Asean Football Federation

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ASEAN Football Federation
AbbreviationAFF
Formation31 January 1984 (1984-01-31)[1]
Founded atJakarta, Indonesia
TypeFootball organisation
HeadquartersKuala Lumpur, Malaysia
Region served
Southeast Asia and Australia
Members12 associations
Official language
English
President
Cambodia Khiev Sameth
Parent organization
AFC
Websiteaseanfootball.org

The ASEAN Football Federation (AFF) is an organisation within the Asian Football Confederation (AFC) and is an international governing body of association football, futsal, and beach soccer in Southeast Asia and Australia. It consists of the federations of Australia, Brunei, Cambodia, East Timor, Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, Myanmar, Philippines, Singapore, Thailand, and Vietnam.[1]

The AFF was founded by the member states of, and is officially associated with, the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN), even though it also includes Australia, a non-ASEAN member state, after it left the Oceania Football Confederation in 2006.[2]

History

The AFF was established in Jakarta on 31 January 1984 during an informal meeting of representatives of six ASEAN member states; Brunei, Indonesia, Malaysia, Singapore, Philippines and Thailand. The idea of founding the federation came from the initial meeting of founding the sub-continental football association in Bangkok in 1982 that was attended by Hamzah Abu Samah, Peter Velappan, Hans Pandelaki, Fernando G. Alvarez, Pisit Ngampanich, Teo Chong Tee and Yap Boon Chuan.[3] Other nations that have joined the federation since are Cambodia, Laos, Myanmar and Vietnam (all in 1996),[1] East Timor in 2004, and Australia in 2013.[4]

President

YearName
1984–1994 Indonesia Haji Kardono
1994–1996 Thailand Vijit Ketkaew
1996–2007 Malaysia Tengku Ahmad Rithauddeen
2007–2019 Malaysia Sultan Ahmad Shah
2019– Cambodia Khiev Sameth

Members

It has 12 member associations,[5] all of whom are members of the Asian Football Confederation.

CodeAssociationJoined inNational teamNational league
AUSAustralia Australia2013 (Men, Women)
BRUBrunei Brunei Darussalam*1984(Men)
CAMCambodia Cambodia1996(Men, Women)
TLSTimor-Leste East Timor2004(Men, Women)
IDNIndonesia Indonesia*1984(Men, Women)
LAOLaos Laos1996(Men, Women)
MASMalaysia Malaysia*1984(Men, Women)
MYAMyanmar Myanmar1996(Men, Women)
PHIPhilippines Philippines*1984(Men, Women)
SGPSingapore Singapore*1984(Men, Women)
THAThailand Thailand*1984(Men, Women)
VIEVietnam Vietnam1996(Men, Women)
Notes

(*) Founding member

Tournaments

Title holders

Competition Year Champions Title Runners-up Next edition[6]
Men's national teams
FIFA ASEAN Cup 2026 (Final)
ASEAN Championship 2024 (Final)  Vietnam 3rd  Thailand 2026 (Final)
ASEAN U-23 Championship 2025  Vietnam 3rd  Indonesia 2027
ASEAN U-19 Boys Championship 2026  Australia 6th  Thailand 2028
ASEAN U-17 Boys' Championship 2026  Vietnam 4th  Malaysia 2028
SEA Games Men's Football Tournament 2025 (Final)  Vietnam 4th  Thailand 2027 (Final)
Hassanal Bolkiah Trophy 2018  Timor-Leste 1st  Cambodia TBD
ASEAN Futsal Championship 2026  Thailand 17th  Indonesia 2028
ASEAN U-19 Boys' Futsal Championship 2025  Thailand 1st  Indonesia 2027
ASEAN U-16 Boys' Futsal Championship 2025  Indonesia 1st  Thailand 2027
SEA Games Men's Futsal Tournament 2025  Indonesia 1st  Thailand 2027
ASEAN Beach Soccer Championship 2022  Thailand 2nd  Malaysia 2026
Women's national teams
ASEAN Women's Championship 2025 (Final)  Australia U23 1st  Myanmar 2027
AFF Women's Cup 2024  Indonesia 1st  Cambodia 2026
U-19 Women's Championship 2025  Thailand 3rd  Vietnam 2027
U-16 Women's Championship 2025  Australia 2nd  Thailand 2027
SEA Games Women's Football Tournament 2025 (Final)  Philippines 1st  Vietnam 2027 (Final)
ASEAN Women's Futsal Championship 2026  Thailand 1st  Australia 2028
ASEAN U-19 Girls' Futsal Championship 2026
ASEAN U-16 Girls' Futsal Championship 2026
SEA Games Women's Futsal Tournament 2025  Vietnam 1st  Indonesia 2027
Men's club teams
ASEAN Club Championship 2025–26 (Final) Thailand Buriram United 2nd Malaysia Selangor FC 2026–27
Futsal Club Championship 2023 (Final) Indonesia Black Steel Papua 1st Thailand Hongyen Thakam 2026
Women's club teams
Women's Futsal Club Championship 2016 (Final) Indonesia Jaya Kencana Angels 1st Thailand Khon Kaen TBD

