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Collina
models a suit created by Italian stylist
Laura Biagiotti during the "Donna sote
le stelle" fashion event on the Spanish
Steps in Rome last July 17.
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You
may not know why you know this man. But you do. You've
likely seen his Image flashed on some sports program
or in some magazine article that you might not have
paid much attention to. He's not a celebrity in America
- yet - but he's immediately identifiable to soccer
fans (and non-fans) nearly everywhere else.
Orson
Welles would have loved Pierluigi Collina. On the eve
of Halloween 1938, when Welles panicked America with
his dramatic radio eyewitness account of Martian creatures
landing in New Jersey, Welles only needed to add that
the landing took place on a soccer field and identified
one of the invaders as the bald, bulging-eyed man with
the whistle to have blown the whole cover of Collina
as we know him now, or believe we know him.
In
Europe, where soccer is king and fans are rabid for
their teams, the Italian Collina is known by all. They
call him E.T., the extraterrestrial, or Kojak, for the
famous Telly Savalas television character. But in even
larger circles, in international soccer, Collina is
a true cult figure. He has a worldwide f an club and
is often noted as a "sex symbol," with women
swooning for him as much as they would any of the athletes.
He maintains his own personal website (see sidebar)
and admirers have devoted their own fan sites to Collina
(one going so far as to laud him as "The Emperor
of Honor"). He has been voted the Best Referee
in the World five times in succession by the Football
History and Statistics Federation, and his visage can
be seen on thousands of T shirts worn by the soccer-going
public proclaiming "Collina for President/' How
can that possibly be for a man who indulges in an activity
in which insults, abuse, threats and accusations of
corruption are the norm? In many places around the world,
Sports officials are spat upon, ridiculed, physically
attacked and in every way vilified. Has any other official
in any Sport ever achieved the level of adoration -
or at least public interest - as Collina? He must be
from another world.
Otherworldly
Appearance
In
his earthly form, the 42-year-old Collina is by all
accounts one of the nicest gentlemen you could ever
wish to meet. More than six feet tall and weighing in
at 165 pounds, he has impressive stature. He is an immaculate
dresser, who oozes Italian style and charm (Collina
was even invited to model a suit in Rome's Haute Couture
Spanish Steps fashion gala last July).
Much
of his popularity stems from his physical image — a
bizarre marriage of Uncle Fester from the Addams Family
thrown together with the sleek athleticism of Michael
Jordan. Not only that, but he has a rubberfaced ability
to constantly change expressions. Perhaps Jim Carrey
studies Collina footage for inspiration.
Instantly
recognizable standing alongside England's Superstar
soccer player David (Mr. Posh Spiee) Beckham in European
adidas advertisements, Collina lets his referee skill
speak for itself.
Off
the soccer field Pierluigi Collina is Mister Nice Guy
but, when he's in the cauldron of a top crunch game,
demanding intense concentration, the whole scene can
change in an instant.
Here
you can believe a War of the Worlds description of Martians
leaving their spaceship armed with deadly ray guns.
A totally bald dome-shaped head glistens in the sun's
ray s on running sweat, the skull punctured by Frankenstein
eyes under bulging hairless brows. When he's calm, those
eyes are sparkling icy blue but, on the soccer field,
they often flash like traffic Signals — a bright green
for "OK, keep playing," snake yellow for "I
don't want to see that again," blazing red for
"Get walking."
It's
during those times when millionaire players are out
of line that Collina's eyes become demonic with glaring
pupils like great balls of fire about to jump out of
their sockets. The normally smooth-skinned face distorts
into vertical crevices enclosing a cruel, thin line
of mouth. Clear body language and gestures reinforce
every decision. It's no wonder he has a reputation for
frightening the life out of even the toughest of players.
They rarely contest calls or even the red or yellow
cards he's sometimes forced to show. But such is the
countenance of Collina that in the next instant a toothy,
boyish smile might soothe and encourages the good guys
The
stark baldness is not by design. In fact Collina has
no hair anywhere on his head. The hairlessness is the
result of a disease called alopecia that Collina contracted
in 1984. Although non-life threatening, alopecia can
be traumatic, both physically and mentally. It involves
serious loss of body hair, particularly evident about
the head. There i little hope for reversal, but many
support groups exist to guide sufferers through the
initial and later stages to rebuild lifestyles and confidence.
Collina serves as a shining example of accepting and
even using the condition to develop a unique personality.
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Collina
shakes hands with Japan's captain Hedtoshi
Nakata after Japan's loss to Turkey during
the 2002 World Cup last June.
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He
makes light of what at the time was a sudden physical
transformation — in only 15 days after contracting the
disease Collina lost all his hair. "Perhaps I was
lucky, but I did not suffer the social embarrassment
that others experienced in those days. I was fortunate
that it was just becoming the fashion for men, particularly
celebrities in the arts, to shave their heads,"
he says. "Today, bald seems to be beautiful!"
he adds with a chuckle. "Perhaps, if some of my
referee friends adopted a bald look, they might benefit
from easier recognition!"
