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Merdeka Tournament
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Merdeka Tournament

Merdeka Football Tournament
Organising bodyFAM
Founded1957; 68 years ago (1957)
RegionInternational
Number of teamsVaried
(4 in 2024)
Current champions Malaysia (13th title)
Most successful team(s) Malaysia (13 titles)
2025 Merdeka Tournament

Merdeka Tournament (Malay: Pestabola Merdeka) is an international friendly football tournament held in Malaysia to commemorate the Independence Day. It is mainly played at Independence Stadium, in Kuala Lumpur.[1] "Merdeka" is the Malay word for independence. As of 2024, the tournament has been held 43 times, though with decreasing frequency in recent decades.

The Merdeka Tournament is the oldest invitational football tournament in Asia, and the matches in the tournament are considered International "A" matches (Friendly match) by FIFA.[2]

History

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The winner of the second season of Merdeka Cup in 1958, Malaya football team, five years before the merger to form Malaysia. Also in the picture is Tunku Abdul Rahman (centre), the first Prime Minister of Malaya, and at that time president of Football Association of Malaya & Asian Football Confederation.[3][4]

The Merdeka Tournament is Asia`s oldest football tournament which invited football playing nations to compete since 1957.[5][6][7][8] The tournament also was once called the ‘Mini Asia Cup’ around the 1960s to 1980s, which was founded by the former AFC President, Tunku Abdul Rahman.[9][10] At that time, the FIFA president, Sir Stanley Rous, was just as surprised that newly independent Asian country could successfully organize a football tournament where all expenses of the visiting teams were fully borne by the host.[11] The Merdeka Tournament proved to be a huge success, inspiring similar tournaments like the Jakarta Anniversary Tournament in Indonesia, the King's Cup in Thailand and the President's Cup in South Korea.[12] While the tournament had been held annually from 1957 to 1988, it has been held only ten times from 1989 to 2023. During the late 1950s to early 1980s, it was a prestigious tournament among Asian nations because the participants sent their full senior players.[13] After the 1980s, interest in the cup waned from both football fans and football teams, because many Asian nations focused more on the qualification phases in the FIFA World Cup and AFC Asian Cup.[14]

The first edition of the tournament was held in August and September 1957 with British Hong Kong emerging inaugural champions.[15] However, from then on it was purely dominated by Malaysia, South Korea, Myanmar, Indonesia and a host of other countries, including South American and European clubs.[16]

Malaysia/Malaya exclusively lifted the trophy ten times, emerged runners-up on eight occasions, and in addition shared the winner’s rostrum twice with South Korea (1960 and 1979), while South Korean sides have won it seven times.

Indonesia, Taiwan and Myanmar hold multi-winning accolades. The other champions were Morocco (1980), New Zealand (2000), Uzbekistan (2001), Czechoslovakia Olympic (1987) and Austria’s with their SK Admira Wacker (1991), German Hamburger SV (1988), Argentinian Buenos Aires XI (1983) and Brazilian Santa Catarina XI (1982).

Brazilian states' São Paulo XI, Minas Gerais XI, and America FC Rio de Janeiro finished runners-up, as have Japan and India.

The 2024 Merdeka Tournament would be held in September 2024. Three countries will be invited to the tournament, from Kim Pan-gon's decision. The tournament uses the same format as the 2023 edition, where higher-ranked teams received a bye in the semi-final, and only waiting in the finals.[17]

List of finals

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Merdeka Tournament logo in 2013.

Below are the list of Merdeka Football Tournament finals since 1957.[18][19]

