Month: October 2016

10 man Iran U19 draws first match against Qatar.

Riffa: A goal at either end for Abolfazl Razzaghpour gave Islamic Republic of Iran a 1-1 draw against defending champions Qatar in their AFC U-19 Championship Bahrain 2016 Group C encounter on Friday.

Iran defender Razzaghpour was left to rue his misfortune at the Bahrain National Stadium as he deflected an Abdullah Abdulsalam header into his own goal in the 38th minute, after it initially looked to be going wide.

Despair turned to elation in the second half though, as Razzaghpour equalised with a thumping strike despite his team being reduced to 10 men shortly after the break.

Qatar started the game promisingly although Iran were giving as good as they got in the opening exchanges.

Tarek Salman surged forward in the 3rd minute for Qatar, leaving his marker on his backside as he fired in a powerful shot that just missed the right hand post.

This set the tone for the first half, with the two teams exchanging speculative shots from distance, the majority of which drifted high or wide.

Iran’s best chance of the half came in the 28th minute, as Shahin Abbasian made good headway down the right flank before crossing deep to the far post for Ali Shojaei to knock the ball down.

Reza Karmollachaab was facing the wrong way as the ball arrived but he pulled off an acrobatic bicycle kick that arrowed towards the bottom right hand corner of the goal, only for Mohammad Albakari to dive low to his left to keep it out.

Riffa: Islamic Republic of Iran defender Abolfazl Razzaghpour turned from villain to hero in less than 60 minutes when his team held Qatar to a 1-1 draw in their Group C opener at the AFC U-19 Championship Bahrain 2016 at the Bahrain National Stadium on Friday.

Razzaghpour first gifted Qatar the lead with an own goal in the 38th minute but turned saviour after netting a powerful left-footer from outside the box to earn a precious point for his side.

“I pray before each game that if I make any mistake in the game, I should remain focused to help my team in all the ways possible,” he told the-AFC.com on his thoughts after the dreadful own goal.

“I kept my concentration on the game and had told my friend midfielder, Omid Nor Afkan before to pass me the ball if he sees any space in front me so that I can take the shot with all my power.

“Thankfully, I got the space, the pass and I did not want to miss this chance.”

“We are not under any kind of pressure. We don’t think about the performances of other Iranian teams and want to think only about our match,” he said about Iran’s recent successes in football and futsal fields.

Photo: AFC

IRAN 1-0 KOREA REP. : Another fine performance by Team Melli

A goal by Sardar Azmoun in the 25th minute of the first half was enough for Team Melli to seal the three points and maintain the lead in the Group A of the FIFA World Cup 2018 qualifiers.

In a packed Azadi stadium , Queiroz once again started the match with a different line up from the previous game against Uzbekistan. Azmoun and Dejagah both returned to the line up while Shojaei who performed immaculately in Tashkent was benched. Not that this change had any adverse effect in the style and game plan as Team Melli continued their fine form picking up where they left off in Tashkent.

Early periods saw several chances for Team Melli. Alireza Jahanbakhsh was guilty of missing a couple of good chances until the 25th minute. Ramin Rezaeian, so solid in the last couple of matches after a slow start to the qualifiers, took the ball past the Korean markers on the left before sending a nicely weighted ground ball to the centre where Azmoun was running alongside his marker. Azmoun cleverly deflected the ball into the far corner where the Korean keeper was over stretched but unable to prevent the goal.

After the goal , Iran was more focused on controlling the ball and exchanging passes. They were excellent on all fronts. The match continued on the same rhythm all the way with the Koreans unable to threaten Biranvand and completely overwhelmed by the tight Iranian defence. The Korean frustration showed in the number of fouls committed in the match.

Ashkan Dejagah was masterful in the midfield as he was leading by example. Dejagah with his skills. ball control and ball distribution made the difference for Iran.  Saeid Ezatolahie is improving with every match and his supporting role to Dejagah completed an almost perfect performance for Iran’s midfield. 

