This article first appeared on TheseFootballTimes
There’s something peculiar about Brescia Calcio, or just
simply known as Brescia. Founded in 1911 in the quaint but industrial city that
is situated in the Lombardy region of Italy. They are oft described as a yo-yo
team, yet hold the record for spending more seasons in Serie B than any other.
A young Pirlo...look at them locks |
If one looks through their pretty unremarkable history, you
will find that in fact some pretty remarkable players have won the biancoazzurro jersey. The most
impressive one of course is Roberto Baggio, who brought such unprecedented
levels of attention by his mere presence in his four year stint. The bearded
genius, Andrea Pirlo, was born in the city and was raised through the primavera
set up and made his Serie A debut at the tender age of 16 in May 1995.
Baggio and Pep |
Pep Guardiola enjoyed a brief post-Barcelona stint at the
Stadio Mario Rigamonti in 2001/02 in a team that featured not only the Divine
Ponytail but also future World Cup winner Luca Toni. That’s quite an alumnus.
The most remarkable example however has to be that of one
Gheorghe Hagi, Maradona of the Carpathians. Romania’s greatest ever player
adorned the jersey of the Little Swallows
for two seasons, sandwiched in between spells at the Spanish behemoths Real
Madrid and Barcelona. When viewing his profile on Wikipedia it makes for a curious
sight. Real Madrid. Brescia. Barcelona.
The mind-boggling aspect of Hagi’s stint in Italy was that
he was supposed to be at the pinnacle of his career when he moved in the summer
of 1992. He was 27 years old. When Baggio traversed the same path eight years
later he was 33 and in search of first team football with a view to making the
Italy squad for the 2002 World Cup.
Guardiola was in need of a home after being ruthlessly
shunted out of Catalonia by his beloved Barcelona at the age of 31. Toni was
only 23 when he led the line and wasn’t the world-class predator he developed
into in later years. Baggio, Guardiola and Toni were either at the beginning or
the twilight of their careers.
This is what makes the Hagi case fascinating. How had he
ended up there?
In February 1987 Hagi was transferred to Steaua Bucharest,
or borrowed one can say, for the European Super Cup match against Dynamo Kiev.
Steaua, who were the reigning European Cup champions, had political suction in
the form of Nicolae Ceausescu. Ceausescu of course was the general secretary of
the Romanian Communist Party and his son Valentin oversaw and the running of
the club and personally intervened in teams matters on occasion to ensure the
nations biggest team was well equipped to reflect positively on the country,
especially in European matches.
Hagi was supposed to play the one off game against the Ukrainians.
One match turned into three years, despite the opposition of his former club
Sportul Bucharest, Hagi never played for them again.
Overtures were made by foreign sides to take Hagi away from
Romania during the late ‘80s but were outright rejected by the Romanian
government. Giovanni Agnelli, impressed with what he saw from the diminutive
no.10, offered to build a Fiat factory in Bucharest at their expense in
exchange for Hagi. Next up was Silvio Berlusconi, who in 1989 approached an
escaped refugee called Giovanni Becali, now Romania’s biggest football agent,
with the job of coaxing Hagi into leaving his home country for Italy. Despite
being offered a huge sum of money, Hagi wouldn’t leave without his family so
the deal collapsed.
With the fall of the Communist Party in the wake of the
Romanian Revolution in December 1989 and a return to democracy, Romanian
players for the first time had the freedom of movement denied to them for so
long. In May 1990, weeks before he was due to travel to Italy for the World Cup,
Real Madrid broke their transfer record to sign him, shelling out 400 million pesetas.
Players of Hagi’s talent today would leave Romania in their early 20s, Hagi was
25 when he finally left.
Hagi’s two-year stint in the Spanish capital was mixed. Los
Blancos had won the last five La Liga titles, the era of La Quinta del Buitre, which had dominated the Spanish football
landscape in the latter half of the 1980s, was coming to an end. The signing of
Hagi was intended to signal in a new era. A fresh era was starting, however it wasn’t
at the Santiago Bernabeu, but at the Camp Nou
In the same summer of 1990, Barcelona, not to be outdone by
their rivals, also signed a left footed temperamental maverick from Eastern
Europe in the shape of Hristo Stoichkov from CSKA Moscow. Former Barcelona
manager Helenio Herrera felt that his old sides’ rival got the better player.
Whether they did or not is open to debate, but what is
certain is that the Bulgarian made an immediate impact for Johan Cruyff’s Barca
as the ‘Dream Team’ began to take shape and would win four consecutive titles
and the European Cup for the first time in 1992.
Hagi would win nothing with Los Merengues, with the club going through a transitional phase
that resulted in the chewing and spitting out of managers at an alarming rate,
even by Real Madrid standards. John Toshack, Alfredo di Stefano and Radomir
Antic all came and went in his first season. Despite the chaos, they managed to
finish 3rd.
Hagi in action for Real |
Hagi also admitted to struggling to settle in his initial season
in Spain after years of being the big fish in the small pond at Steaua. He now
needed to adapt to being a big fish within an ocean of many bigger fish. In
1991-92 he faired somewhat better. There were still flashes of the mercurial
brilliance from that left foot (why are so many left footed players dubbed
‘mercurial’?), the highlight being his outrageous 40-yard lob against Osasuna.
