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Stadiums in Naples: San Paolo & others The San Paolo stadium
in Fuorigrotta
In 1934 financial difficulties
following Ascarelli’s death caused the team to
relocate to another stadium, one financed and built by
the Italian state in the late 1920s up in the Vomero
section of Naples. It was originally called the
"October 28th Stadium" (a Fascist reference to the
date of Mussolini’s March on Rome in 1922, which
brought the Fascists to power in Italy). Later the
name was changed to the current one—the Arturo Collana stadium (after a
journalist who was president of the Naples football
club). It held over 30,00 spectators and was the
Naples home stadium until 1959. The “Collana” is still
an active multi-purpose sports facility and has
undergone numerous renovations over the years. The
stadium has a certain interest for historians of WWII
in that it become a German internment camp in 1943 for
captured members of the Italian resistance due to be
shipped to Germany; as such, the area around the
stadium became the center of the active resistance
movement against the Wehrmacht
culminating in the so-called “Four Days of Naples.”
The square adjacent to the stadium is today called Piazza Quattro Giornate (Four Days). In 1959, the Naples soccer team
(currently doing well in “serie A,”
the top league in Italy) moved to the new San Paolo stadium
in Fuorigrotta, a western suburb near the Mostra d’Oltremare. The
stadium then underwent extensive renovations in 1989
in preparation for the 1990 World Cup. Those
renovations and the supplemental construction in the
area were to have included a new underground train to
get people to the games. Only a cynic would note that
that train line
didn’t open until 2007; after all, they did get the
stadium finished on time! San Paolo seats
sixty-thousand crazed fans and is the third largest in
Italy. Currently, there is a popular movement to have San Paolo stadium renamed for Diego Armando Maradona, Argentine superstar who played for Naples from 1884-1991, leading the team during its most successful period, one that included two Italian A-league national championships (1986/87 and 1989/1990). Maradona is easily the most popular athlete in any sport ever to compete in Naples. Ironically, he played for Naples during the regular 1990 season when he was also on his own national team of Argentina for the World Cup games held at various sites throughout Italy. Argentina played Italy in one of the semi-final matches; it was played at San Paolo in Naples. Maradona was so well-liked by his Neapolitan fans that he even got away with encouraging them to root for Argentina. The fans took it good-naturedly and even gave him a round of applause when he scored the winning penalty kick against Italy. There is, however, a problem; Italian law prohibits public buildings from being named for any person who has not been dead for 10 years. to main index to sports portal |