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Photo of Fazrul Nawaz

Photo: Farissen at en.wikipedia / Public domain (source: Wikimedia Commons)

Fazrul Nawaz

ファズルル・ナワズ / ふぁずるる・なわず

American association football player

April 17, 1985 (age 41) ・ Singapore, United States

  • association football player

My Take

Fazrul Nawaz is the kind of national-team mainstay I instinctively root for. A striker who carried Singapore's front line, he later stepped into an assistant-coach role with the women's national side, swapping the goal-scorer's glory for the work of building others up. Representing a small footballing nation means absorbing both the attention and the pressure alone, and he wore that shirt anyway. What I admire is that the shift in spotlight didn't sour him; he turned around and started developing the next generation. That graceful pivot from finishing chances to creating opportunities for others says a lot about his character.

Overview

Fazrul Nawaz bin Shahul Hameed (born 17 October 1985) is a Singapore former international footballer who last played as a striker or second-striker for Singapore National League club Warwick Knights and the Singapore national team. He is the current assistant coach for the Singapore women national team.

Summary adapted from Wikipedia, licensed under CC BY-SA 4.0.

1. Profile

Name (English)
Fazrul Nawaz
Name (Japanese)
ファズルル・ナワズ
Reading
ふぁずるる・なわず
Born
April 17, 1985 (age 41)
Zodiac / Chinese zodiac
Aries / Ox
Origin
Singapore, United States
Blood type
Private
Height
Private
Agency
Private
Occupation
association football player

2. Background

Elementary school
Private
Junior high
Private
High school
Private
University
Private

3. Relationships

Spouse
Private
Children
Private
Parents
Private
Siblings
Private

4. Personality

Motto

Private

Association football player — see all → · More people from United States →

7. About this entry

Tags

  • association football player
Last updated
2026-06-02

Facts are limited to publicly available information up to 2024; non-public items are marked "Private / Unknown". English text is machine-assisted (facts translated by Sonnet, "My Take" written by Opus 4.8). The Japanese page is the source of record.