Russia Finally Falls, Leaving a Trail of Admirers and Doubters

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SOCHI, Russia — It was only a couple of minutes to midnight, and Miroslav Romaschenko did not want to leave. As Croatia’s players bounced around in ecstasy and as Russia’s collapsed, disconsolate, onto their backs, the losing team’s assistant manager sat down, frozen in place on the Fisht Stadium’s turf.

He stayed there, staring into space, as the Croatian captain, Luka Modric, leapt into the crowd, celebrating his country’s second-ever World Cup semifinal; as both teams sought out Fyodor Smolov and Mário Fernandes, the two players whose missed penalties brought Russia’s tournament to a close; and as the fans turned to leave, back to the beach, back to the bars, back to reality.

His colleagues tried to rouse him, leaning in close to whisper their commiserations, asking if he wanted a hand up. Gently, he waved the first few entreaties away. When he finally moved, urged to his feet by Alan Dzagoev, the Russian midfielder, he did so slowly, reluctantly. Once he left the field, once the clock ticked 12, once tomorrow came, he knew it would all be over. For all the sorrow and the hurt, he had the look of a man not quite ready for it to end.
Russia 2 Final 2 Croatia
Croatia advances 3–4 on penalty shootout

Mario Fernandes (115')
Denis Cheryshev (31')
Shootout

Quarterfinal

Andrej Kramaric (39')
Domagoj Vida (101')
Shootout

Fedor Smolov
Alan Dzagoev
Mario Fernandes
Sergey Ignashevich
Daler Kuziaev

    

Marcelo Brozovic
Mateo Kovacic
Luka Modric
Domagoj Vida
Ivan Rakitic

Nobody expected Russia to remain at its own party for quite this long. A kind draw in the group stage raised the possibility that the host — on the eve of the tournament ranked just the 70th best team in the world — might avoid the embarrassment so many here feared it might suffer. At best, Stanislav Cherchesov’s team might have expected to survive to the knockout rounds. Aleksandr Samedov, the midfielder, said on the eve of the tournament that all he wanted was to “make the country proud.”

He and his teammates did that, and far, far more. The first weeks of this tournament felt like a reverie for Russia. At the start, as the seemingly endless crowds of Latin American fans swept into the country, an invading force wearing sombreros for helmets, the host seemed unsure of what to make of it all: welcoming, of course, and intrigued, but a little detached.
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By the time Russia had dispatched Saudi Arabia and Egypt in its first two games, however, the mood had shifted: from hope to excitement and on, ever upward, to elation. A loss to Uruguay in the final group game — with qualification in the round of 16 assured — did not dampen it.

When Russia then sent Spain spiraling out of the tournament in a wildly intense round-of-16 game decided by a penalty shootout, hundreds of thousands of jubilant Russian fans, if not more, spilled onto the streets of cities the length and breadth of this vast country.
Photo
Russia goalkeeper Igor Akinfeev, left, sat alone as Croatia players celebrated after scoring the winning penalty on Saturday. Credit Alexander Zemlianichenko/Associated Press

Central Moscow ground to a halt, an impromptu street party that some compared to the celebrations at the end of World War II. From Kaliningrad to Vladivostok, the nation was in thrall. “The entire Russian country is in love with us,” as Cherchesov put it.

The rest of the world benefited, too. Russia’s unforeseen success illuminated the whole tournament. It meant that the host was not just a stage for the carnival, but a continuing participant in it. By knocking out Spain, Russia also did its bit to add to the air of the surreal that, most likely, will be the abiding memory of this World Cup.

That victory was not enough to ensure Russia a place in the planet’s collective heart, however. A note of doubt, remained. It is not unusual for World Cup hosts to exceed expectations, for an average team to be spurred by a partisan crowd and patriotic pride, and advance further into the tournament than its apparent talents might suggest.

Nor is it unusual for such homegrown success to attract raised eyebrows: Witness South Korea’s referee-assisted run to the semifinal in 2002; Argentina’s controversial appearance — and victory — in the final in 1978; even the longstanding South American allegations of a European plot to ease England’s path to glory in 1966.

In Russia’s case, those suspicions came easily. It is only four years, after all, since the Winter Olympics in Sochi, in which a vast state-backed doping program corrupted the results and boosted Russia to the top of the medals standings. Russia played Saturday’s World Cup quarterfinal in the stadium that opened and closed that event; the doping laboratory at the center of the accusations sits just outside the arena’s security zone. It is a restaurant now.

Grigory Rodchenkov, the whistle-blower at the center of the Sochi case, has alleged that he was told to make sure there was “no noise” when it came to failed tests for soccer players.
Photo
Mário Fernandes, who tied the game, 2-2, late in overtime, grimaced after missing Russia’s third penalty in the shootout. Credit Kevin C. Cox/Getty Images

The Mail on Sunday, a British newspaper, has claimed FIFA knew of cover-ups in Russian soccer 18 months before this tournament started. Travis Tygart, chief executive of the United States Anti-Doping Agency, told USA Today in the past week, “We’re fools to believe it’s any different this time around from what happened in Sochi.” Denis Cheryshev, one of Russia’s breakout stars, has been forced to deny taking a growth hormone after his own father — apparently misquoted — suggested he had.

There is no documentary evidence of any wrongdoing, of course. It is all supposition and conjecture. It would all be roundly rejected not only by the Russian authorities but by much of the Russian people, inclined to be suspicious of anything any government tells them.

