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Armenian Soccer Team Gets New Foreign Coach

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  • Armenian Soccer Team Gets New Foreign Coach

    ARMENIAN SOCCER TEAM GETS NEW FOREIGN COACH
    By Emil Danielyan

    Radio Liberty, Czech Republic
    Aug. 16, 2006

    The Football Federation of Armenia (FFA) named the new foreign coach
    of the national soccer team on Wednesday less than a month before the
    start of its qualifying campaign for the 2008 European Championship.

    Ian Porterfield, a veteran British tactician, pledged to bring a
    "good spirit" to the team as he was presented to the media after
    signing an 18-month contract with the FFA. "I am looking forward to
    working here over the next few months," he said.

    Ruben Hayrapetian, the federation chairman, said Porterfield was chosen
    from a pool of about two dozen foreign specialists that showed interest
    in the job. Hayrapetian said the 60-year-old Scot's experience and
    track record was decisive in the selection process. He refused to
    disclose any financial details of the deal.

    Porterfield managed the Scottish side Aberdeen in the late 1980s
    and England's reigning champions Chelsea in the early 1990s before
    continuing his coaching career abroad. He has coached the national
    teams of Zambia, Saudi Arabia, Oman and Trinidad and Tobago. His last
    job was with one of South Korea's leading football clubs.

    Porterfield, who replaces Dutchman Henk Wisman, is the fifth foreigner
    to take the helm of the Armenian team in the last four years. He
    faces a daunting task of ending its protracted run of poor results
    in the European qualifying competitions. He admitted having little
    knowledge of the squad, saying that he last watched its games in 2003.

    Armenia is presently only 104th in the worldwide rankings of national
    teams that are issued by the game's governing body, FIFA. It faces
    Serbia, Belgium, Finland, Poland, Portugal, Azerbaijan, and Kazakhstan
    in Group A of 2008 European Championship qualifying.

    The Armenians will open their qualifying campaign against Belgium,
    one of the group favorites, in Yerevan on September 6. Few believe
    that they stand a chance of qualification.

    The competition will see the first-ever games between Armenia and
    Azerbaijan that are certain to arouse nationalistic passions in the
    two countries locked in a bitter conflict over Nagorno-Karabakh. The
    FFA wants the matches, tentatively scheduled for September 2007,
    to be played in Baku and Yerevan. The Azerbaijani side, however,
    is pushing for a neutral venue, saying that it can not guarantee the
    security of Armenian players.

    A final decision on the issue rests with UEFA, European football's
    governing body. It is expected to be announced later this year or
    early next.
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