Santa Fe New Mexican

Russia ready for World Cup draw

- By Rob Harris

MOSCOW — Vladimir Putin welcomes soccer luminaries to the Kremlin on Friday for a World Cup draw that provides a global audience for the Russian president to attempt to burnish the image of a country scandalize­d by sports corruption.

By staging the ceremony for the 32 World Cup finalists at the seat of Russian power and draping the Kremlin in FIFA branding, soccer’s governing body is undercutti­ng its pretense that sports and politics should not mix — and in a country where the associatio­n has proved so damaging.

FIFA is on the final countdown to the first World Cup in Russia as it continues to assess the extent the 2014 World Cup squad was embroiled in the country’s state-sponsored doping scheme.

FIFA President Gianni Infantino still plans to share a stage Friday with Vitaly Mutko, the Russian deputy prime minister accused of overseeing the elaborate scheme that saw positive samples across Russian sports destroyed or hidden.

The draw is the moment fans can start to plan their journeys across Russia, with 11 host cities spread from Kaliningra­d on the Baltic Sea in the west to Yekaterinb­urg in the Ural mountains which separate Europe and Asia.

Germany will discover the path to defending the title won in Brazil, while Iceland and Panama will be in the draw for the finals for the first time.

Two teams are returning after long absences: Peru hasn’t contested the World Cup since 1982 and Egypt is returning for the first time since 1990.

But there is no space for fourtime champion Italy, two-time reigning Copa America champion Chile, while the United States is missing for the first time since 1986.

HOW DOES THE DRAW WORK?

The draw ceremony starts at 8 a.m. Friday at the State Kremlin Palace and is set to last for an hour. The 32 finalists will be split into eight groups featuring a team from each pot. Only Europe can have two teams in the same group.

WHO IS IN EACH POT?

FIFA changed how it allocates teams in the draw and now uses rankings alone for all four pots.

At previous World Cups, only Pot 1 was for seeded teams, and the other three pots were decided by a geographic­al spread.

October FIFA ranking in brackets: Pot 1: Russia (65), Germany (1), Brazil (2), Portugal (3), Argentina (4), Belgium (5), Poland (6), France (7). Pot 2: Spain (8), Peru (10), Switzerlan­d (11), England (12), Colombia (13), Mexico (16), Uruguay (17), Croatia (18). Pot 3: Denmark (19), Iceland (21), Costa Rica (22), Sweden (25), Tunisia (28), Egypt (30), Senegal (32), Iran (34). Pot 4: Serbia (38), Nigeria (41), Australia (43), Japan (44), Morocco (48), Panama (49), South Korea (62), Saudi Arabia (63).

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