
Ukraine (UKR)
After two near-misses in FIFA World Cup™ qualifying, Ukraine have
booked a place in the 2006 edition of the tournament in commanding
fashion. Coach Oleg Blokhin and his men were the first Europeans after
hosts Germany to book a place at the showcase event following a
successful qualifying campaign in a difficult group.
After the 1991 break-up of the Soviet Union and subsequent founding of
the Football Federation of Ukraine, the Ukraine national team first
entered a preliminary stage for a FIFA World Cup finals in 1996/97
ahead of the 1998 finals in France.
The eastern Europeans' first attempt ended with them placed second in
their group behind Germany but above Portugal and Northern Ireland.
They subsequently lost to Croatia in the play-offs and failed to make
it to France, and there was a repeat performance before Korea/Japan
2002 when they went down in the play-offs again, this time to Germany.
After failing to qualify for UEFA EURO 2004, former Soviet
international and 1975 European Footballer of the Year Blokhin
succeeded Leonid Buryak with the task of leading his country to
Germany, which he did with style.
The undoubted ace in his pack is undoubtedly Andriy Shevchenko, AC
Milan's prodigious goal-getter and the East Europeans' one truly
world-class striker. Ukraine's fortunes rise and fall in tandem with
the form of the 2004 European Footballer of the Year.
Shevchenko is ably supported up front by Shakhtar Donetsk hitman Andriy
Vorobey and Andrey Voronin of Bayer Leverkusen in a three-pronged
attack bristling with menace.