The Herald (South Africa)

Russian keeper Akinfeev out to save host’s blushes

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RUSSIA’S love for Igor Akinfeev, their goalkeeper who spends much of his time picking balls out of the net, speaks volumes about the home team’s World Cup chances.

Now Akinfeev wants someone who can score to share the fame when the men in red get the party started against Saudi Arabia tomorrow.

“The team have to come out and play,” Akinfeev said after a 1-0 loss in a friendly to Austria on May 30 in which Russia did not register a single shot on target.

“If they do not, the score is not going to change.”

The 32-year-old CSKA Moscow veteran is the World Cup star you may very well never have heard off.

The Russian captain has played more games for club (565) and country (106) than Soviet goalkeepin­g legends Lev Yashin and Rinat Dasayev.

He has won six league titles and been named Russia’s top keeper 10 times.

Yet an injury in the early bloom of his career thwarted his move to the bright lights of the English Premier League and consigned him to a life of domestic accolades.

Akinfeev will guarantee himself internatio­nal renown if he manages to see the hosts make the unlikelies­t of impacts on the beautiful game’s biggest stage.

Russia’s performanc­e entering the World Cup has not just been poor, it has been historical­ly so.

Coach Stanislav Cherchesov’s men enter the World Cup as the first Soviet or Russian side to go winless in seven matches.

They became the lowest-ranked of the 32 teams in the tournament by sliding to their lowest Fifa ranking ever, 70th.

Fans let their frustratio­n show by whistling them off the pitch after they drew their final warm-up against Turkey 1-1 in Moscow on June 5.

“Your job is to believe in us,” Cherchesov told sceptical reporters after the match.

Things were not always this bleak. Cherchesov was Russia’s goalkeeper when the squad still had Soviet-era talent and were ranked in the top five for parts of the 1990s.

They showed flashes of brilliance in reaching the semifinals of Euro 2008.

Most of the decade since was supposed to have been spent building a team that could make the nation proud at their first home World Cup. But a string of injuries has seen them battling to make an impression. – AFP

 ?? Picture: EPSILON/GETTY IMAGES ?? CHANCE TO SHINE: Russia’s legendary goalkeeper Igor Akinfeev has told his team they must seize the chance to make an impression on the world stage
Picture: EPSILON/GETTY IMAGES CHANCE TO SHINE: Russia’s legendary goalkeeper Igor Akinfeev has told his team they must seize the chance to make an impression on the world stage

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