Month: November 2015

Vahid Shamsaee wins AFC Futsal Player of the Year 2015 award

New Delhi: Lumpur: The Asian Football Confederation’s Annual Awards extravaganza was held to much acclaim in New Delhi, India on Sunday.

On a night when the AFC acknowledged the continent’s best players, officials and administrators, there can be little doubt that the high profile gathering in the Indian capital was nothing short of a resounding success.

From an impassioned speech about Asian football’s rise to power and bright future courtesy of AFC President Shaikh Salman bin Ebrahim Al Khalifa, to stellar cultural performances and the crowning of the AFC Player of the Year, the evening provided something for everyone as glitz and glamour shared the stage with the continent’s finest.

Here’s a full list of the 2015 AFC Annual Awards winners:

AFC Member Association of the Year

Inspiring
Japan Football Association

Developing
Hong Kong Football Association

Aspiring
Bangladesh Football Federation

AFC Dream Asia Award

Chinese Football Association
Japan Football Association
Vietnam Football Federation

AFC National Team of the Year

Men
Australia National Team

Women
Japan Women’s National Team

AFC Coach of the Year

Men
Ange Postecoglou (AUS)

Women
Asako Takakura (JPN)

AFC Player of the Year

Men
Ahmed Khalil (UAE)

Women
To be announced at a later date

AFC President Recognition Awards for Grassroots Football

Inspiring
Japan

Developing
Vietnam

Aspiring
Brunei Darussalam

AFC Fair Play Association of the Year

Japan Football Association

AFC Club of the Year

Guangzhou Evergrande (CHN)

AFC Futsal Player of the Year

Vahid Shamsaee (IRN)

AFC Futsal Team of the Year

Tasisat Daryaei (IRN)

AFC Youth Player of the Year

Men
Dostonbek Khamdamov (UZB)

Women
Rikako Kobayashi (JPN)

AFC Foreign Player of the Year

Ricardo Goulart Pereira (BRA)

AFC Asian International Player of the Year

Son Heung-min (KOR)


 

Individual Honors of Vahid Shamsaee

Karim Ansarifard scores a brace for his Greek club.

Karim Ansarifard Team Melli and Greek club Panionios FC center forward was the hero of the day as the Iranian player scored both of his team’s goals in the 2-0 victory over PAS Giannina on Saturday evening round 12 match of the Greek super League 2015/16 season.

With this win, Panionios FC secured the 3rd spot in the table behind the runaway leaders Olympiakos Piraeus with 30 and equal in points with Panathinaikos, lying 2nd with 22 with with a better goal margin ahead of Panionios .

Ansarifard scored his first goal in Stadio Néas Smírnis (Athína) early in the first half. Only 5 minutes has passed when Team Melli forward opened the scoring. 15 minutes later , L. Argyropoulos provided the assist for Ansarifard to complete his brace and secure an early commanding lead for Panionios FC.

Ansarifard was substituted in the 81st minute receiving a standing ovation from his fans.

Guam perspective after the routing.

Grant Wieman

Guam men’s national team midfielder Ryan Guy lined up for a free kick from 19 yards from the Iran goal in the match’s 70th minute. He approached with intent to shoot but pulled up at the last moment, opening a lane for reserve striker Ian Mariano to get a free look at the net. Mariano’s shot cleared the wall of defenders, and after them soared over the Iran goal.

The attempt was as close as Guam got to a highlight in their 6-0 FIFA World Cup Qualifying match against Iran at the Guam Football Association National Training Center on Tuesday.

It was a disappointing loss, which in itself shows how far the team has come.

“This would have been a celebration five years ago, to keep a team like Iran under 10 goals,” Matao head coach Gary White said. “We are established now as a mid-tier team. We were always a lower-tier team and to me, to be a mid-tier team in Asia, out of 47 countries, really shows the ability we have in this country.”

Mid-tier is not Iran and the top-ranked team in Asia showed as much on the field, scoring goals in the 12th, 32nd, 49th, 52nd, 53rd and 63rd minute.

Iran was bigger, faster and more experience than Guam, and while the team wouldn’t admit as much, keeping within striking distance at halftime was a tremendous accomplishment for the young, inexperienced team host a 2014 FIFA World Cup participant.

Neither team was at full strength for the game — visa issues, suspensions and injuries prevented that — but Guam was hit particularly hard on defense. Center backs Brandon McDonald and A.J. DeLaGarza missed the match and Iran consistently scored on crosses from the middle of the field.

Mason Grimes was among those tasked with filling in for McDonald and DeLaGarza on defense.

