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ReBeL

The Jackal
Jan 14, 2005
22,871
Serie A’s Soccer Teams in Troubles and TV Rights



All Italian press and soccer fans and politicians are presently debating what is called "Calciopoli" (roughly, "Soccergate"), the big scandal in soccer arisen from the wire-taps. Maybe lawyers should be focusing on it too!

Assuming the Soccergate will be proved true, a host of legal conflicts would arise. One which has already been discussed on newspapers (and certainly already by in-house legal teams) is the destiny of all those contracts between the above soccer teams risking of being demoted and their sponsors, and the media companies, and merchandising agencies, etc. That is, all those companies which in some way or another have bought "the image" of Juventus to exploit it for commercial purposes.

In particular, the most economically relevant contracts would be those regarding TV rights. TV broadcasting rights account for more than 50% of aggregate soccer revenues. Juventus TV rights in turn account for approximately 7% of aggregate soccer TV rights revenues.

Pursuant to law no. 78 of 1999, each Serie A team is entitled to pay-TV rights for its home matches. This allows each team to exploit pay-tv rights on its home matches, increases the economic power of the most important teams, whose matches are most valuable. Less prestigious teams obviously do not like this system. According to the smaller teams, to ensure a level playing field, TV rights have to be collectively managed, with revenues distributed among all teams, taking into account each teams prestige, successes, etc.

Sky, the pay-tv satellite platform controlled by Rupert Murdoch’s NewsCorp, paid Eur 190 millions for the pay-tv rights on Juventus’ home matches for two seasons: the 2005-2006 season, just finished, and the next season (2006-2007).

In January 2006 Mediaset (the main Italian TV private network) bought pay-tv rights on the Juventus’ home matches on all platforms for the 2007-2008 and 2008-2009 seasons for a Eur 218 millions consideration. For other Eur 30 millions Juventus granted to Mediaset an option on 2009-2010 season’s matches: if Mediaset exercises the option, it shall pay other Eur 113 millions for the third season. Mediaset will broadcast Juventus’ home matches by pay-per-view digital terrestrial television; moreover, it has sub-licensed to Sky the satellite rights on the same matches for Eur 157,3 millions.

According to "Il Sole 24 Ore", the main and authoritative Italian financial newspaper, if Juventus is demoted to Serie B, the value of Juventus’ TV rights could decrease by approximately 60%.

License agreements between television networks and Juventus apparently do not provide any termination or penalty clause for the unthinkable: demotion of Juventus from Serie A for disciplinary reasons.

What then, if the unthinkable becomes true, about these TV rights, which may become terribly expensive? Absent a contractual termination clause, then what other remedies would be available for the television operators which bought rights on Juventus’ matches (or for sponsors, merchandising agencies, etc.)?

Section 1467 of the Italian Civil Code states that "if extraordinary and unforeseeable events make the performance of one of the parties excessively onerous, the party who owes such performance can demand the termination of the contract." So, this rule entitles one party to terminate a contract as a remedy to a subsequent economic imbalance between the obligations of the parties of a contract.

The contracts between Juventus and the broadcasters do include a clause on general demotion to Serie B. Without this clause, if Juventus had been demoted "on the field" (the four teams at the bottom of the ranking are removed from Serie A to Serie B and are replaced by the four teams at the top of Serie B), the remedy of excessive onerousness should have been deemed not applicable. Although unlikely for Juventus, a Serie A team can always end up in Serie B for a very bad season (as the saying goes: on any given day, any given team …).

With reference to Soccergate, the applicability of "excessive onerousness" remedy depends on whether Soccergate is deemed an "extraordinary and unforeseeable event". TV networks should ask to the Court to order the termination of the contract which has become too onerous. Juventus could avoid termination by offering to modify the terms and conditions of the contract.

However, one may say that Soccergate is not an "extraordinary and unforeseeable event", since Soccergate (if proven true) actually is generated by Juventus itself (through its representatives). So, termination for excessive onerousness could in this case not be applicable.

In the case of Soccergate, the likely exclusion of Juventus from Serie A could be deemed chargeable to Juventus only. Therefore, Juventus could be excluded from Serie A if the behaviour of its managers is deemed (i) illegal under the FIGC rules and (ii) chargeable to Juventus.

Therefore, if it is ultimately confirmed that Juventus breached FIGC rules, remedies for breach of contract should remain available. That is, Juventus could be deemed liable (vis-à-vis TV networks, sponsors, etc.) for the damages that are caused by "its" illegal behaviour. This could apply also to cover the decrease of value of the TV rights bought by Mediaset and Sky, as well as loss of profits (which may be recoverable in certain cases under Italian law).

