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An Ex-Expatriate

~ and what she saw

An Ex-Expatriate

Category Archives: Sports

Pallanuoto

16 Monday Sep 2013

Posted by farfalle1 in Italian sports, Sports, Sports in Italy, Uncategorized

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

High swimming, Pallanuoto, Rapallo nuoto, Water polo

One of my favorite Honeymooners episodes features Ed Norton and Ralph rehearsing for a play.  At one point Norton has a line containing two words which he pronounces as one word: ‘poloponies’ (which he pronounces pah-lop’-own-ies).  I can never hear the word ‘polo’ without remembering this and giggling.

In Italian it’s called ‘palla’, which means ‘ball,’ not ‘polo’ – but it still makes me chuckle, and pretty often.  Water polo (or pallanuoto, swimming ball) is a big sport all over Europe, and especially in Italy.  There are quasi-professional teams here that, like soccer, are placed in divistions, Serie A and Serie B.

Rapallo, like many other Italian cities, fields (pools?) its own pallanutoto teams.  The men play in Serie B.  The Women?  This will tell you:

Water polo sign

That’s right! The women’s team won the national championship of Italy last year – very exciting.  The sign says: “Rapallo, Champions of Italy 2013, together we realized a dream, thanks girls!  Men’s Pallanuoto – welcome back to A2 [serie]- Go guys!”

The 2013-2014 season is about to begin.  Last week the women gathered for their first workout, and I had a chance to speak very briefly with one of the coaches (it was clearly not a time for chatting; he was very busy).

Coach

Coach discussing practice routine with the women

He explained that the pallanuoto teams are not professional in the way that, say, soccer teams are; that is, the players do not receive huge salaries.  “But are they paid?”  I asked.  “They are reimbursed,” which left me not a lot further ahead.  I suspect they are paid some kind of living expenses, but I don’t believe there are any huge salaries.

Two of the coaches discuss training with the women

Two of the coaches discuss training with the women

Swimming warm-up laps

Swimming warm-up laps

There are 10 teams in Serie A in Italy.  There are two divisions in Serie B,, each with 12 teams – one in the north and one in the south.

And that was all I was able to learn about the organization of the sport here in Italy. It was a huge pleasure to watch the women swim their warm up laps – they are strong and graceful.  As one who struggles gamely, but slowly, in a pool, I can only watch with awe.

In the U.S. I believe water polo is played as a club sport, in schools and universities, and of course in the Olympics, where it has been a sport since 1900 (for women  since 1986).  If you’re interested in the details of the game, you can learn about it here.  FINA is the governing body of water polo (as well as other water sports) here in Italy and much of the rest of the world.  They oversee the various tournaments.  I’m hoping to have an opportunity to learn more about it firsthand in the coming weeks.

Years ago we had a young friend who played water polo with his secondary school team.  He told us that we could not imagine what goes on under the water – players who sharpen their toe nails so they can scratch their opponents, trunks being pulled down, anything to gain an advantage without being caught.  I found myself wondering if the same nonsense goes on in the professional games.

It’s clearly a sport enjoyed by many, as this game in the sea at Santa Margherita Ligure suggests:

water polo in santa sea-001

The game above must just be for fun – I don’t think there is a full complement of players present (6 players and 1 goalie per team), unless some are hiding under the water. (Besides, I’ve never heard of a pro team in Santa.) Think how difficult it would be if there were big waves!

The Future of MLB

18 Monday Apr 2011

Posted by farfalle1 in American habits and customs, Arizona, Sports, Uncategorized

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

Baseball, College baseball, Denver Christian School, Ephs, Spring training, Williams College Baseball


The Phoenix area is famously the site of much of baseball’s Spring Training.  Many teams, both Major and Minor, get the off-season kinks out in the Arizona sun, including the New York Yankees, the Cubs and White Sox of Chicago, the Cincinnati Reds, Cleveland Indians, Colorado Rockies… the list goes on and on, and if you’re interested in that list you can see it here.  The excitement is over for this year; the teams have left to take up the ardors of regular season play.

But wait!  It turns out professional baseball players aren’t the only ones who take advantage of this climate to get in some Spring training.  High school and college teams from all over the Northern part of the country come to the Gene Autry Park in Mesa to take part in a series of warm-up games, some of which count in their regular season of play.  There are two baseball fields in the park as well as other fields and amenities including a building with rest rooms and a concession stand.  Can’t have a baseball game without a hot dog close by.

