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Yerevan celebrates Poland upset

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  • Yerevan celebrates Poland upset

    Yerevan celebrates Poland upset
    Thursday 7 June 2007
    by Khachik Chakhoyan
    from Yerevan



    Armenia's prime minister danced with joy after
    watching the 1-0 win against Poland while coach Ian
    Porterfield hailed his side's "iron fist".

    Victory dance
    Hamlet Mkhitaryan's second-half free-kick earned
    Armenia a second successive qualifying win and struck
    the Group A leaders a major blow as they look to reach
    UEFA EURO 2008'. Prime minister Serzh Sargsyan caught
    the mood of the moment in the VIP area at the
    Republican Stadium last night, performing a dance of
    joy at the final whistle before heading for the
    dressing room to congratulate the players.

    'Winning mentality'
    "Our lads finally showed what we expected of them
    which is willpower, character and a desire for
    victory," said Football Federation of Armenia
    vice-president Ashot Manukyan. "Despite missing a
    number of players Ian Porterfield managed to find
    appropriate replacements and instilled a winning
    mentality in the team in a short period of time. Now
    we hope that football will blossom in Armenia."

    Battling underdogs
    Scottish coach Porterfield was thrilled with his
    side's performance. The 61-year-old former Chelsea FC
    manager said: "We played like a united squad, like an
    iron fist against Poland. That is why we achieved what
    we wanted so much. Poland have a much stronger squad
    but our commitment helped Armenia to achieve the best
    possible result in this game."

    Armenian heroes
    He gave special praise to goalscorer Mkhitaryan while
    goalkeeper Gevorg Kasparov, who made a string of vital
    saves to deny Leo Beenhakker's Poland, also emerged as
    a hero. "I am especially grateful to Hamlet Mkhitaryan
    and Gevorg Kasparov," he said. "Mkhitaryan was
    unstoppable and proved to be the real leader of the
    moment while Kasparov was flawless in goal."

    Everyone's celebration
    Mkhitaryan, meanwhile, was eager to share his moment
    of glory with his team-mates as they celebrated after
    the final whistle, even if their seven points from
    seven matches is not form that will ultimately take
    them to the finals. He said: "We need wins like this
    to believe in ourselves, to take confidence into other
    matches. I'm very happy I scored the winner but this
    victory belongs to us all - my team-mates and our fans
    who were behind us for the whole 90 minutes."

    ©uefa.com 1998-2007.
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