Full name | Shahin Tehran Football Club |
---|---|
Founded | 1942, as Shahin 1973, as Shabaz 1979, as Shahin |
Ground |
Shahid Shiroudi Stadium Tehran, Iran |
Capacity | 30,000 |
League | Tehran Province league |
2013–14 | Tehran Province league, 8th |
Shahin Tehran Football Club (Persian: باشگاه فوتبال شاهین تهران) is an Iranian football club based in Tehran, Iran. Shahin A.C. is located at East of Tehran in the Narmak neighborhood (Golestan Street). Shahin was the most popular clubs in Iran before the 1960s and it had a rivalry with Taj Tehran. Their match was the most important derby of Iran at the time. Shahin F.C. was dissolved in 1966 for political reasons. Shahin was revived again after the Iranian Revolution in 1979. Due to the Iran-Iraq War, The national league was not held during the 1980s, however, Shahin was one of the strongest teams in the provincial league of Tehran.
They currently compete in the Tehran provincial league.
In June 1942, Dr. Abbas Ekrami opened the poetry book Divan-e Hafez and saw the following line, after which he named the club Shahin,
در هوا چند معلق زنی و جلوه کنی
ای کبوتر نگران باش که شاهین آمد
In the air, you will rotate a few times with glory;
oh pigeon, be worried, Falcon is on its way.
Ekrami founded the club with help of some young students under the motto:
Shahin became a prominent club in Iran and formed other teams for its sub-clubs Oghab FC, Shahbaz FC, Darius FC, Simorgh FC, Atom FC, and Pirooz FC. The club also produced many famous Iranian players such as Masoud Boroumand, Homayoun Behzadi and Mehrab Shahrokhi.
Shahin FC, without any doubt was the most popular football club in the history of Iranian football. Shahin produced many talented players like Parviz Dehdari, Masoud Boroumand, Homayoun Behzadi, Jafar Kashani, Hossein Kalani, Hamid Shirzadegan, and many more that played for Team Melli. These talents made Shahin popular in the 1960s but its very popularity was viewed as a threat by the Iran Football Federation and the Keihan Varzeshi newspaper (Iran's most important sports publication at the time). The conflict between them became worse and on July 9, 1967, two days after Shahin's 3–0 win against Tehranjavan F.C., the Iran Sports Organization declared Shahin F.C. as dissolved. League attendance dropped and other clubs including Pas Tehran, Rah Ahan, and Oghab tried to sign Shahin players.