Ali Parvin
Ali Parvin | ||
Ali Parvin 1978
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Personnel | ||
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Surname | Ali Parvin | |
birthday | September 25, 1947 | |
place of birth | Tehran , Iran | |
size | 169 cm | |
position | striker | |
Men's | ||
Years | station | Games (goals) 1 |
1968 | Alborz FC | |
1968 | Kian FC | |
1968-1970 | Paykan Tehran | |
1970-1988 | Persepolis Tehran | 292 (90) |
National team | ||
Years | selection | Games (goals) |
1970-1980 | Iran | 76 (13) |
Stations as a trainer | ||
Years | station | |
1980-1987 | Persepolis Tehran | |
1987-1993 | Persepolis Tehran | |
1989-1993 | Iran | |
1998-2003 | Persepolis Tehran | |
2005-2006 | Persepolis Tehran | |
1 Only league games are given. |
Ali Parvin ( علي بروين; * September 25, 1947 in Tehran ) is a former Iranian soccer player . He is considered one of the most successful players in the history of Iranian football and belonged to the so-called "Golden Team" of the 1970s.
Career
Ali Parvin was born in Nasihabad , a suburb of Tehran. He was a classic street footballer and was discovered everywhere. The Alborz FC , the reserve team of Kian FC , scouted and signed him. After a few games at Kian FC , Paykan Tehran signed him.
His breakthrough came in 1970 with his move to Iranian record champions Persepolis Tehran after Paykan broke up. Parvin became a national player in the same year . The 1970s were the most significant of the football player Parvin. On September 7, 1973 Ali Parvin, Homayoun Behzadi ( Hattrick ), Iraj Soleimani (2 hits), Hossein Kalani (1 hit) and the remaining ghermezpooshan-e paytakht ( German The red capitals ) , which means Persepolis Tehran, produced the former Taj FC (now Esteghlal Tehran ) in the ancient city of Derby with 6: 0 from the highest-ever victory over eternal rivals. The legendary no. 7 - Persepolis Tehran has blocked the shirt number of their popular player Parvin after his career end forever ( english retired number ), but his son was allowed to 7 carry for a specified time - celebrated in the 1970s three championships (1971/1972 , 1973/1974, 1975/1976), three runner-up championships (1974/1975, 1976/1977, 1977/1978) and the Tehran Hazfi Cup (1978/1979) with Persepolis Tehran . Not only did he dominate Iranian club football in the 1970s, Parvin was also instrumental in all the successes of the Iranian national football team , the strongest national team in Asia in the 1970s. The greatest successes included two Asian championships ( 1972 , 1976 ) and participation in the 1978 World Cup in Argentina.
After the Islamic Revolution , the Soltan ( German Sultan ) , as he is still called by many of his fans today, became player-coach at Persepolis Tehran. In the 1980s he ran the club under the most difficult conditions, paying the bills many times with his own assets, thus saving his club from bankruptcy. In spite of all the difficulties, Parvin achieved something almost impossible. While Iraq and Iran bombed each other in the first Gulf War for eight years, he and his club won the Tehran League Cup four times (1981/1982, 1983/1984, 1985/1986, 1986/1987), the unofficial Iranian championship of the 1980s, three times the entry into the final of the Tehran Hazfi Cup , which one won twice (1981/1982, 1986/1987) and the Iranian Cup (Hazfi Cup) in the season 1987/1988. Even after the Iraq-Iran war , Parvin and his men were hungry for success: in the 1988/1989 season they won another unofficial Iranian championship, the so-called Hevdah-e-Shahrivar League, and only one year later, in the 1989/1990 season , you became Iranian runner-up in the Qods League .
In 1989 Ali Parvin also coached the Iranian national team . In 1990 he won gold with Iran at the Asian Games in China. Only a few months later he won the then newly created Asian Cup Winners' Cup (Asian CWC) for the 1990/1991 season with Persepolis Tehran . In the same season he won another title, the Iranian Cup (Hazfi Cup) (1990/1991). The success story of coach Parvin did not continue when the national team was eliminated in the preliminary round of the Asian Cup in Japan in 1992 and started the journey home, an extraordinary situation for the Asian football power. He was still successful with his club. In 1992 he won the local Tehran Super Cup competition . In the 1992/1993 season he was Iranian runner- up with his club and moved back to the final of the Asian Cup Winners' Cup competition, in which they lost 2-1 to the Yokohama Marinos . With the national team , however, he experienced another setback when he did not qualify for the 1990 World Cup in the USA . Parvin then took a break and gave up all offices. It was not until the late 1990s that he returned to the stage of Iranian football. In the 1998/1999 season he took over the post of head coach at his club , Persepolis Tehran, with whom he twice in a row (1998/1999, 1999/2000) the Azadegan League , the Iranian Championship and in the 1998/1999 season the Iranian Cup (Hazfi Cup) won. Under Parvin, Persepolis made it into the semi-finals of the AFC Champions League twice in a row (1999/2000, 2000/2001) , in which they were twice defeated by East Asian teams, but won the game for third place.
