Tag: AFC Asian Cup

Javad Nekounam breaks the record of Team Melli all time appearnces

Finally , the current Captain of Team Melli, Javad Nekounam , broke Ali Daei’s record for the most number of matches while playing his 150th match against Qatar in Sydney.

Javad Nekounam , who started his international career in 2000 while a midfield player at Pas Tehran , has been consistently playing for Team Melli in the last 14 years in which he played in 2 World Cups (2006 , 2014) and 5 AFC Asian Cup ( 2000, 2004, 2007, 2011, 2015).

Nekounam is also the 4th highest scorer in Team Melli history , behind Ali Daei, Karim Bagheri and Ali Karimi , the 3 legendary stars of Iranian football. Nekounam has accumulated 37 goals , one less than Ali Karimi who is the third on the list.

Our sincere congratulation to Nekounam on this achievement.

Messi-Nekounam

 

 

 

Season Openin. Subst. Goals Yellows Reds
2000 1 5 0 0 0
2001 6 4 0 1 0
2002 11 1 0 1 0
2003 13 0 1 2 0
2004 18 0 7 3 0
2005 11 0 4 2 0
2006 11 0 2 2 0
2007 8 0 4 3 0
2008 8 0 4 1 0
2009 8 0 2 3 0
2010 6 0 1 1 1
2011 10 0 5 0 0
2012 8 1 1 1 0
2013 8 0 6 0 0
2014 8 1 0 3 0
2015 2 1 0 0 0
Total 137 13 37 23 1
By season | In opening squad | Substituted in | Goals | Yellow cards | Red cards

 

 

List of Team Melli players in AFC Asian Cup 1968 to 2015

List of Team Melli appearances in AFC Asian Cup

* Limited to players with  5 or more games.

Yellow background indicates current players

 

Seq Name Start Subst. Goals Caps
1 MAHDAVIKIA, Mehdi 14 3 0 17
2 DAEI, Ali 16 0 14 16
3 KARIMI, Ali 11 3 5 14
4 NEKOUNAM, Javad 14 0 4 14
5 ABEDZADEH, Ahmadreza 10 2 0 12
6 GHLEECHKHANI, Parviz 12 0 2 12
7 BAGHERI, Karim 10 0 4 10
8 ABDOLLAHIE, Nassrollah 9 0 0 9
9 AZIZI, Khodadad 7 2 2 9
10 ESTILI, Hamidreza 8 1 2 9
         
11 GHAYEGHRAN, Sirous 9 0 1 9
12 HEJAZI, Nasser 9 0 0 9
13 MINAVAND, Mehrdad 9 0 1 9
14 MOHAMMADKHANI, Nader 9 0 1 9
15 MOHARRAMI, Mojtaba 8 1 0 9
16 ZARINCHEH, Javad 9 0 0 9
17 ALIDOUSTI, Hamid 7 1 3 8
18 ARAB, Mostafa 8 0 0 8
19 BEHZADI, Homayoun 6 2 4 8
20 DERAKHSHAN, Hamid 7 1 0 8
         
21 FONOONIZADEH, Mehdi 8 0 0 8
22 HOSSEINI, Jalal 8 0 1 8
23 JABBARI, Ali 7 1 5 8
24 KALANI, Hossein 8 0 7 8
25 KASHANI, Jaffar 8 0 0 8
26 KERMANI-MOGHADAM, Morteza 7 1 0 8
27 PEYOUS, Farshad 8 0 3 8
28 REZAEI, Rahman 8 0 0 8
29 TEYMOURIAN, Andranik 8 0 1 8
30 ARABSHAHI, Zia 7 0 1 7
         
31 KAEBI, Hossein 6 1 0 7
32 NOSRATI, Mohammad 6 1 1 7
33 PANJALI, Mohammad 7 0 0 7
34 ROWSHAN, Hassan 6 1 3 7
35 BARZAGARI, AbdulReza 5 1 2 6
36 BAVI, Karim 6 0 1 6
37 BAYANI, Shahroukh 6 0 3 6
38 CHANGIZ, Abdolali 6 0 0 6
39 DANAEIFARD, Iraj 5 1 1 6
         
40 DINVARZADEH, Mehdi 6 0 0 6
41 FARIBA, Behtash 6 0 7 6
42 FONOONIZADEH, Morteza 6 0 0 6
43 GOLMOHAMMADI, Yahya 6 0 0 6
44 HAJILOO, Asghar 6 0 0 6
45 HAQIQIAN, Mahmoud 6 0 0 6
46 KHABIRI, Habib 6 0 0 6
47 MANSOURIAN, Alireza 5 1 0 6
48 MIRZAPOUR, Ebrahim 6 0 0 6
49 PEYROVANI, Afshin 6 0 0 6
         
50 SOLTANI, Behrouz 6 0 0 6
51 ASHTIANI, Ebrahim 5 0 0 5
52 BAYANI, Shahin 5 0 0 5
53 HAJSAFY, Ehsan 5 0 1 5
54 MOHAMMADKHANI, Nasser 5 0 3 5
55 OSTADASADI, Ali Akbar 5 0 0 5
Ali Karimi Pashaki

Asian football is all the poorer for the retirement of a genuine legend.

