Deccan Chronicle

Cassano, a fighter amongst the Azzurri

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Kiev, June 30: His coach may not believe he has even an hour in his legs but however long he plays, Antonio Cassano could easily make the difference between Italy returning from Ukraine as heroes or nearly men on Monday.

Back in October last year, the AC Milan forward’s very participat­ion in the Euros was cast into doubt as he was found to have a heart defect.

Coming back from a game in Rome he suffered an ischemic stroke that required surgery to repair a hole in his heart.

Thereafter he faced a long and uncertain wait on the sidelines to recover before doctors would give him the all-clear to return to the field.

It was a tragic blow for a player who had long struggled with a ballooning waistline, fitness issues, temperamen­t problems and the lack of faith from national team coaches — Marcello Lippi had overlooked him entirely for the 2010 World Cup campaign.

But two years ago, with Cassano showing great form for Sampdoria and a new coach in Cesare Prandelli leading the national team, suddenly the troubled but talented striker found himself an integral part of the Italy set-up.

Prandelli even said he wanted to base his side around Cassano and the boy from Bari seemed rejuvenate­d by responsibi­lity and respect.

Such is the strength of Prandelli’s man-managment and resource allocation that he never intended to play Cassano over a full match in the Euros.

He has started his star forward in every single game and told him to run until he dropped, after which he made way for fresher legs.

Against Germany in the 2-1 semifinal victory, he did exactly that.

“It was Antonio’s best match in terms of intensity and tempo. He ran, he fought, he realised he could be important even though he only had 50 minutes in his legs,” said Prandelli.

Cassano it was who found space on the left, pivoted to escape the attentions of Mats Hummels and Jerome Boateng before picking out the head of Mario Balotelli six yards out with a pinpoint cross from his weaker left foot.

The Milan forward was energetic and involved, constantly finding space between Germany's defence and midfield or drifting out wide where another cross for Riccardo Montolivo should have resulted in a goal.

It was a performanc­e that helped ensure Germany never settled and found themselves 2-0 down and chasing the game long before they could build up a head of steam.

The man they call “Fant-antonio” in Italy may not be able to survive an epic encounter to the end but his telling interventi­ons during his shortened stints on the pitch have had a magical affect on Prandelli's Italy. — AFP

 ??  ?? Antonio Cassano.
— AFP
Antonio Cassano. — AFP

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