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-- HOLY ****! Soccer suspended in Italy.
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Posted by denys envy on Feb-02-2007 23:59:

HOLY ****! Football suspended in Italy.

SOURCE

FIGC suspends soccer in Italy
February 2, 2007

ROME (TICKER) -- Football in Italy has been indefinitely suspended after a police officer was killed during serious trouble at the Sicilian derby between Catania and Palermo.

The policeman, Filippo Raciti, was 38.

According to reports, he was struck in the face by a small explosive while attempting to deal with fighting outside the stadium. He was taken to hospital but died from his injuries.

The Italian football federation (FIGC) held an emergency meeting on Friday evening, and commissioner Luca Pancalli then announced an immediate suspension of soccer

"I have demanded a stop to all activity of (soccer) in Italy," Pancalli said in a statement. "Enough is enough. It's a situation that I cannot speak of. To lose your life at 38 is incredible. This is not a sport."

Speaking at a hastily-arranged press conference in Rome, Pancalli said the suspension would remain in place indefinitely.

"The football tournaments will remain suspended until we solve the violence in our (soccer)" he said. "It's unacceptable that such incidents happen in a country like Italy."

Italy was hoping to host the European Championships in 2012.

"At this moment I'm not thinking about (the bid) but should we lose our Euro 2012 bid because of this situation, we would deserve to lose it," Pancalli said.

Italy's national team was due to play Romania in Siena on Wednesday but that game - and the under-21 fixture against Belgium in Chieti on Tuesday - will not go ahead as things stand.

The president of the Italian Olympic Committee, Gianni Petrucci, has backed the FIGC's decision to suspend all football activity, and Italian Prime Minister Romano Prodi added his voice to those calling for action to be taken to stop the trouble.

"After the serious incidents that occurred tonight in Catania, my first thought is for the people that have been affected and for their families," he said. "I feel a duty to say that we need a strong and clear signal to avoid the degeneration of this sport which we are seeing more dramatically and more often."

Around 100 people were reported to be injured - some seriously - after fighting erupted in the build-up to the game at the Angelo Massimino Stadium. Trouble continued throughout the evening, with the game suspended for around 30 minutes at one stage.

Palermo won the match, 2-1, but players and staff were held in the stadium by police after the game while the area was secured.

"I am extremely disappointed. Things cannot continue like this," Palermo coach Francesco Guidolin said. "We didn't know anything. We had to go back to the changing rooms because we couldn't breathe. If we cannot get into our heads that (soccer) is a sport we cannot live in the world of (soccer).

"What has happened tonight offends sport and a beautiful city like Catania."

Prior to kickoff a minute's silence had been held following the death of a club official from lower league club Sammartinese at a game last weekend. Catania club executive Pietro Lo Monaco reacted to news of the officer's death by announcing he would leave football.

"I've heard that a policeman has died," he said. "To speak of (soccer) right now seems useless. For me this is the end. I will leave the (soccer) world. I don't recognize myself in this world anymore. I have loved football intensely but after this right now it seems absurd."

The Catania prosecutor's office has announced an investigation into the incident.


Posted by Xavier on Feb-03-2007 00:18:

Italian football has no violence whatsoever.

UEFA are cool


Posted by InterMilan31 on Feb-03-2007 00:36:

First off its called Football.

Secondly this has been coming for a while with multiple angles of buildup.

No suprise to me that it all blew up in Sicily. Notorious for its hooligans (more than Roma). Many problems there where each city is against each other and history never leaves your head (racism etc). The same goes for Southern Italy as well racism, economic struggles compared to the north.

Its quite sad to see this happen but I think it has to and I agree with the players association nominating a year ban. Something needs to be done here to prove that this shit cant go on. FIGC really never aknowledged it before. I mean after the Dida incident flares are still allowed in the stadium . Now the new non-corrupt (apparently) FIGC could take steps to curb the violence. Hope so.

