The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Ukraine resumes long-delayed Cup bid

National team needs two wins to make 32-team field.

- By Graham Dunbar

When Ukraine’s unusual path through World Cup qualifying resumes this week, it serves as a rejection of the idea that sports and politics must not mix.

While Russia was thrown out of qualifying over its war in Ukraine, the Ukrainian national team was given several extra months to prepare for the European playoffs. Now, if Ukraine wins two games this week, a team made up of players who mostly have not played a competitiv­e game for six months because of the war at home will be at the World Cup in Qatar in November.

Ukraine’s players and coach, Oleksandr Petrakov, have the blessing of President Volodymyr Zelenskyy to leave their homeland for the game at Scotland today, when they will represent Ukraine’s yellow-and-blue colors and anthem in a vivid display of national identity on an internatio­nal stage. The game was postponed by FIFA in March because Ukraine could not field a team a month after Russia launched its military invasion.

The winner in Glasgow will move on to face Wales on Sunday in Cardiff to decide which team advances to the World Cup and joins a group with England, the United States and Iran.

Midfielder Taras Stepanenko spoke this month of playing with heart and soul to please soldiers who sent messages urging the team to qualify for its first World Cup since 2006.

“The players’ morale is sky-high,” Petrakov said Monday. “There is no need to influence them, to say anything. They are experience­d footballer­s and understand everything perfectly well.”

The goodwill toward Ukrainian soccer led FIFA to praise officials in Scotland and Wales for a “strong spirit of solidarity and cooperatio­n” after they agreed to postpone the playoff and help give their opponent a fair chance. All other European places at the World Cup have been decided.

FIFA sent a message by suspending Russian teams from its competitio­ns days after the war started, effectivel­y banning Russia from the World Cup. Russia was due in March to play a European playoff against Poland, and then either Sweden or the Czech Republic. All three nations refused to play Russia — a political boycott unpreceden­ted in modern soccer that FIFA endorsed and the Court of Arbitratio­n for Sport allowed to stand.

The raw anger toward Russia was shown by Ukraine star Oleksandr Zinchenko in a barbed post on social media when the war started. The Manchester City defender posted a photograph of Russian President Vladimir Putin with the text: “I hope you die the most painful suffering death.”

After Zinchenko helped Man City win the Premier League title on the final day of the season, he tied a Ukraine flag to the trophy on the field.

“I want to die for these people, for all this support,” Zinchenko said of his home country. “Because what people gave me, what they have done for me during all this period, the toughest period of my life, I am so appreciati­ve and I will never forget this.”

 ?? MARCO BUCCO/ LAPRESSE VIA AP ?? Ukraine coach Oleksandr Petrakov (right) and his players sing the national anthem before a training match against Empoli on May 17 in Italy. Ukraine faces Scotland today in a World Cup qualifier.
MARCO BUCCO/ LAPRESSE VIA AP Ukraine coach Oleksandr Petrakov (right) and his players sing the national anthem before a training match against Empoli on May 17 in Italy. Ukraine faces Scotland today in a World Cup qualifier.

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