The five-star Swisshotel Sochi Kamelia is a gated property hidden from fans and reporters by the Black Sea on one side and a lush private park with firs and palm trees on the other.
The entrance is protected by armed guards in fatigues. Guests in evening gowns and bespoke suits mingle on a marble terrace overlooking a cascading pool.
Jewels the size of small rocks are on sale near a waterfall in the lobby and a blood-orange sunset illuminates the spacious rooms before giving way to the sparkle of crystal chandeliers.
"We will do everything to make sure they leave happy and without a worry," he told AFP.
"We will help them win the World Cup."
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Russia's warmest upscale resort is surrounded by snow-capped mountains that won Sochi the right to host the 2014 Winter Olympics and restored the lustre of its Soviet past to the city of 350,000.
It is President Vladimir Putin's preferred working vacation spot and an important summit venue for visiting heads of state.
"Our hotel has no street access. The property is guarded and this will obviously be fortified with extra security during the World Cup," Gregoriyev said.
"I think it will also be protected at the government level."
But what about those pesky reporters and the drones they use to sneak pictures of some of football's most famous performers?
"We are not going to shoot anything down, of course, but we will inform certain government (security) agencies that probably know how to fight these things," Gregoriyev said with a grin.
Their second group game against Costa Rica is 2,000 kilometres away in Saint Petersburg and their third five days later against Serbia will take them 1,300 kilometres north to Moscow.
Travel is part of the Russian adventure for all 32 qualified teams and Brazil coach Tite has clearly focused on giving his men the best treatment possible while away from game.
The training ground is a five-minute walk away and the ride to the airport along Sochi's modern roads takes 30 minutes.
"Sochi's climate suits Brazil very well," Gregoriyev said.
Little except the outlines of the main building resembles the hotel that opened at the height of Stalin's Great Purge of 1936-38 in which hundreds of thousands died.
Regular rooms have TV screens covering a good part of the wall while the suites are decorated with backlit artwork that gives them the futuristic feel of a spaceship.
The restaurant promises "Swiss-inspired European cuisine" and offers bottles of Moet & Chandon champagne for USD 650 (535 euros).
The kitchen will be tailored for Brazilian tastes and overseen by the team's official chef.
"They will obviously need what we consider to be fairly exotic fruit such as papaya and passion fruit," said the manager. "But there is nothing we have not seen before.
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