Khabor Wala Desk
Published: 18th November 2025, 11:18 AM
18 January 2003 remains one of the most electrifying evenings in the history of Bangladeshi football. It was a Saturday, and the Dhaka National Stadium was trembling under the roar of nearly 50,000 supporters. One name echoed through the air again and again—Motiur Rahman Munna.
The galleries thundered in harmony:
“Munna! Munna!”
Munna’s name has since been etched into Bangladeshi football folklore. Why? Because on this very day, during the semi-final of the 2003 SAFF Championship, he scored Bangladesh’s only Golden Goal in history—securing victory over arch-rivals India.
The match stood 1–1 after 90 minutes. Ten minutes into extra time, Munna unleashed a left-footed strike from 25 yards out. The ball rocketed into the Indian net. Under the Golden Goal rule, the match ended instantly. Bangladesh won.
Technically, football records list Golden Goal matches as draws. But for Bangladesh, that night was nothing less than a national celebration.
In the 77th minute, Rokonuzzaman Kanchan headed in a superb goal from an Arman Miah corner.
Barely five minutes later, India capitalised on a midfield error. Substitute Alvito D’Cunha fired a shot that slipped past goalkeeper Aminul. The deafening crowd fell silent.
Munna played a quick one-two near midfield, drove forward and suddenly pulled the trigger—an unstoppable bullet into the net.
Alfaz later recalled:
“It felt like a miracle. None of us expected such a goal.”
Bangladesh could have scored several times—
Kanchan’s early header cleared off the line
Jai’s volley missed narrowly
A shot in front of an empty net sailed wide
India survived wave after wave. But not the Golden Goal.
| Position | Players |
|---|---|
| Goalkeeper | Aminul |
| Defence | Sujan, Nazrul, Rajani |
| Midfield | Munna, Arman, Joy |
| Attack | Alfaz, Kanchan |
| Substitutes | Parvez Babu (Farhad), Hasan Al Mamun (Titu), Uzzal |
The stadium had not seen such a crowd in years. When India equalised, you could hear a pin drop. But Munna’s goal sparked an explosion of joy—flags waving, fans crying, strangers hugging each other.
Even the press box shook with excitement.
India’s manager Debjyoti Mukherjee, himself a Bengali, congratulated Bangladesh in fluent Bangla.
Coach George Kottan, deeply loved in Bangladesh, remarked:
“We should have won in normal time.”
Kanchan still feels emotional:
“I actually scored twice that day. One was disallowed. With modern technology, it would have counted.”
However, he also criticised the current team’s structure, adding:
“Bangladesh lack planning today. The coach is not organising the team properly.”
As Bangladesh face India again—
can someone recreate Munna’s miracle?
Will it be
Hamza Choudhury?
Shamit Som?
Rakib Hossain?
Or will a new hero rise?
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