Piala Sumbangsih

(Redirected from Malaysia Charity Shield)

Piala Sumbangsih (English: Charity Cup), also known as Piala Sultan Haji Ahmad Shah (English: Sultan Haji Ahmad Shah Cup) or Malaysian Charity Shield, is a Malaysian football super cup competition. It is the curtain raiser match to the new Malaysian football season, pitting the reigning Malaysia Super League champions against the previous year's winners of the Malaysia Cup.[1]

Piala Sumbangsih
Founded1985; 39 years ago (1985)
RegionMalaysia
Number of teams2
Current championsJohor Darul Ta'zim (9th title)
Most successful club(s)Johor Darul Ta'zim (9 titles)
Websitemalaysianfootballleague.com

Johor Darul Ta'zim are the current title holders after winning the 2024 edition on a walkover. The match was supposed to be played between Johor Darul Ta'zim and Selangor, but was called off as Selangor withdrew over safety concerns after an attack on one of their players.

History

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The Piala Sumbangsih was first held in 1985, contested between Selangor and Pahang, with Selangor becoming the first winner after winning the match 2–1.[2][3] The cup format has changed when during early days it was contested by the previous year winners of the Malaysia FA Cup against the Malaysia Cup winners, and only in recent years it has changed to be contested between the last year league winners against the Malaysia Cup winners.[3]

The match act as the curtain raiser match to the new Malaysian football season, pitting the reigning Malaysia Super League champions against the previous year's winners of the Malaysia Cup. If the Malaysia Super League champions also won the Malaysia Cup, then the league runners-up provide the opposition. Since 2016, the Piala Sumbangsih match is also considered the first match of the league season, where the league points are awarded.[1][4][5]

Winners

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YearWinnersRunners-upScoreVenue
1985SelangorPahang2–1Stadium Merdeka
1986JohorSingapore1–1 (6–5 pen.)Stadium Merdeka
1987SelangorKuala Lumpur1–0Stadium Merdeka
1988Kuala LumpurPahang2–1Darul Makmur Stadium
1989SingaporeKuala Lumpur1–0KLFA Stadium
1990SelangorKuala Lumpur0–0 (3–0 pen.)Stadium Merdeka
1991KedahSelangor2–1Darul Aman Stadium
1992PahangJohor2–0Larkin Stadium
1993PahangSarawak5–0Darul Makmur Stadium
1994KedahKuala Lumpur1–0Darul Aman Stadium
1995Kuala LumpurPahang3–2Stadium Merdeka
1996SelangorSabah2–0Likas Stadium
1997SelangorKedah2–0Shah Alam Stadium
1998SarawakSelangor3–1Negeri Stadium
1999PerakJohor2–0Perak Stadium
2000Kuala LumpurBrunei1–1 (4–3 pen.)KLFA Stadium
2001TerengganuPerak4–0Sultan Ismail Nasiruddin Shah Stadium
2002SelangorTerengganu2–1Sultan Ismail Nasiruddin Shah Stadium
2003Pulau PinangSelangor1–0Batu Kawan Stadium
2004MPPJ FCNegeri Sembilan4–2MPPJ Stadium
2005PerakPerlis2–2 (4–2 pen.)Utama Stadium
2006PerakSelangor4–2Bukit Jalil National Stadium
2007PerlisPahang2–1Utama Stadium
2008PerlisKedah0–0 (6–5 pen.)Darul Aman Stadium
2009SelangorKedah4–1Darul Aman Stadium
2010SelangorNegeri Sembilan2–1Tuanku Abdul Rahman Stadium
2011KelantanSelangor2–0Shah Alam Stadium
2012Negeri SembilanKelantan2–1Bukit Jalil National Stadium
2013ATMKelantan1–1 (4–3 pen.)Shah Alam Stadium
2014PahangLionsXII1–0Darul Makmur Stadium
2015Johor Darul Ta'zimPahang2–0Larkin Stadium
2016Johor Darul Ta'zimSelangor1–1 (7–6 pen.)Larkin Stadium
2017KedahJohor Darul Ta'zim1–1 (5–4 pen.)Larkin Stadium
2018Johor Darul Ta'zimKedah2–1Larkin Stadium
2019Johor Darul Ta'zimPerak1–0Larkin Stadium
2020Johor Darul Ta'zimKedah1–0Sultan Ibrahim Stadium
2021Johor Darul Ta'zimKedah Darul Aman2–0Sultan Ibrahim Stadium
2022Johor Darul Ta'zimKuala Lumpur City3–0Sultan Ibrahim Stadium
2023Johor Darul Ta'zimTerengganu2–0Sultan Ibrahim Stadium
2024Johor Darul Ta'zimSelangor3–0 (w/o)[a]Sultan Ibrahim Stadium
  1. ^ Cancelled after Selangor withdrew due to security reasons, and the trophy was awarded to Johor Darul Ta'zim.[6][7]

Performance by clubs

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RankTeamWinnersRunners-up
1Johor Darul Ta'zim91
2Selangor87
3Kedah Darul Aman36
4Sri Pahang35
Kuala Lumpur City35
6Perak32
7Perlis21
8Johor FA12
Negeri Sembilan12
Kelantan12
Terengganu12
12Sarawak11
Singapore11
14Pulau Pinang1
MPPJ1
ATM1
17Sabah1
Brunei1
LionsXII1

See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b "JDT kick off 2016 with Sultan Haji Ahmad Shah triumph". Asian Football Confederation. 14 February 2016. Archived from the original on 15 February 2016. Retrieved 28 February 2018.
  2. ^ Atsushi Fujioka; Erik Garin; Mikael Jönsson; Hans Schöggl (11 January 2018). "Malaysia Charity Shield (Piala Sumbangsih; Sultan Ahmad Shah Cup)". Rec.Sport.Soccer Statistics Foundation. Retrieved 28 February 2018.
  3. ^ a b Ferzalfie Fauzi (9 January 2010). "Piala Sumbangsih". Utusan Malaysia (in Malay). Retrieved 28 February 2018.
  4. ^ "ATM lift Sultan Haji Ahmad Shah Cup". Astro Awani. 6 January 2013. Retrieved 28 February 2018.
  5. ^ "JDT Beat Selangor To Lift Sultan Haji Ahmad Shah Cup For 2nd Consecutive Year". Bernama. 14 February 2016. Retrieved 28 February 2018.
  6. ^ "Malaysia's season-opening Charity Shield cancelled after top club withdraws over assaults, acid attacks on players". South China Morning Post. 9 May 2024. Retrieved 9 May 2024.
  7. ^ "Tahniah Johor Darul Ta'zim 🏆 Juara Perlawanan Sumbangsih 2024–2025 !". Malaysian Football League. 11 May 2024. Retrieved 13 May 2024 – via Facebook.