Subject: Inter-Milan - A Derby Story Date: Mon, 13 Oct 1997 21:59:50 -0500 [posted in four long installments] From: Paul Mettewie(This story is not intended to be a legally binding non-fiction story - especially when it concerns the blow-by-blow events of the soccer games themselves. Please do not hold me to the exact minute and scorer of games held a quarter of a century ago! Thanks - Paul) INTER versus MILAN - "FURY IN THE FOG" Many American teenagers associate November with the leaves falling off the trees, with the family getting together for Thanksgiving, with going to football games wrapped in blankets with mugs of hot cider to keep one warm. Not for me. But I didn't miss out on *anything*. Not that I don't like leaves changing colors and the wonderful Thanksgiving feast and family get-together. But I was in Milan, Italy as an American teenager. I thought of November as foggy mist around the Duomo, as buying a farcito tost in the subway tabaccheria - con carciofi (with artichoke) if you please - so you could not only enjoy a tasty sandwich, but warm your hands as well! November was riding the Metropolitana (simply known as the "Metro") to school and to locations around the city. It was the sparks shooting off the electric tram lines at night, it was the hot chestnut vendors in the Piazza Cordusio. There was even an organ grinder man with a real monkey -- something I never thought I would see in real life! "Novembre" was all this and more ...... but most of all, November was soccer. Calcio. Football! And soccer in Milan is a crown jewel of the city. Along with the great opera center, La Scala, along with one of the world's fashion centers located on the Via Montenapoleone, along with the constant thrumming of business deals of the "borsa", the stock exchange. Along with the towering presence of the ornate gothic cathedral called simply "Il Duomo", the symbol of the city. Soccer was part and parcel of Milanese life. It was discussed everywhere at anytime by virtually everybody. You could hear it being talked about anywhere. But my favorite place to open up a copy of the Guerin Sportivo or to argue with a friend on the latest Italian National team controversy was the Galleria. THE Galleria folks, not some fake southern California yuppie spinoff. It stands next to the Duomo, a stately elegance of ornate glass, tile and lights called the Galleria Vittorio Emmanuale, an enclosed promenade that may have been the world's first indoor shopping mall, and is certainly still its most wonderful. Nothing beats talking about soccer, or art, or politics, or just plain people watching in the Galleria.* I guess you can tell that I liked Milano -- not pretty like a Como or Orvieto or even Roma, it was not glamorous unless you are 'fashionable', but definitely a very livable city and one that never lacks for goings-on. Soccer in November in Milan was me playing the game for the American School of Milan. For playing (and sometimes even winning) games as a defender and then as a keeper. But really November to me was being a fan of Inter- nazionale of Milano, the "nerazzurri." One of the world's most powerful soccer teams in a city where some of the finest soccer the world has ever seen has been played. A city with a sharp divide between its two teams - Inter and arch-rival AC Milan. The neraz- zurri (the black and blue) against their deadly enemies -- the rossoneri (the red and black). Rivalry isn't enough to describe the gulf between fans of these teams! In fact, the word doesn't even come close. Inter and Milan shared an almost complete lock on the Italian soccer scene with Juventus, the "bianconeri". "Juve" as they were often known as, were one of the two main teams of Milan's sister industrial city of the north, Turin. Together, the triumvirate of Juve, Milan and Inter were - and still are - called "i grandi" (the great ones). No other team, no matter how talented, is given that title except for these teams. Along with Juve's arch- rival team, Torino, these teams have won 80% of Italy's "scudetti" (championships) in the top soccer league in Italy, Serie A (A Series, or A League). A virtual hege- mony of power was shared amongst these three teams. Soccer sports rivalries in Italy aren't like their brethren in the States. True, in Chicago you will find the odd Cub or Sox fan that almost foams at the mouth when talking about the crosstown rival team. But in Italy the crosstown rivalries (which are sometimes even regional, like Bologna and Firenze) are much, much more heated. Inter-Milan, Juve-Torino (despite the descent of the once-proud "Granata" into the second league in Italy, Serie B), and Roma-Lazio were the biggest of these crosstown rivalries, or "Derby" as they were called in Italy. You can only compare these rivalries to their brethren in Europe and South American and also to ones growing in Asia and Africa. A Derby in Italy (and in most of the rest of Europe as well) is not a minor matter. It isn't just fans jeer- ing each other for an afternoon, followed by a year of benign behavior. Oh no, it is far, far more than that. It is engrained in the Italian soccer fan's psyche to root for one's team, but it is even more deeply en- grained that one must hate the team's arch-rival with a passion that is only approached by the passionate love that Italians usually reserve just for wine, food, music, and the opposite sex (not necessarily in that order of course!) It isn't just the Yankees against the Mets, it isn't just the Bears against the Packers, it isn't just Ohio State against Michigan, this is a bitter and longstanding rivalry now 90 years old. The "ultras" (hardcore fans) of the the teams are at all times passionate about their teams. These clubs of usually quite young men have names, usually in English words (probably because of again the English tradition of the game and the newer, somewhat American influence of being more cool or modern because of using an english word) are named "Commandos", "Vikings", "Boys", "Fossa dei Leoni" (Italian for Lion's Den), "Fossa dei Serpenti" (Snake pit) -- and they are NOT for the faint of heart. If you sit in or around one of the areas that contain these fans expect to stand for most if not all the game and expect to listen to a cacophony of singing, yelling, horn-playing (sometimes with huge truck horns powered by batteries - the infamous 'klaxons' you hear at every Derby,) da-da-DA-da da-da-DA-da da-da-DA-da da-da-DA-da da-da-DA-da da-da-DA-da da-da-DA-da da-da-DA-da.... Most of all, expect your vision to be blocked from time to time by dozens, hundreds, even thousands of flags and banners proclaiming love for one's team or hatred for the rival. It is wise indeed to have a flag of your own even if you aren't a big fan. Just make sure that you are sitting in the right section! But more about *that* matter about ultras later on.... Some ultras are merely very passionate, other bound into the criminal. Suffice it to say that an Inter fan does not sit in a Milan ultra section, nor does a Milan fan do the same in an Inter ultra section. Not unless you are insane or a very pretty young female. VERY pretty! So November in Milan for me was walking down the hallways of my school with my Inter bookbag, saying a hearty 'Forza Inter' to fellow Interisti, and an equally hearty 'Milan di Mer..." to the wretched Milanisti among the student population. But our friendship with chants shared with other Inter fans and the rivalry and taunts thrown at the Milan fans in the school halls was incredibly muted compared to the electric atmosphere of the Stadio San Siro, The Saint Cyril Stadium. San Siro is not a pretty stadium -- but along with Wembley, Maracana, and a few dozen other edifices, it is one of the world capitals of soccer. A "must