Weekend Roundup, Featuring: Che Partita, Roma-Lazio

By: Julian | March 13th, 2011
   

Roma are refusing to let the race for fourth place go down to two teams. By defeating Lazio over the weekend, Vincenzo Montella has hit out at his critics and continued one of the brightest trends of Claudio Ranieri’s reign- a spotless derby record. I Lupi’s run of consecutive victories over Lazio now stands at five in Serie A, one more than the number of points they find themselves off the pace for fourth.

The game was by no means beautiful, but it was certainly difficult to stop watching. Barcelona keep viewers mesmerized with an array of passes as diverse as the offerings in a library; Napoli attracted viewers until the last second due to oft-late heroics from the likes of El Matador, Edinson Cavani. Roma-Lazio offered none of that, but instead a full ninety minutes of unbridled passion.

Italy Soccer Serie A

Such fire was evident in the sheer amount of cards in the game. Roma received four yellows, all to team staples: Daniele De Rossi, Davide Pizarro, Francesco Totti, and Mirko Vucinic. That is, arguably to the four players that this derby means the most (Perhaps in any other year, Philipe Mexes would be added to that list, but his sight already seems firmly set up AC Milan). Lazio received a single yellow, that to Stephan Lichtsteiner, but more than compensated with two red cards, one each to Stefan Radu and Cristain Ledesma. The two reds, notably, came within two minutes of each other.

The two goals, within twenty minutes. The first was from a Totti freekick which seemed to roll back the years. Standing over the ball in the seventieth, il Capitano blasted the ball through the wall, leaving Fernando Muslera helpless to parry. Francesco ran to the stands and blew kisses to the fans, some of which held up a sign to remind the aging captain that he was still loved “Ti amo”. The stadium rang out with cries of “Francesco TOTTI” as the whistle was blown for the restart. Two things thus stand firm at Roma: their captain’s ability, and the fans’ appreciation for him, made evident in the smiles around the stadium.

Fabio Simplicio let out a rare smile himself after he won the penalty that led to the second goal. In the ninetieth, Ledesma tripped the player in the box whilst chasing a Rodrigo Taddei cross, and was duly sent off by the ref. Totti stepped up to take the penalty- a bit odd, considering the controversy caused against Shakhtar when Marco Borriello took duties ahead of the pre-assigned taker, Pizarro. The captain however made no mistake as he rifled in a shot high into the net, doing well to get past the oft-reliable Muslera, who had lasers shined into his eyes on both goals. Francesco now stands a mere goal away from reaching the astounding mark of two hundred Serie A goals.

Lazio now have many questions to answer. Their slide down the table continues, as the side now find themselves out of the top four. Udinese are two clear of the side, which are only two clear of their crosstown rivals. The race for the final Champions’ League spot could very well go to the final day, with no game looking as important as Matchday 32’s Udinese-Roma. For now however, it seems as if the momentum is with the striped team and the one in red, and quickly draining away from the blue.

Rosella Sensi, the outgoing Roma president, dedicated the victory to her late father, Franco. What Franco did for Roma will forever be remembered by the tifosi, but equally impressive are the accomplishments of the man who will likely go down in history as Roma’s greatest ever.

Matchday 29 talking points:

  • Udinese should not be discounted for fourth themselves. Winning 4-0 against Cagliari, the side are now in command of fourth place. Toto Di Natale scored twice and is now on 24 goals for the season, four more than second place Edinson Cavani.
  • If anyone can re-teach Juventus how to win, Gigi Del Neri would love to know. The side dropped 2 points against Cesena after blowing a two goal lead. Marco Motta was sent off in a remarkable round of Serie A for sending offs, being one of eight players to receive a red.
  • Milan and Inter are first and second but perhaps no one expected them to draw against Bari and Brescia, twentieth and nineteenth. The race for the scudetto is thus unchanged, with Inter five points off the pace.
  • Napoli however are only one behind them. Inter would do well to quickly glance over their should at a side that dispatched of Parma 3-1.
  • There was a red in that game as well, to Parma’s Daniele Galloppa in the fifty-ninth.
  • There were no reds for Fiorentina or Palermo, but the former side continued their revival as the latter slunk to their fifth loss in as many games. Serse Cosmi has much work left to do.

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Follow Julian on Twitter for Serie A news coverage, updates on new posts, and more, @JulianWCB.


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  • Great read, as per usual Julian.

