CAMPAIGN FOR PEACE

Football restarts in Ukraine amid bomb shelters, soldiers and an empty stadium

Shakhtar Donetsk and Metalist Kharkiv drew 0-0 as the Ukraine Premier League restarted six months after it stopped.

In Summary

• President Volodymyr Zelensky encouraged the return of top-flight football as a morale-boosting show of defiance.

• Shakhtar and Metalist’s players, along with the match officials, came out of the tunnel draped in Ukraine flags before lining up to hear an address from President Zelensky on the stadium’s big screen.

Huddersfield Town's Jonathan Hogg, referee Jonathan Moss and Nottingham Forest's Joe Worrall hold a banner in support of Ukraine amid Russia's invasion before the Premier League promotion play-off match
Huddersfield Town's Jonathan Hogg, referee Jonathan Moss and Nottingham Forest's Joe Worrall hold a banner in support of Ukraine amid Russia's invasion before the Premier League promotion play-off match
Image: REUTERS

In an empty Olympic Stadium, with bomb shelters prepared and Russia’s threat still looming, top-flight football returned to Ukraine on Tuesday.

Shakhtar Donetsk and Metalist Kharkiv drew 0-0 as the Ukraine Premier League restarted six months after it stopped.

Initially, matches will only be played in Kyiv, its outskirts and two western provinces near the border.

President Volodymyr Zelensky encouraged the return of top-flight football as a morale-boosting show of defiance.

Russia launched a full-scale invasion of Ukraine on 24 February, a day before the second half of the 2021-22 season was scheduled to begin.

That season was eventually cancelled as the death toll rose on both sides of the conflict. Shakhtar have since played friendlies around the world in an attempt to campaign for peace.

However, their draw against Metalist marked the first day of the domestic 2022-23 season and coincided with Ukraine’s Day of the National Flag.

The possibility of Russia intensifying its attacks has also been raised by a car bombing that killed the daughter of a key ultra-nationalist political figure on the outskirts of Moscow. The symbolism of the match in Kyiv was clear well before kick-off.

Shakhtar and Metalist’s players, along with the match officials, came out of the tunnel draped in Ukraine flags before lining up to hear an address from President Zelensky on the stadium’s big screen.

A Ukrainian soldier ceremonially kicked off the match and some players were in tears before the action got fully underway. Military officials, as will be the case at every game in the new season, were in attendance ready to evacuate players and officials to shelters if air-raid sirens were heard. In fact, the match passed off uninterrupted, with Shakhtar dominating for the most part.

Midfielder Mykhailo Mudryk hit the crossbar for the 13-time champions, but they were also thankful for a superb first-half save from goalkeeper Anatoliy Trubin to keep them from falling beyond.

Players line up before kick-off before Shakhtar Donetsk against Metalist Kharkiv

The players stood for the national anthem and a video address from president Volodymyr Zelensky before the match

Many of Shakhtar’s overseas players have moved away after rules were relaxed over transfers out of Ukraine. However, others, such as Burkina Faso striker Lassina Traore, have stayed.

Brazilian defender Lucas Taylor has even headed the other way, taking his place in the starting line-up after signing on loan from Greek club Paok on Monday.

Kyiv’s Olympic Stadium, which hosted the Euro 2012 final, displayed a large banner in support of Ukraine’s United 24 fundraising drive, with the players warming up in T-shirts dedicated to a new ‘Pitch In For Ukraine’ campaign aimed at sports fans around the world. The 16-team league will restart without Desna Chernihiv and Mariupol FC.

Chernihiv, close to the border with Belarus, has been badly damaged after a siege lasting nearly six weeks, while Mariupol lies in ruins and Russian hands.

“We are living for this moment,” Shakhtar football director and former Croatia right-back Darijo Srna told BBC’s World Football podcast. “These people deserve to be happy. They are not bad, they are not jealous, they don’t want anything that is not theirs. They’re just fighting for themselves, for their children and for their land.”