I’ve left no better players at home, riles Lippi

(Reuters) – Italy coach Marcello Lippi refused to accept he had omitted more talented players from his squad after the uninventive world champions were held to a surprise 1-1 draw with New Zealand on Sunday.

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Their second World Cup Group F draw in a row means the Azzurri meet Slovakia on Thursday needing to win to secure their passage to the last 16 or face possible humiliation.

Lippi has ignored Sampdoria’s creative forward Antonio Cassano ever since returning to the job in 2008 while the likes of Alessandro Del Piero and Giuseppe Rossi were excluded despite their ability to do something different.

“I am absolutely convinced there are no phenomenons that I left at home,” Lippi, who will be replaced by Cesare Prandelli after the tournament, told a news conference.

“We have players who have personality, players who have proved it in the championship. We have the Serie A top scorer of 29 goals (Antonio Di Natale).

“I don’t think it’s a question of personality, it’s just fluidity. There is no one else I could have brought. They would have had the same problems as the lads who were out there today. It’s premature to talk about that.”

Lippi said he had no idea if Shane Smeltz’s seventh minute opener for New Zealand should have been flagged offside but reckoned it was a clear penalty when Daniele De Rossi was tugged back to allow Vincenzo Iaquinta to equalize on 29 minutes.

A vastly improved performance is required against Slovakia in Johannesburg on Thursday if the Azzurri are to go through but even a draw might suffice for the traditional slow starters.

Asked if the possible return to fitness of creative midfielder Andrea Pirlo could make the difference, Lippi said: “If he is available but I don’t have certainty.”

(Editing by Michael Holden)

Juve miss Champions League spot, Siena go down

Juventus suffered the biggest embarrassment of a terrible season when their slim Champions League hopes were extinguished in a 1-1 Serie A draw at Catania on Sunday.

The twice European champions, Serie A’s most successful club, have lurched from one bad result to another this term and respite from the misery never looked likely in Sicily despite Claudio Marchisio equalising Matias Silvestre’s opener.

Beleaguered Juve lie seventh, assured of a Europa League qualifying berth next term like sixth-placed Napoli but eight points behind fourth-placed Sampdoria with two matches left.

Samp stayed two points clear in that final Champions League qualifying spot thanks to a 2-0 home win over relegated Livorno with Antonio Cassano scoring a typically classy goal on five minutes and Reto Ziegler blasting in a late free kick.

Luigi Del Neri’s side are four behind third-placed AC Milan after the Rossoneri beat Fiorentina 1-0 on Saturday.

Fifth-placed Palermo are now the only team that can catch Sampdoria and they host them next weekend in a mouthwatering clash.

Strikers Edinson Cavani and Fabrizio Miccoli netted as Palermo won 2-1 at Siena to confirm the home side’s relegation after they were effectively condemned last weekend because of their poor goal difference.

Third-from-bottom Atalanta, who missed a first-half penalty and were reduced to 10 men for the whole second period, stay five points adrift of safety after a calamitous late own goal from Federico Peluso in a 1-1 draw with fourth-from-bottom Bologna.

Peluso sank to his knees and held his head in his hands after he miscontrolled the ball with one touch and it ran into the net following a save by Andrea Consigli.

Conceding the freak equaliser followed a bizarre episode on halftime when the referee awarded Bologna a penalty and dismissed Maximiliano Pellegrino for protesting, then reversed the penalty decision because the ball had been out of play.

Lazio can make sure of safety with victory at home to second-placed Inter Milan later (1845 GMT) but such a result would hand the Serie A title initiative back to bitter city rivals AS Roma, 2-1 winners at Parma on Saturday.

(Editing by Clare Fallon;

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Bride comes before a call for Sampdoria’s Cassano

Sampdoria striker Antonio Cassano has all but ruled himself out of a late Italy recall for the World Cup after saying he would not postpone his wedding in June.

Cassano, one of Serie A’s most gifted players, has been ignored by Italy coach Marcello Lippi for two years despite the world champions crying out for more creativity.