A year ban will probably not go down. So i say fan violence/disturbances effect the team til the end of the year. 1 arrest = -1 point. Very drastic things to prove the point. Then when the trouble dies down institute rules and police presence like they do in England.

RIP Filipo Raciti


Posted by Zild on Feb-03-2007 04:04:

I'm a huge Calcio Catania fan!


Posted by sensorium on Feb-03-2007 07:21:

A year ban is a bit too much, specially for a country known for its clubs trying to appeal everything.

R.I.P. the policeman, Filippo Raciti.


Posted by mellow_head on Feb-03-2007 12:04:

Yeah, I've seen the "footage", everyone went berserk

Simple solution though: games like these must be played behind closed gates, too bad for the fans and may decrease the team morale but it's the only way to avoid victims.


Posted by Ian on Feb-03-2007 13:46:

quote:
Originally posted by mellow_head
Yeah, I've seen the "footage", everyone went berserk

Simple solution though: games like these must be played behind closed gates, too bad for the fans and may decrease the team morale but it's the only way to avoid victims.


do you not think that the fans would just fight outside the ground anyway or in bars?

England is the example. Forget the minority who still give us a bad name, security has been great and we've learnt from our mistakes, for example hillsborough. The Italians need to do the same. The reference to england by one of the officials was spot on

quote:
"We must reflect. We can not accept episodes of violence every single weekend just because someone plays badly. I've been in football many years, but I've never experienced such a tragic week.

"If in England they've managed to beat every type of violence, I see no reason why we can't do the same. In England you see teams that have been relegated and applauded by their fans, here our players are hit because they lose one game.

"The culture must change. This time we can not allow it to go on. It's time to reflect, we can not lose life for absurd reasons."


Yes it's a game, a sport, yes it's passionate, but there is a big need for it to be realised that it is humans vs humans as well. Passion can be there without violence. I just hope that they can sort something out.


Posted by denys envy on Feb-03-2007 15:12:

i just hope they catch the f*cknut who threw it and put his ass behind bars for a long time.


Posted by Cloud on Feb-03-2007 16:41:

I just hope they ban Italy like they did with England in 1985.


Posted by SouthernDJ on Feb-03-2007 18:46:

Cloud I'm afraid it will happen,
right now every soccer activity is suspended from serie a to all other minor leagues, even national team and their under 21 can't play next week, until a final serious disciplinary should be taken.
I have to agree totally with Ian, it's not a football matter, but every people here in italy must understand what does it mean real entertainment and avoid hatred and hooliganism against next, England is a clear example for us.


Posted by Ian on Feb-03-2007 19:07:

It's as very hard job to do. The first step is making the majority of people understand it. The next is doing it, esp with the ultras from like lazio & roma, the fans of milan/inter against each other, the 2 turin teams, the southern rivalries etc


Posted by RapidFire on Feb-03-2007 21:21:

mama mia!

it souns a bit drastic but i guess an example has to be made. football shouldnt be cause for violence. ive seen this type of shit first hand in serbia (no one died but the riots def got out of hand) and it kills the atmosphere and almost makes you scared to go to a game


Posted by denys envy on Feb-03-2007 22:51:

to put you fools straight. i've always called it football. i've called it football before you fools called it football... well since birth anyway. i was calling it what the Yahoo! soccer article was calling it, a copy and paste job if you will.

if you have any further problems with that please direct all questions/comments to the following - HERE

thanks.


Posted by trunks1022 on Feb-04-2007 01:04:

holy shit people went crazy over there


Posted by belu on Feb-04-2007 06:17:

this kind of shit disgusts me and first of all i hope they catch the fuker who did it. Being a Serie A fan, im very disappointed. I was also looking forward to the friendly against Romania...to hell with these bastards taking away my calcio like that!!


Posted by jacheatamobits on Feb-05-2007 03:36:

you aproach phenomenology when you discus sports-related riots.

heres how i look at it:

large numbers of people=random violence

unless you separate the populace by barriers.

but then theres always the argument that a high police presence "ruins the fun". to some, though, this "police-crowd" interaction is the fun that they show up for...


