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    Omid team's moral boosting win

    Omid team's moral boosting win


    Iran's Olympics team earns a valuable away victory against arch rival Iraq and made their qualification challenge a serious one. This victory comes at the back of series of events that helped its fruition.


    When it comes to rivalries in Asia, an Iran-Iraq tie is as mouth-watering as a japan-South Korea one with the two Middle Eastern nations having a long tradition of fierce battles where victory means far more than the 3 points that a football match brings about. So any tie with the neighbor is choke-full of determination and drive that sets it apart from other games in a tournament. With each nation having won and lost some nail biting match ups, it seems the fate of both Iran and Iraq is bound on some unwritten law that each one’s glory ought to come at the expense of the other. The two nations have been consistently grouped in various Asian competitions, tournaments and qualifiers in the past few decades. Therefore, it came as no surprise to see yet another tie for the Olympic honors, just before the final group stage.

    The Omid team had to overcome some rather vicious inner demons first before stepping onto the pitch against Iraq, though. It has been a common thing to see a section of these Under-23 players be denied permission to exit the country for away games, which drastically affected their fortunes and we saw year after year, despite having the talent and ambition, Iran’s Olympic team fall prey to their own nonsensical policies. But that isn’t the worst inner demon they faced, as edition after edition, inspite of much talk and promises by the officials, usually the selection of the staff and the coaches is left with mere weeks left for crucial qualifiers, followed by lack of preparation and test games, thus, seeing an uncoordinated, inexperienced bunch of young players trying hard to do the impossible. So it should not come as a major surprise to see Iran fail to qualify for the Olympics in 36 years.



    However, this year, despite the late selection of the staff, headed by the young, ambitious former Esteghlal star, Alireza Mansourian (of the triumph over Russia with Team Melli fame, post Ghotbi era) and assisted by Markar Aghajanian (Former Paas player and captain), with the help of the authorities the issue was exit of young military-eligible players was finally solved and Iran, after decades saw its full squad get the nod to travel to its away games. It must be mentioned that thanks to our football federation officials, the lads traveled on a chartered flight, which is another first for our Omid teams.



    Much credit must be given to the team and its staff who had only a week or little more to gather their squad and only one test game against the Team Melli, on some patches showed good sense of football with some slick passing and triangulations that held the promise of better days for us. Yes, they did have some rather questionable moments in the game which can be attributed to their lack of preparation and crucial game jitters. But I believe they held theirs well and showed enough intelligence and talent to keep up our hopes of playing in Olympics after 9 tries. What impressed me was inspite of their age, they kept their heads during the final two quarters where tremendous pressure was applied by the home team and our lads, quite intelligently, ran down the clock with short passing and moves that is seen in much more experienced squads. Kudos must be given to the young coaching staff as well for handling the pressure well and using the right strategy and substituting tactics.

    The goal was a great goal and underlined the maturity of some of our key players, especially Aliasgar, Ansarifard and the midfield dynamo, Mohsen Mosalman, who after tricking the keeper, slotted home the match winner. With the home game on Thursday and our lads back home playing in front of our own fans, my money is on Mansourian’s boys to make Iran proud and reach the final stage of the qualifiers after seeing their arch rival off in this tie.


    http://directkicks.blogspot.com/2011...sting-win.html

    #2
    I am a bit disappointed that the coverage of this team (U23 or Iran Olympic team) and the interest is a bit on the shy side by the media and the fans.

    After the failures of the previous teams since Moscow 1980 Olympics , I guess the fans have become used to the bad news and under achievement. In fact , I was not too excited myself and missed both the games against Kyrgyzstan ( admittedly due to other non-football related reasons as well).

    To my utter delight , after yesterday when the U23 played against Iraq in Irbil , I changed my mind about the prospects of this team. They are a bunch of winners and although judging by one match is a serious mistake , I truly have confident that this team , bar a disaster , can make it to London comes next year.

    The fluent football , the control of the match , the tackles , the speed , the moves on the flanks were all a very delightful pieces of football that I enjoyed . It also increased my confidence in this bunch of young prospects.

    Of course , there was a few niggling things as usual like the finishing should have been much better and a margin of 3 goals was more reasonable result , but this is football where sometimes the full potential is not realized,

    Good game boys , see you in London next year ...



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      #3
      Unfortunately I missed the game, however going by PFDC members' comments it seems our boys did not impress and on the contrary displayed a somewhat lackluster football. I also visited an Iraqi discussion board and noticed pretty much all its members resented their own team for "losing to an equally horrendous team" yes this is what they implied! Was that the case? did we play that bad?

