Los Angeles Times

No team, but China is a presence

- By Kevin Baxter kevin.baxter@latimes.com Twitter: @kbaxter11 The Associated Press contribute­d to this report.

China does not have a team in the World Cup — it finished fifth in its six-team group in Asian qualifying — but it does have a lot of fans in Russia, where the country’s economic clout has given it a huge presence.

Nearly 43,000 World Cup tickets were sold in China, more than were purchased in 26 countries that did send a team to Russia. Chinese fans purchased fewer than 11,000 tickets to the last two World Cups combined.

And corporate China is even more prominent at this summer’s tournament.

When several sponsors walked away from FIFA and the World Cup following the corruption scandal that rocked the organizati­on three years ago, Chinese companies rushed to fill the void.

In front of Moscow’s Luzhniki Stadium, site of the opening and championsh­ip matches, Mengniu, China’s second-biggest dairy producer, has products lined up at a sprawling kiosk surround by plastic cows and a cutout of Argentine star Lionel Messi. The Wanda Group, the world’s largest private property developer, and electronic­s manufactur­er Hisense also have stands at the stadium.

But you don’t have to go to Russia to notice China’s presence at the World Cup: Illuminate­d signs and field-side advertisem­ents have brought Chinese names into homes around the world.

Two years ago, Wanda signed on as one of FIFA’s seven official partners, alongside Coca-Cola, Adidas, Gazprom, Qatar Airways, Visa and Hyundai/Kia. Hisense, Mengniu and Vivo, another Chinese electronic­s company, signed on as sponsors within the last 15 months.

“They’ve realized that the world is their oyster,” Philippe Le Floc’h, FIFA’s chief commercial officer, told the Associated Press. “China is the biggest population in the world. It’s a massive economy. They have some very, very good companies who are eager to have a presence abroad, and I think it was just a nice fit.”

Russia f ined for neo-Nazi banner

Russia’s soccer federation was fined $10,100 by FIFA after a fan displayed a neo-Nazi banner during the team’s 3-0 loss to Uruguay in Samara.

FIFA and monitoring experts said the banner included the number 88, which is recognized as far-right code for “Heil Hitler” because H is the eighth letter of the alphabet.

In a separate case, FIFA fined Serbia’s federation for a second time for fans displaying a banner celebratin­g a World War II nationalis­t group. Serbia must pay $20,200 for a disciplina­ry charge of showing a “political and offensive banner” during the team’s 2-0 loss to Brazil in Moscow on Wednesday.

FIFA said it also warned the Russian and Serbian federation­s, and also Brazil’s federation for unspecifie­d incidents involving its fans at the same game.

Morocco’s soccer federation was fined $65,650 and winger Noureddine Amrabat was warned for misconduct after a late Spain goal cost the team a victory.

Amrabat directed an obscene comment about FIFA’s video review system at a television camera minutes after a stoppage-time goal by Spain forward Iago Aspas was allowed to stand in the 2-2 draw at Kaliningra­d.

Mexico’s federation was fined $15,150 after fans threw objects during a 3-0 loss to Sweden.

One last look?

Coach Juan Carlos Osorio and some members of the Mexican team did some sightseein­g in Moscow before leaving for Samara, the site of Monday’s eliminatio­n-round game with Brazil.

Captain Andres Guardado, defenders Jesus Gallardo and Edson Alvarez, midfielder Javier Aquino and striker Raul Jimenez joined Osorio for several hours downtown visiting Red Square, among other places.

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