He arrived as Harimau Malaya’s CEO, promising transformation. He leaves behind a mystery: what exactly changed?He arrived as Harimau Malaya’s CEO, promising transformation. He leaves behind a mystery: what exactly changed?

Goodbye Rob Friend, hello questions

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Rob Friend has left Malaysian football. Before we wave goodbye, perhaps somebody could tell us what exactly we are saying goodbye to.

The Football Association of Malaysia has confirmed that Friend’s contract as Harimau Malaya CEO ended earlier this month by mutual agreement.

National coach Peter Cklamovski has already issued a gracious farewell. Others who departed have done the same.

Friend, so far, has remained silent.

That feels fitting. After all, silence has accompanied much of his tenure.

When FAM unveiled the former Canadian international as the face of a bold new era in January 2025, the appointment carried weight.

This was not another technical adviser or consultant parachuting in for a few workshops. This was a chief executive officer, a newly created position tasked with helping transform the national team.

The mission sounded ambitious. The visibility, however, often felt remarkably limited.

The challenge now is compiling the highlight reel.

That may sound unfair. Perhaps Friend worked tirelessly behind the scenes. Perhaps he built systems, opened doors, forged relationships and laid foundations that outsiders never saw.

If so, now would be an excellent time to tell us.

Because for much of the public, Friend’s tenure produced more questions than answers.

Start with the basics. How much was Friend paid? What benefits came with the role? Who approved the package? What key performance indicators measured success?

These are not personal questions but matters involving governance.

Football supporters routinely hear about financial constraints, sponsorship needs and development budgets. Transparency should not suddenly become optional when discussing senior executives.

The same principle applies to the broader Harimau Malaya project.

What exactly was the CEO responsible for? Who did he report to? Who reported to him? Where did authority begin and end?

For a role presented as a major structural reform, the reporting lines often appeared blurred.

The CEO we never quite knew

Then there was the geography.

Friend’s own explanations during the heritage-player controversy revealed that he remained based in Canada and travelled to Malaysia largely for football-related duties and matchdays.

Remote work is hardly unusual in modern sport. Football has become a global business.

Yet national teams are built on daily relationships, local knowledge and constant engagement with stakeholders.

A CEO operating thousands of kilometres away naturally invites questions about oversight, influence and accessibility.

The issue was whether Malaysian football truly benefited from having its most senior national-team executive based on another continent.

Those questions have never received clear answers. Neither has the question of outcomes.

When Friend arrived, FAM spoke about taking Malaysian football forward through a new structure and a new vision. Today, the structure appears to be disappearing.

The Asian Football Confederation’s governance audit recommended returning Harimau Malaya fully under FAM’s management, arguing that stronger accountability and governance would follow.

That recommendation does not automatically mean Friend failed.

But it does raise an unavoidable question: If the experiment has effectively ended, what lessons did it teach?

Most CEOs leave annual reports. Friend leaves a mystery novel.

Perhaps the final chapters contain achievements that have not yet been shared. If so, FAM should publish them proudly.

What systems remain today because of Friend’s work? Did he establish a stronger scouting network? Improve commercial opportunities?

Did he strengthen player pathways? Modernise operations? Create structures that will outlast his departure?

Those answers determine whether this period represented meaningful progress or merely an expensive detour.

And, there remains the question of accountability.

Friend became one of the most visible figures during the fallout from the heritage-player controversy. Throughout that episode, confusion surrounded his precise role, authority and involvement.

Some of those questions may never be fully resolved.

Transparency should not leave with departing executives. It should become even more important once they are gone.

This is not about assigning blame. Nor is it about searching for a convenient villain.

Football administration is often messy. Ambitious projects do not always succeed. Restructuring efforts sometimes produce unintended consequences.

What supporters deserve, however, is honesty about what worked, what did not and what the investment delivered.

Friend may have contributed more than the public realises. He may have helped move Malaysian football forward in ways that never generated headlines.

If supporters struggle to define a CEO’s legacy after 18 months in office, the problem is not public ignorance. It is institutional opacity.

So as Malaysian football turns the page, one final request seems reasonable.

Open the book. Tell us what the CEO achieved. Tell us what the experiment cost. Tell us what remains.

Only then can supporters decide whether this was a bold chapter in Harimau Malaya’s evolution or simply a curious footnote.

Until then, the farewell feels incomplete.

The views expressed are those of the writer and do not necessarily reflect those of FMT.

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