Tag: Azadi Stadium

Iran to play Japan on October 13th.

The friendly international against Japan has been finalized and will be played on FIFA Day on 13th October 2015 in Azadi Stadium.

The match will come 5 days after Team Melli has played Oman its main Group D rival in FIFA World Cup 2018 qualifiers in Muscat. This friendly has been discussed  between the two federation but only finalized yesterday to nicely slot between the two teams commitments in the World Cup qualifiers.

Both the Asian giants have stumbled in the first round of FIFA World Cup qualification rounds 2018 with Japan surprisingly being held by Singapore at home, and Iran facing the same against Turkmenistan away. As such , this edition of the competition might be a shade more difficult than both Iran and Japan has expected and matches like this friendly will be beneficial for the two main contenders for a place in World Cup 2018 finals in Russia.

The friendly in Tehran will be the first between the two teams in 10 years . The last time the two have met was in the World Cup 2006 qualifiers where Iran lost 2-1 in Yokohama. None of the players in that match will be featuring in the October friendly.

The Iran and Japan rivalry goes back to the fifties of last century. The two teams met for the first time in the Asian Games 1951  semi-finals in New Delhi, where the match ended goal-less. In the replay the next day Iran drew first blood and won in a closely fought match 3-2  with 2 goals from Mehdi Masoud-Ansari and one from Masoud Broumand. Japan goals came from Masanori Tokita and Toro Kagawa.

16 matches have been played between the teams with Iran edging Japan by 6 wins against 5. 5 matches were drawn.

Team Melli program: South African camp is on, Palestine match finalized.

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General Secretary of the Football Association, said they have not been able to find a national or club side to play friendly preparatory games against  in South Africa while Palestine game in Azadi is confirmed.

Mohammad MohammadNabi was commenting on the latest plans for Team Melli including the training camp in South Africa which he said is now finalized and will commence on 14th December.

He added that after the national team’s training camp and on return from South Africa, the players will rest for 2 days and  according to the current program , Team Melli will play the Palestinian national team  in Azadi on the 28th December. After that following a two days rest , the team  will fly to Australia for the final phase of preparation and training just before the AFC Asian Cup commences..

 

FIFA Refuses to allow Zimbabwe vs Iran match.

FFIRI’s desperate attempt to find an opponent for Team Melli practice match in Tehran, hit another snag.  Zimbabwe was selected to play against Team Melli in Azadi on the 12th Nov. However, this same country has already arranged a friendly match against Morocco on the 16th and hence FIFA refused to allow this match to proceed.

According to FIFA Rules regulating international matches and to avoid excessive fatigue on players on their return to club duties after their international break or FIFA day , a team cannot play two consecutive matches in two different continents , unless 3 days minimum has elapsed and a maximum of not more than 5 hours flying between the two venues is flown.

Based on Zimbabwe schedule, the request by FFIRI for the issue of clearance for international match was denied.

FFIRI are known to have arbitrary, knee-jerk reaction in arranging international matches. After all these years in office, the personnel there have yet to master the mechanism of arranging friendly matches.  They also seem to have less regards to long term planning and scheduling preferring to deal with international friendly matches in an auction style. This would be in form of finding the cheapest and first available teams to play with in the quickest time possible. Failure to arrange matches, like most frequently , they blame the lack of time for such let down.   

Team Melli is arranging a training camp for the upcoming AFC Asian Cup 2015.

AC Milan legends give Iranian soccer fans a boost

(CNN) — As Iran’s relations with the Western world seem to be thawing following a historic U.S. agreement over its nuclear production, sport is also doing its part to bring Tehran in from the cold.

AC Milan, the world’s most successful soccer club in terms of trophies won, sent a team stacked full of its former stars to take part in a charity match against counterparts from Persepolis FC.

Thursday’s game, watched by 65,000 fans in Persepolis’ Azadi Stadium, was won 3-1 by the seven-time European champion.

But as Iran’s nuclear deal will help lift some of the economic sanctions that have hurt its growth, this exhibition has bigger meaning for Persepolis and the development of Iranian football.

It is part of a collaboration that began at the end of last year when Persepolis president Mohammad Rouyanian visited Italy to meet with Milan chief executive and V.P. Adriano Galliani.

Milan’s website reports that the “Rossoneri” (“black and reds”) will be sharing knowledge of the club’s successful youth academy with Persepolis — which is Iran’s most successful team and one of the most popular in Asia.

“Mohammad Rouyanian expressed his admiration for the way that the club and its proprietor made Milan the most decorated in the world,” the website said. “The desire to create and develop a form of collaboration between the two clubs came naturally.

“Collaboration is already underway that will see the Milan Academy help to export and replicate the Milan Model with Persepolis, which celebrates its 50-year anniversary this year.”

Legendary defender Paolo Maldini headed a star-studded Milan lineup at the 100,000-capacity Azadi Stadium for a match that marked the last Persepolis appearance for former Iran captain Mehdi Mahdavikia.

Mahdavikia, 36, retired this year following a distinguished career in which he appeared at two World Cups — representing his country 111 times in all — and spent eight seasons with German club Hamburg.

The Milan team also included another of Italy’s defensive greats, Franco Baresi, and his fellow World Cup winner Gennaro Gattuso.

Its goals came from Daniele Massaro — part of Italy’s 1982 World Cup-winning squad — Christian Lantignotti and Stefano Eranio, while Alireza Emamifar scored for Persepolis.

“Thank you to @acmilan glorie for coming to Iran and putting a smile on the Iranian AC Milan fans :)” one supporter wrote on Twitter.

‘There is no better ambassador than football’: Meet the US soccer coach in Iran

 

By Alexander Smith, NBC News contributor

One American enjoys a unique view of life in Iran – from the sidelines of Tehran’s main soccer stadium typically packed with more than 100,000 screaming fans.

