Russia, it is going to be a big mess”. His nation, Ivory Coast, have not qualified.
Russia’s football governing body has been trying to clean up its act and organisers say they recorded no racist episodes when they hosted the Confederations Cup — the World Cup warmup — this year.
But intertwined with that scourge is hooliganism — a culture deeply rooted due to some clubs’ affiliation with rival wings of the armed forces as well as the inherent ill will between Moscow and the largely neglected provinces.
Hooliganism experts say Russia’s powerful FSB security service has cracked down hard on football gangs and blacklisted many of its leaders as the World Cup nears.
Russia is also using Fan ID cards requiring visitors and locals alike to undergo security checks before they can buy match or travel tickets.
Authorities will want to avoid the scenes in Marseille during Euro 2016 when Russian hooligans beat up England fans, leaving some in hospital.
Perhaps the biggest concern to Russians themselves is the fate of their team — a squad that has so often underperformed despite having Europe’s largest potential talent pool.
Singer Mikhail Boyarsky, a Soviet-era legend who is omnipresent on Russian TV and something of a self-appointed football expert, was blunt.
“I doubt we will get very far,” he told the Sovetsky Sport paper. “There are no miracles in sport.”
Something close to that happened at Euro 2008 when Russia stunned the Dutch and made the semi-finals.
Russia were then thrashed 3-0 by eventual champions Spain and have wallowed in misery ever since.
The current squad’s problem is twofold: they have no stars and must perform under the stern gaze of a black-belt judo president who does not take losing lightly.
“Of course I hope our national team wins.
“I am really looking forward to that,” then-prime minister Putin said after Russia was awarded the right to host The Beautiful Game.