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        #4
        If U23 qualifies for London 2012, how many of their current players will still be eligible agewise? I think Afshin and Ansarifard are pushing close to 23 by then.
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        http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Footbal...he_Asian_Games

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          #5
          Originally posted by Keano View Post
          Unfortunately I missed the game, however going by PFDC members' comments it seems our boys did not impress and on the contrary displayed a somewhat lackluster football. I also visited an Iraqi discussion board and noticed pretty much all its members resented their own team for "losing to an equally horrendous team" yes this is what they implied! Was that the case? did we play that bad?

          Seriously ?!!!

          Iran's u23 did not impress ?!!!

          It could be one of many reasons:

          1- Those people where watching the match on a two square inch stream on their laptop
          2- They have been watching far too many Barcelona matches.
          3- They will never ever be satisfied with any Iran football performances.

          To cap it all , I did monitor the Iraqi TV post match expert panel and the Iraqis were full for praise for Iran., hands down. This is something you do dnot normally expect to hear from the Arab commentators in this part of the world.

          Keano jan. This young team played well and deservedly won the match. There was no statistics but I guess the possession was something like 60% for Iran and scoring chances just 1 for Iraq against at least 5 or 6 for the boyz.



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            #6
            Originally posted by Paradigm View Post
            If U23 qualifies for London 2012, how many of their current players will still be eligible agewise? I think Afshin and Ansarifard are pushing close to 23 by then.

            I believe that 3 over age players allowed in each team



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              #7
              Thank you Maij jaan. Your elaboration on the details of the match is dearly appreciated. I thought so too, meaning bias might have been the main factor.

              One thing I have often noticed with most Iraqis is how they regard Iran team as a somewhat "disliked" national team, to an extent that some of them compare beating and humiliating Iran just as delightful and sweet as beating teams like KSA. Not implying the Iraqis hating on us (Although some do) but rather how they take each and every defeat against Iran as an insult and fully disheartening for the entire nation, this comes while Iraq itself is almost one of the only Arab countries the majority of Iranians cheer for and wish their success in football, but again this is football and rivalry accompanied with hostile mentality is part of it. Below is the link to the site I was referring to:

              http://www.aliraqi.org/forums/showth...=102798&page=3

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                #8
                Originally posted by Keano View Post
                Thank you Maij jaan. Your elaboration on the details of the match is dearly appreciated. I thought so too, meaning bias might have been the main factor.

                One thing I have often noticed with most Iraqis is how they regard Iran team as a somewhat "disliked" national team, to an extent that some of them compare beating and humiliating Iran just as delightful and sweet as beating teams like KSA. Not implying the Iraqis hating on us (Although some do) but rather how they take each and every defeat against Iran as an insult and fully disheartening for the entire nation, this comes while Iraq itself is almost one of the only Arab countries the majority of Iranians cheer for and wish their success in football, but again this is football and rivalry accompanied with hostile mentality is part of it. Below is the link to the site I was referring to:

                http://www.aliraqi.org/forums/showth...=102798&page=3
                The riverly between Iran and Iraq goes way back to the sixties and like anywhere in the world , within two neighboring countries , you have the odd haters and extremist. Those haters are probably "Baathist" who are hated in Iraq anyway. I could only laugh when I saw some comments about Iraq government bowing to their masters the Iranians....khosham omad

                Anyway , politics aside , Iraq played very well and deserved the win.

                One more comment about the team is the physical strength or lack of it to be precise. Iranian players , generation after generation , were always known for their strong builds and physical strengths. What I see now is a generation like "Farhad Majidi" who drop flat on their face on the first hint of tackle!!!

                That is alarming .



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                  #9
                  Originally posted by maij View Post

                  Anyway , politics aside , Iraq played very well and deserved the win.
                  LOL, Maij jaan gerefti ma ro to ham ha! LOL JK But seriously speaking I suppose by "Iraq" you meant to say "Iran"? Otherwise I am more confused than before!

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                    #10
                    Originally posted by Keano View Post
                    Unfortunately I missed the game, however going by PFDC members' comments it seems our boys did not impress and on the contrary displayed a somewhat lackluster football. I also visited an Iraqi discussion board and noticed pretty much all its members resented their own team for "losing to an equally horrendous team" yes this is what they implied! Was that the case? did we play that bad?

                    everything is relative.
                    we shdnt expect free flowing, great tactical and highly cohesive performances from a bunch of kids who have had (at best) 5-6 days of practice together.
                    not to mention the disgusting lack of any interest in them by the media (and therefore, the public), which at that age could be quite disconcerting and disappointing.

                    yes, the team severely lacked a creative playmaker in the middle. and mosalman, despite being a fantastic player is not a regular playmaker. perhaps rahmani could have helped here.
                    this lack of playmaker meant they focused their tactics on the wings, espeially the left where afshin was a constant thorn in iraqis side.

                    and as majid said, if they were only slightly more lucky, the margin would have been larger.