Likely, to avoid being sued, Juventus will negotiate new agreements on TV rights. This time, the broadcasters will be sure to add a clause on disciplinary sanctions since on any given time any given team can be demoted for disciplinary reasons.

by Francesco Portolano and Ernesto Apa
http://www.mondaq.com/article.asp?articleid=39964&lastestnews=1
 

Buy on AliExpress.com

s0ftcore

Senior Member
Jul 13, 2002
568
AC Milan General Director and Football League President - Adriano Galliani and AC Milan Representative and former World Cup winner Leonardo will be investigated for match fixing after Naples Magistrates heard wired telephone conversations concerning choice of referees for AC Milan matches and have hard evidence. Transcripts show that they gave orders to Referee Commissioner Mazzei and the Secretary for the Refereee's Commission Martino to have particular referees and linesmen for certain matches.
 

swag

L'autista
Administrator
Sep 23, 2003
84,749
s0ftcore said:
AC Milan General Director and Football League President - Adriano Galliani and AC Milan Representative and former World Cup winner Leonardo will be investigated for match fixing after Naples Magistrates heard wired telephone conversations concerning choice of referees for AC Milan matches and have hard evidence. Transcripts show that they gave orders to Referee Commissioner Mazzei and the Secretary for the Refereee's Commission Martino to have particular referees and linesmen for certain matches.
Source?

Damn. This really is getting to be about everyone denouncing in public what they've been doing for years as a standard practice in private.
 

ReBeL

The Jackal
Jan 14, 2005
22,871
The subject is becoming more related to politics with time passing:

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Mediaset says relegation of leading Italian football teams may affect results


In an interview with the daily Il Corriere della Sera, Berlusconi said Mediaset will wait for the outcome of investigations underway for alleged match rigging and false accountancy involving leading clubs such as Juventus Football Club SpA before deciding how to protect its interests.

Juventus previously said it will have to renegotiate television rights sold to Mediaset and satellite TV group Sky for the 2007-2008 season if it is relegated to the Italian second division Serie B.

Separately, the daily MF said that the network SportItalia is ready to sell its viewing rights for Serie B if the clubs are relegated.

In the interview with Il Corriere della Sera, Berlusconi added that he is not concerned by the arrival of the left-wing government of prime minister Romano Prodi, which replaced the government led by his father.

After the victory of the left-wing coalition, one of its members, Fausto Bertinotti, who subsequently became speaker of the lower house of parliament, said Mediaset had to be slimmed down.

http://www.sharewatch.com/story.php?storynumber=124340
 

ReBeL

The Jackal
Jan 14, 2005
22,871
A preview for 2 new books:
Forza Italia, by Paddy Agnew
Calcio: a history of Italian football, by John Foot





This year's Italian football season closed with an operatic flourish that, even in the world's most theatrical football culture, was unprecedented. Juventus, the biggest, richest and most popular club, won its 29th title. Simultaneously, phone-tapping investigations provided the starkest evidence yet for common but unproven knowledge in Italy: the club's systematic involvement in match-fixing, doping and corruption of every kind.

The question is not so much why this had been happening, but how Juventus have got away with it for so long. The invisibility of systematic corruption is the challenge that faces any book on Italian football. First up is Paddy Agnew, long-time Rome correspondent whose monthly despatches in World Soccer have been barbed and wicked miniatures of the machinations of Italian football. At book length, however, his tone is muted and his own story treads the usual path of infatuation and infuriation. This is a distraction from the best parts, recounting scandal, disorder and corruption.

The real problem is a failure of intellectual nerve. In the introduction, he writes "obviously this book is in no sense an academic or sociological survey of Italian football". Lord forbid! No one believes that you can either sell such a book or make a case for such an approach. Yet on every page, sociological argument is screaming to get out.

When trying to account for the steady decline in the European performance of Italian teams in the 21st century, and the declining potency of Italian tactics and style, Agnew is irresistibly drawn to a comparison with the failing Italian economy,:confused: outflanked by more nimble competitors. As he acknowledges, this is a nation whose recent PM Silvio Berlusconi rose to prominence on the back of his ownership of AC Milan, named his political party after a football chant, and intervenes in debates about the national team and its manager.

While many of the sociological points smuggled into Agnew's book are plausible, his resistance to these questions leads him into cliché. Thus football's extraordinary social significance in Italy can be explained because it runs in the "nation's DNA". So what constitutes a football gene? How did they get there? But then if you are not going to address issues of power head on, this is where you end up.

John Foot's Calcio, by contrast, is unabashed in its academic leanings, yet he wears his learning lightly. Calcio is encyclopaedic in its coverage, thematic in its organisation and a trove of rare insights. Cities and clubs, players and managers, fans and directors, scandal and the media are all dealt with. Foot mixes analysis and story telling, admiration and admonition, in equal measure.

Both authors end on similar notes. Both rightly love Italy and Italian football and neither is naïve about its decline in quality and probity. On occasion both seem to have come close to ending the affair, but are hooked on their cruel mistress. They are also too polite, but they have personal investments in the country to consider. As a consequence neither can quite bring himself to deliver an unambiguous account of the forces that the Juve affair, and all the others, derive from.

