Yeah, Giovinco created a great deal in the beginning actually. First a shot from good position, then he served Iaquinta a sitter whereas Iaquinta chosed to slide (!?) to shoot the ball and Sereni had to pull out a great save. And those two were only in the opening minutes of the game. He then had the cross for Iaquinta's ridiculously close header. For the rest of Giovinco's time on the pitch the team had ZERO possession on Torino's half whatsoever and there was nothing to work with for Seba.
Mind you, those two first chances Giovinco created came from plays that none of the remainding players out there are capable of doing. Taking the ball in the stride and advancing towards goal. Also, it seems we have to go over the same old basics about what a player like Giovinco needs in order to shine: confidence through playing time and trust. Knowing that one is allowed to fail two times in order to kill the game on the third try.
Forza Sebastian.