If this is your first visit, be sure to
check out the FAQ by clicking the
link above. You may have to register
before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages,
select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below.
Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
Irans Journey to Russia Starts at the Door to Hell
Lol stop complaining and crying for "international sources", at least we will have broadcast available. If we were to play in Guam, y'all would be like "why isn't there no broadcast, marg bar AFC!!"..
International source please. Why in Iran and only against Iran, would be a logical question.
hmmm... couldn't find anything in english, but i don't think Peyrovani a man so trusted by CQ, would say they, the Guam FF have asked to play in Iran, if there wasn't anything there.
also, it's important to note, before the game against Turkmenistan, Guam had never hosted another country in Guam for WCQ.
I don't know if you guys witnessed the Guam and Turkmenistan game, but it was brutal to watch as both teams really sucked. It was hard to say which team was worse. Guam made history by recording their first win against Turkmenistan in their joke of a stadium, and I was receiving stress by their lack of precision is passing, crossing or even shooting. Their cameras suck and they do not really have professional commentators. So there will be a possibility of not watching Iran triumph against Guam on TV, but I'm hoping that will not be true. If we can manage to win by 6 or 7 goals against Turkmentistan I will be satisfied, because they lack as a team, and there is not much of a distance between our nations to say our boys were tired or jet lagged. If we managed to beat the Uzbeks 1-0 away with the debuts of six new players, we could at least win by scoring more goals with our more experienced players instead. I know most of you are thinking of seeing a younger team against the Turks, but be sure that CQ would not do that. As you guys should recall, CQ wanst to blend TM slowly by adding new players, so that the teamwork is maintained without any big changes being made. The players may have had a taste of what its like to play against an international team, but in this next game I'm sure we'll see either Akhbari or Beiranvand in goal. The reason behind that was Haghighi was the only choice for first keeper for the friendly because of the competitiveness of that game cannot be comparable to what we face in the next few days, and it is clear that Makani is being used as a backup to Haghighi or just CQ owes him that for his ghayrat when he got attacked after the game in Seoul. In conclusion, my prediction would be "Iran 7 Turkmenistan 0".
Thank you for the kind words gentlemen and I'm glad you enjoyed it.
PL jaan, all criticisms are always welcome. The article was written in an allegorical style and in that sense it's meant to be more whimsical and inspire the imagination, rather than being a historical or factual essay.
Having said that, your reference to Turks and Turkic is completely lost on me. The article is about Turkmenistan and Turan (both of which are located in Central Asia)- it has nothing to do with the Turks or Tukic, as the Avestan Turan would have predated the arrival of the Oghuz tribes in Central Asia by thousand of years.
In fact, even at the time of Ferdowsi, current day Turkmenistan or Avestan Turan had hardly seen the large scale migration of the Oghuz/Turkic tribes that followed Ferdowsi's death in the early 2nd millennium.
Ferdowsi's Irano-centric views split the characters and regions around a central region being Iran. In that sense the three sons of Fereydun simply define the regions and people to the East and West of Iran and since the separation of Arab (semitic) and Ajam (Indo-Europeans) may have occurred earlier at the time of Jamshid (hence Ajam) or Avestan Yima that parallels the story of Noah in Semitic traditions, the Salm/Iraj divide likely symbolizes the East/West divide within the Indo-European language tree and people.
These 4 divides would of course translate to later historical invasions by the same groups as the old cliche suggests "history repeats itself": Mecodoninans/Romans (Salm/Iraj divide), Arabs (Fereydun/Zahhak divide) and the Mongols (Tur/Iraj divide ).
The connection to turan and turkmenistan is underlying in your article. I am familiar with Shahnameh and all Iranian and Turkic history to the very core.
Turan is the land beyond Amu Darya river, So Turkmenistan was inside Iranian territory. Even Nesa the Parthian capital and ancient Marv are in Turkmenistan.
Thank you for the kind words gentlemen and I'm glad you enjoyed it.
PL jaan, all criticisms are always welcome. The article was written in an allegorical style and in that sense it's meant to be more whimsical and inspire the imagination, rather than being a historical or factual essay.
Having said that, your reference to Turks and Turkic is completely lost on me. The article is about Turkmenistan and Turan (both of which are located in Central Asia)- it has nothing to do with the Turks or Tukic, as the Avestan Turan would have predated the arrival of the Oghuz tribes in Central Asia by thousand of years.
In fact, even at the time of Ferdowsi, current day Turkmenistan or Avestan Turan had hardly seen the large scale migration of the Oghuz/Turkic tribes that followed Ferdowsi's death in the early 2nd millennium.
Ferdowsi's Irano-centric views split the characters and regions around a central region being Iran. In that sense the three sons of Fereydun simply define the regions and people to the East and West of Iran and since the separation of Arab (semitic) and Ajam (Indo-Europeans) may have occurred earlier at the time of Jamshid (hence Ajam) or Avestan Yima that parallels the story of Noah in Semitic traditions, the Salm/Iraj divide likely symbolizes the East/West divide within the Indo-European language tree and people.
These 4 divides would of course translate to later historical invasions by the same groups as the old cliche suggests "history repeats itself": Mecodoninans/Romans (Salm/Iraj divide), Arabs (Fereydun/Zahhak divide) and the Mongols (Tur/Iraj divide ).
Leave a comment: