Magazine Jul/Aug 2013 He Came, He Saw, He Scored

13 July 2013, 14:32
55556 |

He Came, He Saw, He Scored

Yura Movsisyan’s sensational path to soccer stardom includes a Major League Soccer Championship, a move overseas to play in the Danish Superliga and high-progiled transfers within the Russian Premier League. The striker's nifty feet have also made the Armenian national team a group to be reckoned with. Movsisyan has his sights set on a field of greener pastures, conquering one frontline challenge at a time.

Yura Movsisyan is all too familiar with the dramatics. For every stop he’s had in his soccer career, his brilliant performances and pristine reputation have left a lasting impression.
Earlier this year, Movsisyan found himself in a position to please; he was facing the pressures of living up to his $9.7 million transfer to FC Spartak Moscow of the Russian Premier League.
When the 25-year-old laced his cleats for his first game in red and white against Terek Grozny on March 10, he proved he was worth every ruble the only way he could – by scoring. He scored once. He scored twice. He then scored a third time for good measure, accounting for all three goals in a 3-1 victory. It was his first professional hat trick.
Movsisyan kept the game ball as a memento and phoned his family in California to share the elation from the locker room. It was the greatest game he ever played, right?
“I wouldn’t say so. Scoring-wise, yes, but not when talking about my overall quality of play. If I can’t touch the sky, I will never say I did. I’m my worst critic on the field. That’s the way I’ve been my whole life, and that’s the way I’ll always be.”
Movsisyan then called the coach who was instrumental to his craft and eventual advancement in the sport. The surprise recipient of the call was one Cherif Zein in Los Angeles. Zein mentored Movsisyan for two years at Pasadena High School and one year at Pasadena City College.
“How many kids would do something like that? I don’t know any!” says Zein, who last coached Movsisyan over seven years ago. “He always calls me; he always visits me; he always contributes to our Pasadena club team and gives his time to the kids. And he doesn’t have to do any of it. It was very nice. It meant a lot to me.”
Before developing into a game-changing forward and fan favorite, Movsisyan faced the growing pains of maturating as a player and person.
He was born in Baku in 1987 at the height of a developing war between Armenia and Azerbaijan and moved to Pasadena, California when his family was granted political asylum status in 2000. It’s a dark period of his life, vaulted in a memory bank he’d rather not open.
“I can never hide that I was born in Azerbaijan,” he says. “I really didn’t know what was going on at the time because we were constantly on the move; we lived in Russia too. I am a very proud Armenian, and my parents raised my brothers and myself as Armenians. Life began for us when we moved to America – that’s how I look at it.”
Although Movsisyan had dreams of playing professional soccer as a child, he never played at an organizational level until he was a 14-year-old in Los Angeles. He and his brother Movses, two years his senior, played on club teams and later, together at Pasadena High School where Yura scored 32 goals in 13 games. Zein first got a look at Movsisyan when he played for the local club team Lazio but didn’t think much of him at the time.
“I was flabbergasted on how fast Yura developed,” Zein tells Yerevan magazine. “Movses was actually better than him but Yura focused on becoming great. He was persistent in his work ethic and willingness to improve.”
With both brothers chasing the same dream, a time came when one of the two had to begin providing financially for the family. So Movses quit soccer to work, allowing Yura the opportunity to further pursue the sport.
Movsisyan played one year at Pasadena City College, tallying 18 goals en route to being named the college’s 2005-2006 Men’s Athlete of the Year. But he wasn’t even invited to the MLS draft combine.
So Zein called Ralph Perez, a former assistant coach for the Los Angeles Galaxy, who called Nelson Rodríguez, Executive Vice President of Competition at MLS, and vouched for the unknown Armenian. Rodríguez told Perez to find suitors interested in drafting Movsisyan. So he went to Bob Gansler, who coached the 1990 United States World Cup team with Perez as his assistant. Perez’s respected judgment and Movsisyan’s stellar play at the Nike Friendlies caught the eye of the Kansas City Wizards coach, and Gansler drafted Movsisyan with the fourth overall pick in 2006, making him the highest player ever taken from a community college.
“You look for players who are offensive threats because they are few and far between,” Perez tells Yerevan magazine. “I liked his heart and determination. Soccer was in his blood 24 hours, the passion – watching, studying, playing – you can’t instill that in everybody. A lot of kids aspire and dream, but he lived and breathed soccer. He was motivated to help his family. That’s really commendable. He got the opportunity and made the most of it, and I’m proud of him.”
At 19, Movsisyan’s life instantaneously changed when he moved from familial comforts to the unfamiliar grounds of the Midwest. To boot, he seldom played once Gansler resigned midway into his rookie season.
“Soccer made me grow up fast. When you live alone at such a young age, it’s different. It’s the
real world, and you have a lot more responsibilities. You have to find a way to do all the right things.”

Read the full version in PDF format