visit" for any true (and sufficiently wealthy) fan of the game. It looms out of the fog on the southwest side of the city. It's grounds break up the montonous rows of towering apartment buildings that house some of the nearly two million people of the northern Italian Industrial city. The stadium when I was a boy was slightly different looking than it is now -- thanks to "improvements" made for the 1990 World Cup in which larger entrance ramps and more modern facilities were installed. All in all though, the improvements made the rather plain colossus of a stadium (almost 80,000 seated in it) into a truly ugly behemoth sitting in the "periferia" (the periphery, or outer zone) of Milano. But you didn't come to San Siro to admire its archi- tecture, you came to admire your favorite team destroying the opposition, preferably the team from across town. You came to see the likes of Alessandro Mazzola (called Sandro, Sandrino or "il baffo" - the mustachioed one - by Inter fans.) Mazzola had wondrous ball control talent in his slight frame. He hardly looked the part of the talented athlete, but he remains one of Italy's best soccer players of all time. You came to see the elegant tall figure of Giacinto Facchetti striding up from the defense to make powerful counterattacks, the rocky face and even more rugged game of bulwark defender Tarcisio Burgnich, the bowl-like mop atop Roberto Boninsegna (Bonin-SEGNA! - a play on words in Italian meaning Bonin-SCORES! as "segnare" is Italian to "score" as in to score a goal), or the speed of Jair Da Costa, the Brasilian winger. If you were Milanista, you came to San Siro to see Romeo Benetti, the defending midfielder who possessed a cannon- like kick, you came to see Albertosi, the graceful goal- keeper who was battling with Dino Zoff for a starting spot on the national team, or Karl-Heinz Schnellinger, the tough German national defender. But mostly a Milan fan came to see Gianni Rivera, the midfielding wizard or "fantasista" (creative one - a term reserved only for the most precious talents of soccer) who clashed for years with his Inter rival Mazzola and who battled him for a spot as the playmaker of the Italian national side. Both teams had recently won Italian championships and had also had European Cup championships in the prior years. Each year their derby matchups and the ones with Juventus almost certainly decided who would win the scudetto. Each year, the two derbies and the chance meeting in a "friendly" (ha!) or an Italian Cup match was the most sought-after ticket in town. My first year in Italy I did not have "the fever" bad enough nor the connections to go to a derby. But that changed in my second year. But I had already been to San Siro even as a newly arrived young high school freshman to watch an Italian Cup match between Inter and Juventus. This served as my "primer" and initiation into Italians watching their beloved calcio. And it helped make me into a lifelong fan. Coming into this game I was looking for something to replace my interest in American football; leaving it, I never again ached to see a oblong ball be thrown. I sat the entire game in a neutral section open to the general public. Most of these fans had just bought their tickets and a lot of them appeared to either be mild Inter fans or those of the visitors. Me and my friends Eric and John sat in a largely pro-Juve section immediately next to a woman who spent the whole game calling Mazzola the most vile of names. At first I thought she looked a bit like the actress Giulietta Masina that Fellini had used in years not too long before this game. But as the game went on and her insults to Mazzola unceasingly flowed forth, she only looked like Masina after a long steambath and too many grappas. Or Anna Magnani after being shot by the Germans in "Roma - Citta' Aperta"! The game was back and forth for the first hour with neither team ever mounting a truly threatening attack, Mazzola and Boninsegna being held in check by the Juve defense; Bettega, Causio and Capello being controlled by Inter. I remember the evening as being unusually warm and from our high perches we could see the foot- hills of the Alps. The game ebbed and flowed while I drank in the atmos- phere, the flags and banners, the animated conversations, the chants and songs. It began to grow dark. With less than thirty minutes left in the game "Il Baffo" Mazzola scored on a quick turnaround and flick shot after a Facchetti header was not cleared suffici- ently far enough from the area by Albertosi. Pandemonium erupted as the Inter fans erupted in cheers and massive flag-waving. Horns blew, men danced together, fathers bounced their children, little old men and ladies jumped up and down like Olympic gymnasts. Inter had scored! The "beneamata" (well-loved, a term used by Italian fans to describe their team) had scored! The players piled up on top of one another in a squirming blue and black mass on the field. da-da-DA-da da-da-DA-da da-da-DA-da da-da-DA-da da-da-DA-da da-da-DA-da da-da-DA-da da-da-DA-da! Some loud booms of big firecrackers could be heard. A blue flare was ignited and began to burnt brightly in one of the large Ultras section. But Ms. Juve was certainly not happy. Not only had her team been put behind, it had been bested by the player she had been deriding for an hour. She clasped her head in her hands and then closed her eyes as if not seeing would somehow banish this horrible event from her mind. 'Po-rrrrrrrrr-ca miseria!" (hard to translate into english because it loses its impact, let's just say she wasn't happy) she trilled loudly. She then raised her balled-up fists to the sky as if in supplication to some god or gods, bemoaning her fate. Then she was glaring at me as I jumped up and down in glee at the masterful score by my hero. My two Interista friends and I slapped five and ten (no high fives or tens back then, we all slapped low) and began the standard "INTER-INTER-INTER-INTER!" chant that swelled to a roar as tens of thousands chanted. Ms. Juve and the other Juventus fans were trying their best at counter chants or sly little insertions between the INTER (like "va cacccar'" or "take a dump" between the INTER chant so they could make it sound like thus).... INTER -'va caccar' - INTER -'va caccar' - INTER..... Well, I didn't say Oscar Wilde or Ambrose Bierce was in the stands, did I? These were largely working- class people where I sat (even though I would not have been considered one of them, as a student I was much like them in that I couldn't afford to sit with the rich in their covered, comfortable seatback chairs in the lower stands.) So this is what was going to pass for wit. Of course, Milan and Inter fans did the same to the other teams' chants as well as Juve and some of the more hated rivals like Lazio, Cagliari, Fiorentina and Roma. All seemed well until just a scant few minutes from the end of the game, the dark, foreboding visage of Juve center-forward Pietro Anastasi appeared alone in front of the Inter goalie Bordon. Bordon came out desperately and dove at the quick strikers' feet...but to no avail. Anastasi whirled around the prostrate black-clad form of the keeper and fired the ball into the unguarded net as Facchetti vainly tried to block the ball. Suddenly Black and White flags appeared out of nowhere, scores of them dancing around in manic glee as the Juventus fans celebrated the equalling score. Inter fans moaned and buried their head in the hands or screamed abuse at the referee who had -- according to them -- let Anastasi get away with a push on Burgnich. Ms. Juve was doing a bad twist imitation with her husband or boy friend. I was trying not to look devastated. She ended her cheers for Juve with --surprise!