Though FIFA competition rules typically punish federations whose teams refuse to play scheduled games, soccer’s world body agreed with Poland, Sweden and the Czechs. That three-nation boycott of Russia weighed heavily on the urgent CAS ruling, which sided with FIFA’s stated need to “guarantee the smooth running of its flagship competition.” Poland, Sweden and the Czech Republic - which lost to Sweden - had all stated they would refuse to play Russia in light of the country’s war on Ukraine. Poland was given a bye and advanced to the tournament in Qatar by beating Sweden in the playoff final. The interim ruling in Russia’s appeal on March 18 - pending a full appeal hearing likely due at CAS in the weeks ahead - ensured the men’s team could not play Poland six days later in the World Cup qualifying playoff. The legal debate between FIFA and Russia’s soccer federation was published Tuesday by the Court of Arbitration for Sport, explaining why its judge denied an urgent Russian request to freeze a ban that excluded its teams from the men’s and women’s World Cups. Letting Russia try to qualify for the World Cup risked doing “irreparable and chaotic” harm to the competition, FIFA successfully argued at sport’s highest court.
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