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Harutyun Vardanyan

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Harutyun Vardanyan
Harutyun Vardanyan in 2006.
Personal information
Full name Harutyun Vardanyan
Date of birth (1970-12-05) 5 December 1970 (age 54)
Place of birth Gyumri, Armenian SSR, Soviet Union
Height 1.83 m (6 ft 0 in)
Position(s) Centre Back
Youth career
1988–1989 Lori Vanadzor
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1989–1997 Shirak Gyumri 225 (56)
1998–1999 Lausanne Sports 7 (0)
1999–2000 Fortuna Köln 33 (1)
2000–2003 Young Boys Berne 98 (5)
2003–2004 Servette Geneva 28 (0)
2004–2006 FC Aarau 37 (0)
2006–2007 Biel-Bienne 15 (5)
International career
1994–2004 Armenia 62 (1)
Managerial career
Western Armenia
*Club domestic league appearances and goals

Harutyun Vardanyan (Armenian: Հարություն Վարդանյան, born 5 December 1970 in Gyumri, Armenian SSR) is a former Armenian football player who played defender for the Armenia national football team and for Armenian, Swiss and German clubs. He spent most of his club career in the Swiss Super League, playing for Lausanne, Young Boys, Servette, and Aarau. Vardanyan was also a key defender for the Armenia national football team, having played 62 international matches. He scored 1 goal since his debut in an away friendly match on 15 May 1994.

Vardanyan was the most diverse player of Armenia in the national team captaincy. He possessed uncompromising universalism, could play in any position in the defense and had a decent transfer. He also had the disadvantage of underachievement. Vardanyan could not keep up with the fast forward, but because of his experience could take a correct position, which are crossed by this lack roots.

Club career

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Harutyun Vardanyan was born in Leninakan (now Gyumri), but began his career as a football player in Lori Vanadzor. In 1989, he returned to Leninakan, where he played for the local Shirak Gyumri. It is for this club Vardanyan played the most seasons and matches in the history of the club. As part of Shirak, Vardanyan won the Armenian Premier League three times and the Armenian Supercup once. In 1997, he was voted the Armenian Footballer of the Year. This season was the last in his career for his native club, for which he spent 9 years playing. That year, he signed a contract with Lausanne Sports, where he played for a season. He then moved to Cologne, where he played for Fortuna Köln. Vardanyan stayed at Fortuna Köln for two seasons, then returned to Switzerland and played for Young Boys Berne.

In 2003, he moved to the Servette Geneva. As part of Geneva, Vardanyan won bronze medals of the Swiss Super League. This success was the only 10-year-old Swiss career Vardanyan. After the end of the season, he moved to Aarau, where he continued to play for the club of the same name, FC Aarau. In early February 2005, Vardanyan was injured in a test match between Aarau and FC Seoul, which left him out of football for six months.[1] In 2006, he moved to the club's first league FC Biel-Bienne, in which he ended his playing career. In total, Vardanyan had 524 matches at an official level, scoring 68 goals.

International career

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Vardanyan's first match for the Armenia national football team happened on 15 May 1994 in an away game, the second game for Armenia in its history; against the national team of the United States.[2][3] The only goal for the national team Vardanyan had was a goal against Albania in a home game on 6 September 1997.[4] On 29 August 2005, in part to match against the Netherlands and the Czech Republic for the first time after a long break caused by trauma, figured Vardanyan.[5] However, not having played any first-or second-in games, Vardanyan was included in a list of players for the next qualifying match for the 2006 FIFA World Cup qualification match against Andorra, though expressed his desire not to play for.[6] Thus, he last played for the national team on 17 November 2004 in a 2006 FIFA World Cup qualification match against Romania.[7]

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In April 2007, Harutyun Vardanyan was placed in pre-trial detention by Swiss police for cases involving fines. Causes and circumstances of these penalties in the Swiss media had not been reported. Jean-Marc Hofstetter, President of FC Biel Bienne, for which at the time Vardanyan played for, was surprised by the event.[8] In the end, it turned out that Vardanyan was arrested because he gave 4 people a ride in his Mercedes. Three did not have the right to enter the territory of Switzerland and the 4th came to watch the game of football club Biel-Bienne advocated by Vardanyan. However, the latter in no way influenced the police. Vardanyan was supported by the players, coaches and club management.[9]

Personal life

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Vardanyan and his family moved from Switzerland to the town of Mont-de-Marsan, France, in 2010. He is the owner and the operator of a small café on one of the central squares in the French town.[10]

National team statistics

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Armenia national team
Year Apps Goals
1994 4 0
1995 5 0
1996 9 0
1997 7 1
1998 4 0
1999 7 0
2000 6 0
2001 7 0
2002 2 0
2003 6 0
2004 5 0
Total 62 1

Honours

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Club

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Shirak Gyumri

Individual

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References

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  1. ^ Футбол. Капитан сборной Армении остался в бездействии на полгода (in Russian). REGNUM.ru. Retrieved 13 March 2013.
  2. ^ "USA - ARMENIA 1:0". armfootball.tripod.com. Retrieved 13 March 2013.
  3. ^ "Harutyun Vardanyan". armfootball.tripod.com. Retrieved 13 March 2013.
  4. ^ "ARMENIA-ALBANIA 3:0". armfootball.tripod.com. Retrieved 13 March 2013.
  5. ^ Футбол. Наставник сборной Армении назвал состав на матчи с голландцами и чехами (in Russian). REGNUM.ru. Retrieved 13 March 2013.
  6. ^ БЕССМЕННЫЙ ВРАТАРЬ СБОРНОЙ АРМЕНИИ МОЖЕТ НЕ СЫГРАТЬ ПРОТИВ АНДОРРЫ (in Russian). vanadzor.ru. Archived from the original on 6 December 2013. Retrieved 13 March 2013.
  7. ^ "ARMENIA-ROMANIA 1:1". armfootball.tripod.com. Retrieved 13 March 2013.
  8. ^ Многолетний капитан сборной Армении по футболу задержан в Швейцарии (in Russian). REGNUM.ru. Retrieved 13 March 2013.
  9. ^ Арутюн Варданян стал жертвой своей доброты (in Russian). HAYINFO.ru. Archived from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 13 March 2013.
  10. ^ "Harutyun Vardanyan in France". Archived from the original on 30 October 2019. Retrieved 8 August 2013.
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