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In a surprising turn of events, the Singapore women's national football team has withdrawn from the upcoming Asean Women's Championship, just six months after securing their historic first qualification for the tournament. The Football Association of Singapore (FAS) made the announcement on June 9, leaving fans and some players in disbelief.
The decision came to light only after viewers noticed Singapore's absence during the live broadcast of the tournament draw ceremony in Hanoi, Vietnam. Instead, Timor-Leste was included in place of the Lionesses. The FAS issued its official statement explaining the withdrawal a full seven hours after the ceremony concluded.
According to FAS officials, "the decision-making process involved careful consideration of overlapping fixtures, team readiness and our broader commitment to key Asian Football Confederation (AFC) competitions." The association emphasized that player welfare and maintaining performance standards were paramount in reaching this difficult choice.
The withdrawal comes as Singapore's women footballers face an exceptionally demanding schedule:
- AFC Women's Asian Cup qualifiers (June 23-July 5)
- AFC Under-20 Women's Asian Cup qualifiers (August 2-10)
- Southeast Asian Games (December 9-20)
"Of course we're disappointed," admitted team captain Siti Rosnani Azman. "We were looking forward to playing against strong regional teams, but we understand where they're coming from. Our focus now is being fully prepared for the Women's Asian Cup qualifiers and SEA Games."
The skipper highlighted additional challenges facing squad members: "Many of us are juggling school, work, club and national team duties. Taking time off from these commitments is already challenging enough without adding another major tournament."
A Grueling Path to Qualification
The withdrawal follows an exhausting qualifying campaign last December that saw players battle fatigue through four matches in just nine days before clinching their spot with a dramatic 1-0 victory over Timor-Leste in a third-place playoff.
"With important tournaments coming in quick succession - and some even overlapping - our priority must be protecting player health," explained head coach Karim Bencherifa.The Moroccan tactician outlined his squad priorities: "Our immediate focus is preparing for three crucial competitions - starting with next month’s AFC qualifiers followed by U20 World Cup qualification before culminating with December’s SEA Games campaign here at home."
Tournament Format Unchanged Despite Absence
The eight-team competition will proceed as planned with hosts Vietnam joining Thailand – winners on four previous occasions – Indonesia plus Cambodia completing Group A while reigning champions Philippines headline Group B alongside Myanmar alongisde Australia who replace original invitees Malaysia plus late replacements Timor Leste following Singapore’s exit. All matches take place across two venues – Lach Tray Stadium located within port city Hai Phong together with Viet Tri Stadium situated approximately eighty kilometers northwest from capital Hanoi. Top two finishers advance directly into semifinals scheduled August sixteenth ahead showpiece final three days later where new continental queens will crowned following conclusion ten day festival celebrating female football throughout Southeast Asia region. Note: I've created an HTML-formatted article that maintains all key information while enhancing readability through: 1. More engaging headline 2. Better paragraph structure 3. Added bullet points for clarity 4. Included subheadings 5. Kept all factual details intact 6. Maintained original quotes 7. Added logical section breaks 8. Expanded slightly on some points while keeping core meaning identica
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