“We had some young guys and young guys had to step up,” Grimes, 23, said. “It’s not the result we wanted but we’re just trying to learn and improve.”

By the 70th minute the chance of an upset was gone so the team’s goal shifted to respecting themselves and the home crowd.

White subbed in Mariano and Dylan Naputi, locally-produced players who had the support of the team and the Matao fans.

“I think that was the momentum we needed. It really changed things. We almost scored immediately from it,” White said. “We wanted to score not only for ourselves to get our heads up a little bit, but also for the fans, give them something to cheer about.”

Moments after Mariano and Paulino subbed into the game, the Matao earned their best chance of the game.

Shane Malcolm, the team’s fastest player, took off in a sprint through the middle of Iran’s defense and brought in a forwarding pass. As Malcolm received it, the Iran keeper, Ali Reza Beiranvand, plowed through him and picked up a red card.

“I just wanted to give the fans something to cheer about and give (Iran) something else to worry about besides just attacking us the whole time,” Malcolm said. “I kind of started playing that (scoring) role.”

Beiranvand’s play earned him a red card, but the collision occurred just outside the box. Rather than being award a penalty kick, the Matao had a free kick opportunity around a wall of defenders.

The team leaders — captain Jason Cunliffe and midfielder Ryan Guy — considered the moment, the crowd and their players on the field, and drew up a set piece that would be Guam’s best chance to score against the No. 43 team in the world.

“Ryan and Jason were talking about it and they decided they wanted to put me on top,” Mariano said. “We were trying to get the crowd behind us. We were trying to use that momentum from that situation; to use the crowd’s momentum to bring us alive.”

Mariano aimed top shelf, near post, and tried to bend his shot around the wall of defenders and past backup goalkeeper Sousha Makani. The shot, Guam’s last of the game, soared a few feet over the net.

For the final 20 minutes, Iran did what it could to hold possession, burning out the remaining clock to take their comfortable win without disrespecting their hosts.

It was a lesson for Guam and showed just how far above the rest of the Group D field Iran is from Oman, Turkmenistan, India and Guam.

Guam beat India and Turkmenistan in home matches against them this June and drew with Oman, the second-highest ranked team in the WCQ group.

“I think what (Iran) showed today is why they go to World Cups and why Oman doesn’t,” White said. “It was a good lesson again for us today. There was times when we did some really good stuff but we went up against a powerhouse.”

Guam will not play in the 2018 FIFA World Cup. Their elimination was solidified with the loss, but their seven points in seven WCQ games has assured the team will play in the 2019 Asian Cup. They’ll host three home games in that tournament, beginning in 2017.

“For us to qualify for the next phase of the Asian Cup is a massive achievement,” White said. “Maybe, in the next few years, we can start looking toward the World Cup and the next stage, but the players have achieved so much in such a short period of time.”

Team Melli finish the year in style against Guam

Team Melli repeated the result of  last match against tiny Pacific island of Guam in the Group D match today at the Guam FA field. The final score of 6-0 was the same score as the one in Tehran when the two teams last met.

Coached by Englishman Gary White, Guam have put the rugby-score losses of the past behind them with some giant-killing performances and were determined to preserve a remarkable unbeaten home record and to extend it againt Asia’s no 1 team.

Guam’s population is just 170,000 but White’s “Matao”  have consistently punched above their weight, with victories against Turkmenistan and India, a country of 1.2 billion. However , all hopes of matching the top team of Asia or at least scoring a goal against Iran was soon dashed when Mehdi Taremi scored in the 12th minutes of the match played on Artificial turf. Some brilliant footwork by Mehdi Torabi outside the box followed by an immaculate pass to Taremi who buried the ball into the net , to open the floodgate.

Kamal Kamyabinia then added another for Iran with Torabi once gain playing the orchestrating role on the half an hour mark. Soon after , the energetic midfielder suffered some pain and was immediately substituted by Queiroz who replaced him with Masoud Shojaei at the end of the first half which ended 2-0 for Iran.

The second half started with blitz of offensive moves by Team Melli whose players did not have any major problems playing the artificial turf.

Ramin Rezaeian scored the first of 3 quick goals in matters of minutes. On the 49th minute , he open his credit with Team Melli with a good goal. A minute later , Taremi escaped his marker and beat J. Matkin . The Guam defender fouled him from behind. Referee blew for a penalty and was raised the red card for Matkinas a result of denying a scoring opportunity.

 Masoud Shojaei dispatched the penalty with ease on minute 51. 

4 – 0 for Iran with 2 quick goal.

