11.05.2016 03:52 h

Heat is on Konoplyanka to help Ukraine at Euro 2016

Ukraine's great hope Yevhen Konoplyanka chose La Liga, dismissing England's more physical Premier League, and has since become a bench warmer at Sevilla.

Ukraine's fans still hope that he can fire the country to success at Euro 2016.

The 26-year-old winger attracted interest from big clubs from across the continent with dashing displays with Dnipro in the 2014-2015 Europa League.

Konoplyanka looked like one of the few players from Ukraine capable of making a mark on the European game like Andriy Shevchenko and Sergiy Rebrov.

He chose a move to Spain. "If I was two-and-a-half metres tall and didn't know how to control a ball then I may have gone to England," Konoplyanka was quoted as saying.

"But here (in Spain), the football's more technical. It's the best," said the super-sub who reportedly has a 40 million euro buyout clause in his contract.

Despite that confidence, and a goal as a substitute in his debut against Barcelona in the UEFA Super Cup, Konoplyanka has struggled for a first team place.

His flashes of form have persuaded Sevilla coach Unai Emery to keep faith with the Ukrainian.

"I am confident that if Konoplyanka has not been successful yet, he will be in the future," Emery told Spanish media.

"The team will need him and we will support him, as we do with the rest of the players."

Before his travails in Spain Konoplyanka made an impressive rise in his home country.

Born in the central town of Kirovograd as the Soviet Union was crumbling in 1989, he was spotted by Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk scouts playing for a local team and signed at the age of 16.

"I knew that Dnipro were interested," Konoplyanka told AFP last year. "They sent their scouts to watch me."

"I tried hard to show my worth in that match, even scored a goal. After the game we signed a deal."

A year later in 2007 Konoplyanka made his debut in the Ukrainian top flight. His career only really took off however after Spanish manager Juande Ramos took over in 2010.

A natural right-footer who plays mostly on the left wing, Konoplyanka scooped the first of three crowns as Ukraine's Player of the Year.

His eye-catching performances attracted Ukraine manager Myron Markevych and led to a call-up for the first of 51 caps. He has scored 11 goals.

At Euro 2012, which Ukraine co-hosted with Poland, Konoplyanka started all three group games, setting up Andriy Shevchenko's winner in the opening match before the team crashed out.

He scored three goals in qualifiers for the 2014 World Cup finals, including a long-range screamer in a 1-1 draw with England at Wembley. But Ukraine failed again to reach the finals.

In 2014, Ramos left Dnipro as fighting raged between pro-Russian separatists and government troops in eastern Ukraine.

In his place came former national coach Markevych and -- despite the turmoil -- he led Dnipro to the Europa League final against Sevilla.

Despite a rousing effort by Konoplyanka and his teammates, Dnipro lost 3-2 to the Spanish club.

With a place in the Europa League's all star team, Konoplyanka had done enough to seal a move abroad.

One difficult season on and conflict-wracked Ukraine is pinning its hopes on Konoplyanka for Euro 2016 in France.

"He's one of the leaders of our team and when he warms the bench at Sevilla it's definitely not good for Ukraine," coach Mykhaylo Fomenko told AFP.

"But he still has time to get enough match practice," he said. "After Konoplyanka went to Spain he received everything he needs to become one of Europe's best wingers."