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  • Soccer: Longford share hopes of progress

    UEFA.com
    July 29 2004

    Longford share hopes of progress

    Forty-eight teams will meet today when the second leg of the UEFA Cup
    first qualifying round is completed.

    Estonian winners
    The victors will join Estonia's FC Levadia Tallinn, who beat Bohemian
    FC of the Republic of Ireland 3-1 on aggregate on Tuesday, in the
    second and final qualifying round.

    Helpful fans
    Another Irish side will be hoping for a more successful outcome this
    evening. Longford Town FC trail Liechtenstein's FC Vaduz 1-0 from the
    away leg, but their supporters will expect their players to match the
    efforts they have put in over the past few days. New seats,
    turnstiles and a control room have been installed to bring Flancare
    Park up to the UEFA A Licence standard required to host the match.

    Injury doubt
    Vaduz's chances will not be helped should Liechtenstein Player of the
    Year, Benjamin Fischer, fail to recover from a minor leg injury. "We
    have to apply pressure from the start," said coach Martin Andermatt.
    "The Irish will try to score an early goal but we will try to impose
    our rhythm." However, Vaduz midfielder Franz Burgmuller is confident
    of progress. "If we play with full speed and concentration we will
    make it."

    Pre-season fitness
    Meanwhile, Northern Ireland's Glentoran FC face a tough task at
    Finnish club AC Allianssi. With the Irish League only starting on 14
    August, Glentoran manager Roy Coyle said a lack of match fitness had
    played a big part in the 2-2 first-leg draw in Belfast.

    Competitive debut
    However, Coyle, who could include former Manchester United FC
    defender Pat McGibbon for the first time in a competitive game, said:
    "I think we have seen the best of them and we are pretty confident."
    His Allianssi counterpart, Ari Tiittanen, is also in relaxed mood
    ahead of the action at Vantaa's Pohjola stadium. "We are in no rush
    to score an early goal. We can be patient. I believe we can win," he
    said.

    Visa difficulties
    Elsehere, Armenia's FC MIKA will be without midfielder Tigran
    Hovhannisyan, who has been denied a visa for the trip to Hungary
    where they will play Budapest Honvéd FC. MIKA coach Suren Barsegyan
    is unworried, though, and said of his side's 1-0 deficit: "We are all
    aware that nothing is lost after the first leg. We will get even for
    the defeat and have enough to build on."

    First ever win
    Despite trailing 2-0 to Ukrainians FC Illychivets Mariupil, another
    Armenian club, FC Banants, are determined to restore national pride.
    Armenia's representatives are yet to win a match in this competition,
    and Banants coach Hovhannes Zanazanyen said: "We will treat this game
    seriously because we need a victory in the UEFA Cup. The time has
    come to break the duck."

    Staying behind
    Illichivets coach Mykola Pavlov has called up an 18-man squad for the
    away leg, leaving several players at home to prepare for a league
    fixture against FC Dynamo Kyiv next Monday. He acknowledged that his
    team failed to take all their chances last week. "We failed to do
    so," he said, "and the winner will be decided in the second match."

    Farewell game
    Finally, Lithuania's FK Ekranas, 1-0 ahead against F91 Dudelange from
    Luxembourg, and hoping for a first-ever aggregate victory in a UEFA
    club competition qualifying round, could be saying farewell to
    centre-back Egidijus Majus, who is a target for Russian Premier
    League leaders FC Zenit St. Peterburg.
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