In the past the game has had drama, controversy, clowns and championships. It was first contested back in 1929 and since then AS Roma have led the way with 63 wins to Lazio’s 46. In 1979 a Lazio fan was killed by a flare fired from the Roma section at the far end of the stadium and in 2004 the game had to be abandoned after the leaders of the Roma Ultras groups walked unopposed onto the pitch and approached Francesco Totti to tell him to walk off after a rumour spread that the riot police had killed a fan. Violence then escalated onto the streets outside the stadium.
Both teams have been through the mill in terms of off the field antics. Back in 1980 SS Lazio were relegated, along with AC Milan after being implicated in a betting scandal. Match-fixing also cost the club dear in 2006 when they were implicated in the Calciopoli scandal that saw Juventus relegated and Lazio excluded from European competition. Long time club owner Sergio Cragnotti arrived at the club in 1992 and initially funded some massive transfers (£18m for Veron, £19 for Vieri & £35m for Crespo). But when his Cirio food empire collapsed, so did the club’s fortune.
AS Roma were also implicated in the 2006 scandal but have had a bit more of a stable time financially since, although like their cross-town rivals have had to play second fiddle to first the Old Lady of Turin and then the Milan clubs. Every season they were one player away from a Scudetto-winning side, one decision away from beating their rivals, and one manager away from getting the balance right. Today it’s the turn of the Spanish duo Luis Enrique and Ivan De La Pena to try and bring some Barca magic to the side. On the other side of the stadium all of the tittle-tattle talk was of Gianfranco Zola arriving on a little white pony to save the club from the management of Edoardo Reja.
Ah yes, the magic box. Cast your mind back to yesterday’s opening piece on the avventura Italiano. In summary, we left our intrepid heroes Danny, Adam and Stuart leaving the tinderbox atmosphere of the Stadio Septembre VIII in Frascati armed with their magic boxes – the football equivalent of a Fortnum and Masons picnic hamper. We left our Roma umbrellas at home (as well as our headbands, rucksacks and scarves). In fact we were armed just with our invite as he boarded the football special from Frascati to Roma Termini.
One 30 minute train ride and we walked out into the Roman sunshine. Nothing screamed Derby Day to us. No riot police, no sirens, no fans. Strange. If this was Manchester Piccadily, Liverpool Lime Street or even Mile End in London on derby day two hours before kick off there would be chaos. But here in a country dominated by chaos there was calm. We hopped in a taxi and went on a nice (but somehow unnecessary) drive through the Villa Borghese (think Hyde Park but with sunglasses and Vespas) before eventually being deposited at the Ponte Duca d’Aosta. This was the bridge that everyone we spoke to warned us about.
We had to go and pick up our tickets so we entered the stadium, walked around a bit, went out of the stadium and finally found “box one” which was a stall manned by a stunning Italian women (there is a theme here – bear with me). She checked our ID, slapped a plastic wristband on us and ushered us through a magic gate, where we got to re-enter the stadium on a red carpet which led to the same spot we were five minutes previous.
Surprise number one was that they were serving beer in the stadium. It wasn’t cheap (€8 a pint) but it was the real deal so we indulged. There was still thirty minutes to kick off and the noise was on a par with anywhere I’ve been in the world, perhaps bar Legia Warsaw. Both Curves were full and prepped for action. The teams warmed up to incessant whistling and our Magic Box area around us filled up with people wearing their Roma headbands, carrying their Roma rucksacks (and undoubtably with their Roma umbrellas in).
AS Roma 1 SS Lazio 2 – Stadio Olimpico – Sunday 4th March 2012
In our earlier game in Frascati, one refeering decision early in the game essentially decided the result. Across the city a few hours later you could argue the same point.
Back in 2006 West Ham lost the best ever FA Cup final against Liverpool basically down to one man – on loan full back Lionel Scaloni. His decision to try to hoof a ball upfield in the last-minute of injury time when West Ham were winning instead of whacking it into touch. His clearance went to Gerrard and the rest is history. Scaloni never played for the club again. Scaloni then ended up at Lazio and here he was – my pantomime villain for the day. His first act was to get booked for a silly foul on Totti, and then a minute later he was a spectator as Roma’s Fabio Borini equalised. The ex-Chelsea youngster, who like so many before him was never given a chance at the club which was slowly self-destructing thanks to the way the owner treated his managers.
The game was no conforming to any calcio stereotype. It was fast paced, open and chances were flying it at both ends. The fans at both ends were distracted by the game for once, and whilst the noise didn’t really abate, the show did. Both sides should have scored again before the break, and it was left to the referee to become the common enemy as he dished out four yellows in the opening period.
Four glasses of red and three “mousses” later and we went back to our seats. The second half seemed much better through a haze vino rosso perhaps because it was a genuinely good game. The yellow card count started to creep up with Mauri and ex-Manchester United defender Heinze going into the book.
Any controversial moment in the game and the crowd reacted as if they had been personally affronted. One chap kept popping up and pointing his finger and thumb at the Lazio fans in a gun gesture, whilst someone behind him kept filming the whole thing on an iPad. Yep, someone had brought their iPad, encased in a lovely Roma leather case of course.
If the first eight five minutes had been dominated by a very un-Italian style of game, then the last five conformed to what we had seen a thousand times with time-wasting, play acting and cards galore. First was a second yellow for Scaloni (shame that), although Lazio did try to send on a sub at the same time but referees never fall for that trick do they?
Four other players went into the note-book in the final few minutes including the legendary Totti for a desperate dive. Even his God-like powers didn’t sway the officials who saw through his histrionics. The final whistle was greeted with fireworks in the Lazio end and boos all around the rest of the stadium. Two derby defeats to their bitter rivals in the season seem to have ended Roma’s Champions League challenge as well.
More photos from the afternoon can be found here.