Gigi Meroni

Luigi Meroni
Personal information
Full nameLuigi Meroni
Date of birth24 February 1943
Place of birthComo, Italy
Date of death15 October 1967 (aged 24)
Place of deathTurin, Italy
Height1.70 m (5 ft 7 in)
Playing positionWinger
Youth career
19??–1960Libertas SanBartolomeo
1960–1961Como
Senior career*
YearsTeamApps(Gls)
1960–1962Como25(3)
1962–1964Genoa42(7)
1964–1967Torino103(22)
Total170(32)
National team
1964Italia B2(1)
1966–1967Italy6(2)
* Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only.
† Appearances (Goals).

Luigi "Gigi" Meroni (24 February 1943 – 15 October 1967) was an Italian professional footballer who played as a winger.

He died at the age of 24, shortly after the end of a match between Torino, the team to which he belonged, and Sampdoria, hit by a car while crossing Corso Re Umberto in Turin with his friend and teammate Fabrizio Poletti.[1] He played 145 matches in Serie A, scoring 29 goals.[2]

Club career

Meroni began playing football in a small courtyard of 60 square meters, and then moved to the field of the Oratorio di San Bartolomeo in Como. From the age of two he had lost his father, and his mother Rosa, a professional weaver, had financial difficulties raising three children: Celestino, Luigi (called Luigino, then Gigi) and Maria. His first job was as a designer of silk neckties, he also devoted himself to painting.[2]

His football career began in the Como youth sector, where he also made his debut for the first team, albeit in the second division. He was then sold to Genoa. In the shadow of the Lanterna, Meroni had moments of great notoriety. The "magic" threatened to crack on the last match of the season, when Meroni refused to undergo examinations for doping control, saying that he had forgotten the test in a hotel. Three other players tested positive for amphetamines and Meroni was suspended for the first five rounds of Serie A in 1963.[2]

In 1964, despite the discontent of the Genoa fans, Meroni was sold to Torino, a team coached by Nereo Rocco and on the rise after the decline following the tragedy of Superga. The transfer fee was 300 million lira, a record at the time for a player of only 21 years of age.[2]

He was nicknamed the "butterfly", with reference to his style of play and anticonformist outfits (he was notorious for his cohabitation as husband and wife with a young divorcee, Cristiana Uderstadt), and the "beatnik del gol" (the beatnik of football) for his artistic interests and hippie lifestyle.[2]

Along with striker Nestor Combin, he formed a successful attacking partnership, preceding the glorious attacking partnership of Paolo Pulici and Francesco Graziani at Torino years later.[2]

Rumors of his move to Juventus, for an offer of 750 million lire, triggered a sort of "crisis" and then popular Torino president Orfeo Pianelli, under the pressure of the fans, declined.[2]

In 1967 at San Siro, after one of his famous dribbles, he lobbed the ball from the edge of box into the top corner of the goal, interrupting the unbeaten home run of the "Grande Inter" of Helenio Herrera, forcing Inter Milan to be defeated after three years of positive results.[2]

International career

Meroni made 6 appearances for Italian national team between 1966 and 1967, scoring 2 goals. His first call-up for Italy was in a qualifier against Poland in 1966, making his debut on 19 March 1966, in a 0-0 away draw against France. He scored the first goal for the Azzurri in Bologna, 14 June 1966, marking the sixth goal of the Italy-Bulgaria 6–1 friendly match in preparation for the World Cup. He scored a goal in the other friendly, Italy-Argentina 3–0, held in Turin eight days later.[3]

He participated in the ill-fated expedition led by coach Edmondo Fabbri at the World Cup in England in 1966, which culminated with the incredible 1-0 defeat to North Korea, and Italy's elimination in the first round. The continuing differences with the coach meant Meroni only played the second game against the USSR.[3]

Style of play

Meroni was a modern right winger that wore the number 7 shirt. His biggest strength was his excellent and unpredictable dribbling ability, which allowed him to trick and beat opposing defenders with feints. Due to his technical skill, he would often undertake individual runs, coming face to face with the goalkeeper in one on one situations, after dribbling through the entire opposition defence.[4]

References

  1. Giorgio Dell’Arti (2 July 2014). "Fabrizio Poletti". http://cinquantamila.corriere.it'' (in Italian). Il Corriere della Sera. Retrieved 2 April 2015.
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 2.5 2.6 2.7 "Gigi Meroni". http://www.storiedicalcio.altervista.org'' (in Italian). Retrieved 23 April 2015.
  3. 3.0 3.1 "Nazionale in cifre: Meroni, Gigi". http://www.figc.it/'' (in Italian). FIGC. Retrieved 23 April 2015.
  4. "Gigi Meroni: La Farfalla Granata". http://www.gigimeroni.com'' (in Italian). Retrieved 2 April 2015.

External links