The first sanctions of the International Federation, Sunday, are considered insufficient by several nations, which still refuse to face the Russians following the invasion of Ukraine.
Three days of silence for a controversial decision. Sunday evening, Fifa finally came out of the woods to join the mobilization initiated by the world of sport once morest the invasion of Ukraine by Russia. The body did not have much choice: Sbornaïa is still in the running to take part in the next World Cup in Qatar next November, organized by Fifa. And the pressures in favor of a banning of the selection multiplied during the weekend. Poland, the Czech Republic and Sweden have in turn announced that they do not want to face Russia at the end of March, during the play-off matches for the 2022 World Cup.
But in its decisions, taken unanimously by the office of its Council, FIFA is careful for the moment to exclude Russia. She prefers to impose on him to evolve under a neutral banner during the next competitions. On the same principle as during the last two editions of the Olympic Games, this time decked out with the name of “Russian Football Federation”, without singing a Russian anthem or waving a Russian flag. As for the Russians’ home matches, they will also have to take place “on neutral ground”, writes Fifa without defining what that may mean.
“Potential exclusion from competitions”
A decision “totally unacceptablefumes Poland through its president of the Polish Football Federation, Cezary Kulesza. We are not interested in participating in this match of appearances. The Polish national team will NOT PLAY once morest Russia, regardless of the name of the team»he reacted.
Position shared by the Czech and Swedish federations: both assure that they intend to maintain their refusal to face the Russians at the end of March. The Swedish Football Federation (SvFF) said to herself “disappointed” most “determined to continue working with other federations to cancel Russia’s matches in the upcoming World Cup qualifiersensures the instance, which “cannot watch in silence and not act when countries are attacked in a completely unjust way”.
Poland must challenge Russia on March 24 in the 2022 World Cup play-offs. This might be the case with Sweden or the Czech Republic five days later if the Russians qualify for the final play-off confrontation. Faced with the outcry, Fifa says it has “engaged in dialogue” with these three federations, and suggests that it reserved the right to take further action. She evokes the hypothesis of a Russian exclusion, assuring that she would continue to “determine possible sanctions, including a potential exclusion from competitions, which will be applied in the near future if the situation does not improve quickly”. A perspective that is the subject of “advanced discussions” this Monday according to a source with knowledge of the discussions, quoted by AFP.
On Sunday, the president of the powerful French federation, that of the 2018 world champions, was one of the first to say he was in favor of this outcome. “The world of sport, and in particular football, cannot remain neutral. I will certainly not oppose an exclusion of Russia” launched in an interview at Parisian Noël Le Graët, president of the French Football Federation (FFF), also a member of the FIFA Council. Later that same evening, the FA announced that they would boycott all scheduled matches once morest Russia in “near future”.
Fifa has little choice: either it follows the position of exclusion from the World Cup, shared by many other selections, even if it means depriving Russian players of a chance to compete in the biggest football competition next November, or it will have to record the withdrawal of the Polish, Swedish and Czech selections for the March play-offs and de facto qualify Russia. The second option would complete the damage to the already lackluster image of the body with the public. “All national teams should follow our example, nods Poland goalkeeper Wojciech Szczesny on DAZN channel’s microphone, like that we will see if Fifa has the balls to give a place to the World Cup to Russia by default. I do not think so.”