It must be disappointing for Uli Stielike to witness his players hardly creating a single scoring chance in the match . It is even more worrying for the German when his star-studded team with many playing in Europe looked nothing better than an ordinary Asian team that no one seems to fear anymore. 

It is no secret that SON Heung min cares more for his Tottenham career than playing for his country and this match showed that the most expensive and most glamorous Asian player needs really to step up his performance and show his worth if he cares about glory for his nation.

Iran now leads the table going into the long break. Both the results and performance must have been quite satisfying for the fans and critics. Korea on the other hand needs to find a few answers before they find themselves out of the run in this closely fought group.

Man of the Match : ASHKAN DEJAGAH

 

# Team MP W D L F A D P Last 5 matches
1 4 3 1 0 4 0 +4 10 WWDW
2 4 3 0 1 4 1 +3 9 WLWW
3 4 2 1 1 6 5 +1 7 LWDW
4 4 1 1 2 1 2 -1 4 LWDL
5 4 1 0 3 3 6 -3 3 WLLL
6 4 0 1 3 2 6 -4 1 LLDL

Religious leaders: “Turn Azadi into Azadari (Mourning) place”

Team Melli players and fans are in  real dilemma for Tuesday’s game against South Korea in the 4th round of the FIFA World Cup 2018 qualifiers.

Tuesday is Tasooa and the following day Ashoora is commemorated by Shi’a Muslims as a day of mourning for the martyrdom of Imam Hossein ibn Ali , the grandson of Prophet Mohammad at the Battle of Karbala. These days are marked by mourning and no major activities or celebrations are conducted in Iran.

As the FIFA plan for the match against South Korea coincided with Tasooa , Iran’s FA requested a change of date as a sign of respect for the mourning periods in the Shia Islamic calendar. FIFA , AFC and South Korea all refused the Iranian request due to the busy world football calendar , a decision which put a lot of pressure on the football administrators and the IRIFF headed by Mehdi Taj who was in an unenviable position.

After it was clear that the game must go ahead as schedule, the president of IRIFF declared that his federation is under the command of the government and will obey any directive. Iran refusal to play the match, technically considered a withdrawal, would have been excessively costly and virtually would have signaled the end of the competition for Team Melli as the ruling body FIFA could disqualify Iran from the World Cup for withdrawing from a match. It also would have wiped all the 3 matches result.

The situation created an immense pressure on the government of the pragmatist President Hassan Rouhani. His opponents, the religious hardliners, found it an opportunity to discredit him and accuse his administration of showing disrespect to the Imam and bowing to foreign external (…) pressure!

The hapless IRIFF executives, the players, who could only observe in silence and the media, were all nervously awaiting the verdict on the match and whether the hardliners, a very small group in numbers but powerful and actively backed by Ayatollah Khamanei, would have their way by ushering the crowds to Hosseinia (mourning places) instead of Azadi stadium.

Sanity prevailed at the end, and the match was allowed to go on as per schedule. The hardliners and the religious hierarchy realized that they would be committing a grave mistake if they stood against playing the match. If Iran pulled out of the match and subsequently disqualified from the world most prestigious football competition, the history would have never forgotten that neither would have the passionate football loving fans. The popularity of the religious factions in Iran, already on shaky ground and beaten in many battles especially after the Nuclear Treaty with the west, would have dipped even further if Team Melli was victimized. Simply said, there was far too much at stake on one single football match.

Not entirely content with defeat however, the religious hierarchy is warning against any chants that express joy or enjoyment during the game on Tuesday and instead they are urging the crowds in Azadi to turn it into black and conduct the traditional azadari (mourning) instead of singing and chanting for Team Melli!

The Imam Juma of Tehran who leads the Friday sermon declared that he will be watching the crowd action very closely for any inappropriate behavior in Azadi that would be disrespectful to the memory of Imam Hossein. For all intents and purposes, that means any signs of joy normally associated with scoring a goals is deemed an insult and disrespectful.