I have no need to be polite so will take the liberty of saying what these books demonstrate: that Italy and Italian football are a disgrace. If the country were to apply now for EU membership it would be refused - its democratic credentials are so threadbare, its legal system so Byzantine and its economic and political elites so corrupt. Italy would be told to get in the queue with the Romanians and the Bulgarians.

The historical roots of the problem stretch back to the incomplete and fragmented creation of the nation state, the failure to come to terms with the legacy of fascism, the supine consumerism of mainstream civil society and - most recently - the shameless TV authoritarianism of Berlusconi and his gang.

The entire board of Juventus has now resigned; the team may be stripped of its title and demoted. One hopes that this will prove the Tagentopoli of Italian football - a judicial assault that breaks the old order apart and sweeps the decrepit elite from power. It is just as likely that they will be replaced, as the old political parties were, with new elites whose conduct is every bit as despicable as their predecessors'.

By David Goldblatt
Published: 26 May 2006
http://enjoyment.independent.co.uk/books/reviews/article601235.ece
 

ReBeL

The Jackal
Jan 14, 2005
22,871
Son of Italy coach investigated in soccer scandal



ROME, May 26 (Reuters) - The son of Italy's World Cup coach Marcello Lippi has been put under investigation by magistrates looking into the sports talent agency he worked for, legal sources said on Friday.

The agency, GEA World, which is headed by the son of former Juventus general manager Luciano Moggi, is being investigated by magistrates for "illegal competition with use of threats and violence".

The firm has more than 200 players and coaches on its books. Luciano Moggi is at the centre of the match-fixing storm that is buffeting Italian soccer after telephone transcripts were published of his conversations with top soccer officials.

Apart from Lippi's son, Davide, magistrates are also investigating Giuseppe De Mita, the son of former Italian prime minister Ciriaco De Mita, and two others. Others at GEA, including Moggi's son, are already under investigation.

Italy coach Lippi has faced calls to resign before the World Cup in Germany, which starts on June 9, after allegations he was forced by Moggi to select certain players for the national side.

Lippi has insisted he never came under pressure over team selection and that he never had business dealings with his son while his son was at the agency.

Giancarlo Abete, who is vice-president of the Italian Football Federation, said the decision by magistrates to investigate Lippi's son did not affect its recent vote of confidence in Lippi to lead Italy into the World Cup.

"We are in a situation in which a storm is going on, in the sense that there is a situation that gets filled with new elements day after day," Abete was quoted as saying by Italy's AGI news agency.

Reuters
 

ReBeL

The Jackal
Jan 14, 2005
22,871
Italians losing faith in football




As football fans around the world are preparing for a month of hope, exaltation and for most inevitable heartbreak, for many football-loving Italians the agony has already begun.

Their faith in the game has been stretched to breaking point by the biggest scandal in the country's sporting history.

An unseasonable cynicism is threatening to make a mockery of Italians' four-yearly voyage to football heaven and hell.

And they could do with something to cheer about. The economy shows few signs of life - and the recent general election left the country as divided as ever.

Time, if ever there was one, for a spot of feel-good football fever. But it is not to be: revelations about the extent of corruption in the domestic game have seen to that.

Big scalps

Back in 1966, disgruntled fans threw rotten tomatoes at their under-performing prima donnas when they flew home early after being dumped out of the World Cup by the minnows of North Korea.

This year, they have started early. When Gianluigi Buffon - the world's most expensive goalkeeper - joined his team-mates for pre-tournament training the fans whistled their derision.

The reason: Buffon is being investigated for illegal gambling - an allegation he has denied. Buffon is not alone. From Turin in the north to Rome in the south, there is a heavy reek of corruption about the game they call calcio.

End of affair

You can bet your bottom dollar it will not stop there. There have even been suggestions that the position of the national team coach, Marcello Lippi, has been compromised by his links with some of the men at the centre of the row.

For now, Lippi has the confidence of the man appointed to sort out the mess. After the World Cup, though, it is anybody's guess.

One of the wisest heads in world football, Franz Beckenbauer, says it is all bound to take its toll on the team's performance when the tournament begins.

Three times winners of the World Cup, Italians are passionate about their football.

The scandal is the talk of the town - the chatter at cafes and bars is of little else. There is a touch of Machiavelli about it all: a belief by powerful men that the ends justifies the means.

But it has introduced a tired world-weariness into the way ordinary football-loving Italians talk.

For Aldo Lundari - a lifelong Juventus supporter, like his father before him - what has happened marks the end of the affair.

"They have taken us for a ride," he says, sipping a glass of chilled white wine, a Juventus flag still hanging limply from his home in Bergamo, outside Milan.

For Aldo - as for many other Italians - what happens in Germany is now of only academic interest.

"I'll watch the World Cup - he says, sadly - but it just won't be the same."

