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The Parvenus of Pridnestrovia


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  • 2 weeks later...

The most surprising thing about Transdniestria is that La Sturgeon has not honoured it with a State Visit.

She hasn't even engineered a motion of support for its struggle for self determination in the Holyrood wind farm.

She's an Ayrshire wummin, so surely Moscow -if not Dreghorn itself- could be 'twinned' with Tiraspol? 

 

Anyhow, below is a match report from The Guardian, and, below that, further background on Club and Country, from The Times.

 

Last night Sheriff Tiraspol beat Real Madrid 2-1 at the Bernabeu.

 

 

‘Everything we did turned out badly’: Real Madrid reeling after Sheriff shock

Manager Carlo Ancelotti says stunning 2-1 loss was undeserved

Sheriff’s Yuriy Vernydub hits out at comments from Dirk Kuyt

Reuters and Guardian sport

Wed 29 Sep 2021 09.13 BST

 

https://www.theguardian.com/football/2021/sep/29/everything-we-did-turned-out-badly-real-madrid-reeling-after-sheriff-tiraspol-shock-champions-league

 

Real Madrid’s coach, Carlo Ancelotti, struggled to explain how his side were beaten 2-1 at home by rank outsiders Sheriff Tiraspol in the Champions League on Tuesday after dominating every aspect of the match with the exception of the scoreline.

Meanwhile his opposite number, Yuriy Vernydub, hit out at Dirk Kuyt, who had said while working as a pundit on Dutch TV last month that “teams like Sheriff Tiraspol have nothing to do with the Champions League”.

Luxembourg international midfielder Sébastien Thill scored an outstanding late half-volley to snatch an unlikely victory at the Bernabéu for Sheriff, who had reached the Champions League group stage for the first time this season after winning four qualifying rounds.

 

Sheriff took the lead against the run of play with a header from Jasurbek Yakhshiboev before Karim Benzema equalised for the 13-times European champions with a second-half penalty. Real had 30 shots on goal and 11 on target while keeping 67% of possession and winning 13

 corners while the Moldovan side had only four attempts, scoring two of their three shots on target – including Thill’s winner – and failing to win a single corner

“Everything went well for them while everything we did turned out badly,” Ancelotti said after his side’s first defeat of the season. “More than worried we are sad. We played with intensity and commitment but lost due to the finest details. The team played well, we could have been sharper in the area but it’s difficult to explain what happened. The small details cost us the game and we should learn from that in the future. But this was a defeat we did not deserve.”

Vernydub said victory was “so emotional” and went on to reference Kuyt’s comments, made on RTL 7 last month. “We are a real team … it’s our place and we proved it,” Vernydub said. “It was a great player, Dirk Kuyt, who said there is no place in the Champions League for Sheriff. So I’m very happy to destroy his perfect world.”

Sheriff, who were founded in 1997, are top of Group D with six points, having beaten Shakhtar Donetsk 2-0 in their opening game. Their Peruvian defender Gustavo Dulanto said: “I dreamed of winning in the Bernabéu, I have always followed Madrid, they are the most successful team in the Champions League, so to beat them at home is a huge achievement.

“There’s still a long way to go and we can’t relax because there’s no logic in football, as today’s result shows. We came here with the knife between our teeth but we can only look forward to the next game.”

 

Sheriff’s captain, Frank Castañeda, added that his side had fancied their chances before kick-off: “We knew we could win here and before the game we had it in our heads that we could, and as captain I tried to motivate the team and tell them we could do it because this is football. Real Madrid is an historic team but on the pitch it’s 11 players versus 11 and we came here to get the victory and got it.”

Match-winner Thill said: “We’re so happy today. We played a really good game. The side were so brave with how we played and luckily enough I was able to score a bit of a stunner.”

 

 

 

Last night Sheriff Tiraspol beat Real Madrid 2-1 at the Bernabeu. This article, detailing their rise to prominence, first appeared on September 14, before their Champions League debut.

 

 

 

FOOTBALL

Sheriff Tiraspol: The conquerers of Real Madrid from ‘the most lawless place in Europe’

The Moldovan champions’ rise looks like a fairy tale — but Sheriff are bankrolled by an all-powerful company in a breakaway state where the Soviet Union lives on

Robert O’Connor

Tuesday September 14 2021, 5.00pm, The Times

 

https://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/sheriff-tiraspol-the-champions-league-debutants-who-are-above-the-law-36wwsdtnm

 

Last night Sheriff Tiraspol beat Real Madrid 2-1 at the Bernabeu. This article, detailing their rise to prominence, first appeared on September 14, before their Champions League debut.

Visitors to Transnistria to play Sheriff Tiraspol in this season’s Champions League won’t have seen anything quite like it. In the Russian-backed separatist enclave at Moldova’s eastern border, an archaic land where the Soviet Union seems never quite to have gone away, Sheriff’s owners have dreamt of a moment like this.

When the story began, hardly anybody was watching. The first game of this European run, a 4-0 qualifying win away to the Albanian side Teuta, was played the same night England beat Denmark in the Euro 2020 semi-final at Wembley.

 

There followed victories against the champions of Armenia and Serbia, before in August they stunned Croatia’s Dinamo Zagreb, conquerors of Tottenham last season, 3-0 on aggregate to reach the group stage.

It reads like a fairytale money can’t buy: an underdog club, hailing from one of Europe’s most impoverished countries, beats the odds to book a visit from Real Madrid in the Champions League.

Except that Sheriff’s slice of history has come at an astronomical cost, bankrolled by a corporation so vast and powerful that the territory where it operates is only half-jokingly described as “the republic of Sheriff”.

“The Moldovan league is at absolute zero, except for Sheriff,” says Ivan Testemitanu, the former Moldova and Sheriff midfielder. “Why? Because they can buy anything. They can buy Ronaldo and Messi if they want. They have their own laws over there.”