-- more invective directed at Mazzola. The game ended as a draw, which suited the Juve fans just fine, but left the Inter fans in a funk. I picked up my flag (on a hollow plastic pole because solid wood ones had long since been banned) and me and my friends walked out slowly out the ramps to the exits. We always took the "metro" to near the stadium and walked to and from the games that way. So we were on the way to the subway stop when we ran into two groups of fans - one juventino and the other interista who were yelling at one another from across a street. Occasionally a can would be launched from one group to another. We were on the side of the street with the Inter group. We stopped in our tracks. "I don't think we should get any closer" said Eric. "Nah, it's no big deal," said John, a tough New Yorker. "We just keep walking. We're on the right side of the street anyways." "Let's just cool it here for awhile," I suggested waiting to see if the groups moved on into the subway as we wanted to do. Suddenly a huge crash filled the air and everyone started running in all directions. A bottle or rock had hit a car window and broken it. I saw Eric and John turn around and run up the street the other way. I wasn't far behind. I don't know what happened there because we kept going until we saw a trolley line stop that we knew went into the center of the city and we got on it. It was full of Inter fans and one older couple with Juventus colors on. But there was no antagonism on the car, only the Inter fans arguing amongst themselves over who was to blame for the missed opportunity for a win over rival Juve. The Juve couple stared straight ahead with inscrutable expressions. John stood next to them holding onto a strap hanging from the ceiling. Me and Eric sat further back in the trolley next to two old ladies in black dresses carrying UPIM (an Italian department store) bags full of loaves of bread. "Ha perso l'Inter?" asked one lady, showing a mouth missing more than a few teeth. She was asking me if Inter had lost. No doubt the sullen discussion amongst the bigger group of Inter fans had provoked this question. "No, signora, l'hanno pareggiato uno a uno," I replied telling her that no, it was a one to one tie. "Ah, ma quelli di la comportono come e' stato una sconfitta," she said laughing and shaking her head as she looked at her friend. She was amused by how sad the Inter fans looked after a tie. Probably a woman of southern Italian origin who knew that a tie with Juventus was no small accomplishment. But then, to those other Inter fans, and to me and my friends as well, we thought differently -- this was Milano, this was Inter. More was expected. Indeed, that is the blessing and the curse of Italian soccer, more is always expected. The anger of fans came to me in a more forceful way the next season when we managed tickets to the real thing - Inter versus Milan in a game that was official for the campionato. Both teams were high on the rankings along with Lazio, led by Giorgio Chinaglia, and with the aforementioned Juve team. The stadium was sold out and we were heading to the game in a large group from our school, about half of the kids were Milan fans and half were Inter fans. We took the subway to the last stop, Lotto. We then decided to walk to the stadium instead of taking the bus. The girls that were with us (only three had come - ah, the pain of teen- agers!) did not fancy getting on a crowded bus with plenty of "roaming hands" threatening their bottoms. So we walked -- it was not a problem for us anyway -- we were there early enough and our young legs thought nothing of the walk. "Milan is going to win," said Mike to me, his Milan cap cockily tilted to one side on his head, a red-and-black scarf keeping him warm against the cool breeze that was blowing on another foggy Milanese Sunday in the fall. "Now how can you say that, Mike - you know nothing about soccer," said Eric, not the one from before, but a taller German who lived in a marvelous penthouse with a view of the Duomo. His friend Enrico, a Brasilian, laughed at the suggestion that Milan would win. But Mike stuck to his guns. "I know enough to know that Milan is playing great right now and Inter doesn't have the attack to score on Milan," said Mike some- what defensively. Mike was a relatively new arrival in Italy, but had picked up the lan- guage and a love for soccer quickly. He and his brother Tex (guess where they were from) had fallen in with a group of Milanistas at the school - poor devils! "Schnellinger is getting old and Albertosi is second rate - both Zoff and Bordon are better than him," said Eric, looking down imperiously at the shorter Mike. "Eh, Americani, americani che fate qui?" (Hey, Americans! Americans! What are you doing here?) a group of surly older (must have been all of 20 or 21 while none of us was even 17) Milan ultras suddenly appeared in front of us. They had guessed from hearing our English mixed with Italian that we were not Italian and they didn't like the easy mixture of blue and red amongst our group. They also looked to very likely be commu- nists, judging from their student attire, so an additional tension was in the air. The Vietnam War was in full swing and student demonstrations in Italy had been heated lately, mixed with labor protests and the contest backgroud of strikes. "Ma siamo da tutti nazioni," said Eric, a longtime resident of Milano who knew the rules well. He let the ultras know that we were Americans and Italians and Brits and French and Brasilians and Germans. The American School had kids from 18 different countries in it from North and South America as well as Europe and the Middle East. At this time many rich foreigners sent their kids to our school so they could pick up English quickly. When the Milan ultras heard Eric was a dual- national German-Italian, they asked him if he liked Schnellinger. Eric responded enthusi- astically that he was while we stifled giggles because Eric was dyed-in-the-wool Interista with a passionate hatred for Schnellinger, considering him a traitor, and worse -- a Milan player. Fortunately Eric had no blue or red on that day -- he fancied himself a sharp dresser and compared to the rest of us who were in in the standard student uniform of that time -- jeans and drab olive jackets, he was. Another rossonero ultra came up to me and Mike and asked us what we thought of Nixon, then President of the United States. I answered that I didn't particularly care for him while Mike kept quiet, his halting Italian and his Republican party tendencies causing him to consider silence a wise choice in this situation. "Ma, sai devi ucciderlo!" said the ultra, leaning into me and poking his finger in my chest. He was telling me I should kill him! I answered that that would accomplish nothing, I would only be arrested and the same things would go on (the Vietnam War, the bombings in Cambodia). I said that assasination was not the answer, political change was and that I was hoping to vote for a Democrat when I was old enough. I could see he was winding up for a long speech about politics and the evils of the United States so I began to back away, apologizing and saying that the rest of my group was leaving (which they were as the girls started to complain that they were getting cold standing around.) He shook his head in disgust at my obviously ignorant views of the world and fired a parting shot. "Inter di merda, Mazzola di merda, Stati Uniti di merda," he said as he flipped us the bird. (Inter is shite, Mazzola is shite, the United States is shite.) Mike couldn't take it any longer and returned the bird back to him, then turning it sideways and yelling in english "And this is for the horse you rode in on!" We disappeared around the corner and there was the