Liga Super Malaysia
Season2018
Dates3 February – 29 July 2018
ChampionsJohor Darul Ta'zim
5th Super League title
5th Liga M title
RelegatedKelantan
Negeri Sembilan
AFC Champions LeagueJohor Darul Ta'zim
Perak
Matches played132
Goals scored402 (3.05 per match)
Top goalscorerRufino Segovia
(19 goals)
Biggest home winPahang 4–0 Negeri Sembilan
(10 March 2018)
Kedah 4–0 Selangor
(13 April 2018)
Kuala Lumpur 5–1 Kelantan
(22 May 2018)
Pahang 4–0 Kuala Lumpur
(25 May 2018)
Selangor 4–0 Kelantan
(1 June 2018)
PKNS 4–0 Terengganu
(14 July 2018)
Johor Darul Ta'zim 4–0 Kelantan
(20 July 2018)
PKNS 4–1 Perak
(28 July 2018)
Biggest away winNegeri Sembilan 0–4 Johor Darul Ta'zim
(5 May 2018)
Melaka United 0–4 Johor Darul Ta'zim
(26 June 2018)
Kuala Lumpur 1–5 Perak
(18 July 2018)
Highest scoring8 goals
PKNS 5–3 Negeri Sembilan
(11 July 2018)
Longest winning run10 games
Johor Darul Ta'zim
Longest unbeaten run19 games
Johor Darul Ta'zim
Longest winless run7 games
Melaka United
Longest losing run4 games
Selangor
Kelantan
2017
2019
All statistics correct as of 29 July 2018.

The 2018 Malaysia Super League (Malay: Liga Super Malaysia 2018), known as 2018 unifi Malaysia Super League (Malay: unifi Liga Super Malaysia 2018) for sponsorship reasons,[1] was the 15th season of the Malaysia Super League, the top-tier professional football league in Malaysia.[2]

Johor Darul Ta'zim were the defending champions.

Club licensing regulations

Starting this season, every team in the Liga Super Malaysia must have a FAM Club Licence to play in the league, or else they are relegated. To obtain a FAM Club Licence, teams must be financially healthy and meet certain standards of conduct as organisations. As part of privation effort for the league, all clubs compete in Liga Super Malaysia and Liga Premier Malaysia will be required to obtained FAM Club Licence.[3][4]

As in other national leagues, there are significant benefits to being in the top division:

  • A greater share of television broadcast licence revenues goes to Liga Super Malaysia sides.
  • Greater exposure through television and higher attendance levels helps Liga Super Malaysia teams attract the most lucrative sponsorships.
  • Liga Super Malaysia teams develop substantial financial muscle through the combination of television and gate revenues, sponsorships and marketing of their team brands. This allows them to attract and retain skilled players from domestic and international sources and to construct first-class stadium facilities.

Despite several reminders from FAM from the beginning of 2015, however there are few teams failed to get the approval for both AFC and FAM club licenses from First Instance Body (FIB) .[5][6]

Team(s) AFC Club License Status FAM Club License Status
Johor Darul Ta'zim Passed Passed
Kedah Failed Passed
Kelantan Failed Passed
Kuala Lumpur Failed Passed
Melaka United Failed Passed
Negeri Sembilan Passed Passed
Pahang Passed Passed
Perak Failed Passed
PKNP Failed Passed
PKNS Passed Passed
Selangor Passed Passed
Terengganu Failed Passed

*Updated: 6 December 2017

Teams

Sarawak and Penang were relegated to 2018 Malaysia Premier League after finished 11th and bottom place of last season league. Kuala Lumpur and Terengganu promoted to 2018 Malaysia Super League after securing place as champions and runners-up in 2017 Malaysia Premier League.

On 21 November 2017, it was announced that T-Team who finished ninth in the Super League last year, will play in the 2018 Malaysia Premier League pending approval from Football Malaysia LLP (FMLLP).[7] The suggestion then were approved on 4 December 2017, followed by an announcement stating that Felda United, who finished third last season are ineligible to compete in this year top-tier competition. They were replaced by Negeri Sembilan and PKNP.[8]

Venues

Team Location Stadium Capacity
Johor Darul Ta'zim Johor Bahru Tan Sri Dato' Haji Hassan Yunos Stadium 30,000[9]
Kedah Alor Setar Darul Aman Stadium 32,387[10]
Kelantan Kota Bharu Sultan Muhammad IV Stadium 30,000[11]
Kuala Lumpur Kuala Lumpur Kuala Lumpur Stadium 18,000[12]
Melaka United Krubong Hang Jebat Stadium 40,000[13]
Negeri Sembilan Seremban Tuanku Abdul Rahman Stadium 45,000[14]
Pahang Kuantan Darul Makmur Stadium 40,000[15]
Perak Ipoh Perak Stadium, Ipoh
Naval Base Stadium, Lumut
42,500
12,000[16]
PKNP Ipoh Perak Stadium, Ipoh
Penang State Stadium, Batu Kawan
42,500
40,000[17]
PKNS Shah Alam Shah Alam Stadium 80,372[18]
Selangor Kuala Lumpur Kuala Lumpur Stadium 18,000[19]
Terengganu Kuala Terengganu Sultan Ismail Nasiruddin Shah Stadium 15,000[20]
Source:[21]

