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SPORT

Italy football coach Mancini pays tribute to ‘little brother’ Vialli

Former Italian football star Gianluca Vialli passed away at the age of 58 on Friday, devastating Italy's coach Roberto Mancini who was his best friend and long-time strike partner in their playing days at Sampdoria in the 1980s and 90s.

Italy football coach Mancini pays tribute to 'little brother' Vialli
Italy's coach Roberto Mancini (R) with Gianluca Vialli (L) in June 2021, ahead of the UEFA EURO 2020 match between Italy and Austria at Wembley Stadium in London. Photo by Laurence Griffiths / POOL / AFP

Former Juventus, Chelsea and Italy striker Gianluca Vialli died of pancreatic cancer in London, his former club Sampdoria announced on Friday.

The former Italy forward’s death came less than a month after another of Mancini’s friends Sinisa Mihajlovic died of leukemia.

“Only a few days after Sinisa passing away I’ve lost another brother, or little brother as I liked to call him,” the Corriere Dello Sport quoted him as saying on Saturday.

“We met at 16 years old and never left each other’s side: Italy’s youth and senior teams, Samp, the highs, the lows, the victories and the defeats.”

In eight years together at Sampdoria, Mancini and Vialli won the club’s only Serie A title in 1991, the previous year’s Cup Winner’s Cup and three Italian Cups.

They also came within a hair’s breadth of winning the European Cup in 1992, being narrowly beaten at Wembley by Johan Cruyff’s Barcelona ‘Dream Team’.

The duo, nicknamed “the goal twins” during their Sampdoria days, were reunited in the Italy set-up when Vialli was made chief of the national team delegation in 2019, with Mancini already head coach.

Their tearful embrace after winning Euro 2020 at the same ground where they tasted bitter defeat to Barca became one of the iconic moments of Italy’s emotional triumph.

“Those two nights at Wembley. Many years ago we cried with pain and bitterness, and then we cried with joy as though we were united by destiny before he passed away,” Mancini added.

“He played a key role in us winning the European Championship. The players loved him,” said Mancini.

“Gianluca gave us courage that we didn’t know and which he used to fight his illness so hard that he managed to be with us (the team) as long as he possibly could.

“Gianluca was the best of us, a perfect, courageous man… It was a privilege to be his friend, his teammate in football and life.”
  

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PROTESTS

Protest staged in Milan over Winter Olympics

Activists protesting against the environmental impact of the 2026 Winter Olympics took to the streets of Milan on Saturday as part of a series of demonstrations against the Games.

Protest staged in Milan over Winter Olympics

Around 1,000 people marched on a soaking wet day in the northern Italian city to decry the building of infrastructure for the Milan-Cortina Games, including the event’s controversial bobsleigh track.

The march was organised by pressure group Unsustainable Olympics Committee, a network of hiking groups, environmental activists, heritage associations and left-wing political movements.

They contend the sporting event will have a negative impact on the environment in Italy’s mountains and the cost of housing in Milan, and have organised other, smaller protests over the last week.

“I’m here to defend the environment from an unsustainable model of development,” careworker Simona Antonioli, 29, told AFP.

“The mountains are increasingly becoming prey for speculators, and we also want more protection there.”

The Italian government announced earlier this month that the Games’ bobsleigh track would be built in Cortina d’Ampezzo, despite opposition from the International Olympic Committee (IOC) and after organisers had announced that sliding events would take place outside Italy.

The IOC said that the 82-million-euro ($88.6-million) project may not being ready in time for the extensive testing needed before the Games, while having little long-term benefit to local residents.

Italian construction company Pizzarotti, the sole bidder for the contract, has 13 months to build a 1,445m-long (4,740-foot) track which includes 16 bends and requires complex refrigeration systems.

“The mountains are not an amusement park,” said protestor Alberto Di Monte, 38.

To “turn the mountains into a track is to have the wrong idea of what the mountains are.”

Events at the Winter Olympics will be spread widely across northern Italy, as well as in Milan and Cortina.

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