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Irans Magnificent
Seventh
(FIFA.com) 07 Jun 2005
Despite some unexpected early slip-ups,
including a 3-1 loss to Japan and a 3-3 draw
with Thailand in the second phases of the group
stages, Iran were crowned champions in this
year's AFC Futsal Championship in Ho Chi Mihn
City on 4 June, following a deserved 2-0 victory
over Japan in the final.
So far, the unstoppable Team Melli have
collected all seven titles of the annual event
which began in 1999. Japan have been the only
team who have looked like breaking their
dominance, but they have tasted defeat in the
last four finals against the Iranian side.
However, this year it seemed that Japan had a
good chance of lifting the trophy, especially as
they had defeated the eventual victors just a
week before the final. But the champions proved
to be worthy winners on the day and of the
tournament itself.
Iranian striker Vahid Shamsaee, top scorer of
the tournament with 23 goals, put the favourites
ahead after just three minutes. Mohsen Zarei
doubled the advantage five minutes later, which
effectively ended the game as a contest. Indeed,
following the second goal, Jurandir Azeredo's
men were rarely troubled by the Japanese side.
The coach was a relieved man at the final
whistle. The re-match with Japan was as hard as
the game earlier in the tournament, but this
time we played better and we converted our
chances," he said. "Japan are tough opponents,
but we played to our strengths."
New challenges for Team Melli In the opening
group stage, Iran beat Bhutan (27-2), Kuwait
(1-0) and Lebanon (10-3) to qualify for the
second face where they came up against Japan,
Thailand and China.
Despite reaching double figures against Bhutan
and Lebanon, the narrow victory over Kuwait sent
alarm bells ringing that the domination that
Iran have enjoyed in this competition could be
beginning to fade.
That view was re-enforced in the next game when
they slipped to defeat against Japan. Kogure
Kenichiro bagged a second half brace, while Fuji
Kenta added the third. In the closing minutes,
Hossein Sultani pulled one back for Iran, but
that was little more than a consolation.
In the next match, a 3-3 draw with Thailand saw
the defending champions on the verge of
elimination. Only another 10-3 victory, this
time against China, saw them through to the
semi-finals, where they comfortably defeated
Uzbekistan 4-1.
Pretenders to the throne
While the press and the public alike regarded
this Team Melli as the weakest in their history,
their struggle reflected the rapid development
of the other Asian nations in the futsal arena.
Iran had not lost or even drawn a single match
in the six tournaments prior to this one, so
their defeat to Japan and draw with Thailand has
been heralded in Asia as the end of their
domination.
The progress of the other teams can be
exemplified by Chinese Taipel, the hosts of last
year's FIFA Futsal World Championship. After
gaining valuable experience in the FIFA
tournament, the young team proved to be the
surprise package as they pulled off two
victories over Korea Republic.
Lebanon leading the developing teams
During the two-week event, a new format was
introduced after the initial group phase. While
the top eight teams played against each other
for the tournament title, the rest of the 16
losing teams were placed into four groups in an
auxiliary competition.
After exciting the group stage at the first
phase, Lebanon got into the winning habit by
beating Malaysia 5-1, Indonesia 5-3 and Macau
10-1. This was enough to take them into the
semi-finals were they edged out Palestine in a
close match. A 6-2 win over Iraq saw them claim
the title.
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