It is one very complicated situation the like of it has never occurred in Tehran Azadi stadium. The illustrious and passionate Iranian fans have always adapted and normally carry a few tricks up their sleeves. Leaders of the fans, no doubt will be closely watched by the secret police and religious minders, would be urged and pressured to exercise azadari (mourning) rituals and the fans to follow them.

 What about the players?

Although none of them would like to be targeted by the religious hard-liners, however, even if they do celebrate scoring a goal or two, they would hardly be considered traitors to the cause while playing for the country. The religious hard-liners in Iran are mostly a pressure group in the parliament and unlike the Saudi extremist wahabis , the Shia equivalents are non-violent and much more savvy and wary of the public sentiments.

 

 

 

UZBEKISTAN 0-1 IR IRAN

Tashkent

Tashkent: A Jalal Hosseini header ended Uzbekistan’s 100% record in third round qualifying for the 2018 FIFA World Cup as Islamic Republic of Iran defeated the Central Asians 1-0 in Tashkent on Thursday.

Uzbekistan came into the tie on the back of 1-0 wins over Syria and Qatar, but Hosseini’s goal on 27 minutes proved the difference maker as Carlos Queiroz’s team picked up their seventh point in three games to remain unbeaten so far.

Samvel Babayan’s side tried to respond in the second half but having lost playmaker Server Djeparov to injury just before the break, the White Wolves failed to breakdown a stout Iranian defence and suffered their first defeat of the qualifying campaign.

“I think we deserved this victory,” said Queiroz. “Uzbekistan also played well, but they controlled the ball in their area. We tried to go on the counterattack when we took ball.

“We didn’t give many chances to Uzbekistan. They didn’t show their usual performance, and that was to our advantage. We blocked them every time they had dangerous shots and I congratulate my team on this positive result.

“I think the battle for the World Cup will continue. We took three points today, but we need more victories and points. It is just one more step towards our target. If any team makes any mistake in Tashkent they will lose.”

Uzbekistan went into the game without captain Odil Akhmedov due to his inability to recover from injury, while Queiroz made a raft of changes to his midfield and attack with an eye on the crunch match with Korea Republic on Tuesday.

One of those changes, Reza Goochannejhad, could have opened the scoring inside 10 minutes but he sliced his volley high and wide after he was picked out inside the area by full-back Ramin Rezaeian’s fine cross.

Iran did go in front before the half hour mark, though, as centre-back Hosseini connected with a smart header from Masoud Shojaei’s inswinging free-kick from the right that left goalkeeper Aleksandr Lobanov helpless.

The hosts suffered a further blow five minutes before half-time as two-time AFC Player of the Year and captain on the night Djeparov was withdrawn from the field in a great deal of discomfort to be replaced by Alexander Geynrikh.

Uzbekistan begun the second period strongly and pushed forward in search of the leveller but struggled to penetrate the Iran backline.

Inside the final 20 minutes, substitute Jaloliddin Masharipov was brought down on the edge of the area in a hugely promising position but Geynrikh’s free-kick summed up Uzbekistan’s night as it hit the wall and rebounded away harmlessly.

And Iran could have ended the match even more comfortably as Sardor Azmoun, a second half replacement for Ghoochannejhad, played in Vahid Amiri but Lobanov was quick off his line to deny the midfielder, but Queiroz’s team still managed to see out the remaining minutes unscathed.

“Unfortunately we lost the game,” said Babayan. “The players tried to battle until the end of the match, but we couldn’t create chances without Akhmedov. We created some moments, but the team didn’t realise them. Now we have the next game and we need to pay attention to it.

“We lost the fight in the first 30 minutes tonight. Besides that, we couldn’t create any chances through the middle and those were the main reasons for our defeat tonight. We can’t play well in midfield without Akhmedov. Our defenders played well, but we lost many battles in the centre.”

Photos: Lagardère Sports.

Full marks for Team Melli vs. Uzbekistan

Team Melli shared the top of the table in Group A of the FIFA World Cup Qualifiers 2018 after beating Uzbekistan 1-0 in the capital city of Tashkent. The lone goal of the game came from a header by Seyed Jalal Hosseini from an immaculate free kick by the rejuvenated Masoud Shojaei.

Iran and South Korea are both on 7 points after the third round of the qualifiers with Uzbekistan following closely on their heels with 6 points.

Queiroz , who must have been disappointed with the last two games of Team Melli made a major change in the starting line up. Dejagah , Azmoun , Teymourian were all benched, in their places Amiri, Taremi and Ghoochannejad started the match.

Despite the solidly built defensive team, Iran was in fact the side that took the initiative and for over 20 minutes attacked the host not allowing a single coordinated attack on Biravand goal in the process. Team Melli could very well have been 1-0 up in the first 15 minute except for the narrow miss by Ghoochannejad.

Before the half hour, Team Melli scored from a beautiful set play and an immaculate cross by  Masoud Shojaeui. The midfielder who was carrying the Captain’s armband for the first time , sent his perfect free kick from the left flank towards the box where Jalal Hosseini met it with a powerful header past the hapless Lobanov.

The first half ended 1-0 for Team Melli .

In the second , the home side took the initiative but all to no avail. Alireza Biranvand, excellent on crosses, hardly had any save to make during the half and the match for that matter. Iran’s defence marshalled by Hosseini and the excellent Pouraliganji was more than a handful for the Uzbek players who could not pass Go! The only question mark was the form of Milad Mohammadi who seemed to be uncertain and occasionally wild at some of his plays.

Carlos Queiroz introduced Azmoun , and Jahanbakhsh in the 2nd half and the duo’s substitution nearly produced a goal to increase Iran’s lead. Finally Teymourian was introduced to solidify the midfield defensive power.

It was an excellent performance by Team Melli. Much more slick ball movement and smoother touches while the number of fruitless crosses decreased significantly against the towering Uzbek defenders.

The next match at Azadi on Tuesday against South Korea will clarify the shape of the qualification.

 

Uzbekistan v. Iran : match preview

This is hardly a do-or-die match for Team Melli, nevertheless a crucial one in the FIFA World Cup qualifiers double header.  They don’t come more difficult than that as the first match tomorrow in Tashkent is against table leader Uzbekistan with maximum points from two matches, followed by a home game on Tuesday against their nemesis, South Korea.

Iran is setting comfortably between these two opponents in the table with 4 points, a narrow defeat in Tashkent will not be the end of the road, but a good result in Azadi is crucial.

Queiroz has managed to build a solid back line and his defensive mentality has served the team quite well so far. However, this team needs winners as it needs to score goals. The ingredients are there but what is lacking though is a game plan that can surprise the opponents most of whom are so familiar with Queiroz mentality and can so neutralize Team Melli with ease.

In fairness to the coach, it is difficult to blame him entirely for the futile offence as the feeding of balls to the forward line has been seriously flawed. Ashakn Dejagah , who is the midfield dynamo and a player that the team depends on so strongly in midfield has not been firing on all cylinders. He lacked precision and seemed to run short of ideas at crucial moments. Ezatolahie who has shown a remarkable progress in his club still could not run the midfield with the efficiency that senior players can. Teymourian will be too occupied with his defensive duties and would not venture too deep either.

So, it is left to the qualities of the balls from the flanks to create much of the offensive weapons where Sardar Azmoun will be waiting and fighting the battle against the tall and strong Uzbeks. Mentioning Sardar, who has been a true revelation for Iran, he really needs to be at his best in these two matches

It is all a question of will. Does Queiroz have the guts to surprise the Uzbek at their own home or will he maintain his cautious approach? Most probably it will be the latter with the Portuguese coach who is much more comfortable holding back rather than venturing forward.

