Tag: england

  • StradiVardy is here to play, not just earn.

    StradiVardy is here to play, not just earn.

    When Jamie Vardy arrived in Cremona, he probably had no idea of the Stradivari family and the musical instrument that bares their name. The Stradivarius violins are famous the World over for the quality of sound they produce but I would imagine the only Stradivarius that Vardy is familiar with is the racehorse that won three Ascot Gold Cups.

    Maybe I’m doing Vardy a disservice, but the bemused way he posed next to a violin in his new Cremonese shirt leads me to believe I’m right. But Vardy isn’t here to sell violins, he’s here to score goals and save Cremonese from relegation. That statement might seem like an odd one to anyone looking at the current Serie A standings. Cremonese sit third with two wins from two, including a spectacular 2-1 win away to Milan at the San Siro.

    Among the celebratory scenes and wild celebrations from the fans when Vardy arrived, there is one man not so keen for his arrival. Manuel De Luca wore the number 9 shirt for the first two games this season and despite his 93rd minute winning penalty against Sassuolo, he’s been cut from the Cremonese squad to make way for Vardy. There’s no suggestion this has caused any sort of rift behind the scenes at the Lombardy club, but it adds to the pressure to perform that Vardy will feel from the moment he takes to the pitch.

    Pressure that he’s sure he can deal with. In his unveiling press conference (in the violin museum) he was defiant when asked about being just a marketing ploy, “It is up to me to disprove the predictions. Age is just a number. I always listen to my legs. At the moment I still feel great. During the summer I wanted to show on social media that I was keeping myself in the best possible shape and coming back to training with the team was incredible. Training is going very well.”

    For the time being nothing can dampen the enthusiasm of the Grigiorossi fans, excited to see their new man in action. Expectation is high in Cremona for a striker capped 26 times by England and who scored 200 goals in 500 games, winning the Premier League and FA Cup. One thing I noticed watching Cremonese beat Sassuolo two weeks ago was the speed in which they got the ball forward in transition. Going from absorbing pressure to the other end of the pitch very quickly, they should have held more than a 2-0 lead when Sassuolo eventually started fighting back.

    Vardy will provide the pace at the top end of the pitch that suits this counter attacking stance, but he’ll also provide clinical finishing that will be key if Cremonese are going to take more points off the big boys. They were wasteful against Sassuolo but got away with it thanks to facing another wasteful relegation candidate. They won’t get the chance to be so profligate in front of goal against the likes of Inter, Juventus or Napoli. Even the next block of teams like Roma, Lazio, Fiorentina will punish their profligacy.

    Jamie Vardy is no stranger to the need for efficiency, last year Leicester were woeful, abject and well beaten every week. But the 38 year old still managed to bag 9 times during this disaster of a season for the Foxes. Whatever Serie A can throw at him, Vardy will think he’s seen it all before, this is a player that was playing in English football’s 5th tier at semi-professional level only 3 years before making his England debut.

    The only “new one” on him will likely be lining up alongside a player who is the Great Grandson of the country’s former Fascist Dictator from World War Two. Yes, Vardy’s team mate on the right wing (yes, really) is Romano Floriani Mussolini. He goes by Floriani and insists that his name is only a distraction for other people and not himself, but the young winger on loan from Lazio is highly rated in Italy. His direct running and pace caused problems for Sassuolo when he was introduced and he won the penalty that De Luca tucked away before being promptly withdrawn from the squad to make way for Vardy.

    Manuel De Luca isn’t the only thing gone from Cremonese though, season tickets have now sold out since Vardy signed with over 10% of the population of Cremona now having one. And don’t even try and get a Cremonese shirt for a few months, they’ve sold out too. You can still buy them online, but there’s no sign of a delivery date.

    Vardy is a man known for his controversial and provocative celebrations and in this small corner of the Po Valley they’ll be hoping he can hit the right notes and play the World’s smallest violin to Cremonese’s opponents this season…

  • How England helped shape the Italian game…

    How England helped shape the Italian game…

    We English have a habit of laying claim things that aren’t ours. Like half the World at one point… But one thing we do have a pretty firm claim on is that we invented the beautiful game.

    In the 1920s and 30s Benito Mussolini would have Italians believe that Calcio descended from Calcio Storico Fiorentino, the medieval football of Florence. This game was mostly played by noblemen (including Popes) and dates back to 1530 where it was first referenced in Piazza Santa Croce. The game combined elements of football, rugby, wrestling and street fighting, which I guess is where the great Italian defenders of the 70s and 80s were drawing inspritation.

    Locals in Florence play a game of Calcio Storico Fiorentino.
    Calcio Storico Fiorentino in the modern day

    Benito Mussolini promoted the game as the “true origin” of Calcio in direct contrast to the foreign game of football. He used the game in fascist propaganda to reinforce the idea of Italy’s deep cultural and martial heritage, distancing itself from British influence. The game was even revived in the 1930s in Florence with choreographed pageantry to tie it in with Renaissance and Roman virtues.

    But Calcio does owe a lot to British football, including one of its biggest clubs and one of the most iconic kits in the game.

    James Richardson Spensley in Genoa

    Dr James Richardson Spensley was an English physician and football enthusiast who worked on boats that came through the port in Genoa. During his time in Italy, Dr James would organise football matches with local dockers and as a result, is largely considered to be the first person to bring football to the masses in Italy.

