Raymond Zarpanelian

Raymond Zarpanelian (born 17 May 1933 in Paris, France; died 29 March 2011 in Paris, France) was an Armenian-French football coach who was last known to have been based at Al-Ansar in Saudi Arabia.[2]

Raymond Zarpanelian
Personal information
Date of birth 17 May 1933
Place of birth Paris, France
Date of death 29 March 2011(2011-03-29) (aged 77)
Place of death Paris, France
Managerial career
Years Team
1993–1994 Sierra Leone[1]
1997 ASF Bobo Dioulasso
Al-Ansar F.C.

Career

Sierra Leone

In 1993, he was appointed manager of Sierra Leone.[3]

Assisted by Sam Obi Metzger, Zarpanelian guided Sierra Leone to a 0-4 defeat to Ivory Coast and a 0-0 stalemate with Zambia at the 1994 Africa Cup of Nations, causing him to step down as coach and go back to Paris.[4]

Burkina Faso

Working with ASFA Yennenga in early 1997, the Franco-Armenian took charge of ASF Bobo Dioulasso by summer of that year, driving them to a runners-up position in the league and a national cup trophy.[5]

Uganda

Visited Uganda with French journalist Frank Simon to watch the 2000 CECAFA Cup and observe East African football.[6][7]

Death

Diagnosed with kidney cancer, Zarpanelian died at a hospital in Paris at the age of 78 in 2011 and was buried on the 6th of April.[8] Previously, he was linked with the Central African Republic technical director position.[6] The Raymond Zarpanelian Trophy was launched in 2014 to honor an African-based French football technician each year,[9] with Pascal Janin getting the award for his achievements with Stade Malien.[10][11]

Personal life

The former Sierra Leone mentor was said to have been a magnanimous person.[4]

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.