Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

American Eskandarian makes papa proud

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

  • American Eskandarian makes papa proud

    Persian League, Iran
    Jan 25 2005


    American Eskandarian makes papa proud
    Tue 01-25-2005


    FIFAworldcup.com - With only one cap to his name, steadily improving
    striker Elecko Eskandarian is primed for a big future with the U.S.
    national team. The 23 year-old D.C. United man may not be the biggest
    or the fastest, but his understanding, eye for goal and undeniable
    pedigree have him in frame for a fine run on the international stage.

    After three years at the University of Virginia - a side brought to
    prominence by current national team boss Bruce Arena - Eskandarian
    went into Major League Soccer as the U.S.' top collegiate player in
    2003.
    After coming into the league highly touted, he scored only three
    goals for D.C. United in an unremarkable start to his professional
    career. The squat forward looked sadly out of his depth. But willing
    to pay his dues, the remarkably down-to-earth Alecko learned his
    lessons well and 2004 proved another story altogether as he brought
    the capital club back to greatness with a championship run.
    In the run-up to the 2004 campaign, 14-year-old wunderkind and league
    record-signing Freddy Adu was grabbing all the headlines. But it was
    his teammate, Eskandarian, who got the job done for United once the
    ball got rolling. The player capped off his fine run of form with two
    goals in the MLS championship match against Kansas City.
    D.C. United coach, former Poland captain and one of the finest-ever
    MLS players, Peter Nowak, was amazed with the vast improvements on
    display in Alecko's sophomore season.
    `Now when I ask him `how many goals will you score today?' he has
    more confidence and asks `how many do you want?'' the coach
    commented. Twice Eskandarian was named player of the week and became
    the first D.C. United player to score more than ten goals in a season
    since 2001. He finished the year as the team's top scorer, helping
    them to earn a spot in the CONCACAF Champions Cup.
    `It's pretty sweet to go to everybody that was doubting me and just
    show them the trophy (MLS Cup) and just be like, `Shut up. I did
    it,'' Eskandarian said of his triumphant 2004.
    Family ties, football ties
    The Eskandarian saga is a compelling and peculiarly `American' tale,
    screaming of long, arduous journeys and the intermingling of
    cultures.



    Originally of Armenian origins, the Eskandarian clan was forced to
    flee Europe for Iran to escape the horror of early 20th century
    genocide. Alecko's father Andarik went on to make his name playing
    football in the mid-east. The hard-nosed, no nonsense defender lined
    up for Iran at the 1978 FIFA World Cup Argentina, and his
    performances were so impressive he was named to a Cup all-star team.
    And after playing an exhibition match at the Meadowlands in New
    Jersey, USA, his ample talents were noticed by the then managers of
    the New York Cosmos. Almost at once, the player relocated to the East
    Coast of the U.S. where he lined up alongside such icons as Pele and
    Franz Beckenbauer for the legendary Cosmos of the North American
    Soccer League (NASL) - the ill-fated precursor to MLS.
    Andarik's son Alecko was born in the ethnic hotbed of Montvale, New
    Jersey in July of 1982 and almost at once showed an aptitude for
    football. His father - who now owns a sporting goods store - did all
    he could to nurture that talent.
    `I have been playing soccer ever since I can remember,' Alecko
    recalls fondly. `And my first soccer memory is kicking the ball
    around with my brother and my dad in our backyard and going nuts when
    I scored a goal.'
    It did not take long for the stocky poacher to climb the ladder of
    the American game, scoring goals with a predatory instinct. What he
    lacked in size and speed, he more than made up for with creativity
    and a predatory nose for goal.
    He was only 16 when the powers that be in U.S. Soccer noticed the
    clever, cocksure Alecko. In 1999 he was called in to play with the
    under-17 national team, went on to play four games with the under-20s
    at the FIFA World Youth Championship in Argentina in 2001, and led
    the U-23 (Olympic) side in scoring in 2002 with seven goals.
    It was only a matter of time before he got his chance with the big
    boys in the senior squad. And it came on 26 May 2003, when he came
    off the bench in a friendly against Wales.
    Though he failed to score, it is surely just the beginning for the
    young, stout striker. With Bruce Arena alerted to Eskandarian's
    substantial ability, he has been called into the training camp for
    the final six-team `Hexagonal' of North, Central American and
    Caribbean Zone FIFA World Cup qualifying.
    The U.S. will take on Trinidad & Tobago on 9 February in their first
    match of the final round.

    http://www.persianleague.com/news/Morenews.cfm?News=2250
Working...
X