Sports: Devoid of ideas in Yerevan, Ireland are authors of their downfall in Armenia

June 5 2022

Worrying crossover with World Cup nightmares as Stephen Kenny’s men lack subtlety to unlock home side

Armenia 1, Republic of Ireland 0

A minute before the hour mark at Yerevan’s Republican Stadium, an injury to an Armenian player opened up the opportunity for an additional water break. Green shirts showed urgency to get to the sidelines, keen for hydration in the conditions. Only a handful of Armenians wandered towards the physio to do the same. It was an informative response.

This isn’t a build-up to arguing that the weather was the reason for Ireland’s difficulties here. Yes, it would be disingenuous to rule out the 33-degree heat as a factor, but Seamus Coleman had stressed on the eve of the game that it wouldn’t function as an acceptable excuse.

What was more telling was that Stephen Kenny and his assistant Keith Andrews were keen to get in another team talk, whereas the natives seemed content with the state of play. Their coach, Joaquín Caparrós, said they had a good discussion at half-time to understand where they could improve after offering little before that. “Football consists of two halves and not one half,” said the experienced Spaniard.

His position looked to be in jeopardy after a nine-goal drubbing at the hands of Norway in March. The 66-year-old was applauded going into his press conference.

Kenny’s face wore the story of frustration, a familiar feeling he was hoping to leave behind. On the eve of the game, he took issue with Ireland’s 2020 Nations League record being raised, a window where a decimated squad with Covid problems toiled in empty stadiums. He had no such problems this time, yet there were parallels in terms of the bottom line. More worryingly, there was a crossover with the World Cup nightmares at home to Luxembourg and Azerbaijan.

Ireland had more possession and completed 312 more passes than the hosts, but faced with a conservative approach, they weren’t cute enough to pick open the locks. Innovation against strong sides indicated things were trending in the right direction, but it will count for nothing without a killer instinct.

The Nations League is Ireland’s safety net if regular qualification goes awry, and it’s also a method to secure a better seeding. If the last dozen games reflected a step forward, this was two back. Kenny admitted his team’s beginning to the second half was a source of concern and said he will accept criticism. He’s got a job on his hands to lift his players for Wednesday’s Ukraine clash. This is another test of this group’s resolve and will reignite the factional debate about the manager, which had threatened to subside with the awarding of a new contract.

In some respects, Ireland’s first-half performance could be explained through the contribution of Nathan Collins. On his competitive debut, the Burnley defender was one of the visiting starters with no excuse for rustiness, given he was active right up until the end of the Premier League season.

Yet he was guilty of sloppy touches in an early spell that set the tone as it became clear that Armenia were prepared to sit deep and defend in a back five, a strategy Kenny was not expecting, saying it had only appeared once in the homework on their last 20 games. “They always played 4-4-2 and we found it difficult to break them down,” he said.

Under minimal pressure, Ireland succeeded in passing themselves into trouble and Caoimhín Kelleher was called to action from a Tigran Barseghyan snapshot. From another Collins misplaced pass, Shane Duffy went into the book for a rash challenge. Self-inflicted pain.

Yet as the half progressed, Ireland’s back three spent more time around the halfway line, enjoying plenty of time on the ball and calm touches from Collins to cut out potential counters illustrated his confidence. With the Armenians providing little threat, Ireland required subtlety to break down a narrow low block of red shirts.

Chances were created with Jeff Hendrick, who later faded, having his eye in as regards slotting through balls. Callum Robinson twice could have profited from his vision with the West Brom forward, out of action since May 7, with his last start coming on April 15, lacking sharpness when it mattered, although he was unlucky when a shot from a Chiedozie Ogbene cut back was turned behind.

Troy Parrott, the other member of the front three, drifted in and out of the match, yet this was another one of those Irish internationals where the absence of a natural attacking playmaking number ten was evident. Ogbene missed a free header before the break, another sign of potential Armenian vulnerability; Ireland just needed to expose it more regularly.

   

From the restart, there was no real additional penetration. There were isolated moments of opportunity without being of enough significance to concern the unconvincing netminder David Yurchenko. Ogbene, a major threat in previous outings on the road, was rarely able to get on the shoulder of the last man because the centre halves sat back. Surprise packages only hold that status for so long; Armenia were capable of reading Irish intentions.

Warning signs were flashing. A correct offside flag chalked off a Tigran Barseghyan left footer from inside the area, yet minutes later he was allowed to curl another narrowly wide. Kenny sprung Obafemi for Parrott, dropping Robinson deeper and later went for James McClean and Jason Knight in place of Stevens and Robinson. Obafemi’s introduction was eagerly awaited but he looked like a new signing finding his feet.

More significantly, when Armenia did advance forward, the Irish structure appeared shaky with space between lines.

The ball was worked to Eduard Sperstyan, a Russian based talent viewed locally as the heir to Henrikh Mkhitaryan, who was given ample time to unleash the shot that arrowed a way past Kelleher.