    I only watched the highlights of the Udinese game but my god they play some fantastic calcio. I grimaced as I watched them tear apart Palermo the other day but I can't deny they are a superb side to watch.

    Palermo on the other hand - very sad how after a great start our season appears to be ending on a pretty sorry note. Shame on Zampa for sacking Rossi. Stupid, stupid man.

  • I thought the Rome derby was mediocre in terms of quality. You can talk about passion all you want, but neither side put in a performance that cried out Champions League. This is by far the worst season of calcio I've ever seen, and it might take a long while before Serie A catches up to La Liga and the EPL.

    Every week there are major upsets - Milan couldn't defeat last place Bari and Juve threw away a two goal lead to Cesena. Right now Juve wouldn't even qualify for the Europa League, and Sampdoria have gone from the brink of the Champions League to 15th? Every game I watch has horrible defending, players bitching to the refs every two minutes, and managers who don't do much more than write 11 names on the teamsheet.

    Well, at least Napoli is looking pretty good. I'd love to see the team catch Inter but that would take quite a few dropped points by the nerazzurri the rest of the way.

  • Actually, as the 7th place team, Juventus would get into the Europa League based on who wins the Coppa Italia. Since Inter won it last year, the 7th place team (again, Juventus, sigh) went to the Europa League.

    Also, if it wasn't for the unpredictability of Serie A this year, your very mediocre Napoli side would be somewhere in the range of 6th-10th.

    Say what you will about the major upsets, but I happen to enjoy them. I know the product doesn't seem all that great, but it beats the shit out of watching Manchester United and Arsenal beat up on teams in the mid-table. Ho hum. Another predictable season from the EPL. Even more predictable is La Liga. I don't know how having 2 really, really, really good teams and 18 bottom feeders makes a league good quality, but I'm sure there's some good reason.

  • Thanks for reminding me - if the Coppa Italia winner is one of the top 6 teams, the Europa League spot reserved for the Coppa winners will go to the 7th place team. It's conceivable that Roma or Palermo could win the Coppa but finish outside the top 6. However, I think you're right, the 7th place team should qualify for Europe again.

    I enjoy upsets as well bot not if it means the entire league has dropped in quality. Italian soccer is in a crisis - no wins at the last World Cup, teams dropping out of Europe faster than I can count, and a domestic league where skill is hard to find some days. I disagree with your assessments of the EPL and La Liga - those teams have done well in the Champions League recently and although only the top teams can realistically win the title, there's a lot more quality amongst the bottom sides than you believe.

  • This seems strange, I don't remember the Roma blog having this bright red color as part of its layout...

    Weird, I must have clicked the wrong link at the very top of the page then.

  • Unbelievable. I mean how could you have a weekend review piece and only pick one match to focus on?
    http://www.guardian.co.uk/foot...

  • Lmao, Julian, you know I bust your balls for shits and giggles. Why would I care if you're turning this page into the roma page if all I ever come here for is the pictures? Certainly not for your atrocious writing, I mean c'mon, have you ever read your own drivel?!

    No but in all seriousness, nice writeup, I did in fact read it lol.

    Since we're talking about having sand in one's vagina in regards to your blogging though, you might want to check out MAD's latest desperate cries for attention. How dare you after just barely a week of being the Serie A blogger not make inter the focal point of EVERY.SINGLE.ONE of your articles?

    Start thinking about making amends asap, I heard Denis Alibec had some Bucatini all' Amatriciana today, quick, post it up for the world to see and rejoice!!!

  • Comrade

    Unbelievable paranoia and delusion. Francesco was so neutral that I had to ask him which team he supports.

  • Oh I haven't been on the Inter Offside in months. I stopped visiting once it became vogue to insult every other blogger on the site.

    Sorry that there's been no post yet. I've been busy all day, will get one up tonight.

  • You're a smart man. It's all good about the post, JUST STOP IGNORING iNTER!!!1

  • Kabir

    I like that you included a Guido de Angelis vid...
    No mention of the lasers to Muslera's face on both goals?

  • Edited edited so the kids don't worry about bias.

  • Kabir

    I feel like there's a clever comment to be made relating the Derby to Lupe Fiasco's latest album...

  • mike

    Woah, is it only me, or is this article actually biased? :D

  • Honestly. 820 words and not a single one about Serie C2. WHY DOES JULIAN HATE CALCIO?

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