Iran men's national basketball team

The Iran men’s national basketball team (Persian: تیم ملی بسکتبال مردان ایران) represents Iran in international basketball, and is governed by the Islamic Republic of Iran Basketball Federation (IRIBF).

Iran
FIBA ranking28 Decrease 2 (3 March 2026)[1]
Joined FIBA1947
FIBA zoneFIBA Asia
National federationIRIBF
CoachSotiris Manolopoulos
Nickname(s)Team Melli
(The National Team)
Olympic Games
Appearances3
FIBA World Cup
Appearances4
FIBA Asia Cup
Appearances19
Medals‹See Tfd›Gold Gold: (2007, 2009, 2013)
‹See Tfd›Silver Silver: (2017)
‹See Tfd›Bronze Bronze: (2015, 2025)
Retired numbers1 (15)
First international
 France 62–30 Iran 
(London, United Kingdom; 1 August 1948)
Biggest win
 Iran 141–29 Maldives 
(Medina, Saudi Arabia; 10 April 2005)
Biggest defeat
 South Korea 116–54 Iran 
(Manila, Philippines; 4 December 1973)

Iran is one of Asia’s most successful federations. Since the turn of the century, they’ve won three FIBA Asia Cup tournaments, while also claiming a silver and two bronze medals at the competition. Iran has also qualified for every edition of the FIBA World Cup since 2010, and have participated in two Olympic Games (2008, 2020).

History

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iran team in 1948 summer Olympic

Early years

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In 1948, the Iran national basketball team participated in the 1948 London Olympics, their first appearance in the competition. In 1951, Iran participated in the first Asian Games held in Delhi and placed third in Asia. In 1959, Iran participated in the EuroBasket held in Turkey.

2007 FIBA Asia Championship

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Placed in the dreaded "Group of Death" alongside China, the Philippines, and Jordan, the Iranians won all three group matches to make it to the next round. In the quarterfinals, Iran went 2–1, to make it to semifinals, following victories over Chinese Taipei and Qatar, and then routed Kazakhstan, 75–62, in the semifinals.[citation needed]

The Iranians then beat Lebanon 74–69, with Hamed Haddadi scoring 31 points.[2] Not only did it avenge an 82–60 defeat in the quarterfinals, they also became the first Western Asian team to win the tournament, and thus make it to the 2008 Beijing Olympics.[2]

2008 Beijing Olympic Games

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In being crowned the 2007 Asian Champions, the Iranians qualified for the 2008 Beijing games for the first time in 60 years. The Olympic experience led to a flurry of opportunities for the Iranian players, as they traveled across the world in preparation for the games, including a visit to the US.They also Defeat Serbia (72–70) before the start of the tournament in 2008 FIBA Diamond Ball.Iran was placed in Group A, along with Lithuania, Russia, Argentina, Croatia, and Australia, suffering five defeats. The Olympic experience opened doors for players such as Hamed Haddadi, and Iranian captain Samad Nikkhah Bahrami to play in the NBA (National Basketball Association) and sign in the top French League.[citation needed]

Haddadi finished with averages of 16.6 points per game, 11.2 rebounds per game, and 2.6 blocks per game, leading the entire tournament in the latter two categories. His highlight performance was in the game against Argentina when he put up 21 points and 16 rebounds.[3]

2009 FIBA Asia Championship

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Winning the FIBA Asia Championship 2009 at Tianjin, China, was a sign on continuing progress in basketball.Iran won all three group matches against Chinese Taipei, Kuwait, Uzbekistan to make it to the next round.In the second round Iran Won Japan, Philippines and South Korea.In the Quarterfinals Iran wins Qatar and in Semifinals Iran wins Jordan.Iran defeated China, by a score of 70–52 in the final.[4]

2010 FIBA World Championship

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Iran's second consecutive FIBA Asia Championship gave them their first ever FIBA World Championship berth, at the 2010 FIBA World Championship.The team lost against USA, Brazil, Croatia, Slovenia and one win against Tunisia.Iran finished 1–4 in Group B, for 19th place.