Ireland had 15 minutes to react and Will Keane and Alan Browne were chucked into the mix while Ogbene assumed the departed Coleman’s position at wing back and the cross count stacked up. Alas it was frantic rather than calculated and Armenia, in keeping with the entire match, were content to absorb pressure and gamble on Ireland being devoid of ideas.

It was the right call.

https://www.independent.ie/sport/soccer/international-soccer/devoid-of-ideas-in-yerevan-ireland-are-authors-of-their-downfall-in-armenia-41721533.html

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Sports: Scotland v Armenia: Lyndon Dykes misses Nations League openers with Armenia and Republic of Ireland

June 5 2022

Queens Park Rangers striker Lyndon Dykes has withdrawn from the Scotland squad ahead of Wednesday’s Nations League opener against Armenia.

The 26-year-old, who was substituted during last week’s World Cup play-off semi-final loss to Ukraine, has picked up a quad muscle injury.

With head coach Steve Clarke having picked a larger than normal squad, no replacement has yet been called in.

Wednesday’s match at Hampden is the first of three games within six days.

  • Republic fall to surprise loss in Armenia
  • ‘Football taught Republic a lesson’
  • Why Nations League is important for Scots

Armenia will arrive having started their Group B1 campaign with a 1-0 victory at home to Republic of Ireland on Saturday.

Stephen Kenny’s Republic then host Scotland on Saturday before Clarke takes his side to Armenia on Tuesday.

Krasnodar midfielder Eduard Spertsyan’s long-range strike with 16 minutes remaining ended the Republic’s eight-game unbeaten run.

It was a result made all the more surprising by the fact Armenia, ranked 92nd in the world, had been thumped 9-0 away to Norway in their last fixture, a friendly in March, and had lost nine goals in their previous two home games, scoring just once.

Armenia won promotion to League B of the Nations League after heading North Macedonia, Georgia and Estonia in their group two years ago.


Sports: Armenian athletes win silver and bronze at European Weightlifting Championships

Public Radio of Armenia
June 5 2022

Armenia’s Varazdat Lalayan won the silver medal of the men’s +109 kg at the European Weightlifting Championships held in Tirana, Albania.

Lalayan lifted 211 kg in the snatch and 240 kg in the clean and jerk.

Gor Minasyan won the bronze in the same weight category with a total result of 236 kg (210+246).

Georgia’s Lasha Talakhadze became the winner of the event with a result of 462 kg.

Sports: How to watch Scotland v Armenia? UEFA Nations League TV channel, live stream, kick-off time

June 5 2022

Instead it is UEFA Nations League duty against Armenia – the first time the teams have ever met – which is in store of Steve Clarke’s team.

The competition, which has largely taken the place of friendlies in the international calendar, is an important one for Scotland – it is how they qualified for Euro 2020 and qualification for the next European Championships is a possibility from this tranche of Nations League fixtures.

Tickets are still available, but here’s how to tune in as it all kicks off.

Who: Scotland v Armenia

What: UEFA Nations League

Where: Hampden Park, Glasgow

When: Wednesday, June 8, 7.45pm

The Tartan Army can watch the match on Premier Sports 1 (Sky 451 / Virgin 551).

The subscription channel is available on annual or monthly deals, as well as an online only option where the game can also be streamed via the Premier Player.

BBC Sportsound will cover the game on radio and Sportscene will have highlights on BBC One at 10.40pm an via the iPlayer.

Premier Sports have the broadcast rights to Scotland’s Nations league matches until 2024 – which is when the new deal with Nordic streaming company Viaplay kicks in.

The competition involves 55 countries and will run alongside qualifying for the European Championship in 2024. The idea for a Nations League was first mooted in 2011, before being adopted in March 2014. The main aim of the Nations League tournament is to give teams more competitive matches.

Nations League rankings will decide the make-up of the draw pots for the European Qualifiers while providing teams with another entry route into the European Championships.

Teams will have more competitive matches against teams of a similar ranking to them – aiming to result in more competitive, and hopefully entertaining, encounters.

Armenia come to Scotland buoyant after defeating Republic of Ireland in what is considered a shock in matchday one. Stephen Kenny’s side was beaten 1-0 in Yerevan.

Scotland will be without Lyndon Dykes who has withdrawn, his place could be taken by Ross Stewart. Doubts remain over Nathan Patterson’s fitness. Ryan Jack withdrew from the squad before defeat by Ukraine, replaced by Allan Campbell, while Kieran Tierney’s injury forced his omission from Steve Clarke’s selection options.

Scotland’s recent run of eight games without defeat ended by Ukraine, however they are without a win in their last three games – but Armenia have won two of their last three matches, having defeated Montenegro in March.

After Hampden they meet again in Yerevan on June 14.

Scotland have never played Armenia before so the two matches within the space of the next week will prove to be the first and set the tone for the teams match-ups going forward.

Most recently Rangers were in Armenia to face Alashkert in the Europa League play-off last year.

