Moscow: The Russian football team deserves to be criticised after its poor performances at the European Championships but one should not completely tarnish the squad’s reputation, Sports Minister Vitaly Mutko has said.

Playing in Group B at the Euro Cup, which kicked off on June 10, Russia ended their match against England with 1-1 draw, then lost their encounters with Slovakia and Wales 1-2 and 0-3 respectively.

“Football is a very peculiar sport,” Mutko, who is also the president of the Russian Football Union (RFU), told Tass on Friday.

“During yesterday’s game we were almost not noticing French footballers, but the German team eventually lost to them 0-2.”

In a semi-final match of the 2016 UEFA Euro Cup on Thursday night in Marseille, reigning world champions Germany lost 0-2 to France, who are the hosting nation of the 2016 UEFA Euro Cup.

“We need to assume a different attitude,” Mutko said. “We can criticise the team, but why should we destroy it completely. Why should we be justifying ourselves by expressing our personal negative and positive sympathies?”

Mutko said the most important issue at the moment was to find a new head coach for the national team, who would then decide on the team’s national roster for international tournaments.

Following Russia’s 0-3 defeat to Wales, team’s head coach Leonid Slutsky said right after the match that someone else should take his place at the helm of the national squad. A week later he officially announced his resignation.

Slutsky is also the head coach of the Russian CSKA Moscow football club, which he guided to the champion’s title in several seasons since taking charge of the club in October 2009.

“(National team’s) players left for their football clubs as the new season is about to start,” Mutko said.

“The new head coach will have to make decisions selecting players (for team) based on their preparedness and level of skills.”

The sports minister added that the new coach should be making up the country’s team of players, who “have the honest desire of playing and representing for the national team”.

Over 270,000 Russians signed a petition, launched last week, to completely disband the national team of Russian footballers and draft new players. The petition is posted for signing at the official website of the Russian Sports Ministry.

“Such petitions are the cause of emotional breakdowns not only among the players of the national football team, but among those viewed as possible candidates for the team,” the Russian sports minister said.

Mutko’s statements come in the wake of an incident involving two players from the national squad, Pavel Mamaev and Alexander Kokorin, who allegedly spent 250,000 euros (around $276,000) on champagne partying in Monaco following their weak performance at the 2016 Euro Cup.