2013 FIBA Asia Championship

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Winning the 2013 FIBA Asia Championship at Manila, Philippines, was a sign that the Iranian team has forgot the tragedy of their loss to Jordan in last tournament, 2011 FIBA Asia Championship, and reclaimed the top place in the FIBA Asia. Iran defeated the charged up hosts Philippines by an 85–71 win in the final. Iranian center Hamed Haddadi, who played a stellar role in Iran's triumph at the 27th FIBA Asia Championship, became the most accomplished individual player of the competition winning two awards, including that of the MVP. Iran was the only team with two awards in the All Stars with Oshin Sahakian named for the Power Forward position.[citation needed]

2014 FIBA World Cup

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In the 2014 FIBA World Cup in Spain, Iran national basketball team was grouped with Spain, Egypt, Serbia, Brazil and France in Group A.Iran national basketball team, in its first meeting in the opening game, faced Spain, the world's second-ranked team, and succumbed to defeat.On the sixth day of the 2014 FIBA World Cup and in its last match of the preliminary stage, Iran faced the French and succumbed to defeat, and finally ranked 21st with 4 losses and one win against Egypt. Iran lost against France and Serbia.

2019 FIBA World Cup

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In the 2019 FIBA World Cup of China, which was held in Asia for the first time, the Iran team was grouped in Group C with the teams of Spain, Puerto Rico and Tunisia. They lost all three games and competed with the Angolan and Philippine teams to rank 17–32 (for the first time in this period, 32 teams participated) and won both matches. Thanks to the goal difference, they finished ahead of China, which had lost against Nigeria, and went to the Tokyo Olympics as the best Asian team.

2020 Tokyo Olympic Games

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Iran national team in 2021, during a time out in a friendly against Spain.

Iran is in group A of the competitions along with the US, France, and Czech.Iranian men’s basketball team conceded a 78–84 defeat against Czech at the opening match of the basketball competitions of the 2020 Tokyo Olympics.In their second game at the Olympics, Iranian basketball players lost to the US 66–120.Iran’s national basketball team finished the campaign in the 2020 Olympics with a 79–62 loss against France at Saitama Super Arena.Iran, in its three appearance at the Olympics, conceded three defeats in Group A.

2023 FIBA World Cup

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Iran was only one of three teams at the World Cup 2023 to go home without a win. Finishing bottom in Group G after resounding defeats to Brazil, Côte d'Ivoire and Spain. Further disappointment was to follow in the classification games against France and Lebanon. After the final play of their campaign, one man took centre stage, Hamed Haddadi, bidding a final farewell after 4 consecutive World Cup runs with Iran. At the other end of his career is Mohammad Amini. The 18-years-old who plays for AS Monaco Basket, played 30 minutes a game and was Iran's top tournament scorer.[citation needed]

Competitive record

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Olympic Games

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Summer Olympic Games record
Year Round Rank M W L PF PA PD Squad
Germany 1936Did not enter
United Kingdom 194813th place match14th place725199366−167Squad
Finland 1952Did not enter
Australia 1956
Italy 1960
Japan 1964
Mexico 1968
West Germany 1972
Canada 1976
Soviet Union 1980 Boycotted the event
United States 1984
South Korea 1988 Did not enter
Spain 1992Did not qualify
United States 1996
Australia 2000
Greece 2004
China 2008Preliminary round11th place505323464−141Squad
United Kingdom 2012Did not qualify
Brazil 2016
Japan 2020Preliminary round12th place303206283−77Squad
France 2024Did not qualify
United States 2028Future events
Australia 2032
Total3/20152137281,113−385

FIBA World Cup

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FIBA World Cup record Qualification record
Year Round Rank M W L PF PA PD Squad M W L PF PA PD
Argentina 1950Did not enterQualification via Wild Card
Brazil 1954
Chile 1959
Brazil 1963
Uruguay 1967Qualification via FIBA Asia Cup
Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia 1970
Puerto Rico 1974Did not qualify
Philippines 1978Did not enter
Colombia 1982Did not qualify
Spain 1986
Argentina 1990
Canada 1994
Greece 1998
United States 2002
Japan 2006
Turkey 2010Preliminary round19th514301367−66Squad
Spain 2014Preliminary round20th514344406−62Squad
China 2019 17th–32nd Classification23rd523379372+7Squad1284890811+79
Philippines Japan Indonesia 2023 17th–32nd Classification31st505321419−98Squad1266856824+32
Qatar 2027 To be determined220180139+41
France 2031To be determined
Total4/19204161,3451,564−2192616101,9261,774+152