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/5012314.stm
 

ReBeL

The Jackal
Jan 14, 2005
22,871
What's black and white and has a foul smell? Ask Signor Moggi



THERE ARE 58 million people living in Italy but it’s a small world. Italians call it Italietta, a pejorative term implying that the control of the country is in the hands of a select gang of unscrupulous people.

For almost a month now, Italians have been learning, with bitterness, just how small their country is. Football is at the centre of the scandal and the lead role is played brilliantly by Luciano Moggi.

Moggi is comic-book bad. His put-downs are awesome, especially because of his trademark droopy eyelids. When he smiles, his whole face sparkles, but he does “angry” with whispers and shouts. This is a former station master nicknamed Paletta (“lollipop man”), a small-time fixer who reached the summit of power: he was until two weeks ago director-general of Juventus, the Rolls-Royce of Italian football teams.

You know the story by now: he was a phone-slinger from down south. He won games from the stands, kicking ass instead of leather. Juventus were systematically favoured by hand-picked referees (“see also what’s not there sometimes” was one instruction relayed to a referee). It was favoured by a mathematical usage of yellow and red cards against their future opponents. Surprise, surprise: Serie A was more bent than the Charlton attack.

It’s hard not to scream through embittered lips that “we told you so”. For years it has been a running joke in Italy. We whingers who stood in the stands for Parma-Juventus matches had felt hard done by for years: Parma reduced to nine men, another Del Piero penalty, another Parma goal disallowed. We felt convinced something whiffed but were repeatedly told by TV hosts (who, it now emerges, also colluded with Lucky Luciano) that we were paranoid.

Markets as well as matches were allegedly fixed. The world was so small that Moggi twice employed Marcello Lippi (now national manager) as “technical commissariat” (manager) at Juventus. Moggi’s son works with Lippi’s son at Gea. Gea is the sports agency that represents almost 300 footballers. It controls more than 17 per cent of the estimated transfer market. Moggi even had Giuseppe Pisanu, then the Minister of the Interior, pleading on the phone for help to save a team in his constituency. Moggi, of course, did the trick.

This political and financial involvement in football means that the actual game defies gravity. Only in Italietta is it possible to win three promotions in two seasons (Fiorentina). It’s never clear at the end of each season which division your team will play in next time round because no one’s quite sure where the chairman has gone: he could be in Santo Domingo (Gaucci), in prison (Cragnotti), on trial (Tanzi) or caught red-handed giving a suitcase of cash to a fixer (Preziosi).

This time, though, the scandal seems bigger. The Juventus share price has plummeted by 40 per cent in less than a month and investors are scratching their heads at quite how tawdry the club’s bar code black-and-white stripes are. Italy goes into the World Cup having been forced to withdraw its refereeing representative; Franco Carraro, the president of their FA, has resigned. The national coach, captain and goalkeeper are under investigation. Even by Italietta standards, this is quite a crisis.

What happened next is interesting. Cardinal Camillo Ruini, the head of the Catholic Church in Italy, tried to sdrammatizzare (make a molehill out of a mountain): “I wouldn’t want there to be a change of register,” he said this week, warning us away from outright revolution. “Dissension grows with the grain”, whatever that means. Others step forward to calm things down, not least because the investigation is now under the command of Francesco Saverio Borrelli, a man who spearheaded the Tangentopoli political corruption clean-up . . . and that means Berlusconi is both happy and nervous: his AC Milan might enjoy Juventus being stripped of their two most recent championships and dropping to Serie B, but the return of an empowered magistrature makes him understandably a little twitchy.

There’s so much momentum to the story that every hour new accusations, transcripts and confessions emerge: Moggi was apparently able to bounce players into the national team and thereby increase his market assets. He could get fixtures altered. He could even soften up the opposition because some of them were bound to be Juve boys on loan anyway.

But if you didn’t return his calls you would be frozen out: Fabrizio Miccoli and Enzo Maresca, two of the brightest young talents in Italy, were publicly humiliated by Moggi and now play in Portugal and Spain respectively. There are others: Zidane, Henry, Di Vaio and Davids. World-class players were rudely shunted if they didn’t adhere to Moggismo.

Most Italians won’t consider Moggi an evil man: he’s accused of being a bad sport, a jolly rotter, but he’s not at the time of writing accused of any crime. But what really riles about Moggi is that he knew nothing about the sport. Playing football in Italy has always been a pleasure because of its innocence and aspiration. You play at dusk on small pitches overlooked by the parish priest. If you can’t afford the pitch you play on the cobbles, dribbling past Vespas. Now that all seems romantic drivel. In Moggi’s world sport is a stitch-up played with calculator and cash till.

By Tobias Jones, the author of The Dark Heart of Italy
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,1072-2198864,00.html
 

ReBeL

The Jackal
Jan 14, 2005
22,871
Lippi says Italy focused on football not scandal



FLORENCE, Italy, May 27 (Reuters) - Italy coach Marcello Lippi knew his son was likely to be drawn into the scandal that has engulfed Italian football and insists his team are managing to concentrate on their preparations for the World Cup.

