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Reuters
Reuters
Sport
Spasiyana Sergieva and Dado Ruvic

Fleeing Ukrainian athletes welcomed by clubs in Bosnia, Bulgaria

Vika Groza, 11, from Odesa, plays tennis during training session, after fleeing from Russia's invasion of Ukraine in Varna, Bulgaria, March 18, 2022. Picture taken March 18, 2022. REUTERS/Spasiyana Sergieva

Sports clubs in Bulgaria and Bosnia are providing refuge, training and competition for athletes escaping war in another show of global solidarity for Ukraine.

Mihail Minchev, the 34-year-old owner and trainer of Hispano tennis club near the Black Sea city of Varna, was among those responding to the Bulgarian tennis federation's appeal to help after Russia's invasion upended lives for millions in Ukraine.

Sasha Groza, 14, from Odesa, plays tennis during training session, after fleeing from Russia's invasion of Ukraine in Varna, Bulgaria, March 18, 2022. Picture taken March 18, 2022. REUTERS/Spasiyana Sergieva

"I had to so do something," said Minchev, who volunteered to host two families with three teenage female tennis players from another Black Sea city: Odesa in Ukraine.

"I could not just be an indifferent spectator and watch what is happening on TV from my couch as if it is some reality show."

One of the new arrivals, 14-year-old Sasha Groza, has won competitions in Odesa, dreams of one day winning the Australian Open, and looks up to British women's No. 1 Emma Raducanu.

Tennis coach Mihail Minchev leads a training session in Varna, Bulgaria, March 18, 2022. Picture taken March 18, 2022. REUTERS/Spasiyana Sergieva

"Tennis is my life," Groza said at Minchev's apartment before a training session.

She appreciates Varna's friendly welcome but cannot quite grasp what has happened. "Our fathers stayed in Ukraine, our grandmothers, grandfathers stayed in Ukraine. It's very sad."

Bulgaria's tennis association has, likewise, helped about 12 families with young tennis players so far. It plans to include them in national tournaments without prior registration.

Sasha and Vika Groza from Odesa warm up during a training session with tennis coach Mihail Minchev in Varna, Bulgaria, March 18, 2022. Picture taken March 18, 2022. REUTERS/Spasiyana Sergieva

SHARED WAR TRAUMA

In Bosnia, memories of their own devastating conflict three decades ago fuels compassion.

"When the girls asked us why we were helping them, we said that we were children of war ourselves, running away with our mothers while others were helping us," said Anita Glibic, director of the Student Volleyball Club (SOK) in the southern town of Mostar.

Varva Koltsova (L) and Olha Kachur (2nd R) from club Balta in Ukraine look on during training with Bosnian teammates from Student Volleyball Club (SOK) in Mostar, Bosnia and Herzegovina March 21, 2022. Picture is taken March 21, 2022. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic

SOK is hosting seven players from the Ukrainian club Balta, with four more expected in response to an open invitation to Ukrainian female volleyball players.

The club is providing accommodation, meals and training.

"We travelled for four days, ... with long stays on the borders. It was so difficult," said Varvara Koltsova, who arrived with her three-year-old son.

Another Ukrainian player Olha Kachur said at last they felt safe without war and bombs.

"I think that no person who run away from Ukraine now have a plan what to do ... Of course we want to go home to our families, our friends but now we don't know when war will end," she said.

"I feel little guilty because I'm safe and they are not."

(Writing by Tsvetelia Tsolova in Sofia and Daria Sito-Sucic in Sarajevo; Editing by Andrew Cawthorne)

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