The Captain stumbled on a college game one day when he went to the Park to while away a little time.  He saw Middlebury College playing Oberlin.  We were so excited!  Our friends Kate,  John, Charles and Angus live in Middlebury – it made them seem so close.  The Captain spoke to some of the fans, hoping to find a friend in common with our friends, but of course the stands were filled mostly with parents and girlfriends of the Middlebury players.

And that makes sense.  It turns out it is the parents who foot the bill for this spring break odyssey.  They hold fund-raisers during the year, but I have to imagine that mostly they just pay.  It would take a lot of bake sales to underwrite an eastern baseball team’s stay in the southwest.

I met the Captain a couple of days later to watch some ball.  That morning  featured two high school teams from Colorado.  It also, evidently, featured a most interesting pitcher, Chris by name.

He was so interesting that he was being followed around by a bunch of scouts.  No, not college scouts, as we initially thought; major league scouts.  Huh?  Don’t young baseball players go through the college system before turning pro, or is that just football?  I’m not enough of a sports-meister to know.

Here they all are, timing Chris’s pitches.  What makes him so interesting, evidently, is the fact that he can throw a ball at about 91 miles per hour.  The professional pitchers are in the 94-97 mph range, according to one of the scouts I spoke to.

A couple of days later I returned alone because the team from my beloved Williams College was scheduled to play.  Sure enough, there they were in all their understated glory.  (I grew up in Williamstown and later attended the College as part of the first experiment in co-education – that was an experience.)  It felt really great to be able to holler, “Go Ephs!” again – words that haven’t passed my lips in years (Williams teams are always ‘The Ephs’ after the founder of the college, Ephraim Williams). I was not the only fan present.

Williams College enjoys a fine reputation as a center of undergraduate learning; it is, perhaps, less lauded for its baseball teams.  How amusing it was to hear such sideline chatter as, “Jason, you have a really discerning eye!”  An unsuccessful batter returning to the bench looked more like someone worrying over a perplexing physics problem than a pissed-off athlete.  And perhaps he was.  Even though the scouts weren’t there to see the left-handed pitcher Steve, below, Williams was still enjoying a good week; they had already won 11 of their 13 games.

Pitching has always looked extremely uncomfortable to me – doesn’t it look like his arm is glued on backwards?

The future of Major League Baseball might be more Chris and less Steve, but the games in Mesa were all good fun. It’s such a pleasure to watch a good baseball game on a hot dusty day in a small park with just a few other fans.

Uppity Up Up

25 Friday Feb 2011

Posted by farfalle1 in Arizona, Sports, Travel, Uncategorized

≈ 9 Comments

Tags

Ballooning, Hot air balloons

Hot air ballooning is a big attraction in the Southwest. Probably the best known balloon event is the Albuquerque (New Mexico) International Balloon Fiesta, held in October each year. Among the zillions of scheduled events is a ‘mass ascension’ of hundreds of balloons, which must be quite something to see.

There’s ballooning activity here in Arizona as well, though it appears from the web sites I could find to be centered more around Phoenix proper , Scottsdale and Sedona rather than out to the east where we are.

I suspect the balloon we saw the other day belongs to an individual rather than one of the several tour companies that run balloon flights in the area.  We don’t often see balloons here, though part of the reason might be that flights generally take off at dawn and at dusk when the air is at its stillest.  We’re not usually looking out the window at dawn (ahem).

Our first glimpse, off to the east:

Getting closer and losing altitude:


About to land in the parking lot of a nearby shopping center:

It’s such a pretty sight, a hot air balloon; it gets one thinking adventurous thoughts.

The Captain and I went on a hot air balloon ride a number of years ago with the dashing Captain Bollard who dressed the part and served champagne.  I was terrified; the wicker basket you ride in comes up only to about your waist.  I spent the entire flight kneeling on the floor of the basket and peeking over the edge.  If I’d had a rosary you would’ve heard clicking beads a mile away.

Most of a balloon flight is calm, slow, gentle, graceful and still.  Until the captain decides it is time to gain some altitude.  Then he ignites a flame under the bottom hole of the balloon that makes a huge whooshing sound (the hot air fills the balloon above which is what makes it rise).  What a shock it was to hear that for the first time, and to be so close to a rather large open flame.  In a wicker basket.  Still, you see things from a completely new perspective when you look down from a balloon.  And since you’re not as high or moving as fast as you are in an airplane, you have time to look carefully at the scene slowly passing beneath you.  Sometimes you see a lot of faces staring up with their mouths open, which is quite satisfying.

