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Scotland play Holland on March 28 - but who will win?

Italians vow to address domestic woes after bid ends in failure

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Published Date: 19 April 2007
ITALY blamed recent chaos for the failure of their bid to host the 2012 European championship.
The past 12 months have been one of the most turbulent periods in the history of Italian football, with a Serie A match-fixing scandal last year followed in February by the death of a policeman in rioting before a Sicilian derby between Catania and P
alermo.

Italy's image was tarnished further this month when police lashed out with batons at Manchester United fans during a Champions League tie against Roma.

"I'm not surprised this has happened," the president of the Italian Football League, Antonio Matarrese, told Italy's La7 television station from Cardiff after European governing body UEFA announced Poland and Ukraine as the successful co-hosts. "We are coming out of one of the most terrible tragedies in the history of Italian football," he added, referring to the death of police inspector Filippo Raciti outside Catania's Massimino stadium.

"The fact we've lost this bid is not a catastrophe, but at this point we need to take stock and start reorganising."

Italy's Sports Minister Giovanna Melandri congratulated the organisers of the winning bid, but said that the government's plan to reform Italian football would go ahead regardless.

"UEFA has made a political and a sporting choice, they've given a chance to two countries that have only recently entered into the European footballing family," she said.

"Of course I'm disappointed. I still believe the dossier we submitted was a good one, but now we need to congratulate the winners and push ahead with our own programme of reforms and rebuilding of Italian football.

"From the government's point of view, we always said that whether we won the Euro 2012 bid or not would not alter our intention to rebuild football by one centimetre.

"I still believe we need to change the existing model of public ownership of the stadiums that doesn't work and move towards private ownership," she said.

"The anti-violence plan that was made law earlier this month will enter its second phase soon with the training of stewards to ensure security inside the grounds."

Italian national team manager Gigi Riva also said it was time to look ahead. "We did everything we could," he said. "We made a good presentation, we were well organised.

"We've got a lot of challenges to overcome in Italy that are more important than hosting Euro 2012. Let's concentrate on winning those."

As well as a promise to train stewards to ensure security inside grounds, Italy's bid was also founded on a plan to renovate several of its most famous grounds. Milan's San Siro and Rome's Olympic Stadium had been earmarked for work to be carried out, while the construction of three new grounds in Turin, Naples, and Palermo was planned.

The head of the Italian Football Federation, Giancarlo Abete, said the decision to give Euro 2012 to Poland and Ukraine was politically motivated.

"All three candidates had what it took to win. Eastern Europe had never hosted the European Championship. That's what it comes down to," he said.



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  • Last Updated: 18 April 2007 9:20 PM
  • Source: The Scotsman
  • Location: Edinburgh
  • Related Topics: Euro 2012
 
1

Edgar,

19/04/2007 07:37:52

It won't happen. Italy will not tackle the problem. Other excuses will be found to explain this humiliation of the World Champions, eg: its political, punishment for beating France in World Cup Final, not voting for Platini etc

2

Scotty,

EDINBURGH 19/04/2007 09:10:17

Italian football is institutionally corrupt, the right wing fans are untouchable and Italian football is as ugly as ever before.


 

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