stadium and also, even better, a lot of carabinieri (the Italian State Police). Some of them had riot gear on with shield and helmets and long batons, others were adjusting packs which obviously contained gas masks. It made you think -- am I going to a game, or am I going to a battle? A lot of the first and not too little of the latter was the answer to that question. We walked in through large steel gates and handed our tickets to the ticket takers and were then eyeballed for weapons by police. Some of the more questionable looking (not me I swear! -- although they carefully checked my flag and the pole to see that no weapons were in the pole or hidden in the furls of the big black and blue banner) were led aside for more thorough searches. We passed through after a policeman almost broke my plastic flag pole (a not un- intentional move I think, either he was Milanista or just didn't like the pole even if it was legal, being hollow). We began the walk up the ramp to our level on high above the field on the same side as the teams but towards the corner. Well, we got in! Some danger of nosebleed, but at least no one could urinate on us (a danger for fans of one team seating underneath fans of another - dis- gusting but true). We sat in a fortunately mixed section that seemed not to have too many problems for our group. But only thirty meters away a huge Inter ultra group sat behind a fenced partition (and this was the upper deck). It was an infamous Curva group of Ultras. We didn't know much, but we knew to steer clear of them, even the Inter fans amongst us. They were already chanting in unision. First they would chant to the field and to the few players or officials on the pitch at this time. Then they would turn to the left and begin to yell chants at the one large Milanista group in the upper seats. This was an Inter "home" game, and the Inter fans held their usual season seats with the Milan fans in fewer numbers and out of their element slightly. Most, if not all the chants yelled at this groups involved high praise of Inter, and no praise of Milan. A favorite chant was "Gianni Rivera - putana rossonera" Well I already said it wasn't slick wit in the stands. I think most everyone can make out the gist of that insult. Milan fans responded in kind, one cheer referred to the fact that Inter had its origins as an offshoot of Milan and was therefore a bastard child. Slightly more witty, but you left allegory to Dante Aleghieri at home when you came to the game, these fans were more interested in overlaps and motor midfielders, not couplets and the fate of man's soul. "Hey, I am going to get something to drink," said Eric. "I got to have something to wash down this prosciutto crudo." "Hey, I'll trade you my Porchetta Peck sandwich," I said to Eric, smacking my lips at the idea of some smooth, tangy crudo. And the bread that Eric had looked absolutely fresh baked. I forgot about the game while I considered this treat (some things never change!). Eric's mom shopped at the Rosticceria Peck downtown. Actually her maid shopped there -- and he liked to have the salty, spicey pork sandwich called the Porchetta. I could almost taste the proscuitto melting in my mouth.... "Hey, I got a foccacia from Stella tabacchi," said John, blowing my trade negotiations sky high. "I'll trade ya." "Bene - e' fatto," said Eric, saying that the deal was done, grabbing the bigger Foccacia and handing over the object of my culinary desire to the interloping John. I could smell the fresh bread, the cheese, the proscuitto! Ai! "Madonna," I said in disgust, turing around to tell John's girlfriend that he was a selfish jerk. She smiled at me as if to say "tell me something I don't know, Paul." I consoled myself with the Porchetta Peck and the Gazzosa that Eric brought back (a sweet Seven-Up like drink sold in Italy). I also had some sugar cookies so I soon contented myself with talking to Mike about how many more Inter flags were waving and how much bigger they were than the Milan banners. One huge Inter flag was being slowly and majestically waved at the front of the top balcony by two fans holding the wildly bending pole. The flag was easily twenty feet in length and featured a large gold star in a field of black and blue and the legend: "INTER CLUB - COMO" and underneath in smaller letters the legend "FEDELISSIMI" (the most faithful ones) The two young men struggled with the dual tasks of keeping the flag from wrapping itself around them or a luckless passerby and the seeming possibility of not being dragged over the edge of the long drop to the grandstand below whenever a gust of wind grabbed the huge standard. My own flag, not exactly small (it was the largest one I could find for sale in the sports shop by our family's apartment), could have been layed over many times inside this huge banner with space for considerable lettering still left over. To the right of the giant, a banner was draped over the edge of the balcony and ran at least thirty meters. On it were a large FORZA INTER! and then the word "FOSSA" and then a fold that hid the other words and then half-decent depictions of Mazzola, Facchetti and Domenghini standing together confidently, arms crossed in the age-old traditional soccer picture pose. Other banners ran around all the balcony -- I stopped counting at 25 large ones, and except for the corner that the Milan allotment was compressed in, were all black and blue. A sturdy fence separated the Milan fans on both sides from the Inter ones. The same kind of fence surrounded the field. Ten feet high and topped with spikes, it was meant for some serious crowd control. Also for crowd control was an entrance to the field that came not from amongst the stands, but out of a tunnel leading to a hole in the field on top of which was extended a sturdy canvas cover to protect the teams from thrown objects. Unfortunately, it's presence was often justified. Several hundred riot police ringed the field, mingling with photographers, ballboys and regular carabinieri in their snazzy dark blue uniforms. A small group of bersaglieri - the colorful army troops with feathers in their caps and a trademark quick-run march - were also present. "Hey, the Bersaglieri are here," said Mike looking at the feathered and peaked caps of the lounging troops. "Why do they need them?" "Probably the band we'll hear for the presentation." said Eric. Normally there were no bands at games, but an important Italian politician had recently been assassinated by Red Brigade terrorists so the band was part of short ceremony to commemorate the unfortunate man's passing. "Will they run while they play?," asked Mike. "Nah, I don't think so -- not for this time anyway," said the Italian-American Eric. "Non sarrebbe appropriato per una ricordanza. (It wouldn't be appropriate for a condolence.) The riot police were ready for almost anything, they carried nightsticks and had packs with tear gas and gas masks. Plastic face shields rode high on their heads and heavy jackets with POLIZIA emblazoned on them made them bulky with intent. Some German Shepard guard dogs paced with their masters. Shields lay against the fence in groups. A clutch of workers ran out to the center of the field carrying some banners and poles. They quickly assembled a pyramidal structure that was a four sided advertisement at mid-field that read: "PELICCERIA ANNABELLA - MODA PER LEI" (ANNABELLA FURRIERS - FASHIONS FOR HER) Some commotion occurred on one end of the stands, seconds after this commotion an official in Inter togs ran out to the advertisement gesturing wildly and as suddenly as it had gone up, the ad was brought down, right in the middle of some voice- over advertisments promoting the furrier that were being read by over the public