World Cup Story Feed / 世界杯事情流
World Cup Story Feed / 世界杯事情流
On May 30, 2026, at the Puskás Aréna in Budapest, Paris Saint Germain and Arsenal played a 1 1 draw, ending 4 3 in a penalty shootout. Russian goalkeeper Safonov stood on the goal line, making zero saves throughout the match. Even in the penalty shootout, he didn't make a single dive to the ground, yet still lifted the big eared trophy.
On May 30, 2026, at the Puskás Aréna in Budapest, Paris Saint-Germain and Arsenal played to a 1-1 draw, with PSG winning 4-3 on penalties. Russian goalkeeper Matvey Safonov stood on the goal line without making a single save. Even in the penalty shootout, he didn't have to dive once, yet he lifted the Champions League trophy.
He became the first Russian to win the European Cup twice.
That same month, FIFA issued a ticket for Russian football to return to the international stage. There were no broadcast cameras at Wembley, only the slightly empty stands of Baku. The participants were replaced by 15-year-old boys whose voices hadn't even broken yet.
Top national team players achieved glory at the pinnacle of European football without breaking a sweat, while the national youth teams could only head to the Caucasus to play in a newly launched junior tournament. Gianni Infantino had precisely driven this probe into the soft underbelly of European football.
Targeting minors was a shrewd calculation. This U15 World Cup was a tournament FIFA had just approved in December 2025. It didn't touch the broadcast revenue sharing of senior teams, didn't disrupt the qualification rankings for World Cup qualifiers, and sponsorship agreements were still nonexistent. Using a newborn "new toy" as a test, even if the Western European football associations walked out and boycotted, the only losses would be a few youth matches without broadcasters.
Infantino argued to the media that the ban on Russia was "ineffective" and would only breed "more frustration and hatred." UEFA President Aleksander Čeferin quickly followed suit, with a ready-made and politically correct justification: "Young athletes should not be isolated."
Holding the tournament in Azerbaijan was another layer of calculation. Not in Western Europe, not in the core of Eastern Europe. Baku in the Caucasus region was a perfect political buffer zone. Throwing 15-year-old Russian kids there meant that even if Western European football associations cursed under their breath, they couldn't immediately organize a massive wave of withdrawals. Forcing national associations to completely break ties with FIFA over a U15 tournament was too costly and offered too little gain.
This salami-slicing tactic was something Europeans had seen two years earlier.
On September 26, 2023, UEFA announced the reinstatement of Russia's U17 youth teams. But it took only 14 days for that iron plate to shatter Čeferin's knife. Ukraine, England, Sweden, Poland, Latvia, Denmark, Finland, Ireland, Lithuania, and Norway—at least ten national football associations lined up to issue statements of boycott. On October 10, UEFA sheepishly retracted its decision.
That failed attempt revealed the cards: before a full lifting of the ban on senior teams, youth teams serve as litmus tests for politicians to gauge boundaries. Now Infantino, using the same blueprint, wanted to clear a different minefield. From October 22 to 31, 2026, when the first U15 World Cup kicks off, the spectators in the stands will include not only team coaches but also football association bigwigs watching the broadcast feeds to assess the risk of backlash.
The Russians clearly understood this game. Sports Minister Mikhail Degtyarev had already made it clear, predicting that Russian sports would be "fully integrated" into international events by the end of the year.
The senior national team remains firmly on the banned list, unable even to touch the 2026 World Cup qualifiers. But the U15 is just the first step; U17, U19, and U21 teams are lined up behind.
The door hinge has already loosened.