Scotland 2/5 (WillHill, Boylesports), Draw 7/2 (Various), Armenia 17/2 (McBookie)


Artsakh state minister: I believe Russia already realizes anti-Russian essence of Azerbaijan

NEWS.am
Armenia – June 5 2022

I believe Russia already realizes the anti-Russian nature of Azerbaijan and its being an unreliable “partner”—which has been proven several times. And the last manifestation of that was the blocking of RIA Novosti in the territory of Azerbaijan for publishing an interview with me. Artsakh (Nagorno-Karabakh) Minister of State Artak Beglaryan wrote this in his Telegram channel.

“It is interesting when the Azerbaijani authorities:

▪ spread hatred with all their media resources—not only against Armenians, but also against the Russian people,

▪ regularly violate the provisions of the tripartite declaration of November 9, 2020—killing [Armenian] civilians in Artsakh, before the eyes of Russian peacekeepers,

▪ bypassing the Russian peacekeepers, they occupy the Parukh settlement and the Karaglukh height, which is in their [i.e., the Russian peacekeepers] area of responsibility, and in December—the villages of Khtsaberd and Hin Tagher as well,

▪ destroy not only the Armenian cultural heritage that has ended up under their occupation, but also the monuments of the Great Patriotic War, which are considered both Armenian and Russian treasures,

support sanctions against Russia. Do they think that my interview with RIA Novosti (@rian_ru) was just a step that provided a platform for truth and justice, and was a violation of any documents and agreements which they themselves are violating with the above-mentioned and other aggressive actions, not only against Artsakh and Armenia, but also against Russia?” Beglaryan added.

https://news.am/eng/news/705739.html


Russia lawmaker visits Armenia, gets familiarized with Karabakh peace process

NEWS.am
Armenia – June 5 2022

Russian State Duma member Konstantin Zatulin—who is also First Deputy Chairman of the State Duma Committee for CIS Affairs, Eurasian Integration and Relations with Compatriots—was in Armenia, from Wednesday to Saturday. This was reported on Zatulin’s Telegram channel.

The purpose of the trip was to get acquainted with the current sociopolitical situation, the settlement of the Artsakh (Nagorno-Karabakh) conflict, and the development of relations with Russian compatriots.

Zatulin met with all former presidents of Nagorno-Karabakh, as well as with incumbent President Arayik Harutyunyan.

Also, the Russian lawmaker spoke with Andrey Volkov, the commander of the Russian peacekeeping troops in Artsakh, and with Aleksandr Bordov, the head of the Russian community of Artsakh.

And on Saturday, Zatulin met with Russian Ambassador to Armenia Sergey Kopirkin, at the Russian embassy in Yerevan.

Armenia village head says no emigration in rural community after Azerbaijan military advance

NEWS.am
Armenia – June 5 2022

The Azerbaijani armed forces which entered Armenia in the direction of Nerkin Hand village have not caused any difficulties for life in the village, as they are far from the village. Nerkin Hand village mayor Khachatur Baghdasaryan told about this to Armenian News-NEWS.am.

“The Azerbaijani armed forces are located far from the village, our Ministry of Defense has deployed positions in front of them,” he said.

Baghdasaryan noted that there is no emigration in the village, and the locals are not afraid and are engaged in agricultural work.

To note, Sputnik Armenia website had reported that the Azerbaijani armed forces advanced 9 square kilometers, or about 900 hectares, into Armenia—in the direction of Nerkin Hand village. In addition, the Azerbaijani positions are located on the dominant hills, and this enables to monitor more territory.

Artsakh government to assist restoration of Hakobavank monastery

NEWS.am
Armenia – June 5 2022

Artsakh (Nagorno-Karabakh) President Arayik Harutyunyan on Sunday visited the Hakobavank monastic complex, on the occasion of Pentecost, and attended the Divine Liturgy served there, reported by the Office of the Artsakh President.

The head of state highlighted the restoration program of this monastic complex, and noted that an instruction has already been given to provide the necessary state funds to that end.

Pope Francis kisses Armenian Apostolic Church sacred medallion

NEWS.am
Armenia – June 5 2022

Pope Francis received a group of Armenian clergy Saturday and kissed the sacred medallion of the Armenian Apostolic Church. This became known from the Facebook post of an Armenian travel agency.

Also, the travel agency posted a historic photo from this meeting.

“Cool photo from yesterday’s Vatican meeting with Orthodox Christian priests & monks: Roman Pope kisses an Armenian Apostolic encolpion (sacred medallion) while greeting Armenian guests,” reads the aforesaid Facebook post.

Public discussion underway at France Square in Yerevan

NEWS.am
Armenia – June 5 2022

A public discussion on “What kind of Armenia are we fighting for?” is currently taking place at France Square in downtown Yerevan.

Earlier we reported that no opposition rallies or marches are planned today.

Resistance Movement coordinator Ishkhan Saghatelyan—the National Assembly deputy speaker from the opposition “Armenia” Faction and a representative of the Supreme Body of the opposition Armenian Revolutionary Federation (ARF) Dashnaktsutyun Party of Armenia—had earlier stated that Sunday will be a working day for them, and they will prepare for the acts of civil disobedience planned for next week—and which will be announced in advance.