Ukraine v Italy

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Expectations were high but ultimately the Ukraine team were beaten fair and square by the Italians. The main problem was that the whole team is built up towards Schevchenko but ultimately he is just not good enough. Scheva may have scored a goal in this match but his performance was lacklustre in part due to the fact that he is not match fit and carrying a bit tooooo much weight.

As for atmosphere though, the players could not knock the support they got – every seat had a Ukrainian flag and these were waved furiously throughout.  I even felt a lump in my throat when they played the National Anthem. Must stop chewing gum.

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Ukrainian Roulette

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I have driven on some pretty ropey roads. Komasi to Accra with monkeys hanging on your wing-mirror; The St Bernard Pass with Fiats three abreast trying to overtake a coach, but nothing quite compares to the Kiev – Kharkov road. It lulls you into a false sense of security – dual carriageway till the golden domes disappear in your rear view mirow and then about 500Km of gently undulating straight single lanes interspersed with the odd village and police radar gun team.Along the route small crosses and flowers – most fresh – serve as a continual reminder that air travel is much safer. 30 minutes may pass without incident then…the 50kph lorry belching smoke ahead of you moves out to overtake a 15kph tractor. A convoy of blacked-out jeeps approaches you – headlights blazing. At the crossroads 200m ahead, two oil tankers pull out crossing each other. Behind you a subaru flashes and moves to overtake. You are doing 150kph. You brake slightly. the subaru overtakes, brakes at the overtaking lorry and cuts inside to see the tractor, brakes and swerves onto the hard shoulder throwing up dust. The two tankers pass and like opening curtains, a gap appears through which the jeeps emerge at full tilt. You drop a gear, clear the tractor and lorry squeeze in as the jeeps motor past and wait for the next incident some 20 minutes later: 2 4x4s have collided head on and it is not a pretty sight.

The police are there having a cigarette.

Elsewhere along the route their colleagues are raking in 20 UAH “fines” as you were clearly going 96 kph – it says on his radar gun. Production of a UK driving license causes raised eyebrows and a hesitancy to require the fine – I pass unscathed.

This time.

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Visa Bill

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Apologies for a prolonged absence but moving apartment and life in general seems to have taken precedence over writing about it. Anyway – I’m back and have decided to fan the blog flames and see what sparks. Just come back from Kharkov and kind of enjoyed the place. It is built on a monumental soviet scale (see statue above and note just how large it is !)- very wide roads and no real centre so it tends to sprawl. It has a history of chemicals and aeronautics but now has a growing student population – don’t know where they end up with their degrees but that is a typical ukrainian problem – bad wages, fantastic resources and no political direction. Aside from bar- room politics I took in the largest square in Europe which was packed with at least 20,000+ people to see a concert of the great and good – and all to celebrate the city’s liberation at the ned of the war. Ukraine Independence Day was the following day – so there will have been a few headaches.

Whilst in Kharkov (pronounce it Hike-off and see the smiles from the pro-Russkies who don’t like the soft Ukrainian Harkiv pronounciation) took a trip to the border to get my passport stamped. You need to leave the country every 3 months and my time had come. Fearful of being kept in Russia for some technicality I decided to skip the normal Checkpoint Charlie routine and just offer some financial recognition to the border guards for a stamp well-stamped. I do get myself into a pickle sometimes.

All was going well – 50 of Uncle Sams finest had been dropped and I’d been stamped out (ummm yes can’t seem to find the immigration card) and then stamped in (with new immigration card) until I had to cross back into Ukraine from the Russian side (without actually having gone there if you get my drift) but as I took my steps back through into Ukraine … clenched my fists and was about to burst into a small jig (a small horse-drawn carriage that is quicker than a Lada) I was called back – all the way back.

A slow dreading plod in 40 degrees heat across no man’s land – about 500 metres of nerves. Michael Caine I ain’t.

Sweating? Just the slight bead of perspiration on the brow (shirt was wringing wet).

Turns out the guard had given me their copy of my card by mistake. We swapped them over and I took the long walk back again. One day my visa will arrive – otherwise – I have to leave again and return before 3 months time.

Still, beats hanging under a lorry.

Next entry – it has to be the road back to Kiev… to follow shortly

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