I look back at the history of the Italian National Team players
who made a solitary appearance for the National Team in the 1980s and 1990s.
The aim is to look upon the reason, background and circumstances
why a certain player was selected for a match but never again.
Presentation
of the one-capped players for Italy in the decade of the 1980s:
Domenico
Marocchino:
24-year-old Juventus midfielder Domenico Marocchino made his only appearance
in a World Cup qualifier at Napoli on December 5, 1981, vs. Luxembourg (1-0).
He was part of the Juventus squad that
won the Scudetto in 1981 and 1982.
Given Enzo Bearzot’s inflexibility,
further caps would have been difficult to come by.
Marocchino was a former Juventus youth
player, who made his debut with Juniorcasale in (1976/77), followed by spells
at Cremonese (1977/78) and Atalanta (1978/79).
He made his Juventus debut in 1979 and
remained with the club until 1983. He won the Scudetto in 1981, 1982 and the
Coppa Italia in 1983.
The rest of his career was spent at
Sampdoria (1983/84), Bologna (1984 through 1987) and Casale (1987/88).
Photo
From: Calciatori Panini 1981/82
(Domenico
Marocchino) |
Luciano
Marangon:
25-year-old AS Roma defender Luciano Marangon made his sole appearance in
a friendly on April 14, 1982, vs. East Germany at Leipzig (0-1 loss). He was
replaced in the 61st minute by Giuseppe Bergomi.
He was Italy Manager Enzo Bearzot’s
final ‘only cap’. He was always an outside bet to make the 1982 World Cup
squad. He later joined Verona and won the Scudetto in 1985. He transferred to
Inter from there but did not get further caps.
Marangon started out at Lanerossi
Vicenza in 1975 and rwmained with the club until 1980.
The rest of his career was spent with
Napoli (1980/81), AS Roma (1981/82), Verona (1982 through 1985), Inter (1985 through
1987).
Photo
From: Calciatori Panini 1981/82
(Luciano
Marangon) |
Gennaro
Ruotolo:
24-year-old Genoa midfielder Gennaro Ruotolo played in the ‘Scania 100’
Tournament (in Sweden) vs. Denmark at Malmö
on June 12, 1991 (2-0 win). He was replaced in the 61st minute by Massimo
Crippa He was Italy Manager Azeglio Vicini, one and
only ‘One-cap Wonder’. Vicini was headed on the way out at this point. Along
with clubmate Stefano Eranio, he was beneficiary of Genoa’s excellent season
(1990/91) that yielded qualification to the UEFA Cup.
Ruotolo started out in the lower
Divisions at Sorrento (1984 through 1986) and Arezzo (1986 through 1988) before
joining Genoa in 1988 and earning promotion to the Serie A in 1989.
He remained with Genoa until 2002. The
rest of his career was spent with Livorno (2002-03), Al Ittihad (2003), back to
Livorno (2003 through 2006), back to Sorrento (2006/07) and Massa Lubrense
(2007/08).
Photo
From: Calciatori Panini 1990/91 (Gennaro
Ruotolo) |
Massimo
Carrera:
27-year-old Juventus defender Massimo Carrera made his only appearance as a
second half substitute for Moreno Mannini in
a friendly at Cesena on February 19, 1992, vs. San Marino (4-0). He was Italy
Manager Arrigo Sacchi’s first one-cap player. He had joined Juventus that
season from Bari and was a regular under new Juventus Manager Giovanni
Trapattoni in a season that they finished second. He remained and was a solid
defender for Juventus until 1996 before joining Atalanta.
He started out with Pro Sesto
(1982/83) followed by spells at Russi (1983/84), Alessandria (1984/85), Pescara
(1985/86) before joining Bari in 1986 and earning promotion to the Serie A in
1989. He remained with Bari until 1991 before joining Juventus.
At Juventus, he won the Scudetto and
Coppa Italia Double in 1995, as well as the Champions League in 1996 and the UEFA
Cup in 1993.
He left Juventus in 1996 and the rest
of his career was spent at Atalanta (1996 through 2003), Napoli (2003-04),
Treviso (2004/05) and Pro Vercelli (2005 through 2008).
Photo
From: Calciatori Panini 1991/92
(Massimo
Carrera) |
Giorgio
Venturin:
23-year-old Torino midfielder Giorgio Venturin appeared as a second-half
substitute (replacing Luca Fusi) the 1992 US Cup in a vs. Republic of Ireland (2-0
win) at Boston. USA on June 4, 1982. He was beneficiary of Torino’s UEFA Cup
run that season, as well as a third-place finish. He also spent some time at
Lazio and Atletico Madrid.
