Ahmad Latiff
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Ahmad Latiff Khamaruddin (born 29 May 1979) is a Singaporean footballer currently on loan at Tampines Rovers FC from Johor FA.
[edit] Career
Once touted as a successor to golden boy Fandi Ahmad, he can play as an attacking midfielder or striker with talented playmaking skills. However, due to his consistent bad disciplinary track record for the national team and the club sides, he is deemed as 'bad boy' for Singapore football.
He started his career at Police FC (now Home United) in 1996, before moving to Geylang United the following year. In 1998, his sparkling performances led Singapore to win the Tiger Cup, the nation's first international trophy, despite getting sent off in the final win against Vietnam.
In 1999, he moved to SAFFC where he helped the club win the S-League title in the following season. In 2001, he made his first career move abroad to Indonesia before coming back to SAFFC in 2002, where he played as a playmaker instead of being a striker in which he led the team to a runaway S-League title win.
In 2004, he once again moved to Woodlands Wellington but did not really played like what he did during his days at SAFFC. Eventually in 2006, he made his move abroad once again to Johor FA, the Malaysian state playing in the Malaysian Premier League, where he played well for the side alongside with fellow national skipper Aide Iskandar. After the Malaysian football season ended, he made a loan move with Aide Iskandar to Tampines Rover for the rest of S-League season.
For his international career, he had been in the Singapore national football team inconsistently after the 1998 Tiger Cup win due to his poor disciplinary track record. He was recalled to the national team in 2006 after his good performances for Johor FA but he may face the axe once again after commiting some disciplinary offences during the Singapore's away trip to United Arab Emirates for the Asian Cup qualifying match against Iraq.