Post-Match Press Conference
Selangor FC vs Negeri Sembilan FC
Malaysia Cup 2025-26 | Quarter-Final 2nd Leg
14 February | Stadium MBPJ
Negeri Sembilan FC head coach Nidzam Jamil did not shy away from a frank assessment following his side’s defeat to Selangor FC in the second leg of the Malaysia Cup quarter-final at Stadium MBPJ.
In a candid post-match press conference, the head coach highlighted structural weaknesses, decision-making lapses, and a critical gap in character and composure that ultimately cost the team on the night.
A Difficult Opening Spell
Nidzam admitted that the team never truly settled into the match, particularly in the opening 15 to 20 minutes.
He described Selangor as dominant in both defensive and offensive phases, while Negeri Sembilan struggled with uncertainty — especially in defensive responsibilities. There was visible hesitation among players regarding pressing triggers, marking assignments, and controlling key opposition threats.
According to Nidzam, this indecision at a professional level is unacceptable.
“At this level, you cannot afford even one wrong decision — wrong timing, wrong marking, wrong anticipation. Against a big team like Selangor, one mistake opens the door.”
He pointed specifically to issues on the flanks and defensive transitions, where Selangor found space repeatedly. The team’s inability to manage defensive duties effectively allowed the hosts to assert full control early in the game.
Structural Issues, Not Individuals
While questions were raised about specific player selections and substitutions, Nidzam firmly rejected the idea that the problems stemmed from individual performances alone.
Instead, he pointed to structural weaknesses within the team setup.
“This is not about one player playing well or not. It is about structure. The problem is we were nervous in decisive situations.”
He emphasised that professional football demands clarity in decision-making. Uncertainty — even for a split second — can be fatal against top-tier opposition.
The coach acknowledged that some players may not have previously experienced matches with such high demands and pressure. However, he stressed that at this stage of competition, character and personality must match technical ability.
The Cost of Naivety
One of the strongest themes from Nidzam’s remarks was what he described as “naivety.”
He stated that certain situations were handled too simply, too directly, and without the sophistication required at this level. Against major clubs, every detail matters — timing of pressing, covering spaces, anticipation of transitions.
Negeri Sembilan were repeatedly punished in transition moments. When defending, they were slow to react. When attacking, they were often one second late in decision-making — a delay that proved decisive.
“At the highest level, we need to be good in almost everything. You cannot rely only on attacking. You need the complete package.”
Controlling the Damage
Trailing heavily by half-time, the message in the dressing room was clear: limit the damage and protect pride.
Nidzam revealed that the priority in the second half was to regain composure and avoid further collapse.
“We had to control the damage. In football, 4-0 is already difficult. It became 5-0. So we needed to control the damage for our pride.”
Substitutions were made not purely on technical or tactical grounds, but based on mindset, decision-making quality, and mental resilience.
He stressed that improving these details — mindset, timing, composure — is now non-negotiable.
A Reality Check
The defeat served as a harsh reminder of the standards required to compete with Malaysia’s elite clubs.
Nidzam was direct in drawing comparisons to the top tier of domestic football.
“If we are comfortable being in Pot Three, no problem. But if we want to move from Pot Two to Pot One — to match the standards of teams like Johor Darul Ta’zim, Terengganu, and Selangor — then we have a lot of work to do.”
He emphasised that the team must not allow such gaps in quality and mentality to repeat. The loss, while painful, must become a turning point.
Accountability and Forward Focus
When asked about broader reactions and criticism, Nidzam remained composed, stating he would address matters internally with the squad.
He made it clear that he is not satisfied with losing in such an open and exposed manner. For him, the performance — not just the result — was the greater concern.
“We allowed it to happen. That is the biggest disappointment.”
The Road Ahead
For Negeri Sembilan FC, this Malaysia Cup campaign ends with a sobering lesson at Stadium MBPJ. The technical staff and players now face a crucial period of reflection and recalibration.
The coach concluded by admitting that significant improvements are required — collectively.
“Me, the boys, everyone — we must correct many things.”
The message from Nidzam Jamil is clear: progress requires brutal honesty, structural refinement, stronger personalities, and sharper decision-making under pressure.
This defeat may have exposed the gap — but it has also defined the standard that Negeri Sembilan FC must now strive to reach.
