One of the first things that Fabio Capello did when he took over as the England manager was to ban tomato ketchup. He obviously felt this was a winning move as he has done exactly the same since he stepped in as the manager of Russia, except it is not ketchup he has banned, but shisha pipes. The decision has proved popular with Russian fans who blame the smoking of shisha pipes on their team failing to reach the World Cup in 2010.

Capello could be surprised to find himself once more within a footballing culture that is driven by trivia. His new job starts in earnest this week with a match in Moscow against Northern Ireland, and it seems to have some stark similarities to his last one.

Following on from failure, making the transition from old guard to new, responding to pressure over his captain and being called an overpaid import, the only difference is that it’s in a different language. Never one to back away from criticism, Capello has started his tenure in Russia with the same vigorous imposition of rules as he did in England, and Samedov, the winger from Lokomotiv Moscow has said he is very big on discipline.

While the Russian players may not be very impressed with the new regime, the public certainly do. There is a nationwide frustration bubbling over from the Russian teams failure to qualify for Euro 2012 from what only can be described as gift group, and they are embracing Capello with his tough, hardline approach, and already consider him as the man to restore pride to Russian football.

The old guard, who did so well in Euro 2008 but looked tired and jaded this year, and demands have been made from the top that changes are made, and soon. Capello doesn’t select on reputation, as Beckham knows only too well, and with his huge pay packet come even bigger expectations, and how this pans out only time will tell.

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