address system. At this time a Milanista from our school named Paul ran up the aisle laughing and said. "The put the ad on backwards on two of the panels," he said giggling. "Inter can't even have the ads run right." This of course started a mini-squabble amongst our factions which ended with John knocking over my Gazzosa bottle by accident when Tex pushed him. I told John that he might as well be a milanista - first he took crudo from me and now he was trying to have me die of thirst. He offered to buy a replacement but I needed to go to the men's room so I excused myself. Thirty minutes before the game -- plenty of time. I started down the steps and noted that the ad for Annabella had gone back up, this time with the additional advantage of having all the lettering facing the right way. Some sarcastic cheers rang out from the stands. The Milan fans were singing to Rivera who was warming up with a few short sprints. The Inter fans were drowning them out with insults of Milan's great #10.... There was no more gazzosa so I had to buy some acqua minerale San Pellegrino instead. I ran into some Milan fans from the International School of Milan soccer team that we regularly played against. They were tall skinny Germans who were not our best friends, this year they were a bit more tame as we had tied them 4-4 instead of losing as we usually did to them. "Hey Americano interista," said the taller one, "Schnellinger is going to kick the shite out of Mazzola and Boninsegna." I asked him with as straight a face as I could muster whether Milan would avoid scoring an auto-gol (own-goal). A reference to the fact that the tall German had had that unfortunate event happen to him in that drawn game against us. He scowled and muttered something not complimentary in German. I smiled and while trying to cooly Charles Bronson-like exit out of there walked straight into a program seller who spilled his souvenirs on the ramp. "Eh, che fai!" The old gentleman bent over while I tried to ignore the giggles of the two Germans as I helped the vendor pick up the fallen merchandise. A poliziotto watched me with an amused look from his post by the entryway. I excused myself and tried to vanish out of there. Emerging out onto the balcony it was obvious the time to the game was approaching -- the chants were picking up and a groups of players from both clubs were huddled under the cover of the canvas over the exit tunnel talking amongst themselves and with some field officials. They conversed in a quite friendly manner, sharing a moment of camraderie before the battle. I thought one of the interista players was Bonimba (an affectionate nickname for Roberto Boninsegna, the Inter center-forward and Italian national) while one of the Milan players was definitely Chiarugi, a small winger famous for his speed and his theatrical dives after fouls (or non-fouls). At least he was famous for that with us interisti! If there was one Milan player I disliked above all others it was Chiarugi. The Inter fans on our soccer team called players who made big scenes after fouls a "Chiarugi" -- something the Milanisti on the team tried to change to a "Mazzola" - without much success or so I thought anyway! Mazzola never faked a foul, everyone knew that! Everyone except the silly Milanisti! Chiarugi was so bad that he had drawn two yellows the season before for seemingly endless agonized rolls after alledged fouls. On one the referee actually stood and waited for the Milan player to stop rolling and look up tenatively before slowly withdrawing the yellow and writing his name down. Rivera, as captain tried to placate the official, pointing to the opponent as a more worthy recipient. Meanwhile Chiarugi huddled in a ball while the Milan trainer applied the "magic sponge" that seemingly cured every malady short of cancer with just a few wipes and squeezes. A roar interrupted my reverie. The teams! Running parallel to each other the two sides came out. Shivers ran down my spine as the crowd of over 70,000 roared cheers for their favorite players and teams. Wave after wave of sound cascaded down from the packed stands. Two of the world's great soccer teams were lining up to do battle. INTER! INTER! INTER! INTER! INTER! The Milan fans waited for whatever breaks they could to inject quick Milan chants before being drowned out by the responding "home" fans. Nevertheless the Milan cheers were surprisingly loud and it took the Inter group some effort to drown them out. At the front of the groups ran Mazzola and Rivera side by side, holding small momentos for the other teams captain and a presentation to be given to a charity that was being honored. As long as I live I will not forget the wave- like movements of thousands of flags, blue, black, red, black, dollops of gold and white thrown in here and there (gold was the third color of Inter, white the third color of Milan) The Klaxons went wild, other deeper horns now joined the awesome tide of sound. I looked over at one of the girls, Kerry, and she was holding her hands over her ears, wincing in pain. Not for the faint of heart, nor was it for the short! Poor Kerry was having trouble seeing anything but Eric the German's back. Flags waved wildly, the stands in the balconies and behind the goals literally undulating with the blue movements of hundred of small, medium and large flags and banners. Two smaller knots of red moved amongst the sea of black, blue and gold, one in the lower corner and another in the corner above them. Milanisti in an ocean of Inter. Klaxons went off wildly, their four note squeals going off over and over again. Other sirens let out brief songs, the favorite one being of all things "La Cucaracha" for some reason or other. Probably because only five notes were needed for the key refrain. La Scala this was not, this was far more serious "art" to many Italians - leave the music to Sills and Callas. It's derby time! Eric and I slapped hands for luck as we always did before games and I did the same with John -- despite his culinary crimes. The Milan fans amongst us tried to look calm and cool amongst the thundering of the Inter fans. Fat chance! We laughed at them and elbowed them if we could. They defiantly shove back and yelled Forza Milan! as loud as they could. What a moment. The fog seemed to lighten a bit and the day grow a bit less gray for a few minutes. INTER! The players ran out diagonally from the field tunnel to the center of the field facing their bench and the main grandstand where the big shots sat in the plush seatbacks that cost $80 or more a game - stratospheric for the time. Politicians, Inter and Milan management, a smattering of celebrities joined the wealthy of Milano and Lombardy in those seats -- a bomb thrown here would cripple the city, no doubt the mayor and most of the leaders of industry were here, including the father of current Inter owner Moratti. But enough of the big shots.... Mazzola looked like the corner barber and Rivera like a young dandy -- neither appeared to be the world class midfielder he was. Right behing them strode the more imposing blocklike figures of Burgnich and Schnellinger, no-nonsense men with pillar like legs. The almost giraffe-like height of Facchetti towered over all but Milan's Albertosi, the Milan keeper wore a gray and black keeper kit and Bordon, the Inter goalie, wore all black and his trademark rakish tilted cap. I considered wearing one of these in honor of him during my own contests, but my long bushy curls didn't "cotton" to this kind of cap, so I settled for a headband instead. But at least I always wore all-black as the keeper. For back then, almost all keepers wore all black. At that time there were few teams or countries that had the colorful keeper kits that now dominate. Most