[俄超] 強勢崛起的聯賽
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/sport/football/competitions/european-
championships-2012/8740731/Russia-v-Republic-of-Ireland-vast-riches-
propelling-the-unstoppable-rise-of-the-Russian-Premier-League.html
Russia v Republic of Ireland: vast riches propelling the unstoppable rise
of the Russian Premier League
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Twenty years after the collapse of the Soviet Union, Moscow's attempts to
calm troubled regions and stem the bloody violence in the Caucasus are now
being played out on the football pitch and through the images of Samuel
Eto'o, Roberto Carlos and the next tranche of iconic players to be tempted
by the millions on offer in the Russian Premier League.
By Mark Ogden, Moscow, 11:00PM BST 04 Sep 2011
------
Regardless of whether Russia's national team takes control of its Euro
2012 qualifying ambitions by defeating the Republic of Ireland at the
Luzhniki Stadium on Tuesday, football in Russia has become more than just
a game.
It has become a political football in the truest sense. Winning the race
to host the 2018 World Cup was a victory on the global stage for prime
minister Vladimir Putin, but the power of football is now being harnessed,
from Siberia to Chechnya, Tatarstan to Dagestan, with oligarchs, state
governments and powerful companies all 'encouraged' to channel their
wealth into clubs across the country.
Eto'o's remarkable transfer from Inter Milan to Anzhi Makhachkala last
month — a move that makes the Cameroon forward the world's best-paid
footballer with a salary of £350,000 a week — has lifted the lid on the
power-play now being directed by the federal government.
The recent emergence of Anzhi (Dagestan), Terek Grozny (Chechnya) and
Rubin Kazan (Tatarstan) has been fuelled by vast investment from regional
governments, with Anzhi also benefiting from the £5.5 billion fortune of
owner Suleiman Kerimov, who is bank-rolling the salaries of Eto'o, Carlos
and the former Chelsea defender Yuri Zhirkov.
Kazan's title successes in 2008 and 2009 were funded by the state
government in order to claim regional pride through the achievements of a
previously unheralded football team.
The perception within the Kremlin that natives will be less restless if
their regional identity can be attached to a successful football team has
yet to prove wholly successful, however.
Such is the delicate situation in Chechnya and Dagestan, where separatist
movements remain linked to terrorism, both Terek and Anzhi base their
squads away from their volatile home cities.
Terek's players live and train 150 miles away, while Eto'o and his Anzhi
team-mates are based in Moscow, only taking the 900-mile flight to
Makhachkala for home fixtures.
Ireland midfielder Aiden McGeady, who has spent the past year with
Russia's biggest club, Spartak Moscow, admits that trips to the Caucasus
are rarely trouble-free for clubs from the capital.
“During a game against Anzhi, we had a corner and I was making my way up
that side of the pitch and there was a big riot,” McGeady said. “I saw
the Anzhi fans running up to the Spartak fans, tearing out seats and
throwing them at the our supporters.
“It's a different world out there, but my team-mates were telling me that
it's normal for teams in that region.”
Crowd violence and racism remain a stain on the Russian game, one which
the authorities are determined to eradicate as the country prepares to
host the 2014 Winter Olympics at Sochi. By the time the World Cup arrives
in 2018, racism is expected to be a distant memory.
Last year, Lokomotiv Moscow fans unfurled a banner showing a banana
directed at Nigerian striker Peter Odemwingie, now with West Bromwich,
while in March, Zenit St Petersburg were fined £6,000 after one of their
fans offered a banana to Carlos at a pre-match ceremony.
Brazilian defender Carlos threatened to leave Russia earlier this summer
when he walked off the pitch in protest after a banana was thrown from the
crowd during a game against Krylya Sovetov.
Carlos earns £4.2 million a year at Anzhi, with Zhirkov benefiting from
similar generosity from owner Kerimov. The big wages are not restricted to
newly-rich clubs from the regions, however.
Zenit, funded by Russia's biggest company, Gazprom, are believed to have
hired former Roma coach Luciano Spalletti on a £4 million a year
contract, while their star player Aleksandr Kerzhakov earns in excess of
£100,000 a week.
Joey Barton was offered a £100,000-a-week deal by Zenit, a figure made
more attractive by the 13 per cent tax rate applied to footballers in
Russia, before instead leaving Newcastle for Queens Park Rangers. McGeady
left Celtic for a £50,000 a-week package at Spartak.
CSKA Moscow, a club with close connections to Roman Abramovich, also
afford generous salaries for goalkeeper Igor Akinfeev and Japanese
midfielder Keisuke Honda.
But while 60,000 attended Moscow's 'classic' derby between Spartak and
CSKA last week, top-flight fixtures are rarely sold-out, with the
exception of Zenit home games.
Siberian clubs Amkar Perm and Tom Tomsk both face severe financial
difficulties, while Moscow has endured a five-year wait for the league
title to return from the provinces.
Viewing figures for ESPN's weekly broadcast of live action from the RPL
are growing, however, and the presence of Eto'o and others is only likely
to see the profile of Russian football grow.
Whether the game will achieve what the politicians have failed to pull off
by ensuring peace and prosperity beyond Moscow is another matter, though.
--
http://fanchants.com/football-songs/chelsea-chants/we-all-follow-the-chelsea/
We All Follow The Chelsea, Over land and sea (and Leicester)
We All Follow The Chelsea, Onnnntooo vi-ic-toreee...
--
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