Posted by OurManFlint on Feb-05-2007 03:58:

I turned on this match a couple minutes before it really escalated.

I don't think the fact that Palermo scored their second goal off an elbow helped the situation.


Posted by sleepydragon on Feb-05-2007 12:26:

quote:
Originally posted by OurManFlint


I don't think the fact that Palermo scored their second goal off an elbow helped the situation.


lol yes thats a good reason for a riot football fans are idiots.


Posted by fcuk � on Feb-05-2007 12:30:

The mass for the policman is now on Rai. Its sad showing a funeral like this over a football match


Posted by djverne on Feb-05-2007 14:34:

Wink

Why is it that soccer fans get so violent? We really don't have this problem in the US anymore with any of our major sporting events. I wonder if the violence could be attributed to the lack of major sporting events in these countries? In the US, if your team looses you just turn to different channel and watch another favorite team in a different sport. I watched the world cup last year and I'm trying to get into soccer, but what the heck is up with all the diving(ITALY)? It seems like all the players and fans are frustrated with the sport because it is so dam hard to score. The NFL, NHL, Nascar, NBA, MLB, all changed there rules over the last 40 years to make there sport more exciting for the fans, maybe soccer needs to do this.


Posted by denys envy on Feb-05-2007 14:42:

quote:
Originally posted by djverne
Why is it that soccer fans get so violent? We really don't have this problem in the US anymore with any of our major sporting events. I wonder if the violence could be attributed to the lack of major sporting events in these countries? In the US, if your team looses you just turn to different channel and watch another favorite team in a different sport. I watched the world cup last year and I'm trying to get into soccer, but what the heck is up with all the diving(ITALY)? It seems like all the players and fans are frustrated with the sport because it is so dam hard to score. The NFL, NHL, Nascar, NBA, MLB, all changed there rules over the last 40 years to make there sport more exciting for the fans, maybe soccer needs to do this.


you're obviously american and don't understand - soccer IS exciting, like way too exciting. our passion for our team runs deep, it's a religion. while you can bear some team losing and just flip the channel we can't fucking stand it and flip out. the only solution would be to make the game unwatchable so people stop caring so much - but that's not a financially sound decision.


Posted by djverne on Feb-05-2007 14:58:

We have passion for are teams to but we don't riot when they loose. I almost forgot that soccer is Holy to you guys. Lol, you soccer fans remind me of the Sunni and Shiites except they don't have to pay an admission price.


Posted by K.I.K.E. on Feb-05-2007 15:35:

Football (soccer) is more than a sport, at least in Europan society.

It's a social 'thermomether' in hundreds of cities: if the club lives good or bad days, it gets reflected on the diary life of the city, and also the essence of the town is reflected on the club history and principles, so is on the supporters. It's 'rooted' in society heart.

Football = social mirror. That's the way has been for more than one century.


Posted by RonskiSpeed on Feb-05-2007 15:43:

quote:
Originally posted by djverne
Why is it that soccer fans get so violent? We really don't have this problem in the US anymore with any of our major sporting events. I wonder if the violence could be attributed to the lack of major sporting events in these countries? In the US, if your team looses you just turn to different channel and watch another favorite team in a different sport. I watched the world cup last year and I'm trying to get into soccer, but what the heck is up with all the diving(ITALY)? It seems like all the players and fans are frustrated with the sport because it is so dam hard to score. The NFL, NHL, Nascar, NBA, MLB, all changed there rules over the last 40 years to make there sport more exciting for the fans, maybe soccer needs to do this.

You can be passionate allright, but I assure you that you're not as much as Europeans or South Americans. I've seen your matches on tv, and there's no chanting whatsoever, the whole stadium is quiet. Like the guy above said, many have turned it into some sort of religion.


Posted by denys envy on Feb-05-2007 16:13:

Read the following - How Soccer Explains the World


great book on this subject. relgious, economical, political influences of soccer in the world.


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