While
Collina readily admits his smooth dorne hasn't done
anything to hurt his career — in fact, quite the contrary
— he also is quick to defend other sufferers of the
disease. Collina took offense during an Oct. 9, 2002,
Italian television program, described as the "Soccer
Oscars," when he was made fun of in a spoof advertisement
for "Collina hair lotion."
"I
receive e-mails and letters from mothers whose sons
have alopecia and I also receive requests for advice
from people who have that illness," Collina explained
in the Italian press. "I think some respect needs
to be shown. For me it is no longer a problem, as is
clear, but for others it certainly is. ... For a kid
who is forming his personality and has alopecia ...
joking in that manner does certainly not help him to
be well. That is what annoyed me during the broadcast.
To use irony is all right but (to) offend the feelings
of people with problems is not (acceptable)."
Suave
and Continental
While
Collina's physical attributes help him get attention,
it's his uncanny ability to project the perfect countenance
for every given Situation that makes him an influencing
presence. He looks you straight in the eye and has the
knack of making you feel important to him. His voice
is quiet, reassuring but firm. Add an innocent smile,
frequent chuckles and you're hooked. Brains too, earning
an economics degree at Bologna University in 1984. He's
at home speaking English, Spanish, French and, of course,
Italian, which he delivers at a machine-gun, staccato
rate when excited.
Pierluigi,
or "Pigi" to his friends, is married to Gianna
and is the adoring father of two girls, Francesca Romana
(age II) and Carolina (age seven). A frisky Scotty West
Highland terrier rounds out the Collina family home
in the town of Viareggio, known as the Pearl of the
Tyrrhenia, on the Italian West Coast near Pisa. Winter
family holidays follow the sun to Spain and the Canary
Islands. He loves reading, particularly the legal thrillers
of John Grisham, and communicating with family and friends
via the Internet. Mood music for him is jazz.
In
Italy, unlike in some European countries — notably England
— the top referees are not füll time, and as such, Collina's
"real" Job is as a financial advisor specializing
in government bonds Investments. But sport has always
been his life.
Growing
up in the basketball-crazy town of Bologna, he played
the game in high school and continues to be a staunch
supporter of the Bologna Fortitudo team, which won the
basketball Serie A championship three years in a row.
Think of him as an Italian Version of Jack Nicholson
courtside for the Italian Version of the Lakers.
Baseball,
tennis and soccer were his other active sports, although
Collina is modest about his skill level at any games.
At 15 he played soccer for a Pallavicini church team
as a central defender but he jokes, "I was more
of a nuisance value and often got into trouble with
referees. I was sent off several times." Sidelined
by an injury at 17, he was teased by a teammate into
a referees' training course being offered in Bologna,
but he never had any Intention of taking the role seriously.
Once in, though, he was hooked.
That
short, turbulent soccer playing experience was enough
to qualify Collina as a connoisseur of the trickeries
of soccer players. As they say "Ex-criminals make
the best cops." Starting off his officiating career
in 1977, success came quick — three years to reach the
highest regional level, the National Third Division
in 1988, and then the top Serie A debut in December
1991.
Collina
made his mark as a strict disciplinarian when the Italian
League was at its zenith in world soccer. He has controlled
(in the truest sense of the word) 180 Serie A matches,
including titanic clashes between the cream of clubs
— Juventus, Inter and AC Milan, Roma, Lazio and all
the others.
Outside
Italy, in European League and Cup games, Collina strengthened
his solid reputation and was accepted as an international
referee by FIFA in 1995 äs one of the youngest officials
at that level.
Popular
but Skilled, Too
Of
course, the pinnacle of his international success came
last June when Collina was selected to control what
is arguably the biggest pressure-cooker match in the
world. With eyes half closed and a satisfied smile,
Collina recalls, "Of the many wonderful matches
it's been my privilege to referee, the one that Stands
out is, of course, the Brazil vs. Germany World Cup
Final in
Japan
last year. From the moment I was informed of my selection,
right through the whole experience until the last whistle,
I was in dreamland."
Pausing
to put the occasion in perspective, he continues, "Here
were two giants of World Cup history — Brazil with four
titles and Germany with three — recalling famous players
like Pele, Rivelino, Jairzinho, Beckenbauer, Matthaus
and
Voller. Now I was to be in the middle of the modern
stars — Ronaldo, Rivaldo, Carlos, Hamann, Kahn and Klose.
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Collina
Online
Type
in Pierluigi's name into any populär search
engine such äs Yahoo or Google and you'll
get thousands of hits in return — actually
13,200 on Google. By way of comparison,
typing in "Ed Hochuli," a well-known
NFL referee, produced 1,080 hits; "Dick
Bavetta," widely known NBA referee,
came back with 2,810 hits; and "Bruce
Froemming," longtime major league umpire,
produced 5,930 hits.