everyone was emulating as a tradition the famous all-black kit of the immortal Russian keeper Lev Yashin. The players lined up with each team on one side of the midfield line. The coaches and bench players walked or ran to the fiberglass protected bench areas. Inter's manager Invernizzi and his Milan counterpart Rocco shook hands and talked for a few seconds. Undoubtedly words of great wisdom were being exchanged but no one would hear them over the singing that now came from the stands. Invernizzi looked the part of the pained orchestra conductor, a wince always playing on his face. Rocco looked like his name sounded -- tough-as-nails, with a mouth set hard in a resolute boxers' visage. The players did as players everywhere did while the pre-game ceremony was being held. They jumped up and down, talked, scratched themselves, joked with one another, checked the stands out. Then they raised their shoes as the officials walked by checking for any illegal studs on their shoes. The linesmen then ran out to the goals to check the nets at both ends. With shooters like Benetti and Boninsegna on the field, it would be best to make sure they were securely fastened and without holes! The players that stood still through a brief ceremony as the bersaglieri played a song I didn't know (not the Italian national anthem, because that was rarely done at Italian sporting events of the time). But something stately and also mercifully short. Then the exchange of tokens and a quick posing for team pictures. Then the players burst out to their field positions. The roars keyed back up to ear- splitting levels. A Baffo! Baffo! Baffo! chant started for Mazzola who was easily and artfully juggling the ball at the center circle while playfully keeping it away from Boninsegna. The ball seemed on a string from thigh to instep, back to thigh again, then to instep, all the while Bonimba laughing as he tried to take it away from Sandro. When it looked like Sandrino was going to lose the ball he hit it just a little bit harder up to his head where he balanced it above his heavy eyebrows and then dropped it so sweetly, continuing with the amazing juggling. An artist with the ball -- Georgie Best had his great skills, Platini his marvels with the ball, Diego Armando Maradona the incredible balance and sweet touch, Pele the laser-like eye for the open space, but to me, Sandro Mazzola was the master of dribbling. He seemed to have a secret agreement going with the ball -- 'you don't leave my foot and I will see that you are treated well.' Mazzola finally surrendered the ball to the referee and did quick little gallops, raising his thighs so that they almost touched his chest. Facchetti kicked some looping shots at Bordon. On the Milan side Chiarugi was talking to one of the linesman. Should have figured that to be happening. Already politicking!!! Benetti fired some twenty-five meter rockets at Albertosi who fisted all of them (except one or two who rippled the net sharply) back in huge arcs almost all the way back to Benetti on the fly. Rivera was now talking with the referee and Boninsegna at the center circle. Mazzola came running back up and shook hands with the referee and pushed Rivera slightly and in a not unfriendly manner. Rivera hopped backwards while gesturing in a friendly manner back to his nerazzurro rival. Ma che cosa? ('What are you doing' you could hear them saying....) Hmmmm....joking with the enemy? How could this be? Come on Sandro, this is Milan! Our enemies! This is The Derby! The Milan fans beseeched their hero while Inter fans roared their approval for their idols. The referee looked at his watch in that age-old referee's timekeeping gesture. Sandro would have a great game, but as for his teammates....well, some things just don't happen as you want them to. The plane that had been constantly flying over the stadium towing first an UPIM banner and then a Pelicceria Annabella banner was flying off with a little wiggle of its biplane wings as a final sign. Hmmm...was a milanista or an interista in there? Hopefully not a juventino I thought. Now it was business. The whistle blew and all fans roared at once. Milan started with the ball and Rivera promptly launched a long strike to Chiarugi who dribbled the ball off his feet prompting long derisive cheers. Obviously all Inter fans "liked" him about as much as I did! Facchetti threw the ball into Bonisegna, who had come far back to get a quick early touch on the ball. He always seemed to like to do this and the Inter faithful roared in support. "Bonimba! He will be on his game today!" said Eric the German. "Watch him score quick!" Inter held sway in the first few noisy minutes, the chants never-ending. An Inter banner was passed over us, a twenty meter wide star-filled flag that had us laughing at the sour expressions on our milanista classmates. Mike refused to help and had his Milan hat knocked off by the flag brushing it off -- we laughed and temporarily kept it from him until his brother finally jumped and got it back. Milan di mer.... Milan was absorbing the Inter attacks well, Karl Heinz was particularly outstanding, clearing the ball from Domenghini's foot as he prepared a shot from little over ten meters and then once poking the ball away from Mazzola, who went catapulting head over heels after the tackle. The crowd howled but no sign from the official except a play on. Mazzola looked to have been more than just touched but the ball had been played first according to the referee apparently. Facchetti lobbied for his running mate of many years, but of course, to no avail. A few minutes later Benetti (or was it another midfielder?) lost the ball as an Inter counter- attack was led by Domenghini and Facchetti. There was a heavy mist around heightened by the flares that were intermittently being set off in the stands. Milan in the fall -- waves of gray in the air. But nowhere near as bad as the Cagliari game the year before when the officials debated whether to play the game at all. Heavy fog made viewing the contest from beyond the fourth row of the lower stands an exercise in psychic powers. And the Milanese fog had a taste to it -- sulfur dioxide. This "cat's feet" had chemical claws. A roar brought me back to reality......... Jair had beat two men with a serpentine run down the far side and unleashed a perfect cross that ended with Facchetti just missing the far post with a solidly struck header that had Albertosi beat. OOOOOOOOHHHHHHHHHHHH!!!!!!! Sixty thousand throats cried out in agony. Eyes were covered as the disbelief at the missing of the golden opportunity sunk in. A smoke bomb had been thrown on the field after Mazzola had gone down, and now was clouding the field in front of Albertosi. Mazzola himself kicked it off to the side where some Carbinieri poked at with batons before covering it with a tarp. The first smoke bomb of the game, it would not be the last. Prati was beginning to help Rivera at midfield for Milan and they began to gain more and more possession on the ball. A quick one-two between the Milan midfielders broke the Inter lock on the middle of the pitch and let Rivera stroke a long pass to Chiarugi who broke down the wing past a slipping Inter defender. Burgnich broke over to cover the quick little rossonero wing but not before Chiarugi cut a quick head-high cross that whizzed by the Inter libero and past the turning head of Facchetti. The cross found a lunging Schnellinger who beat the frozen Bordon to the near post with a header from just eight or nine meters out. A stunned silence then a roar of joy from the Milan sections as Karl-Heinz bounded away to the corner in front of the Milan fans. He soon disappeared under a swarm of red and black shirts and white shorts. Meanwhile Facchetti and