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Soccer: Armenia In Focus

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  • Soccer: Armenia In Focus

    ARMENIA IN FOCUS
    Thomas Michalakos

    Sportsnet.ca
    http://www.sportsnet.ca/soccer/2012/02/27/canada_armenia_soccer_friendly/
    Feb 27 2012
    Canada

    When you think of budding football nations, Armenia would not make
    the cut.

    Since gaining independence after the split-up of the Soviet Union
    in 1992, the Highlanders have never qualified for a major tournament
    and are normally considered a stepping stone for the more established
    national teams in UEFA. Most consider them as an easy three points,
    lumped in with similar minnows such as San Marino, Andorra, Moldova
    and Liechtenstein.

    But the Euro 2012 qualifying campaign resulted in a major change of
    fortune, with Armenia becoming the predator instead of the prey and
    coming within 90 minutes of making history.

    With Canada set to play Armenia in Cyprus Wednesday in a friendly,
    most people are unaware of the Canucks' latest opponents. Here is a
    rough guide on what you need to know about Armenian football and who
    to watch out for when the two countries meet.

    History

    In just under 20 years, Armenia has made significant strides to gain
    respectability in the world of football. Their lowest FIFA ranking was
    159 (June 1994), but now the tiny nation of just over three million
    inhabitants are 41st in the world and 25th in Europe, their best ever
    seeding in their short history.

    Development has not been easy, especially prior to 1991 when the
    domestic league fell under the Soviet football pyramid and was
    nothing more than a regional tournament. Some of the country's best
    even suited up for the USSR. After the collapse of communism, the
    Armenian Football Federation was formed and they immediately created
    their own identity by setting up a Premier League, First Division
    and domestic cup competition (Independence Cup) in 1992.

    Currently the top tier consists of eight teams and the second tier
    has nine, although all the clubs in the lower division are reserve
    sides from the Premiership. FC Pyunik is the most decorated club in
    Armenian football with 13 league titles, five Independence Cups and
    eight Armenian Supercups. They are also the most popular club in the
    country and boast an incredible list of graduates -- most of the top
    players in Armenia have come through their youth set-up.

    However last year saw a new team lift the title for the first time
    in ten seasons, with Ulisses FC being crowned champions. No club
    has ever made it to the group stages of a European competition,
    a statistic that might soon change.

    Qualification Results

    First International Match: Armenia vs. Moldova (0-0) in Yerevan

    1996 European Cup Qualifying: last place in their group, beat Macedonia
    in Skopje for their only victory. Conceded seventeen times and only
    scored five goals in 10 matches. Almost earned a result in Seville
    against Spain, but lost on a second-half penalty.

    1998 World Cup Qualifying: finished in fourth place ahead of Northern
    Ireland and Albania, but 12 points back of a birth to the finals.

    Started the group stage with a morale-boosting goalless draw at home
    to Portugal, and recorded a 3-0 victory over the last-place Albanians
    towards the end of qualifying.

    2000 European Cup Qualifying: finished second from bottom, with both
    wins coming against last-place Andorra. Best result in defeat came
    against France, losing 3-2 at the Hrazdan Stadium after taking the
    early lead.

    2002 World Cup Qualifying: another last place finish, ending without
    a win and five draws in 10 matches. Best result came in 1-1 draw at
    home to eventual group winners Poland, and lost a heartbreaker to
    Ukraine 3-2 after being taking a two-goal lead at home.

    2004 European Cup Qualifying: beat Northern Ireland twice to finish
    ahead of them in the group, fourth from five teams and ten points
    off a playoff spot that included eventual cup winners Greece

    2006 World Cup Qualifying: both wins came against lowly Andorra,
    which kept them from finishing at the foot of the group. Terrible
    defensively, conceding 25 goals in twelve matches, most in their
    history at a major tournament. Almost produced a shocking result in
    Yerevan against group winners Netherlands, but a second-half goal by
    Ruud van Nistelrooy ruined a good overall performance.

    2008 European Cup Qualifying: UEFA decided to cancel both legs versus
    Azerbaijan, leaving both teams with only 12 matches played instead of
    14. Finished second-last in group, but recorded back-to-back victories
    against Kazakhstan and Poland, before tying Portugal at home. Despite
    positive results, four goals scored came in those three matches.

