THE ARCHIVE
As good as it got
Cagliari 1969-70 | Cagliari 1969-70 |
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In the last 40 years of Italian football, only Diego Maradona’s partial deification in Naples can rival the status granted by Cagliari fans to striker Gigi Riva. Thirty-seven years after his Herculean goalscoring feats (21 goals in 30 games) helped the Sardinian side win their only Serie A title, his presence can still be felt around the island. In Cagliari’s Bar Marius, where fans gather before matches, a life-size statue of Riva continues to draw adoring glances. In other bars and cafes on Sardinia, posters of Riva, aka Rombo di tuono (Sound of thunder) continue to adorn the walls, and 46-year-old Danilo Piroddi still claims to be able to “dine out” on the story of how, during a Cagliari training session in 1970, a Riva thunderbolt, estimated at 120 kilometres an hour, broke his arm. “Despite the agony I was in, the doctors still treated me with reverence when I told them how I’d sustained the injury,” Piroddi claims. According to Sardinian historian Franco Brescio, ten books have been written about Cagliari’s title-winning side of 1970. The Italian media’s obsession with Riva’s private life, especially his often controversial business interests, tended to overshadow the impact the title had on the island. “Look at a map of Italy, that’s all you need to realise what Italians really think of Sardinia,” the team’s pragmatic coach Manlio Scopigno was fond of saying to the team. The sight of the Italian boot haughtily kicking its islands away reflected the fact that many Sardinians believed themselves to be out on a limb during the late Sixties. Dogged by a poor infrastructure, Sardinia was, according to Franco Brescio, “not so much dormant 40 years ago, as completely comatose. The island had always been divided from region to region, and was split between those who wanted to converse in Italian, and those who stuck doggedly to speaking the Sardinian dialect.” Sardinia was beginning to change, with the era of mass tourism. The Aga Khan purchased huge sections of the coastline and hotels began to sprout around the island’s edges. At the same time, Cagliari began their meteoric rise in Italian football. Having spent most of the 1950s mired in Serie B, Riva’s arrival in 1964 galvanised the team and was a magnet for other players to leave more fashionable clubs to head to Sardinia. From WSC 246 August 2007
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