The man who left Russia to start a football career… in Syria

Eljaish Sports Club.

Eljaish Sports Club.

Press Photo
Twenty-six-year-old Basel Abdulfattah was born and lived all his life in Russia. However, in January 2016, he decided to move to his father's homeland, Syria. In interviews with the Russian media, the defender talked about his new life in a country torn by civil war.

Back in January 2016, Russia saw what was perhaps the most bizarre soccer transfer of recent years. It had nothing to do with fat contracts with stars like Hulk or Samuel Eto'o. Former Russian youth team player Basel Abdulfattah, who played for second-division Russian club Dynamo St. Petersburg, joined Al-Jaish in Damascus.

On the one hand, the player's decision is understandable. His father is a Syrian, who arrived in Russia in the 1980s to study engineering, married a Russian woman and settled in his new homeland.

However, despite his Syrian roots, Abdulfattah describes himself as Russian; he was born in St. Petersburg, grew up as an ordinary Russian child, and hardly speaks Arabic. Additionally, given the political context, his decision to move to war-torn Syria looks rather unusual.

BaselBasel Abdoulfattakh. Source: PhotoXPress 

From Russian grassroots football to the Syria national team

Abdulfattah says that his main motivation was the offer to play for the Syrian national football team. Despite graduating from the youth academy of Zenit St. Petersburg, one of the strongest teams in Russia, Abdulfattah gave up trying to break into the Russian national youth team, and has played for a number of the country's second-tier clubs in recent years.

"The Syrian option initially emerged two or three years ago," Abdulfattah told the news website R-Sport.

"At that time, I was contacted by the Syria national team's coach Anas Makhlouf. I talked with him, he asked me if I saw myself in the team. My father and I discussed it – Why not turn my football career a full 360 degrees? The first time my father and I went to Syria in summer 2015, not knowing what would come of this."

However, his citizenship application was stalled, and, in the summer of 2015, Abdulfattah could not find a job. For six months, he had to keep in shape on his own. But in January 2016, Abdulfattah was invited to join Al-Jaish – one of the strongest clubs in Syria.

Abdulfattah says that life in Damascus has changed for the better since the summer of 2015.

"When we were flying for the first time, it was a little scary. A lot of checkpoints, all the people in army uniform, document checks everywhere – You couldn't go anywhere without a passport. The situation was really tense. Warplanes flew over Damascus every 10 minutes, there was shooting, we heard explosions,” he told Russian website sports.ru.

Damascus is bustling with life

However, he added, the situation has changed since Russia launched its air campaign in Syria. “There are neither planes nor shooting now,” he said. Absolute silence."

"Times are hard, half the country is under martial law," he told R-Sport. "But two cities – Latakia and Damascus – are absolutely safe. Syrians are very positive people, always happy to joke and laugh. Guys from the club invited us to tea, showed us the city.”

According to Abdulfattah, “life is flourishing” in the center of Damascus, which he compares to a “modern European city.”

Military football

There are 20 teams competing in the Syrian championship. Matches are now held only in Latakia and Damascus. "There are few people at the stadiums," Abdulfattah told sports.ru.

"Although I saw pre-war photographs, and it was a glorious spectacle: great pitches, full stands. For example, they built a stadium for 75,000 people in Aleppo in 2007, this is the largest stadium in the Middle East and Asia's third. Unfortunately, you can't play there now."

Abdulfattah's club – Al-Jaish – is owned by the Syrian army.

"Even the training field is located at a military base,” he said. “From time to time, the club's chiefs come – people in uniform, the generals."

Abdulfattah has concluded a contract with Al-Jaish until June. The player has no specific plans for what's next. But he has serious hopes of playing for the Syrian team.

"I trained with the team in the fall," he told R-Sport. "Half of the team plays in other Asian countries – the UAE, Qatar. Syrian players are in great demand because the local school is believed to be the strongest in Asia, along with Iran."

If the Syrian national team qualifies for the World Cup, Abdulfattah could be seen at the tournament in Russia in 2018.

 

Based on articles published by sports.ru and R-Sport.

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