for the injured Lauren James strengthened that wing, and when Kelly set Russo up for the equaliser the tide did not exactly turn, but the belief of the English players certainly grew. Battered by a number of crunching tackles, fullbacks Lucy Bronze and Alex Greenwood continued to throw themselves into every challenge, while captain Leah Williamson made a lung-bursting run to create a late chance that hinted at reserves of energy not even she knew she had. Having been to the brink so many times, England believed. When the game finished 1-1 and the penalty shootout awaited, the English players seemed relaxed and confident, with their Spanish counterparts looking slightly more on edge. The Spaniards had the game in the palms of their hands for 120 minutes, but it began slipping away as Hannah Hamton started to save their spot-kicks, first from Caldentey and then from Bonmati, before Paralluelo fired her effort wide. Kelly made no mistake, lashing the ball into the net as the English fans in the stadiumerupted in joy. "This is England, I think this is our moment, we've dug in for the 120 minutes, we've done what we needed to do to keep Spain out. It was just one kick and that was it and so we did that this time," Hampton said. For all their dominance, this is a final that Spain will feel got away from them. Despite all their success in recent years, they lacked the cutting edge they needed to get the job done, and when it really mattered, England had it in spades. (Reporting by Philip O'Connor, editing by ed Osmond)


New Straits Times
16 hours ago
- New Straits Times
Guardiola and Xavi applications a hoax, says Indian football
NEW DELHI: Coaching applications supposedly from Pep Guardiola and Xavi Hernandez to manage India's football team turned out to be a hoax, the national association said yesterday. Subrata Paul, national team director of the All India Football Federation (AIFF), said earlier this week that Xavi had applied to the vacant job. But the AIFF this weekend said the approaches were not "genuine." "The AIFF received an email furnishing the applications from Spanish coaches Pep Guardiola and Xavi Hernandez. The authenticity of their applications could not be confirmed, and it has since emerged that the email applications were not genuine," the AIFF said in a statement. Manchester City manager Guardiola's application was never reported earlier. The Indian men's team are without a coach since Spaniard Manolo Marquez stepped down earlier this month as head coach after just one year and one win in eight games. The AIFF advertised the vacancy, and later said it received 170 applications. India's men are 133rd in the FIFA rankings — their lowest placing in nearly a decade — and have won just one of their last 16 matches.


New Straits Times
18 hours ago
- New Straits Times
Spanish harmony to battle English resilience in Women's Euro final
BASEL, (Switzerland): Today's final of the Women's Euros in Basel pitches the two best European teams of the current generation against each other, as a unified Spain side bristling with technique and intelligence takes on an equally talented England side that never gives up. Both sides have overcome adversity on their way to the final, with Spain almost losing playmaker Aitana Bonmati to a pre-tournament meningitis scare, and Sarina Wiegman's England coming close to elimination twice in the knockout round, only for late heroics to see them through. "We need to be at our best to beat Spain. I think they need to be at their best to beat us, too," England captain Leah Williamson told a media conference on yesterday. "I think there's a lot of respect between the two teams, and I'd be hesitant to rule an underdog in this scenario." Both sides said that all 23 squad members were fit and available for selection today, setting the stage for what is expected to be an intriguing battle of skill, wit and nerves. Defending champions England may not have played particularly well in their five games so far, but they have displayed an uncanny ability to snatch victory from the jaws of defeat in the knockout stage, first with a shootout win over Sweden and then with a come-from-behind extra-time victory over Italy. "I know that we've left it late," Williamson admitted. "(That was) definitely not the plan, we'd really like to wrap things up a little earlier and a little easier if we could." Spain have also gotten off to several slow starts, but they have still run out convincing winners in their five games to date, eventually finding a way to break down their opponents. "We have a particular way of playing, of training, we are very confident. Even if we won the games, there are things always that we can correct, things we see on video that we practice, and that's our line of work," Spain captain Irene Paredes said. The Spain team for Sunday's final is a much more harmonious one than the one that took beat England 1-0 in the World Cup final in 2023, when several of the best Spanish players boycotted the tournament in a dispute with coaching staff and their federation. Though Spain won that game 1-0 to claim their first major title, Montse Tome's squad has given a much more unified impression in Switzerland, with none of the negativity that surrounded them at that World Cup. "(This tournament) shows the change we are making, and right now I believe that, for all their efforts, the squad deserves to win," Tome said. "When you are in the elite football world that's not always the case, but we will do everything to win the final tomorrow (today)." Spain's only defeat in their last 14 games came at the hands of Sarina Wiegman's side in the Nations League in February, and they will be slight favourites for today's decider, but Paredes said such labels make little difference when the game kicks off. "I think both teams deserve to be in the final. We wanted to be there, at the beginning of the tournament that was our objective, to play six games. We're on our way. Tomorrow is number six," she told reporters. "We don't like this idea of being favourites. We know what it takes to be here, what we have to suffer, and we have to be focused."