He started out at Torino in 1987 and
remained with the club until 1994. During this spell, he was loaned to Cosenza
(1988/89) and Napoli (1990/91).
He joined Lazio in 1994 and remained
with the club until 1999, including a loan at Cagliari (1995/96).
The rest of his career was spent at
Spanish side Atletico Madrid (1999/2000), back to Torino (2000 through 2002),
Taranto (2002/03), Lodigiani (2004) and Cisco Lodigiani-Roma (2004-05)
Photo
From: Calciatori Panini 1991/92
(Giorgio
Venturin) |
Daniele
Zoratto:
31-year-old Parma
midfielder Daniele Zoratto was already past the age of 30 when he made his only
appearance for the Azzuri. He made his appearance
in a World Cup Qualifier in Berne vs Switzerland (0-1) on May 1, 1993. He was
substituted in the 64th minute by Gianluigi Lentini. Zoratto benefitted from Parma’s good league form (Third
Place in 1992/93) and the Cup Winners Cup victory. He was nearing the end of
his career at this point anyway and his sole selection appeared to be one-off.
He started out in the Lower Leagues with Piobbico (1978/79)
followed by Casale (1979/80), Bellaria (1980/81), Cesena (1981/82), Rimini
(1982/83) and Brescia (1983 through 1989.
He joined Parma in 1989 and remained with the club until 1994.
He helped the side earn promotion in 1990 and was part of the squad that won
the Coppa Italian in 1992 and Cup Winners Cup in 1993.
After Parma, he joined Padova in 1994 for one last season
(1994/95).
Photo
From: Calciatori Panini 1992/93
(Daniele
Zoratto) |
Andrea
Fortunato:
22-year-old Juventus left-back defender
Andrea Fortunato made his
only appearance in a Word Cup Qualifier against Estonia (3-0 win) on September
22, 1993, at Tallinn. He was a promising defender and was a regular in his only
season at Juventus (1993/94, a second place finish). Sadly, Fortunato would
pass away due to Leukemia on April 25, 1995 aged just 23.
He started out at Como in 1989 and
remained with the club until 1991. In 1991, he joined Genoa, who loaned him to
Pisa (1991/92). He returned To Genoa (1992/93) after one season was signed by
Juventus in 1993.
Photo
From: Calciatori Panini 1993/94
(Andrea
Fortunato) |
Antonio
Manicone:
26-year-old Inter midfielder Antonio Manicone made his only appearance
(jointly with Andrea Fortunato) in a Word Cup Qualifier against Estonia (3-0
win) on September 22, 1993, at Tallinn. He had a successful season at Inter
(1992/93), joining from Udinese after a mid-season transfer swap with Stefano
Desideri. He remained at Inter until 1996 before drifting into the lower
Leagues.
He was an Inter youth player who
transferred to Licata (1986/87), followed by spells at Palermo (1987 through
1989), Foggia (1989 through 1991) and Udinese (1991/92).
He joined Inter in 1992 and remained
with the club until 1996, winning the UEFA Cup in 1993/94. At Inte, he was
loaned to Genoa (1994/95).
The rest of his career was spent at
Perugia (1996 through 1998), Cosenza (1998/99), Lecco (1999/2000) and Pro
Patria (2000 through 2003).
Photo
From: Calciatori Panini 1993/94
(Antonio
Manicone) |
Massimiliano
Cappiolli:
26-year-old AS Roma
midfielder Massimiliano Cappioli was part of the Claudio Ranieri’s Cagliari
side that was promoted to the Serie A in 1990. He joined Roma following
Cagliari’s qualification to the UEFA Cup in 1992/93. He was tried out by Arrigo
Sacchi as part of the 1994 World Cup preparations. He came on as a substitute
in the 65th minute replacing Giovanni Stroppa. The match at Napoli vs. France
on February 16, 1994 (0-1 loss) would be his last.
He
started out at Cagliari in 1988 and remained with the club until 1993. In 1993,
he joined AS Roma and was with the club until 1996.
The rest of his career was spent at
Udinese (1996 through 1998), Atalanta (1998), Bologna (1998/99), Perugia
(1999/2000), Palermo (2000 through 2002) and Taranto (2003) and a final stint
at Pescatori Ostia (2008/09).
Photo
From: Calciatori Panini 1993/94
(Massimiliano
Cappioli) |
Andrea
Silenzi:
Jointly
with Cappiolli, 28-year-old
Torino striker Andrea Silenzi was tried out by Arrigo Sacchi as part of
the 1994 World Cup preparations. Just like Cappiolli, he came on as substitute
in the 65th minute replacing Pierluigi Casiraghi. The match at Napoli vs.
