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Football: Bolton Iranian bridging the cultural gulf: Teymourian goal

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  • Football: Bolton Iranian bridging the cultural gulf: Teymourian goal

    Football: Bolton's Iranian bridging the cultural gulf: Andranik Teymourian's
    goals have finally made him feel at home in England, he tells Daniel Taylor
    DANIEL TAYLOR, The Guardian - United Kingdom
    Published: Apr 14, 2007


    It was a balmy summer evening in Nuremberg when Andranik Teymourian
    first came to the attention of Sam Allardyce. Iran were on their way
    to a 3-1 defeat against Mexico and an early exit from the World Cup
    finals but for the one Christian in an otherwise Muslim team it was to
    be a night that opened the door to a new life.

    Bolton Wanderers parted with pounds 255,000 to prise Teymourian away
    from FC AbooMoslem, a Mashhad-based club partly funded by the Iranian
    military, and there have been the first indications recently that
    Allardyce has unearthed a bargain. Teymourian has needed time to
    acclimatise, which is probably only to be expected for a 24-year-old
    from Tehran with only the most basic grasp of English, but he has now
    forced his way into a side that travels to Arsenal today still
    harbouring aspirations of beating them to the Premiership's fourth
    spot - and a place in next season's Champions League qualifying
    stages.

    Teymourian, or "Ando" as he has become known to his team-mates, has
    also scored his first Premiership goals, netting twice in Bolton's 3-1
    win at Wigan Athletic last weekend, and it is a measure of his
    popularity in Iran that his match-winning contribution has been shown
    every hour, on the hour, on the nation's television news channels.

    "To be the only Iranian playing in England makes me feel very proud,"
    he says. "I'm hoping I can be a good advert for English football and
    particularly for Bolton Wanderers. My photograph has been in all the
    Iranian newspapers and the goals are being replayed all the time. Not
    many people in Iran knew much of Bolton but I hope there will be
    people in Tehran wearing Bolton shirts the next time I go home."

    An athletic, predominantly right-sided midfielder, Teymourian is
    regarded by Allardyce as "a player of immense potential" and the
    fittest professional at the Reebok Stadium by some distance. The
    fitness coaches set him four different endurance tests on his first
    day at the club and had to stop him after the first to tell him he
    needed to pace himself. A puzzled Teymourian asked his interpreter, a
    pizza shop owner from Burnley, to explain: "This is the speed at which
    he always goes."

    "The culture is not massively different for me in England because what
    I was doing in Iran I now do here," Teymourian says. "The only problem
    is the language barrier and for the first five or six months that was
    really hard. It's getting easier now, though, and I've picked up a lot
    of the football terms.

    "The most important thing for me was to understand my manager and,
    after that, to learn the other things. Sometimes people here speak
    really fast and because of their strong accents I don't understand
    much. But I understand part of what Sam Allardyce is saying now and we
    get along really well."

    It helps him, he says, that he has an entourage of Iranian friends
    living in the north-west. Acclimatising, however, cannot always have
    been easy given the recent hostilities between his native country and
    his adopted one. "I came here to play football and I don't want to
    talk about the political side of it," Teymourian, whose family are of
    Armenian descent, makes clear early in his interview. "That's a dif
    ferent thing altogether. I am not a politician. All I will say is that
    the Iranians are good people. You have to have a connection with them,
    you have to talk to them more and then you will know what sort of
    people they are."

    He is hopeful, he says, that other clubs will take Bolton's lead and
    start exploring the Iranian Premier League for new players. "I think
    there are other players who can come over but maybe they have to show
    themselves in big tournaments such as the World Cup. I am certainly
    very happy in Bolton. It is like a family and I am really grateful to
    all the players and the coaches and my manager for the way they have
    helped me. They have done their best to make me feel welcome and it is
    very appreciated.

    "After the World Cup I had plenty of offers from Arab and German teams
    but I wanted to play in England because the way the teams play
    football here you will not see anywhere else in the world. All the top
    clubs - Manchester United, Chelsea, Arsenal and Liverpool - are always
    on television back in Iran and I love their style of play. The Iranian
    television channels are not sophisticated enough to show the lower
    division teams but the Premiership is always shown and I saw my style
    suiting English football better than anywhere else. I want to improve
    my game and I know this is the best place to do that."
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