Sweet emotions
Dante Alighieri described Purgatory as a lofty island-mountain around which seven terraces rise one above another, connected by stairways in the rock. On the summit is the Garden of Eden, from which purged souls ascend to Heaven. The Divine Comedy offers up a nice parallel for Juventus's first season in Serie B. But goalkeeper Gianluigi Buffon is no soul in torment, particularly on international weeks when he steps outside Purgatory to put on his country's No1 jersey.
'Great satisfaction'
From winning the FIFA World Cup one week to playing in Serie B the next was a long way down for the man voted goalkeeper of the year by uefa.com readers, but the 29-year-old has no regrets about his decision to stay and help Juventus return to Serie A. "Being voted in the uefa.com Team of the Year is a great satisfaction for me," Buffon told uefa.com. "It is never easy to make a top eleven. I thought it would be even more difficult for me following my decision to play in Serie B. This award makes me understand that fans take the human aspect into account when they vote, not only the technical side.
'Smile on my face'
"I decided to stay because I wanted to repay Juventus and the people at the club. Usually I love the people who work for a club more than the club itself and I stayed to help those people I shared good and bad times with. I decided to think about other people instead of my own situation." Thanks in no small part to Buffon, Juventus should bounce straight back to Serie A, despite starting the season with a nine-point penalty. Juve may have dropped down a level, but that has not made the goalkeeper's job any easier and the Bianconeri have had Buffon's saves to thank for numerous points this season. "I'm living this experience with a smile on my face. I believe I'm playing well largely because I've always taken Serie B extremely seriously, never lightly or for granted. I think I play with the right mentality, focusing only to win the league and return where we belong as quickly as possible."
'Top of the mountain'
Buffon has a harder task on his hands with Italy who have got off to a slow start in their bid to qualify for UEFA EURO 2008™. Marcello Lippi was a tough act for new coach Roberto Donadoni to follow, but Buffon, who has won 72 caps for his country believes the Azzurri are on the right path once again. "We had a few problems at the beginning but I think the main concern was physical because our domestic league started later than others. Then we also paid for our World Cup hangover after our triumph in Germany. But I think we're back on the right track now.
'New motivation'
"Winning the World Cup is the moment when you reach the top of the mountain. You cannot go higher than that. The only way to be hungry for success again, to find new motivation, is to receive a few slaps in the face. It was like that when we drew at home against Lithuania and we lost in France. It can help to fall from the top and try to climb up again." Hence the self-imposed exile in Serie B. "I thought it was good to bring myself down to earth a bit by playing in the second division. I was sure I could find a different motivation in Serie B. I knew everything in Serie A, I think I knew every spectator by name. Discovering new emotions, playing in smaller arenas with a heated atmosphere every week has helped me improve as a player."
'Strong character'
It is a new experience, but one that cannot diminish the memories of a golden summer. "The whole group was the key for our World Cup success alongside a great coach [Lippi] who gave us that something extra we needed. Our group had a strong character and there were a few individual players who made the difference. Among them myself, [Gianluca] Zambrotta and [Fabio] Cannavaro who were also included in uefa.com's team of the year, but also players like [Gennaro] Gattuso, [Andrea] Pirlo, [Luca] Toni, [Franceso] Totti, [Alessandro] Del Piero and others.
Sweet memories
"The most important save I made was stopping Zinédine Zidane's header in the final. The most beautiful was Lukas Podolski's shot in the extra-time of the semi-final against Germany. Probably the sweetest memory of the whole tournament, however, was that run to hug [Fabio] Grosso after he scored the decisive penalty in the final against France. It didn't look real. When I thought about winning the World Cup, it was a dream, a utopia, something impossible to make real." Having had a glimpse of footballing heaven, Buffon is well on his way to hitting those heights once again.
Uefa.com