1: ^ Perak plays at Lumut due to the upgrading of their own stadium at Perak Stadium
2: ^ PKNP plays at Batu Kawan due to the upgrading of Perak Stadium
3: ^ Kelantan plays their home games at their opponents stadium during Ramadan, due to ban of Sultan Muhammad IV Stadium usage by state government during Ramadan

Personnel, kit and sponsoring

Team Head coach Captain Kit manufacturer Main sponsor
Johor Darul Ta'zim Argentina Raúl Longhi (caretaker) Singapore Hariss Harun Nike[22] Forest City
Kedah Malaysia Nidzam Adzha Malaysia Baddrol Bakhtiar AL[23] ECK
Kelantan Malaysia Yusri Che Lah (caretaker) Malaysia Shahrizan Ismail Lotto[24] BMW Raza Premium
Kuala Lumpur Brazil Fábio Magrão[25] Malaysia Indra Putra Mahayuddin[26] SkyHawk [27] JL99, Ekovest
Melaka United Malaysia E. Elavarasan Malaysia Khairul Fahmi Che Mat Warrix[28] EDRA CGN[29]
Negeri Sembilan Portugal Mário Lemos South Korea Kim Do-heon[30] AL Matrix Concepts[30]
Pahang Malaysia Dollah Salleh[31] Malaysia Matthew Davies[32] FILA Aras Kuasa
Perak Australia Mehmet Duraković[33] Malaysia Nasir Basharudin[34] AL Lembaga Air Perak, Quest International University Archived 2018-01-25 at the Wayback Machine
PKNP Malaysia Abu Bakar Fadzim[35] Malaysia Hafiz Ramdan FILA Perak Corp Archived 2020-02-18 at the Wayback Machine, MAPS
PKNS Malaysia K. Rajagopal[36] Malaysia Safee Sali Kappa PKNS
Selangor Malaysia Nazliazmi Nasir Malaysia Amri Yahyah Lotto redONE, CRRC
Terengganu Malaysia Irfan Bakti[37] Ivory Coast Kipré Tchétché Kobert Chicken Cottage

Coaching changes

  •    Indicate the positions in the relegation zone.
Team Outgoing coach Manner of departure Date of vacancy Week Table Incoming coach Date of
appointment
PKNS Sven Gartung End of contract 31 October 2017 Pre-season K. Rajagopal 22 November 2017[36]
Kelantan Zahasmi Ismail End of contract 30 November 2017 Sathit Bensoh 7 December 2017[38]
Kedah Nidzam Adzha Resigned 30 November 2017 Ramón Marcote 11 December 2017[39]
Negeri Sembilan Asri Ninggal End of contract 30 November 2017 Jorg Steinebrunner 20 December 2017[40]
Kelantan Sathit Bensoh Sacked 15 February 2018 3 12 Yusri Che Lah (caretaker) 16 February 2018[41]
Johor Darul Ta'zim Ulisses Morais Resigned 25 February 2018 4 1 Raúl Longhi (caretaker) 26 February 2018[42]
Negeri Sembilan Jorg Steinebrunner Resigned 28 February 2018 4 11 Azraai Khor 28 February 2018[43]
Selangor P. Maniam Rested 14 March 2018 5 8 Nazliazmi Nasir (caretaker) 14 March 2018[44]
Kelantan Yusri Che Lah (caretaker) End of caretaker role 19 March 2018 5 11 Fajr Ibrahim 21 March 2018[45]
Kedah Ramón Marcote Move to development coach 28 March 2018 5 6 Nidzam Adzha 28 March 2018[46]
Melaka United Eduardo Almeida Sacked 2 May 2018 8 7 E. Elavarasan 7 May 2018[47]
Negeri Sembilan Azraai Khor Sacked 10 May 2018 10 12 Mario Lemos 10 May 2018[48]
Kelantan Fajr Ibrahim Resigned 5 June 2018 14 12 Yusri Che Lah (caretaker) 5 June 2018[49]

Foreign players

Southeast Asia (SEA) players need to have acquired at least 30 international caps for their senior national team with no period restriction on when caps are earned and those who has less than 30 international caps will be subjected to FMLLP approval.

Players name in bold indicates the player is registered during the mid-season transfer window.