 

Samvel Babayan, Uzbekistan
“Thursday’s game see us come up against the group favorites. They are the number one ranked team in Asia and they have many high level players playing at European teams. But we have studied Iran very well and we will try to show good football.

“They are all strong teams at this stage of qualifying. For example, Syria showed a good performance against both us and Korea Republic in the first two matches. Each game we play becomes the most important game at this stage. But we are thinking only of Iran now. We watched many of their games and we will try to find way to beat them. My players are ready for any situation in the match and our aim is to win.”

iran-v-uae_coach Queiroz

Carlos Queiroz, Iran
“We will play against the best team in our group on Thursday. Uzbekistan won their first two matches and are leaders in Group A. Nonetheless, my team will try to secure the win for the Iranian people. My team is clearly improving year on year. When I began to work in Iran we had only one player playing for a European side, now we have 11 who are at various clubs in Europe.

“[Ashkan] Dejagah and [Alireza] Jahanbakhsh were injured some time ago, but they have recovered and are ready to play against Uzbekistan. It is good news for Iran and bad news for Uzbekistan. Of course, Iran has star players aside from those two, we are a team not individuals, and we have no player selection issues for the game.”

Squad for Uzbekistan and South Korea announced

The list of 25 Team Melli players who will have the difficult mission of facing Uzbekistan away and then South Korea has been published today by the IRIFF.

There are no surprises in the team , however the list included 3 uncapped players; Akhbari, Ansari and Aghayei.

Team Melli has just returned from a camp in Armenia where they played one friendly match against a club side winning 2-0. The camp did not include any legionnaires. 

 

 

[box title=”GOALKEEPERS” style=”glass” radius=”5″][/box]
akhbari-tm biranvand_ali sqd-HaghighiARi2013
AKHBARI, Mohammadreza BIRANVAND, Alireza HAGHIGHI, Alireza
 
[box title=”DEFENDERS” style=”glass” radius=”5″][/box]
 aghayei-saeid  ansari-mohammad
AGHAYEI, Saeid ANSARI, Mohammad
ghafouri-facial hajsafy---facial hosseini-facial
GHAFOORI, Vourya HAJSAFY, Ehsan HOSSEINI, Jalal
Milad-Mohammadi-TM  Pouraliganji-2
MOHAMMADI, Milad POURALIGANJI, Morteza
Pourgaz-ezzat  rezaeian
POURGHAZ, Ezzatollah REZAEIAN, Ramin
 
  
[box title=”MIDFIELD” style=”glass” radius=”5″][/box]
amiri---facial dejagah---facial ebrahimi---facial
AMIRI, Vahid DEJAGAH, Ashkan EBRAHIMI, Omid
Saeed-Ezzattolahei-Afagh jahanbakhsh---facial shojaei---facial
EZATOLLAHEI, Saeed JAHANBAKHSH, Alireza SHOJAEI, Masoud
teymourian---facial torabi---facial rafiei---facial
TEYMOURIAN, Andranik TORABI, Mehdi RAFIEI, Soroush
 
[box title=”FORWARDS” style=”glass” radius=”5″][/box]
ansarifard---facial azmoun---facial
ANSARIFARD, Karim AZMOUN, Sardar
 ghoochannejad---facial
 taremi-TM
GHOOCHANNEJAD, Reza TAREMI, Mehdi
[box title=”COACHES” style=”glass” radius=”5″][/box]
Aghajanian-profile
QUEIROZ, Carlos GASPER , Dan
AGHAJANIAN, Markar
   Oceano
DA CRUZ , Oceano Andrade 

Iran U16 lose the AFC title in penalty shoot-out

Goa: Mohammed Dawood scored the winning spot kick as Iraq claimed a first ever AFC U-16 Championship with a 4-3 penalty shootout victory over Islamic Republic of Iran following a 0-0 draw in Sunday’s final.

