Lodi News-Sentinel

Ukrainian midfielder playing for Italian team shows ‘NO WAR IN UKRAINE’ shirt after scoring Europa League goal

- — Dennis Young, New York Daily News

Ruslan Malinovsky­i had a surreal Thursday, scoring two goals in a knockout game and revealing a “NO WAR IN UKRAINE” shirt on internatio­nal television as his home country was being attacked by Russia.

Malinovsky­i, a Ukrainian midfielder for Italian Serie A club Atalanta, displayed the shirt after the first of his two goals against Greek side Olympiacos in the Europa League quarterfin­al in Athens. His two goals led the team to a 3-0 win.

The Russian invasion had ripple effects throughout the sports world on Thursday. Events called off, boycotts begin German Formula One driver Sebastian Vettel had perhaps the most outspoken reaction, saying he would not race in Russia this year. “My own opinion is I should not go, I will not go,” he said. “I think it’s wrong to race in that country. I’m sorry for the people, innocent people who are losing their lives, getting killed for stupid reasons under a very strange and mad leadership.”

F1 currently is scheduled to make a stop in Sochi, Russia, in September of this year. It said that it was “closely watching the very fluid developmen­ts” and would not otherwise comment.

— Several Brazilian soccer players said that they were trapped in Ukraine after Russia attacked the country. Marlon Santos posted a video with several Brazilian players from two teams describing the situation. “We are really desperate. We are going through chaos,” he wrote in Portuguese. “We have the support from our club. But the desperatio­n is agonizing.”

Santos is a defender for Shakhtar Donetsk, one of the top teams in the Ukrainian league, which is suspended because of the war.

— Vitali Klitschko, the mayor of Kyiv since 2014, said he would be joining the fighting on the front lines. “It’s already a bloody war,” he said Thursday. “I don’t have another choice. I have to do that. I would fight.”

Before his political career, Klitschko was one of the best boxers on the planet, winning several world heavyweigh­t titles in the late 1990s and early 2000s. His brother Wladimir, also a world champion boxer, joined his brother in a video statement condemning the invasion. “The world is watching how reckless and deadly imperialis­m is, not just for Ukraine but the whole world,” Wladimir tweeted on Thursday morning. “Let history be a lesson to not be repeated.”

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