Lippi's son Davide, who is a players' agent, was formally put under investigation on Friday by prosecutors looking into the GEA World agency run by Alessandro Moggi, the son of former Juventus general manager Luciano Moggi.

"Lippi is fine, both Lippis are fine," the Italy coach told reporters at the team's training camp on Saturday.

"About 20 days ago, I told my son that with all the stuff that was coming out, given who he had collaborated with, he shouldn't expect to stay out of it," Lippi said.

The Italy coach himself is not under investigation. Along with several of the country's top coaches, he has spoken to magistrates simply as a `person informed of the facts'.

"We live in a country where if you speak to the authorities as a `person informed of the facts' then you are treated as though you are under investigation.

"If you are put under investigation then you are treated as though you have been condemned
," said Lippi.

"We will see who has something to repent for and who doesn't. Some people might be found to have rushed to judgment and to then have been proved wrong - they might apologise for that but it never happens, never happens."

GEA has more than 200 players and coaches on its books. Luciano Moggi is at the centre of the match-fixing storm after telephone transcripts were published of his conversations with top soccer officials.

Lippi said the work of his players had not been affected by the rumbling scandal that continues to dominate Italian media.

"There has been no difference in the approach of the lads, they are showing the same desire as they have always done.

"Away from the field they might give some attention to other things, but on the field their mental approach to work has been exceptional, fantastic
," said Lippi.

"Everyone is calm, some have some problems that need to be cleared up and we hope they are cleared up quickly, but everyone is calm."

Italy face Switzerland in Geneva on Wednesday in their first pre-World Cup friendly and then travel to Lausanne to play Ukraine on Friday.

Italy's opening game of Group E is against Ghana on June 12. Lippi's side also face the Czech Republic and the United States.

Reuters
 

ReBeL

The Jackal
Jan 14, 2005
22,871
Serious investigation promised into match-fixing



FLORENCE, Italy, May 27 (Reuters) - The head of Italy's Football Federation has promised a serious investigation into allegations of match-fixing in Serie A.

"I exclude the possibility that it will all be brushed under the carpet," Guido Rossi, the Federation's emergency administrator, told the daily Gazzetta dello Sport.

"We have to go deep into this, very deep. There isn't just the surface that needs looking at. There is hardly anything that works as it should do."

Rossi, 75, who was appointed after the outbreak of the scandal, said the question of which teams would be in Serie A next season was a matter for the Federation's disciplinary commission alone.

"Who stays in and who goes out will be decided by the disciplinary procedure which will not be impeded by anything or anyone," said Rossi.

The publication of telephone intercepts, many featuring former Juventus general manager Luciano Moggi discussing refereeing appointments, has led to a series of investigations into the game.

Naples magistrates have placed 41 people under investigation including club officials from Juventus, AC Milan, Lazio and Fiorentina, referees and Federation functionaries.

Another investigation in Rome is looking into the operation of sports management agency GEA World which is run by Moggi's son Alessandro. Both Luciano and Alessandro Moggi are under investigation along with Davide Lippi, son of Italy's World Cup coach Marcello.

The first investigation to deliver a verdict will be that of the Federation's disciplinary commission which has to decide whether the league table from last season's Serie A, won by Juventus, should be altered to reflect any wrongdoing.

If Juventus officials, or those of any other club, are found to have tried to influence the outcome of games their clubs could be demoted to the second division Serie B
.

Rossi said given the huge interest in soccer in Italy it was vital that justice be done.

"I want to be very clear with everyone that this affair has enormous importance for the country because it relates directly to 40 million people who follow football," he said comparing the scandal with previous investigations in the business world.

"When corruption related to the elite, such as banks and finance, the truth is that after 10 days there were only the specialist press talking about it. Football however is talked about by everyone," said Rossi.

Reuters
 

ReBeL

The Jackal
Jan 14, 2005
22,871
A little Off-topic:D

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Miss Italy 2005: I love Juve more than ever before



Miss Italy 2005 Edelfa Chiara Masciotta confirmed in a new interview her passion for Juve saying that she supports Juve now more than the past because players find themselves in troubles these days while they're not guilty of anything. She added that Juventus remains the same Juventus, even in serie B.

She also hopes that the Italian national team will bring the World Cup with them this summer...

http://www.corriere.it/Primo_Piano/Spettacoli/2006/05_Maggio/26/miss.shtml

Forza Edelfa...
 

s0ftcore

Senior Member
Jul 13, 2002
568
swag said:
Source?

