The National - News

Egypt fans keep faith in Moscow despite losing start to campaign

- JOHN McAULEY Moscow

Ahmed Morsi, an Egyptian from Cairo but a project manager with Etisalat in Dubai, led the celebratio­ns, serenading Mohammed Salah on his birthday. He bounced and belted it out, first in English and then in Arabic.

Morsi was joined by friends from back home and some new ones, too, for all those without a match ticket for Yetkaterin­burg had apparently decamped to Moscow’s Fan Fest instead.

There, on Friday, the big screens beamed down Egypt’s Group A opener against Uruguay, taking place some 1,400 kilometres away. It might as well have been right here.

The sun beamed bright as well, making those who donned pharaoh headpieces – of which there were many – question their decision, if only temporaril­y. After all, it was worth it: Egypt had not been at a World Cup since 1990. This was an opportunit­y to be embraced, to be celebrated.

“After 28 years now in the World Cup, it’s awesome,” Morsi smiled at half-time, with the score goalless. “We are so, so, so happy. We are proud of our team, who are doing very well against one the strongest teams in the world.”

Others beat drums, waved flags, hollered and honked. They screamed when Luis Suarez went clean-through in the second half, then cheered when Mohammed El Shennawy smothered the ball at his feet.

For Karlos Gergis, the excitement has escalated the past three years. Originally from Suez, he has been studying aeronautic­al engineerin­g at Moscow Aviation Institute since 2015, alongside childhood friend Amr.

“It’s one of the great things to have a World Cup here in Russia, it’s a great chance as we are living here,” he said. “It’s like half-half feeling. Sometimes you want to support Russia because you lived with them for three years, and at the same time you’re Egyptian and you want to support Egypt.”

Being among his compatriot­s, with the match coinciding with Eid, made the distance between temporary and permanent home easier to manage.

“It means I feel the comfort, because we miss our home unfortunat­ely because we didn’t go home once in three years,” Gergis said. “So we feel the Egyptians are here, we are gathering here and living the moment with each other.”

Gaser and Yara Elzahaby, brother and sister from Cairo, will gather in Saint Petersburg next week with Egyptian friends. There, they will attend the clash against hosts Russia.

On Friday, in Moscow, they had only each other, stuck in their own bubble, eyes transfixed on the TV screen, pulses racing. Draped in an Egypt flag, Yara jumped and shouted throughout. When Edison Cavani struck a post late on, she cheered as if it was an Egyptian goal. Her brother had sat on the ground, barely able to watch.

“It’s been 28 years, it’s amazing,” Yara said. “The last time we qualified I wasn’t even born, so this is epic.

“It’s great having lots of people from around the world – it’s a special feeling you don’t get except in a world cup. I hope we qualify to the next round, fingers crossed.

“It’s a great day, it’s Eid, it’s the first game in the World Cup… it’s Salah’s birthday. “So it’s perfect.”

The result? Not so much. Two minutes from time, Jose Gimenez rose highest at a corner and headed past El Shennawy. Uruguay had won it at the death.

For the first time, Fan Fest fell silent, save for the small pocket of Uguguayans. Morsi covered his face in his Egypt flag.

Others called out why Salah, reportedly recovering from a shoulder injury, remained on the bench. Still, he will return for Russia.

Still, their fans claimed, they will make it beyond Group A. “It is a very historic moment for us, a very, very emotional moment,” said Amr Eltouni, who works in engineerin­g in Cairo.

“We are very happy to be in this world event. We think that this is Egypt. This is our destiny to be with the top teams in the world. Our performanc­e today proved this.”

His friend, Amr Fawzy, agreed. “For us, for me, for our generation, it’s a once-in-alifetime experience,” he said, voice hoarse. “To experience it here is Russia especially is very special for us. We’ve had a lot of generation­s with better players but we never qualified to the World Cup.

“But with this generation we made it, and all the credit goes to the players and the coach [Hector] Cuper and the fans all over Egypt. It’s very historic and, Inshallah, we qualify for the next round.”

 ?? EPA ?? Egyptian fans took pride in the team’s presence in Russia even though they lost to Uruguay 1-0
EPA Egyptian fans took pride in the team’s presence in Russia even though they lost to Uruguay 1-0

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