Boyuk Jeddikar

Büyük Jeddikar
Personal information
Date of birth3 February 1929
Place of birthTabriz, Iran
Date of death18 December 2013 (aged 84)
Place of deathTehran, Iran
Height1.89 m (6 ft 2 12 in)
Playing positionStriker
Youth career
1944–1945Tehranjavan
Senior career*
YearsTeamApps(Gls)
1945–1946Tehranjavan
1946–1949Tour
1949–1957Taj
1957–1958Viktoria 89 Berlin
1958–1968Taj
Total334(143)
National team
1950–1965Iran29(2)
* Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only.
† Appearances (Goals).

Büyük Jeddikar (Persian: بیوک جدی‌کار; 3 February 1929 – 18 December 2013)[1] was an Iranian footballer.

He is known for being the first footballer in Iranian football history to be transferred from an Iranian club to a foreign club.

Club career

Jedikar first started playing in the position of goalkeeper. His talent of using the left-foot was discovered by coach Ali Danaeifard who suggested that Jeddikar should move upfront and play as a left striker. This discovery paid off and Jeddikar soon became one of the best footballers in the country.

In 1957, he was transferred to Viktoria 89 Berlin on a three-year contract with a 1500 Deutschmarks a month salary, however his time in Germany was shortened when his father died, so after only 9 months Jeddikar returned to Iran to resume his career with Taj SC (currently Esteghlal).

Prior to Jeddikar's transfer, past Iranian footballers only had played outside Iran whilst they were studying abroad such as Hossein Sadaghiani (Belgium, Turkey and Austria), Hossein-Ali Khan Sardar (Belgium and Switzerland), Ahmad-Ali Khan Sardar (Belgium), Khan Khanan (Belgium) and Masoud Boroumand (United States and Lebanon) were all footballers studying and playing abroad. Jedikar's transfer to Germany paved the way for future footballers such as Parviz Koozehkanani, Hamid Shirzadegan and Mohammad Reza Adelkhani.

International career

At the age of 17 he was selected for Tehran XI. However his first national cap was versus Afghanistan in 1950 and his last cap was versus Turkey in 1965.

References