Burgnich were by the lines- man claming that Schnellinger was behind the Inter defense and that the goal should be disallowed. It was just frustration, even from my far, and decidedly Inter-friendly viewpoint, the Milan player looked well onsides. The official walked away from the two two desperately appealing Inter players, shaking his head. The rest of the first half disappeared in a haze of smoke bombs and scattered whistles towards a sputtering Inter attack. The Inter group of the American School of Milan was quite dejected. Things weren't helped by the constant reminders of our deficit by the Milanistas of ASM. "MILAN! MILAN! MILAN! MILAN! MILAN! MILAN!" The crowd chanted as Mike and Paul the Milanista joined them along with the rest of the knot of Milan followers in our group. The girls even cheered with them, adding insult to injury. Eric the German grabbed me and pulled me down a runway crowded with sullen Inter fans smoking the acrid Nazionale Italian national brand of cigarettes. The smoke genuinely stung your eyes. The reek from them made Lucky Strikes and even the powerful French Gauloises pale in comparison. "Madonna, we're playing like crap," said Eric looking somewhat more rumpled than his usual dapper self. "We aren't using the flanks and Mazzola is being fouled every time he touches the ball. Boninsegna is coming back nearly to the defense to get the ball and we have no one to launch the counter to." "Outside of that, we're allright!" I attempted a feeble joke. All I got from Eric was an even more disgusted look before he spun on his heels to go to the jam-packed loo. I shook my head and gazed out at the Milan section where chants of derision were being hurled at the Inter followers. Behind the safety of the sturdy partition of course. I walked back to our seats to see Eric the Italian trying to salvage something from the game trying to chat up one of the girls. Hmmmm, Eric had always been rather shy, so I settled back to watch his nascent technique. Tex and Mike interrupted my observations as they grabbed my flag, wrapping the Inter banner around the pole and hosting a Milan scarf tied to its top. Now that was too much. I was quite a bit bigger than the two brothers but two girls were between me and the Milanistas so I couldn't just trample them in my rush to separate the interlopers from my flag (or consciousness). I reached around one of the cringing girls and grabbed Mike by the lapel of his jacket and pulled him and the flag backwards towards me. I got the flag back, but at the cost of the pole being cracked and also Tex was angry at me for pushing around his brother. Mike wasn't angry, he was too happy with Milan's lead and the fact that the pole was cracked to mind too much. I apologized to Tex but told him to stay away from the flag or risk further wrath. He, of course, started a Milan chant in reply. Me and the Inter contingent seethed. The girls had finished checking to see whether us blundering males had spilled anything on their clothes. Assured that they were still immaculately casual, they went back to talking animatedly. "What do you think they're talking about Paul," said Eric the Italian to me. "I bet it's not about soccer." "Why don't you ask them?" I responded my mind more on my grumbling stomach than on either the girls or whatever subject they may have been considering. "Hey Kerry, what are you guys talking about," said Eric to the nearest one. Three quickly turned faces stopped their conversation, only to explode into giggles and then they returned to the talk, this time in whispers. "They're either talking about us or which of the guys around us is cute," I said craning my neck to see if Eric the German was returning with the food. "You think Kerry likes me?" said Eric the Italian. "I think she's cute." "Eric, you know what I just said?" I said as I rolled my eyes. "Why don't you ask them? Girls actually answer when you talk to them." I was starting to feel something that didn't involve teenage flirting or even food (general surprise there.) Things were tense with Inter trailing in the game and I felt as if some of that tension was directed at us. The Milan chant had the effect that other fans in the section, Inter of course, had begun to notice us. It was not a pleasant recognition on their part. Another green-jacketed, blue-jeaned Inter fan walked over to our section and told me I should have punched the Milanista for taking the flag. I tried to play him off a bit, saying that Mike was a little crazy and not to mind him. Just then Eric the German appeared with some pannini and one of those gaucho leather squeeze sacks full of apple cider to save the day. He pushed past the curious outsider and we were soon all munching and ignoring the angry interista, the curious Inter fan snorted and walked away, glancing over his shoulder. Whew. Both Erics and I told Paul, Tex and Mike to cool it. It was bad enough that they were wearing Milan colors at an Inter home game, but to screw around with an Inter flag in full view of everyone (not to mention the fact that it was my flag.) "Ah, Inter fans are all talk," said Paul the Milanista, all 5'4 of him. "We got nothing to worry about." Yeah, right. He wouldn't be saying the same thing in a hour or so. I would be wishing then that *he* was right. The second half of the game was more of the same from Milan and more of the same from Inter. Substitutions were made on both sides, but the play remained largely at the midfield with Rivera and Prati dancing away from their markers, retaining possession of the ball for maddening stretches of time. Invernizzi began to push up Facchetti more and more seeking the tying goal. Burgnich was left to man mark the tall legend's man in lieu of his usual duties as libero. Ultimately this only led to a second Milan goal. It was just not the nerazzurri's day. It happened just 10 minutes from the final whistle. Chiarugi broke free again down the sidelines and passed into the box to a stunningly wide-open Rivera who curled a lazy shot into the far "seven" of the goal, leaving Bordon flat-footed and disconsolate. Milan 2, Inter 0. Oh, the pain! Now the Milan area was openly abusing a whistling Inter crowd. The Inter fans did not respond heartily at first, pre- ferring instead to whistle and catcall at Invernizzi, who had never enjoyed the status of his famous predecessor, Helenio Herrera, the Uruguayan manager who had brought 3 scudetti, 2 Champion's Cups, and 2 Intercontinental Cups to Inter. The day grew cooler and the fog settled heavily in the waning moments of the game. Eric the German wanted to leave early, disgusted. The rest of us, of course the Milanisti, wanted to stay to the end. We should have listened to him. Several flares and one or two smoke bombs were thrown onto the pitch, some yellow rain-suited Inter employees ran out to kick them off the pitch. The natives were indeed restless. Any decision, favorable or not, was derided by the fans, howling and whistling and throwing objects. The police and soldiers moved into position around the edges of the field, their shields now protecting their bodies in fronts. Their plastic face shields lowered over their eyes. What surprised me was the numbers and the armour of police and soldiers behind a stout ten-foot steel spiked fence. There seemed to be at least a couple of hundred troops and police, all ready for action. No one was taking any chances with a pitch invasion. The bersaglieri disappeared down the ground tunnel -- they were hardly dressed for crowd control and they had their instruments to boot. You could see a few of them ducking objects from the stands. Things were definitely turning ugly. An Inter shot by Bonimba that hit the post a few seconds before the final whistle seemed to