Asia loses a legend as Karimi retires

 

JOHN DUERDEN

espnfc.com

 

Ali Karimi has finally hung up his boots after a fine career.

 

Not many football players were mentioned by name in those diplomatic cables released to the world by WikiLeaks a few years ago but Ali Karimi was. Even Iranian president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad found the time to get involved in the career of the man they called ‘The Wizard Of Tehran” who finally pocketed his wand and hung up his boots earlier this week. Having threatened to quit before, this time it is for real and Asian football has lost a little of its sparkle as a result.

His 117 caps for Iran, Bundesliga success with Bayern Munich and three separate spells with his beloved Persepolis in Tehran don’t tell anything like the full story. Karimi is one, some say the best, of the most talented players Asia has ever produced.

Special barely begins to describe the quarterfinal of the 2004 Asian Cup against South Korea, almost exactly a decade ago. Jinan is one of the grittier Chinese cities but if you wanted beauty and magic, it was the place be on that sticky Saturday night as it hosted one of the greatest individual performances ever seen on the continent. Scoring a hat trick in a 4-3 win was always going to grab the headlines but there was something different about his performance that only a true great can claim. Iran coach Branko Ivankovic recalled later on how he realised early in the game that his star man was in special form; the instructions from the bench and the half-time team talk were basically to give it to Karimi.

Some of the Korean defenders were still shaking their heads an hour after it all finished and the tormentor is still talked about and respected in Seoul. Karimi was more than the difference between the two teams, he was the difference between witnessing an exciting game of knockout football in a major competition and something unforgettable. A few months later, he was named Asia’s player of 2004.

It was almost a perfect year with the only frustration that he was still playing for Al Ahli in a UAE league where he lingered too long. It was like Park Ji-sung starring in the 2002 World Cup and deciding to stay at Kyoto Purple Sanga for another season or two instead of heading to PSV Eindhoven, the latter stages of the Champions League and then Manchester United. In typical Karimi fashion however, when the move came, it was a big one as he left Dubai for Bayern Munich, just weeks before Park was pictured holding the famous red shirt at Old Trafford in July 2005.

Karimi’s first game against Bayer Leverkusen was watched by millions back home. It is hard to think of an Asian player who had managed such an impressive big league debut after a direct switch from east to west and the midfielder basked in the plaudits after helping his new club to a 5-2 win.

He continued to look solid over the next six months or so, before an ankle injury in arctic conditions against Hamburg in March 2006 ended his first campaign. He never really got going again, perhaps it was being injured a long way from home, perhaps it was the fall-out of that summer’s World Cup, perhaps it was issues behind the scenes at FC Hollywood, but the injury as good as ended his time with Bayern. It was made official in May 2007 and, soon after, he returned to the Middle East and Qatar. Apart from the briefest of spells with Schalke, his European career was over.

There will be regret that the wider world outside Asia didn’t get to see much of what he could do. 2006 should have been the time but the World Cup was a disaster for both player and country. Karimi was still not match fit after the Hamburg injury and was taken off on the hour of the opening game against Mexico. Shortly after, a 1-1 scoreline became a 3-1 defeat. Worse was to follow. He was one side of a major split in the dressing room opposite Ali Daei, a legend who was past his best by the time the tournament kicked off, and for Iranian football, the lack of unity off the pitch was more painful than results on it.

Controversy was never far away from Karimi — given the tag “Asian Maradona,” the nickname was accurate in more ways than one as he was not afraid to speak out about some of the issues in Iranian football, a trait that won him enemies as well as public affection. In 2008, the Iranian FA banned him from the national team after he publicly criticised the federation for incompetence. He was reinstated thanks to the efforts of President Ahmadinejad.

 

Ali Karimi: The deep-lying forward has played 112 times for Iran
Karimi was never one to hold his tongue.

