Before Gaetano Manfredi was elected mayor of Naples in 2021, he was a university professor specializing in seismic engineering — preparing and designing buildings to withstand earthquakes.
As Manfredi rose up to become chancellor of the University
of Naples Federico II, a study was commissioned to measure the impact of fans
celebrating goals scored by the Napoli soccer club inside what is now known as
the Stadio Diego Armando Maradona.
“The engineering department building is near the stadium and
there’s a seismograph there that whenever Napoli scored would record enough
shaking that it nearly registered as an earthquake,” Manfredi told The
Associated Press in a recent interview.
So what magnitude might the university seismograph record
when Napoli wins its first Italian league title in more than three decades?
With a 17-point lead and seven games remaining, the first chance to clinch
comes this weekend — a long holiday weekend for May Day (Europe’s Labor Day).
“We can’t predict what the number will be but there will
definitely be a lot of vibrations,” Manfredi said, flapping his hand up and
down to simulate the trembling. “An earthquake. A big earthquake of joy.”
The mayor isn’t exaggerating.
Support for Napoli is akin to religion in the southern city
and the team hasn’t won Serie A since Diego Maradona led the club to its only
two Italian championships in 1987 and 1990.
“The passion for soccer in Naples is one of the biggest
passions in the world,” Manfredi said.
It’s so great that Neapolitans have cast aside their
superstitions about celebrating — or even mentioning — the word “scudetto,” or
title, before it happens and have been decorating the city with streamers,
banners, flags and life-size cardboard replicas of Napoli players — all in
Napoli blue.
The title could also be a lift socially for Naples, a city
that has had problems with trash removal and crime and is seen as a poor
southern cousin to the traditional northern soccer capitals of Milan and Turin.
“If we do this thing, we’ll remain on the walls of Naples
forever,” Napoli coach Luciano Spalletti said — avoiding the word “scudetto.”
Every neighborhood in the city, from the steep and narrow
alleyways of the characteristic Quartieri Spagnoli to the more modern
Fuorigrotta area where the stadium lies, has its own style of celebrating.
One banner stretching over the street in the Forcella
neighborhood of the historic center, which is known for its mural of San
Gennaro, the city’s patron saint, reads “Scusate per il ritardo” or “Sorry for
taking so long” — a reference to the title of a 1983 film directed by and
starring local actor Massimo Troisi, as well as the 33 years since Napoli’s
last title.
“We’re unique. There’s no other place in the world like
Naples. Naples is an open theater,” local taxi driver Giovanni Murri said, in a
reference to a poem by Neapolitan playwright Eduardo De Filippo.
A saying heard often these days in the city goes,
“Celebrations in Naples are unlike anywhere else.”
As the mayor explained: “It’s because Neapolitans are
cheerful. The cheerfulness of Naples is famous around the world.”
GOMORRAH’S FOOTSTEPS
Naples has waited so long for this that the city is
preparing for multiple celebrations.
There will be the spontaneous eruption when the team
clinches the title — which could go on for days, weeks, or even months.
“Obviously we don’t know when that will happen or what will
really happen,” the mayor said.
Then an organized celebration will be held downtown in
Piazza Plebiscito on June 4 after the club is awarded the Serie A trophy
following the final game of the season.
“It’s going to be like celebrating New Year’s Eve twice —
actually (bigger) than New Year’s,” said Vincenzo Masiello, who runs the ’O
Vesuvio trattoria and pizzeria in the Quartieri Spagnoli.
In order to avoid congestion downtown and a scene like the
chaos when Argentina’s squad returned home with the World Cup trophy,
simultaneous celebrations will be organized by the city on June 4 in different
neighborhoods, including one in Scampia, the gritty northern suburb exposed as
a crime-infested underworld in the “Gomorrah” book, film and TV series.
MARADONA’S LEGACY
Even 2½ years after his death, Maradona’s legacy remains a
strong attraction in Naples.
In the Quartieri Spagnoli, a huge mural of Maradona acts as
an unofficial museum to the former Argentina great.
“It’s a problem in terms of overcrowding,” Manfredi said.
“It’s a sort of secular cult, which is really appreciated.”
The mayor said that on days of big Napoli games or in
holiday periods, up to 30,000 people visit “Piazza Maradona” daily, which makes
it one of Italy’s most visited attractions.
“Even after his death, he still brings people to Naples,”
said Antonio Tortora, another local taxi driver. “He’s a saint.”