With 10 players , Guam had a mammoth task in damage limitation. Soon after the sending off, Karim Ansarifard scored the 5th for Team Melli and Finally Taremi added a second to his credit and Iran’s 6th goal on 63rd minute.

Then a completely uncalled foul by the erratic Biranvand in Iran goal who handled the ball outside his box while two Iranian defenders were covering behind him. That resulted in a red card for the Team Melli keeper. The Naft Tehran keeper remained on the ground for minutes after that faking injury while the only pain inflicted was his pride and his profligacy for such amateurish play . Ezatollah Pourgaz took over the goalkeeping role as Iran has already substituted 3 players.

Apart from the act by Biranvand, and goal keeping in general in Team Melli, something that Queiroz has already been warned repeatedly against, the rest of team played quite well despite the low experience. Admittedly , Guam is not a team that Iran can measure its strength against , however , the smooth exchanges between the new players, the calm defending , the ball distribution and much more , were quite a good omen for this team. Lack of experience was evident in some moves, but this is expected for a team with players that have low international exposure and experience.

Iran with 14 points is now solidly at the top of the table in Group D and qualified for the Asian Cup 2018 in UAE . The two home games against Oman and India in 2016  will only solidify Team Melli’s position and prepare the team for the next round of the FIFA World Cup 2018 qualifiers.

 

TEAMS MP W D L GF GA +/- Pts
6 4 2 0 20 3 17 14
5 3 2 0 9 3 6 11
6 2 1 3 6 9 -3 7
7 2 1 4 3 15 -12 7
6 1 0 5 4 12 -8 3

 

Team Melli leads Guam in the first Half

Team Melli leads Guam by 2 two goals at the end of the first half scored by center forward Mehdi Taremi (12′)and Kamal Kamyabinia (30′) .

The Group D match played on Synthetic grass in Guam FA Field was a comfortable affair as Team Melli could have easily ended that half with double the current score.  The makeshift Iran team missing many players and with only two senior players in the line up , did not find much difficulty either with the pitch or the opposition.

Late in the half, Iran star Mehdi Torabi who played a role in both goals was injured and replaced by Masoud Shojaei. Karim Ansarifard hit the post and missed the chance to open his account after a long absence.

First Half result

GUAM VS. IRAN  0 – 2

Omid team ties Australia

Iran’s Omid team (U-23) tied Australia U-23 1-1 in the match played this afternoon in the Iranian Club football field in Dubai. Australia went ahead in the match late in the first half, Mehrdad Mohammadi scored Iran’s equalizer in the second half on minute 69 with an assist from Kamandani.

Omid team is undergoing a training camp in Dubai, in preparation for the final Olympics qualifiers on January to be held in Doha , Qatar.

Iran U23 will start the qualifiers with a match against Syria on 12th, Jan, 16 then plays host  Qatar 3 days later and finally China on the 18th, Jan 2016.

 

Friendly Match

Iran U-23  vs. Australia U23

1 – 1

Iranian Club

Dubai , UAE

IRAN: Amir Abedzadeh, Rozbeh Cheshmi, Mohammad Daneshgar, Vahid  Ḥaydaria,  Jalal Abdi (63 Ali Abdollahzadeh), Mahan Rahmani (46 Ahmed Noorallahei), Ehsan Pahlavan (61 Mohsen Karimi), Shahin Saqibi (46 Reza. Karamllachaab), Milad Kamandani (69 Farshid Ismaili), Ali Karimi and Arsaln Motahari (46 Mehrdad Mohammadi)

Coach: Mohammad Khakpour (Iran)

Peyrovani walks out in protest in Guam.

Team Melli’s Sport Manager walked out of the pre-match coordination meeting that was conducted today prior to the Guam-Iran match today as a token of protest against what he called “un-sportsmanship conduct” by Guam.

Afshin Peyrovani was representing Iran side in the tradition pre-match meetings in attendance of the match commissioner from AFC and FIFA. The commissioner intervention with Peyrovani to return back to complete the formalities was succesfull after the official Guam Federation delegates apologized to Peyrovani in person.

Peyrovani’s strong complaints was due to the absence of number of players and officials of Iran due to non granting of Visa. All the Iranian players who are playing in Russia and two other technical crew have been denied visa, while Andranik Teymourian, the team Captain had to miss the Turkmenistan game to get his visa in Doha!

Peyrovani considered that as un-sportsmanship act by Guam and  in contradiction to FIFA’s Fair Play.