Titles by nation

As of 14 June 2026

Nation National team National team (women) Club Total
FIFA Ch SEA U23 U19 U16 HBT Futs SeaF F19 F16 BS Ch Cu SEA U19 U16 Futs SeaF F19 F16 ACC FutsM FutsW
 Thailand 71615321751245331526 88
 Vietnam 34314138112 31
 Indonesia 31221211131 18
 Australia 63112 13
 Malaysia 16221 12
 Myanmar 52212 12
 Singapore 41 5
 Japan* 111 3
 Philippines 11 2
 Brunei 1 1
 Timor-Leste 1 1
 India* 1 1
 Iran* 1 1
 Cambodia 0
 Laos 0
Total1534519176196114121144526393
Notes

(*) Champion as an invited team.

Tournament record

FIFA World Cup

FIFA World Cup record
Team 1930
Uruguay
(13)
1934
Kingdom of Italy
(16)
1938
French Third Republic
(15)
1950
Fourth Brazilian Republic
(13)
1954
Switzerland
(16)
1958
Sweden
(16)
1962
Chile
(16)
1966
England
(16)
1970
Mexico
(16)
1974
West Germany
(16)
1978
Argentina
(16)
1982
Spain
(24)
1986
Mexico
(24)
1990
Italy
(24)
1994
United States
(24)
1998
France
(32)
2002
Japan
South Korea
(32)
2006
Germany
(32)
2010
South Africa
(32)
2014
Brazil
(32)
2018
Russia
(32)
2022
Qatar
(32)
2026
Canada
Mexico
United States
(48)
2030
Morocco
Spain
Portugal
Argentina
Uruguay
Paraguay
(48)
2034
Saudi Arabia
(48)
Years
Australia Australia[a] × × × × × × × × × GS × × × × × × × R16 GS[b] GS GS R16 Q 7
 Indonesia[c] × × R1 × × × × × × 1
  1. Competed as part of the OFC in 1974 and 2006.
  2. Provisional Member of AFF. Became an official member in 2013.
  3. Indonesia competed as the Dutch East Indies in 1938.

World Cup qualifier final round

Team 2002
Japan
South Korea
2018
Russia
2022
Qatar
2026
Canada
Mexico
United States
Years
 Thailand 5th/5 6th/6 2
 Indonesia × 4th/6 1
 Vietnam 6th/6 1

FIFA Women's World Cup

FIFA Women's World Cup record
Team1991
China
(12)
1995
Sweden
(12)
1999
United States
(16)
2003
United States
(16)
2007
China
(16)
2011
Germany
(16)
2015
Canada
(24)
2019
France
(24)
2023
Australia New Zealand
(32)
2027
Brazil
(32)
Years
Australia Australia[a] × GS GS GS QF QF QF R16 4th Q 9
 Thailand × × GS GS 2
 Philippines × × GS Q 2
 Vietnam × × × GS 1

Olympic Games men's football tournament

Olympic Games (Men's tournament) record
Team1900
France
(3)
1904
United States
(3)
1908
United Kingdom
(6)
1912
Sweden
(11)
1920
Belgium
(14)
1924
France
(22)
1928
Netherlands
(17)
1936
Germany
(16)
1948
United Kingdom
(18)
1952
Finland
(25)
1956
Australia
(11)
1960
Italy
(16)
1964
Japan
(14)
1968
Mexico
(16)
1972
West Germany
(16)
1976
Canada
(13)
1980
Soviet Union
(16)
1984
United States
(16)
1988
South Korea
(16)
1992
Spain
(16)
1996
United States
(16)
2000
Australia
(16)
2004
Greece
(16)
2008
China
(16)
2012
United Kingdom
(16)
2016
Brazil
(16)
2021
Japan
(16)
2024
France
(16)
Years
 Thailand × × × × × × × × × × × GS GS × × 2
 Malaysia × × × × × × × × × × × × × GS × 1
 Myanmar × × × × × × × × × × × GS × × 1
 Indonesia × × × × × × × × × × × QF × 1

