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    Red tape ‘holding up’ £2.34billion in aid for Ukraine from sale of Chelsea FC

    RED tape is said to be holding up £2.34billion in aid for Ukraine from the sale of Chelsea FC.The cash was pledged when Roman Abramovich was barred from benefiting from offloading the club.
    The £2.34billion in aid was pledged when Roman Abramovich was barred from benefiting from offloading ChelseaCredit: Getty
    It should have gone to good causes in Ukraine — but has been stuck in a sanctioned account since US tycoon Todd Boehly’s consortium paid £4.25billion for The Blues in May last year.
    The foundation set up to deliver the aid has said it cannot start work until it gets the green light from the UK and EU.
    Acting CEO Mike Penrose, former Unicef UK chief, said: “We’re ready to go and we’re just waiting for approval.
    “There are complexities and delays based around political approval both between the UK and the EU and within the UK.
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    “We won’t make any decisions until we know the money’s coming. We don’t want to end up with a charity but no money.”
    Russian oil magnate Abramovich, 56, was forced to sell Chelsea when he ignored demands to condemn Vladimir Putin’s illegal invasion last year.
    He agreed his share should go to good causes in Ukraine.
    The funds have been earmarked for medical, housing and educational projects.
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    Five months ago, UK Foreign Office minister Leo Docherty told the Commons that he hoped the cash was “on the start of its journey to Ukraine”.
    The Foreign Office declined to comment last night.
    Canada, meanwhile, has said it plans to seize £21million in sanctioned Abramovich assets to divert to reconstruction projects in Ukraine. More

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    Vitaly Merinov dead at 32: Tributes paid to world kickboxing champ after Ukrainian dies on frontline of war with Russia

    KICKBOXING champion Vitaly Merinov has died fighting in Ukraine aged 32.The Ukrainian was killed on the front line in the war with Russia with tributes quickly being paid to the “hero”.
    Vitaly Merinov died on the front line of the war with Russia
    Tributes have poured out for the 32-year-oldCredit: Reuters
    Merinov leaves behind a wife and daughterCredit: Reuters
    He was a national champion in kickboxing
    Merinov coached boxing and MMA
    Merinov died in hospital on March 31 according to the mayor of Ivano-Frankivsk, Ruslan Martsynkiv.
    He said: “During one of the fights, Vitaly received a gunshot wound in his leg. He recovered and returned to the front again and defended Ukraine to the last breath.
    “He has a wife and a two-year-old daughter left. Sincere condolences to the family and loved ones. Eternal memory to the Hero!”
    Merinov is a four-time world champion in kickboxing who is believed to have signed up for the war effort on the first day of the full-scale invasion in February 2022.
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    He reportedly leaves behind a wife and daughter and many have paid tribute to his heroic efforts.
    Two-time Winter Olympian Vladyslav Heraskevych wrote: “Vitaly Merinov died at night from wounds received in battle.
    “Four-time world kickboxing champion Vitaly went to war on the very first day of the full-scale invasion. He defended Ukraine until his last breath.
    “He is survived by his wife and two-year-old daughter. Glory to the hero!”
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    One tribute read: “Vitaly Merinov died fighting for freedom, Justice & democracy. This hero will not be forgotten.”
    Another said: “What a brave person. Going back to the frontline when he was wounded. I know that this isn’t unusual in Ukraine, but still it’s.
    “I’m so sorry for Vitaly’s family and friends’ loss. RIP and glory fallen hero Vitaly Merinov 🙏”
    And a third commented: “Rest in heavenly peace hero Vitaly Merinov. Condolences to the loved ones. We will not forget we shall remember.”
    Merinov was also a national champion in MMA and earned the title of master of sports in boxing.
    Ukraine sports minister Vadym Huttsait revealed the war has claimed the lives of 262 Ukrainian athletes.
    Another boxing champion Maksym Galinichev passed away last week on the front lines – he was a European champion aged 22. More

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    Russia must be stopped from forcing their way back into football and all sport until Putin ends massacre in Ukraine

