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Have you
heard of Luciano
Marangon ?? Me neither, but he could have been a familiar name to all
Spurs fans, as our Italian correspondent,
John Crockett
reveals ...
Ramsey -
Willis, Baker - Henry, Kinnear - Knowles, Thomas - Hughton. All
well-known full-back combinations which helped Spurs to win various
trophies in different periods of the clubs history.
But what about the
defensive pairing of Stevens and Marangon ??
O.K. So Gary
Stevens we know about. He also played for England, but was finally
forced to retire from the game after a series of injuries, especially
the one incurred in an unnecessarily harsh challenge by Vincent Jones.
But who is Marangon ??
Well, he’s an ex-Italian international
full-back (not in the Tramezzani mould) who revealed in a recent
interview in the Friday supplement of the widely read Milanese daily
newspaper “Corriere della Sera” that he had agreed to sign for
Tottenham during the 1987 - 88 season. This was around the start of El
Tel’s reign, but the move didn’t come off because the President and
owner of Internazionale - Ernesto Pellegrini - told him that he couldn’t
go. This was in the pre-Bosman era, so Marangon was forced to do what
his President said. However, at the age of 31, Marangon decided to give
up football.
So,
what sort of a player was Luciano Marangon ?? Quite simply, he was a
very useful player. A defender by trade, he even managed to break into
the Italian national side, making his debut for Italy in April 1982 in
the same side (more or less) than won the World Cup about three months
later. For a defender in Italy, he must have been good to make the
national team.
As a club
player, he played at youth level for Juventus. However, as often happens
in Italian football, he had to move on to a smaller club to get first
team football and he made his senior debut in Serie A in 1977 for
Vicenza, alongside the famous striker Paolo Rossi. One factor that
characterised his career was that he played for teams that were in with
a chance of winning the Scudetto, even though these teams were often
considered surprise packages when they made their challenge. This was
true as regards his one season with Napoli, where he helped form a very
solid defence with Dutchman, Ruud Krol. Before then, Napoli had never
won the championship, but in 1979 - 80, they made a serious challenge
for the title with Marangon’s help. His next stop was Roma, who again
put in a very good campaign before losing out in the end.
His real glory
years arrived when he moved to Verona, where he gained a championship
winners medal in 1984 - 85 alongside Peter Breigel, the German non-stop
dynamo, in the heart of the defence. His club were rank outsiders which
managed to see off the challenge of hot favourites, Juventus. This
success precipitated his move to Internazionale, which was his last club
before retirement.
Would Luciano
have been useful to Tottenham ?? Undoubtedly, in my opinion, especially
if we consider the number of players Spurs played in defence around that
time. Where is he now ?? He’s running his own bar in the Dominican
Republic - another reason to indicate that he would have been able to
settle in another country and come to terms with the style of play in
the English championship and English culture. It will forever be a thorn
in his side that he was not allowed to join Tottenham and we will never
know how it would have turned out in the end if he had. |