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Shahid Shiroudi Stadium

Coordinates: 35°42′37″N 51°25′39″E / 35.71028°N 51.42750°E / 35.71028; 51.42750
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35°42′37″N 51°25′39″E / 35.71028°N 51.42750°E / 35.71028; 51.42750

Shahid Shiroudi Stadium
Amjadieh Stadium during 1960s
Map
Full nameShahid Shiroudi Stadium
Former namesAmjadieh Stadium (1939–1981)
LocationTehran, Iran
OwnerMinistry of Sport and Youth (Iran)
Capacity25,000 (Football)
SurfaceGrass
Construction
Built1939
Opened1939
Closed2015
Tenants
Iran national football team (1942–1971)
Shahin F.C. (1942–1966)
Taj SC (1945–1974)

The Shahid Shiroudi Stadium (Persian: ورزشگاه شهید شیرودی) formerly known as Amjadieh Stadium (Persian: ورزشگاه امجدیه) is a sports stadium in Tehran, Iran. It is currently used for athletics and held football matches until 2009.[citation needed]

The stadium is able to seat 30,000 people and was opened in 1942. It was called Amjadieh Stadium (Persian: امجدیه) until the Iranian Revolution.[citation needed]

In September 2015 it was announced the stadium and the complex would undergo a massive renovation.[1]

History

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The stadium is one of the oldest sports stadiums in Iran. It was built in 1942 and was located in North of Tehran at the time of opening, while it is now in center of Tehran. In 1934, Maxime Siroux began designing and constructing Amjadieh Stadium with the capacity of 15,000. Reza Shah approved and ordered similar stadiums across Iran.[2] Siroux later designed and constructed the Hafezieh Stadium in Shiraz. The stadium has played host to many sporting, cultural, and national events as well as political meetings. Ever since Iran national football team was formed, they played their home matches in Amjadieh Stadium before Aryamehr Stadium was constructed. It was also home to Taj S.C. (Esteghlal F.C.) and Persepolis F.C. before Azadi Stadium was built. It was also home to Shahin F.C. before and after the Iranian Revolution.[citation needed]

It has also hosted the 1968 AFC Asian Cup finals. The Asian Club Championship was also held in Amjadieh Stadium in 1970. Additionally, Amjadieh stadium along with Aryamehr Stadium and Apadana Stadium (under the name of Persepolis stadium) was the host of preliminary round of the football matches at the 1974 Asian Games.[3] The stadium has also been the venue for the AFC Youth Championship 2000.[citation needed]

Cultural, political and military operations

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  • During the Coronation of the Mohammad Reza Shah and the Shahbanou of Iran in 1967, many events took place in Amjadieh Stadium, including the Coronation Parade.[4]
  • The stadium was to be the final departing site for Operation Eagle Claw and, after its failure, Operation Credible Sport, the aborted missions to rescue 52 American hostages being held in Tehran during the Iran Hostage Crisis. The proposed extraction would have involved a rescue force being transported to the embassy, releasing the hostages, and then escorting the hostages across the main road in front of the embassy to the stadium, where helicopters (Eagle Claw) or a modified C-130 (Credible Sport) would have retrieved the entire contingent.[5][6]
  • On February 24, 1981, the Mojahedin-e-Khalq party held its public meeting in Tehran at the Amjadieh Stadium, around 40,000 people attended.[7]

Naming

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The stadium was named after Shahid Ali Akbar Shiroodi, a Cobra helicopter pilot who was killed in the Iran–Iraq War.[citation needed]

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References

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  1. ^ "ایسنا - شیرودی با هفت هزار میلیارد تومان بازسازی می‌شود". Iranian Students News Agency. 13 September 2015.
  2. ^ Salari Sardari, Mohadeseh (2024-03-04). "Andre Godard and Maxime Siroux: Disentangling the Narrative of French Colonialism and Modern Architecture in Iran". Iranian Studies: 1–29. doi:10.1017/irn.2024.10. ISSN 0021-0862.
  3. ^ "Asian Games 1974 (Iran)". RSSSF. Retrieved 31 October 2013.
  4. ^ "Celebrating the Coronation". Angelfire. Retrieved 15 November 2013.
  5. ^ Lambert, Laura. "Operation Eagle Claw". britannica.
  6. ^ Thigpen, Jerry L.; Hobson, James L. (2011). The Praetorian STARShip: The Untold Story of the Combat Talon. Air University Press. p. 210. ISBN 978-1780391977.
  7. ^ Houchang E. Chehabi (1990). Iranian Politics and Religious Modernism. I.B.Tauris. ISBN 9781850431985. Retrieved 15 November 2013.
Preceded by AFC Asian Cup
Host Venue

1968
Succeeded by