Superga air disaster

Superga air disaster

The three-engined Fiat G.212, of the Avio Linee Italiane airline after the crash into the embankment back of the Basilica of Superga.
Accident summary
Date 4 May 1949
Summary Controlled flight into terrain due to low visibility
Site near Turin, Italy
Passengers 27
Crew 4
Fatalities 31 (all)
Aircraft type Fiat G.212 CP
Operator Avio Linee Italiane
Registration I-ELCE
Flight origin Lisbon, Portugal
Destination Turin, Italy

The Superga air disaster occurred on 4 May 1949 when the Fiat G.212 of Avio Linee Italiane (Italian Airlines), carrying the entire Torino football team (popularly known as the Grande Torino) crashed into the retaining wall at the back of the Basilica of Superga, which stands on the hill of Turin. There were 31 victims.

Background

The Avio Linee Italiane (Italian Airlines) Fiat G.212CP was carrying the team home from Lisbon, where they played a friendly with S.L. Benfica in honour of the Portuguese captain Jose Ferreira. In the incident the whole Torino team lost their lives, winners of five consecutive championships from the 1942–43 to 1948–49 season,[1] almost all part of the Italian national football team. Club officials and carriers also perished in the accident, as well as the crew and three well-known Italian sports journalists: Renato Casalbore (founder of Tuttosport); Renato Tosatti (the Gazzetta del Popolo, father of Giorgio Tosatti) and Luigi Cavallero (La Stampa). The task of identifying the bodies was entrusted to the former coach of the national team, Vittorio Pozzo, who had transplanted almost all of Torino in the national team.

The full-back Sauro Tomà, who injured his meniscus, did not take part in the trip to Portugal; nor did the reserve goalkeeper Renato Gandolfi (the third goalkeeper, Dino Ballarin, brother of Aldo, took his place), the commentator Nicholas Carosio (blocked by the confirmation of his child), Luigi Giuliano (captain of Torino Primavera and more recently in a permanent position in the first team, was blocked by influenza) and the former coach of the Italian national team and journalist Vittorio Pozzo (Torino preferred to assign the place to Cavallero). Invited to join the team for the friendly by Valentino Mazzola, Tommaso Maestrelli, despite playing for A.S. Roma, did not take the flight because he could not renew his passport at the police headquarters. Even the president of Torino, Ferruccio Novo, did not take part in the trip because of influenza.

Torino were proclaimed winners of the 1948–49 season and the opponents, as well as Torino, fielded their youth teams in the remaining four games. The day of the funeral nearly a million people took to the streets of Turin to give a final farewell to the players. The shock was such that the following year the Italian national team traveled to the 1950 FIFA World Cup in Brazil by ship.[2]

Crash

The twilight lasted all day, a melancholy to die for. The sky came apart in the mist and the fog blotted Superga

—Settimana Incom, Newsreel

The wall from the back of the Basilica of Superga was never restored in memory of the victims
The Grande Torino

The three-engined Fiat G.212, with aircraft registration I-ELCE, of Avio Linee Italiane, took off from Lisbon at 9:40 on Wednesday, 4 May 1949. The commander of the aircraft was Lieutenant Colonel Meroni. The flight landed at the airport in Barcelona at 13:00. During the stopover, while the aircraft was refueled, the Torino team met for lunch with Milan that was directed to Madrid.

At 14:50 I-ELCE set off for the Turin-Aeritalia Airport. The route followed flew over Cap de Creus, Toulon, Nice, Albenga, Savona. Above Savona the plane veered north, in the direction of the capital of Piedmont, where it was expected to arrive in about thirty minutes. The weather in Turin was bad. At 16:55 the airport of Aeritalia communicated the weather situation to the pilot: clouds almost touching the ground, showers, strong south-west wind gusts, very poor horizontal visibility (40 meters).

The tower asked for the pilot's position. After a few minutes of silence at 16:59 came the reply: "Quota 2,000 meters. QDM on Pino, then we will cut at Superga". At Pino Torinese, which is located between Chieri and Baldissero Torinese, southeast of Turin, there was a VDF radio station (VHF direction finder), to provide a QDM (Magnetic course to be taken on a head on approach as a radio aid) on request.

Once perpendicular to Pino, 290 degrees of the bow, the plane was aligned with the runway Aeritalia, about 9 miles away, at 305 meters above sea level. Just north of Pino Torinese was the hill of Superga with the homonymous Basilica, in a dominant position at 669 meters above sea level. It is hypothesised that - due to the strong left crosswinds - the plane could have suffered a drift to starboard, which shifted from the axis of descent and lined up, instead, with the hill of Superga; recent investigations showed the possibility that the altimeter had locked at 2000 meters, which led the pilots to that they were at this level, while they were only 600 meters from the ground.[3]

The facts are that at 17:03 the plane with the Grande Torino on board, made a turn to the left, put in horizontal flight and aligned to prepare for landing, instead crashed into the back of the embankment of the Basilica of Superga. The pilot, who was believed to have the Superga hill to his right, instead saw it suddenly emerge in front of him (speed 180 km/h, visibility 40 meters) and did not have the time to do anything: the wreckage did not recognise any attempts to go-around. The only part of the aircraft which remained partially intact was the empennage.

At 17:05 Aeritalia Torre called I-ELCE, but received no response. Of the 31 people on board, there were no survivors. The current remains of the aircraft include a propeller, a tire, scattered pieces of the fuselage, but also the bags of Mazzola, Maroso and Erbstein, which are preserved in a museum in Grugliasco near Turin. The Museo del Grande Torino e della Leggenda Granata, hosted in the prestigious Villa Claretta Assandri of Grugliasco, was opened 4 May 2008, the anniversary of the tragedy. Currently, eight of the 18 players (2 coaches and journalist Renato Casalbore), who perished in the accident, are buried at the Monumental Cemetery of Turin.

Victims

The memorial to the victims of the disaster at the Basilica of Superga.
Opera of E. Eandi created for the 50th anniversary of the tragedy
Players
Club officials
Journalists
Crew
Others

See also

Bibliography

References

  1. The 1943–44 and 1944–45 seasons were not played because of World War II
  2. Giampaolo Ormezzano; Giovanni Tortolini (1990). 1990, l'anno dei Mondiali. Milano: di.e.di.
  3. TG-R "Leonardo": possibili cause della sciagura di Superga: l'ipotesi dell'altimetro guasto||

External links

Coordinates: 45°04′51″N 7°46′03″E / 45.08083°N 7.76750°E