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The first groups of 'ultras', football supporters
between the ages of 15 and 25 who clearly differed from the classic
model of the adult football spectator, appeared in Italy around
the end of the 'sixties and early 'seventies. Gathered in the cheaper
sectors of stadiums, attracted by clubs through special reduced
price subscription campaigns, the ultras immediately displayed a
series of unique characteristics totally new to Italian football.
These ranged from a marked sense of identification with their own
particular "territory", meaning a sector of terrace marked
out by banners with the group's name or symbol, to a paramilitary
look taken from the one in vogue with a number of extremist political
organizations of the time: parka, Dr. Martens boots, camouflage
combat suits and jackets worn under scarves with the colors of their
clubs.
Initially the 'ultras' distinguished themselves above
all for their totally new way of supporting their teams and, in
a more general sense, of taking part in the match. From the Brazilian
'Torcidas' came the use of drums and horns, from English soccer
fans the 'scarf effect' (massed scarves raised and waiving in a
human sea-like optical effect) and chanting, more often than not
obsessive, to encourage their heroes or stun and intimidate their
adversaries. In this way, support came to be considered as part
of the strategy and tactics used to win a match: the "twelfth
player", so as to speak. They also made widespread use of pyrotechnics
(handheld signal flares, smoke flares, rockets and colored Bengal
lights), to bring an extra touch of liveliness to the terraces.
The concept of "terrace choreography" arose for the first
time, a totally original practice that was to evolve as the ultra
groups themselves became more organized. Choreography came to be
the hallmark of the Italian style: phantasmagoric, enormous, multicolored
shows and spectacle on a vast scale, to great visual effect; the
power of all-Italian fantasy. From the stage of Genoa's North Terrace
that managed to inspire even the French daily "Le Monde",
to Florence's Fiesole curve that outlined the city's monuments based
on the original topographic plan.
The longest standing ultra group is Milan's Fossa
dei Leoni - the Lion's Den - founded in 1968, which takes the name
of the black-and-red's old ground and finds home in the stadium's
cheaper sectors at ramp 17. However, some date back further, like
the "Fedelissimi Granata" founded in Turin as early as
1951, and still present in the ultra lineup on the Maratona curve.
The Sampdoria Ultras appeared in 1969 (the first to call itself
"Ultras"), followed by 'the Boys' from Inter. The 'seventies
saw the gradual aggregation of the hundreds of tiny groups populating
the terraces of the nation's major football stadiums, leading to
the formation of major groups like Verona's Yellow-blue Brigade,
Fiorentina's Viola Club Viesseux, named after the piazza in Florence
where they met (1971), the Naples Ultras (1972), Milan's Red and
Black Brigade, Genoa's Griffin's Den and Turin's Granata Ultras
(1973); the For Ever Ultras Bologna (1975), the Juventus Fighters
(1975), Atalanta's Black and Blue Brigade (1976), the Eagle's Supporters
Lazio and Rome's Commando Ultra Curva Sud, or 'CUCS' (literally
the South Curve Ultras Command) (1977). Some broke away from existing
clubs (the Boys were originally from Inter's Fossati Club, while
the Granata Ultras split from Turin's Fedelissimi). Others arose
from the fusion of smaller short-lived groups (the Juventus Fighters,
for example, came from the former Panthers).
Some groups were based simply on a belonging to a
certain urban area (the original core of the Sampdoria Ultras came
from the Sestri Ponente quarter of Genoa), or peer group that met
in Bars, schools or amusement arcades. Many of their members already
belonged to political groups or movements, and it was precisely
the characteristics of these politically extreme organizations,
their sense of belonging and comradeship, their defiance of the
powers that be and sense of conflict that gave substance to these
groups, which were capable of rallying together hundreds of people
in a matter of hours. Another aspect peculiar to the Ultras was
their strong sense of territory. Indeed, the terraces were gradually
abandoned by so-called "normal" supporters clubs, that
moved their standards elsewhere to make room for the ultras' banners.
