
Pope meets Italian Serie A champs Napoli
VATICAN CITY: Pope Leo XIV welcomed Italy's newly crowned Serie A champions Napoli to the Vatican on Tuesday, joking about his own soccer allegiances. Napoli won their fourth 'Scudetto' on Friday with a 2-0 home victory over Cagliari, edging out Inter Milan by one point in a nail-biting end to the season.
The team, captained by Italian international Giovanni Di Lorenzo, arrived for their papal audience a day after a triumphant open-top bus parade through central Naples. 'The press says I am an AS Roma fan, but you are welcome! This is what the press says. Not everything you read in the press is true,' the pope said, according to a transcript.
Leo, the first pope to come from the US, follows and practices sports, including tennis. People who know him have described him to the media as an AS Roma supporter.
Napoli chairman Aurelio De Laurentiis gave him a blue Napoli jersey signed by players, bearing the number 10 and his name in Italian, 'Papa Leone XIV'. 'You are a number 10, so you are a great striker', De Laurentiis said. Leo replied with a chuckle and a simple 'thank you'.
Coach Antonio Conte, whom De Laurentiis introduced as 'deeply Catholic', knelt down and kissed the pope's hand, before Leo told him he had seen him many times on TV. In a short speech, the pontiff stressed the importance of team spirit and collaboration, and sport's educational value, especially for young people.
Winning comes 'at the end of a long journey, where what matters the most is not a one-time exploit or the extraordinary performance of one champion', he said. 'The championship is won by the team, and when I say 'team' I mean the players, the coach with the whole squad, and the club,' he added. — Reuters
Leo ended his remarks giving his blessings to players and club officials, and offering congratulations, also on behalf of his personal cook. 'She is from Naples and she says: best wishes! She would like to be here too, Mrs Rosa, (she is) a big fan', the pope said. — Reuters

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Kuwait Times
2 days ago
- Kuwait Times
Gattuso convinced Italy can qualify for World Cup
ROME: Gennaro Gattuso said Thursday he is convinced Italy can qualify for the World Cup as he begins his reign as Azzurri coach following the dismissal of Luciano Spalletti. Italy are at risk of missing out on a third consecutive World Cup after a troubled start to their qualifying campaign which has left them nine points behind Group I leaders Norway and cost Spalletti his job. Asked whether he had more hope or conviction that Italy could reach next year's finals in the USA, Canada and Mexico, Gattuso said: 'conviction'. 'I believe that we have good players available to us. We have four or five who are among the top 10 in the world in their position,' added Gattuso. 'We have a good team, but I do mean team, I'm not thinking about individuals. I'm convinced that the team has quality and I'm convinced that we can achieve our goal.' Gattuso has a tough job on his hands with only top spot in the group giving automatic qualification to the World Cup, even with Italy having played two fewer games than Norway. As well as the significant points gap Italy have a goal difference which is 12 goals worse than Norway, who hammered Italy 3-0 earlier in June. That leaves Italy with the play-offs, from which they failed to reach the last two tournaments, as their only realistic shot at qualification. 'We need to bring back the enthusiasm and not think negatively. My goal is to make sure that the players that come to (Italy's training center) Coverciano do so with great enthusiasm, and to create a family,' said Gattuso. 'After formations, technique and tactics the priority is to recreate that mentality that in the past has made us stand out.' Gattuso, a World Cup winner in 2006, was not the Italian Football Federation's first choice to replace Spalletti. Claudio Ranieri eventually turned down an appeal to come out of retirement, for a second time, to save his country's footballing fortunes. But Italy icon Gianluigi Buffon, now head of the national team delegation, said he believes Gattuso is capable of defying those who doubt his capabilities after an up-and-down coaching career. Gattuso, 47, was recently sacked by Hadjuk Split but has also managed AC Milan and Napoli, winning the Italian Cup with the latter club five years ago. 'I had a long playing career and every time I faced once of Rino's teams with Juventus they gave us a hard time, you had the idea that his teams had a precise identity, and that there was a lot of work and thought behind them,' said Buffon. 'It's very simple, when you're on the pitch you can tell straight away if behind the other team there is a good coach or not. And I every time I faced his Milan or Napoli team I could tell that was the case.' Gattuso will be in the dugout for the first time in September when Italy host Estonia in Bergamo before travelling to Hungary to take on Zionist entity. — AFP