But in that climate, seeing a Russian team not only surpassing its fans’ wildest expectations, but doing so by running farther than every other team here — and by some considerable distance — it is hardly unreasonable to withhold a little affection for this Russian team, to wonder if what we have seen is real.

That is the price you pay, of course — just as all cyclists are vulnerable to being tarred by the sins of the past, regardless of their own guilt, so too all Russian athletes are now, unfairly, greeted with skepticism. But that is not to say that the culpable always bear the cost alone. Presuming their innocence, they are victims here, too. They are the ones who should be receiving garlands of praise for all they have done, and not dealing with any innuendo and rumor.

From the way they responded to the end of their journey, there is no question that it has all seemed real to the players, and to the staff. They arrived here in Sochi believing, with all of their hearts, that they could sustain this monthlong fantasy for a few more days.

When Cheryshev scored yet another wonderful goal in this dreamlike summer of his, it seemed they might; when Fernandes drew the game back to 2-2, deep into extra time, forcing yet another penalty shootout, the whole stadium seemed to believe fate and fortune were on Russia’s side.

And when, in the middle of the shootout, Dzagoev urged the crowd to make yet more noise, to make itself heard out across the Black Sea and into Turkey, and in the caldron, Mateo Kovacic duly missed his spot kick for Croatia, it seemed that, once more, they were.

The spell, though, could not hold. At some point, even at the best parties, everyone has to go home. Fernandes missed; Domagoj Vida scored for Croatia, and so, too, did Ivan Rakitic. Croatia’s players raced to their fans. Russia’s players sank to the floor. And as the lights came on and the reverie evaporated, Romaschenko sat on the turf, waiting for midnight, hoping to stretch it out just a bit more.
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After a game of highs and lows for Russia fans, the end brought only dejection. Credit Mohamed Messara/EPA, via Shutterstock

England vs. Sweden: Here’s what happened.

Here’s how Croatia beat Russia (by Joel Petterson):
PK: Russia 3, Croatia 4

GOAL CROATIA! Ivan Rakitic scores to send Croatia to the semifinals!

Croatia piles onto Subasic near the endline in jubilation, just feet away from a devastated Akinfeev, still sitting in the goal mouth. The Russian fans are giving their team a muted standing ovation as their dream run as hosts is officially over.
PK: Russia 3, Croatia 3

GOAL RUSSIA! Daler Kuziaev coolly puts in the left corner. It all comes down to this next one.
PK: Russia 2, Croatia 3

GOAL CROATIA! Vida cracks it into the left side, as Akinfeev goes the wrong way.
PK: Russia 2, Croatia 2

GOAL RUSSIA! Sergey Ignashevich powers it into the left side.
PK: Russia 1, Croatia 2

GOAL CROATIA! Luka Modric’s barely sneaks in, as Akinfeev got a hand on it to send it off the inside of the right post and in!
PK: Russia 1, Croatia 1

MISS RUSSIA! Mário Fernandes sends it wide left, smashing it low on the ground!
PK: Russia 1, Croatia 1

SAVE RUSSIA! Akinfeev gets down to his left and stops Mateo Kovacic’s roller!
PK: Russia 1, Croatia 1

GOAL RUSSIA! Alan Dzagoev slides it into the lower right corner.
PK: Russia 0, Croatia 1

Marcelo Brozovic blasts it into the upper right corner, past a diving Akinfeev!
PK: Russia 0, Croatia 0

Smolov tries a chip and it’s saved by Subasic’s hand!
The Goal That Got Us Here
Photo
Mario Fernandes scores Russia’s second goal. Credit Catherine Ivill/Getty Images
120+1’: Final Whistle

Nearly every player on the field doubles over in exhaustion. Penalties will decide the final semifinalist of this World Cup.

The good news for Croatia: Subasic, as we mentioned before, made three saves in Croatia’s penalty shootout against Denmark in the round of 16.

The bad news: he appears to be on one leg, essentially. And Russia’s ‘keeper, Akinfeev, also made two saves in Russia’s penalty win over Spain.
120’: One More Minute

One minute of added time. But at this pace, we could have, like, four goals in that period.
118’: Russia On Edge

The Russian fans, many in tears or near them just a few minutes ago, have roared to life and are all standing for the final couple minutes of stoppage time. And their team is not satisfied with a tie: Roman Zobnin fizzes a low shot that Subasic scrambles to smother on the left side of the goal
115’: GOAL RUSSIA!

Mário Fernandes with a header to save the host nation!

Russia had a free kick from just outside the right corner of the penalty area after Josip Pivaric’s silly handball. The kick is a beautiful one, curled right to Fernandes, and he thunders it into the left side of the net to send Fisht Stadium into absolute delirium.

Fernandes with an equaliser!!! Absolute scenes. #RUSCRO pic.twitter.com/5UVOBQ5hnz
— FIFA World Cup (@WorIdCupUpdates) July 7, 2018 

113’: Subasic, Again

Subasic again comes up big. Smolov tore down the left side, cuts back with a nice move, then plays a dangerous ball right across the face of goal. But Subasic stretches and just gets a hand on it to swat it out of danger. That hamstring seems like it’s just fine.
112’: Great Save by Subasic!

Russia’s corner kick pops out to Daler Kuziaev just outside the area, who rockets a shot back in. But Subasic, a few yards out after trying to punch the ball away, takes it right in the chest and is able to smother it and end the danger.

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