Russian Lawmaker Aims to Make Football Hooliganism a Sport

Russian Lawmaker Aims to Make Football Hooliganism a Sport
Russian supporters attack an England fan at the end of the Euro 2016 Group B soccer match between England and Russia, at the Velodrome stadium in Marseille, France on June 11, 2016. A Russian lawmaker has proposed an unorthodox solution to the country’s football hooliganism woes ahead of next year’s World Cup, legalize it and turn it into a spectator sport. AP Photo/Thanassis Stavrakis, File
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MOSCOW—A Russian lawmaker has proposed an unorthodox solution to the country’s problems with soccer hooliganism ahead of next year’s World Cup—legalize it and make it a spectator sport.

Organized groups of Russian fans, many with martial arts training, fought English fans on the streets of Marseille during last year’s European Championship.

That inspired Igor Lebedev, who sits in the Russian parliament, to draw up rules for what he calls “draka,” the Russian word for “fight”—20 fighters on each side, unarmed, in an arena.

In a statement on the website of the nationalist LDPR party, Lebedev said organized brawls “could turn fans’ aggression in a peaceful direction.” He also claimed it would serve as an “example” for English fans, who he characterized as undisciplined louts and poor fighters.

“Russia would be a pioneer in a new sport,” said Lebedev, who also suggested fights between different fan groups could draw crowds of thousands. “English fans arrive, for example, and start picking fights. And they get the answer—challenge accepted. A meeting in a stadium at a set time.”

Some fan groups in Russia already hold illicit fights along similar lines, typically pre-arranged mass brawls in rural locations, away from police. A Russian Premier League game on Saturday between CSKA Moscow and Zenit St. Petersburg was marred by clashes between small groups of rival fans who fought one another and tried to break through a security fence.

CSKA Moscow fans attack a Zenit fan (C) during the national championship soccer match between CSKA Moscow and Zenit in Moscow, Russia, on March 4, 2017. (AP Photo/Tikhon Danin)
CSKA Moscow fans attack a Zenit fan (C) during the national championship soccer match between CSKA Moscow and Zenit in Moscow, Russia, on March 4, 2017. AP Photo/Tikhon Danin