only serve to heighten the frustration of the Inter fans as the final whistle blew amidst jeering of Inter fans and cheering from the Milan side. Paul, Tex and Mike were jumping up and down, taking particular care to include the girls in the celebration. Double punishment! Only the Milan fans seemed to be sway- ing, their rossonero banners and signs waving gayly amidst a sea of limp neraz- zurro flags and banners. It was defin- itely not my dream of a derby ending. We argued briefly with our Milanista schoolmates about staying or leaving, an argument won by us when we said we were leaving whether they came or not. The girls, looking at our Inter colors and much larger size, decided to go with us. That ended the argument as Mike, Tex, and Paul the Milanista will- ingly followed the fair ones onto the exit ramps. The crowds were not sullenly quiet as they winded down the ramp. They were sullen and noisy. Every minute or so a firecracker would explode deafeningly in the enclosed concrete ramp, a ringing noise that had us all covering our ears in pain. A klaxon sounded from a group of insane Milanistas, shouting and some pushing ensued between that group and the surr- ounding Inter fans. I looked over at Mike and saw that he did not seem to care, that no concern seemingly crossed his face about the incident. We filed out of the stadium and noted that the small army of troops and police that had been there at the start of the game had seemingly vanished. There wasn't a shield with "Polizia" on it anywhere to be seen! We walked off in the direction of the metro stop at Lotto. I wanted to stop at a Tabacchi (a Coffee/Cigarette bar) to buy some gettone (tokens used to make calls instead of coins) but the Tabacchi was packed full with fans commiserating over a "caffe' forte", a cup of powerful espresso with a dash of grappa in it. Arguments roiled back and forth between the crowd of Inter fans. No gettone today from this place, unless you wanted to spend 15 minutes wading through the crowd to get to the bar. There went the chance of getting anybody's parents to drive out and pick us up! We turned away and continued to walk to the metro. The cowd was rapidly thinning out as the ones who had driven were already either in the main parking lot of San Siro or were fanning out to the side streets near the stadium where they had parked. Many of them would find par- king tickets when they got to their cars, the police had not been without some forces outside the stadium too! We bought a bag of hot chestnuts from a vendor to help ward off the cold as much to stay our hunger. Kerry clutched at one in her mittened hands, cradling it like a Faberge' egg and smelling its delicious aroma and revelling in its warmth. I, on the other hand, ate mine as soon as it seemed cool enough, burning my tongue slightly in my greedy disregard for safety. The chestnut vendor asked the score and when informed that Milan had won, just shook his head and lamented that business would be poor today. Losing fans didn't buy as much as winners did. Here was one man removed from the maelstrom of emotions, instead concerned with the day to day practicalities of life. We asked him who he supported. He smiled and said that he was from a small village near Catanzaro and still supported his home town team although they were mired well back in the Italian divisions. We bought another bag of chestnuts from him because he looked like he needed the business and he thanked us, wishing us luck. He also admitted with a cackle that he was a little bit of a Juventus fan too. Ay, ay, ay.... We continued our walk to the Metro and now the crowds had definitely thinned out. We were in several small groups, I was walking alone with Mike talking about the game. We were arguing over who was better, Mazzola or Rivera, when some shouts broke our concentration. I looked around expecting to see Eric or Paul or some of the girls, but it wasn't them. No, it wasn't them at all... A group of Inter ultras were closing on me and Mike quickly, yelling insults at Mike. They seemed to have appeared from nowhere, stepping out from amidst the curtains of fog. The whole incident happened so fast, my first reaction was to try to bar them from getting at Mike with the flag pole. That was no great help. The plastic flag pole snapped easily as four or five Inter ultras surged into Mike, grabbing at him. I was pushed off to the side by some others. Mike's Milan cap and scarf were torn off him, he only saved his small Milan banner. It was over as fast as it happened, the ultras running away as the rest of our group ran up, Eric the German and John leading them. Mike had not been hurt much, a scratch under one eye from someone grabbing at the cap probably. I was unhurt but ab- solutely furious and shaking with fury. My Inter flag lay draped on the ground with Mike picking it up and handing it to me. He shook his head as he looked at the shattered pole. "Better your flag pole broken than his jaw," said John, casting a streetwise eye around for any further trouble. "Didn't you see them coming," he asked me and Mike. "We thought you did and then we yelled but it was too late." "No we didn't we were talking," said Mike, whose jaw was trembling -- it had been a shock to see and feel so many people rushing at you, hate in their eyes. "My cap is gone, my scarf!" "They took off down to the subway," said Eric the Italian who had just come running up. He panted out "I saw a policeman and told him about what happened and I think he saw it, but he just waved me on. He didn't give a bloody damn." "Nah, don't even think about it," said Eric the German. "They don't want to hear about crap like this. Unless some- one got knifed they aren't going to get involved." Not heeding this last thought and whether it might still apply to us, we all wanted to get Mike's stuff back. We decided to put the girls in a taxi with Mike the Milanista and we ran down to the metro to see if we could catch up to the ultras. We ran down into the Lotto metro sta- tion, expecting to find the ultras long gone. We instead found a train sitting at this end-of-the-line station waiting for enough passengers before it set off. The ultras were on the next to last car, yelling at us, waving Mike's cap out the window like a trophy. "Milanista di merda, venite qua!"said one hooligan, taunting Mike to get back the scarf he held teasingly. He then began to try to tear up the scarf, without much success. "Come on out here and show us how tough you are now!" said John to the ultras. They taunted us to come in, we taunted them to come out. Strangely, I never remember a policeman in the station, an almost regular sight at any time, if only to be there to have a coffee or two in the station bar. The train doors eventually closed with the ultras going off with Mike's hat and scarf. The booty of war... We caught the next train and joined the rest of the group at the Galleria for some panini, granitas and fru- latti. We didn't normally splurge like this but we had some extra lire and some of us thought we could impress the girls with our money and suave manners amongst the crowds of the Duomo. We soon were laughing and having a good time looking out at the forest of neon signs opposite the Duomo cathedral. A strange but somehow fascinating combination. A stately and ornate six hundred year old cathedral and the glaring modern boisterousness of the neon signs. With night coming on and some coffee to warm you and belly full of good food, it all didn't seem so bad. With a girl leaning on your shoulder and a eyeful of history on one hand and on the other, a look at the future, the game's result seemed withstandable. Until next Sunday, when the madness would start all over again! FORZA INTER! - Paul Mettewie