Ahead of the 2018 World Cup, Russian authorities are cracking down on the hooligan culture in domestic football in a bid to host a smoothly run tournament renowned for dramatic contests on the pitch and not off it.
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Ahead of the World Cup, Russian authorities are cracking down on the hooligan culture in football.
Groups which wreaked havoc two years ago report surveillance and threats from law enforcement.
Leading hooligans from each club face lengthy prison sentences on old or trumped-up charges if there's trouble at the World Cup, even if they aren't personally involved, a Moscow veteran hooligan told SNTV.
''I definitely won't go to any Russian national team games because, if, God forbid, someone does something, I will be the first to be suspected of doing it," said a veteran hooligan speaking under condition of anonymity.
He also said he had flown to Marseille in 2016 specifically to take part in fights with the English fans on the streets and in the stadium at the European Championship.
England's hooligans of the 1980s and 1990s inspired many Russian groups - most still bear English names.
Alexander Shprygin ran a fan group which worked with the government on World Cup planning, and had been photographed with Russian President Vladimir Putin, but he has rapidly fallen from grace.
Shprygin was twice deported from France during the 2016 tournament and two of his organisation's board members were imprisoned in Marseille over the disorder.
He denies any role.
Three months later, Russian police arrested him in a toilet at a conference held by the national football federation, seeking to question him over an earlier brawl in Russia, and dragged him out past waiting media.
His organisation has been dormant since then.
Shprygin told SNTV that his friends in the hardcore fan scene have been summoned by Russia's Federal Security Service, the heir to the Soviet-era KGB, for "preventative conversations" and many want to go abroad during the World Cup.
''They've switched on all of the legal mechanisms and if before when you violated a rule at a stadium you could leave the stadium and forget about it, now even the slightest violation isn't left unnoticed.
"It's the main event of my life I've been dreaming of all my life and waited for.
''And I not only won't be able to attend the opening match, I won't be able to attend any match of the World Cup at all. Of course it's annoying," said Shprygin.
World Cup tickets are worthless without a Russian government-issue "Fan ID".
Applicants are vetted by the Russian security services, who have denied several thousand Russian fans ID to see games at the World Cup and last year's Confederations Cup, according to Oleg Semyonov, formerly a leader of the Spartak Moscow fan scene, who now runs a legal advice hotline for supporters.
Semyonov says authorities are using a big database which has barred people accused of taking part in football-related disorder - including Shprygin, whose ID was cancelled two hours before a Confederations Cup game - but also some with convictions dating back 20 years for minor offences like jaywalking or public drunkenness.
Most top Russian clubs now have so-called "curators" from the security services who work with the fan organisations and have warned them off disorder, Semyonov added.
While Russian-fronted hooliganism is likely to be relatively absent from the World Cup, Semyonov said he still expected clashes between rival groups hailing from other nations.
"I rather expect some incidents between the Serbian and the Croatians, between Poland and Germany and even between Saudi Arabia and Iran because one side are Shia and others are Sunni and under certain circumstances there might be misunderstandings between them,'' predicted Semyonov.
Amid the crackdown, the Russian fan scene is increasingly split.
So-called "ultras" focus on coordinated chants, lighting flares and staging elaborate displays at games, but can defend themselves if needed.
The hardcore fighters mostly stick to pre-arranged brawls in forests because of tight stadium surveillance.
Some fighters are drifting away from football and turning to organised mixed martial arts events which offer a chance to make money from their hobby.
The Moscow hooligan also lamented the end of hooliganism's golden era, when battles between rival clubs in Moscow came down to tactics as much as strength.
Hooliganism offers a brotherhood, even for those like the Moscow hooligan, who has a university education and a traditionally middle-class job.