FIBA Asia Cup

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FIBA Asia Cup record Qualification record
Year Round Rank M W L PF PA PD Squad Round Rank M W L PF PA PD
Philippines 1960Did not enterNo qualification
Taiwan 1963
Malaysia 1965
South Korea 1967
Thailand 1969
Japan 1971
Philippines 1973Championship5th place1046798899-101Squad
Thailand 1975Did not enter
Malaysia 1977
Japan 1979
India 1981Classification 7th–12th8th place734653648+5Squad
Hong Kong 1983Classification 5th–8th5th place651421365+56Squad
Malaysia 1985Classification 5th–8th8th place624467482-5Squad
Thailand 1987Did not enter
China 19895th place game5th place743613614-1Squad
Japan 19915th place game6th place844680650+30Squad
Indonesia 19934th place game4th place642489465+24Squad
South Korea 19959th place game10th place853594505+89Squad
Saudi Arabia 19977th place game8th place734510579-69Squad
Japan 1999Did not qualifyQualification via WABA Championship
or FIBA Asia Challenge
China 2001
China 20035th place game5th place743538577-19Squad
Qatar 20055th place game6th place844562512+50Squad
Japan 2007FinalChampions871592555+37Squad
China 2009FinalChampions990767581+186Squad
China 20115th place game5th place981947516+431Squad
Philippines 2013FinalChampions990781489+292Squad
China 20153rd place game3rd place972774542+232Squad
Lebanon 2017FinalRunners-up651494418+76Squad
Indonesia 2022Quarterfinals5th place431340294+46SquadQualifiers1st in group651484351+133
Saudi Arabia 20253rd place game3rd place651442405+37SquadQualifiers1st in group651453305+148
Total3 titles19/31140954511,46210,066+1,3962/212102937656+281

Asian Games

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Asian Games record
Year Round Rank M W L PF PA PD Squad
India 1951Round-robin3rd place422222195+27Squad
Philippines 1954Did not enter
Japan 1958
Indonesia 1962
Thailand 19667th place game7th place734543575-32Squad
Thailand 19707th place game7th place862740668+72Squad
Iran 19745th place game6th place734643580+63Squad
Thailand 1978Did not enter
India 1982
South Korea 1986
China 19907th place game7th place633466499-33Squad
Japan 19947th place game8th place624498530-32Squad
Thailand 19987th place game7th place624452465-13Squad
South Korea 2002Did not enter
Qatar 2006Bronze medal game3rd place853632581+51Squad
China 2010Bronze medal game3rd place862566461+105Squad
South Korea 2014Gold medal gameRunners-up761565456+109Squad
Indonesia 2018Gold medal gameRunners-up431313274+39Squad
China 2022Classification 5th–6th5th place651512409+103Squad
Japan 2026Future events
Qatar 2030
Saudi Arabia 2034
Total12/197746316,1525,693+459

FIBA Asia Challenge

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FIBA Asia Challenge record (Defunct)
Year Round Rank M W L PF PA PD Squad
Taiwan 2004Qualified but withdrew
Kuwait 2008
Lebanon 20105th place game6th place734500504-4Squad[a]
Japan 2012FinalChampions770519422+97Squad
China 2014FinalChampions761496410+86Squad
Iran 2016FinalChampions880670402+268Squad
Total3 titles4/6292452,1851,738+447

FIBA Diamond Ball

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FIBA Diamond Ball record (Defunct)
Year Round Rank M W L PF PA PD Squad
Hong Kong 2000Did not qualify
Serbia and Montenegro 2004
China 20083rd place game4th place312000Squad
Total1/3312189226-37

West Asian Championship

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WABA Championship record (Defunct)
Year Round Rank M W L Squad
Lebanon 1999Round-robin4th place413Squad
Lebanon 2000Round-robin4th place422Squad
Jordan 2001Round-robin3rd place422Squad
Jordan Iran 2002Round-robinRunners-up431Squad
Iran 2004Round-robinChampions440Squad
Lebanon 2005Round-robinChampions440Squad
Jordan 2008Did not enter
Iraq 2010Round-robinChampions330Squad[a]
Iraq 2011Round-robinChampions330Squad
Jordan 2012Round-robinRunners-up541Squad
Iran 2013Round-robinChampions330Squad
Jordan 2014Round-robinRunners-up541Squad[b]
Jordan 2015Did not enter
Jordan 2016Round-robinChampions440Squad
Jordan 2017Round-robinRunners-up541Squad
Total6 titles13/15524111