The symbols brandished on these banners were for the most part wild
animals (lions, panthers and tigers in particular), the inevitable
Jolly Roger, weapons and similar symbols in a call to violence (the
face of little Alex, in Kubrick's film "A Clockwork Orange").
At the outset, group activities were more often than not financed
by collections, with everyone chipping-in and each member having
a specific function, from organizing transfers to follow their club,
to buying skins for drums, poles for banners and cans of paint.
With the advent of the Ultras, even the excesses of the public changed
face completely. Unruly behavior like invading the pitch (or 'referee-baiting)
decreased, while from around 1974 onwards clashes between rival
groups tended to become more frequent. This was the case in two
matches that year: Turin-Sampdoria and Rome-Lazio. Right from the
start spectators began throwing all sorts of objects onto the field,
and violent battles between opposing factions of supporters ensued,
obliging the police to intervene firing tear gas onto the terraces.
The clashes continued onto the streets, almost in an urban warfare
scenario: buses destroyed, cars overturned, etc. Many of these incidents
arose from traditional rivalries (derbies between teams from the
same city, or long-standing hates between rival cities, like Pisa
vs. Livorno, Bergamo vs. Brescia or Palermo vs. Catania), while
others depended on the political inclination of the respective supporters
(the historic rivalry between Vicenza's left-wing Red Whites, and
Verona's right wing Yellow-Blue Brigade).
Initially the violence was confined to a fairly limited
area, meaning the stadium itself and its immediate vicinity. However,
the first serious episodes were unfortunately soon to come (a stabbing
during the Lazio-Naples match, the same scene being repeated during
the 1975 Milan-Juventus match. In 1977 during the Atalanta - Turin
match, ultras clashed with iron bars and the Inter-Milan match saw
a knife fight between the Boys from Inter and Milan's Brigade).
On the 28th of October 1979, during the Rome derby, a Lazio supporter,
Vincenzo Paparelli, was hit in the head by a rocket fired from the
south curve by a Rome Fedayn supporter, and died within a few minutes.
The same Sunday saw other serious incidents in Ascoli ( Ascoli -
Bologna, 7 injured), Milan (Inter - Milan, 18 injured) and Brescia
(Brescia - Como, several injuries).
The Olympic stadium tragedy, aggravated by the widespread
climate of violence that characterized many stadiums at the time,
shook public opinion and became a major question both with the press
and the authorities. Drastic steps were taken: banner poles, drums
and even banners with warlike symbols were all banned from stadiums
for several months. The 'eighties saw the gradual and inexorable
expansion of ultra groups whose ranks came to number not tens, but
hundreds and in some cases thousands of members. There was no team,
whether in the North or South of Italy, first division or third,
that wasn't supported by one or more organized youth fringe groups.
This proliferation naturally led to the development of a complex
network of alliances and rivalries. The more solid coalitions of
this period included Rome - Atalanta - Juventus, Lazio - Bari -
Turin, Inter - Fiorentina - Sampdoria, Milan - Genoa - Bologna,
though it's curious to note how today these relations, once cordial,
have for the most part deteriorated and been replaced by other alliances,
at times being transformed into atrocious rivalry. 1982 went down
in history for Italy's world cup victory in Spain. The final was
against Germany in Madrid, in front of a crowd of 100,000 spectators,
for the most part Italian. There were also a good number of ultra
banners, but this proved to be the only real moment of national
level aggregation. A practically unique case in Europe if you consider
the characteristic cohesion of English, German or Dutch soccer fans
following their national teams. The reasons for this irreparable
division between Italian supporters, unable to unite even to support
the national squad, are probably rooted in the age-old rivalry between
a number of the country's oldest cities. Whatever the case, the
ultras nevertheless presented themselves as a continental model,
giving rise to a movement that was to touch the whole of Europe.