Kuwait Times
3 days ago
- Kuwait Times
Mbappe a doubt for Real's Club World Cup opener
MIAMI: Real Madrid could be without striker Kylian Mbappe for their Club World Cup opener against Saudi Pro League side Al Hilal after the Frenchman missed training due to illness. New head coach Xabi Alonso will make his debut on the Real bench for the Group H match at Hard Rock Stadium and could be without several regulars. Defender Antonio Rudiger and the versatile Eduardo Camavinga are also likely to miss out against the Saudi team. 'Kylian was feeling a little better this morning, but not enough. It's very hot and it was better that he didn't train. But we will wait until the last moment. Tomorrow morning we will decide,' said Alonso. 'Rudiger made a brutal effort this season and I don't know if he will be called up tomorrow, but he is progressing well and will be the first to return. Camavinga is also improving quickly, but he needs time,' he added. Al Hilal will also have a new coach on the bench with Italian Simone Inzaghi having joined after leading Inter Milan to the Champions League final. Alonso said the change of coach means that it is difficult to know what to expect from Wednesday's opponents. 'We have to prepare for the game in the best possible way. They will be a tough opponent, without a doubt. But it's time to focus on ourselves. They haven't made their debut with Inzaghi yet, so we don't know how they will play. 'We have to have hunger to win, to compete, to want to play well. We have to mix a lot of things, but that self-love, that feeling of team, that defending the badge... The team already has it, but we have to work on it. We must be a team,' he said. Alonso was asked about the right-back position where Dani Carvajal faces competition from new arrival Trent Alexander-Arnold, who has joined from Liverpool. 'It is a privilege to have such top players. Trent is more flexible in positions, but Carva has a lot of personality and competitiveness. The initial impact of Trent has been very good.' Alonso was quizzed for his opinions on several players and unsurprisingly was upbeat about his squad, suggesting that England's Jude Bellingham may be more effective in a central midfield role than in the more advanced position he has sometimes operated in. 'Jude has the ability to cover a lot of the pitch. He has the soul of a midfielder, he likes to participate, but he has the great quality to arrive. The important thing is the starting point. Finding him in the right places is going to help us because he has impressive qualities,' he said. Alonso will get a brief spell to enjoy working with Croatian midfielder Luka Modric before the 39-year-old leaves the club. 'It's easy with him. We always had a great relationship, friends and now coach-player. I like his relationship with the younger ones, he is a very good influence. We want to enjoy him in these weeks. He's a player of the era, being able to squeeze him a little more will be a luxury,' he said. — AFP

Kuwait Times
4 days ago
- Kuwait Times
Sabalenka serves up apology to Gauff after comments
Coco Gauff PARIS: World number one Aryna Sabalenka said she has apologized to Coco Gauff after dismissing the American's maiden French Open triumph, adding that she regrets the comments she made about the 21-year-old after the final. Sabalenka had been poised for victory after claiming the opening set in a tiebreak, only to watch Gauff orchestrate a stunning 6-7(5) 6-2 6-4 comeback to claim her second Grand Slam title. Sabalenka made 70 unforced errors in the final and later said at a press conference that Gauff won 'not because she played incredible, (but) because I made all of those mistakes' -- comments she has since regretted making. 'It was just totally unprofessional of me, I let my emotions get the better of me. I absolutely regret what I said back then,' Sabalenka told Eurosport. 'We all make mistakes. I'm only human and I'm still learning in life. We all have those days when we lose control. 'The difference with me is that the world watches me do it, I get a lot more hate afterwards for what I did than other people.' Sabalenka said she had reached out to Gauff personally afterwards to apologize. 'I wanted to apologize and make sure that she knows that she absolutely deserved to win the tournament and that I respect her. I never intended to attack her,' Sabalenka added. 'I was super emotional and not very smart at that press conference. I'm not necessarily grateful for what I did. 'It took me a while to look at it again, to go into it with my eyes open and to understand. I realized a lot about myself.' Having lost two Grand Slam finals this year, Sabalenka will now turn her attention to the grasscourt swing, warming up for Wimbledon by playing at the Berlin Open this week. — Reuters