New Straits Times

The world’s ‘invincible’ football team

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ARKADAG: Forget Real Madrid, Manchester City or Paris SaintGerma­in. The world’s best football team — statistica­lly speaking — might be a little-known outfit from the closed central Asian nation of Turkmenist­an.

Founded last year, FK Arkadag, named in honour of strongman former president Gurbanguly Berdimuham­edow, has been unstoppabl­e, notching up 36 consecutiv­e domestic victories in a run still ongoing.

The side has not lost a single competitiv­e match and swept to a league and cup double in their inaugural season — success unthinkabl­e almost anywhere else.

But in Turkmenist­an, it could hardly have gone any other way.

The energy-rich country is one of the most closed on earth, rights groups say, with the Berdimuham­edows — father Gurbanguly and son, President Serdar Berdimuham­edow — exerting near total control over all aspects of society.

Gurbanguly Berdimuham­edow is now known by the title of “Arkadag”, or hero-protector.

Arkadag, the football club named after him, play their home games at Arkadag Stadium in the freshly-built city of Arkadag – a mega project constructe­d in his honour at an official cost of US$5 billion.

Despite its record-breaking run, FK Arkadag has struggled to bring in the crowds.

Around 200 spectators came to matches last month against Ahal and Altyn Asyr attended by AFP, dotted around the brand new 10,000-capacity stadium.

Tickets had been offered for free.

Watching on, fan Begench Mukhadov waved the club’s scarf, emblazoned with its official logo, an ice-blue and white crest featuring an Akhal-Teke horse, a Turkmen national symbol.

“Arkadag will definitely win every title going again this season. I’m happy that an invincible team has emerged and that football has become interestin­g,” Mukhadov, an 18-year who works in a constructi­on firm, said.

Civil servant Shageldy Soyunov, 34, said he “closely follows all of Arkadag’s matches” and likes the team’s “dynamic play”.

After securing the double last year, Gurbanguly Berdimuham­edow presented Arkadag’s players with a photo of Serdar Berdimuham­edow signing a football with the club’s logo.

The gift was “accepted with great pride and deep gratitude,” reported Turkmen state media, which the regime exerts an extremely tight grip over.

“He met our team and spurred us on to new victories,” Didar Durdyev, the league’s two-time top goalscorer, said.

After scoring 83 goals in 24 league games last year, FK Arkadag have maintained their attacking prowess, securing 25 in five outings this season.

“We feel the support of our respected Hero-Protector Gurbanguly Berdimuham­edow,” the 30year-old striker Durdyev said.

Sporting authoritie­s have scrubbed references that question Arkadag’s status as an invincible footballin­g force.

There is no trace on the Turkmen Football Federation’s website of two recent defeats against Ukraine’s Shakhtar Donetsk and Dnipro-1 in friendly matches in February.

This is hardly surprising in a country where informatio­n is so closely controlled. Especially when it comes to a football club created in honour of the unquestion­able father of the nation.

Later this year, the club – and its narrative of invincibil­ity — will face their biggest test yet, when they play in the AFC Champions League 2, the Asian confederat­ion’s equivalent of the Europa League.

Unlike other countries in Central Asia, Turkmenist­an has never been a footballin­g nation and has not made a mark internatio­nally.

But officials say they are unfazed, hoping Arkadag’s success can spur a turnaround.

“It’s good that the players know each other,” an official from the state sport committee said. “It strengthen­s their collective spirit to win.”

 ?? AFP PIC ?? Founded last year, FK Arkadag have been unstoppabl­e, notching up 36 consecutiv­e domestic victories in a run still ongoing.
AFP PIC Founded last year, FK Arkadag have been unstoppabl­e, notching up 36 consecutiv­e domestic victories in a run still ongoing.

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