The transfer became the fundamental moment in the life of an ultra,
attended only by the most fanatical supporters with no fear of the
potential dangers present. The transfer became a way of selecting
the group and testing the strength of the bonds within it. Being
present in one of the "hot" stadiums was an honor reserved
for the few. Being there without a banner was considered an act
of cowardice. The increase in the traveling public on transfer days
also meant considerable efforts for the State Railways, which had
to schedule "special trains" for supporters. The organized
spectacle of the ultras involved entire terraces, thousands of people.
Buying thousands of colored balls or pompoms was extremely costly,
but the competition for the most original show was fierce. While
the Sampdoria ultras set up a 90 by 32 meter flag, the ones from
Rome handed out ten thousand red and yellow cards to the public;
Turin supporters covered their stadium's Maratona curve with red
and white bands of cloth, and the Naples ultras were famous for
hurling thousands of rolls of toilet paper onto the pitch. Hand
in hand with these notes of color went increasingly black crime
reports on the violent incidents happening in stadiums. The use
of knives spread, especially in Milan and Rome, while the Atalanta
ultras became famous for being very turbulent but prepared to use
only fists and boots.
In February '84 the Coppa Italia match between Triestina
and Udinese ended in serious clashes with the police; a young Trieste
supporter, Stefan Furlan, was beaten into a coma by police batons
and died the following day. Eight months later, at the end of the
Milan - Cremonese match, Marco Fonghessi was stabbed to death. The
killer, Giovanni Centrone, was barely of age. On the other hand,
in the early 'eighties the link between ultras and politics began
to weaken. The private cultural reaction pervading the younger ranks
began to show even at the stadiums. Friendships between supporters
of politically opposite inclination (Fiorentina-Verona) were further
testimony to how the alliances between ultras were by then absolutely
independent of any political factors. This period instead saw a
steady increase in the use of drugs on the terraces. While the habitual
drug addicts, frequent in the 'seventies, disappeared thanks to
increasingly severe body searches, the numbers of cannabis smokers
multiplied exponentially. Even the ultra's symbolism underwent a
radical transformation and images of marijuana leaves made their
appearance on scores of banners. When the Nuclei Sconvolti formed
in Cosenza, their name (literally subvert nuclei) was an immediate
success and many groups adopted it. So, by halfway through the 'eighties
the Italian ultra movement was truly on the crest of the wave. The
groups all had a multitude of followers (for example, for the 1987-88
season Milan's Fossa dei Leoni was over 15,000 strong), with a clearly
defined hierarchical structure. Some groups, like the Naples Commando
Ultra Curva B even had a highly evolved management structure (members
filed in a database, a group house organ, a TV, etc...).
In the 'nineties the ultras world was overwhelmed
by profound changes and began to develop an identity crisis. Many
of the fundamental values that 'being ultra' had been based on in
the past began to be felt in a different way, and far less by the
incoming generations, probably because being ultra had come to be
a fashion. But there was another side to the coin, that of an ultras
movement which, though still unable to reach total unity of intent
as a result of certain inviolable hatreds, became aware of the need
to react to survive. After thirty years of history the ultras had
become an integral part of the football system, irreplaceable and
influential, and a determining factor even in club strategy. The
second half of the 'nineties was fatally marred by the killing of
the Genoa supporter Vincenzo Spagnolo in January 1995. This devastating
episode threatened the very existence of the ultras movement, already
in profound crisis due to the changing generation and the dividing
up of the terraces into lots of tiny "slices", something
that was made more noticeable by the disorder brought to the stadiums
by the so-called "wild dogs" or scattered supporters,
and due to an identity crisis which was aggravated by the disbanding
of certain groups of ultras that until then had been a point of
reference for many supporters, leaving them with a sense of loss
and disorientation. From the ultras rally in Genoa, for which the
football championships traditionally stop, came a rawboned and crude
statement inspired by the Bergamo ultras and their coarse conservative
mentality, entitled "basta lame basta infami" - cut out
the knives, cut out the infamy.
Source:SuperTifo
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