Singapore took a firm grip on the AFF Suzuki Cup final Wednesday with a thumping 3-1 win over Thailand in the first leg at Jalan Besar Stadium.

Goals from Mustafic Fahruddin, Khairul Amri and Baihakki Khaizan gave the Lions a deserved victory which will raise hopes of a record fourth Southeast Asian title ahead of Saturday's second leg in Bangkok.

Pre-match favourites Thailand were briefly on level terms in the second half through Adul Lahso but Singapore were back in front almost immediately and scored a third at the death to seize the advantage.

"We've got a good result, it's up to us now to go to Thailand and try again to score, as if we don't score it will be very, very difficult," said Singapore coach Radojko Avramovic, promising not to sit back in the second leg.

"If they provide us with a nice chair, we can maybe sit back," he deadpanned.

Thailand's German coach Winfried Schafer bullishly insisted he was "sure" his team would win, despite seeing their usual free-flowing attacks stifled by Singapore.

"I have trust in my team, I know my team. For me it's (the result) not important," Schafer said, adding: "I'm sure we will win this match."

In a carnival atmosphere, the home team were quickly into their stride with some slick interchanges on the artificial surface, and Bosnian-born striker Aleksandar Duric, 42, headed over as early as the third minute.

Duric, who will retire after the tournament, proved himself a handful again just minutes later when he was hauled down in the box by Piyaphon Buntao, with Japanese referee Masaaki Toma pointing straight to the spot.


Fahruddin survived some nervy moments after his first, successful spot-kick was ruled out for encroachment, and he planted the second effort high and right to spark jubilation in the packed 7,500-capacity stadium.

Singapore were dominant and Amri, the match-winning hero when the two sides met in the 2007 final, floated a showboating effort from distance which tested Thai goalkeeper Kawin Thamasatchanan.

Teerasil Dangda's shot from a tight angle was as close as Thailand came in the first half but the tournament's leading goal-scorer brought his team back into it on 59 minutes when his cut-back was swept in off the post by Adul.

However, parity lasted just two minutes as Duric found Amri in the box from the left and the striker span away from his marker, turned and buried his shot at the near post.

Singapore goalkeeper Izwan Mahbud was at full stretch when he palmed away a stinging free-kick by Thailand's Jakkapan Ponsai, and Duric should have done better with a header from a set-piece as the chances flowed.

With 10 minutes to go, Thailand were dealt a blow when goal-scorer Adul was stretchered off injured, reducing them to 10 men as coach Schafer had already made all three substitutions.

And Khaizan made it Singapore's night when he bundled in a corner from close range with just seconds left, prompting long and loud celebrations outside the stadium.