Other tournaments

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Honours

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Team

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Roster for the 2025 FIBA Asia Cup.[5][6]

Iran men's national basketball team – 2025 FIBA Asia Cup roster
PlayersCoaches
Pos.No.NameAge – Date of birthHeightClubCtr.
G 3 Mohammad Sina Vahedi 24 – (2001-01-08)8 January 2001 1.85 m (6 ft 1 in) Tabiat Eslamshahr Iran
PG 5 Mobin Sheikhi 28 – (1997-03-15)15 March 1997 1.75 m (5 ft 9 in) Shahrdari Gorgan Iran
F 6 Mohammad Amini 20 – (2005-04-26)26 April 2005 2.01 m (6 ft 7 in) SLUC Nancy Basket France
F 7 Navid Rezaeifar 28 – (1996-08-23)23 August 1996 1.88 m (6 ft 2 in) Shimidor Iran
G 11 Mohammad Mehdi Heydari 19 – (2006-04-28)28 April 2006 1.96 m (6 ft 5 in) Mahgol Alborz Iran
PF 12 Arman Zangeneh 32 – (1993-06-15)15 June 1993 2.05 m (6 ft 9 in) Tabiat Eslamshahr Iran
PF 14 Arsalan Kazemi (C) 35 – (1990-04-22)22 April 1990 2.02 m (6 ft 8 in) Shahrdari Gorgan Iran
F 17 Matin Aghajanpour 24 – (2001-03-14)14 March 2001 1.98 m (6 ft 6 in) Kalleh Mazandaran Iran
PF 23 Mohammad Mehdi Rahimi 22 – (2003-06-24)24 June 2003 2.02 m (6 ft 8 in) Palayesh Naft Abadan Iran
C 32 Hassan Aliakbari 29 – (1996-07-07)7 July 1996 2.18 m (7 ft 2 in) Tabiat Iran
C 51 Salar Monji 28 – (1997-04-10)10 April 1997 2.07 m (6 ft 9 in) Shimidor Iran
PG 55 Mehdi Jafari 21 – (2003-10-04)4 October 2003 1.87 m (6 ft 2 in) Mahgol Alborz Iran
Head coach
Assistant coach(es)
  • Iran Mohammad Kasaeepour
  • Iran Farzad Kouhian
Legend
  • (C) Team captain
  • Club – describes last
    club before the tournament
  • Age – describes age
    on 5 August 2025

Past rosters

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Olympic Games

1948 London Ashtari, Ehsasi, Esfandiary, Hashemi, Karandish, Mohtadi, Rafati, Sadeghi, Salabi, Shademan, Soroudi, Soudipour, Zadegan, Coach: Kazem Rambari

2008 Beijing 4 Doraghi, 5 Amini, 6 Davari, 7 Kamrani, 8 Davarpanah, 9 Zandi, 10 Afagh, 11 Sohrabnejad, 12 Sahakian, 13 Nabipour, 14 Bahrami, 15 Haddadi: Coach. Rajko Toroman

2020 Tokyo 4 Vahedi, 5 Jalalpoor, 7 Hassanzadeh, 8 Davarpanah, 13 Jamshidi, 14 Nikkhah Bahrami, 15 Haddadi, 17 Rezaeifar, 20 Rostampour, 23 Geramipoor, 41 Kazemi, 88 Yakhchali, Coach: Mehran Shahintab

FIBA Basketball World Cup

2010 turkey 4 Nabipour, 5 Davoudi, 6 Davari, 7 Kamrani, 8 Veisi, 9 Zandi, 10 Hassanzadeh, 11 Sahakian, 12 Kazemi, 13 Kardoust, 14 Davarpanah, 15 Haddadi, Coach: Veselin Matić

2014 Spain 4 Arghavan, 5 Mashayekhi, 6 Yakhchali, 7 Kamrani, 8 Kazemi, 9 Zangeneh, 10 Afagh, 11 Sahakian, 12 Kardoust, 13 Jamshidi, 14 Bahrami, 15 Haddadi, Coach: Mehmed Bečirovič