    RUSSIA must be stopped from forcing their way back into football — simple as that.Vladimir Putin’s attack on Ukraine invalidates a return to humanity and should do so until he removes the troops he unleashed a year ago, who are still causing massive loss of life.
    Putin’s invasion of Ukraine means Russia must stay in the sporting wildernessCredit: AFP
    Gianni Infantino has displayed worrying signs he might let Russia back inCredit: Reuters
    For football fields, read killing fields. Any government with even a glimmer of morality must support Ukraine and their courageous people.
    That goes for all sport. Yet Fifa president Gianni Infantino is showing signs of relenting, while rogue states such as Syria and Iran are cuddling up to the Kremlin.
    Even more embarrassingly, Uefa are also said to be considering lifting the suspension, although Russia were not included in the current Euro qualifiers.
    Maybe both bodies are looking forward to the conclusion of the war, an eventuality that doesn’t seem to have affected Russian considerations so far, and certainly hasn’t Ukraine’s.
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    Why should it? The massacres in Ukraine make nonsense of the late Liverpool manager Bill Shankly’s dry half-joke that people think football much more serious than life and death.
    Five of the Stans of central Asia, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan and Uzbekistan — once possessions of the Russian empire — have already agreed to play their former landlords.
    The whole quintet are in arid, just-about-inhabitable lands so no wonder the Russians weren’t too bothered about handing them independence.
    Like them, Syria and Iran are in Fifa.
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    Indeed, Iran beat Syria in the qualifying rounds for the Qatar World Cup, in which Iran played.
    Fifa have to juggle their politics but it would be a breach of responsibility were they to stand at the touchline of the current war and open competition for the evil Putin’s teams.
    Putin is the rotten core at the heart of Russia.
    But now, incredibly, the IOC are considering whether the country’s athletes should be allowed to compete under the national flag at the Paris Games in 2024.
    Lord Sebastian Coe, president of World  Athletics, is having none of this. He didn’t win two Olympic golds to watch his sport descend into hypocrisy.
    Gianni ‘I feel like a woman’ Infantino has not committed to official Russian entry into the bloated World Cup 2026 in North America.
    Football must have nothing to do with the Kremlin until the bombs stop dropping, the kidnapped children are sent home and the tanks trundle back.
    Awarded the Russian Order of Friendship, it seems that the friendship might have become less friendly, although not enough for Gianni to return the medal pinned on him by Putin himself in 2019.
    Infantino has practically been voted president unanimously (how does he do that?) and continues to see himself as a well-dressed world leader in white shoes with an even whiter reputation.
    He failed though when he tried to silence the bloody sounds of war for the month of the Qatar competition.
    Gross naivety, gross vanity.
    Neither Putin nor Volodymyr Zelensky, Ukraine’s leader, appear to have given a moment of thought to a truce.
    Putin has all the principles of a starving rat and would have used the month to rebuild his stock of weaponry.
    Poor repressed Belarus would have helped and Iran-made drones flown in by the thousand.
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    Ukraine, the excellent Shakhtar Donetsk and others, continue to play to a background of war.
    Football must have nothing to do with the Kremlin until the bombs stop dropping on factories, schools, hospitals and homes, until all the kidnapped children are sent home and until the tanks trundle back over the border. More

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    Boxing legend Klitschko blasts Olympic bosses’ decision to allow Russian athletes to compete under ‘neutral flag’