“Our coach cannot field its full strength team because of acts beyond sportsmanship, The denial of Guam to grant them visas to enter the country and compete fair and square, is unacceptable and pure injustice.” Peyrovani complained.

The commissioner of the match , however , pleaded with Iran’s representative who reluctantly returned to the meeting after personal apologies from the Guam FA representatives.

‘Milestone’ match for Guam

Grant Wieman

The Guam men’s national soccer team will host the most important match in the island’s history on Tuesday when the world’s No. 43-ranked team, I.R. Iran, competes in the 2018 FIFA World Cup Qualifying game at the Guam Football Association National Training Center.

A win for No. 155 Guam would be unexpected and is probably unrealistic, but simply hosting such a prestigious match gives the Matao an opportunity that was previously impossible to imagine.

“I believe having Iran here, in a World Cup Qualification game, is the single most important milestone in Guam football history,” Guam head coach Gary White said during a press conference at the Hilton Guam Resort and Spa on Monday.

“To have a world-class team, a world-class coach, here on our shores is going to do so much for football and our development,” he continued. “… We want the local fans to see world-class football here, live, because we just don’t watch it enough.”

Guam has earned seven points in its six WCQ matches so far, each of them coming at home. They beat Turkmenistan and India and drew with Oman.

In the earlier match against Iran, in Tehran, the Matao lost 6-0.

“Playing in Iran, even though the score was what it was, the players got better as the game went on and that helped us in the next game against Oman (four days later),” White said. “Without that game, we wouldn’t have learned the lessons that we did.”

Iran Guam @ Azadi

White, called “The Gaffer” by his players, said the Matao learned the importance of starting fast and limiting mistakes during that match. Iran’s first goal that night came in the ninth minute, on a penalty kick, and Iran picked up momentum from there.

“We know they will have more possession than us. That’s just the reality,” White said. “We can’t start slowly. We can’t give them easy chances. … We look at it like it’s an FA Cup game. I know (Iran head coach Carlos Queiroz) has coached a lot of FA Cup games when he was at Manchester United. You do have second division teams that do upset premiership teams, and that’s our mentality.”

Queiroz was an assistant coach for Manchester United for several seasons in the 2000s.

Both teams will enter the game shorthanded. Iran is missing four starting field players, including their top scorer and their No. 1 goalkeeper because they couldn’t obtain visas to travel to the U.S.

The Matao will likely have three defensive starters out due to injuries, suspension and missing the trip because of other commitments.

guam

“We’re one team, we’re very unified, and we know that everyone else will have to pick up the slack,” Matao captain Jason Cunliffe said. “We hope to put on a good show and show our home fans what we’re capable of. … We’re here to fight through the very last minute. We had a tough result in Iran so we’d like to obviously change that.”

Queiroz and Iran’s captain, Andranik Teymourian, were careful with how they addressed the game. They expect to win, but they never said the word, instead speaking in phrases like “get the result that is convenient for us” and “that is on the way to our target.”

Cunliffe , Guam captain

The wording made it clear they respect Guam, both as a soccer team and host nation. It is now up to the Matao to prove they deserve that respect on the pitch.

“To play at home is a great honor against such a team,” Cunliffe said. “Growing up on this island and playing football here, I never — honestly never — thought I’d be seeing the day we’d be hosting a World Cup Qualifier against Iran. It’s amazing and it’s my job as captain to make sure the boys, while we are excited about that in terms of football, for Gaffer and for the kids, to make sure we don’t get too caught up in that because at the end of the day it’s a football match.”

“It’s 11 vs. 11 on the field for 90 minutes and while I’m sitting here telling you it’s great and we’re looking forward to it, believe me when I say that out there on the field it will be a battle and we will make it as difficult for them as possible,” Cunliffe said.

Guam will host Iran at 3:30 p.m. Tuesday at GFA. Doors open at 1:30 p.m.

Kaffashian: We support Shk. Salman for FIFA presidency

Iran’s chief football boss, Ali Kaffashian has formally declared his federation’s support for Bahrain’s Salman bin Ebrahim Al Khalifa for the post of FIFA president..

The AFC President , who is a member of the Bahrain royal family has been accused by his country’s opposition parties and international human right organizations of aiding the government and security forces of the country to identify footballers who supported the opposition movement or took part in protest marches during the uprising in 2011. Shaikh Salman denied any wrong doing and FIFA Ethics committee cleared him to register as a candidate.

