The Russian Football Federation appealed on Tuesday to have FIFA and UEFA bans on their teams frozen in a fast-track legal process and eventually overturned. (More Football News)
Following Russia’s invasion to Ukraine, the country’s national and club football teams were expelled from international competitions on February 28.
The Russian Football Federation appealed on Tuesday to have FIFA and UEFA bans on their teams frozen in a fast-track legal process and eventually overturned. (More Football News)
Russian national and club teams were expelled from international competitions on February 28 ‘until further notice’ following the country’s invasion of Ukraine. FIFA and UEFA did not specify their legal reasons.
The Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS) said it hoped to give urgent interim verdicts on the appeals within days.
Russia’s men’s national team was scheduled to play Poland on March 24 in a 2022 FIFA World Cup qualifying playoff. Poland have refused to play Russia in the match which was originally to be in Moscow.
The winner of that match would have played the winner of the game between Sweden and the Czech Republic on March 29 with a place at the 2022 FIFA World Cup in Qatar at stake. Those two federations also have refused to play against the Russians.
CAS said the Russian appeals against FIFA and UEFA also involve the Polish, Swedish and Czech football federations, plus several other national federations in Europe.
The football federation of Belarus, Russia’s political and military ally, is listed as a party on UEFA’s side of the case.
The Russian legal strategy of filing separate appeals against soccer’s world and European governing bodies could require broadly similar cases to be heard by two different panels of three CAS judges.
In appeals at CAS, each party chooses one arbitrator from an approved list and the court appoints a lead judge. The choices can be challenged.