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Early Football (Soccer) in Naples Attila Sallustro
The first organized football club in
Naples was formed in 1904 as “The Naples Foot-Ball and
Cricket Club” by one James
Poths, an English employee of a merchant marine
company in Naples. The name of the “Naples Football
Club” turned, simply, into “Il Naples.”
The team played in Bagnoli
on a field in the shadow of the Posillipo hill. There
would generally be a few hundred spectators (mostly
friends and relatives of the players), some of whom
would happily help the players lay down chalk lines on
the field before the game. The club played visiting
teams and were particularly encouraged in 1906 when they
defeated (3-2) a team off the English ship, Arabik,
a team that included some professional English players.
Il Naples then went on the road to play
in Palermo, winning a private trophy awarded for the
match. In 1911 the Naples club spun off its
own competition in the form of a new club named the Internazionale. Their “home field” was
near the thermal baths in Agnano; the Naples team also
moved away from the swiftly industrializing area of
Bagnoli to a new field in Agnano. (Note that the teams
were not yet “professional”; they were made up mostly of
amateur athletes and anyone who was simply in good
enough shape to play but who made a living at a “real”
job.) After WWI, a playing field was set up
in Naples, itself, in the Villa
Comunale along the seafront and the splendid new
via Caracciolo and suddenly everyone could stop, watch
and cheer—football fandom was born. In 1921 the original
two teams, Naples and Internazionale
reunited to form Internaples, the team
that would represent the city in a nation now full of
town teams (although still organized separately into
leagues in the north and leagues in the south). The team
moved to a new playing field in the Arenaccia quarter
(roughly, the area behind the Albergo dei Poveri),
a field that had been built in 1919 for a local military
team. The president of the new Internaples
club was the young industrialist Giorgo Ascarelli, who
would then be instrumental in building a new stadium in Naples and
getting the Italian national leagues expanded into the
current nation-wide system. He was also responsible in
1926 for changing the name of the club from Internaples
to Associazione Calcio Napoli, with the
team, itself, simply Napoli. This was
in keeping with the Fascist view that an Italian city
should not use a foreign term, Naples,
to refer to itself. Also in 1926, the Fascist government
abolished the North/South separation of sports leagues;
thus, beginning with the 1926/7 season, Naples
participated in its first nation-wide league play. On
that team was Attila
Sallustro (photo, above), a native of Paraguay,
who had played for the earlier Internaples
team; he remained with Napoli through
1937 and may be counted as the first football “idol” of
Neapolitan fandom.
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