Match-fixing and earthquakes disrupting Italy
At first glance Italy's Euro 2012 preparations could not be going any worse and on Friday they play their only pre-tournament friendly against Russia in Zurich.
- Agence France-Presse
- Updated: May 31, 2012 01:43 pm IST
Rome: At first glance Italy's Euro 2012 preparations could not be going any worse and on Friday they play their only pre-tournament friendly against Russia in Zurich.
Things seemed to be moving smoothly until early this week but since then the walls have come crashing down.
A co-ordinated police raid into match-fixing saw Italy full-back Domenico Criscito woken up just after 6am on Monday morning to have his room at Italy's training base just outside Florence searched.
Criscito had been implicated in the "Calcioscommesse" or football-betting scandal scandal and that would cost him his place in Italy's 23-man squad that will travel to Poland and Ukraine.
Coach Cesare Prandelli was forced into a late change, ditching Criscito, who is ususally his first choice left-back, and replacing him with Palermo's Federico Balzaretti.
But worse was to follow 24 hours later as an earthquake in the Emilia Romagna region forced Tuesday's friendly against Luxembourg in Parma to be called off.
Italy's chance to prepare for next month's tournament will finally arrive on Friday in Switzerland but Prandelli has precious little time to experiment.
He really needs to select the team that will line up on June 10 in their first Group C clash against world champions and holders Spain.
It means there is added pressure on a team who already have been written off as a shadow of some of the glorious Italy sides of the past.
They have a tough group with Giovanni Trapattoni's Ireland and Slaven Bilic's Croatia rounding out the competition.
Just getting to the knock-out rounds will be a test despite midfield playmaker Andrea Pirlo's assertion that they're expecting to reach at least the last four.
Their one saving grace perhaps is the less than impressive form of their opponents in Zurich.
Russia have already played two warm-up games, drawing 1-1 with World Cup semi-finalist's Uruguay in Moscow before a drab 0-0 stalemate against Lithuania in Switzerland.
Even the most fervent Russian fan will readily admit this is far from a great Russia team with an aging and underperforming squad who failed to even reach the last World Cup.
That will at least reduce the liklihood of Italy suffering a morale-sapping defeat ahead of the Euros.
And then there is the well-documented fact that Italy's last two World Cup victories in 2006 and 1982 followed match-fixing scandals.
A good omen for their chances in Poland and Ukraine but for the fact that this is a team in the process of rebuilding.
While the defence and midfield are largely established, with Villarreal forward Giuseppe Rossi missing out through injury and Antonio Cassano only just back from a heart operation, the forward pair have little experience playing together.
Cassano will likely start alongside Mario Balotelli, but the two have hardly played together before.
Not that there will be any options for greater synthesis in the forward positions with Antonio Di Natale just back into the squad after a two-year hiatus and Fabio Borini a total newcomer with Sebastien Giovinco a relative one.
Italy have a lot of work yet to do, but then again, so too have Russia.