Dan Gaspar, 58, is the assistant coach of the Iranian national soccer team.

“My experience is not one I’ve seen on TV or read in a newspaper. I live here, it’s real life,” said Gaspar.

“It may sound strange to most people, but I’ve worked on four continents and Iran is one of the safest places I’ve worked in,” he said. “When I read and hear and see things through the media and then go out to the balcony of my apartment and look into Tehran that is not what I see.”

‘No negative reactions’ 
Gaspar, who spends all but six weeks of the year living in Tehran, says the typical American representation of Iran as an isolated place does not resemble his experience.

“You would be surprised, it is very multicultural, far more than I had anticipated,” he said. “In the apartment complex I live in you often see lots of other internationals.”

Socially, Gaspar says he spends time with the other staff on the soccer team, cooking meals for each other at home. Although, he did speak highly of Tehran’s restaurant scene.

“I have eaten Mexican food, I have eaten Italian food, French food,” he said. “There are no bars and no night-life, publicly, so going out to restaurants is a big part of the way people socialize. Their restaurants are of a high standard, compared to any other country in the world.”

While conceding that the universally warm reception he has received may have something to do with his involvement in the increasingly successful national team, he said he’s generally had a positive experience.

“Out and about in the city, when people discover that I’m an American they are interested by it,” he said. “It opens up a discussion, in a positive way.  I have had no negative reactions.”

Winding path to Tehran 
Gaspar took a winding path to Tehran. He began coaching in the 1970s in the amateur soccer leagues in Connecticut. From there, he went on to several roles in Portugal — Gaspar has duel Portuguese-American citizenship and is multilingual — before returning in 1996 for a stint on the staff at the New York Metro Stars, where he reached the MLS playoffs.

He has also worked in Japan’s J-League and in South Africa. But it was working under head coach Carlos Queiroz on the Portuguese national team which offered his unusual avenue to Tehran.

Queiroz is something of a legend in coaching circles, having won trophies at Real Madrid and Manchester United. But he was fired as head coach of Portugal in 2010 after allegedly insulting an anti-doping team attempting to take samples at his training ground.

In April 2011 Queiroz was announced as Iran’s new head coach — quite a coup for a relatively small soccer nation — and he asked Gaspar to come with him as his assistant and goalkeeping coach.

“Professionally I felt this was an incredible and interesting challenge. It’s a unique opportunity,” Gaspar said.

While in the U.S., soccer takes a back seat to the pigskin, baseball mitt, and basketball hoop. In his new home, the world’s biggest sport is firmly center stage.

“Iran is a passionate country about football,” said Gasper, using the term for soccer outside the U.S. “There is no doubt that the Iran fans are one of the most passionate fans in the world — they love their football.”

“It’s not uncommon to have 120,000 fans attend our matches at the Azadi stadium, in Tehran. The atmosphere is electric with a sea of green, red, and white flags filling the stadium, along with the most intense noise-levels I’ve ever heard from the crowd, supporting their football heroes,” added Gaspar, who has been in the job as assistant and goalkeeper coach since 2011.

Gaspar claims his “expertise is not politics,” but he has met both the recently elected President Hassan Rouhani and his predecessor Mahmoud Ahmadinejad – who he said had an impressive knowledge of soccer.

A moment of ‘national optimism’
Rouhani’s election on June 15 came at a particularly interesting time. It was followed three days later by Gaspar helping guide the Iranian soccer team to victory in Ulsan, South Korea — and with it, to qualification for next year’s World Cup in Brazil.

He said these two events created a “perfect storm” which created an “incredible feeling of national optimism.”

“There was a happiness among the people and you could sense there was this hope that things would improve,” he said.

He described helping Iran to qualify for the World Cup as the happiest moment in his career.

“Imagine this: You have the pressure of 75 million people on your shoulders, with the hopes and aspirations that we qualify their nation to the 2014 Brazil World Cup, and we delivered that mission,” he said.

“The celebration after in the locker room after the South Korean match, when we qualified for the tournament, was very emotional. There were tears of joy, hugs, singing, and plenty of high fives.

But he said even he was surprised when the Iranian ambassador to South Korea brought a ballot box to the team’s hotel where they were staying in the run-up to the qualifier, just so players and staff could vote in the election even though they were out of the country.

“I don’t think anyone from the outside world would believe that kind of thing would take place,” he said.

 

Soccer diplomacy
Gaspar’s role could take on increased significance next year, if U.S. plans bear fruit to host Iran in a World Cup warm-up game on U.S. soil.

“Talks are only at a preliminary stage at the moment, but there appears to be a genuine interest on both sides to make this match to become a reality,” he said.

The two countries have only played twice before. Iran beat the U.S. 2-1 at the 1998 World Cup in a game of historic significance, both in terms of sport and diplomacy. This was followed by a non-competitive game in Pasadena, Calif., 18 months later.

Gaspar realizes the how important playing another match next year could be, coming at a crucial diplomatic stage between the nations.

“For 90 minutes it will be an ideal gesture towards diplomacy,” he said “Who knows, football may be a launching pad towards respectful, honest and peaceful solutions between nations?

“Certainly the world would benefit from such discussions.  History has demonstrated that football has proven to bridge nations. The power and influence of football is amazing. There is no better ambassador than football.”

Both the USSF and U.S. government have refused to confirm or deny they are in talks with Iran about the game.

But U.S. State Department spokeswoman Marie Harf told a briefing earlier this month: “We’ve always said we were open to direct negotiations and talks with the Iranians, so where a better place than on the soccer field, right?”

 

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At schools, in shops, and on the streets of big cities and small towns, daily life plays out in Iran.