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Sports: Losing this one would be ultimate humiliation

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  • Sports: Losing this one would be ultimate humiliation

    Irish Independent
    Oct 9 2011

    Losing this one would be ultimate humiliation

    Ireland should have no reason to be wary of Armenia, writes Eamonn Sweeney

    By Eamonn Sweeney
    Sunday October 09 2011

    Let's get it straight about Armenia. In their 4-1 win against
    Macedonia on Friday night, our opponents on Tuesday featured five
    players from their domestic league. The Armenian League is rated 50th
    in Europe by UEFA, 17 places behind the League of Ireland.

    Only the leagues of Andorra, the Faroe Islands and San Marino rank lower.

    There are two players on the Armenian team from Khimki, which last
    year finished 13th in the Russian First Division. This is not the top
    flight, Russia has a Premier League. Ural Sverdlosk Oblast, Krasnodar
    and Shinnik Yaroslavl, who contribute players to the team, also toil
    on the second rung of Russian football. There are a couple of players
    from Metalurh Donetsk, currently lying eighth in the Ukrainian Premier
    League. Defender Levon Hayrapatyan plies his trade with mighty Lechia
    Gdansk, currently tenth in the Polish Premier League.

    The one player at a big club is Henrik Mrkhitaryan, a midfielder who's
    made 26 appearances over the past couple of seasons for Shakhtar
    Donetsk. In the qualifying campaign for the 2010 World Cup, Armenia
    finished bottom of their group with four points from ten matches. When
    the draw was made for Euro 2012, they were ranked 45th out of 53 teams
    in Europe, between Iceland and Kazakhstan. In the last decade they
    have gone through 11 managers.

    This is the team then whose visit to the Aviva Stadium on Tuesday is
    being greeted with so much trepidation.

    Ireland need only a point to make the play-offs. Armenia need a win
    because, incredibly, for the first time in the country's football
    history they have come within an ass's roar of qualification.

    And fair play to them for doing so. We know what it's like to be the
    minnows and we'd have a good idea of the excitement gripping the folk
    of Yerevan, Gyumri and Kapan as they catch a glimpse of uncharted
    territory for the first time.

    But the stark truth is that it says a lot about the piss-poor standard
    of European Championship qualifying Group B that Armenia are still in
    there with a shot on the last day. And it says even more about the
    good fortune that Ireland have enjoyed that we merely need a draw
    against them to qualify after a campaign which saw us take three
    points out of a possible 12 against our perceived main rivals,
    Slovakia and Russia.

    Before the competition began, you'd have imagined that such a haul
    would have doomed us to irrelevance. What you wouldn't have imagined
    is that people would be worrying about our prospects of earning a draw
    at home to Armenia, a 'gimme' if ever there was one under normal
    circumstances.

    If Ireland lose to the ancestral homeland of Cher, Charles Aznavour
    and Kim Kardashian at the Aviva Stadium, it will be, given everything
    that's at stake, the most humiliating defeat in the history of soccer
    in this country. By some distance. Because more than half of the team
    we'll be facing play their club football at a level which is roughly
    equal to or lower than that of the League of Ireland.

    Yet such is the pessimism surrounding Trapattoni's team that Armenia
    are being touted as a serious challenge to an Irish side which appears
    to have an addiction to making life hard for itself. Chances are,
    however, that we will clamber over the obstacle which is Armenia and
    make the play-offs where the argument over whether Trap is saviour or
    stooge will finally be resolved one way or the other. If all goes
    well, we could get Montenegro; if our luck finally runs out, it might
    be Croatia.

    But first we need a draw against Armenia. A draw against Armenia for
    God's sake. You've heard of the Group of Death. Turns out we've been
    playing in the Group of Life.

    - Eamonn Sweeney

    http://www.independent.ie/sport/soccer/losing-this-one-would-be-ultimate-humiliation-2900534.html

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