Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Why Armenia Could Strike A Blow For The Minnow At Euro 2012

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

  • Why Armenia Could Strike A Blow For The Minnow At Euro 2012

    WHY ARMENIA COULD STRIKE A BLOW FOR THE MINNOW AT EURO 2012
    Jonathan Wilson

    guardian.co.uk
    Monday 10 October 2011 12.46 BST

    Some fine young players (and the late Ian Porterfield) have helped
    carry Armenia to the brink of a Euro 2012 play-off berth

    Armenia fans cheer their team during the 4-1 victory over Macedonia in
    Euro 2012 qualifying. Photograph: Arthur Gevorgyan/PanArmenian/Reuters

    This sort of thing doesn't happen any more. The globalisation of
    football, the manic cosmopolitanism of the game at the top level,
    the blanket television coverage of leagues from all over the world: it
    should all mean that there can be no glorious surprises like Armenia.

    And yet there they are, after three successive wins in which they
    have scored 11 goals, looking for a win in the Republic of Ireland to
    take second place in the qualifying group and a play-off for European
    Championship qualifying.

    They have defied what Scott Murray once called the Josimar-Murdoch
    Law of Diminishing Returns, his theory that major tournaments are not
    what they once were because we have too much knowledge and there can
    never again be that thrill of realising a player or team we've never
    heard of is supremely talented.

    Perhaps Latvia, who qualified for Euro 2004 by finishing behind
    Sweden in their group and then beating Turkey in a play-off (coming
    from 2-0 down with 24 minutes of the second leg to go, no less) are
    the last European minnow really to emerge, but they, like Slovenia
    before them, were a side based on dogged resilience. There's nothing
    wrong with that, of course, but sides who pack men behind the ball
    and look to nick one on the break are necessarily limited; they can
    only go so far and the fear must always be that they will end up,
    as Latvia did, making up the numbers in the finals itself, spending
    their three games looking to keep the score down and nothing else.

    That's not to say sides should not look to defend themselves - Greece,
    after all, showed in that tournament what can be achieved by solidity
    and playing to your strengths - but a side based almost entirely
    on defence is necessarily restricted. And that is what makes this
    Armenia such a welcome surprise: they play proactive football that
    is very easy on the eye. They've got a long way to go before matching
    Greece's achievements (and they start at an even lower base), but in
    terms of style, Armenia are probably the most potentially exciting
    side to emerge since Denmark in the early 80s.

    In that, this Armenia are true to the nation's traditions. Although
    there has only been an independent national team since 1992, in Soviet
    times Ararat Yerevan served as a de facto national side. Their greatest
    moment came in 1973 when they won an unexpected Double under Nikita
    Simonyan, who had already won the Double as a player and coach at
    Spartak Moscow. He was of Armenian heritage, and had essentially been
    exiled back to his homeland following disagreements with officials
    at Spartak.

    "It was much harder to win the league with Ararat than it was with
    Spartak Moscow," Simonyan said. "We had some good players, but
    essentially we were a provincial side. I had to change my personal
    style, because the players had a different mentality. We had two
    Ukrainians in the side, but they had lived in Yerevan from childhood,
    so they had adopted the spirit of the people. Players from the south
    are more skilful, more technical, even if it is bad for the team as
    a collective. You have to stick them to each other."

    That process of sticking the players to each other, of creating a
    cohesive unit in which they can express their individual ability,
    probably began under Ian Porterfield. The former Sunderland midfielder
    took charge in 2006, and oversaw 10 games before his death from
    cancer the following year. Although only two of them were won, what is
    significant is that only nine goals were conceded. The present coach,
    Vardan Minasyan, served as Porterfield's assistant, briefly taking
    over from him as caretaker.

    "The results do not suddenly come out of the blue," said Armenia's
    Shakhtar Donetsk midfielder Henrik Mkhitaryan. "We have many
    young players who have earned the coaches' trust and have a clear
    understanding of what needs to be done. Our football is based on mutual
    trust between coaches and players. Everyone has the same approach,
    be it the coaches, the players, the Football Federation of Armenia
    or our team doctors. We are a whole and healthy mechanism.

    "Our main strength is the team. Henrik Mkhitaryan would not be
    able to achieve anything alone. I am not myself without my team or
    my team-mates. It is thanks to the men I play alongside that I can
    show what I am capable of. So I am deeply grateful to my colleagues
    for their belief in themselves and in me. Together we are striving
    towards one goal."

    Porterfield may have begun to change the mentality, but what has
    really elevated Armenia is the emergence, in the past year (and it
    really is only in the past year; when the Republic of Ireland won 1-0
    in Yerevan in their first game in qualifying nobody thought it might
    prove a key result) of a highly gifted young generation of players.

    Although the goalkeeper, Roman Berezovsky, is 37 and the right-back
    and captain Sargis Hovsepyan, is 38, the rest of the squad are in
    their early-to-mid-20s.

    That, in part, may explain why so many of the squad still play in
    Armenia, or at smaller clubs in Ukraine. Five of the side that beat
    Macedonia 4-1 on Friday still play in the domestic league, which is
    ranked 50th best in Europe by Uefa, above only the Faroe Islands,
    Andorra and San Marino. Only Mkhitaryan is at a club that has even
    come close to Champions League qualification.

    He is likely to be vital on Tuesday, and not just because he is
    Armenia's best player. Minasyan, who cites Barcelona and Arsenal as his
    models, favours a 4-2-3-1, and pace in wide areas has been a feature of
    their recent matches. Given Ireland's sluggishness at full-back that
    could be decisive, but the question Minasyan must answer is whether
    to use Gevorg Ghazaryan on the left and Mkhitaryan on the right, or
    to pull Mkhitaryan back into a deep-lying creative role and explore
    other options - the former Ajax forward Edgar Manucharyan perhaps -
    wide. Is it better to pack strength on the flanks, or to ensure the
    supply to the flanks is good?

    Playing Mkhitaryan wide perhaps strengthens Armenia defensively,
    allowing them to play a ball-winner alongside Karlen Lazarian at
    the back of the midfield. While this is a side of far more attacking
    ability than Porterfield's, the additional expressiveness has come
    at the cost of some of the defensive resilience of old. "Armenia will
    give Ireland chances but they are also capable of taking their own -
    as we discovered to our cost," said Martin Skrtel, whose Slovakia
    side lost 4-0 to Armenia last month.

    "We created enough chances but we weren't able to score. We still have
    a young team, though, so we have to retain perspective. The one thing I
    would say to any team playing Armenia is to make sure you score against
    them. We didn't do that in the first half in Zilina and then we went
    and conceded four goals after the break. There will be chances in the
    game, no doubt about that. And Ireland have got to make them count."

    As Russia showed in the first half in Dublin, though, Ireland can
    be left befuddled by teams who move the ball at pace. Then again, as
    Ireland showed in the second half of that game, the direct approach
    can unsettle even the most poised sides. In a sense, anyway, the most
    important thing is that Armenia are there with a chance of qualifying
    at all, not just for their players and fans, but for all minnows.

    Their progress is a message that dull solidity is not the only way
    for the minnow.

    http://www.guardian.co.uk/football/blog/2011/oct/10/armenia-ireland-euro-2012-qualifying?newsfeed=true

Working...
X