Brazilians flourish in Ukraine mining city
It's hard to imagine a bigger contrast with the beaches of Rio de
Janeiro. The Ukrainian city of Donetsk is surrounded by slagheaps, was
once named Stalino and is a gritty industrial hub dominated by mining.
Yet it is in this unlikely location on the fringes of Europe where
for the last few years a legion of Brazilian footballers has prospered
to turn the local football team, Shakhtar Donetsk, into arguably the
finest in the former Soviet Union.
An entire football team could be formed from the Brazilian players
who have pulled on the orange jersey of The Pitmen in the recent decade.
Backed by the financial clout of club owner Rinat Akhmetov and
inspired by the leadership of Romanian manager Mircea Lucescu, the
Brazilians have now made the club a force to be reckoned with in Europe.
"They all are really talented, hard-working and well-adapted for our
playing style," Akhmetov told AFP. "They all are also full of desire to
keep on progressing. And that means that we are moving in the right
direction." The city, founded by Welsh industrialist John Hughes in the
19th century, is marked by Soviet high-rises and no architectural jewel.
But thanks to Akhmetov it now boasts the Donbass Arena, one of the
finest football grounds in Europe.
Shakhtar won the last edition of the UEFA Cup in 2009 but the club is
now enjoying what could be its best ever season -- outclassing rivals
Dynamo Kiev to head the Ukrainian domestic league and into the last 16
of the Champions League.
'I hardly imagined staying' Current star Fernandinho, who hails from
the balmy climes of Londrina in southern Brazil, remembered the shock of
arriving in Donetsk seven years ago.
"Frankly speaking, when I was a 20-year-old guy and crossed the ocean
to find myself in a completely uncommon country I could hardly imagine
that I would stay here for more than three seasons," he told AFP.
"But it became a rapidly growing club and everything changed quickly
for the better. We achieved some serious results and my opinion about
Shakhtar and its prospects has also changed." "Today I'm 27 and my
current contract with Shakhtar runs until 2016. And it would not be a
sensation if I decided to finish my career here," he added.
Fernandinho acknowledged that money was the main driving force for
young Brazilian players in their transfer moves to Europe.
"Of course money is the main thing," he said. "Financial
opportunities of the European clubs outweigh the means of Brazilian
sides."
"Besides, the advanced western European countries like Italy,
Germany, France attract footballers with their high standards of life,
which are much better than the conditions in Brazil."
He added that though Ukraine has so far failed to reach the level of
the advanced European countries, the club from Donetsk is an oasis of
comfort which allows the footballer to concentrate on the game
completely and to show rapid progress.
--- 'A turning point' Forward Brandao was the first Brazilian player
to come to Shakhtar. He appeared in the Donbass mining belt team two
years before Lucescu became manager in 2004.
AFP
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