Damn. This really is getting to be about everyone denouncing in public what they've been doing for years as a standard practice in private.
Got that from a Newcastle forum, and the dude didn't include a source link. Basically, the post I made is somewhat a summary of post #96, which can be found on Page 5 - can't remember who posted it

Cheers (pls dont give me a yellow card) :disagree: :D
 
OP
Snoop

Snoop

Sabet is a nasty virgin
Oct 2, 2001
28,186
  • Thread Starter
  • Thread Starter #113
    s0ftcore said:
    Got that from a Newcastle forum, and the dude didn't include a source link. Basically, the post I made is somewhat a summary of post #96, which can be found on Page 5 - can't remember who posted it

    Cheers (pls dont give me a yellow card) :disagree: :D

    Someone ban this guy
     

    ReBeL

    The Jackal
    Jan 14, 2005
    22,871
    Nice Article:

    --------------------------------------------------------------

    Italians kick up a stink



    Everything they do, everywhere they go, the smell follows them around. They cannot shake it off. The Azzurri gathered last week to show off their chic and shiny Dolce & Gabbana suits for the World Cup photocall, and the smell was there. They sat to take some pre-tournament questions from the media, and the smell was there. They turned up for the launch of their upbeat song for Germany - by a band with the magnificently appropriate name of 'Pooh' - and the smell was there.

    The stench of corruption is embedded in the Italy camp. During public appearances nobody talks about the World Cup. There is no debate about who should play up front, or what system best suits the team, or how many points they require from a devilish group also containing the Czech Republic, the United States and Ghana. The only topic up for debate is the scandal that has dominated the headlines since tapped telephone calls revealed Luciano Moggi, Juventus's overlord, was pulling match-fixing strings. It is the first item on the evening news, above politics, religion and human tragedy, which is most unusual in Italy, even for such a football-obsessed country.

    With a massive investigation under way, a wave of resignations and potential relegations are the talk of calcio and beyond. Juventus, Serie A champions, are expected to be demoted, conceivably sent down to the fourth division, although they may wriggle their way into the second tier. AC Milan, Lazio and Fiorentina are also at risk of serious punishment. And there might be more to come, as the authorities continue to rake through the dirt.

    Thirteen members of Marcello Lippi's 23-man Italy squad, including Luca Toni who scored 31 goals for Fiorentina this season, come from the four clubs currently feeling the heat. Last week the captain, Fabio Cannavaro, in an act of spectacular folly, tried to defend his club, and Moggi, by writing off the Juve revelations as little more than 'chatter'. Nothing worse than what everyone is up to. He was quickly forced to face the press to retract his comments and clear up any 'misunderstanding'. Keeper Gianluigi Buffon, who spent some time away from the group as he was questioned over his heavy gambling on football results, now reckons he is in the clear. But if one dodgy betting slip turns up he will be ejected from the squad and will face a minimum 18-month ban from football. As for Lippi, the coach himself is an old associate of Moggi - their two sons work together as agents for the GEA company being investigated by magistrates for 'illegal competition with use of threats and violence' - so he can hardly switch off from the crisis. Nothing like a World Cup to lighten the pressure.

    'Lippi is fine, both Lippis are fine,' he said yesterday. 'About 20 days ago, I told my son that with all the stuff that was coming out, given who he had collaborated with, he shouldn't expect to stay out of it.

    'If you are put under investigation then you are treated as though you have been condemned. We will see who has something to repent for and who doesn't. Some people might be found to have rushed to judgment and to then have been proved wrong - they might apologise for that but it never happens, never happens.'

    Luca is a football fanatic who lives in Fidenza, a small town between Milan and Bologna in the north of Italy. He speaks for many ordinary supporters when he rails against 'the terrible shame' of the Italian game's rancid crisis. 'It is very difficult to have pride in our football. When the national team met up at their training camp at Coverciano, many fans went there to boo and insult them. And they were right.'

    When news of the scandal first broke, the response from fans was symbolised by a vast banner that covered the curva where the Juventus hardcore congregate in the Stadio delle Alpi. Addressed to 'il tridente', the trio in charge of Juventus, which comprised Moggi, Antonio Giraudo and Roberto Bettega (all have subsequently resigned), it read: 'We are with you.' Surprise, surprise - the banner was provided by Moggi:pumpkin: . Italy watches and waits to see if Adriano Galliani, the wheeler-dealer at Milan, will be another high-profile head to roll.

    'Supporters are very tired of all this corruption,' says Luca. 'I hope this won't end up with nothing happening, everything swept under the carpet, as per usual in Italy. I hope Juventus, AC Milan, Lazio and Fiorentina are all relegated. We can have a Serie A with Salerno, Mantova, Cesena. It would be the best thing for Italian football, to start again from zero.'

    Might the investigation slow down during the World Cup, to avoid any potential calamities were any squad members to be charged? Apparently not. The Federazione Italiano Giuoco Calcio (FIGC, the Italian FA) wants this mess unravelled, and the game cleaned up, in good time for next season. The aim, if optimistic, is to have everything clarified by the beginning of July, so the FIGC can present a credible list of entrants to the Champions League and Uefa Cup.

    This is not the first time that an Italian World Cup mission has been enmeshed in controversy. Dating back to 1934, when they hosted the competition, there were questions shadowing Italy's progress in a competition Mussolini deemed essential to win.