One day about 15 years ago The Captain (not of balloons, by the way) and I were sitting on our terrace at our New England home having sundown drinks with friends.  We lived far out in the woods, and there were not many clear areas nearby other than the space in front of our house.  We watched a balloon in the distance grow larger and larger; in fact pretty soon it seemed immense – to the point that our 130-pound guard dog started quivering and soiled himself.  Yes, the same dog that kept delivery men rooted to their van seats in our driveway.  The balloon filled our sky and suddenly we realized that the pilot was looking for a place to land.  We also realized that he really had few options.  We knew who it was because there was only one balloonist for miles around (not Captain Bollard).  Sure enough, before long the balloon bounced along the field in front of our house, knocked over two sections of garden fence, took out a row of tomatoes and came to rest in our lettuce.  The sprightly 70+ year old pilot was all apologies, his comely companion, ever so much younger, was charming.  Drinks were offered, toasts drunk, the chase car appeared, and before we knew it balloon and balloonists were gone, as if it had all been something we imagined.

And that’s the thing about balloons, I think – they get the imagination going.  They’re romantic and slightly exotic; surely if you’re in a balloon, adventure cannot be far away!  So if you ever have a chance to have a balloon ride, I hope you’ll do it.  Even if you’re afraid – you can always kneel on the floor of the basket.


Sad Day for Some

25 Friday Jun 2010

Posted by farfalle1 in Italy, Sports, Uncategorized

≈ 7 Comments

Tags

Italian Football, Italian Soccer, World Cup

Rapallo, and all of Italy for that matter,  is draped in crepe after Italy’s upset loss to Slovakia in yesterday’s World Cup game.  Well actually, Rapallo is draped in sun and beach towels, but there is an air of resigned sadness amongst soccer fans of all stripes.

Here’s what’s really good about an Italy World Cup game – you can drive through Rapallo and the streets are eerily deserted and navigation is a snap. We visited a car mechanic’s shop and had to tear him away from his buzzing, humming radio – the radio was fine, it was those plastic horns the fans blow, the vuvuzelas.  Then I stopped with the Captain at his golf course, also deserted.  Inside the club house, though, we saw no fewer than 4 big-screen TV’s, each with a crowd of men (only men!) watching and offering unsolicited and unheard advice to the players and coaches.  Then I went to the local AgriTech to buy some plant food – the radio was on very, very loudly – more swarms of bees.

It seemed there would be no one at exercise class, either – I arrived about 10 minutes before it was due to start.  2 minutes later the game ended and 5 minutes after that about 15 other exercisers streamed in.

Following football is a national pastime in both the U.S. and Italy, though the games followed are completely different.  Here’s another difference between the two countries.  We were in Arizona when the Phoenix Cardinals won a berth in the Super Bowl XLIII (2009).  It was absolutely quiet all around the town immediately after the game.  Here, if Italy so much as scores a goal in a world cup match the town erupts in noise – shouts, car horns, cheers.  The enthusiasm is infectious and very, very loud.  Kind of like vuvuzelas but without the plastic.

So now we will all be sad for a few days because we’re out of the Cup race; then we can begin watching and waiting for 2014, when surely Italy will once again be a contender.

Surf’s Up – Ligurian Style

04 Tuesday Aug 2009

Posted by farfalle1 in Sports

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

Paraggi, surfing, surfing in Italy

Surf's up Paraggi-1

Some stormy weather brushed past Liguria a few days ago giving us what passes for big surf here.  This pair of hearty souls got out the surfing kayak and rode the big ones.

In fairness I have to say that  in fine weather there are bigger waves in the open sea. The photo above was taken in the protected bay at Paraggi where of course the waves are smaller.  Here’s a photo that a man named Elio from near Torino took of a surfer down at Levanto:

levanto surfer (Elio from near Torino)

And when there’s a storm, watch out!  Camogli, on the other side of the peninsula from Paraggi, gets hit hard from time to time, as you can see in this photo by G. Ron:

Camogli storm by G Ron

So, laugh at the little waves in Paraggi if you must (I do)… but respect what they become when they’re all grown up and angry!

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