 

Perhaps, however, Iran’s leader regretted the intervention the following year. In June 2009, Karimi headed to South Korea as part of a team needing to win to keep hopes of automatic qualification for the 2010 World Cup alive against a backdrop of major protests back home. The president had just won re-election but the opposition claimed their man, Mir Hossein Mousavi, as the real winner. The favoured colour of the challenger during the election was green, and six of the Team Melli XI took the pitch in Seoul sporting wristbands of the same colour. Whatever the official explanation soon given — namely that the gesture was a religious one — it was certainly interpreted by many as support for the opposition.

Many thought that was it for Karimi in terms of the international stage, especially when in 2010, his club Steel Azin banned him from playing after he was reportedly seen drinking water in a training session during Ramadan. The ban didn’t last long though and he was soon back playing for his country but, in truth, his best years were behind him.

Even so, he managed to play a sizable part in Iran’s successful qualification for the 2014 World Cup until the historic defeat to Lebanon midway through the final stage. Many fans campaigned for him to be summoned to Brazil but it was not to be, though coach Carlos Queiroz reserved some special words for the player when naming his final squad, who took the omission with the kind of grace he often showed on the playing field. In the end, it was hard to imagine the 35 year-old matching younger compatriots in their defensive discipline against Argentina but then, perhaps, it is easy to imagine him coming up with the goal that Iran deserved against the eventual runners-up too.

Karimi wasn’t perfect. He upset plenty and his performances didn’t always match his skill but that was part of his charm. He divided opinion as easily as he divided a defence with a deft backheel, but surely all can agree that Asian football is all the poorer for the retirement of a genuine legend.

Iran road to AFC Asian Cup 2015

IRAN
Iran secured a record-equaling 13th appearance in the AFC Asian Cup.

An ever-present at the AFC Asian Cup since first hosting the tournament in 1968 Iran claimed their spot in the tournament after winning Group B ahead of Kuwait, Lebanon and Thailand.

Team Melli have plenty of pedigree in the AFC Asian Cup, having won three consecutive titles in 1968, 1972 and 1976.

Iran were then helmed by legendary manager Heshmat Mohajerani who not only took his country to their third AFC Asian Cup in 1976 and in that same year a quarter-final appearance in the Montreal Olympics, but also led the national side to their first ever appearance at the 1978 FIFA World Cup in Argentina.

Since those glory years, Iran proved unable to match the achievements of Mohajerani’s men, crashing out in the AFC Asian Cup semi-finals on five occasions.

It also took two decades before the Middle Eastern giants returned to the World Cup, playing a part in the tournament in 1998, backed by the goals of their Bundesliga star and Iranian icon Ali Daei.

While Iran can also boast an appearance at the 2006 FIFA World Cup in Germany, in recent AFC Asian Cup campaigns they have repeatedly come unstuck against fellow Asian powerhouses South Korea.

In four consecutive tournaments since the 2000 AFC Asian Cup in Lebanon, Iran have encountered the Koreans at the first knockout stage and won just the one encounter – in 2004 when they went on to finish third overall.

Now led by former Real Madrid and Portugal national team manager Carlos Queiroz, Iran secured a place in the 2014 FIFA World Cup, topping their qualification group in the process, for their fourth appearance at the finals.

Skippered by evergreen Javad Nekounam who is nearing 150 caps, and with exciting new call-ups to the team that include attacking stars Ashkan Dejagah and Reza Ghoochannejhad who ply their trade in Europe’s top divisions, the AFC Asian Cup’s all-time top-scoring team have the ability to match their former glory and will surely be a side to be feared.

Coach:  Carlos Queiroz (Portugal). Queiroz coached his home country through an under-achieving 2010 World Cup, where a 7-0 rout of North Korea masked some major Portuguese failings. They  failed to score in three other matches — against Ivory Coast, Brazil and a testy 1-0 second-round loss to eventual champion Spain. Queiroz, the former Real Madrid coach and assistant to Manchester United manager Alex Ferguson, was fired once European Championship qualifiers began following the World Cup but he has  resurfaced — and flourished — in Tehran. On Queiroz’s watch, Iran won its final Asian qualifying group, has advanced to the 2015 Asian Cup in Australia and is currently the top Asian team in FIFA’s rankings.

