2006–07 Malaysia Super League

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Liga Super
Season2006–07
ChampionsKedah Kedah
RelegatedMalacca
2008 AFC CupKedah (group stage)
Perak (group stage)
Matches played156
Goals scored480 (3.08 per match)
Top goalscorer20 goals
Keita Mandjou (Perak)
Mohd Shahrazen Said (DPMM)

The 2006–07 Liga Super (English: 2006–07 Super League) also known as the TM Liga Super for sponsorship reasons is the fourth season of the Liga Super, the top-tier professional football league in Malaysia.[1]

The season was held from 16 December 2006 and concluded on 4 August 2007.[1]

The Liga Super champions for 2006–07 was Kedah.[1]

The FAM has decided to expand the league from eight teams to 14 in total, however, only 13 clubs compete at the start of the season after MPPJ pulled from the league.

The highest scoring game was between Malacca and Perak where Perak defeat Malacca by 9–0.[1]

Perak's Keita Mandjou and DPMM's Mohd Shahrazen Said were joint-top scorer with 21 goals each. Kedah's Marlon Alex James was in third place with 20 goals.

League table[]

The final league table after the final matches of the season on 4 August 2007.

Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Qualification or relegation
1 Kedah Kedah 24 17 4 3 54 21 +33 55 Champion
2 Perak Perak 24 16 5 3 58 22 +36 53
3 Brunei DPMM 24 13 5 6 46 29 +17 44
4 Terengganu Terengganu 24 13 5 6 41 29 +12 44
5 Perlis Perlis 24 13 4 7 47 25 +22 43
6 Johor Johor FC 24 11 6 7 35 26 +9 39
7 Malacca TM 24 10 6 8 34 33 +1 36
8 Selangor Selangor 24 8 4 12 27 36 −9 28
9 Pahang Pahang 24 7 6 11 32 41 −9 27
10 Penang Penang 24 6 6 12 25 36 −11 24
11 Negeri Sembilan Negeri Sembilan 24 6 6 12 29 46 −17 24
12 Sarawak Sarawak 24 2 4 18 28 65 −37 10
13 Malacca Malacca 24 2 3 19 24 72 −48 9 Relegated to Liga Premier
Source:[citation needed]

Champions[]

 2002 Liga Perdana 2 Winner 
Flag of Kedah.svg
Kedah
2nd title

Season statistics[]

Top scorers[]

Position Players Teams/Clubs Goals
1 Guinea Keita Mandjou
Brunei Shah Razen Said
Perak Perak FA
Brunei DPMM FC
21
3 Saint Vincent and the Grenadines Marlon Alex James Kedah Kedah FA 20
4 Argentina Johor Johor FC 16
5 Malaysia Muhamad Khalid Jamlus Perak Perak FA 15
6 Malaysia Mohd Azlan Ismail Perlis Perlis FA 13
Zambia Phillimon Chepita Perlis Perlis FA
8 Brazil Terengganu Terengganu FA 11
9 Angola Frederico Dos Santos Negeri Sembilan Negeri Sembilan FA 9
Malaysia Akmal Rizal Ahmad Rakhli Selangor Selangor FA

References[]

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