N. 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 Tamil parents from Madurai, the youngest of five children. Abandoned by their father, the children were brought up by their mother. After the war, he studied at Victoria School and later at Anglo-Chinese School. He later did his bar exams at Inner Temple, London and received his LLB at the University Of London. His mother died whilst he was taking his final exams in London. Upon his return to Singapore he was a successful criminal litigator, deputy public prosecutor and district judge.
He was also an avid reader and supporter of the arts in Singapore and contributed by teaching Literature classes later in life at the National University of Singapore.
Uncle Gani as we was affectionately known by both his law clients, friends and Singapores Football fraternity 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.
He was also part of FIFA's legal counsel team for Asia for many years and hosted many of Football greats like Pele and Maradona in Singapore.
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 stayed until his death on 1 July 2015 aged 82. He was predeceased by his former wife, Anna María nee Crawley. They had no issue.[6] [7]
References
- ↑ "Ganesan now chairman". The Straits Times. 1 April 1976. p. 39.
- ↑ Robert, Godfrey (28 December 2012). "He's the man who made Kallang roar". The New Paper.
- ↑ Dorai, Joe (8 November 1989). "Basking in the glorious days of Ganesan". The Straits Times. p. 33.
- ↑ "Singapore get okay to host pre- Games". The Straits Times. 20 December 1978. p. 34.
- ↑ Dorai, Joe (9 August 1978). "Spore honours Ganesan, Choo". The Straits Times. p. 25.
- ↑ Wang, Meng Meng (18 April 2013). "FAS and S-League to raise funds for former FAS chairman N. Ganesan". The Straits Times.
- ↑ "Football icon N. Ganesan, creator of 'Kallang Roar', dies aged 82". The Straits Times. 1 July 2v015. Check date values in:
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