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Armenia And Turkey: More Politics Than Football

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  • Armenia And Turkey: More Politics Than Football

    ARMENIA AND TURKEY: MORE POLITICS THAN FOOTBALL

    Tert.am
    15:33 13.10.09

    Though Armenian and Turkish football officials had reached a
    preliminary agreement that no fans of the host team would be present
    at the Armenia-Turkey matches, during the return match and amidst
    Turkish fans' shouts, it will be possible to distinguish the voices
    of the Armenian team's supporters.

    Present at the match will be a number of journalists, politicians,
    and sociologists who have arrived to Bursa from Armenia to follow the
    sporting dispute turned "Football Diplomacy." Bursa, Turkey's fourth
    largest city and the capital of the region with the same name, with
    a population of 2 million, welcomed Tert.am's correspondents with
    strong bursts of winds; if we believe meteorologists, the winds will
    continue on the day of the match too.

    In the city, however, one doesn't really feel the full swing of the
    pre-football match. But local football fans are convinced that if
    the authorities are not extremely attentive, the stadium that has a
    capacity of 20,000 will be filled easily.

    A 40-year-old shop vendor named Akif doesn't conceal his
    dissatisfaction at all that Turkish and Armenian presidents will be
    present at the match. "I have not even missed a single match of the
    local Bursaspor team, but today, when the country's national team is
    in our city, I don't want to see how political figures will hinder
    the football players' showing their game," said Akif, sharing his
    opinion with Tert.am correspondents.

    Despite no longer in the running for the 2010 World Cup, the Turkish
    team gathers a large number of fans from Bursa, who, unlike Istanbul's
    population, don't have many opportunites to watch a match by this
    much-loved team. Here, even with great enthusiasm, they welcome the
    team's coach Fatih Terim, for whom this will be the last match in
    his post.

    Gyunel, a 30-year-old manager, says he regards the political
    component of the match with understanding: "I have never understood
    the radical fans. If football countries become friends, what's so bad
    about that? And that in the case when our team no longer qualifies
    for the World Championship."
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