Forza Italia

Forza Italia – The Fall and Rise of Italian Football

Written by Paddy Agnew, Published by Random House Group’ 2007 edition.

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This book tells of Paddy Agnew’s journey as a commentator on things Italian, mainly Football from his arrival in December 1985 to mid 2007.

He arrived in Rome with his girlfriend Dympna not knowing the language and initially depending on her small income until he became established. Eventually moving out of ‘The Eternal City’ to a village north of the capital where he still lives with his wife Dympna and their daughter Róisín.

It tells of how he was initially taken advantage of and given the run around by differing people but was determined to get established and get to understand the very soul of Italian Football and how it shapes their society and how the Italian way shapes it.

Paddy has carved out a career in journalism and become a go to authority on the Italian Football scene. He initially worked freelance and for the Irish Times from 1986 until autumn 2017. He has also reported successfully for RTE, ESPNTV, Newstalk 106, the BBC World Service, Reuters, Talksport and World Soccer Magazine for whom he posts regularly.

With a varied palate of reporting on the Vatican, the Mafia and the intrigues of Serie ‘A’ football he has never had a dull moment.

The book tells how he has fallen in love with the Italian game, all its twists and turns, ups and downs. The corruption scandals, the individuals who run, manage the game and the judiciary who have exposed the wrong doings are all there to give you the information to make up your own mind on the Italian way.

This book does not get into the deep feelings of the Italian fans like Tim Parks’ ‘A Season With Verona’ but it does give a great depth of information and thought into the way in which the upper echelons ran the game in the period of the book.

As a historical piece of this era it is very concise and to understand Italian Football of today it is a must to read.

 

The bubble bursts on March 13th

Visiting Villa park for the second time this season I was cheered by everyone’s good mood and expectation.

The 4-1 defeat of Wolverhampton Wanderers 3 days earlier had raised expectation of regaining promotion to the Premiership through automatic promotion rather than by the nail biting lottery of the play offs.

Villa Park looked as immaculate as ever and a crowd of over 30000 had turned up to see them play Lower Table Queens Park Rangers in this rearranged game.

From the start Villa looked lethargic and seemed to have no shape or purpose. QPR won just about every header in attack and defence and it was no surprise that they took the lead through Ryan Manning after 12 minutes when he ought fought John Terry to head home a net uncontested cross.

Villa did little to respond and when they did high crosses into the box were dealt with easily. It was no surprise that QPR’s left back Jake Bidwell, who had provided the cross for the first goal, scored with a well placed shot to the right hand corner of Sam Johnstone’s goal. His shot was made easy by the poor headed clearance by the Villa defence.

Surely Villa would come back in the second half playing into the Holte End. The introduction of Kienen Davis and Scott Hogan did have an initial impact but with everything going through Jack Grealish who was receiving the ball further and further within their defensive half it was not surprising that substitute Luke Freeman who had only been on the field for a few minutes made it 3-0 with just 98minutes from time.

Birkir Bjarnason’s late introduction on 81 minutes for the very ineffective Connor Hourihane did spark some more direction and James Chester’s 88th minute goal and 4 minutes of added time gave unjustified hope but Villa’s 61% domination of play did not reflect QPR’s domination of the score, chances and commitment.

 

Aston Villa manager Steve Bruce told BBC WM:

“We’ve choked tonight. We’ve made a mess of it. Now we need to put it right at Bolton on Saturday evening.

“From experience, I always feared it might be ‘After the Lord Mayor’s Show’ following the weekend. I toyed and toyed with changing it, making five or six changes, and in hindsight, I should have done.

“We never got started. Mentally, we weren’t at it. We didn’t get anywhere near the heights of Saturday. But that’s what this league is all about, any team can beat you.”

Quotes from Steve Bruce from BBC WM printed on the BBC sport Website.

With other results going against Villa it looks highly unlikely that they will go up automatically. To be any football fan has its ups and downs but the last 6 years with Villa have been a roller coaster that has had more downs than ups.

Some fans left early but most left the ground still hopeful that the team can regroup and win their last 9 remaining games.

Match of the Day

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While many would have considered Manchester United v Liverpool or Aston Villa v Wolverhampton Wanderers as their match of the day with chasing teams gaining the upper hand, a worthy alternative was Hereford FC v Kings Lynn.

Hereford FC are rising from the December 2014 demise of Hereford United. The newly formed club, keeping the Bull mascot, the club colours and the Edgar Street ground have started to bounce back and hope to eventually regain Football League status.

What is impressive is the fan base they have kept and grown. With over 1500 season tickets they have deserved their success having won the Midland Football League in 2015/16, the Southern League South and West League in 2016/17 and now sit top of the Southern League Premier Division. In between all of this was a trip to Wembley for an FA Vase Final.

Hereford 0 Kings Lynn 2 – March 10th 2018

Hereford started the game 10 points clear at the top of the league against their nearest rivals Kings Lynn who had played one game more. A win would have left them out of sight in the league with only Slough with games in hand any threat to their ultimate promotion.

Hereford however never got into their stride and although hitting the bar once in each half never looked like taking control. The very wet pitch made keeping control of the ball difficult and gusting winds made for some high balls straying from their intended destination.

At half time the 0-0 scoreline looked the most likely final outcome to the game but some head tennis in the Hereford goal mouth lead to Ryan Fryatt beating Hereford’s goalkeeper Martin Horsell on 58 minutes. With the home side trying to push forward Toby Hillard received a through ball which he ran onto to slot home for 2-0. Hereford never looked like coming back from this and the game petered out for Kings Lynn to inflict the double over the league leaders.

Hereford need to regroup to continue their rise up the leagues and the 3424 who attended was a bigger crowd than at 8 Football League games some three and four leagues above this level. I’m sure that Hereford will get their reward this season. Everyone at the ground was so friendly when buying a ticket a few hours earlier and two Kings Lynn fans decided to chat to me all of the match. This was Non League football at its best although I believe the conditions did not give me the end to end football I had hoped for. Great day out.