Sports | soccer Russian Soccer's No. 1 Fan? The Kremlin Russian nationalism plays out on the pitch, and politicians pay out off it By Katherine Thompson Posted Jun 26, 2008 8:51 AM CDT Copied From left, Russia's Vasili Berezutski, Sergei Semak, Konstantin Zyryanov and Dmitri Torbinski exercise during a training session of the Russian national team in Vienna, Austria, Wednesday, June 25. (AP Photo/Sergey Ponomarev) Russia's soccer team takes the field against Spain today in the Euro 2008 quarterfinals with an unlikely and ardent cheering section—the Kremlin. The team, resurging after years in decline, can thank the hefty monetary backing of an oil magnate afraid to run afoul of Moscow. And, as Josh Patashnik writes in the New Republic, "This is Vladimir Putin's team through and through." Only one team member plays for a non-Russian team during the regular season, a departure from the typical European soccer diaspora. Star striker Andrei Arshavin "wants to play for Barcelona, but I don't think they can pay him more than he earns now," says Russia's sports minister. And who pays Arshavin's $100,000 per week salary? State-owned Gazprom. Read These Next Man was planning cremation for his sister, who turned out to be alive. Mom allegedly passed 31 hospitals on road trip as daughter was dying. 'Putin wants legal recognition to what he has stolen.' Pentagon opens rare investigation into Sen. Mark Kelly. Report an error