2019 China 1 Mozafari, 4 Mirzaei, 5 Mashayekhi, 6 Hosseinzadeh, 7 Hassanzadeh, 8 Yakhchali, 12 Zangeneh, 13 Jamshidi, 14 Bahrami, 15 Haddadi, 20 Rostampour, 23 Geramipoor, Coach: Mehran Shahintab

2023 Philippines, Japan, Indonesia 3 Vahedi, 4 Mirzaei, 5 Mashayekhi, 6 Amini, 7 Rezaeifar, 8 Yakhchali, 10 Girgoorian, 14 Kazemi, 15 Haddadi, 17 Aghajanpour, 30 Agha Miri, 32 Aliakbari, Coach: Hakan Demir

FIBA Asia Cup

2003 China 4 Tajik, 5 Davari, 6 Veisi, 7 Kamrani, 8 S. Bahrami, 9 Zandi, 10 Afagh, 11 Sohrabnejad, 12 Askarnejad, 13 Ahmadian, 14 Rouzbahani, 15 Afradi, Coach: Mostafa Hashemi

2005 Qatar 4 Tajik, 5 A. Bahrami, 6 Amini, 7 Kamrani, 8 S. Bahrami, 9 Zandi, 10 Afagh, 11 Sohrabnejad, 12 Rouzbahani, 13 Shahsavand, 14 Tabeshnia, 15 Haddadi, Coach: Mohammad Mehdi Izadpanah

2007 Japan 4 Doraghi, 5 Amini, 6 Davari, 7 Kamrani, 8 A. Bahrami, 9 Akbari, 10 Afagh, 11 Rouzbahani, 12 Sahakian, 13 Nabipour, 14 S. Bahrami, 15 Haddadi, Coach: Rajko Toroman

2009 China 4 Tajik, 5 Amini, 6 Davari, 7 Kamrani, 8 Davoudi, 9 Akbari, 10 Afagh, 11 Sohrabnejad, 12 Sahakian, 13 Doraghi, 14 Bahrami, 15 Haddadi, Coach: Veselin Matić

2011 China 4 Davarpanah, 5 Davoudi, 6 Davari, 7 Kamrani, 8 Atashi, 9 Kazemi, 10 Afagh, 11 Sahakian, 12 Kardoust, 13 Sohrabnejad, 14 Bahrami, 15 Haddadi, Coach: Veselin Matić

2013 Philippines 4 Jamshidi, 5 Davoudi, 6 Davari, 7 Kamrani, 8 Veisi, 9 Sahakian, 10 Afagh, 11 Sohrabnejad, 12 Kardoust, 13 Arghavan, 14 Bahrami, 15 Haddadi, Coach: Mehmed Bečirovič

2015 China 4 Mashayekhi, 5 Yakhchali, 6 Davari, 7 Kamrani, 8 Davarpanah, 9 Hassanzadeh, 10 Afagh, 11 Sahakian, 12 Kardoust, 13 Jamshidi, 14 Bahrami, 15 Haddadi, Coach: Dirk Bauermann

2017 Lebanon 4 Mirzaei, 5 Mashayekhi, 6 Aslani, 7 Rezaeifar, 8 Yakhchali, 9 Dalirzahan, 10 Niktash, 11 Sahakian, 12 Arghavan, 13 Jamshidi, 14 Kazemi, 15 Haddadi, Coach: Mehran Hatami

2022 Indonesia 1 Mozafari, 5 Mashayekhi, 7 Hassanzadeh, 8 Yakhchali, 10 Yousof Vand, 12 Zangeneh, 13 Jamshidi, 14 Kazemi, 15 Haddadi, 17 Rezaeifar, 23 Pazrofteh, 71 Aghajanpour, Coach: Saeed Armaghani

2025 Saudi Arabia 3 Vahedi, 5 Sheikhi, 6 Amini, 7 Rezaeifar, 11 Heydari, 12 Zangeneh, 14 Kazemi, 17 Aghajanpour, 23 Rahimi, 32 Aliakbari, 51 Monji, 55 Jafari, Coach: Sotiris Manolopoulos

FIBA EuroBasket

1959 Turkey 3 Salabi, 4 Kamali, 5 Meshun, 6 Agakuzik, 7 Ufervizi, 9 Taçbehs, 10 Avendi, 11 Veisi, 12 Vafai, 13 Rezi, Coach: Hassan Nikli