    James Richardson Spensley founded Genoa
    James Richardson Spensley – Apparently…

    By 1897 he had founded the Genoa Cricket and Football Club. Not only did he found the club, but he managed it, organised their games and was their goalkeeper. He helped to shape Genoa into the first dominant team of Italian football, winning the first championship in 1898, going on to win another 5 titles with him at the helm. He retired from playing when he was nearly 40 and would go on to manage the side for a few more years before his death in World War One at the Fortress of Mainz.

    Had it not been for the four clubs in Turin founded by Edoardo Bosio then Dr James would’ve founded the first club in Italy. The two of them are rightly considered as the Grandfathers of Italian football.

    Herbert Kilpin and the Milan cricket club

    129 Mansfield Road in Nottingham is an unassuming terraced property that could be any other in England. However, on the 24th January 1870 at this property, a man was born who would go on to shape Italian – and World – football for years to come.

    Herbert Kilpin was a lace maker who lived most of his life in Nottingham playing as a Midfielder and Defender for local part time teams. In 1891, he moved to Turin to work for Edoardo Bosio who was an Italian-Swiss textile merchant. Bosio had founded the first ever Italian side, Internazionale Torino, and Kilpin would represent the team in his time with Bosio.

    In 1898, however, while living in Milan with Samuel Richard Davies, Kilpin would found AC Milan, then known as the Milan Cricket and Football Club. To this day Milan still uses the English spelling of the city’s name to pay homage to their founder.

    He chose the famous red and black stripes after being quoted as saying, “We’re going to be a team of devils. Our colours will be red like fire and black to invoke fear in our opponents”.

    Herbert Kilpin, founder of Milan, in the first red and black that AC Milan ever wore.
    Herbert Kilpin striking fear into his opponents in Red and Black

    The first elected president of AC Milan was Alfred Edwards with Kilpin acting as player-manager. Milan were, unsurprisingly, immediately successful, winning the championship in 1901 in only their second season. Kilpin spent 9 years with the Milan side and won two more titles in 1906 and 1907.

    Herbert Kilpin died in Milan in 1916 aged 46, apparently due to his smoking and drinking habits – another English trait. Little was known, or acknowledged, of his influence over Milan’s early history until the 1990s when Luigi La Rocca tracked down Kilpin’s grave in the Municipal Cemetary in Milan. In 1999 the club paid for a new tombstone acknowledging his role in Milan’s history and in 2010 he was moved into the Famedio in the main building where Milan’s most illustrious personalities are interred.

    Curva Sud in Milan pay homage to Herbert Kilpin, the original founder of AC Milan
    The Curva Sud pay homage to their founder

    John Savage and the spare kits

    Nottingham’s influence over Calcio doesn’t finish there though, a few years later in 1903 an Englishman John Savage would help one of Italy’s most iconic clubs gain their iconic kit design.

    John Savage was a footballer who had played with Kilpin at Internazionale Torino before joining Juventus in 1900. He was the first foreign player to represent the Old Lady, who at the time wore pink shirts. Savage wasn’t impressed with the quality of them though and likened them to being similar to a “gang of war survivors”. Whatever that means.

    He wrote a letter to Nottingham based tailoring company Shaw and Shrewsbury requesting new kits and nearly a month later received a spare set of Notts County kits, in the famous black and white stripes.

    Juventus originally wore a pink kit until John Savage intervened and gave them their famous black and white stripes.
    Juventus in their new colours alongside some of the old kits

    At first, Juventus were not impressed with the change, Domenico Donna – a founder of Juventus – compared them to funeral attire. However, thanks to a remarkable upturn in form in the new kits, Donna labelled the kits as “a symbol of old fashioned Piedmontese elegance”.

    Juventus would keep the Notts County kits and the retain the black and white to this day, the link remained so close that when Juventus opened their new stadium in September 2011, Notts County were invited over to play in the first ever game here.

    John Savage would go on to referee the 1902 Italian Football Championship final between the other two English influenced clubs, AC Milan and Genoa.

    More general influences

    The Italian Football Federation (FIGC) was inspired by the structure of the English FA when it was formed in 1898. Not much of a surprise given the English influence of the game in those early years, rules and club structures were based on the English game and most of the clubs were started as cricket and football clubs.

    In fact, one of the Italian terms still used today, Il Mister, used to describe a coach is attributed to an affectionate term given to William Garbutt during his time managing Genoa between 1912-27. He won three championships with Genoa and introduced structured training and tactics to Italian football.

    Inter and Roma are two clubs that have had English ownership stakes or partnerships in the past and Serie A was brought into British homes in the 90s thanks to James Richardson and his Sunday show Football Italia on Channel 4. That programme, in fact, was responsible for this Calcio fan’s own obsession!

    Much like everything else though, England introduced the sport to Italy but Italy took it and ran with it, made it their own and subsequently has won 4 World Cups to England’s one. They even beat England in their own back yard in the Euro 2020 final after a penalty shootout to really assert their dominance over the English game.

    While English domestic football has surpassed Italian domestic football for quality and finances, Calcio had some great days in the 80s and 90s and Italian clubs still have joy against Premier League teams in England.

    England and Italy will always be inseparable for their love of the game and their passion for it, and we’ll always be linked thanks to those English pioneers back in the day.