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Sports: Pair Of Locals Bring Back Pan-Armenian Gold

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  • Sports: Pair Of Locals Bring Back Pan-Armenian Gold

    PAIR OF LOCALS BRING BACK PAN-ARMENIAN GOLD
    Edgar Melik-Stepanyan

    Glendal News Press
    http://www.glendalenewspress.com/sports/tn-gnp-sp-men-20110829,0,6756866.story
    Aug 29, 2011
    CA

    Basketball: Two local grads aid L.A.'s championship win; Glendale
    chapter takes third in Armenia.

    A pair of local men's basketball players returned from Armenia with
    gold medals won at the fifth annual Pan-Armenian Games in the country's
    capital of Yerevan.

    The duo just happened to play for a team from Los Angeles instead of
    the one from Glendale that was highlighted by former standouts from
    Hoover and Glendale highs.

    Glendale High graduates Vahram Amayakyan and Artin Adjamian each
    played supporting roles in helping Los Angeles defeat Sochi, Russia,
    93-86, on Aug. 21 in the championship game of the Pan-Armenian Games.

    "It was by far the best experience of my life as far as basketball
    goes," said Amayakyan, who graduated with Adjamian from Glendale
    in 1999.

    Sochi ruined the championship aspirations of Glendale a day earlier,
    defeating Fred Babadjanians' team, 87-82, in overtime. Glendale -
    representing the Homenetmen Ararat chapter - defeated Tehran, 91-87,
    in the third-place game.

    "I think finishing in third place means a lot more to the rest of the
    world than to us," said Babadjanians, whose team lost to Sochi in the
    championship contest of the 2007 games. "Everybody keeps congratulating
    us for third place, and I question why we're being congratulated. In
    the grand scheme of things, I guess it's better to finish in third
    place than not any place."

    Babadjanians waited after the bronze-medal game and watched Los
    Angeles' Mike Danielian, a Grant High graduate who is a sophomore
    at Cal State Fullerton, exhibit his skills against Sochi. Danielian
    scored 49 points to give Los Angeles its first title and its Coach Carl
    Bardakian his third title as a player and coach in the Pan-Armenian
    Games.

    "I kept telling the guys that the championship goes through Sochi,"
    said Bardakian, who is America's representative for the Basketball
    Federation of Armenia and was also assisted by Zorik Isajane, an
    assistant men's basketball coach at Glendale Community College.

    "We knew it would be tough. We felt we prepared hard. We were in a
    great position to challenge for the title. We had a deeper bench,
    more experience and we were physically and mentally ready to handle
    Sochi's run throughout the game.

    "It took a great team effort to win the championship."

    Glendale and Los Angeles were presented their medals by Armenia
    President Serzh Sargsyan, a moment both coaches said they'll never
    forget.

    "Having the president be there, it's something I'll remember the rest
    of my life," Amayakyan said.

    Added Babadjanians: "We were told by the organizing committee that
    the top three finishers would be presented with their medals by the
    president of Armenia. That made us want to be a part of that [after
    the loss to Sochi]."

    Babadjanians' team wasn't tested until it met Sochi. It won its first
    five games by an average of 32.4 points, including a 106-40 victory
    against Montreal in pool play.

    "When it came down to our team getting tested, we hadn't been tested,"
    Babadjanians said. "Unfortunately, we had to pass the test on the fly.

    When our backs were against the wall, and instead of being there
    before, we had to figure it out on the fly. You can't figure it out
    on the fly and win championships.

    "I really feel like whoever played that semifinal really took a
    lot of Sochi. I think if the tables were turned and [Los Angeles]
    played Sochi in the semifinals, I think we would've had success in
    the championship game."

    Glendale's younger men's basketball team - featuring Coach Barsegh
    Karamanian and Burbank High's Andre Spight, an All-Pacific League
    selection this past season - won its pool before being eliminated by
    Bourj Hammoud of Lebanon in the first round of the playoffs. Glendale
    continued play after losing in the playoffs and finished the
    tournament 4-3.

    "Sometimes with a younger team, it's hard to motivate a younger team
    to play seven games in seven days," Karamanian said. "My expectations
    were a little higher. The kids were inexperienced and the inexperience
    really showed up.

    "Our size showed up. We were a relatively short team in the paint. The
    team we lost to had big centers.

    "I believe there are two or three potential players who could play
    on the first team next time."

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