Posted on 07/01/2015 11:21:18 AM PDT by Theoria
Welcome to calcio storico, a centuries-old competition in Florence with very few rules and the sort of human wreckage generally associated with the gladiators.
Last Tuesday, about 24 hours before he jammed his fingers into another mans nose, dropped his elbow across another mans neck and put another mans feet where ones ears are supposed to be, Rodrigue Nana considered, just for a moment, the basic notion of fear.
Do you want to know what I am afraid of? he said, his fingers tracing the meaty scar above his left eyebrow. Nana, a Cameroon-born transplant to Italy, leaned forward, as if to share a secret. I am afraid of showering.
He did not laugh. Neither did any of his teammates sitting nearby. This was not a time for joking; Nana and the rest of his team were about to begin their last training session before last Wednesdays final match of calcio storico, a centuries-old competition that features very few rules and the sort of human wreckage generally associated with the days of the gladiators.
Nana and his friends have endless stories. There was the player whose ankle shattered at the bottom of a dog pile. The one who went into a coma after being punched in the back of the head. The guy whose ear was bitten off in the middle of a scrum. In one game, Nana had his shaved scalp cut open the way a letter opener slices an envelope.
The thing is, Nana continued, when youre playing, you dont feel any of it.
But then you calm down and take a shower. And that is when everything starts to burn.
(Excerpt) Read more at nytimes.com ...
'Fighting is accepted in the game, although it is against the rules to confront an adversary in a two-on-one situation or to blindside him.'
[HD] Calcio Storico 2014 - Azzurri-Bianchi[Youtube]
The Calcio Storico, the most brutal sport on earth in pictures
A bit like rugby, which was created to toughen up upper class British school boys
Is it more dangerous than the old Royal Navy Field Gun competition?
The first rule of calcio storico is that you dont’t TALK about calcio storico...
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