The 27-year-old, whose bad boy image from the past has influenced Lippi, has matured markedly in recent years and is back on top form as Sampdoria seek qualification for next season’s Champions League.

“No way,” Cassano told Reuters when asked if he would postpone his June 19 wedding if Lippi changed his mind or had an injury crisis.

“I’ve thought about the blue shirt since I was born but it’s not my problem,” added the former AS Roma and Real Madrid man.

Cassano was a surprise choice in Roberto Donadoni’s squad for Euro 2008 but has not played since for Lippi, who has steered clear of other outspoken characters such as Inter Milan forward Mario Balotelli.

By scheduling his wedding during the June 11-July 11 tournament in South Africa, Cassano might have sought to force Lippi’s hand but no hints to rethink the date have been forthcoming.

“I do it my way,” Cassano told reporters “Maybe prima donnas are not accepted by a group but I have always been one and will continue to be.”

However, the striker will still be cheering on the aging side when they take on Paraguay, New Zealand and Slovakia in Group F.

“I am Italian so I’ll support Italy,” Cassano added.

(Editing by john O’Brien; To query or comment on this story email sportsfeedback@thomsonreuters.com)

NEWS FEATURE: Lippi and Italy fans at loggerheads over Cassano

Rome – The absence of controversial talent Antonio Cassano from Italy’s line-up is the talking point this week among football buffs as the world champions gear up for two qualifying games to the 2010 World Cup.

Coach Marcello Lippi resorted to his trademark tough-guy attitude saying that he doesn’t have to give reasons for his choices – one of the benefits of having won Italy’s fourth world title in 2006.

“I have my convictions and I don’t owe explanations,” he said. “And not because I’m arrogant, but because I want to work with who is present.”

Lippi said in the past that his choices are always strictly technical, and Cassano’s little inclination to protect the midfield, a must for Lippi, should not be ignored.

Millions of would-be coaches in bars and internet forums, however, still wonder why Lippi has never called up the in-form Cassano since he returned at the Azzurri’s helm in the summer of 2008.

Polls on gazzetta. it and repubblica. it showed that 80 per cent of about 66,000 readers would like to see the Sampdoria striker don again the Azzurri’s jersey after his last appearance at Euro 2008 under Roberto Donadoni.

Cassano was among Italy’s best players at Euro 2004, scoring two goals in three games, then had a fairly dull period while at Real Madrid and returned in good form after transferring to Samp in 2007.

His showing at Euro 2008 was also quite convincing, but Lippi seems to have forgotten him as Italy vie for a berth at next year’s tournament in South Africa.

Cassano’s character has not helped his career, and everyone, particularly sports directors and club presidents, remembers his fits of anger, the rows with coaches, the crashed corner-kick flags, and the insults to referees.

His latest “Cassanata,” a Cassano-esque tantrum, dates to March 2008 and was probably his most spectacular.

After scoring the equalizer in Samp’s 2-2 home draw with Torino, he was sent off for protests late in the game, but began to insult the referee, hurled his jersey at him and challenged him to settle matters outside the stadium.

The show cost him a five-game ban and a 15,000-euro (20,200 dollars) fine, but he seems to have mellowed out ever since, while his playing performances have remained excellent.

A further, off-the-pitch, stir was caused in November by his autobiography, titled “Telling everything,” in which he claims to have had between 600 and 700 women since he transferred from Bari to Roma in 2001.

He has again been crucial for mid-table Samp this season, particularly since the arrival from Fiorentina in January of Giampaolo Pazzini, who has scored most of his eight goals in 10 games thanks to Cassano’s assists. Cassano also has eight to his name so far.

Pressed by the absences of strikers Alberto Gilardino and Luca Toni, Lippi has called up Pazzini, but not Cassano, despite his acting as perfect support striker in the last two months.

After Saturday’s game away to Montenegro, Lippi must already be bracing for protests from the fans in Bari, the footballer’s home town, where Italy welcome Ireland on April 1. (dpa)