    One of the players in the outstanding Austria team who were beaten by Italy in the semi-finals, remembers the referee heading a ball that was going out of play back to 'Mussolini's Azzurri' as they were known. In front of Il Duce, Italy beat Czechoslovakia in the final after extra time. Sceptics doubted that Italy would have won the trophy anywhere else.:p

    Their coaching mastermind Vittorio Pozzo had a powerful answer, inspiring Italy to retain the World Cup when it was held in France four years later. Italy had to wait almost half a century to become champions again. Spain 1982 was another World Cup experience played out against a backdrop of storm clouds.

    Two years previously Italy had been rocked by another scandal, with more than 30 players and officials accused of taking bribes. Paolo Rossi, the golden boy of calcio and one of the most expensive players in the world at the time, was the most shocking name hauled up before the judges. He was banned for three years, reduced to two on appeal, and was back in the fold by the time Enzo Bearzot named his World Cup squad.

    So far so good. But when Italy failed to spark in the group stage, with Rossi utterly unconvincing, and only squeezed through after three tepid draws against Poland, Peru and Cameroon, the criticism soon swirled out of control.

    Dino Zoff, the veteran goalkeeper and captain of the 1982 team, articulates the problems they faced in the BBC's excellent series World Cup Stories. 'Every news conference after a match became a court process, where instead of talking about football, it became a session for defending ourselves,' he recalls. 'After a meeting we decided that it was hopeless and that we should be concentrating more on playing football than on the excuses we needed to give to the people and to the journalists, and it seemed whatever we said they insulted us again.'

    One of the team doctors, Fino Fini, takes up the story of a tournament showing no signs of a glorious finale: 'The weather was awful, it rained constantly, the hotel rooms were tiny. We were uncomfortable. If we decided to go out of the hotel, we were followed by the military service as they were worried that ETA [Basque separatist terrorists] might do something. Therefore it was unhappiness without end. Rain and control.

    'Then we went to Barcelona, having got through the qualifiers, and the pitch was incredible. There was sun, animals that were flying around, little birds, and then a lovely vision of a beautiful city. We were in a lovely hotel, with room to manoeuvre and there were even beautiful women. But then something developed, that wasn't very nice, from the media.'

    Relations deteriorated badly when the press gossiped loudly about the nature of the relationship between room-mates Rossi and Antonio Cabrini. An absurd game of Chinese whispers ended up with rumours that they were having an affair, because they had both been seen bare-chested on the balcony of their hotel room.:rofl::rofl:

    'It was so wrong, of course. They were real men,' says Fini. 'In every sense of the word. The men then got together and formed a union among themselves against the press. In doing this, against the media, we resolved all sorts of problems.' Bearzot, a gentleman in the mould of Alf Ramsey, felt it best to distance the players from their tormentors. He handled the situation with exemplary poise and had the total respect of his players.

    Bruno Conti remembers: 'We had been happy to talk to the press, but we saw stories that were simply not true. The most horrible was that Rossi was with Cabrini, and that players were seen drinking in bars and shooting up drugs. This didn't go with everything we were trying to do and represent. This didn't go with the image of football as we saw it so we created a news blackout.'

    The phrase silenzio stampa - a media blackout - was born. It continued throughout the tournament and was a blessing in disguise. Italians traditionally thrive on a siege mentality.

    They faced the most difficult draw imaginable in the next round, reigning world champions Argentina and hot favourites Brazil. Italy came into their own. Maradona and company were smothered and conquered, before the turning point of the tournament saw Italy edge a classic win over Brazil. Rossi, the arch predator, shone as if he had never been away and helped himself to a hat-trick.

    'When we went on to play Argentina and Brazil, we had no fear and we were playing with pride. We knew that we had to give it our all and leave our inhibitions in the changing room. The first goal was mental to me. It was the breakthrough moment for me. I had just been through a difficult and complicated time in my life. I had been out of action for two years from 1980 to 1982. I played my first game just one month before the competition. For me it was like starting all over again.'

    Italy and Rossi swept past Poland in the semi-finals and Germany in the final. Zoff reflects on how they overcame unseemly off-the-field distractions. 'It brought out not only the best in us but the maximum amount. It happens often to us here that when a team is attacked, it makes them perform miracles. But also the opposite can happen, as we've seen in the last World Cup and even before where, with the best luck in the world, we still did badly.'

    So what of Italy 2006? In these extreme circumstances, there has been plenty of talk of reviving the spirit of 1982. Italy's World Cup heritage makes them a perennial favourite. They are the third most successful team of all time, behind Brazil and Germany, with three triumphs and two more finals to their name.

    Their past two international tournaments ended in doom and gloom. They were humbled by South Korea in 2002 and went home at the group stage of Euro 2004 when Denmark and Sweden drew to seal their fate. Lippi's squad suggests Italy are on the attack this time around. He has selected six strikers, all of whom are fit, and all of whom have Serie A experience.