In an interview years later, Hagi would state the senior members of the squad
(Sanchis, Michel and Butrageuno in particular) were not fond of him. Halfway
through his four-year contract, he wanted out.
It speaks volumes about the appeal of Serie A in the early ‘90s
that Brescia even attempted to sign a player like Gheorghe Hagi, the mere idea
is completely outlandish when reflecting on it now, years later. In the
modern game it would be similar to seeing Bournemouth sign Isco or Mesut Ozil.
Yet every team in Serie A had a superstar player in the ‘90s. It was the
greatest league the sport has ever seen.
What ultimately swung the deal in Brescia’s favour was their
coach, Mircea Lucescu, the now legendary Romanian manager who was just starting
his managerial career. He had taken over at Brescia in the summer of 1991 after
a year with Pisa. He won promotion in his first attempt as Brescia won Serie B
and for the upcoming season in Serie A he wanted to create a ‘mini Romania’.
First, Florin Raducioiu, later of West Ham fame, was signed
from Hellas Verona. That was followed up with the signing of Ioan Sabau, a
fellow Romanian midfielder, from Feyenoord. New Brescia president Luigi Corioni,
who had replaced Claudio Cremonesi only six months prior, set his sights on
Gica (Hagi’s nickname) but knew it wasn’t going to be easy.
In early July Corioni flew to Madrid and a deal was quickly
agreed upon for eight billion lira (around £2 million) but a deal hadn’t been
struck with the no.10 as he was back in Romania on holiday. Hagi’s agent, Ioan
Becali, declared ‘’I believe there is a 0.01% possibility of Hagi playing in
Brescia.’’ Hagi demanded the same wages he was earning at the Santiago
Bernabeu.
Two weeks later he was presented as a Brescia player. Lucescu’s
little Romania within the biancoazzurro
was complete.
Hagi in the summer of 1992 |
Hagi’s first season in Italy, much like in Spain, wasn’t
successful yet was tinged with moments of genius and madness. He got sent off
on his league debut and the team struggled to score goals, recording only 36
(lowest in the league) and Hagi himself only netted five. By the end of the
season Brescia was forced into relegation play off against Udinese with both
sides having finished on 30 points.
A week after the season officially ended Brescia and Udinese
squared off in Bologna’s Stadio Dall’Ara and Hagi’s side capitulated 3-1. The club
was back in Serie B after only a season.
Raducioiu, who scored 13 goals, didn’t hang around, and was
sold to Milan. Hagi however, against all plausible explanation, decided to stay
with Brescia, to show ‘’he wasn’t a coward.’’ Serie B had the privilege of
having two bona fide world-class stars amongst its ranks for the 1993-94 season
in Hagi and Gabriel Batistuta, who like Hagi decided to stay with Fiorentina
despite relegation.
Serie B goal scoring charts. Quite the names |
With the World Cup less than a year away, Hagi began to hit
top form for Brescia in Serie B. Much in the way he improved upon his first
year at Real, he catapulted Brescia towards the top of the table, scoring
sublime goals against Pisa, Venezia and Fiorentina.
Yet the season wasn’t without its controversy, Lucescua gave
Hagi permission to join up with the Romanian national team for a pre-World Cup
friendly even though he was suspended from playing after spitting on Northern
Irish striker Phillip Gray in the previous friendly. Hagi arrived back to Italy
a day late and Lucescu promptly dropped him from the starting XI. The first
time he missed a Brescia game since signing.
Days later he was due to be interviewed by an American
newspaper, Hagi had agreed to the interview weeks before but suddenly decided
he wasn’t in the mood. Lucescu barked at his volatile star that he better sit
down for it otherwise he would be fined, a shouting match ensured between the
pair. Hagi eventually relented.
‘’He is a great player without a work ethic.’’ Lucescu
remarked. ‘’He could be the best player in the world, after Maradona. If he
changes his mindset, he could be one of the best players in the World Cup.’’
Lucescu’s words would prove to be prophetic; Brescia
finished third and secured promotion back to the top flight, with Hagi scoring
nine goals. Brescia also had a date at Wembley, beating Notts Country 1 – 0 to
win the much-maligned Anglo-Italian cup. It was his first piece of silverware
in four years.
Hagi lit up USA '94 |
Hagi would of course play an instrumental role in leading
Romania’s ‘golden generation’ to the quarter finals of USA ’94, narrowly losing
out to Sweden on penalties. He had played to the level that Lucescu, who was as
much Hagi’s father figure as he was his biggest critic, knew he was capable of.
His left foot weaving magic over the five games. Who can forget that goal against Colombia or the assist
to Dumitrescu against the Maradona-less Argentina? He was undoubtedly one of
the best players in the tournament, even if his own assertion that he was the
best player at the tournament was incorrect. He did however belong in that
bracket with Romario, Stoichkov and Baggio.
Hagi and Stoichkov in 1994/95 |
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