Fast Facts 

Population: 76 million
FIFA ranking: 38
Ranking among Asian nations: 1
Year of first attempt: 1968
Previous attempts: 12
Best finish: Champions 1968, 1972, 1976
Qualified: top of Group B
Players to watch: Reza Ghoochannejhad (Standard Liege, Belgium), Ashkan Dejagah (Fulham, England), Andranik Teymourian (Esteghlal, Iran), Javad Nekounam (Esteghlal, Iran)

 

Iran @ AFC Asian Cup

Players records

  Name Openin. Subst. Goals Yellows Reds
1. DAEI, Ali 16 0 14 1 0
2. MAHDAVIKIA, Mehdi 14 3 0 1 1
3. NEKOUNAM, Javad 13 0 4 3 0
4. GHLEECHKHANI, Parviz 12 0 2 0 0
5. KARIMI, Ali 11 3 5 2 0
6. ABEDZADEH, Ahmadreza 10 2 0 1 0
  BAGHERI, Karim 10 0 4 0 0
8. ABDOLLAHIE, Nassrollah 9 0 0 0 0
  GHAYEGHRAN, Sirous 9 0 1 0 0
  HEJAZI, Nasser 9 0 0 0 0
  MINAVAND, Mehrdad 9 0 1 2 0
  MOHAMMADKHANI, Nader 9 0 1 0 1
  ZARRINCHEH, Javad 9 0 0 0 0
14. ESTILI, Hamidreza 8 1 2 0 0
  MOHARRAMI, Mojtaba 8 1 0 2 0
  ARAB, Mostafa 8 0 0 0 0
  FONOONIZADEH, Mehdi 8 0 0 0 0
  KALANI, Hossein 8 0 7 0 0
  KASHANI, Jaffar 8 0 0 0 0
  PEYOUS, Farshad 8 0 3 1 1
  REZAEI, Rahman 8 0 0 3 0
22. AZIZI, Khodadad 7 2 2 3 0
  ALIDOUSTI, Hamid 7 1 3 0 0
  DERAKHSHAN, Hamid 7 1 0 0 0
  JABBARI, Ali 7 1 5 0 0
  KERMANI-MOGHADAM, Morteza 7 1 0 2 0
  ARABSHAHI, Zia 7 0 1 0 0
  HOSSEINI, Jalal 7 0 1 0 0
  PANJALI, Mohammad 7 0 0 0 0
  TEYMOURIAN, Andranik 7 0 1 2 0
31. BEHZADI, Homayoun 6 2 4 0 0
  KAEBI, Hossein 6 1 0 2 0
  NOSRATI, Mohammad 6 1 1 1 0
  ROWSHAN, Hassan 6 1 3 0 0

24 teams in AFC Asian Cup 2019

The AFC has announced major changes in the competitions structure.

The major competition of the conteninet, the AFC Asian Cup will feature 24 teams in 2019 edition while AFC Champions League will see a similar number of nations participating according to AFC announcement following a meeting in Muscat where the AFC U-22 Championships were recently held.

The AFC Challenge Cup, which sees participation from lower ranked Asian teams, with winners gaining direct entry to the Asian Cup, will also be scrapped following this year’s edition in Maldives.

Qualification process for the Asian Cup and Fifa World Cup will also be combined at the preliminary stage. AFC Member Associations (MAs) will be split into eight groups with the group winners and four second best teams going forward to the final qualifying round for Fifa World Cup, as well as gaining automatic entry to the Asian Cup. This also increases the number of Asian teams competing in the final round of the World Cup qualifiers from 10 to 12.

The top 24 remaining teams who failed to progress to the final round of World Cup qualifiers, will instead compete for a chance at the Asian Cup in six groups of four teams. However the final round of qualifiers for the World Cup and Asian Cup will remain separate.

Changes have also been implemented for AFC’s club competitions. Assessment criteria for a nation’s AFC Champions League eligibility will now also include national team performances over the previous four years. 30% of the criteria points will be drawn from national team with the remaining 70% based on clubs’ showings.

The top 24 ranked MAs based on this new criteria will get a direct slot in the AFC Champions League group stage. Other criteria such as club licensing, existence of integrity programmes, organization of a professional league, satisfactory facilities and logical support also need to be fulfilled.

The next eight highest ranking MAs will get a direct slot in the AFC Cup group stage while those ranked from 33 to 47 will get a chance to play in the AFC Cup playoff stage.

The new rules will come into effect in competitions from 2015 with assessments taking place this year.

AFC President Shaikh Salman Ebrahim Al Khalifa praised the new changes and hoped for a positive impact.

“Competitions are the main products of AFC and I am happy that it is in the good hands,” he told AFC.com.

“We must market our product and generate income to sustain football across the continent. I am sure that the changes that happen will have big impact in Asian football and will benefit our Member Associations.”

Team Melli scores 4 and qualifies for Asian Cup 2015.

Team Melli qualified for the AFC Asian Cup the  for a record 13th time when they defeated Lebanon 4-1 in Beirut.

In a match overshadowed by a terrorist attack earlier that day in south of Beirut near the Iranian Embassy , which prompted the authorities to ban the spectators from entering the stadium fearing more attacks.

