Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Ukraine isn’t just trying to win a game

- By Kevin Baxter Los Angeles Times

Shortly after Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, Oleksandr Petrakov showed up at a military enlistment office in Kyiv, the Ukrainian capital, and asked for a weapon.

“I am 64 but I felt it was normal to do this,” Petrakov told a reporter from the Guardian a month later. “I think I could take two or three enemies out.”

The territoria­l defense force thanked him but declined the offer since Petrakov had no military experience. As manager of Ukraine’s national soccer team, he was needed elsewhere.

Which brings us to Sunday, when, on a well-manicured patch of grass in Cardiff, Wales, Petrakov can deliver a blow as important to Ukrainian sovereignt­y as anything he could have accomplish­ed on a battlefiel­d backhome.

If Petrakov’s team beats Wales, Ukraine will qualify for its first World Cup in 16 years and just its second since it became an independen­t country in 1991. And, while that won’t keep the bombs from falling or stop the battles from raging, it will provide a burst of pride and an invaluable boost in morale for a nation beginning to wilt after more than 100 days ofwar.

“We are all fighting, each on his own front,” President Volodymyr Zelensky wrote on social media. “For our blue and yellow flag, for our coat of arms on our hearts.”

No sport worships national identity like internatio­nal soccer, whose teams play for their country not their club and wear a flag not a crest over their hearts. It’s why Zinedine Zidane, the child of Algerian immigrants, cried as “La Marseillai­se” played following France’s World Cup victory in Paris in 1998. It’s why much of Brazil shuts down whenever la Seleção plays a big game. It’s why the chance to cheer the national team in the 2006 World Cup persuaded the two sides in Ivory Coast’s 3-year-old civil war to put down their weapons and return to the negotiatin­g table.

It’s also why, for Ukraine, Sunday’s World Cup qualifying match is far more than a game. The army, which had fought the invading Russians to a stalemate for three months, has suffered a series of recent setbacks. Things are particular­ly dire in the east, where the civilian death toll is mounting as the Russians consolidat­e their gains.

Beating Wales won’t change that, but it will be welcome good news amid the bad.

“Everyone knows the situation back in Ukraine,” midfielder Oleksandr Zinchenko told ESPN. “We need to show the best performanc­e of our lives.”

As midfielder Taras Stepanenko told reporters last month: “Every day, we receive messages from our soldiers. A lot of soldiers, a lot of people in Ukraine love football, and they have only one demand: ‘Please do everything you can to go to the World Cup.’

“For them, it’s like a moment of hope. That’s why we have to play with our soul, with our heart. This is very, very important. It will be very emotional for my country, for our players and for all Ukraine.”

Ukraine is unbeaten in World Cup qualifying, but because six of its eight games in group play ended in a draw, it finished second to reigning world champion France and did not earn an automatic berth in this fall’s tournament in Qatar. Instead it was placed in a 12-team playoff, where three additional World Cup berths were at stake.

Poland was scheduled to play Russia in group play but, in solidarity with Ukraine, it refused. Sweden and the Czech Republic, the other teams in the group, also refused, choosing to forfeit their chances at a World Cup berth rather than share a

field with the Russians.

Four days later FIFA, soccer’s global governing body, suspended Russia and Poland went on to qualify.

For Ukraine, the war postponed its first playoff game 10 weeks to June 1. It then played an inspired 90 minutes to beat Scotland, 3-1. However, that will mean nothing if it doesn’t beat Wales on Sunday.

The odds are long. The game with Scotland was the first competitiv­e match for Ukraine in 6½ months, and now it must come back, four days later, on tired legs against the 18th-ranked team inthe world, one which will be well-rested.

Yet if Ukraine is taking inspiratio­n from its soccer team, the players are taking their strength from the people fighting back home.

“There are times when you don’t need a lot of words,” Zelensky wrote. “Just pride.”

The team is getting that from Petrakov, who, like Zelensky, has risen to a challenge many thought would overwhelm him.

Petrakov grew up playing in the Soviet soccer system and had a long if undistingu­ished playing career that included a short stint with an army team before the breakup of the Soviet Union in 1991. As a coach, he cycled through a number of amateur and lower-division pro teams before joining the Ukrainian national team program on the age-group level 11 years ago.

His greatest success came in the 2019 U-20 World Cup, when Ukraine beat South Korea in the final. It was the country’s first internatio­nal trophy at any level, so when Andriy Shevchenko stepped down as the senior national team coach last August, a month after getting routed by England in the European Championsh­ips, Petrakov waschosen to replace him.

Ukraine hasn’t lost since.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States