Yeah, the only reason why I ever heard of him, was because it caused some commotion when he beat Kenta Matsudaira. This was after Kenta brought Ma Lin to 7 games in the world championships, so everyone was viewing him as this insane prodigy that in the future would provide competition to the Chinese team. Of course, right after that, Kenta went on to suffer several loses to some not so high ranking players, such as Noshad.
Noshad's style and his strokes look really unorthodox, and kind of odd and ugly, as one prior person put it, but clearly effective, if they allowed him to beat Kenta. The unfortunate fact is that Table Tennis has progressed to the point that simply just playing and learning through playing is not enough. Where as players in the past, and from my impression, Noshad also, got really good at table tennis from just playing a lot of top people a lot, (which is why Waldner and Schalger tend to do some unorthodox but effective stuff) that simply isn't good enough today against the Chinese players.
Continued repetition of certain drills is now needed to reach a level of play that just isn't really possible if you rely on the old method of just playing alot and learning.
And since Noshad seems like that type of player, I think he won't really get good until he does more drill like stuff, and steam lines his style. His unorthodox swings, while OK at times, is often unnecessary, a take more reaction time that what is allowed in order to compete at the top elite level.