Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Pyunik starved of competition

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Pyunik starved of competition

    Pyunik starved of competition
    by Khachik Chakhoyan

    uefa.com 1998-2006.
    Thursday, 2 November 2006
    from Yerevan

    While FC Pyunik celebrate winning a sixth straight
    Armenian title, the state of club football outside
    their native Yerevan is a cause for concern.

    Strength in depth
    This season's triumph, their ninth in total, was never
    in doubt for Pyunik. They had lost a number of players
    from the side that prevailed in 2005, but still had
    enough strength in depth to beat off competition from
    the usual suspects at the top of the table - FC
    Banants, FC MIKA and FC Ararat Yerevan.

    Poor competition
    There are no foreign players at Pyunik, save for
    Russian-born Boris Melkonyan, and even he has played
    for the Armenia Under-21s. However, although they have
    plenty of local talent, their chances of competing
    successfully in Europe have been hampered by the
    weakness of Armenian domestic football.

    Worrying sign
    The club have bowed out in the first qualifying round
    of the UEFA Champions League for three successive
    seasons, and like many former Soviet Republics,
    Armenia is struggling to do justice to its young
    players. The Soviet regime held sport in high regard
    and a number of Armenian players represented the USSR.

    Since independence, though, investment in sport has
    been cut dramatically and many teams are struggling to
    survive.

    Provincial decay
    Only Pyunik and Banants have decent conditions for
    training youngsters, although both MIKA and Ararat are
    looking to up their efforts in this area. But out in
    the provinces, a lack of facilities, finance and
    infrastructure is hindering the development of junior
    football. In the past, cities like Gyumri and Vanadzor
    were seen as hotbeds of Armenian talent. Now, Gyumri's
    local outfit FC Shirak are stuck at the foot of the
    standings while Vanadzor does not even have a
    professional club any more.

    Limited competition
    The Football Federation of Armenia is trying, with
    UEFA's help, to improve youth soccer, but at the
    moment things are pretty dire. Tellingly, five of the
    sides in the second division are the reserve teams of
    top-flight clubs, and only one - FC Lernayin Atrsakh -
    showed any interest in winning promotion this term.

    Slow progress
    The talent still exists in Armenia. Edgar Manucharyan,
    a star of the Armenia squad that reached the 2005 UEFA
    European Under-19 Championship finals, is at AFC Ajax,
    while another youngster - Zhora Hovhannisyan - is on
    the books at Olympiacos CFP. Other prospects are
    learning their trade with the leading local clubs, but
    it may be a while before any Armenian team, even
    Pyunik, have the muscle to hold their own in Europe.
Working...
X