                    I also must mention the goalkeeper (who till the end of the match could not be identified. this shows how removed and disinterested our media are, when they cant even recognize their own players!!!!), who did wonderfully well on crosses and shots. he showed great athletic ability and daring to come out and either deflect or punch those 50-50 difficult balls.
                    I was very impressed by him, whoever the kid was.

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                      #11
                      Originally posted by Keano View Post
                      LOL, Maij jaan gerefti ma ro to ham ha! LOL JK But seriously speaking I suppose by "Iraq" you meant to say "Iran"? Otherwise I am more confused than before!


                      OOOppssss...I am making too many typos these days and that is because I stay up so late and sometimes even doze of in front of the screens while typingggggggggggggggggggggggggggggggggggggg ...

                      Oh...sorry Again

                      Maazerat mikham...Iraq ke Goozid , Ein Iran khodamon bod ke Khoob bazi kard va bord.



                      ..Which reminds me , I have to hit the sack soon, I have an early flight tomorrow.



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                        #12
                        Originally posted by Doctor DOOM View Post

                        I also must mention the goalkeeper (who till the end of the match could not be identified. this shows how removed and disinterested our media are, when they cant even recognize their own players!!!!), .
                        Yeah...that was quite odd...The commentator called him "Lak" but there is no such name in my list (The AFC official list) or any list of the team I have seen.

                        Honestly now, isn't that really ridiculous ?



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                          #13
                          Thanks for the elaboration guys.

                          I too believe that the media coverage of our youth teams of all levels is insufficient and quite unfair. The fans obviously are interested in following our U-23 team matches, the participation of PFDC members in the Iraq vs Iran thread is a clear indication of that. Why media and IRIB shows little interest in broadcasting U-23 matches is beyond me. Our media is more into Haashie and khaale zanak bazi than promoting the sports itself. You would find hundreds of articles about Daei and Kashani fiasco, or Ansarifard's fluctuation in selecting his future team etc.

                          Nevertheless good luck to our boys in the return match against Iraq in Iran, I truly wished this match would take place in cities like Ardebil (A beautiful stadium and fierce football fans) or even in Tabriz (Despite the nerve wrecking behavior of its fans I still believe they would make one hell of an atmosphere for any international opponent).

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                            #14
                            The real story behind our Omid elimination


                            After the miserable showing by the whole Iranian team and staff, I was ready to rant about how pathetic our “stars” like Ansarifard, Afshin, Hajsafi, … performed and how they displayed a (lack of) quality seen only in back allies of provinces in Iran rather than a national team. I was down and wrote on and on about how Mansourian’s inexperience got exposed when none of his substitutions made any impact on the last 30 minutes of the game. I screamed about the lack of playmaker and any sort of creativity in the middle. I wrote and wrote about how idiotic and immature our players were with their insistence on back heels and unorthodox passing when the more straight forward passes would have sufficed. I remarked on the easy chances and goals we conceded.

                            And I wrote in anger and dismay … until I came across this little gem of a news:
                            Omid’s midfielder Jalal Kamyabinia, was ineligible to play and barred from play in our away game in Iraq by AFC.
                            But here’s the twist: Due to IFF’s incompetence and their failure in conveying this news to the staff, Kamyabynia did play in that game and AFC announced they ruled that game in favor of Iraq by a scoreline of 3-0.

                            This catastrophic news was brought to the staff and later on, to the team’s attention who understandably lost all their hopes and drive and apparently some of the lads actually wept in the dressing room. Nobody can bear such a twist of fate, from a 1-0 ahead in an away game to a 3-0 loss in a matter of seconds.

                            This put everything in context and made sense of all the poor passing, rushed, emotional hurried game, and generally the whole miserable performance. Now I am left with my anger, but directed at the ever incompetent and frankly, brainless federation of ours rather than the poor lads whose legs must have felt like lead, trying to claw their way back from a 3-0 deficit.

                            And this completes the infamy of Kafashian’s federation who has failed in each and every major tournament Iran participated in. Incompetence bordering on criminal! Enough is enough, Mr. Kafashian. High time you took away your misery-ridden shadow of incompetence away from our football, once and for all.

                            You know what is the worst part of it all? It's that the IFF had the AFC notice of Kamyabikia's suspension FOUR MONTHS in advance of the Iraq game!!! Such is the extent of IFF's pathetic incompetence.

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                              #15
                              lol they fielded a banned player.

                              this team doesnt even deserve to play international football....such mismanagement...such a messed up coaching and staff.....unbelievable.

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