Club Player 1 Player 2 Player 3 AFC Player ASEAN Player Former Players
Johor Darul Ta'zim Brazil Marcos António[50] Argentina Fernando Elizari[51] Argentina Fernando Márquez[52] Iraq Gonzalo Cabrera[53] Singapore Hariss Harun[54] Argentina Jorge Pereyra Díaz[55][56]
Argentina Luciano Figueroa[57]
France Harry Novillo[58]
Argentina Nicolás Fernández
Brazil Jorge[57]
Kedah Kosovo Liridon Krasniqi[59] Brazil Sandro[60] Brazil Paulo Rangel[61] Indonesia Andik Vermansyah[62] Philippines Álvaro Silva[63] Spain Pablo Pallarès[64]
Kelantan Brazil Cássio[65] Brazil Cristiano[66] Brazil Bruno Lopes[67][68]
Indonesia Ferdinand Sinaga[69]
Lebanon Mohammed Ghaddar[70]
Senegal Morgaro Gomis[71]
South Korea Do Dong-hyun[72]
Tunisia Alaeddine Bouslimi[73][66]
Namibia Lazarus Kaimbi[74]
Kuala Lumpur Brazil Paulo Josué[75] Brazil Juninho[76] Brazil Guilherme de Paula[77] Uzbekistan Bobirjon Akbarov[78] Indonesia Achmad Jufriyanto[79]
Melaka United France Steven Thicot[80] Nigeria Ifedayo Olusegun[81] Belarus Yahor Zubovich[82] South Korea Lee Chang-hoon[83] Singapore Shahdan Sulaiman[84] Portugal Tiago Gomes[80]
South Korea Jeon Woo-young[85]
Negeri Sembilan Brazil Alex Moraes[86] Brazil Flávio Júnior[87] Argentina Nicolás Vélez[88] South Korea Kim Do-heon[89] Philippines Ángel Guirado[86] Cambodia Prak Mony Udom[86]
Latvia Renārs Rode
Pahang The Gambia Mohamadou Sumareh[90] Nigeria Austin Amutu[91] Brazil Patrick Cruz[92] Japan Issey Nakajima-Farran[91] Singapore Safuwan Baharudin[93] Argentina Sergio Unrein
Brazil Alex Moraes
Cambodia Chan Vathanaka[91]
Liberia Francis Doe[91]
Perak Brazil Leandro[94] Brazil Wander Luiz[95] Brazil Gilmar[94] Lebanon Jad Noureddine[96] Philippines Misagh Bahadoran[95][97]
Australia Robert Cornthwaite[98]
PKNP Latvia Ritus Krjauklis[99] Central African Republic Franklin Anzité[99] South Korea Kim Sang-woo[100] Cambodia Keo Sokpheng[99][101]
South Korea Yeon Gi-sung[99]
Bulgaria Lyuben Nikolov[99]
PKNS Colombia Romel Morales[102] Brazil Bruno Matos[81] Brazil Rafael Ramazotti[103] Australia Zac Anderson[104] Singapore Faris Ramli[102] Argentina Jonathan Acosta[104][81]
Selangor Brazil Willian Pacheco[105] Spain Alfonso de la Cruz[106] Spain Rufino Segovia[107] Indonesia Evan Dimas[108] Indonesia Ilham Armaiyn[108]
Terengganu Serbia Igor Zonjić[109] England Lee Tuck[109] Ivory Coast Kipré Tchétché[110] South Korea Do Dong-hyun[111] Cambodia Thierry Bin[109] South Korea Kim Hyun-woo
South Korea Lee Jun-hyeob[112]
Japan Bruno Suzuki[113]

Naturalisation players

Club Player 1 Player 2 Player 3 Player 4 Player 5
Johor Darul Ta'zim SwedenEnglandMalaysia Junior Eldstål3 4 EnglandMalaysia Darren Lok3 4 SpainMalaysia Natxo Insa3 4 CanadaBarbadosMalaysia La'Vere Corbin-Ong3 4 SpainMalaysia Kiko Insa3 4
Melaka United New ZealandMalaysia Khair Jones3 4 EnglandMalaysia Nicholas Swirad3
Negeri Sembilan AustraliaMalaysia David Rowley3
Pahang AustraliaMalaysia Matthew Davies3 4
Perak AustraliaMalaysia Brendan Gan3 4
PKNS EnglandMalaysia Daniel Ting3

Notes:

^3 Carrying Malaysian heritage.
^4 Participated in the Malaysia national team squad.

