"The first procedure is surprise. The second procedure is fear," he jokes.
Step three is to call in the specialists.
Kamin is directing construction of a stadium for next year's World Cup in the city of Volgograd -- known as Stalingrad during World War II. Four World Cup matches are set to be staged in the new stadium.
For locals, 2018 brings the World Cup but also the 75th anniversary of the end of one of the bloodiest battles in history, which left the city devastated.
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The battle lasted more than five months, with more than a million casualties on the Soviet side alone, as Germany was forced onto the defensive in the East.
When the battle finally ended, the wrecked city of Stalingrad held a football match, marking the first hopes of a return to normal life.
Local team Dynamo Stalingrad beat Spartak Moscow 1-0 on May 2, 1943, in front of some of the city's few surviving inhabitants. The Soviet state hailed the match as a symbol of its people's resilience and grit.
The effects of the war can still be felt. During construction, Kamin's workers have found more than 200 shells and other armaments, as well as the bodies of two still- unidentified Soviet soldiers. The site was home to a Soviet command post during the battle of Stalingrad.
When munitions were found during excavation, police sealed off the area to allow specialists to work, causing a few headaches for construction bosses. Thankfully none of the shells turned out to be live, Kamin said. It's not a problem isolated to Volgograd, either. German aerial bombs have reportedly been uncovered during work on other World Cup stadiums in Moscow and Rostov-on-Don.
Towering behind the stadium is the Mamayev hill, a complex of monuments topped by an 85-meter sculpture of a woman -- representing the Russian Motherland - wielding a sword.
The Volgograd stadium was designed to be partly below ground, to ensure it didn't block views of the memorial. "It really fits in," Kamin says.
"Every millimeter of ground here has been watered with blood," Bocharov says. "We know the price of victory and it is very high."
A World Cup game there between Germany and Russia would be the perfect symbol, Bocharov added, though it's all up to the draw.
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