N. Ganesan

In this Indian name, the name Nadesan is a patronymic, not a family name, and the person should be referred to by the given name, Ganesan.
Nadesan Ganesan
PBM
Born 31 October 1932
Singapore
Died 1 July 2015 (aged 82)
Singapore
Title FAS chairman
Term 1976–1982
Predecessor R.B.I. Pates
Successor Teo Chong Tee

Nadesan Ganesan, PBM (31 October 1932 – 1 July 2015) was a chairman of the Football Association of Singapore. He served as FAS vice-chairman for two years before he was appointed chairman on 31 March 1976,[1] and was a vice-president of the Asian Football Confederation. He stepped down as FAS chairman in 1982. He was a criminal lawyer by trade.[2]

Ganesan was born in Tank Road to Ceylonese Tamil parents, the youngest of five children. After the war, he studied at Victoria School and later at Anglo-Chinese School. He had been a table-tennis and hockey player, a track athlete and a footballer.

He was responsible for changing the Malaysia Cup venue from the Jalan Besar Stadium to the 55,000 capacity National Stadium.[3] He also revamped the local leagues and their 118 teams into the 30-team National Football League.

Ganesan was a staunch supporter of coach Choo Seng Quee, whom he brought in as national coach after his election. Choo led Singapore to a Malaysia Cup title in 1977, twelve years after the team last won the competition.

He fought for the Pre-World Cup tournament to be held in Singapore's National Stadium in 1977.[4] Singapore finished second in the group but lost to Hong Kong in the play-off final.

The Lion City Cup was founded by Ganesan in 1977 as the first Under-16 tournament in the world. The tournament would serve as inspiration for FIFA to introduce the FIFA U-16 World Championship in 1985.

Ganesan was awarded the Pingat Bakti Masyarakat medal in 1978 for his services to Singapore football.[5]

He suffered a stroke in 2011 and moved to a nursing home where he has stayed since. He later died on 1 July 2015 in the morning, aged 82. [6] [7]

References


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