Moscow, July 4
The World Cup joke around Russia is that goalkeeper Igor Akinfeev has the “Foot of God”. Comparisons to the “Hand of God” goal Argentina great Diego Maradona scored against England in 1986 came naturally to Russians enraptured by the unlikely performance of their team.
Akinfeev had already won admiration for stopping two Spain penalties that sent the 2010 champions packing and Russia through to their first World Cup quarterfinal since 1970. But his winning left-foot save against Spain’s Iago Aspas has some in the host nation thinking of the 32-year-old in even more reverential terms.
“Akinfeev himself is a god,” said his childhood coach Pavel Koval. “I think Igor is better than (Spain ‘keeper David) de Gea.”
This level of exuberance is relatively new terrain for a solid player with his share of bad luck. During the 2014 World Cup Akinfeev palmed a soft shot in Russia’s opener against South Korea that somehow arched in over his head. The Russians came back to draw the game but looked miserable walking off the pitch. They were eliminated two games later from what may have been one of the easiest groups in the draw. Akinfeev’s personal misfortune came when he suffered a knee injury while negotiating a lucrative move from CSKA Moscow to England’s Premier League a decade ago.
The deal fell through and the Red Army club captain ended up spending his career in the relative anonymity of the domestic league — one of the modern game’s rare one-team stars.
Akinfeev will get his chance to shine before an even bigger audience when he pulls on his gloves on Saturday in Russia’s most important match in generations. — AFP
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