Carlos Queiroz opted to start this match with a different line up, with Teymourian, Jabbari, Hajsafy and Montazzeri being rested. Alireza Jahanbakhash who scored Iran’s 3rd goal against Thailand, earned himself a starting role and looked quite lively on the right. The young player had a couple of good runs on the Lebanese defenders..

The first half ended 0-1 in the first half, Team Melli going ahead late in the half (minute 38) when central defender Amir Hossein Sadeghi towered over all the Lebanese defenders to head home from Masoud Shojaei’s corner.

In the second half, the floodgates opened early, when Ashkan Dejagah volleyed powerfully from a nice footwork on the right flank by Reza Ghoochannejad in minute 50.

4 minutes later , Masoud Shojaei was fouled by the Lebanese defender Ali Hammam in the penalty box.

The Chinese referee had no hesitation whistling for a penalty which Captain Nekounam scored  recording his 37th career goal for Team Melli.

The rout ended in the 63rd minute when the prolific Reza Ghoochannejad continued his amazing scoring record for Team Melli by scoring Iran’s 4th goal from an assist by Shojaei.

With the match in the bag, Queiroz made three substitution including bringing in Maziyar Zare to play as a central defender in place of Hosseini. Although Iran had more of the ball against a demoralized Lebanese team, there were many moments of slack passing by Iranian players and some complacency started developing.

However, it was poor coverage and the ease of dribbling past defenders that allowed Lebanon to score a consolation goal late in the match.

Lebanese winger Mohammed Haider went past 2 defenders with alarming ease before selling Beitashour short with a smart turn and shooting past Davari in an acute angle. The German-Iranian goalkeeper, starting his second game who had very little work to do during the whole match, failed to close and advance on the winger which enable him to slot the ball on the far corner.

Overall. it was a clinical performance by Team Melli , and except for the only goal scored conceded and some lazy and inaccurate passing , Team melli played one of it better games under Queiroz despite the concerns over security and the difficult circumstances off the field. Alireza Jahanbakhsh was quite promising with his runs on the flank. In his first start for the team , the ex Captain of Iran’s youth team , did not shy away from taking on defenders.

Iran, leading the table with 13 points after 5 matches, has qualified for the AFC Asian Cup Australia 2013 , along with Kuwait which defeated Thailand 3-1 in a match player in Kuwait at the same time.

Asian Cup 2015 (Qs) MD5: Lebanon 1-4 Iran

Published on Wednesday, 20 November 2013 02:09

Beirut: Three-time champions Iran confirmed their place at the 2015 AFC Asian Cup after ending Lebanon’s qualification hopes following a convincing 4-1 win in Group B on Tuesday.

Amirhossein Sadeghi opened the scoring just before half-time at Sports City Stadium before Askhan Dejagah, AFC Player of the Year nominee Javad Nekounam and Reza Ghoochannejhad struck in the second half as Iran unbeaten Iran recorded a fourth win five games.

And with Kuwait beating Thailand 3-1, Lebanon saw their hopes of a first AFC Asian Cup appearance since hosting the 2000 edition ended following a second defeat in Group B despite Mohamad Haidar’s late consolation.

Iran only needed to avoid defeat to seal their qualification, but took the lead six minutes before half-time as Sadeghi powered home an unstoppable towering header from a left wing corner.

And the visitors doubled their lead five minutes into the second half as Ghoochannejhad played a pass across the edge of the penalty area and Dejagah beat Lebanon goalkeeper Abbas Hassan with a composed first time finish.

Iran added a third four minutes later as Masoud Shojaei was pulled back by Ali Hamam inside the area and Nekounam confidently sent Hassan the wrong way from the resulting penalty.

And Iran’s fourth arrived four minutes after the hour mark as Shojaei’s deft chip played in Ghoochannejhad and the Belgium-based forward skipped past Hassan before poking the ball home from inside the six-yard area.

But despite seeing their qualification hopes ended, Lebanon’s night did end of a high note courtesy of Haidar superb individual goal with 11 minutes remaining.

 

Team Melli leading Thailand 2-0

Bangkok.

Two goals from the Iranian legionnaires Ashkan Dejagah and Reza Ghoochannejad sealed a comfortable first half lead for Iran in the match against Thailand in bangkok.

The match was poorly attended by the Thai fans whose team has failed to win any points in its last three matches. Team Melli Broke no sweat in this half with a virtual control of the match. Thailand manged rare attempts on Iran goal which was occupied for the first time by Daniel Davari. On the right back , Steven Beitashour made his first full appearnce replacing the injured Khosraow Heydari.