Calciopoli or Morattopoli.. inter fake orgasm (36 Viewers)

OP
gsol

gsol

Senior Member
Oct 14, 2007
1,448
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  • Thread Starter #1,443
    I got other stuff(Inter being doped up in the Herrera era) but it's in Italian and I don't want to bore you.
    All that stuff was published in a confession book written by Feruccio Mazzola (he was an Inter left back and brother of one if the men listed as goal scorers). The book was called "Il Terzo Incomodo" (the uncomfortable left back).

    He played in the Herrera era and he spilled the beans on all the steroid use (which led to most of that team dying relatively young of tuours including Giacinto Facchetti.

    The book also goes into great detail regarding the referee bribing and is filled with confessions. The bribing wasn't just in those semi finals, the league was full of it too.

    This was the great Inter of Angelo Moratti.

    The book was censored but eventually made its way out.
     
    OP
    gsol

    gsol

    Senior Member
    Oct 14, 2007
    1,448
  • Thread Starter
  • Thread Starter #1,444
    I want to know about something.be sure it will not be boring.

    inter finished league in relegation spot.FA cancelled relegations for just that season.I guess in 1930's
    It was 1922.

    The FIGC didn't eliminate relegation though. Inter came in last place and were relegated. Long story short the FIGC allowed Inter back into the top flight and relegated 3rd last Venezia.

    Once I went to an Inter fan site and in the history section it skipped that season completely. I knew why but sent an email anyway asking why it was missing. It was about 8 months ago...I'm still waiting for a reply.

    The official Inter website completely skips over the season and also lies about their hard fought first scudetto.

    Their was a playoff between Pro Vercelli and Inter in 1910. Pro Vercelli had to be out of the country to play in the finals of the (then more lucrative) european military tournament (or something like that). Inter was asked if it would be ok to move the dates of the games...Inter refused and Pro Vercelli had to play the junior squad (some players were 13) and Inter still managed to eat 3 goals. In any case they won their first title in typical Inter fashion.
     

    Salvo

    J
    Moderator
    Dec 17, 2007
    62,791
    wow its a shame calcio has all this surrounding it. and that it goes so deep and for so long. i mean its such a beautiful league with enormously great teams that represent a magnificent country. its a shame a real shame
     

    Alen

    Ѕenior Аdmin
    Apr 2, 2007
    53,920
    I got other stuff(Inter being doped up in the Herrera era) but it's in Italian and I don't want to bore you.
    Here it is translated from “L’espresso” :

    Italian champions that have made the history of Football, will be called to testify in front of Rome's tribunal on doping. Sandro Mazzola, Mariolino Corso, Luis Suarez, Tarcisio Burnich, Gianfranco Bedin, Angelo Domenghini, Aristide Guarneri aswell as Ferruccio Mazzola will all be called to reveal what was behind La Grande Inter's success, in Italy and the World, during the 60's. Ferruccio added: "I haven't longed for a trial. I just happen to be involved now. All the truth will finally be made public".

    Q: What are you referring to Mr Mazzola?
    Mazzola: Even if just a bench player, I was part of that Inter too. I've seen with my eyes how player were treated. I saw Helenio Herrera providing pills that were to be placed under our tongues. He used to experiment on us bench players only to later give them to the first team players. Some of us would eventually spit them. It was my brother Sandro that suggested me that if I had no intention of taking them, to just run to the toilette and spit them. Eventually Herrera found out and decided to dilute them in coffee. From that day on "Il Caffè Herrera" became a habit at Inter.

    Q: What was inside those pills:
    A: Don't know for sure but I believe anphetamins. Once, after a Caffè Herrera, it was prior to a Como vs Inter (1967), I suffered 3 days and nights in a state of complete allucinations, just like an epilletic. Nowdays, everybody denies, even Sandro......

    Q: Your brother?
    A: Yes Sandro and I, since I decided to speak out, simply don't talk to eachother. He says that dirty laudry should be washed at home, on the contrarary, I believe that it's right to speak out, above all for a number of my former teamates, a number of which are either very sick or dead.