France on February 16, 1994 (0-1 loss) would be the last for both. He would be
the first Italian player to join the English Premier League in 1995, joining Nottingham
Forest. After an unsuccessful spell there, he drifted into the lower Leagues in
Italy.
He
was Serie B’s top goalscorer in 1989/90 season with Reggiana and won the Coppa
Italia with Torino (1992/93).
He
started out at Lodigiani (1984 through 1987) and the rest of his career was
spent with Arezzo (1987/88), Reggiana (1988 through 1990), Napoli (1990 through
1992), Torino (1992 through 1995), English side Nottingham Forest (1995 through
1997), Venezia (on loan, 1996/97), back to Reggiana (1997/98), Ravenna
(1998/99), back to Torino (1999/2000) and back to Ravenna (2000/01).
Photo
From: Calciatori Panini 1993/94
(Andrea
Silenzi) |
Fabio
Petruzzi:
24-year-old AS Roma defender Fabio Petruzzi played in the Swiss
Federations’ Centenary Tournament vs. Germany at Zürich on June 21, 1995 (0-2 loss). He replaced Antonio
Bennarivo in the second half. He was the beneficiary of a good season at Roma
under Manager Carlo Mazzone. He later joined Brescia and Bologna both under
Carlo Mazzone.
He started out at AS Roma in 1989 and remained with
the club until 2000, including loans at Casertana (1990 through 1992) and
Udinese (1993/94).
The rest of his career was spent with Brescia (2000 through
2004) and Bologna (2004/05).
Photo
From: Calciatori Panini 1995/96
(Fabio
Petruzzi) |
Fabio Rossitto:
24-year-old Udinese midfielder Fabio Rossitto was selected
in Italy’s 1996 Euros Finals squad. He made his only appearance in a
preparatory friendly on June 1, 1996, at Budapest vs. Hungary (2-0 win). He replaced Demetrio Albertini in the 70th
minute. He did not gain further caps but was part
of the 1996 Euro Finals squad.
He started out with Udinese in 1989
and remained with the club until 1997.
The rest of
his career was spent with Napoli (1997 through 1999), Fiorentina (1999 through
2002), back to Udinese (2002 through 2004), Belgian side Germinal Beerschot
(2004/05), Venezia (2005) and Sacilese (2005 through 2007).
Photo
From: Calciatori Panini 1995/96
(Fabio
Rossitto) |
Pasquale Padalino:
24-year-old Fiorentina central defender
Pasquale
Padalino made his sole appearance in a friendly on November
6, 1996, vs. Bosnia and Herzegovina at Sarajevo (1-2 loss). This was Arrigo
Sacchi’s last match in charge. He was part of Zdenek Zeman’s Foggia side of the
early 90s, before finding his way at Fiorentina in the second half of the 90s.
He won the Coppa Italia with
Fiorentina (1995/96).
He started out at Foggia in 1988 and
remained with the club until 1992.
The rest of
his career was spent with Bologna (1992/93), Lecce (1993/94), back to Foggia
(1994/95), Fiorentina (1995 through 1999), back to Bologna (2000 through 2002),
Inter (on loan, 2001/02) and Como (2002 through 2004).
Photo
From: Calciatori Panini 1996/97
(Pasquale
Padalino) |
Federico Giunti:
Along with Padalino, 25-year-old Perugia
midfielder Federico
Giunti made his one appearance in a friendly on
November 6, 1996, vs. Bosnia and Herzegovina at Sarajevo (1-2 loss). Federico
Giunti came on in the second half replacing Roberto
Di Matteo. This duo were Arrigo Sacchi’s final ‘only
caps’. He later had stints at Parma and AC Milan but gained no more caps.
He won the Scudetto with AC Milan
(1998/99) and the Turkish league title with Besiktas (2002/03).
He started out with Città di Castello in 1987 and remained
with the club until 1991 before joining Perugia.
He was at Perugia until 1997 and the rest of his career was spent with Parma (1997 through
1999), AC Milan (1999 through 2001), Brescia (2001 through 2004), Turkish side
Besiktas (on loan, 2003/04), Bologna (2004/05), Chievo (2005 through 2007) and
Treviso (2008).
Photo
From: Calciatori Panini 1996/97
(Federico
Giunti) |
Michele Padovano :
30-year-old Juventus forward Michele Padovano made his only appearance under New Italy manager Cesare
Maldini. he replaced Christian Vieri in the 68th
minute of a World Cup qualifier vs. Moldova (3-0 win) at Trieste on March 29,
1997. During his spell at Juventus, Padovano was not a starter but was a useful
option from the bench. At this point he was in good form and was rewarded with
a cap, but further caps seemed unlikely.
