câu lạc bộ bóng đá persepolis When Akbar Ghamkhar took over as club chairman, he made several changes in an effort to improve the team. He made player and staff salaries public, angering Parvin, the highest paid player on the team. Ghamkhar hired coach Vinko Begović and entered into contracts with several prominent players. Persepolis had a good start in the 2003–04 season , but things deteriorated. Begović left the team and German manager Rainer Zobel was bought in. Ghamkhar was also replaced with Hojatollah Khatib , who brought back Parvin as the club's technical director. The club finished fifth in the standings in the 2004–05 season .. câu lạc bộ bóng đá than quảng ninh Sân nhà của câu lạc bộ là Azadi Stadium, sức chứa hơn 78.000 chỗ, là "chảo lửa" thực sự mỗi dịp thi đấu. câu lạc bộ bóng đá club brugge Persepolis Football Club was named after Persepolis , the capital of the Achaemenid Empire . The club logo incorporates elements from the location. The first design of Persepolis' crest used the Faravahar , an ancient Persian and Zoroastrian symbol depicting a man with three-feathered falcon wings. [ 67 ] After using the crest on its shirt in its early years, the team stopped including the crest [ when? ] on its shirt until the 1980s. In the middle of the 1980s, the team created a new crest based on an image depicted on a column at Apadana . The image consists of two bull heads attached to one body, with a cup on top and the Olympic symbols underneath. [ 67 ] The bull is a symbol of productivity in ancient Persian beliefs and Persian Literature , and the cup on the top of the column represents the championship. The team then changed the crest again in the middle of the 1990s to a more stylised image: the crest became bent [ clarification needed ] and the Olympic rings were dropped, the cup became more explicit, and the bull heads leaned toward the cup. [ 67 ] This version was used until 2004, [ 67 ] when the team restored the Olympic rings and replaced the bulls with the Homa , a mythological bird and symbol used in the architecture of Persepolis. [ 67 ] During the 2011–2012 season, and before 74th Tehran derby , the club released a new version of its logo [ 68 ] This current version of the club's logo incorporates the previous version into a red shield-shaped frame and includes the name of Persepolis in Persian and English. [ 67 ] One of Persepolis' nicknames is Sorkhpoushan ( transl. "the reds" ; Persian : سرخپوشان ), stemming from their traditional kit, which is predominantly red. From the foundation of the club, the common home kit includes a red shirt, red (in some seasons black or white) shorts and red socks. White and black colours are also seen in the kit. In the early 1970s, the players wore black shorts. White shorts were used in the late 1970s, and red shorts became predominant in the 1980s. [ citation needed ]