The Mercury News Weekend

It takes 16 innings, but Giants out last Marlins, 6-3.

- Kevin Baxter Los Angeles Times The Associated Press contribute­d to this report.

Russia’s Denis Cheryshev celebrates after scoring his side’s second goal during the match against Saudi Arabia in Moscow. The Russians routed the Saudis 5-0 for their first Cup win in 16 years and has the hosts thinking about advancing to the knockout round.

MOSCOW » Russia welcomed the world to its World Cup on Thursday with a quick, energetic opening ceremony that featured a giant fire bird made from crepe paper, English pop singer Robbie Williams flipping off the cameras, a lot of juggling and a speech from President Vladimir Putin.

Russia’s national team then provided a historic encore, blowing out Saudi Arabia 5- 0 in one of the most lopsided World Cup openers ever.

Efforts to downplay the enthusiasm afterward went largely unheeded.

“It’s just the beginning, not the end,” Russian coach Stanislav Chershesov cautioned, through an interprete­r. “We should turn the page and forget this game. We should concentrat­e on the next step.”

Chershesov, widely criticized before the tournament, hadn’t even finished his attempt at levity before he was summoned away from the post-game news conference to take a call.

“It was the head of state who called me with congratula­tions,” a smiling Chershesov said when he returned. “He askedme to share his thanks for the team. And he asked me to keep playing like this.”

That could be tough. No Russian team had played like it did Thursday, at least not in a World Cup. The victory was Russia’s first in the tournament in 16 years, and the margin of victory equaled its greatest ever in a World Cup. A win or draw in either of its final two groupstage games could send the team on to the knockout round for the first time since the breakup of the Soviet Union.

This World Cup is the first to be played in Eastern Europe and Putin, who is hoping the tournament will bring his government internatio­nal prestige, used his speech to celebrate soccer’s power to provide “a unity which cannot be affected by different language, ideology or faith.”

Chershesov’s team didn’t wait long to reward the faith of its long- suffering fans in the crowd of 78,011. Yury Gazinsky scored in the 12th minute, heading in a long, bending right-footed cross from Aleksandr Golovin.

In a midfield suite, squeezed between the stadium’s upper and lower bowls, Mohammed bin Salman, the crown prince of Saudi Arabia, reached across FIFA president Gianni Infantino to congratula­te Putin with a handshake.

WithRussia ranked 70th in the FIFAworld rankings and Saudi Arabia at No. 67, Thursday’s game was the first World Cup opener to feature two countries ranked outside the top 30. While the teams are nearly even in the rankings, they weren’t on the field; Russia dominated.

In the closing minutes of the first half, Denis Cheryshev, who came off the bench when playmaker Alan Dzagoev was forced off with a hamstring injury, doubled the advantage with his first of his two goals. After running onto a through ball from Roman Zobnin in the center of the penalty area, Cheryshev dribbled toward the edge of the sixyard box, and when Saudi defenders Omar Hawsawi and Mohammed Alburayk went for slide tackles at the same time, the Russian flipped the ball over Alburayk and lifted a left- footed shot past goalkeeper Abdullah Almuaiouf.

• Spain can’t wait to get the ball rolling and put its coaching woes in the past. Nothing would be better than a win against European champion Portugal in its World Cup opener to startmovin­g forward after some of the most chaotic days in the national team’s history.

Spain will have new coach Fernando Hierro on the bench today after Julen Lopetegui was fired Wednesday for accepting the Real Madrid coaching job without advising the soccer federation in advance.

Today’s other two games are Egypt versus Uruguay in Group A and Morocco against Iran in Group B.

• A Russian who displayed the rainbow flag during President Putin’s speech at the opening game of the World Cup says he wanted to make LGBT fans more visible. Alexander Agapov, who is president of the Russian LGBT Sports Federation, says “I believe you should practice what you preach and if I’m telling LGBT football fans to be visible, then I should do itmyself.”

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 ?? MATTHIAS SCHRADER — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ??
MATTHIAS SCHRADER — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

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