    Q: To whom are you referring too:
    A: The first was Armando Picchi, captain of the team, that died aged 36 due to a cancer. Then came Marcello Giusti, a reserve player, that died for a brain cancer during the 90's. Carlo Tagnin, a great player that would never refuse a pill, since he wanted to further his career as long as possible, he died in year 2000.
    Mauro Bicicli and Ferdinando Miniussi have left us respectively in 2001 and 2002. Enea Masiero, with Inter from 1955 to 1964, is undertaking chemotherapy, whilst Pino Longoni is on a wheel chair.

    Q: But for Picchi and Tagnin, all the other players are not that famous.
    A: That's cause us bench players would take more of those damned white pills, were treated as cavies. I talked about all this in my autobiography ('Il terzo incomodo', scritto con Fabrizio Càlzia, Bradipolibri 2004), that eventually lead to the opening of athe Rome trail.

    Q: Why?
    A: Cause after the book was published, I was sued by Inter President Mr Facchetti. They want to go in front of a jury? Very well, the 19th of November, their will be a 2nd hearing. All the players of that team, I mean all the players that are still alive, have a choice to testify. I just want to see if they won't have the courage to say the truth under oath.

    Q: Weren't you once freids with Facchetti?
    A: Yes, let's just leave Facchetti out of this, I'd have to mention heavy stuff.

    Q: Do you think that after the trial we will have another kind of image upon that winning Inter?
    A: Frankly, I don't know and I'm not interested. If I wanted to cause real damage to Inter, within the book, I could have added a number of other episodes. I could have added details about fixed matches and bribed referees, especially in Cup ties. Never mind......
    __________________
     

    Alen

    Ѕenior Аdmin
    Apr 2, 2007
    53,920
    how recent are these incidents that he's talking about?
    It's about La Grande Inter, the team that won 2 CL's in the 60's. The only time Inter won trophies post WWII they were drugged and they bribed referees.
    Helenio Herrera was their coach and he was coaching Inter from 1960-1968.

    But this interview took place in 2005 and nothing came out of it. Only 6-7 months later Calciopoli became more interesting.
     

    ReBeL

    The Jackal
    Jan 14, 2005
    22,871
    Guys, you went away in the history. Didn't you??:evil:

    Here is a new thing from Reuters:

    An Italian court will convene on May. 15 to hear an appeal from a small group of Juventus fans who feel their club was unfairly victimised in Italy's match-fixing scandal and that other clubs should be punished in further corruption probes.

    "We are certain 2008 will be the year of our redemption," the fans said on their Web site (www.giulemanidallajuve.com).
    Couldn't they choose any other date??:rolleyes:
     
    OP
    gsol

    gsol

    Senior Member
    Oct 14, 2007
    1,448
  • Thread Starter
  • Thread Starter #1,458
    Not that I know of. Actually they were never convicted at all. Paparesta had some on going legal dispute that Galliani helped him clear up but the details on it are few and far between. There is a "Dossier Como" which apparantly goes into detail but to my understanding it had to do with investments and basic legalities. Why Galliani and Paparesta were so involved is a mystery but I can't pretend to know what happened. In the end it was archived. In any case that pre-dates Calciopoli. The only new shit would be the new wiretaps and Swiss SIM card crap which has already all but lost any steam it had.
     

    ReBeL

    The Jackal
    Jan 14, 2005
    22,871
    Juventus striker David Trezeguet will be a witness on Jan. 29 at the trial of several men connected with the alleged illegal practices of sports management agency GEA world, judicial sources said.

    Former Juventus general manager Luciano Moggi, at the centre of Italy's match-fixing scandal, is accused of securing "unfair competition through threats or violence" along with his son Alessandro, who ran GEA, and Marcello Lippi's son Davide among others.

    Several top players and coaches, including England boss Fabio Capello, are expected to give evidence at the trial which is examining whether the accused manipulated the transfer market by controlling players' movements.

    Reuters
     

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