USA TODAY International Edition

Kaliningra­d far from Moscow

Two countries separate host site

- Martin Rogers

“It is definitely the weirdest city of the World Cup . ... There are parts of it that look more Western than any other Russian city, but it doesn’t always feel that way.”

Tim Rich British sportswrit­er

MOSCOW – Kaliningra­d is the World Cup’s (and maybe Russia’s) most unusual city, an exclave whose location means you need to leave Russia, then pass through at least two (and maybe three or four) other countries, just to get to it.

It is nestled right in the heart of central Europe — to the north of Poland — and as soccer’s biggest tournament headed toward the end of its first week, it shared none of the patriotic excitement that can be found in Moscow or St. Petersburg.

“Moscow is like a party,” Croatia fan Ivan Sedjevic, who watched his team beat Nigeria at Kaliningra­d Stadium on June 16, told USA TODAY. “Kaliningra­d is like a library.”

Aside from hosting World Cup games, Kaliningra­d made headlines recently when the Federation of American Scientists reported that Russia has cranked up its renovation­s of a vast nuclear weapons storage bunker in the region, already one of the most militarize­d areas of the country.

Given Kaliningra­d’s proximity to Western Europe, sandwiched against NATO members Poland and Lithuania, the developmen­t has raised eyebrows around the world.

This news is hardly surprising, as Russian President Vladimir Putin has a history of using sports as a distractio­n while he gets other things done that might not be particular­ly popular.

In 2014, the Kremlin launched an attack that resulted in the annexation of the Crimea just days after the conclusion of the Sochi Winter Olympics.

In the week since the World Cup started, Putin raised the national retirement age and has overseen an order for crime reports during the event to be withheld from the public and media.

“Vladimir Putin sees the World Cup as another opportunit­y to advance his campaign to restore Russia’s rightful place in the world,” said Brian Taylor, a Russian politics expert at Syracuse University and author of The Code of Putinism.

Kaliningra­d’s location is a bit of a misnomer, as it doesn’t make any more effort to assimilate with its neighbors than the rest of Russia. It was a closed city under Soviet rule and was previously part of Germany, known then as Konigsberg, until it was allocated to the Russians at the end of World War II.

England fans who make the trip to Kaliningra­d for their team’s clash with Belgium on Thursday will find themselves barely halfway to Moscow. There aren’t many ways to get to there either, unless you go through Moscow.

Tim Rich, a British sportswrit­er for the Independen­t, found that to fly to Kaliningra­d from Manchester, he would have to go via Amsterdam and Riga, the capital of Latvia. When the final leg of that journey was canceled, he was redirected via Prague and then Moscow.

“It is definitely the weirdest city of the World Cup,” Rich said. “There are some lovely echoes of the past, the old Germanic railway station and a cathedral situation on a lovely island. There are parts of it that look more Western than any other Russian city, but it doesn’t always feel that way.”

Kaliningra­d is only the 40th-most populous city in Russia and has no great soccer pedigree; local team FC Baltika is outside of the top tier Russian Premier League. Yet the World Cup is here, whether the locals are thrilled about it or not, and the reasons are rooted in geography, politics ... and Putin.

 ??  ?? Kaliningra­d is a site for some World Cup games and located about 800 miles west of Moscow. PATRICK HERTZOG, AFP/GETTY IMAGES
Kaliningra­d is a site for some World Cup games and located about 800 miles west of Moscow. PATRICK HERTZOG, AFP/GETTY IMAGES

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States