Mohammad Al-Shamlan
Personal information | |||
---|---|---|---|
Full name | Mohammed Shamlan Mubarak Basheer Al-Shamlan | ||
Date of birth | (1972-12-26) 26 December 1972 (age 51)[1] | ||
Place of birth | Bahrain | ||
Position(s) | Defender (playing career) | ||
Team information | |||
Current team | Hidd SCC (manager) | ||
International career | |||
Years | Team | Apps | (Gls) |
Bahrain | |||
Managerial career | |||
2005–2007 | Pakistan (assistant) | ||
2010 | Bahrain U-23 | ||
2012–2013 | Manama Club | ||
2013–2015 | Pakistan | ||
2014–2015 | Pakistan U-23 | ||
2016 | Riffa SC | ||
2017 | Hidd SCC | ||
2017–2019 | Manama Club | ||
2019–2021 | Hidd SCC | ||
2021 | Al-Khaldiya SC | ||
2022– | Hidd SCC |
Mohammad Al-Shamlan (born 26 December 1972) is a Bahraini football coach. Besides Bahrain, he has managed in Pakistan.[2][3] Leading the Bahrain Olympic Team to the 2010 Asian Games, he left them after a dismal campaign which saw them fail to progress past the group stage.[4] Was denied entry into Palestine by Israel to join his team in the 2014 Palestine International Championship for some days and was forced to sit out of their first game.[5]
Career
He sent 5 goalkeeping coaches to License B training courses in Bahrain when managing Pakistan and was the only foreign coach to deliberately quit the Pakistan job.[6]
Pakistan National Team
Mohammad Al-Shamlan was designated as manager of Pakistan in 2013, asking for a six-month buffer period in order to yield positive results.[7] As their manager, he tried to utilize Pakistan's football talent[4] but failed and quit the job in summer 2015, joining Riffa SC in the Bahraini Premier League.[8] With Al-Shamlan as coach, Pakistan failed to progress to the second round of the 2018 FIFA World Cup qualification.
Pakistan Under 23's
Blamed for unsatisfactory results for the Pakistan U-23's in the 2016 AFC U-23 Championship qualifying stages and losing all matches, he was backed by the Pakistan Football Federation.
References
- ^ FIFA.com
- ^ ""المدرب الأسمر" محمد الشملان ل "البلاد سبورت":". albiladpress.com.
- ^ "أنا سفير للكرة البحرينية.. محمد الشملان تدريبي لباكستان ليس مغامرة وتم تكليفي مديرا فنيا". akhbar-alkhaleej.com.
- ^ a b "Coach Shamlan looks to utilize Pakistan's football talent". Dawn.com. 23 August 2013. Retrieved 2 March 2017.
- ^ "Pakistan coach made to wait in Jordan". 13 May 2014.
- ^ "A friendly coach - TNS - The News on Sunday".
- ^ "Pakistan's Mohammed Shamlan: I don't have a magic wand - Goal.com". 27 August 2013.
- ^ "Satisfied Shamlan says goodbye to Pakistan".
External links
- Mohammad Al-Shamlan coach profile at Soccerway
- Mohammad Al-Shamlan at FootballDatabase.eu
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- Riaz (1950–52)
- Rahman (1953)
- Riaz (1954)
- Durrani (1955)
- ? (1956–57)
- Sharif (1958)
- Hussain (1959)
- Ramizuddin (1959)
- Ainsley (1959–62)
- Alic (1960)
- Ali (1963)
- Atiq (1964)
- ? (1965–66)
- Amin (1967)
- ? (1968–72)
- Amin (1973)
- Kalocsay (1974–80)
- Trautmann (1980–83)
- ? (1984)
- Changezi (1985–87)
- Ziese (1987–90)
- Aslam (1991–93)
- ? (1994–96)
- Idrees (1997)
- ? (1998)
- Pearu (1999)
- Dias (1999)
- Burns (2000–01)
- Layton (2001–02)
- Herel (2002–03)
- Wang Xiaohe (2003–04)
- Lutfi (2005)
- Sharida (2005–07)
- Mohiuddin (2007–08)
- Anwarc (2008)
- Kottán (2009–10)
- Mohiuddin (2010)
- Roberts (2010–11)
- Lutfic (2011)
- Milosavljević (2011–13)
- Anwarc (2013)
- Al-Shamlan (2013–15)
- Nogueira (2018–19)
- Lutfi (2019–21)
- Anwar (2022–23)
- Constantine (2023–)
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