for anyone who's ever been frustrated by the lack of serie-a coverage in the english-speaking media, or wondered why Roma refuses to make an english
website that works ...

31 August 2011

Hurrah! Serie A's well and truly back





It's back, ladies and gentlemen. No, not the football. It's the madness of Palermo.

Everyone's favourite football despot Maurizio Zamparini hasn't even waited until the start of the season to fire Stefano Pioli. Looking for confirmation of this, I came across a little story on the Palermo website, which actually refers to Zamparini as "Il numero uno del club", which I doubt needs translation.

What a lunatic!

I wonder what Delio Rossi's up to? Third time lucky?

27 August 2011

Serie A strike: what's behind it?

The major Italian sports papers all run strike stories on the front page,
"Own goal" screams the cover of La Gazzetta dello Sport
An own goal. That's what the papers here are calling it, and I can't disagree. It's difficult to see any winners in this latest butting of heads between the clubs and the players. In a dispute over the players' collective bargaining agreement that's been running for a long time now, the players have again gone on strike to make their point, despite knowing that it will damage the image of the league and annoy fans in the process.

Serie A fans might remember that strike action loomed last December, only to be averted at the 11th hour thanks to some desperate negotiations. After those talks, a new version of the agreement was approved by the Italian Footballers' Association (AIC) and delivered to the clubs almost four months ago. Despite having the whole summer to mull over the terms, for some reason the owners then waited until just days before the beginning of the new term to announce that they wouldn't be signing it.

The owners say the sticking point is tax. The Italian government plans to impose a new levy on the country's highest earners, and the clubs say that the agreement doesn't outline who will pay these new taxes – the clubs or the players. According to one-time Roma star Damiano Tommasi (now the AIC's president), however, this is nonsense. The long-time curly hair enthusiast has said that the players will pay the tax in accordance with the law, and accuses the clubs of using this to discredit the players and avoid discussion on the main sticking point: segregated training.

Now, apartheid South Africa or 1950s Alabama this is not, but the AIC is staunchly opposed to what it says is the marginalisation of some of its members. Separation, it claims, damages the player's professional dignity and is nothing but a tool used as a powerful blackmail technique by clubs who wish to off-load players.

Goran Pandev, Antonio Cassano and Federico Marchetti are just three high-profile players who have been frozen out in this way and the AIC are adamant that it must stop. The clubs say that a clause guaranteeing the right to train as a group would impinge on the managers' control.

This is a struggle that has been fought for some time. It's true that the clubs use it as a way to force players out, but it's also true that segregated training is sometimes the only option for a disruptive player. One bad apple can spoil the barrel, as they say, and there's more than a few of them knocking around the peninsula's orchard.

Speaking for the clubs, Napoli president Aurelio De Laurentiis pleaded: “We aren't trying to wage war on anyone. The agreement is out of date, something that belongs three decades ago. There's no point renewing it, we need to modernise it.” 

If these words sound a little bit sensible to be coming out of Serie A, don't worry. Milan vice-president Adriano Galliani chirped in: “there is a widely held intention to not hand victory to the players in this matter,” and warned, “If necessary we can wait till December.”

Let's hope it doesn't come to that.

26 August 2011

One ticket to rule them all ...

Sometimes, less is more. Last year, I had two cards that I needed to bring to the stadium: one was the controversial "tessera del tifoso" (a football fan ID card) and my season ticket. I'm not getting into the perceived and real pros and cons of the tessera here, but having two cards was a little annoying.

Fast forward to this season, and things have changed. The ticketing system was to be simplified and season-ticket holders would no longer be required to carry the tessera or any other separate ID, because the ticket itself would have a nice little photo of the fan on it. Makes sense.

So, imagine my surprise then when I was told by the (really nice) guy in the shop that I'd need not one, not two, but three tickets to get to my seat this season. OK ... surprise is not the right word. Anyone who lives here could not be surprised by an Italian system getting more complicated. But still, three bloody tickets.

My pass and my tessera have not been combined. I haven't even been given a fresh ticket. They reactivated the 2010-2011 one instead. To counter any confusion there might be at the gate, they gave me a piece of paper that says the other piece of paper is valid for 2011-2012, too.

Still with me? This is because I changed my seat. Not because I wanted to be difficult or anything, just because last year's pew had about 50% visibility. Obviously, being Italy, no one actually sits in their own seat, so I just chose another one with a clear view and sat there for the year. But for the coming season, I wanted to have my house in order, and so I asked to change the seat for one a few places over. Which was a problem in itself, but I won't bore you all with that yarn.

Anyway, I now have to take three tickets to each game. A plastic one that says I'm allowed to have a laminated paper one which is out of date and an un-laminated paper one that says the out of date laminated one is not, in fact, out of date.

Come to Italy, everyone. You don't know what you're missing ...




AS Roma announces direct link to fans


AS Roma has just announced way that it will be communicating with fans. From here on, anyone out there with a helpful (maybe an unhelpful one would be funnier) suggestion can email the club at tifosi@asroma.it . Of course, it remains to be seen if anyone will ever answer, or even read, these suggestions, but here's hoping.

I'll be mainly petitioning for a decent english-language site. And for one ticket, to rule them all ...

Not to be outdone, I might put up a tifosi email for this site, one it, you know, actually has any tifosi ... Until then (Mom), can you comment below? Any other clubs out there with a successful fan mail system?