Saskatoon StarPhoenix

Empty stadium reflects Russia’s woes

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NAIRA DAVLASHYAN

SOCHI, RUSSIA Sochi’s World Cup stadium is a spectacula­r, sweeping structure on the Black Sea coast, but few locals have seen inside. In fact, the Fisht Olympic Stadium hasn’t hosted a game in nearly a year.

When Portugal takes on Spain on June 15, it will be the first match there since June 29, 2017.

Sochi didn’t even field a profession­al team this season and is a graveyard for clubs, with no fewer than six failed attempts to run a team there in the last 15 years. Meagre incomes from ticket sales and TV rights mean most Russian clubs must beg for funding from the government or risk going under.

“It’s a big tragedy for Sochi, for many Russian cities without a football club,” says youth coach Vladimir Lushin of the Zhemchuzhi­na Sochi club, which played in the Russian top flight in the 1990s but can no longer afford to run a pro team. “The children must have something to aspire to when they do sports.”

Sochi hosted the 2014 Winter Olympics, but is struggling to put that legacy to good use.

The Olympic winter sports facilities haven’t hosted any internatio­nal events in the last 12 months.

Sochi’s 48,000-seat Fisht Olympic Stadium wasn’t built as a sports venue, just to host opening and closing ceremonies. It has held just seven soccer matches to date, only one with a local team, when FC Sochi played a third-tier league game in front of just 6,000 fans last year, shortly before withdrawin­g from the league.

Now there’s another attempt to bring soccer back to Sochi.

The billionair­e Boris Rotenberg, a childhood judo partner of President Vladimir Putin, wants to relocate his Dynamo St. Petersburg team to Sochi in time for the new season in the Russian second tier.

That could meet with an angry reaction in both St. Petersburg and Sochi, where locals say they’d find it hard to back a team imported from the other side of the country.

It’s also likely to lose money; the Russian second tier is full of unprofitab­le teams.

 ??  ?? Vladimir Putin
Vladimir Putin

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