    2010 World Cup Qualifying: Another disappointing finish, dead last
    in group with a single victory against Belgium at home. The result
    was followed by an impressive performance versus Spain, coming from
    behind before losing 2-1 from a second-half penalty by Juan Mata. Only
    six goals scored in 10 matches.

    2012 European Cup Qualifying: best result yet, finishing third and
    missing a playoff spot by four points. Won five matches from 10,
    leading group with 22 goals scored. Beat Slovakia in both legs,
    recording their best ever result with a 4-0 victory in Zilina. Loss
    on final day ended Cinderella run. Armenia scored two goals in the
    match, however one was an own goal by Valeri Aleksanyan which gave
    Ireland the 2-1 win.

    Players to Watch

    Gevorg Ghazaryan (Metalurh Donetsk): plays as an attacking midfielder
    or a striker and earned first international cap in 2007. He has scored
    six goals in 23 matches for the national team, five of them coming
    in 2012 qualifying, and is one of Armenia's main goal threats.

    Marcos Pizzelli (FC Kuban Krasnodar): Brazilian by birth, the attacking
    midfielder made his debut for the national side in 2008 after gaining
    citizenship, scoring five goals in 18 matches -- four of them coming
    from the recent qualifying campaign. He spent five seasons in the
    Armenian top flight, winning three scoring titles with 75 goals in
    total. Possesses the skill to also create chances for teammates and
    is one of the team's main threats in the offensive zone.

    Yura Movsisyan (FC Krasnodar): played in the MLS for Real Salt Lake
    between 2007 and 2009. The forward led the team with five assists in
    qualifying, and is not afraid to pull the trigger if given a chance
    on goal, adding four goals in the process.

    Henrikh Mkhitaryan (Shakhtar Donetsk): by far the best player on the
    pitch for Armenia. The midfielder was purchased for 7.5 million Euros
    from his former employers Metalurh Donetsk last year, and made his
    Champions League debut this season. Netted eight times in 27 matches
    for the national team, six of those strikes came in qualification
    for the team lead. Only three goals shy of Armenia's all-time leader
    Arthur Petrosyan

    Sargis Hovsepyan (FC Pyunik): the 39-year-old defender is national
    team captain and leads by example at the back. He has accumulated 125
    international caps in 20 years of service, becoming Armenia's all-time
    leader. Over 300 appearances with FC Puynik, achieved legendary
    status in his country for being one of their most decorated players,
    winning nine Armenian Premiership titles and four Independence Cups.

    Roman Berezovsky (Dynamo Moscow): considered one of the country's best
    goalkeepers of all-time, with 69 international caps under his belt.

    Most of career spent in Russia with Zenit St. Petersburg and FC Khimki,
    racking up 300 appearances in total for both clubs. Earned four clean
    sheets in 2012 Euro qualifying, helping Armenia concede the fewest
    amount of goals in a single tournament -- their best defensive result
    with only 10 goals allowed in as many matches.

    --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    International friendlies: Watch England-Netherlands live on Sportsnet,
    Germany-France live on Sportsnet World and Italy-USA live on Sportsnet
    ONE starting at 2:30pm ET on February 29.

    --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The Manager

    Vardan Minasyan officially took over as full-time manager in February
    2010, and has guided the team through their recent turnaround. Only 38
    years old, his professional playing career was short-lived and ended
    in 2003, spending most of that time with FC Pyunik as a midfielder.

    Minasyan has earned the trust of his players by producing results
    and has developed a solid foundation that will continue to improve
    through time. Armenia plays an attacking brand of football (4-3-3)
    under their new manager, but his players are well drilled on keeping
    things tight in the defensive end.

    The Final Verdict

    This will be a great test for Canada, as Armenia sits 30 places
    above them in the FIFA rankings and hold a higher seed than all
    three opponents the Canucks will face in the third round of CONCACAF
    qualifying for the 2014 World Cup.

    Thomas Michalakos is a former associate producer with Sportsnet's
    Soccercentral and writes the weekly blog Soccerholic365. Follow Thomas
    on Twitter.

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