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    Iran vs New Zealand RANTING

    Player Ratings vs New Zealand (1–5 Stars)


    2.5 – Alireza Beiranvand
    He gave us confidence by acting as a reliable outlet at the back, always willing to receive the ball under pressure. However, he did not make any decisive saves.

    2.4 – Shoja Khalilzadeh
    A solid and experienced performance overall. He should have stayed closer to Chris Wood and not allowed him to control the ball as if he were playing in the park.

    2.0 – Ali Nemati
    He struggled defensively throughout the match, although he could have become the hero with his goal on the end of first half which was unfortunately ruled out for offside.

    4.5 – Ramin Rezaeian
    Clearly our best player that day. A constant threat going forward, aggressive, confident, and always looking up. He scored a goal and provided an assist, fully deserving all the praise he receives by the foreign media.

    1.8 – Milad Mohammadi
    He constantly played the ball backwards due to a lack of confidence. Defensively, he was equally poor. He is a very complete player physically but not even that he provided.

    2.4 – Saeid Ezatolahi
    The most complete player in our national team. He remains extremely important to us, but this was not one of his better performances, even though his commitment and work rate were evident throughout.

    2.5 – Saman Ghoddos
    Very comfortable on the ball. He played an excellent role in both goals, contributing to the attacking moves with quality and composure. However, he should have put more pressure on Chris Wood for the first goal; he lacked intensity in that moment when we needed.

    1.8 – Aria Yousefi
    Incredible energy and clear potential. However, he was far too individualistic, and that ended up hurting the team.

    2.5 – Mohammad Mohebi
    The type of player every coach loves: tall, strong, fast, and hardworking. He showed great composure and scored an excellent header. However, he carelessly lost unnecessary the ball possession in the build-up to New Zealand's second goal.

    2.3 – Shahriyar Moghanlou
    I understand his inclusion in the starting XI as a way of maintaining the traditional Iran setup we became familiar with under Carlos Queiroz, effectively playing the Azmoun role alongside Taremi. However, his limitations were clear, particularly his lack of pace to threaten balls played in behind. He did nice job defensively actually.

    2.6 – Mehdi Taremi
    Our best player until fatigue set in. His movement and intelligence off the ball helped initiate attacks, and he accelerated the tempo whenever necessary. He deserved a goal, but unfortunately offered nothing to us at the second half.

    Substitutes


    4.0 – Mehdi Ghaeydi
    Clearly our most talented player. He caused so many problems that New Zealand felt compelled to replace Tim Payne with Callan Elliot. His confidence on the ball makes defenders nervous.

    1.5 – Ali Alipour
    A mobile and quick striker who is usually ready to press aggressively. Unfortunately, he failed to use any of those qualities and had a very poor impact after coming on.

    1.5 – Ehsan Hajsafi
    He aadded nothing. Despite his experience, he looked well below his best level.

    2.5 – Amir Hosseinzadeh
    He should have been introduced earlier. He brought energy to the match and helped initiate attacks.
    Manager


    2.3 – Amir Ghalenoei
    I understand the decision to start Moghanlou in order to maintain a physical front duo, but Mohebi would have performed that role better. Ghalenoei deserves credit for comeback twice. However, the tactical organisation was very poor and one of the worst of this first World Cup week. Unbelievable how he is leaving our most talented player, Mehdi Ghaeydi, on the bench from the start.
    Team


    2.4 – Iran
    We should have won this match. It was an entertaining attacking game, largely because New Zealand allowed it to be. Once they sensed they had a chance of claiming a historic three points, they became more adventurous, which gave us opportunities to attack against fewer players behind the ball. It was an open and enjoyable match for any neutral to watch. Ultimately, we looked like a team blessed with some serious individual quality but lacking collective organisation.

    #2
    Originally posted by persian8iran View Post
    Player Ratings vs New Zealand (1–5 Stars)


    2.5 – Alireza Beiranvand
    He gave us confidence by acting as a reliable outlet at the back, always willing to receive the ball under pressure. However, he did not make any decisive saves.