Olympic Games women's football tournament

AFC Asian Cup

AFC Asian Cup record
Team 1956
Hong Kong
(4)
1960
South Korea
(4)
1964
Israel
(4)
1968
Iran
(5)
1972
Thailand
(6)
1976
Iran
(6)
1980
Kuwait
(10)
1984
Singapore
(10)
1988
Qatar
(10)
1992
Japan
(8)
1996
United Arab Emirates
(12)
2000
Lebanon
(12)
2004
China
(16)
2007
Indonesia
Malaysia
Thailand
Vietnam
(16)
2011
Qatar
(16)
2015
Australia
(16)
2019
United Arab Emirates
(24)
2023
Qatar
(24)
2027
Saudi Arabia
(24)
2031
(24)
Years
 Thailand × × 3rd GS GS GS GS GS R16 R16 Q 9
 Indonesia × × × GS GS GS GS × R16 Q 6
 Vietnam 4th 4th × × × × × QF QF GS Q 6
 Malaysia GS GS GS GS 4
 Singapore × × × GS × Q 2
 Cambodia × × 4th × × × × × × × × 1
 Myanmar × × × 2nd × × × × × × × × × 1
 Philippines × × × × × × × GS 1

AFC U-23 Asian Cup

Teams
2013

2016

2018

2020

2022

2024

2026
Years
 Vietnam GS2ndGSQFQF3rd 6
 Thailand GSGSQFGSGSGS 6
 Malaysia QFGSGS 3
 Indonesia 4th 1
 Myanmar GS 1

Asian Games men's football tournament

Football at the Asian Games was a senior tournament until 1998.
Football at the Asian Games has been an under-23 tournament since 2002.
Nation India
1951
(6)
Philippines
1954
(12)
Japan
1958
(14)
Indonesia
1962
(8)
Thailand
1966
(11)
Thailand
1970
(10)
Iran
1974
(15)
Thailand
1978
(14)
India
1982
(16)
South Korea
1986
(18)
China
1990
(14)
Japan
1994
(19)
Thailand
1998
(23)
South Korea
2002
(24)
Qatar
2006
(28)
China
2010
(24)
South Korea
2014
(29)
Indonesia
2018
(25)
China
2022
(23)
Years
 Thailand 7th6th6th12th6th10th11th4th15th4th4th7th7th4th18th14th15
 Malaysia 13th3rd10th10th3rd7th14th15th12th12th17th23rd16th19th12th15
 Vietnam ( South Vietnam) 7th7th4th7th9th17th19th15th14th12th4th17th11
 Indonesia 6th4th3rd5th5th5th4thDQDQ27th11th10th11th10
 Myanmar ( Burma) 5th3rd11thDQ1st1st7th12th13th16thDQ19th10th10
 Singapore 9th10th4th11th26th19th17th7
 Philippines 11th8th8th15th4
 Laos 21st27th23rd3
 Timor-Leste 28th24th2
 Cambodia 7th19th2
 Brunei DQDQ0

FIFA U-20 World Cup

FIFA U-20 World Cup record
Team 1977
Tunisia
(16)
1979
Japan
(16)
1981
Australia
(16)
1983
Mexico
(16)
1985
Soviet Union
(16)
1987
Chile
(16)
1989
Saudi Arabia
(16)
1991
Portugal
(16)
1993
Australia
(16)
1995
Qatar
(16)
1997
Malaysia
(24)
1999
Nigeria
(24)
2001
Argentina
(24)
2003
United Arab Emirates
(24)
2005
Netherlands
(24)
2007
Canada
(24)
2009
Egypt
(24)
2011
Colombia
(24)
2013
Turkey
(24)
2015
New Zealand
(24)
2017
South Korea
(24)
2019
Poland
(24)
2023
Argentina
(24)
2025
Chile
(24)
Years
 Indonesia GS 1
 Vietnam GS 1
 Myanmar GS 1
 Malaysia GS 1