Legally, the territory of Transnistria is part of Moldova. But since gaining independence from the USSR in 1991, the government in Chisinau has never been in control of this sliver of land to the east of the Dniester river, the natural border that marks the political divide.

 

Instead, Russian rubles and soldiers, nominally stationed as peacekeepers, prop up a separatist government in the capital Tiraspol. Operating as a de facto state, outside the reach and conventions of international law, has had its advantages for those who exercise power.

A lack of transparency and accountability has helped criminal elements turn Transnistria into what has been described as the most lawless place in Europe, a smugglers’ paradise where anything can be bought or sold and no paper trail is left. In the words of a diplomat who observed the state’s formation in the early 1990s, working for the Organisation for Security and Co-operation in Europe: “Whatever it is that exists there, it isn’t a subject of international law, it’s some kind of nightmarish Disneyland.”

The Sheriff company that bears the football club’s name was founded in 1993, ostensibly as a charitable organisation to support veterans of the Soviet security services. Yet these pious intentions concealed a more materialistic purpose: under the direction of a former KGB agent, Viktor Gushan, Sheriff had soon established an efficient operation as a smuggling ring, industrialising and professionalising the small-time couriers of contraband that had taken advantage of the absence of customs checks at the Transnistria-Ukraine border.

The strategic placing of Tiraspol, on the road from the Ukrainian Black Sea port of Odessa up to Chisinau and onwards to western Europe, has made a perfect storm of Transnistria’s position outside of international law. In the decades that have followed, everything from alcohol and cigarettes to weapons said to be bound for the arsenals of Africa’s warlords have passed through Transnistria, much of it allegedly via the hands of Sheriff’s operatives.

Today, the Sheriff company dominates Transnistria. Beginning with the supermarket chain selling the produce brought into the republic customs-free, the corporation is now the biggest operator in banking, telecoms, the media and even politics: the political party Obnovlenie (“Renewal”), founded and controlled by Sheriff, won a landslide majority in the state’s parliamentary elections in December. With Transnistria’s president, Vadim Krasnoselsky, elected in 2016 with Sheriff’s financial support, also a close ally, the company’s grip on the republic is complete.

Sheriff branched into football slightly ahead of the trend among oligarchs, in 1996. Promoted to the Moldovan Divizia Nationala two years later, the team began hoovering up titles, 19 of them since 2000. A glistening new stadium and training complex was opened in 2002 at a cost of about $200 million, a level of investment the rest of Moldovan football can only dream of.

The club’s business model is similar to the template used by the Ukrainian giants Shakhtar Donetsk, who Sheriff will beat 2-0 in their Champions League opener. Imports from Africa and South America are recruited in the hope of bulking up their sell-on value and moving them on to teams in western Europe, leaving little to no room for homegrown players from either bank of the Dniester.

The starting XI that defeated Dinamo in the play-off featured players from Colombia, Mali, Peru, Trinidad & Tobago and Guinea, yet only one, the naturalised Brazilian Henrique Luvannor, was eligible to play for Moldova. He left Sheriff for the UAE Pro-League days later.

“Sheriff control all of football in Moldova,” says Testemitanu. “If they want to change any rules, they just call up the president of the football federation. The people in charge at Sheriff decide everything. It used to be a rule that there had to be six local players in Moldovan teams. Last year, Sheriff had it changed.”

Sheriff may be a Transnistrian club representing Moldova, but the reality is that its fortunes are linked to neither. On both banks of the Dniester, football is struggling to survive, and is in desperate need of investment that isn’t coming.

 

 

The Vladimir Lenin statue in Tiraspol. The city is a strong reminder of the Soviet past

The Vladimir Lenin statue in Tiraspol. The city is a strong reminder of the Soviet past

 

Moldova’s most famous club of the Soviet era, Zimbru Chisinau, have for years teetered on the edge of ruin, while most teams in the Divizia Nationala are drowning in debt. Football in Transnistria fares little better.

“Do you know the budget of Manchester United?” asks Pavel Prokudin, the former prime minister and present head of Transnistria’s football federation. “The entire state budget for Transnistria is around $330 million. From that we have to find money for stadiums and infrastructure, but the welfare of the people is the priority, not football.” The Soviet-era Republican Stadium, opposite the city’s trashy Hotel Sofia, is a crumbling concrete wreck, proof of Prokudin’s tiny budget.

Meanwhile, “the republic of Sheriff” continues to grow its football brand. The Sheriff Stadium complex sits way out of town on Karl Liebknecht street, along the highway that leads to the military checkpoint with Moldova proper. The club’s sprawling grounds resemble a glistening modern metropolis, while the city that shares its name trails in the dust.

Today, not much remains in Tiraspol of a time before communism. A statue of the city’s founder, the Russian field marshall Alexander Suvorov, towers on horseback over the eponymous Suvorov Square in the centre, a reminder of the city’s imperial origins, while in the summer, the Dniester attracts sunbathers to its banks in their hundreds as it wends its way serenely through the city. Yet all over Tiraspol, an imprint of Soviet life remains.

Transnistria still flies the flag of the old Moldovan Soviet Republic, green and red with a conspicuous hammer and sickle glistening in one corner. Cast in stone, Lenin watches over the Supreme Soviet building on 25 Oktyabrya Prospekt, the street named to commemorate the date in 1917 when communism came to power in Russia. These anachronisms can still be found in cities across the former USSR, but what sets Tiraspol apart is its authentic Soviet austerity.

“We may be on a capitalist path nowadays, but we still feel respectful of Soviet times,” says Prokudin. “That’s why you see what you see in the streets. We respect our history and our Russian heritage.”

 

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