At Juventus, he won the Scudetto (1996/97)
and the Champions League (1996) and the Intercontinental Cup (1996).
He started out at Asti TSC (1985/86)
before joining Cosenza in 1986.
He left Cosenza in 1990 and the rest
of his career was spent with Pisa (1990/91), Napoli (1991/92), Genoa (1992/93),
Reggiana (1993/94), back to Genoa (1994), back to Reggiana (1994), Juventus
(1995 through 1997), English side Crystal palace (1997/98), French side Metz
(1998 through 2000) and Como (2000/01).
Photo
From: Calciatori Panini 1996/97
(Michele
Padovano) |
Giampiero Maini:
25-year-old Vicenza midfielder Giampiero Maini made his
lone appearance in the ‘Tournoi de France’. He
replaced Angelo Di Livio in the second half vs.
England (0-2 loss) at Nantes on June 4, 1997. He was beneficiary of Vicenza’s
season and Coppa Italia victory. A transfer to AC Milan in 1997/98 did not help
him get further caps.
He won the Coppa Italia with AS Roma
(1990/91), Vicenza (1996/97) and Parma (2001/02).
He started out at AS Roma in 1989 and
remained with the club until 1995, including loans at Lecce (1991 through 1993)
and Ascoli (1993/94).
The rest of his
career was spent with Vicenza (1995 through 1997), AC Milan (1997/98), Bologna
(1998/99), Parma (1999 through 2002), Venezia (on loan, 2000/01), Ancona (2002 through
2004), Arezzo (2004/05) and a final stint at Fabriano (2008/09).
Photo
From: Calciatori Panini 1996/97
(Giampiero
Maini) |
Stefano Torrisi:
In the same ‘Tournoi de France’,
Cesare Maldini tried out 26-year-old Bologna defender Stefano Torrisi. He replaced Alessandro Costacurta in the second half vs. France (2-2 tie) at Paris on June
11, 1997. He had stints at Parma and Atletico Madrid but gained no more caps.
He started out at Modena in 1987 and
remained with the club until 1990.
The rest of his career was
spent with Ravenna Calcio
(1990 through 1993), Reggiana (1993/94), Torino (1994/95), Bologna (1995 through
1998), Spanish side Atletico Madrid (1998/99), Parma (1999 through 2002),
French side Olympique Marseille (on loan, 2001), Reggina (2002 through 2004)
and back to Bologna (2004 through 2007).
Photo
From: Calciatori Panini 1996/97
(Stefano
Torrisi) |
Michele Serena:
The decade’s last lone cap was 28-year-old
Atletico Madrid right-back Michele Serena in a Euro Qualifier on
September 5, 1998, vs. Wales (2-0 win) at Liverpool. He replaced Eusebio
Di Francesco in the 85th minute. He was
Italy Manager Dino Zoff’s first only-cap. He had impressed at Fiorentina prior
and had stints at Parma and Inter after Atletico Madrid.
At Juventus, he won the Coppa Italia
and the UEFA Cup during the 1989/90 season.
He also won the Coppa Italia with
Sampdoria (1993/94) and Fiorentina (1995/96).
He started out at Mestre (1986/87)
followed by Venezia (1987 through 1989).
The rest of his career was
spent with Juventus (1989/90), Monza (1990/91), Verona (1991/92), Sampdoria
(1992 through 1995), Fiorentina (1995 through 1998), Spanish side Atletico
Madrid (1998/99), Parma (1999/00) and Inter (2000 through 2003).
Photo
From: Calciatori Panini 1997/98
(Michele
Serena) |
Conclusion:
Enzo Bearzot rarely changed his side,
despite media and public demands. For the 1980s, he only called two one-cap
players.
Many better players were either
under-capped or not capped at all.
Therefore, Marocchino and Marangon
were unlikely to receive other opportunities.
Enzo Bearzot’s former assistant,
Azeglio Vicini, also stuck to his regular for the most part. Ruotolo was his
only one-cap player towards the end of his tenure.
In contrast, Arrigo Sacchi called up
many players and experimented more than most of his predecessors. He was
criticized for being indecisive as a result. There was also the criticism that
there were not so many players of International quality at any given point to
warrant so many call-ups (which resulted in many one-capped players).
During their short spells, Cesare
Maldini and Dino Zoff had few one-capped players as well.
In almost all cases, none of the
players appeared like future long-term prospects.
In some cases, they were beneficiary
of a good season that warranted a look-in.
The only exception might be Andrea
Fortunato, who might have gained more recognition if not for his illness.
No comments:
Post a Comment