‘Coming home to Rome’: England’s Italians eye Euro 2020 victory

Bedford’s Italian community rooting for their home country to overcome England in today’s Euro final’s match at Wembley.

Italian fans in London are upbeat ahead of the final [Henry Nicholls/Reuters]

Were it not for the grey skies and threat of rain as they sip espressos and talk football outside La Piazza Caffe, Luciano Lambiase and his friends could be in Naples or Rome.

But the retired factory engineer, 66, and his boyhood friends Pasquale Spadaccino and Franco Bulzis, both 73, are discussing the upcoming Euro 2020 final in the southern English town of Bedford, home to one of the country’s largest Italian communities.

“It’s coming home to Rome,” Lambiase said, predicting that his national team would beat England in the final at Wembley on Sunday.

“It’s always been a mystery to us what ‘It’s Coming Home’ means,” he added, referring to the popular anthem written by comedians David Baddiel and Frank Skinner that England fans sing at games.

“This is the first time they’ve played in a [Euro] final, and we’ve won four world cups,” he added.

Liberato “Libby” Lionetti, 55, who runs La Piazza in Bedford’s market square and whose customers include fans in England shirts, was more diplomatic in his predictions.

Hoping for a modest 1-0 win for Italy, he said, whatever happens, football was “definitely coming home to Bedford”.

Ahead of the game, the atmosphere in the town was “very tense, everybody’s excited”, Lionetti said.

Whatever the rivalries during the game, afterwards “everything will be all right”, he added.

“It’s only that 90 minutes, or however long it takes for your team to win. And then that’s it and the next day is another day. You just get on with it.”

The older men drinking coffee outside the café said they hoped the match would pass without any incident.

But they acknowledged that a final between Italy and England brings back memories of the abuse they suffered as young men at international games in the 1960s and 70s.

14,000-strong Italian community

Lambiase, Spadaccino and Bulzis arrived in Bedford as children in 1956 after their fathers left Italy’s southern Campania region to work in the town’s then-flourishing brick-making industry.

Now the 14,000-strong Italian community still runs grocery stores, cafés and restaurants in the town.

The three men say that in the poverty of the early post-World War II years, football bound the Italian community together when they had little else.

“We are lucky to live in one of the most diverse areas of the country and we will always celebrate this diversity and the great Anglo-Italian relationship we have in Bedford,” Sharn Basra, Bedfordshire police assistant chief constable, said.

“Please enjoy the match responsibly, get home safe and let’s all hope for a fitting finale to what has been a great tournament for both teams.”

At the town’s Club Italia, drinks were chilling and Italian tricolour flags decorated tables and walls.

Barman Michael Bianco said Sunday night was going to be “absolutely crazy”.

Manager Francesco Derrico added that if the national side won, Bedford’s Italians would make a night of it.

“If we lose, we stay at home, eat some pasta. If we win, we go out and celebrate.”

Source: AFP