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Introduction to FAM
The Football Association of Malaysia (FAM) is the governing body
for soccer in Malaysia, responsible for organising the Malaysian
national football team and the major soccer tournaments within
the country. Football arrived in Malaya with the British. The
locals soon picked up the game, and before long it was the
country's leading sport. Towards the end of the nineteenth
century, football was one of the central pillars of most sports
clubs in Malaya. But it was not structured. Even when the
Selangor Amateur Football League took shape in 1905 – which
ensured proper administration and organisation – the competition
was confined only to clubs in the Kuala Lumpur area.
In 1921, a national tournament featuring all the states that
made up Malaya was started. The competition, known as the Malaya
Cup (later renamed the Malaysia Cup in 1963), is widely regarded
as the most prestigious and has been held since then, except
during the war years.
In 1926 the Selangor Amateur Football League was established,
and in 1936 the Football Association of Selangor was formed.
While the Selangor FA was moving towards organised football, and
inspiring other states in Malaya to follow suit, the battleship
HMS Malaya visited the country in 1920. After engaging local
opposition in football and rugby, the officers and men of HMS
Malaya decided to commemorate the matches by presenting trophies
for annual competitions in both rugby and football in Malaya. |