In the 2000s Parvin was runner-up with Persepolis in the 2000/2001 season in the last season of the Azadegan League. In 2001 the Iranian football leagues were reorganized. The IPL was introduced as the top division and the Azadegan League became Iran's second division. In the 2001/2002 IPL season , Parvin won the next national championship with Persepolis Tehran. After the successful club in the following season 2002/2003 only finished third in the table, Parvin resigned from his post. For the 2005/2006 season he was again the head coach of Persepolis Tehran. After many internal squabbles with the club's management and some players (including Madanchi ) and wild insults on the part of a few fans, the eternal Soltan ended the chapter of Persepolis Tehran for the time being and left the palace with a broken heart, which he built in four decades (leading).
Ali Parvin acquired the league license from Ekbatan FC on April 30, 2007 , whose name he changed to Steel Azin FC and whose fortunes he leads as manager. Steel Azin played in the Azadegan League (League 2) the following season and just missed promotion to the IPL . In the past season, Steel Azin made it to the IPL and will play in the highest Iranian league in the coming season.
Successes, honors and interesting facts
Club title (player)
- 1971/1972 Persepolis Tehran - Iranian master
- 1973/1974 Persepolis Tehran - Iranian master
- 1974/1975 Persepolis Tehran - Iranian runner-up
- 1975/1976 Persepolis Tehran - Iranian champion
- 1976/1977 Persepolis Tehran - Iranian runner-up
- 1977/1978 Persepolis Tehran - Iranian runner-up
- 1978/1979 Persepolis Tehran - Cup winner (Tehran Hazfi Cup)
Club title (player-coach)
- 1980/1981 Persepolis Tehran - Tehran Cup finalist (Tehran Hazfi Cup)
- 1981 Persepolis Tehran - tournament winner (Vahdat International Cup)
- 1981/1982 Persepolis Tehran - Tehran Cup Winner (Tehran Hazfi Cup)
- 1981/1982 Persepolis Tehran - Unofficial Iranian Champion (Tehran League Cup)
- 1985/1986 Persepolis Tehran - Unofficial Iranian Champion (Tehran League Cup)
- 1986/1987 Persepolis Tehran - Unofficial Iranian champions (Tehran League Cup)
- 1986/1987 Persepolis Tehran - Tehran Cup Winner (Tehran Hazfi Cup)
- 1987/1988 Persepolis Tehran - Iranian Cup Winner (Hazfi Cup)
Club title (coach)
- 1988/1989 Persepolis Tehran - Unofficial Iranian Champion (Hevdah-e Sharivar League)
- 1989/1990 Persepolis Tehran - Iranian runner-up
- 1990/1991 Persepolis Tehran - Iranian Cup Winner (Hazfi Cup)
- 1990/1991 Persepolis Tehran - Cup Winner (Asian Cup Winners' Cup)
- 1992/1993 Persepolis Tehran - Iranian runner-up
- 1992 Persepolis Tehran - Cup winner (Tehran Super Cup)
- 1992/1993 Persepolis Tehran - Cup finalist (Asian Cup Winners' Cup)
- 1998/1999 Persepolis Tehran - Iranian champion
- 1998/1999 Persepolis Tehran - Iranian Cup Winner (Hazfi Cup)
- 1999/2000 Persepolis Tehran - Iranian champion
- 1999/2000 Persepolis Tehran - AFC Champions League - third place
- 2000/2001 Persepolis Tehran - Iranian runner-up
- 2000/2001 Persepolis Tehran - AFC Champions League - third place
- 2001/2002 Persepolis Tehran - Iranian champion
Iranian national soccer team (players)
- 1970 ECO-Pokal (RCD / ECO Cup) in Iran - cup winner
- 1972 Asian football championship in Thailand - Asian champions
- 1972 Summer Olympics in Germany - preliminary round
- 1974 ECO-Pokal (RCD / ECO Cup) in Iran - cup finalist
- 1974 Asian Games in Iran - gold medal
- 1976 Asian soccer championship in Iran - Asian champions
- 1976 Summer Olympic Games in Canada - quarter-finals
- 1978 Football World Cup in Argentina - preliminary round
Iranian national soccer team (coach)
- 1990 Asian Games in China - gold medal
useful information
Persepolis Tehran
- Most successful coach in the club's history
- Most successful coach in Iranian club football
- Record coach (approx. 450 games)
- Oldest player and goalscorer in a game (Age 42)
- Record players (292 games)
- Second best scorer (99 hits)
- Record captain (168 games)
Iranian national soccer team
- First international match: September 1, 1970 --- Iran 7-0 Pakistan
- Last international game: March 12, 1980 --- Iran 4-0 Singapore
- International matches: 76
- International goals: 13
- Captain of the national team at the 1978 World Cup in Argentina
- Best / Wertvollster players ( english Most Valuable Player ) in the AFC Asian Cup 1976 in Iran
As of July 7, 2008
Web links
- Ali Parvin in the database of weltfussball.de
Individual evidence
- ↑ Parvin acquires the league license from Ekbatan FC ( Memento from May 15, 2007 in the Internet Archive )
- ↑ Ali Parvin's successes (Persian) (PDF; 185 kB)
- ↑ Ali Parvin's biography at Aliparvin.ir (Persian)
- ↑ RSSSF: Ali Parvin's international appearances (statistics)
personal data | |
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SURNAME | Parvin, Ali |
BRIEF DESCRIPTION | Iranian soccer player and coach |
DATE OF BIRTH | September 25, 1947 |
PLACE OF BIRTH | Tehran |