    2.4 – Shoja Khalilzadeh
    A solid and experienced performance overall. He should have stayed closer to Chris Wood and not allowed him to control the ball as if he were playing in the park.

    2.0 – Ali Nemati
    He struggled defensively throughout the match, although he could have become the hero with his goal on the end of first half which was unfortunately ruled out for offside.

    4.5 – Ramin Rezaeian
    Clearly our best player that day. A constant threat going forward, aggressive, confident, and always looking up. He scored a goal and provided an assist, fully deserving all the praise he receives by the foreign media.

    1.8 – Milad Mohammadi
    He constantly played the ball backwards due to a lack of confidence. Defensively, he was equally poor. He is a very complete player physically but not even that he provided.

    2.4 – Saeid Ezatolahi
    The most complete player in our national team. He remains extremely important to us, but this was not one of his better performances, even though his commitment and work rate were evident throughout.

    2.5 – Saman Ghoddos
    Very comfortable on the ball. He played an excellent role in both goals, contributing to the attacking moves with quality and composure. However, he should have put more pressure on Chris Wood for the first goal; he lacked intensity in that moment when we needed.

    1.8 – Aria Yousefi
    Incredible energy and clear potential. However, he was far too individualistic, and that ended up hurting the team.

    2.5 – Mohammad Mohebi
    The type of player every coach loves: tall, strong, fast, and hardworking. He showed great composure and scored an excellent header. However, he carelessly lost unnecessary the ball possession in the build-up to New Zealand's second goal.

    2.3 – Shahriyar Moghanlou
    I understand his inclusion in the starting XI as a way of maintaining the traditional Iran setup we became familiar with under Carlos Queiroz, effectively playing the Azmoun role alongside Taremi. However, his limitations were clear, particularly his lack of pace to threaten balls played in behind. He did nice job defensively actually.

    2.6 – Mehdi Taremi
    Our best player until fatigue set in. His movement and intelligence off the ball helped initiate attacks, and he accelerated the tempo whenever necessary. He deserved a goal, but unfortunately offered nothing to us at the second half.

    Substitutes


    4.0 – Mehdi Ghaeydi
    Clearly our most talented player. He caused so many problems that New Zealand felt compelled to replace Tim Payne with Callan Elliot. His confidence on the ball makes defenders nervous.

    1.5 – Ali Alipour
    A mobile and quick striker who is usually ready to press aggressively. Unfortunately, he failed to use any of those qualities and had a very poor impact after coming on.

    1.5 – Ehsan Hajsafi
    He aadded nothing. Despite his experience, he looked well below his best level.

    2.5 – Amir Hosseinzadeh
    He should have been introduced earlier. He brought energy to the match and helped initiate attacks.
    Manager


    2.3 – Amir Ghalenoei
    I understand the decision to start Moghanlou in order to maintain a physical front duo, but Mohebi would have performed that role better. Ghalenoei deserves credit for comeback twice. However, the tactical organisation was very poor and one of the worst of this first World Cup week. Unbelievable how he is leaving our most talented player, Mehdi Ghaeydi, on the bench from the start.
    Team


    2.4 – Iran
    We should have won this match. It was an entertaining attacking game, largely because New Zealand allowed it to be. Once they sensed they had a chance of claiming a historic three points, they became more adventurous, which gave us opportunities to attack against fewer players behind the ball. It was an open and enjoyable match for any neutral to watch. Ultimately, we looked like a team blessed with some serious individual quality but lacking collective organisation.
    What this game showed was that we are tactically clueless. I was watching some of the games yesterday with true favorites playing, and they are just so organized. When they lose the ball, they run back to form a cage around the player with the ball and his nearest option to quickly win the ball back. I don't know what we were doing, but our tactic seemed to be low press (i.e. let the attackers run at you and hopefully they make a mistake). It was clear as day that was the instruction of GN, I imagine because he feared these no-brain Nemati and Shoja would give a penalty due to their history. I don't know if it was just that we had no better options than them?