FIFA U-17 World Cup

FIFA U-17 World Cup record
Team 1985
China
(16)
1987
Canada
(16)
1989
Scotland
(16)
1991
Italy
(16)
1993
Japan
(16)
1995
Ecuador
(16)
1997
Egypt
(16)
1999
New Zealand
(16)
2001
Trinidad and Tobago
(16)
2003
Finland
(16)
2005
Peru
(16)
2007
South Korea
(24)
2009
Nigeria
(24)
2011
Mexico
(24)
2013
United Arab Emirates
(24)
2015
Chile
(24)
2017
India
(24)
2019
Brazil
(24)
2023
Indonesia
(24)
2025
Qatar
(48)
Years
 Thailand GS GS 2
 Indonesia GS GS 2

FIFA U-20 Women's World Cup

FIFA U-17 Women's World Cup

FIFA Futsal World Cup

FIFA Futsal World Cup record
Team Netherlands
1989
(16)
Hong Kong
1992
(16)
Spain
1996
(16)
Guatemala
2000
(16)
Chinese Taipei
2004
(16)
Brazil
2008
(20)
Thailand
2012
(24)
Colombia
2016
(24)
Lithuania
2021
(24)
Uzbekistan
2024
(24)
Years
 ThailandR1R1R1R2R2R2R2 7
 VietnamR2R2 2
 MalaysiaR1 1

FIFA Women's Futsal World Cup

FIFA Women's Futsal World Cup record
Team Philippines
2025
(16)
Years
 PhilippinesGS 1
 ThailandGS 1

Rankings

National football team

AFF Men's National Football Team Ranking By FIFA
Update: 1 April 2026.
Next update: 9 July 2026.

AFF AFC FIFA Country Points +/−
1 4 27  Australia 1580.67 Steady
2 14 93  Thailand 1252.14 Increase 3
3 17 99  Vietnam 1225.68 Increase 9
4 22 122  Indonesia 1144.88 Steady
5 24 135  Philippines 1094.10 Increase 1
6 26 138  Malaysia 1086.22 Decrease 17
7 28 147  Singapore 1059.53 Increase 1
8 31 158  Myanmar 1011.88 Increase 5
9 36 177  Cambodia 911.54 Increase 2
10 38 185  Laos 885.03 Increase 5
11 42 193  Brunei 863.09 Decrease 5
12 44 200  Timor-Leste 825.64 Decrease 2

Top Ranked Men's National Football Teams

Women's national football team

AFF Women's National Football Team Ranking by FIFA
Update: 21 April 2026
Next Update: 15 June 2026

AFF AFC FIFA Country Points +/−
1 3 15  Australia 1838.17 Steady
2 6 37  Vietnam 1593.71 Decrease 1
3 7 39  Philippines 1566.44 Increase 2
4 9 50  Thailand 1469.68 Decrease 1
5 11 55  Myanmar 1484.97 Steady
6 17 92  Malaysia 1218.02 Decrease 1
7 19 106  Indonesia 1175.97 Decrease 1
8 22 113  Laos 1164.92 Increase 1
9 23 117  Cambodia 1146.28 Steady
10 30 152  Singapore 1019.15 Steady
11 32 157  Timor-Leste 965.35 Steady
* * *  Brunei Steady

* Inactive for more than 48 months and therefore not ranked.

Top Ranked Women's National Football Teams

National futsal team

AFF Men's National Futsal Team Ranking by FIFA
Update: 12 December 2025

AFF FIFA Country Points
1 11  Thailand 1319.33
2 20  Vietnam 1201.03
3 24  Indonesia 1190.97
4 51  Australia 1046.91
5 60  Myanmar 1019.27
6 70  Malaysia 988.92
7 81  Malaysia 971.06
8 103  Timor-Leste 899.66
9 122  Brunei 844.46
10 123  Cambodia 840.67
* *  Laos -
* *  Philippines -
* *  Singapore -

Note: (*) Inactive

Women's national futsal team

AFF Women's National Futsal Team Ranking by FIFA
Update: 11 December 2025

AFF FIFA Country Points
1 8  Thailand 1185.31
2 11  Vietnam 1133.86
3 18  Indonesia 1056.79
4 27  Malaysia 987.72
5 38  Myanmar 929.53
6 66  Australia 831.63
7 69  Philippines 811.28
* *  Laos
* *  Brunei
* *  Cambodia
* *  Singapore
* *  Timor-Leste