    WLADIMIR KLITSCHKO has accused Olympic boss Thomas Bach of “serving the interests of Russia” by offering their athletes a way back.Yesterday the International Olympic Committee set out recommendations for sporting bodies to allow individuals, but not teams, from Russia and Belarus to take part in competitions under a neutral flag.
    Wladimir Klitschko accused Olympic boss Thomas Bach of ‘serving the interests of Russia’ by offering their athletes a way backCredit: AFP
    A decision on whether they can compete at Paris 2024 has not yet been taken.
    But former Ukrainian heavyweight boxer Klitschko, who is fighting invading Russian troops in his homeland, slammed the proposals.
    Klitschko, 47, said: “The IOC authorises the athletes to participate in the Olympic Games under ‘neutral flags’. This decision is a false flag.
    “Thomas Bach serves the colours and interests of Russia. This decision contaminates the Olympic spirit and is like this war — a nonsense.”
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    Klistchko’s swipe comes after the sad death of 22-year-old Ukrainian boxer Maksym Galinichev.
    Galinichev, a European amateur champion, was killed in battle against the Russian Army near Kreminna.
    Klitschko, who became super-heavyweight Olympic champion at the 1996 Atlanta Games, also pointedly re-tweeted old images of Bach laughing and talking to Russian President Vladimir Putin and Belarus leader Alexander Lukashenko.
    The IOC’s Executive Board have considered the findings of a four-month consultation.
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    Speaking in Lausanne, IOC president Bach said: “We see that in a number of sports — tennis, cycling, handball, football, ice hockey — it’s already working.
    “You see athletes with a Russian or Belarusian passport participating in competitions, even against Ukrainian athletes.”
    International Olympic Committee president Thomas BachCredit: AFP More

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    Chelsea announce worrying net losses for 2021-22 after ‘extraordinary expenses and loss of revenue’

    CHELSEA have revealed “extraordinary expenses and loss of revenue” as a result of the sanctions imposed on them last year. The UK government placed former Blues owner Roman Abramovich under sanctions in response to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and his links to the country’s president Vladimir Putin.
    Chelsea have announced ‘extraordinary’ losses following sanctions last yearCredit: Getty
    Roman Abramovich has sanctions placed against him last yearCredit: PA
    And the full impact of the sanctions has now been revealed.
    The club announced net losses of £121.3million for the financial year of 2021-22.
    Chelsea were handed a “special license” to continue operating throughout the sanctions.
    However, they were restricted in a number of aspects, including receiving revenue and negotiating contract renewals for players, staff and sponsors.
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    Despite this, the club say they are still set to comply with Premier League and Uefa financial regulations.
    The massive losses come despite turnover increasing to £481.3m from £434.9m the year prior, which was heavily impacted by the Covid-19 pandemic.
    An increase in operating costs including matchday and non-matchday expenses has been attributed as among the causes for the losses.
    A one-off payment of £26.6m to former boss Antonio Conte and his staff was also included in the figures.
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    Worryingly for the club, the sanctions will continue to be felt in the coming years, with Chelsea saying: “Some of these limitations are also expected to have an impact on the financials in the following years due to the long-term impact from restrictions on entering into new contractual arrangements.”
    The 21/22 results show the club made £123m from incoming transfer fees – including Tammy Abraham, Marc Guehi, Fikayo Tomori and Kurt Zouma.
    During the same period, Chelsea spent £118m on incoming players.
    The latest figures do NOT include the club’s recent £600m transfer splurge under new owner Todd Boehly. More

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    England and Ukraine make powerful call for peace in front of cheering Wembley as allies go head-to-head in Euros clash

