The Borneo Post

Russia scrambles to save face with Confed Cup looming

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MOSCOW: The new World Cup stadium in Saint Petersburg was meant to boast a state-of-theart pitch and be a showcase for Vladimir Putin’s Russia when it hosts the 2018 football bonanza.

Instead the US$ 800 million venue, which took a decade to bui ld, has caused more embarrassm­ent than pride as Russian authoritie­s scramble to salvage its pitch less than a month before it hosts the opening match of the Confederat­ions Cup, a World Cup warm-up tournament.

Uprooted chunks of turf and bald spots on the playing surface in the first match last month at the 68,000- seat arena -- a 2- 0 win by home team Zenit St Petersburg over Ural Yekaterinb­urg -- sparked concern that the stadium would be unsuitable for Russian Premier League matches, let alone the 2018 World Cup.

While officials played down the situation, the stadium received wide-ranging criticism including from Zenit manager Mircea Lucescu.

Now, less than a month before Russia face New Zealand at the venue on June 17, workers have begun replacing the turf in a desperate battle against time.

It is the latest chapter in a decade- long saga of spiralling bil ls, missed deadl ines and scandal surroundin­g the World Cup in Russia.

“We were supposed to receive a fairytale stadium, the best in the world, in ideal condition,” opposition firebrand and anticorrup­tion campaigner Alexei Navalny said in an April video post.

“I t was one o f Rus sia’s most important constructi­on projects, and money was stolen nonetheles­s.”

Last year the former deputy governor of Saint Petersburg, Marat Oganesyan, was arrested over a fraud scheme with a firm that was supposed to provide the stadium with a video scoreboard.

Even before the issues with the grass, problems with the stadium’s retractabl­e pitch made the playing surface vibrate and threw doubt on whether it could host games.

Then when officials gave the go- ahead for Zenit -- eventually expected to move into the stadium - - to play games there, even those trial attempts had to be abandoned.

After just two of three planned games authoritie­s and football officials moved the team’s May 17 match against FC Krasnodar to the club’s old Petrovsky stadium to “save the grass from extra wear”.

In an interview with RBK business daily last month, Zenit’s chief agronomist Konstantin Kreminsky blamed Bamard, a Russian company hired to deliver the pitch.

Kreminsky said that the pitch had been poorly prepared for Saint Petersburg’s unforgivin­g winter and that there had been “fungal diseases” and “a lot of mould” on the grass in late February.

A Bamard representa­tive told AFP the company fulfilled its contractua­l obligation­s when delivering the pitch in the autumn and that FIFA approved it. The problems came later, he said.

“Maybe in the spring there were conditions that didn’t allow for normal grass to grow,” he told AFP, without giving his name.

“Maybe they held matches, training sessions... That’s also why issues about the field should be brought up with the ordering customer -- and not the contractor who delivered the goods.”

The Saint Petersburg stadium is not the only Russian football venue that has experience­d problems with its pitch -- with much blame heaped on the country’s harsh winter.

Manchester United boss Jose Mourinho decried the pitch in Rostov for their Europa League match against the local team in March.

“It is hard for me to believe we are going to play on that field -- if you can call it a field,” Mourinho thundered.

In response the Russian Premier League closed the stadium until the pitch improved. It reopened two weeks later. — AFP

 ??  ?? Ian Poulter plays a shot during the second round of the THE PLAYERS Championsh­ip at the Stadium course at TPC Sawgrass in Ponte Vedra Beach, Florida in this May 12 file photo. — AFP photo
Ian Poulter plays a shot during the second round of the THE PLAYERS Championsh­ip at the Stadium course at TPC Sawgrass in Ponte Vedra Beach, Florida in this May 12 file photo. — AFP photo
 ??  ?? Dick Advocaat
Dick Advocaat

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