Note: (*) Inactive

National beach soccer team

AFF Men's National Beach Soccer Team Ranking by BSWW
Update: 19 January 2026

AFF Country Points
1  Thailand 349.5
2  Malaysia 130.5
3  Indonesia 130.5
4  Vietnam 87
*  Australia
*  Brunei
*  Cambodia
*  Laos
*  Myanmar
*  Philippines
*  Singapore
*  Timor-Leste

Note: (*) Inactive

Women's national beach soccer team

AFF Women's National Beach Soccer Team Ranking by BSWW
Update: 19 January 2026

AFF Country Points
*  Australia
*  Brunei
*  Cambodia
*  Indonesia
*  Laos
*  Malaysia
*  Myanmar
*  Philippines
*  Singapore
*  Thailand
*  Timor-Leste
*  Vietnam

Note: (*) Inactive

National football league

AFF Men's National Football League Ranking by AFC

AFC Club Competitions Ranking 2025 - footyrankings

Update: 27 April 2026

AFF League Points Current champions Most championship in the league
1 Thailand Thai League 1 58.271 Buriram United Buriram United (12)
2 Australia A-League Men 46.678 Melbourne City Sydney (5)
3 Malaysia Malaysia Super League 41.434 Johor Darul Ta'zim Johor Darul Ta'zim (12)
4 Singapore Singapore Premier League 38.061 Lion City Sailors Warriors (9)
5 Vietnam V.League 1 38.020 Thép Xanh Nam Định Viettel, Hà Nội (6)
6 Indonesia Indonesia Super League 26.299 Persib Bandung Persib Bandung, Persipura Jayapura (5)
7 Cambodia Cambodian Premier League 22.850 Preah Khan Reach Svay Rieng Phnom Penh Crown (8)
8 Philippines Philippines Football League 16.215 Kaya–Iloilo United City (4)
9 Myanmar Myanmar National League 12.612 Shan United Shan United (7)
10 Laos Lao League 1 3.387 Ezra Lao Army (8)
11 Brunei Brunei Super League 0.580 Indera MS ABDB (4)
12 Timor-Leste Liga Futebol Amadora Primeira Divisão 0.000 Karketu Dili Karketu Dili (4)

Awards

AFF President Sultan of Pahang, Sultan Haji Ahmad Shah said that:

"In recent years, ASEAN football has cultivated some serious talent, and the region is growing as a football powerhouse. We are gaining traction at a global level, and the time is right to honour the men and women who have dedicated their lives to the evolution and honour of the world’s most popular sport."

Sultan Haji Ahmad Shah, who is also chairman of the Awards Selection Committee, said that as football in the region continued to develop and mature, the commitment demonstrated by ASEAN’s finest needed to be acknowledged.

The AFF Awards is held every 2 years, starting from 2013.[7][8]

ASEAN Goodwill Award

YearRecipient
2013 Malaysia Sultan Haji Ahmad Shah
2015 Malaysia Sultan Haji Ahmad Shah
2017 Myanmar Zaw Zaw

AFF Life Service Award

Year Recipient
2013 Malaysia Tengku Tan Sri Dato’ Seri Ahmad Rithauddeen
2015 Malaysia Dato' Sri Paul Mony Samuel
2017 Indonesia Haji Kardono

AFF Association of the Year

YearAssociation
2013 Myanmar Myanmar
2015 Myanmar Myanmar
2017 Vietnam Vietnam
2019 Indonesia Indonesia

AFF National Team of the Year

Year Men Women
2013  Singapore  Vietnam
2015  Thailand  Thailand
2017  Thailand  Thailand
2019  Vietnam  Thailand

AFF Player of the Year (men's)

Year Name Club
2013 Singapore Shahril Ishak Singapore LionsXII
2015 Thailand Chanathip Songkrasin Thailand BEC Tero Sasana
2017 Thailand Chanathip Songkrasin Thailand Muangthong United
2019 Vietnam Nguyễn Quang Hải Vietnam Hà Nội

AFF Player of the Year (women's)

Year Name Club
2013 Vietnam Đặng Thị Kiều Trinh Vietnam Hồ Chí Minh City I
2015 Thailand Nisa Romyen Thailand North Bangkok University
2017 Thailand Waraporn Boonsing Thailand BG-Bandit Asia
2019 Thailand Pitsamai Sornsai Thailand Chonburi Sports School