Iraq shaded a goalless opening 45 minutes at Pandit Jawaharlal Nehru Stadium with top scorer Dawood twice going close.

The forward then struck the crossbar on the hour as Iraq again had the better of the half, but with no goals forthcoming the final was decided from the spot.

Trailing 3-2, Taha Shariati’s penalty was saved by reserve goalkeeper Mundher Najm, but after Muntadher Mohammed had passed up the opportunity to win it for Iraq, Dawood made no mistake in converting the 10th and final spot kick to seal victory for Qahtan Chitheer’s side,

Cheered on by a partisan support, Iraq almost went in front as early as the second minute when Alaa Adnan flicked on Ammar Mohammed’s long ball only for Dawood to fire wide from the penalty spot.

Then on 12 minutes Iran’s Allahyar Sayyad crossed for Younes Delfi, whose effort on the turn from the edge of the area was well tipped wide by goalkeeper Ali Ibadi.

Iran captain Mohammad Sharifi was then narrowly off target with his curling free-kick from 20 yards at the midway stage of the half after Muntadher Abdulsada had fouled Amir Khodamoradi.

Dawood was inches away from giving Iraq the lead minutes later, though, when his shot went the wrong side of the left post after being picked out by Habeeb Mohammed, who had burst forward with purpose from well inside his own half.

As the half wore on the Iraqis enjoyed the better of the possession and Mohammed was next to try his luck when he powered just over from distance 10 minutes before the interval.

Abbas Chamanian - Iran U16 Head Coach
Abbas Chamanian – Iran U16 Head Coach

Three minutes after the restart Adnan drilled just wide from 18 yards after the Iranian backline had failed to clear a Mohammed cross from the left, but the all-important first goal remained elusive.

Then 60 minutes in Dawood came even closer when he hit the woodwork from 20 yards as Iraq cranked up the pressure.

Abbas Chamanian brought on three-goal forward Alireza Asadabadi as Iran tried to impose themselves as an attacking force.

But as the tie entered the final 10 minutes Iraq continued to push for the winner as captain Mohammed Ridha and forward Ali Kareem were both kept out in quick succession by Iran ‘keeper Ali Gholam Zadeh.

Then in stoppage time, and with no extra time at the AFC youth event, Ibadi was taken off injured as Najm was thrust into the spotlight as the game went to penalties.

Sharifi opened the scoring for Iran and Ahmed Sartip levelled before Vahid Namdari and Abdulsada both netted.

Saeid Ahani then side-footed wide and Ali Ahmed capitalised by scoring before Najm saved from Shariati.

Mohammed missed the chance to win it for Iraq and Amirhossein Esmaeilzadeh piled the pressure on Dawood but the forward powered home the winner as Iraq won the tournament for the first time.

Esmaeilpour wins FIFA Futsal Award

The FIFA Futsal World Cup Colombia 2016 most definitely saw a changing of the guard. The two giants of the global game, Spain and Brazil, were knocked off their perches and replaced in the final by Russia and Argentina. On an individual level, meanwhile, this edition of the tournament also witnessed stunning performances by renowned names and the emergence of a new crop of talents, whose own stars promise to shine brightly for many years to come. The members of the Technical Study Group (TSG) awarded the tournament’s individual prizes to the following players:

adidas Golden Ball: Fernando Wilhelm (ARG)
It was a case of fourth time lucky for Fernando Wilhelm. After three previous World Cup appearances had each ended in frustration, the 34 year-old assumed the Argentinean captaincy for this year’s competition. And he could not have managed his new responsibilities any better. Wilhelm never shied away from raising his voice, using his uncanny sense of anticipation to snuff out counter-attacks throughout the tournament. He dependably held his nerve at the key moments, while the Albiceleste’s strikers were particularly indebted to their captain’s keen eye for a telling pass. With his blend of perseverance, combativeness and tactical awareness, Wilhelm is an example to team-mates and rivals alike, and fully deserves the adidas Golden Ball at Colombia 2016.