Results

League table

Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Qualification or relegation
1 Johor Darul Ta'zim (C) 22 19 2 1 47 9 +38 59 Qualification for the AFC Champions League group stage
2 Perak 22 10 6 6 35 27 +8 36 Qualification for the AFC Champions League second preliminary round
3 PKNS 22 10 5 7 37 29 +8 35
4 Pahang 22 9 7 6 35 21 +14 34
5 Terengganu 22 10 4 8 32 31 +1 34
6 Kedah 22 9 5 8 37 36 +1 32
7 Melaka United 22 9 4 9 33 38 5 31
8 Selangor 22 7 6 9 35 39 4 27
9 PKNP 22 7 4 11 25 31 6 25
10 Kuala Lumpur 22 7 3 12 39 51 12 24
11 Kelantan (R) 22 5 3 14 20 43 23 18 Relegation to the Premier League
12 Negeri Sembilan (R) 22 4 3 15 27 47 20 15
Source: FAM, FMLLP
Rules for classification: 1) Points; 2) Goal difference; 3) Number of goals scored.
(C) Champions; (R) Relegated

Result table

Home \ Away JDT KED KEL KLU MEL NSE PAH PRK PKP PKN SEL TRG
Johor DT 2–1 4–0 2–0 3–0 2–0 1–0 2–0 3–0 3–0 2–0 2–0
Kedah 1–2 1–2 3–2 0–2 3–3 2–0 1–3 1–3 2–1 4–0 1–1
Kelantan 1–2 0–1 4–2 1–1 0–2 2–1 3–2 1–2 0–2 2–1 1–1
Kuala Lumpur 1–0 4–3 5–1 3–4 2–1 2–2 1–5 1–1 2–1 0–2 3–0
Melaka United 0–4 4–1 2–1 2–4 3–0 2–2 1–2 2–0 1–1 3–2 0–3
Negeri Sembilan 0–4 1–2 1–1 2–0 1–3 1–3 1–1 1–2 3–1 3–1 1–2
Pahang 1–2 2–2 3–0 4–0 2–0 4–0 0–0 0–0 1–0 1–1 0–1
Perak 1–2 0–0 1–0 3–0 0–0 2–0 1–1 4–3 0–2 3–0 3–2
PKNP 1–2 0–1 2–0 2–1 1–2 1–0 1–2 1–2 0–1 0–2 2–1
PKNS 0–0 3–4 1–0 3–2 2–0 5–3 1–0 4–1 1–1 2–2 4–0
Selangor 2–2 1–2 4–0 3–3 4–1 2–1 1–3 1–1 1–1 2–1 2–0
Terengganu 0–1 1–1 2–0 3–1 1–0 3–2 1–3 2–0 2–1 2–2 4–1
Updated to match(es) played on 29 July 2018. Source: FAM, FMLLP
Legend: Blue = home team win; Yellow = draw; Red = away team win.
For upcoming matches, an "a" indicates there is an article about the rivalry between the two participants.

Positions by round

  Leader
  Relegation to 2019 Liga Premier
Team \ Round 12345678910111213141516171819202122
Johor Darul Ta'zim2221111111111111111111
Perak8379643322223322222222
Pahang71063222233332233453434
PKNS5414355644666666666353
Terengganu6852534455445555535645
Kedah91186766566554444344566
PKNP4711810997777788910101088109
Selangor113581081098999988789988
Kuala Lumpur121210129810889887779891010910
Melaka United36474779101010101010107977777
Kelantan1091210111111111111 1111 12121212121111 121211
Negeri Sembilan11591112121212121212121111111111 1212111112

Season statistics

Top scorers

Top assists

Players sorted first by assists, then by last name.

Rank Player Club Assists
1 Brazil Paulo Josué Kuala Lumpur 9
2 Argentina Gonzalo Cabrera Johor Darul Ta'zim 7
3 Malaysia Akhyar Rashid Kedah 6
Brazil Bruno Matos PKNS
Malaysia Hafiz Ramdan PKNP
Singapore Safuwan Baharudin Pahang

Hat-tricks

PlayerForAgainstResultDate
South Korea Do Dong-hyun Kelantan Perak 3–2 (H) 24 February 2018
Spain Rufino Segovia Selangor Kelantan 4–0 (H) 1 June 2018
Ivory Coast Kipré Tchétché Terengganu Negeri Sembilan 3–2 (H) 27 June 2018
Spain Rufino Segovia Selangor Kuala Lumpur 3–3 (H) 15 July 2018

Notes:
(H) – Home ; (A) – Away

Clean sheets

As of matches played on 28 July 2018.
Rank Player Club Clean
sheets
1 Malaysia Farizal Marlias Johor Darul Ta'zim 13
2 Malaysia Helmi Eliza Elias Pahang 7
3 Malaysia Hafizul Hakim Perak 6
4 Malaysia Shahril Saa'ri PKNS 5
5 Malaysia Wan Azraie Terengganu 3
Malaysia Ramadhan Hamid Kedah

See also

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