A Club Steeped in Glory: Negeri Sembilan’s Story from Paroi

Heritage and Identity

Rebranded for a time as NS Matrix, Negeri Sembilan may feel distant to some newer followers of Malaysian football—but the club’s DNA is rich with history and triumphs.

Long before the semi-pro era, the team helped produce legends such as Ghani Minhat, and the 1990s ushered in another wave of standouts including B. Rajinikandh, Ching Hong Aik, Khairul Anuar Baharom, and Effendi Malek.

The 2000 Malaysia Cup Run

In 2000, Negeri Sembilan stunned many by marching to the Malaysia Cup final, falling only to a powerhouse Perak side. The semi-final remains folklore: away in Kuching—then a Sarawak fortress—Effendi Malek struck twice, before returning to Paroi to end Sarawak’s comeback hopes against a team stacked with the likes of Mazlan Wahid, Bobby Pian, and Ibrahim Mantali.

A Production Line of Talent

Through the years, Negeri Sembilan have nurtured names that became national fixtures—Shukor Adan among them—and even cult favourites such as the stylish Wong Sai Kong. After the famed Razak twins era, however, the squad depth thinned and sustaining a top-flight revival became difficult.

Champions of Malaysia (2006)

Against the grain of pre-season predictions favouring Perak, NS Naza (as the team was then known) captured the 2005–06 Malaysia Super League under K. Devan, led by the club’s “golden generation” featuring Rezal Zambery Yahya. They came close to a famous double, only to be edged by Perlis in the 2006 Malaysia Cup.

A Romance with the Malaysia Cup (2009–2011)

Few Malaysian teams can claim it: three consecutive Malaysia Cup finals.

  • 2009 – Champions (3–1 vs Kelantan): Ending a 61-year wait, Negeri Sembilan outclassed the “Red Warriors.” Surprise package Shahurain Abu Samah opened the scoring, veteran Hairuddin Omar did what he does best in finals, and Zaquan Adha sealed it from the spot.
  • 2010 – Runners-up (1–2 vs Kelantan): Shahurain struck first again, but Kelantan replied through—ironically—Hairuddin Omar, now in red, before Badhri “Piya” Radzi completed the comeback.
  • 2011 – Champions (2–1 vs Terengganu): Facing a superb Terengganu side that had already won the FA Cup, Negeri Sembilan produced a famous late rally. S. Kunanlan levelled in the 81st minute; Hairuddin Omar volleyed home the winner in the 86th—his third straight Malaysia Cup final with a goal.

The Downturn and Hard Lessons

After lifting the 2012 Charity Shield, the squad gradually thinned as key players departed season after season, culminating in relegation to the Premier League (2014). The departures exposed structural gaps in succession planning, contract strategy, and wage frameworks—areas that needed a firmer, longer-term blueprint.

The lesson was clear: avoid large cohorts hitting contract expiry together, protect core assets, and build sustainable depth. The goal remains the same—restore Paroi as a fortress worthy of the chant “Hobin Jang Hobin.”

A Call to Rise

This club has never been just a name; it’s a legacy. With planning, patience, and smart investment, Negeri Sembilan can reclaim its rightful place among Malaysia’s elite.

Come on, Jang—rise again and return to where you truly belong.