    The biggest weakness was our midfield. We don't have one. Any time we would win the ball back, it was 5 at the back to pass around with Beiranvand and 6 in a line on the opposite end of the field. I imagine this was also tactical as GN doesn't believe in our players' passing abilities and is hoping for miracle balls to land at the feet of an attacking player. Watching France and Argentina yesterday, almost every attack is straight through the middle with incisive passes, and then when they switch up to the wings, it's dangerous as the other team has gotten used to everything going through the midfield.

    We are playing Ali Asghari and chipping to wings, and we did actually have the ball luckily make it to Ramin on the wing for the Mohebi goal. But most of the game, we were just cheaply giving up possession. This is just the coaches tactical errors due to his failure to believe in our players' quality to play a clean passing game. We will play Aliasghari long balls against Belgium and Egypt too and have the same result. GN has been using this tactic since 2007, and since he took over from Carlos. The difference was we were playing Asian Cup and Asian WCQ where the long balls would land at Sardar and Taremi's feet and they'd create chances based on their pure skill gap with Palestine, Syria, etc. Anyone who was okay letting CQ go to play GN's beautiful attacking game, LOL at you. Grow a brain, this is the level we get hiring an IR installed puppet to run the national team. In a proper country this guy would be working at a carwash, not running the national team. GN is the definition of party bazi loser, a good federation would have fired him after the NZ game like Tunisia did. Renard without knowing the players' names would do better than GN.

    Comment


      #3
      For anyone who doesn’t know yet, after the NZ game Iran received a minus 14 point deduction in FIFA ranking and is now 4th in Asia. Both S Korea and Australia over took us by winning their games while Iran had to fight back twice not to lose to the lowest ranked team in the WC.

      1) Japan
      2) S Korea
      3) Australia
      4) Iran

      The reason for losing 14 points is because we tied a team that is ranked 85 which is 65 below us.



      All this humiliation is thanks to the Incompetent GN for insisting on using the Brain Dead defenders like Shoja, Nemati and Milad when he had plenty of time to implement up and coming younger players like Hazbavi and others in the defense as well as other areas in the team.

      And this Catastrophe is after playing out EASIEST GAME.

      I dread to see what else is ahead of us in upcoming games.

      Comment


        #4
        Originally posted by Damavand View Post
        For anyone who doesn’t know yet, after the NZ game Iran received a minus 14 point deduction in FIFA ranking and is now 4th in Asia. Both S Korea and Australia over took us by winning their games while Iran had to fight back twice not to lose to the lowest ranked team in the WC.

        1) Japan
        2) S Korea
        3) Australia
        4) Iran

        The reason for losing 14 points is because we tied a team that is ranked 85 which is 65 below us.

        And this catastrophe is After playing our EASIEST GAME.

        All this humiliation is thanks to the Incompetent GN for insisting on using the Brain Dead defenders like Shoja, Nemati and Milad when he had plenty of time to implement younger players like Hazbavi and others in the defense as well as other areas in the team.

        I dread to see what else is ahead of us in upcoming games.
        Our ranking was phony anyway. We haven't beaten any top 30 rated team under GN as far as I'm aware other than the fluke Japan AC win, which will be GN's most proud moment of his life. Anyone who is dreaming of us escaping this group "because this time we don't want it", be prepared for what happens. This team is going to be like being locked in a cage with a Gorilla. They have no chance, and you're smoking the good stuff if you think a miracle will happen and we somehow can steal a point in either of the upcoming game. If anyone watched Egypt play, they are going to kill us. We don't play well against fast technical players. Akram Afif from Qatar looked like Ronaldinho against us, Egypt has 4 players that play his style but better. They also run back on defense and can contract and expand quite well. Maybe if Belgium and Egypt both get food poisoning or the flu the day of the game, we could get a tie, but people here are just dreaming. It's like people pondering maybe the woman of my dreams will come to my house today and tell me she loves me and I'll win the billion dollar lotto.

        TM has the same chances in the upcoming games. I notice the ones who are thinking like this have several deluded opinions quite frankly. They live in fantasy land.

        Comment

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