adidas Silver Ball and adidas Silver Boot with 10 goals: Eder Lima (RUS)
Regardless of the stage, Eder Lima’s mission is always the same: to torment opposition defences and keep the goalscoring charts ticking upwards in his favour. And throughout Colombia 2016, the Russian star has fulfilled his role with distinction. With five goals in his first two matches, Lima successfully picked up where he had left off in 2012, when his nine strikes saw him finish as the tournament’s top marksman. He subsequently turned provider to his team-mates, assisting eight of his team’s goals, before his predatory instincts took over once more in the final, even if his three strikes were ultimately made in a losing cause.

adidas Bronze Ball: Ahmad Esmaeilpour (IRN)
Ahmad Esmaeilpour made his first tentative steps at a Futsal World Cup in Thailand 2012. Four years down the line, he is leaving Colombia on the back of a double achievement: Iran’s third place finish represents the country’s best showing at a Futsal World Cup, while Esmaeilpour himself has been named as the tournament’s third best player. Measuring well over six foot tall, this 28-year-old is the complete package. He has caused chaos throughout the tournament with his technique, movement and vision, not to mention his powerful long-range shooting, all combined with a ferocious desire to win that has carried the Team Melli to the podium for the first time in their history.


adidas Golden Boot: Ricardinho, 12 goals (POR)
Emerging goalless from Portugal’s first encounter against Colombia, Ricardinho made up for lost time in his second outing by scoring six times in a 9-0 win over Panama. Having notched up another three goals in an easy win against Uzbekistan, the Portuguese star then set his team on the way to their first win in the knock-out stages, scoring the first two goals in a 4-0 victory. He also left his mark in the clash with Azerbaijan, netting yet another goal. Boasting technique, power and skill, Ricardinho is the perfect blend of ruthlessness and elegance.

adidas Bronze Boot: Falcao, 10 goals (BRA)
When it comes to Falcao, the figures say it all: five World Cups, 34 matches, 48 goals. This legend of the game continues to set standards that will surely go unmatched for many years yet. As always, pre-tournament expectations were high for the Brazilian. Yet, just as predictably, he immediately proved himself more than up to the challenge, opening his account against Australia. Having signed off with yet another strike in his and Brazil’s final match against Iran, he ended up as the author of ten of the Seleçao’s 33 goals.

adidas Golden Glove: Nicolas Sarmiento (ARG)
In Nicolas Sarmiento, Colombia 2016 saw the emergence of a goalkeeper who promises to be a fixture in the sport for years to come. Much like Argentina coach Diego Giustozzi, the TSG was won over by the 23-year-old’s outstanding raw talent. The fifth-youngest goalkeeper of the 55 present at the tournament, Sarmiento stood out thanks to his consistency, confidence and capacity to marshal the tournament’s most miserly defence. He ended Colombia 2016 with an impressive record of three clean sheets.

FIFA Fair Play Award: Vietnam
Vietnam not only provided a breath of fresh air in their first appearance at a World Cup, but they also demonstrated exemplary sportsmanship all the way up to their elimination at the hands of Russia in the Round of 16. The Vietnamese only picked up four yellow cards throughout the competition.

FIFA makes this award based on evaluations by members of the Technical Study Group (TSG), who undertake a detailed analysis of national team members’ behaviour on and off the pitch. The goal is to promote a sporting attitude among players, coaches and also spectators at FIFA tournaments.

Third place for heroic Iran Futsal Team.

Iran’s remarkable journey at the FIFA Futsal World Cup Colombia 2016 ended on a high note, as they claimed third place after a 4-3 penalty shootout win over Portugal following a 2-2 draw in Cali on Saturday.

The Iranians came from two goals down to take the third-place match to a dramatic penalty shootout, where six rounds of spot kicks were needed to decide the contest.

