Saturday, August 25, 2007

Welcome back, you old bags


"This should be a dignified year for our soccer. We need to provide certainties
in a country where all anyone talks about is soccer."
-
Serie A President Antonio Matarrese

The 2006-07 season was worse than anyone could have expected, in just about every sense imaginable, for Serie A. To say Italian Soccer was "shamed" would be an understatement; a league that already suffers from an inferiority complex thanks to sharing a continent with juggernauts like the Premier League and La Liga was made to look ridiculous last season. The match-fixing scandal that sent down Juventus and led to point reductions for four other teams reinforced the notion abroad that Serie A was a relatively lawless league, as did the mid-season Sicilian derby riot in Catania, which resulted in the death of police officer, a suspension of matches for more than a week, and half the remaining league games being played behind closed doors. That kind of negative publicity — make that outright embarrassment — will likely have the effect of a talent drain on the league, as players with free transfers decide that perhaps they'd rather ply their trade somewhere a little less unstable.



It's difficult to play the hypothetical game, but it's not a stretch to say that had those two events not taken place, 2006-07 could have been a banner year for Serie A. Inter put up a season for the ages, and while it's easy to say that Juve's absence made it less credible, it's not a stretch to believe that the nerazurri would have lapped the field no matter what (though a poor showing in the Champions League took some lustre out of the season). Milan further augmented its position in European football with a rousing march to the Champions League title, and Roma's trip to the semifinals — mostly on the strength of Golden Boot winner Francesco Totti — was no small feat either. Even better, that it was those two particular teams, who play the most attractive football Italy has to offer, succeeding on the international stage took the wind out of the sails of critics who trot out the same, tired crap about Italian soccer being the aesthetic equivalent of a molasses waterfall.

That said, it just wasn't the same without Juve, the Yankees of Italian soccer. Beyond the fact that anything that happened last season comes with a qualification ("Yeah, but that was the year Juventus was beating up on the Riminis of the world"), the TV schedule was noticeably absent of watchable games. And one game into the new season, The Old Lady put together a game that served notice to the rest of league, featuring a four-goal flurry in the final 20 minutes of its game against relegation-bound Livorno en route to a 5-1 victory. Yes, this team isn't of the same class as the 2005-6 squad, thanks to the post-penalty defections of a handful of the team's best players, but it's a team good enough to earn a Champions League berth and be considered one of the four teams with a legitimate shot at the Scudetto.

It's trendy to say this could be one of the greatest seasons in Serie A's recent history. Inter is perhaps even more frightening this season, after picking up Roma standout left back Christian Chivu and forward David Suazo. Milan is what it always is, a world-class side that will have a full season with Ronaldo up front. Roma has put together a side capable both of playing the country's prettiest football, and of making a sustained run at the title, picking up a half-dozen players in the transfer market to flank Totti. And Juve is, well, Juve.

But it goes beyond the possibility that this could be a season for the ages; it's safe to say that a season for the ages is needed if Serie A is to continued being mentioned in the same breath as its peers to the east.

3 comments:

b said...

I'd still like to see a more consistent and successful run in the Champions League by Inter for them to justify their status as one of the best teams in the world.

And I saw highlights of Lazio this morning in which they had a black player! Times, they are a-changin!

Diesel said...

I'm with you completely when it comes to Inter. If you stuck a gun to my head last season and asked me to pick a team to go up against Barca, it would have been Milan (even before Ronaldo and his personal caterer were picked up). And with Juve out of the picture, it would have been a tough call between Roma and Inter (but, I would have picked Inter).

I know it's dangerous to draw conclusions from one game, but Inter looked confused against Udinese, a team it should dispatch without second thought. Contrast that to decisive victories from Milan, Juve and Roma against similarly out-classed opposition, and you've got to wonder if there's going to be some heat on pretty-boy Mancini this year to actually do something besides look good in domestic play.

Anonymous said...

"a season for the ages is needed if Serie A is to continued being mentioned in the same breath as its peers to the east."

Reading this blog has been useful to me thus far, for sure. I have just learned that Spain and England are east of Italy. Thanks, Diesel!