Football

Woman in a man's boots

WHEN she was first offered the job in 2014, Siti Zubaidah Abdul Jabar thought she would be mad to accept it.

It is to run a football club at the highest level in Malaysian football — the Super League. That is usually a man’s job in a male-dominated sport.

Zubaidah, the chief corporate officer of the Selangor State Development Corporation (PKNS) was asked to be the president of their football team.

Zubaidah, 58, a Social Science graduate from Universiti Malaya, admitted that initially she was apprehensive about taking up the role.

“My first reaction was ‘what, this is madness. To me, as a woman, football knowledge and a supporting role are two different things.”

And Zubaidah’s first year as PKNS FC’s president didn’t have a happy ending.

Her club finished 12th in the Super League and they were subsequently demoted to the Premier League.

“In my first year (as PKNS FC president), the team were relegated. That was was tough,” she admitted.

But the lady boss was not one who got discouraged easily.

Zubaidah said during this period, she not only pushed herself but the management to target for a return to the Super League in two years. And PKNS FC did just that in 2016 when they finished runnersup in the Premier League and FA

Cup to win promotion.

That year, PKNS lost 2-1 to Johor Darul Ta’zim in the FA Cup final. PKNS’ goal was scored by Argentine striker Gabriel Miguel Guerra while Safiq Rahim and Jorge Pereyra Diaz of Argentina found the net for the Johor team.

After five years at the helm of PKNS FC, Zubaidah admitted that everyday is a learning curve for her. But she said her job has been made easier by the great support from her coaching team and the players.

“When I was elected, my mission was to turn PKNS FC into a professional team.

“I left the technical and tactical aspects to the more qualified people while I focus on managing the club,” she said.

But the PKNS chief corporate officer admitted that it was tough to get things going in her early years.

This did not deter Zubaidah from working tirelessly to improve PKNS and they were among the first three teams in the 24-team M-League to obtain a club licence when the FA of Malaysia made it a ruling.

“There’s nothing easy in football. Every game is different. There are challenges, win or lose. Nothing should be taken for granted.

“Football administration and financial management are important as you need to learn to spend within the budget and do what’s right for the club,” she said.

Zubaidah, who has worked with three PKNS coaches, E. Elavarasan, Wan Jamak Wan Hassan and currently Datuk K. Rajagobal, said she has instilled values in their players with the te am’s philosophy.

“I have seen how the three coaches work. The biggest difference in the current team I would say is that they play because they genuinely want to play football.

“If it were the old team, the players would be okay sitting on the bench but now when we look at the young players, they came because they want to play, to showcase their talent. And we can groom them right that way.

“That’s what makes this current team so special,” she said.

For the fairer sex eyeing a career in football management, Zubaidah, a mother of four, said she would love to see more women in the industry.

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