Asian Games

1951 New Delhi Khaleghpour, Mashhoun, Masoumi, Mokhberi, Oshar, Razi, Safiyar, Salabi, Soroudi, Soudipour, Coach: –

2006 Doha 4 Tajik, 5 Amini, 6 Veisi, 7 Kamrani, 8 S. Bahrami, 9 Zandi, 10 Afagh, 11 Honardoust, 12 A. Bahrami, 13 Ahmadian, 14 Nabipour, 15 Haddadi, Coach: Fred Oniga

2010 Guangzhou 4 Amini, 5 Davoudi, 6 Davari, 7 Kamrani, 8 Davarpanah, 9 Sahakian, 10 Afagh, 11 Sohrabnejad, 12 Jamshidi, 13 Kardoust, 14 Bahrami, 15 Doraghi, Coach: Veselin Matić

2014 Incheon 4 Arghavan, 5 Mashayekhi, 6 Yakhchali, 7 Kamrani, 8 Zangeneh, 9 Aslani, 10 Afagh, 11 Sahakian, 12 Kardoust, 13 Jamshidi, 14 Bahrami, 15 Haddadi, Coach: Mehmed Bečirovič

2018 Jakarta 4 Mirzaei, 5 Mashayekhi, 7 Davoudi, 8 Yakhchali, 10 Dalirzahan, 12 Arghavan, 13 Jamshidi, 14 Bahrami, 15 Haddadi, 17 Rezaeifar, 41 Kazemi, 77 Hassanzadeh, Coach: Mehran Hatami

2022 Hangzhou 1 Shahrian, 3 Vahedi, 4 Mirzaei, 5 Mashayekhi, 7 Rezaeifar, 10 Girgoorian, 11 Gholizadeh, 14 Kazemi, 17 Aghajanpour, 21 Torabi, 23 Pazirofteh, 32 Aliakbari, Coach: Hakan Demir

Head coaches

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Note: The following list may not be complete

Notable players

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Hamed Haddadi

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Hamed Haddadi in 2020

Center Hamed Haddadi was the first Iranian to play in the NBA. Although he went undrafted in 2004, Haddadi signed with the Memphis Grizzlies in 2008. He appeared in more than 150 games for the Grizzlies and the Phoenix Suns.

On the international stage, Haddadi won medals at the FIBA Asia Cup, the Asian Games, and the FIBA Asia Challenge. At the FIBA Asia Cup, he won five medals, including three golds. Haddadi is one of only three players to win the FIBA Asia Cup MVP award since 2007, taking home four of the seven MVP trophies during that run.

At age 38, Haddadi made his final World Cup appearance at FIBA Basketball World Cup 2023. He was named to the Iranian squad in 2010, 2014, and 2019, and was named to Iran's extended roster for 2023.

The Iran Basketball Federation retired Hamed Haddadi's number 15 jersey on 21 February 2025, ahead of an Asia Cup qualifying game against India. It was the first jersey number retirement in Iran for any sport.[7]

Others

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Kit supplier

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Manufacturer

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2008–2009: Merooj

2010–present: Peak

See also

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Notes

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  1. 1 2 Iran played with their "B" team.
  2. Iran played with their "U18" team.

References

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  1. "FIBA World Ranking Presented by Nike". FIBA. 3 March 2026. Retrieved 3 March 2026.
  2. 1 2 "IRN/LIB – It's Iraaaaaan!". FIBA. Retrieved 5 August 2007.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: deprecated archival service (link)
  3. "Yao, Hamed, and Patty shined as stars from Asia & Oceania at the Olympics". FIBA. 21 July 2021. Retrieved 4 August 2021.
  4. "Iran wins Asian Basketball Championships". WashingtonTV. Archived from the original on 24 August 2009. Retrieved 17 August 2009.
  5. "Manolopoulos names Iran's roster for 2025 FIBA Asia Cup". tehrantimes.com. Retrieved 30 July 2025.
  6. "Team roster: Iran" (PDF). fiba.basketball. p. 6. Retrieved 4 August 2025.
  7. "Hamed Haddadi thrilled in his retirement ceremony". tehrantimes.com. Retrieved 22 February 2025.
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