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FOOTBALL

Vatican gets its first women’s football team

More than three decades after the Vatican first put out a men's team, women are finally putting on its yellow jersey and white shorts and bearing the keys of St. Peter and papal tiara crest.

Vatican gets its first women's football team
A training session behind the Vatican. Photo: Andreas Solaro/AFP

For 35 years the world's smallest state has put out a men's team that for one match in 2010 was coached by European Cup winner Giovanni Trapattoni, while eight teams have competed in its men's championship has for nearly half a century, with players coming from the iconic Swiss Guards, Museums and the economic services.

“We thought the time was right to try to organise something, training and matches, also for women,” Danilo Zennaro, a representative of the Vatican sports association, told AFP.

READ ALSO: Nuns on the run: Vatican launches its first athletics team

And for a few months now, a group of about 20 women — including Vatican employees, wives and workers from the Bambino Gesu pediatric hospital administered by the Holy See — meet once or twice a week to train on the grounds of the Pius XI sports centre in the shadow of the Dome of St. Peter.

The training kits are mismatched, the level of play variable, but serious effort is being made ahead of a match with Serie A side Roma and then a tournament in Vienna later this month, with the session continuing until late into the night.


Photo: Andreas Solaro/AFP

“We are a very heterogeneous group, there are young people aged about 25 and 50-year-olds,” said 35-year-old Vatican employee Maura Turoli, who has little footballing experience but now plays as a defender.

“It's wonderful to be on the pitch and see husbands and children waiting for us and supporting us on the other side of the fence.”

'Message of union'

Although Pope Francis recently spoke of football as “the most beautiful game”, the three words “football”, “women” and “Vatican” are not necessarily ones people would put together in the same sentence.

But Turoli says that they “will try to disprove this idea and show that we have our place”. 


'We have our place': Maura Turoli of the Vatican Women's Team. Photo: Andreas Solaro/AFP

Teammate Floriana Di Iorio, who was already part of the women's team at the Bambino Gesu hospital, says this team “goes beyond sport” and wants to “spread a message of great openness”.

“The main objective is to convey a message of union, to be consistent, to keep our enthusiasm and perhaps also to be examples in places where the role of woman is still seen as a little marginal.”

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A “spirit of union” is also what team coach, Gianfranco Guadagnoli, who works in the Vatican Post Office, wants to achieve.

“We've just started this group, the first training session was one of pain, problems … But they are doing better than expected,” said Guadagnoli, who also coaches the men's team.

“We've never played a 11-a-side and on a big pitch, but Roma have come forward and … we will try, even if our means are not those of a Serie A team. It does not matter, we go with our qualities and whatever happens happens, without problems or dramas.”


Photo: Andreas Solaro/AFP

The match proceeded as expected, with a game reduced to two 20-minute halves ending in a double-figures defeat and a baptism of fire for a trailblazing team. 

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RACISM

VIDEO: Spain’s La Liga reviews video of boy racially abusing Vinicius

Spain's La Liga on Monday said it was reviewing a video of a child making racist insults towards Real Madrid forward Vinicius Junior during the 2-2 draw with Valencia at the weekend.

VIDEO: Spain's La Liga reviews video of boy racially abusing Vinicius

“We’re in the process of studying and analysing the facts from a legal standpoint to see what we can and should do,” La Liga sources said.

In a video published by a journalist for ESPN Brasil, and picked up by Spanish media, a boy sitting in a woman’s lap can be heard calling Vinicius a “monkey”.

The Brazilian scored twice for Madrid as his team recovered from two goals down at Mestalla on Saturday.

Vinicius raised his fist in a “Black Power” salute after the first of his two goals at a ground where he was racially abused last season. Valencia subsequently banned three people from the stadium for life.

The 23-year-old has become a symbol of the fight against discrimination in Spanish football after suffering racist abuse on many occasions, and he was jeered repeatedly by home supporters on Saturday.

Jude Bellingham was sent off after the final whistle against Valencia for protesting after the referee blew the final whistle right before the England midfielder headed home what he thought was the winning goal.

READ ALSO: Football star Vinicius highlights racist behaviour from Spanish fans

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