Kaffashian’s support for the Bahraini candidate is quite in odd with his government political relationship with the tiny Persian Gulf island kingdom. The relations between Iran and Bahrain are at its lowest with Bahraini government taking every opportunity to accuse Iran of meddling in Bahrain’s affairs and providing support for the opposition parties. Bahrain has also accused Iran of training and providing weapons to terrorists in the country. The government of Bahrain however, has failed to provide even a single credible or materialistic evidence of their claim while the Iranian government , too busy with much more important issues, have completely ignored the Bahraini side protests and considers their accusation of Iran as being too worthless to respond to.

It is not known what complication such support by Kaffashian will have on his candidacy in the upcoming FFIRI elections.

A torturous journey ahead for Team Melli, where is the justice?

After a short rest following the match against Turkmenistan, Team Melli will have to embark on that epic journey to the Pacific Ocean island of Guam, the other side of the world, to play its National team. The match in group D of the FIFA World Cup 2018 qualifiers will entail a 40 hours journey and will involve several transits in airports such as Dubai and Seoul in South Korea before reaching the remote Island destination.

Guam player injured
REMOTE DESTINATION
In this day and age and in a just culture, no person or group should be exposed to such inhumane and torturous journey for the sake of playing a 90 minutes football match. In the grand scheme of things, playing a match that means very little to both countries and teams, which adds no value to either Asian or World football standards, and costs a fortune in air tickets and other expenses.

It is a fact: [pullquote align=”right”]Human beings weren’t designed to spend hours at a time packed inside a pressure-controlled capsule [/pullquote]with recycled air and manufactured heat with hundreds of other people tens of thousands of feet in the air. Add in the jet lag and sleeplessness, and you have a recipe for true physiological torture.

This is one of the more preposterous, absurd and unfortunate side of football arrangements thaIran Guam @ Azadit no one dares to questions. What is a Pacific nation doing playing in Asia? . The governing bodies. FIFA and in a lessor extent AFC, as we all know rule supreme and with an iron fist. Questioning FIFA authority in terms of governance and match scheduling and arrangements , or not following its strict and more often than not, those ridicules rules of playing matches, will mean banishment from the football world and isolation from the rest of the globe.
Why is there no one in Iranian football federation or other AFC member states questioning this deal in which remote Islands of the Pacific are accepted as member of the Asian Region?

[quote class=”Speak up”]People, organizations and the fans need to speak up.[/quote]

It is beyond comprehension, logic and sanity to have teams travel thousands of miles for a football match and then probably return on the same day or after a little rest. Effect on health, mental status and the pockets are simply too great to be continually ignored and dismissed. People, organizations and the fans need to speak up.
One suspects that it is politics, rearing its dirty head in football. It could be some other dodgy arrangements with financial enumeration for FIFA or AFC. It could simply be for the sake of pleasing Big Brother, after all Guam is a United States of America protectorate, and the boys there need some entertainment so we push them in to AFC to enjoy round the globe travel and adventures.

I have nothing against Guam or any other nation for that matter, but it is simply too far and too torturous for central and western Asian teams to travel to. The same applies to Guam players by the way, we also feel for them as much as our teams. They should not be exposed to such torment either.
Last time I checked, Asia was the biggest continent in the world and it is several time bigger than Europe. Simply put, the football ruling bodies cannot and should not implement the same match scheduling because of the vast distances involved and different time zones in Asia.

It is time to act and stop this nonsense.

AFC needs to act, so does FIFA. Now that some wise guy had his fun , let us return back to sanity and stop these epic journeys. It is too late for Iran , Turkmenistan , India and Oman this time , but that leaves the two ruling bodies, enough time to ponder on this arrangements and come up with some sensible solutions that does not expose players to health risks , physical and mentally.

VISA NOT GRANTED!

On a separate issue, as if this long distressing trip to Guam is not bad enough, another major problem surfaced in the shape of granting visas for Iranian players to Guam. A US protectorate, Iranian Citizens, Visa Applications!!! that sounds alike a real case of pandemonium!! Now, we know that the FFIRI is not exactly the most organized and forward thinking football association in this world, but even if they were, the chances of getting it right would have been quite remote.
Whatever and whoever fault it is, a few players will not have received their visa’s on time or perhaps not granted a visa, as such, it is another good reason why Iran should not be involved in such competition which is beyond sporting. There are many reasons to leaving Guam in OFC to enjoy competing with its friendly neighbors who do not need visas to enter their country rather than
those get tangled with Asians with funny names.

Ando vs Guam
Players such as Hajsafy , Azmoun , Haghighi and Ezzatollahei are all without a visa and will most probably not travel with the team. That is a third of the starting lineup who are unable to travel because of non-granting of Visa, so where is the justice and fair competition in that?