    ENGLAND players and fans have united to honour Ukraine with a poignant tribute ahead of tonight’s Euro qualifier.Players from both teams called for peace before the match in a powerful show of solidarity, holding a Ukrainian flag with the word “peace” written on it.
    England and Ukraine players called for peace before the match in a powerful show of solidarity
    An Ukrainian fan makes a plea to PM Rishi SunakCredit: AP
    Ukraine players warming up ahead of the gameCredit: PA
    Ukraine supporters cheer and wave their flagsCredit: AFP
    Harry Kane led his Three Lions’ teammates in sending a message of peace following Russia’s invasion of the country.
    Wembley erupted in a sea of blue and yellow as the Ukrainian flag was beamed across the stadium.
    The Ukrainian team draped themselves in flags as they took to the pitch.
    Fans held Ukrainian flags aloft as an emotional rendition of the national anthem echoed through the stadium.
    Read more on the Ukraine war
    Former Blues star and ex-Ukraine boss Andriy Shevchenko shared his moving thoughts on the Ukrainian people before the match kicked off: “In very difficult moments, we have united all together.”
    England’s record goal scorer and team captain Harry Kane said on Channel 4: “It’s been a magical few days after the amazing result the other night. We’ve had a few days to settle down and recover well to look forward to an important game.”
    He emphasised the significance of the match against Ukraine tonight: “It will be a special night. I will have my wife and kids with me walking out to have a picture. We’ve got an important game so I’m trying not to think about it too much.”
    Tribute was also paid to Jack Leslie, who was dropped from the 1925 England squad because of his skin colour.
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    His family was presented with the posthumous honorary England cap.
    England boss Gareth Southgate told Kelly Somers on Channel 4: “We’re clearly hugely respectful of everything that’s happening [in Ukraine]. There’s a lot of tributes, sympathies and support for Ukraine.
    “It is a game of football and there are of course a lot of important things going on in the world but our focus has to remain on this. ”
    More than 1,000 refugees and their host families have been invited to tonight’s game as special guests.
    The Association of Ukrainians in Great Britain (AUGB) joined with the FA to secure the free tickets as a thank you to Brit families who opened their doors to refugees.
    Bear Grylls, who recently travelled to Ukraine to create a documentary on the war and interview Volodymyr Zelensky, also attended the game.
    Around 4,200 Ukraine fans will be cheering their country on when the game kicks off at 5pm.
    It is the first time time the team has played England since Euro 2020 when they lost 4-0.
    The team faced a nightmare 16-hour trip to Wembley for the match after the war closed Ukrainian airspace.
    Some of the starting 11 endured a gruelling 11 hour and 45 minute train journey from Ukraine capital Kyiv to Przemysl in Poland.
    That was followed by a 50-mile, two-hour bus trek to Rzeszow in south-eastern Poland.
    Then came a two hour and nine minute Ryanair flight to London Stansted before another 70-mile, 90-minute bus ride to the team’s Syon Park Hilton hotel.
    Roslan Rotan’s squad have been training Brentford’s base in London since Monday.
    The team have faced a number of other issues – including having to play in empty stadiums and air-raid siren interruptions.
    But Rotan insists any challenges are dwarfed by their “defenders and warriors” facing Russian invaders on the front line.
    Tonight’s match comes just over a year after Vladimir Putin stunned the world when he sent troops across the border.
    His brutal invasion saw hundreds of thousands of Ukrainians displaced as the war raged on.
    An FA spokesman said before the game: “The occasion is an opportunity to show solidarity with the Three Lions’ opponents.
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    “Since the Russian invasion of Ukraine last year, the football world has come together and Sunday’s fixture will welcome some of those displaced from their own country.
    ”Both sets of players will come together before kick-off to send a message of peace.”
    Ukrainian fans watched with banners showing their flag coloursCredit: Getty
    England’s James Maddison warming up ahead of the gameCredit: PA
    The war has raged on for a year now since Putin invaded
    Thousands of Ukrainians have been displaced More

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    We’ll pay our respects to war-torn Ukraine but I’ll worry if we aren’t as motivated as them, says England boss Southgate

