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  • Drought finally ends for Eskandarian

    Toronto Star, Canada
    May 20 2007


    Drought finally ends for Eskandarian


    'It felt good to get the goal,' says TFC star of ending skid

    May 20, 2007 04:30 AM
    MORGAN CAMPBELL
    SPORTS REPORTER

    The father said he was still waiting for a goal.

    The son made sure he didn't wait long.

    Not only was Alecko Eskandarian's goal in the 44th minute yesterday
    the energetic striker's first goal for his new team, but it came
    against the his old club, DC United. DC United traded Eskandarian to
    Toronto for cash this winter, and the 24-year old was glad to pay
    them back with a goal.

    The goal also appeased his father, former New York Cosmo Andranik
    Eskandarian, who had kidded Alecko earlier this week about remaining
    scoreless for so long.

    Eskandarian broke a goalless streak that stretched back to last
    season.

    "It's a bit of a monkey off my back," says Eskandarian, who played
    four seasons with DC. "I would rather get the three points and the
    win but I tried to do my part today. It felt good to get the goal but
    it's bittersweet."

    Scoring droughts are foreign territory to Eskandarian, who scored so
    often in high school the league adopted a rule to stop him from
    shooting.

    As a freshman at the University of Virginia he set records for goals
    (16) and points (38), then scored 20 goals in 80 games with DC.

    After going scoreless through the season's first four games, he
    injured his right calf in practice and had to sit out last Saturday's
    match against Chicago. He played 60 minutes yesterday before Edson
    Buddle replaced him, but says his calf is back to normal and he could
    have played the whole game.

    He says his father never pressured him about scoring, but as a former
    pro himself, his dad had plenty of advice.

    The grandson of Armenians who fled genocide by the Turks, Andranik
    was a rugged defender who played 29 games with Iran's national team.

    After the 1978 World Cup, Andranik signed with the New York Cosmos of
    the NASL.

    "He's always very positive with me," says Eskandarian, who as a kid
    would kick the ball around with some of his dad's teammates,
    including Pele. "He tells me to keep plugging away."

    Andranik thinks his son plays too conservatively these days, and
    needs to return to the game-breaking style that won him the Hermann
    Trophy - soccer's version of the Heisman - as a junior at the
    University of Virginia.

    "I agree with him but the style that we play calls for me to do a lot
    of defensive work," he says. "You just kind of have to swallow your
    pride and do what you're told."
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