Putin presents Trump World Cup football made in Pakistan

The US president says he was happy to pass the ball on to his 12-year-old son Barron


Afp July 17, 2018
Russia's President Vladimir Putin (R) offers a ball of the 2018 football World Cup to US President Donald Trump during a joint press conference after a meeting at the Presidential Palace in Helsinki, on July 16, 2018. PHOTO: AFP

HELSINKI: Russian President Vladimir Putin presented his American counterpart Trump with a World Cup football, manufactured by Pakistan, a day after attending the final of the much-praised tournament in Moscow.

Throwing it to his wife, Trump said he was happy to pass the ball on to his 12-year-old son Barron.

The official match ball of the FIFA World Cup 2018, Adidas Telstar 18, was produced in Sialkot.

The gesture by the Russian president was made to lighten the mood at a post-summit news conference with the American leader on Monday.

US President Donald Trump throws to his wife (unseen) a ball of the 2018 football World Cup. PHOTO: AFP

Pakistan to provide footballs for FIFA World Cup 2018

Trump had congratulated his opposite number on Russia's successful hosting of the competition, which came to a climax on Sunday a day before the Helsinki summit.

Facing a barrage of questions about the war in Syrian and Russia's alleged role in Trump's 2016 election victory, both men broke into brief smiles as the Kremlin chief handed over the souvenir.

"Speaking about having the ball in our court in Syria," Putin said, in an awkward change of subject. "President Trump has just mentioned that we've successfully concluded the football World Cup.

"Speaking of football, actually, Mr President, I will give the ball to you and now the ball is in your court. All the more as the United States will host the World Cup in 2026."

'Shameful': US lawmakers blast Trump over Putin summit

Trump cheerfully returned the compliment, saying he hoped the United States would host an equally successful competition, and promised to give the ball to his 12-year-old son Barron.

The exchange appeared to amuse the two leaders but it did not go down so well back in Washington, where many figures from both sides of the political spectrum felt Trump had been too trusting of Putin's denials of covert interference.

"If it were me, I'd check the soccer ball for listening devices and never allow it in the White House," hawkish Republican Senator Lyndsey Graham said on Twitter.

In a separate incident shortly before the presidents arrived for the news conference an apparent protester was dragged away by security bearing a sign referring to the nuclear test ban treaty.

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