    GARETH SOUTHGATE has warned his England stars there is no room for sentiment against war-torn Ukraine at Wembley today.The Three Lions face Ukraine for the first time since the horrific Russian invasion of their country.
    Southgate has ordered his squad to maintain high standardsCredit: Getty
    Ukraine travel to Wembley to face EnglandCredit: Reuters
    And manager Southgate declared: “We all want to pay our respects and show our support — and that’s important.
    “But as soon as they enter the competition, they want to go through and it’s game on. So in a football sense we need to do what we need to do to win the game.”
    Scotland were overwhelmed by the occasion when they lost an emotionally-charged World Cup play-off semi-final last June in Ukraine’s first game since the war began.
    And Southgate yesterday ordered his squad to  maintain the high standards displayed in Thursday’s terrific 2-1  opening Euro 2024 qualifying win in Italy.
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    He insisted: “I would be worried if our players don’t have that same level of motivation Ukraine have.
    “Our job is to qualify, to represent our country with the pride that Ukraine are going to represent their country with.
    “We’ve got to make sure our level of motivation and focus is what it was before the game in Italy. We had a lot of drive for that.
    “Because we were still smarting from the World Cup, we were smarting from previous games against Italy. Now, three days later, we’ve got to get back to that start point.”
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    Ukraine beat Scotland 3-1 in June 2022 — their first competitive match for nearly seven months — although they lost the  play-off final 1-0 to Wales so did not qualify for Qatar.
    England will travel to Ukraine on September 9 but since the war started, all their matches have been played in neighbouring Poland.
    Asked about the Scotland game, Southgate said: “That was difficult. It was the beginning of the war and Hampden had a different feel. But it’s not irrelevant.”
    More than 1,000 Ukrainians — and the families who have welcomed them into their homes across Britain — will attend today’s match.
    Before kick-off both teams will feature in a joint picture with the Ukraine national flag.
    England keeper Jordan Pickford said: “It’s tough for them as a nation. It’s a massive game of football first and foremost in the qualifying group.
    “That is a tough group for us to get out of. Obviously what they are going through is not very good for the nation. For us, it is a big  step to qualify for the Euros in Germany.”
    The last time England played Ukraine was in the Euro 2020 quarter-finals in Rome in July 2021 — nearly eight months before the Russian invasion.
    The Three Lions won 4-0 with two goals from Harry Kane and strikes by Harry Maguire and Jordan Henderson. More

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    Inside war-torn Ukraine team’s horror journey to England with 16-hour coach trip ahead of Wembley clash

    UKRAINE have suffered a nightmare journey to Wembley for today’s Euro qualifier.Manager Roslan Rotan insists any challenges facing his team are dwarfed by their “defenders and warriors” facing Russian invaders on the front line.
    Ukraine and manager Roslan Rotan have faced a nightmare journey to EnglandCredit: Reuters
    Ukraine take on the Three Lions at Wembley on SundayCredit: Getty
    Ukraine had an excruciatingly long journey to get to Wembley to face England
    But the war  — and subsequent closure of Ukrainian airspace — has forced his players to incorporate trains and buses in their journey to England.
    One group of Rotan’s stars, plus medical staff, endured a tiring 11hr 45min train journey from Ukraine capital Kyiv to Przemysl in Poland.
    That was followed by a 50-mile, two-hour bus trek to Rzeszow in south-eastern Poland.
    Then came a 2hr 9min Ryanair flight to London’s Stansted Airport before another 70-mile, 90-minute  bus ride to the team’s Syon Park Hilton hotel.
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    Another group of players and coaching staff left Lviv on a five-hour train journey before meeting up with the first batch at Rzeszow, while the team’s kit men had left Kyiv last Saturday.
    Ukraine do not have a home ground to play in. 
    They must rent stadiums across neighbouring borders to host “home” qualifiers, while away games such as today’s are a logistical nightmare.
    Rotan’s squad have been training at Brentford’s base in London since Monday in order to ease the travelling burden on players already stretched by their club schedules.
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    Arsenal’s Oleksandr Zinchenko looks set to start in LondonCredit: Getty
    There could also be a place in the Ukraine XI for Chelsea’s Mykhailo MudrykCredit: Getty
    Following the “home” leg of their Europa League last-16 tie with Feyenoord, played in Poland this month, Ukrainian Premier League leaders Shakhtar Donetsk had to travel 18 hours to Kryvyi Rih, a city in southern Ukraine, for a league game against Kryvbas KR three days later.
    They then made another 18-hour journey for the away leg four days later, which ended in a record 7-1 defeat.
    Just selecting a squad is hugely challenging for interim boss Rotan, who also looks after the Under-21s and is manager of Oleksandriya, currently fifth in the Ukrainian Premier League.
    His three jobs and logistical chaos mean he cannot travel abroad to watch Ukrainians such as Arsenal’s Oleksandr Zinchenko and Chelsea’s Mykhailo Mudryk.
    While Ukrainian domestic games are often played in front of empty stands and interrupted by air-raid sirens.
    Last August, a game between Rukh and Metalist in Lviv lasted four-and-a-half HOURS as three sirens went off during the game, forcing players into a bunker. More