Daily Mail

EVERYTHING I TOUCHED TURNED TO GOLD

IN A RARE INTERVIEW, TOTO SCHILLACI TALKS ACTING, REALITY TV, USING GAZZA AS A TRANSLATOR... AND BEING AN ARSENAL FAN

- by Tom Collomosse

‘I always give time to normal people — I am one of them, I am not fake’

YOU need only to see Toto Schillaci’s WhatsApp profile picture to understand how the summer of 1990 changed his life for ever.

Schillaci has just given Italy a 17th-minute lead in the semi-final in Naples against Diego Maradona’s Argentina and is running away in delight, arms raised, with those distinctiv­e eyes gazing upwards at the celebratin­g fans.

Italy would lose the match on penalties but Schillaci had won the hearts of fans at home and abroad. Following an impressive debut season for Juventus, he was originally picked as the fifth-choice striker in a stellar attack also featuring Roberto Baggio, Gianluca Vialli and Roberto Mancini — and few outside his home country had heard of him.

Afterwards, he was briefly one of the most famous people in sport as the tournament’s top scorer with six goals and a level of worldwide recognitio­n that still remains.

Ask most fans for their memories of Italia ’90 and, sooner or later, they will describe an image similar to the one Schillaci chose for his WhatsApp account.

Now 55 and living in his home city of Palermo, Sicily, Schillaci has been spending lockdown working on his garden. ‘ I love nature,’ he says. ‘I love growing things. I’m lucky enough to have a big garden so I cultivate all the plants I can and grow my own fruit and vegetables.’ He’s also been planning to re- open the football school he runs at AMAT Palermo

— the amateur club he joined as a boy — when quarantine rules in Italy are relaxed further on Monday.

‘I can’t wait to get back,’ he admits. Remarkably, he almost looks younger now, with the receding hairline of 1990 a distant memory thanks to transplant work.

Schillaci rarely gives in- depth interviews, but over the course of a fascinatin­g hour he discusses his love of English football (he is a closet Arsenal fan), using Paul Gascoigne as an emergency translator and his experience­s in politics, acting and reality TV.

As well as running his football school, Schillaci does regular work for Juventus, both as a cocommenta­tor and with their many supporters’ clubs worldwide.

Yet there is only one place to start: the magical nights of 1990 that define him. To give context to his rise, it is like Brentford’s Ollie Watkins — the most prolific English striker in the Championsh­ip this season — moving to Manchester United on deadline day and then topping the goalscorin­g charts at the European Championsh­ip next summer.

‘Thirty years have passed, and naturally the period of the World Cup is always present in my eyes and my mind,’ Schillaci tells

Sportsmail over the telephone from Palermo.

‘Even after all this time, my popularity has never waned.

‘It’s even the case with younger fans, who can go on the internet and YouTube. When I go to different places around the world,

I still feel people’s affection and enthusiasm: autographs, photos, Toto this, Toto that.

‘If I’m loved it’s not just because of what I did on the pitch, but also off it — someone can be a worldclass player but also a stronzo (a******e). The fact I entered the hearts of Italians is about how I behaved.

‘I always give my time to normal people. I am one of them. I am not fake — fans know with Schillaci that what you see is what you get — and they like me because of it.

‘I came from nowhere to be top scorer, player of the tournament and second in the Ballon d’Or.

‘From nothing, I became one of the most important players in the world at that time, but luckily I have a certain personalit­y, maybe different from lots of other players.

‘It’s not like I sit down in front of the computer and say, “I’ll re-watch Italia ’90” — but I see the goals all the time. Whenever I do TV work or go to Juventus fan clubs, people show them. It’s always there.’

After Juventus, Schillaci joined Inter Milan before leaving Italy in 1994 for Japanese club Jubilo Iwata, where he spent three successful seasons.

While playing in the J-League, he met Arsene Wenger who was coaching Nagoya Grampus Eight. Schillaci followed the Frenchman thereafter and began to cheer for his Arsenal teams.

There are clear parallels with Gascoigne’s career, beyond two seasons together in Serie A when the Englishman was at Lazio. Like Schillaci, Gascoigne was an instinctiv­e talent from a tough background who shone in the No 19 shirt at the World Cup.

Like Schillaci’s, Gascoigne’s performanc­es in that tournament brought him fame but became a burden when he struggled to repeat them, yet both are still adored by the majority of supporters. No wonder Schillaci feels empathy with one of England’s best- loved footballer­s, which perhaps inspires his slightly rose-tinted enthusiasm for the Premier League.

‘I saw Gascoigne again at an event in London a couple of years ago,’ he recalls. ‘We were on an open-top bus. He still speaks very good Italian and was acting as my translator that day.

‘His hair was white and I noticed he had lost a lot of weight — but nobody can forget his quality as a player. He had magic, he was technicall­y excellent, he entertaine­d people. He was a showman as well as a player.

‘I love English football to death and if I’d had the chance I would have gone to play there. I like Arsenal because I got to know Wenger and I always admired his teams and their style of play.

‘I’m passionate about the Premier League. English players, when they’re fouled, get up and get on with it. It’s not like Italy where players surround the referee. Teams fight to the end, even if they’re losing 4-0. The referees allow the game to flow.

‘If I’d played today, I would have scored quite a few more goals. In my day, you were man-marked by players who kicked you, followed you for 90 minutes. Now it’s much easier. Teams play with a higher line and I’d have used my pace to take advantage.’

The elephant in the room is that Schillaci did not end the tournament with a gold medal around his neck. Italy won the World Cup in 2006 and reached other major finals in 1994, 2000 and 2012, yet the failure on home soil still stings.

The defeat by Argentina, on spot-kicks after a 1-1 draw, featured the only goal Italy conceded in the finals, aside from David Platt’s strike in the third-place play-off. Like England, they were eliminated without losing a match under normal playing conditions.

The pain of the semi- final endures. ‘Don’t talk about it! Don’t talk about it!’ Schillaci snaps when invited to go into greater detail. No wonder: how could a team containing Franco Baresi, Paolo Maldini and Baggio — three greats of their era — fail to win the trophy in their own back yard? Most players from that side soon escaped the shadow of Italia ’90, yet Schillaci was affected more than most.

Injuries, combined with turbulence off the field, meant he never rediscover­ed the form of his first season at Juventus, and he scored only one more goal for Italy, finishing his internatio­nal career with just 16 caps. He never played in another major tournament.

‘I was in such good form that summer, so focused even in training, and everything I touched turned to gold,’ he recalls. ‘I was at the peak of my powers and then when you score the first goal, the second, the third, everything starts to come naturally.

‘Whe ‘When you o play pla with ith that simplicity, si plic everything becomes easier and pretty much everything you do is decisive. I was always on the move, I was quick, smart, sharp in the box and I had a great understand­ing with Baggio.

‘We were good friends off the pitch and a d we e were ee room-mates oo ates during the tournament. We had a great team, one of our best ever, but unfortunat­ely that guarantees you nothing. Games are decided by a few moments, and against Argentina, one of those went against us. We had everything

 ??  ?? Toto today: Schillaci at his home in Palermo
Toto today: Schillaci at his home in Palermo
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