Jamaica Gleaner

Russia meets UEFA looking for path back into world sports

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RUSSIA TRIED to make progress yesterday on its slow and difficult return to internatio­nal sports amid its war in Ukraine at a meeting with officials at European football body UEFA.

Russian Football Union (RFU) vice-president Aleksandr Alaev declined to comment when leaving after three hours of faceto-face talks. They were the first since Russia drew back from a threat last month to leave UEFA and seek to join the Asian Football Confederat­ion.

A follow-up meeting will be held in February, the Russian news service TASS said.

Russian teams are banned from UEFA and FIFA competitio­ns during the war in Ukraine, and currently there is no way back from those decisions that were upheld at sport’s highest court.

National teams, including Poland, Switzerlan­d and Albania, had refused within days of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine last February to play their scheduled games against Russia.

When the UEFA and FIFA bans, imposed on February 28, were challenged at the Court of Arbitratio­n for Sport, judges agreed that the consequenc­es of letting Russian teams play “would be irreparabl­e and chaotic” for the smooth running of competitio­ns.

Russian teams were removed from trying to qualify for the men’s and women’s World Cups; the women’s 2022 European Championsh­ip, which it had qualified for; plus European youth and club competitio­ns.

UEFA also terminated sponsorshi­p deals with Russian state energy firm Gazprom, moved the 2022 Champions League final from the home stadium of Zenit St Petersburg, and banned the club from this season’s Champions League group stage.

While soccer is blocked, Olympic and sports officials worldwide had conference calls last week to explore ways — all of them complicate­d — to help Russian athletes and teams compete soon in qualifying events for the 2024 Paris Olympics.

The Internatio­nal Olympic Committee (IOC) has an executive board meeting today which is expected to discuss its position on Russia 18 months ahead of the Paris opening ceremony. The IOC advised sports bodies last February to exclude Russia from hosting and competing.

UEFA declined to comment on Tuesday on meeting RFU officials Alaev and Maxim Mitrofanov, the general secretary, who is a former CEO at Zenit.

Today in Nyon, UEFA has a meeting of its executive committee, which includes RFU President Alexander Dyukov and the president of Ukraine’s soccer federation, Andriy Pavelko. It was unclear if both will attend in person.

UEFA confirmed last year that Russia would not play in Euro 2024 qualifying which starts in March, though it has yet to remove another showpiece game from the country. Kazan is still listed to host the Super Cup game in August between the winners of the Champions League and Europa League.

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