The Star Malaysia

Son of English coach remembers ‘Grande Torino’ on 70th anniversar­y of Superga disaster

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TURIN: Every year thousands gather at the Basilica of Superga overlookin­g Turin to commemorat­e the memory of Italian football’s all-conquering ‘Grande Torino’ team who were wiped out in an air disaster.

This year, Englishman Bill Lievesley will be among them to mark the 70th anniversar­y of the tragedy which claimed the lives of 31 people including his father Leslie Lievesley, the team coach, among 18 players and officials.

The team known as the Invincible­s, winners of five straight Serie A titles, formed the backbone of the Italian national team at the time.

They were returning from a match against Benfica in Lisbon, when their Fiat G.212 plane crashed in foggy and cloudy conditions into the Superga hill overlookin­g Turin.

“Outside of Italy most people have never heard about the Torino disaster; the only football disaster they know about is the Manchester United one,” Lievesley told AFP ahead of travelling to northern Italy from his home in England.

“It’s as if people now seem to have found out about it,” he said.

“I certainly didn’t forget about it because it completely changed my life around.”

Bill was just ten years old when his 37-year-old father, a former Manchester United and Crystal Palace defender, was killed.

Incredibly Leslie had survived three air crashes, two with the Royal Air Force during the Second World War, and a third with the Torino youth team, at Turin airport.

Lievesley arrived in Torino in 1947, coaching alongside Holocaust survivor Erno Egri Erbstein from Hungary, having first trained Dutch side Heracles Almelo after the war.

Bill recalls returning home on May 4, 1949 and his mother Nellie telling him ‘people are saying that there has been a plane crash’.

“Nobody believed it had happened until several hours later,” recalls Bill, an 80-year-old retired engineer with the National Health Service.

“It was a terrible day with low cloud and poor visibility, the plane went into the hill. It was like I was moving about in a bit of a dream for a while.”

Today, he will attend the commemorat­ion ceremony along with his partner Wendy and daughters Joanne and Susan, as he did ten years ago.

Before that Bill had never returned, moving back to England because his mother wanted his father to be buried in the same churchyard as his family in Washington, five miles (8km) from Doncaster.

Bill says moving back had been a “culture shock” after their comfortabl­e lifestyle in Turin, living initially in a colliery house in the coalmining north with his grandmothe­r.

“I would have preferred to stay in Italy but my mother did what she thought best.”

His memories are of his father bringing him to the team’s former Filadelfia Stadium to play with the other kids before realising “I couldn’t kick a ball”.

Bill now returns regularly to Turin, and has since forged friendship­s, donating his father’s coaching manual to the ‘Museo del Grande Torino e della Leggenda Granata’ run by a dedicated group of volunteers who keep the memory of the club alive.

The museum was housed in the Superga Basilica for a few years before moving in 2008 to Villa Claretta, a former 17th century royal hunting lodge at Grugliasco, nine kilometres west of Turin.

Thousands of documents, memorabili­a, team photos, the wooden locker room and VIP seats from the Filadelfia Stadium, are on display having been recovered after being thrown into a skip following the stadium’s demolition.

Also on display is wreckage from the crash.

“The propeller stands out for me and also the wheel, a stark reminder,” said Bill.

Torino as a team have never recovered fully from the disaster.

They have won the league just once since, claiming a seventh Serie A title in 1976, while city rivals Juventus have dominated Italian football, winning their eighth consecutiv­e and

35th Scudetto overall this season. — AFP

 ??  ?? Not forgotten: A man walks near the monument dedicated to the Grande Torino to remember the tragedy of the crash on May 4, 1949 on the Superga hill in Turin. — AFP
Not forgotten: A man walks near the monument dedicated to the Grande Torino to remember the tragedy of the crash on May 4, 1949 on the Superga hill in Turin. — AFP
 ??  ?? Precious: Volunteer Vito Mazzilli adjusting the jersey of former Grande Torino’s player Ezio Loik at the Museum of Grande Torino and Granata’s Legend in Grugliasco, near Turin. — AFP
Precious: Volunteer Vito Mazzilli adjusting the jersey of former Grande Torino’s player Ezio Loik at the Museum of Grande Torino and Granata’s Legend in Grugliasco, near Turin. — AFP

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