The first half had the feeling of a friendly contest, with both goalkeepers in Iran’s Alireza Samimi and Portugal’s Bebe being the standout performers in the opening period.

Both sides created a good opportunity to open the scoring. Ahmad Esmaeilpour had Iran’s best chance, but his chip over Bebe also sailed over the crossbar. At the other end, Samimi did well to deny Cardinal at close range.

Where the first half was fairly tepid, the second half came to life, as Cardinal scored a quick-fire brace within the first minute of the restart for Portugal. He showed great patience to beat the onrushing Samimi to open the scoring before combining with captain Richardinho to make it 2-0.

Cardinal then made a key defensive play to deny Ali Hassan Zadeh’s shot, even though replays showed he may have used his arm to block the goal-bound effort.

Then an ugly melee that involved both sets of players in the Portugal half produced a pair of red cards, as Iran’s Mohammadreza Sangsefidi and Portugal’s Miguel Castro were given their marching orders.

It was at that stage that Iran turned the match around. Afshin Kazemi pulled the Asian champions back into the game with an assured finish before Mahdi Javid converted a second penalty past Portugal’s back-up goalkeeper Vitor Hugo to send the contest to a penalty shootout after the full-time whistle.

It required six rounds of penalties to decide this encounter. Iran’s back-up goalkeeper Sepehr Mohammadi made a pair of big saves, but his team-mates twice hit the woodwork with their spot-kick efforts.

Then after Portugal’s Joao Matos hit the post with his sixth-round penalty, Javid stepped up to convert his spot-kick and ensure Iran’s best-ever finish to a Futsal World Cup, surpassing their fourth-place accomplishment at Hong Kong 1992.



Matches

12 SEP 2016 – 20:00 Local time
GROUP F
Coliseo Ivan de Bedout
Medellin

Iran     IRAN     v     SPAIN     Spain

FULL-TIME

1-5


15 SEP 2016 – 20:00 Local time
GROUP F
Coliseo Ivan de Bedout
Medellin

Iran      IRAN     v    MOROCCO      Morocco

FULL-TIME

5-3


18 SEP 2016 – 18:00 Local time
GROUP F
Coliseo Ivan de Bedout
Medellin

Azerbaijan     AZERBAIJAN     v      IRAN     Iran

FULL-TIME

3-3


21 SEP 2016 – 17:30 Local time
ROUND OF 16
Coliseo Bicentenario
Bucaramanga

Brazil     BRAZIL     v     IRAN     Iran

FULL-TIME

4-4

Iran win on penalties (2 – 3)

24 SEP 2016 – 15:30 Local time
QUARTER-FINALS
Coliseo Bicentenario
Bucaramanga

Paraguay     PARAGUAY     V     IRAN     Iran

FULL-TIME

3-4


 

Iran win after extra time
27 SEP 2016 – 19:00 Local time
SEMI-FINALS
Coliseo Ivan de Bedout
Medellin

Iran     IRAN     v    RUSSIA      Russia

FULL-TIME

3-4


01 OCT 2016 – 12:00 Local time
MATCH FOR THIRD PLACE
Coliseo el Pueblo
Cali

Iran       IRAN     v    PORTUGAL      Portugal

FULL-TIME

2-2

Iran win on penalties (4 – 3)

 

 

The Heroes

PLAYERS MP MINP GS ASS Y 2YC R
7 310 4 2 1 0 0
7 310 5 1 1 0 0
7 310 5 5 0 0 0
7 283 3 1 2 0 0
6 270 0 0 2 0 0
6 269 2 2 2 0 0
7 261 0 1 1 0 1
7 257 2 0 1 0 0
6 235 1 0 1 0 0
7 229 0 0 1 0 0
6 227 0 0 1 0 0
4 128 0 0 0 0 0
1 40 0 0 0 0 0
1 37 0 0 0 0 0

Comments