Ed. Year Winners Score Runners-up
1 1957 Hong Kong Hong Kong League XI[a] Round-robin  Indonesia
2 1958  Malaya Round-robin Hong Kong Hong Kong League XI[a]
3 1959  Malaya Round-robin  India
4 1960  Malaya and  South Korea 0–0[b]
5 1961  Indonesia 2–1  Malaya
6 1962  Indonesia 2–1  Pakistan
7 1963  Taiwan[a] Round-robin  Japan
8 1964  Burma 1–0  India
9 1965  South Korea and  Taiwan[a] 1–1[b]
10 1966  South Vietnam 1–0  Burma
11 1967  Burma and  South Korea[c] 0–0[b]
12 1968  Malaysia 3–0  Burma
13 1969  Indonesia 3–2  Malaysia
14 1970  South Korea 1–0  Burma
15 1971  Burma 1–0  Indonesia
16 1972  South Korea 2–1  Malaysia
17 1973  Malaysia 3–1  Kuwait
18 1974  Malaysia 1–0 South Korea South Korea B
19 1975  South Korea 1–0  Malaysia
20 1976  Malaysia 2–0  Japan
21 1977  South Korea 1–0  Iraq
22 1978  South Korea 2–0  Iraq
23 1979  Malaysia and South Korea South Korea B 0–0[b]
24 1980  Morocco 2–1  Malaysia
25 1981  Iraq 1–0 Brazil São Paulo XI
26 1982 Brazil Santa Catarina XI 3–0  Ghana
27 1983 Argentina Buenos Aires XI 2–1  Algeria XI
28 1984 South Korea South Korea B 2–0 Brazil Minas Gerais XI
29 1985 South Korea South Korea B 7–4 (a.e.t.) Brazil America Rio de Janeiro
30 1986  Malaysia 3–0  Czechoslovakia XI
31 1987  Czechoslovakia Olympic 3–2  South Korea
32 1988 West Germany Hamburger SV 1–0 Austria Tirol Innsbruck
33 1991 Austria Admira Wacker 3–0  China Olympic Team
34 1993  Malaysia 3–1 South Korea South Korea
35 1995  Iraq 2–0 Hungary Budapesti Vasas
36 2000  New Zealand 2–0  Malaysia
37 2001  Uzbekistan 2–1  Bosnia and Herzegovina
38 2006  Myanmar 2–1  Indonesia
39 2007  Malaysia U-23 3–1  Myanmar
40 2008  Vietnam U-22 0–0 (6–5 (p))  Malaysia
41 2013  Malaysia U-23 2–0  Myanmar U-23
42 2023  Tajikistan 2–0  Malaysia
43 2024  Malaysia 1–0  Lebanon

Records and statistics

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Performance by nations

[edit]

Below are the records of national teams (including youth teams) since 1957.

# Team 1st place, gold medalist(s) Titles 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Runners-up Total
1  Malaysia[d] 13[e] 8 20
2  South Korea[f] 11[g] 3 14
3  Myanmar[h] 4[i] 5 9
4  Indonesia 3 3 6
5  Iraq 2 2 4
6  Taiwan[a] 2[i] 0 2
 Vietnam[j] 2 0 2
8 Hong Kong Hong Kong League XI[a] 1 1 2
 Czechoslovakia[k] 1 1 2
10  Morocco 1 0 1
 New Zealand 1 0 1
 Uzbekistan 1 0 1
 Tajikistan 1 0 1
14  India 0 2 2
 Japan 0 2 2
16  Pakistan 0 1 1
 Kuwait 0 1 1
 Ghana 0 1 1
 Algeria XI 0 1 1
 China Olympic Team 0 1 1
 Bosnia and Herzegovina 0 1 1
 Lebanon 0 1 1

Performance by state or club teams

[edit]

Below are the records of state or clubteams since 1957.

# Team 1st place, gold medalist(s) Titles 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Runners-up Total
1 Brazil Santa Catarina XI 1 0 1
Argentina Buenos Aires XI 1 0 1
West Germany Hamburger SV 1 0 1
Austria SK Admira Wacker 1 0 1
5 Brazil São Paulo XI 0 1 1
Brazil Minas Gerais XI 0 1 1
Brazil America Rio de Janeiro 0 1 1
Austria Tirol Innsbruck 0 1 1
Hungary Budapesti Vasas 0 1 1

All-time top scorers

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# Player Team Matches Goals Ratio Ref.
1 Mokhtar Dahari Malaysia Malaysia 50 36 0.72 [20]
2 Kunishige Kamamoto Japan Japan 18 22 1.22 [21]
3 Abdul Kadir Indonesia Indonesia 36 22 0.61 [22]
4 Cha Bum-kun South Korea South Korea 34 21 0.62 [23]
5 Abdul Ghani Minhat Malaysia Malaysia 32 19 0.60 [24]

Top scorers

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Year Player Team Goals
1986 Krishanu Dey
Zainal Abidin Hassan
 India
 Malaysia
6
1987 Václav Daněk  Czechoslovakia Olympic 6
1988 Peter Pacult Austria Tirol Innsbruck 5
1991 Ernst Ogris Austria SK Admira Wacker 4
1993 Petar Aleksandrov Switzerland Aarau 4
1995 Lee Woo-young  South Korea B 3
2000 Chris Killen  New Zealand 3
2001 Bakhtiyor Hamidullaev
Husain Ali
 Uzbekistan
 Bahrain
3
2006 Indra Putra Mahayuddin  Malaysia 3
2007 Safee Sali  Malaysia U-23 4
2008 Safee Sali (2)  Malaysia 5
2013 Rozaimi Rahman  Malaysia U-23 3
2023 8 players  India
 Malaysia
 Tajikistan
1
2024 5 players  Lebanon
 Malaysia
 Philippines
1

Notes

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References

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