AFF Youth Player of the Year (men's)

Year Name Club
2013 Laos Keoviengphet Liththideth Laos Ezra
2015 Myanmar Aung Thu Myanmar Yadanarbon
2017 Vietnam Đoàn Văn Hậu Vietnam Hà Nội
2019 Thailand Suphanat Mueanta Thailand Buriram United

AFF Futsal Team of the Year

Year Men
2013  Thailand
2015  Thailand
2017  Thailand
2019  Thailand

AFF Futsal Player of the Year (men's)

Year Name Club
2013 Thailand Suphawut Thueanklang Thailand Chonburi Bluewave
2015 Thailand Jetsada Chudech Thailand Rajnavy
2017 Thailand Jirawat Sornwichian Thailand Chonburi Bluewave
2019 Vietnam Trần Văn Vũ Vietnam Thái Sơn Nam

AFF Coach of the Year

Year Men Name Women Name
2013  Singapore Serbia Radojko Avramović  Myanmar Japan Kumada Yoshinori
2015  Thailand Thailand Kiatisuk Senamuang  Thailand Thailand Nuengrutai Srathongvian
2017  Thailand Thailand Kiatisuk Senamuang  Vietnam Vietnam Mai Đức Chung
2019  Vietnam South Korea Park Hang-seo  Thailand Thailand Nuengrutai Srathongvian

AFF Referee of the Year

Year Men Women
2013 Singapore Abdul Malik Abdul Bashir Singapore Abirami Apbai Naidu
2015 Malaysia Mohd Amirul Izwan Yaacob Malaysia Rita Ghani
2017 Singapore Muhammad Taqi Myanmar Thein Thein Aye
2019 Thailand Sivakorn Pu-Udom Australia Jacewicz Katherine Margaret

AFF Assistant Referee of the Year

Year Men Women
2013 Singapore Tang Yew Mun Malaysia Widiya Habibah Shamsuri
2015 Malaysia Azman Ismail Singapore Rohaidah Mohd Nasir
2017 Malaysia Mohd Yusri Muhamad Vietnam Truong Thi Le Trinh
2019 Singapore Ronnie Koh Min Kiat Thailand Hinthong Supawan

Best Goal in the AFF Suzuki Cup

Year Name Club Match
2012 Thailand Teerasil Dangda Thailand Muangthong United Semi Final (1st Leg) Malaysia vs Thailand, 9 December 2012.
2014 Vietnam Lê Công Vinh Vietnam Becamex Binh Duong Group A Vietnam vs Indonesia, 22 November 2014.
2016 Cambodia Chrerng Polroth Cambodia Phnom Penh Crown Group B Cambodia vs Vietnam, 25 November 2016.
2018 Malaysia Syahmi Safari Malaysia Selangor Semi Final (2nd leg) Thailand vs Malaysia, 5 December 2018.

AFF Best XI

See also

Notes

  1. Competed as part of the OFC between 1991 and 2006.

References

  1. "AFF – The Official Website Of The ASEAN Football Federation". About AFF. 20 March 2015. Archived from the original on 27 April 2015. Retrieved 20 March 2015.
  2. "ENTITIES ASSOCIATED WITH ASEAN" (PDF). ASEAN. Archived (PDF) from the original on 11 May 2023. Retrieved 11 May 2023.
  3. "About AFF – AFF – the Official Website of the Asean Football Federation". 14 October 2010. Archived from the original on 19 May 2020. Retrieved 24 March 2020.
  4. "Australia Officially in AFF". ASEAN Football Federation. 27 August 2013. Archived from the original on 26 September 2013. Retrieved 27 August 2013.
  5. "AFF – Southeast Asian Football Federation Official Website – 12 Football Associations". Archived from the original on 4 April 2016. Retrieved 30 April 2016.
  6. "Calendar". www.aseanfootball.org. ASEAN Football Federation (AFF). 24 June 2018. Archived from the original on 14 August 2022. Retrieved 14 August 2022.
  7. "INAUGRAL [sic] AFF AWARDS 2013 TO HONOUR ASEAN FOOTBALL HEROES". 27 March 2013. Archived from the original on 26 September 2021. Retrieved 26 September 2021.
  8. Bhas Kunju (3 April 2013). "Singapore win big at AFF Awards 2013". Goal.com. Archived from the original on 24 September 2015. Retrieved 22 August 2015.