    To turn this crisis around is a very big ask. Compared to 1982, the team is not as good. The manager is not as respected. The crisis is much more relevant, more direct, now than in Bearzot's day when the scandal had blown up two years previously and was just about burned out. But, as they always say, Italians are at their best when they are under pressure.

    Could they generate the kind of us-against-the-world unity necessary to restore some credibility to the Italian game? The reaction in Italy's squad is hard to predict. They could come together in the name of calcio, or they could be set for the biggest barrage of rotten tomatoes imaginable.

    Amy Lawrence
    Sunday May 28, 2006
    The Observer
     

    ReBeL

    The Jackal
    Jan 14, 2005
    22,871
    These are the words of Galliani about Moggi today. My translation won't be accurate so any translation will be so welcomed...

    ------------------------------------------------------------------

    Galliani: «Moggi? Non mi fido di lui»


    La Procura di Napoli ha acquisito altre intercettazioni che riguardano il presidente della Lega Adriano Galliani, preoccupato perché non si sarebbe fidato di Luciano Moggi, e avrebbe provato a organizzare una «resistenza» al sistema messo in piedi dall'ex dg bianconero. Anche in questo caso, comparirebbe il nome dell'addetto agli arbitri rossonero Leonardo Meani. E sempre a Napoli sono previsti nuovi interrogatori. Tra gli altri, il presidente onorario della Fiorentina Diego Della Valle, il presidente della Lazio, Claudio Lotito, e l'arbitro Marco Gabriele. Inoltre dovrebbe essere risentito l'ex designatore arbitrale Paolo Bergamo, mentre, secondo indiscrezioni, dai magistrati dovrebbe recarsi anche l'ex presidente della Federcalcio Franco Carraro.

    http://www.ilgiornale.it/a.pic1?ID=92536
     

    ReBeL

    The Jackal
    Jan 14, 2005
    22,871
    Scandal threatens Juventus



    For the next six weeks, soccer's World Cup will capture the attention of most of this planet.

    Even in North America, where for three years and 11 months or so, professional soccer ranks right up there as an attention-grabber with professional bowling, the great lumberjack challenge and demolition derby, the interest level ratchets up to noticeable.

    While the rest of the world understands the passion of the sport, the intricacies, the beauty of the game and the great talent of those who play it, our little world focuses on hooliganism and whatever other oddities happen in soccer as an excuse to ignore it.

    The latest oddity making world headlines involves one of the world's most famous teams. Juventus of the Italian Serie A division is involved in a game-fixing scandal that could cost Juventus its past two league championships and might see it demoted to Serie C. That would be like making the great Edmonton Oilers teams of the 1980s play in the East Coast Hockey League.

    So what, you say?

    Heed the message. What happened in Italy can happen anywhere.

    In Italy, it involved referees, player agents, even the media.

    The scandal is centred on Juventus and former general manager Luciano Moggi. He and the entire Juventus board resigned recently and the team faces possible relegation just weeks after winning its record 29th Serie A title. A.C. Milan, Lazio and Fiorentina have also been implicated.

    Wiretaps have been released in which Moggi arranges with the assignor of officials to have specific referees and linesmen work his team's games.

    The media has also been involved. A well-known soccer television personality resigned after more than 20 years when it was discovered he was told by Moggi to be positive to Juventus, no matter what the situation, and to be critical of specific officials. That's what he did.

    The fans thought they were getting a longtime expert giving them the real goods. What they were getting instead was someone in the team's back pocket that cared more about being in with the team than being faithful to his viewers.

    Juventus is a powerful squad with powerful people with plenty of money running it. It's not difficult to exert pressure on people to get positive media.

    This is what happens when those powerful people aren't satisfied with running their own team but expect everyone to give in to their wishes.

    I see you shaking your heads out there, thinking "Ah, it could never happen in North America."

    Want to bet?

    Don't you think the Italians read about the bribery scandals in Germany and the Far East and said "It could never happen in Italy?"

    Of course they did. They didn't see it coming, either.

    How often have you heard a coach or general manager of a North American hockey, football or baseball team complain about officials? You don't think they don't call the guy in charge of officials and tell him they never want to see that official again, especially when that referee makes a critical call the coach or manager doesn't like?

    How often have you heard team officials complain about "the media?"

    No "incentives" may pass hands but for whatever reason, the pressure works. Quite often that particular official who makes a difficult call will never see that particular team again.

    Great care must be taken to prevent the erosion of independence. This happened in Italy because there were no checks and balances, because those running the sport got too close and benefitted from those playing the sport.

    We in North America may not be close to this type of scandal ... yet. But that doesn't mean we can't learn from it.

    What happened in Italy, didn't happen overnight.

    By MORRIS DALLA COSTA
    http://slam.canoe.ca/Slam/Soccer/2006/05/29/1603609-sun.html
     

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