England’s first semi-final since 1990 attracts few fans

Published July 12, 2018
MOSCOW: England fans play with a toy ball during a gathering in the city centre on Wednesday, ahead of the semi-final against Croatia.—Reuters
MOSCOW: England fans play with a toy ball during a gathering in the city centre on Wednesday, ahead of the semi-final against Croatia.—Reuters

MOSCOW: England have not been in the semi-finals of the World Cup since 1990 when they lost on penalties to then West Germany. But when England take on Croatia in Russia later on Wednesday evening, there may only be only a few thousand England supporters present.

Moscow’s Luzhniki Stadium has a capacity of 80,000, so a few thousand England supporters will find themselves heavily outnumbered by Croatian fans as well as Russians who are expected to be in the majority.

With their own bitter memories of past semi-final defeats in majhor events, England and Croatia will be competing for a spot in Sunday’s final against France.

But the dearth of England supporters means chants of football anthem ‘Three Lions’ and its catchy chorus ‘it’s coming home’ may be hard to discern in Moscow despite a last-minute dash to the Russian capital by some supporters.

“It’s a bit slow at the moment,” said Paul Turner from Manchester, sporting a red England jersey in central Moscow.

“We had expected more fans around and a few more bars open, but it’s a bit quiet still,” he added, speaking on the morning of the game.

Fears of violence and racism ahead of the World Cup, bolstered by memories of clashes between England and Russia fans Marseille during the European Championship in France in 2016, may have put supporters off travel to Russia for the tournament.

Numbers have also seemingly been kept down by diplomatic tensions over the poisoning of a Russian former double-agent and his daughter in Salisbury in March, and now the death of a woman who police say was poisoned with the same nerve agent.

“We’ve been having a really good time so far... You feel really safe and secure, as opposed to before we came out, nobody knew what to expect. That’s why there haven’t been many England fans here,” said Mark Jowsey, 46, a butcher from Newcastle.“Moscow is one of the best places I have ever been.”

Reassured by positive reports from the tournament and inspired by the unexpected progress of their team, some England fans have raced to Russia in recent days, with extra match tickets released by organisers FIFA and additional seats provided on Moscow-bound flights from Britain.

But initial signs suggest it hasn’t been enough to make a big difference to the game’s attendance.

“[It’s] because of the cost I think, the costs of flights and things like that. It’s hard on the FIFA website to get tickets. It kept crashing. I was trying and trying for hours. It was a nightmare,” Turner, the fan from Manchester, said.

An estimated 32 million people across Britain are expected to tune in as Gareth Southgate’s team takes the next step in their attempt to repeat the success of 1966.

Such is the feverish atmosphere that the system crashed when London Mayor Sadiq Khan announced 30,000 free tickets would be made available to watch the game in Hyde Park via a ballot.

Police have warned fans to behave, listing more than 300 incidents of ‘significant disorder’ that occurred after Saturday’s victory over Sweden.

However, Mark Roberts, head of football policing for The National Police Chiefs’ Council, is relieved Croatia is not a car producer. He said when England lost to Germany on penalties in the Euro ‘96 semi-finals, fans damaged Volkswagen and Mercedes cars.

Published in Dawn, July 12th, 2018

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