Vatican City national football team
Shirt badge/Association crest | |||
Nickname(s) | Il Guardia Svizzera Pontificia (The Pontificial Swiss Guard) |
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Association | Federazione Vaticanese Giuoco Calcio | ||
Head coach | Gianfranco Guadagnoli | ||
Top scorer | Alessandro Quarto (1) | ||
Home stadium | Stadio Petriana, Rome, Italy Stadio Pio XII, Albano Laziale, Italy |
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FIFA code | VAT | ||
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First international | |||
![]() ![]() (Rome, Italy; 22 November 1994) |
The Vatican City national football team (Italian: Selezione di calcio della Città del Vaticano ) is the football team that represents Vatican City. The Vatican City football association was founded in 1972. Its current president is Domenico Ruggerio.[1][2] Gianfranco Guadagnoli, an Italian, is the current head coach.[1] The team has been managed by Giovanni Trapattoni in the past.[3] His first match as manager was played on 23 October 2010 when Vatican City faced a team composed of Italian financial police.[4]
Contents
Overview
In the year 2000, Pope John Paul II established a Vatican sports department with the aim of "reinvigorating the tradition (of sport) within the Christian community".[5] In 2006, Vatican Secretary of State Cardinal Tarcisio Bertone suggested that the Vatican could field a team of men from Catholic seminaries. About the prospect, the cardinal stated, "If we just take the Brazilian students from our Pontifical universities we could have a magnificent squad." The cardinal also noted that in the 1990 FIFA World Cup, there were 42 players in the final round who attended Salesian training centres worldwide.[6] For example, Marcelino, Spanish hero of the 1964 European Nations' Cup was a former seminarian. It was Bertone's proposal that the Vatican's players, even if accepted by UEFA, would be drawn from the population within the Catholic Church worldwide, not just citizens of Vatican City. He was unclear at the time whether the Vatican would grant these players Vatican citizenship to make this possible.[7]
With the smallest population of any nation, approximately 900, it is difficult to form a squad. The Vatican City squad consists entirely of employees of the Vatican: police officers, postal workers, government officials and members of the Swiss Guard, the Vatican’s de facto army, charged with protecting the pope. Since most Vatican citizens are members of the Swiss Guard, they cannot be amassed in large numbers for a long time. Therefore, the national team has played only a few rare international matches, often drawing a fair amount of interested press.[1] When Vatican City played its first match in 2002, only one player, Marcello Rosatti, had a Vatican passport. In 2006, Vatican City was invited to participate in the Viva World Cup by the N.F.-Board and were expected to participate[8] but were unable to do so because they could not assemble a 15-man roster.[9] In total, Vatican City have played only four full international matches against other nations, one draw and three defeats to Monaco in 2002, 2011, 2013, and 2014 respectively.
In addition to its full international matches, the team has played a friendly match, its first, against the San Marino reserve team in 1994.[10] The final score of that match is believed to be a 0–0 draw but Steve Menary’s book ‘Outcasts: The Lands that FIFA Forgot’ states that Vatican insiders told him that the match ended 1–1.[11] In 2010, the Vatican organized a team to play a friendly game against Palestine. However, the team was made up of Catholic priests and was not considered the Vatican City national team.[12] In 2006, the Vatican City played SV Vollmond, a team from Switzerland, at Stadio Petriana with Vatican City prevailing 5–1.[6][13]
The Vatican's stance on football
The first Vatican league was created in 1973 and was first won by employees of L'Osservatore Romano, the newspaper of the Holy See.[14]
The Vatican has typically expressed strong support for football. Pope John Paul II was reportedly a goalkeeper in his youth in Poland, and an ardent supporter of Cracovia Kraków.[15] The former German pope Pope Benedict XVI is an ardent supporter of Bayern Munich since his youth growing up in Bavaria, Germany.[16] Benedict is quoted as saying, "The sport of football can be a vehicle of education for the values of honesty, solidarity and fraternity, especially for the younger generation."[15] In October 2007, the Pope was presented with a #16 shirt (in reference to the sixteenth use of his papal name) by Serie B side Ancona after Benedict supported their initiative to become a "beacon of morality" by adopting an "innovative, ethical model of practising football".[15] In 2010, Benedict and the Vatican reaffirmed their belief that football should be a beacon of morality by lashing out at Serie A after matches for the upcoming season were scheduled at 12:30pm on Sundays to appease pay-per-view companies wishing to spread out Serie A matches over the weekend. The Vatican previously questioned the league's decision to play matches on Sundays at all, but "I consider this a truly harmful development," Monsignor Carlo Mazza told Tuttosport. "Putting people in front of the television screen at 12.30 CET, when they are having lunch with their families, to me seems like a 'pitch invasion' on life."[17] Additionally, on 18 December 2006, Tarcisio Bertone, Cardinal Secretary of State of the Holy See, stated, but only in jest, that he did not preclude the possibility that the Vatican, in the future, could put together a football team of great value, that could play on the same level as, Roma, Internazionale and Milan or Genoa. [18][19] The current Argentinian pope, Pope Francis is an ardent fan of his hometown club San Lorenzo,[20] and exhibited disappointment when Argentina lost the 2014 World Cup final against Germany.[21]
FIFA membership
They are one of only nine fully recognized sovereign states whose national team is not a FIFA member. The others are the Federated States of Micronesia, Kiribati, the Marshall Islands, Monaco, Nauru, Palau and Tuvalu. In May 2014, Domenico Ruggerio, president of the FA, stated that "I prefer to be amateur...To join FIFA, at that level, will be like a business" after stating "The important message of friendship and love is demonstrated by the sport — the real sport, not the business that is in football these days...It is not just important to win a match; it is how you carry yourself." Therefore, that, he added, meant that "the ethos of the Vatican’s soccer team was, at odds with FIFA membership."[1]
Kit
The team's current kit is provided by Diadora. The shorts are all white while the top is solid yellow with a narrow blue and white line around the right upper quadrant of the body.[22]
Matches
Against other nations
Win Draw Loss
22 November 1994 | Vatican City ![]() |
0–0 | ![]() |
Rome, Italy |
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Stadium: Stadio Petriana |
23 November 2002 | Vatican City ![]() |
0–0 | ![]() |
Albano Laziale, Italy |
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Report | Stadium: Stadio Pio XII |
7 May 2011 | Vatican City ![]() |
1–2 | ![]() |
Albano Laziale, Italy |
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Alessandro Quarto ![]() |
Report | Stadium: Stadio Pio XII |
22 June 2013 | Monaco ![]() |
2–0 | ![]() |
Cap-d'Ail, France |
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Morgan Escarras ![]() Eric Fissore ![]() |
Report | Stadium: Stade des Moneghetti |
10 May 2014 | Vatican City ![]() |
0–2 | ![]() |
Rome, Italy |
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Report | Stadium: Stadio Petriana |
Other
3 February 2006 | Vatican City ![]() |
5–1 | ![]() |
Rome, Italy |
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Report | Stadium: Stadio Petriana |
Current squad
Players called up for the international friendlies against Monaco on 22 June 2013[22]
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Coaches
Saverio Di Pofi
Giovanni Trapattoni
Gianfranco Guadagnoli
See also
Notes
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External links
- Attività Calcistica Dipendenti Vaticani (Latin) (Italian)
- CSI – Centro Sportivo Italiano (Italian)
- Clericus Cup (Italian)
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- European national and official selection-teams not affiliated to FIFA
- Sport in Vatican City
- 1972 establishments
- 1972 establishments in Italy