Not
only is he referenced on those 13,200 web
pages, but Collina designed and maintains
his own website at www.pierluigicollina.it/english/home.html
(pictured below),
where you can read through his personal
biography, browse photos of Collina, send
him e-mail, ask him questions or get his
autograph.
Collina's
popularity is such that he's even spawned
several fan websites devoted to all things
Collina. Several of those fan sites are
in foreign languages, but two English-based
sites are: www.geocities.com/CapeCanaveral/Cockpit/6099/
pierluigi/ and
www.collina.8k.com/main2.htm
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"Compared
with the hundreds of players who have appeared in the
final matches, dating from 1930,I was very conscious
that only 16 referees had controlled them. I was tobe
number 17."
Every
referee acknowledges the moral support of others to
meet unknown challenges in big games. Collina remembers,
with pride, "I had marvelous messages from family,
friends and strangers, including many from America,
that lifted me onto a high plane. With that support
and encouragement I knew that my team of officials would
cope with any eventuality. We all had a fantastic experience.
Even months after that day, I still find it difficult
to accept it was not a dream."
Confirming
his voted Status as the Best Referee in the World, Collina
received many accolades for his handling of the final,
which Brazil won, 2-0. Not too surprisingly, the only
place his popularity seemed to diminish was in Germany.
His popularity became so far reaching, in fact, that
just months after the World Cup, Collina was tabbed
by the Japanese Company Hatchando for a series of television
commercials to endorse its octopus-based snack food
takoyaki. (Said the Hatchando press release announcing
the deal, "Mr. Collina's tenderness and warmth
is akin to the sense of hotness and security which is
inherent in takoyaki.")
The
2002 World Cup was Collina's second, having been one
of the officials selected for the 1998 World Cup in
France. Collina also took his show to America on two
very high profile assignments: the first for the 1996
Olympics at Atlanta and Miami, where he refereed four
matches, including the final match between Nigeria and
Argentina; the second in 1997 to officiate the U.S.
vs. El Salvador World Cup qualifier.
"I
liked very much the warm, friendly people I met everywhere
who made me and other visiting officials so welcome,"
he says.
The
Undisputed Man In Charge
Regardless
of his memorable appearance or perceived popularity,
it is what Collina does on the pitch that makes him
a success.
He
has a commanding style on the field. With his powerful,
menacing presence, Collina simply Stares out players
until they accept his decisions, which are mostly correct.
He has little patience for unfair acts and less for
blatantly disparaging behavior. He proved that once,
famously, by halting an Italian League match until officials
removed a racist fan's banner that insulted a black
player.
Arrogance
might come easily to one such as Collina, but that is
an attribute he seems to lack, as attested by many of
his officiating peers. Collina is popular among his
fellow referees and he readily admits to mistakes. "Of
course (I make mistakes)," he asserts. "I
don't make any fewer mistakes than my colleagues, and
I cannot hide them. They were less obvious in the early
years of TV coverage, when there were only two or three
Cameras, but now the whole field is surrounded by up
to 20.1 have only two eyes."
Those
eyes start to smolder when the criticisms of the refereeing
during the 2002 World Cup are mentioned. While Collina
himself was not singled out for undue criticism, the
entire group of FIFA officials was treated harshly on
several occasions in the world media. "In 64 international
matches, played in the most exacting conditions for
the players and officials, there are bound to be some
mistakes by human beings trying to be perfect,"
he says, his voice rising. "We accept fair criticism
and do our best to eliminate our faults. What we strongly
object to are vicious personal attacks when we know
we have made the right call."
As
an example Collina recalls an earlier incident involving
American referee Esse Baharmast, which made world headlines
during the 1998 World Cup in France. Briefly, Baharmast
called a crucial penalty in the Brazil-Norway match,
which decided the Group A Standings. Unfortunately,
not one official camera caught the action that led to
Baharmast's call, which set the media alight with speculation.
The consensus in the press was Baharmast got it wrong.
"I
was with Esse for the next two days," recalls Collina.
"It was a nightmare for him. He was destroyed."
Collina shakes his head slowly at the memory. Then he
recounts how a maverick Swedish channel produced film
showing the indisputable evidence that Baharmast was
100 percent right. "Fortunately, the media were
informed in time for the truth to be broadcast and some
apologies appeared but, although vindicated, Esse was
in a state of shock, devastated."
Far
From Done
Having
achieved the pinnacle of soccer as a referee at 42,
what now for Pierluigi Collina? Too young to retire
and too old by the time the 2006 World Cup comes around
in Germany — unless FIFA eases the age limit for referees
before that time, which might happen.
Scarcely
had the clamor of praise for Collina's handling of the
World Cup Final died away when the debate about the
FIFA retirement age of 45 for referees had begun. Could
it be right that the man widely acknowledged as the
best referee in the world would not be appearing in
the 2006 finals in Germany because, at 46, he would
be too old? In the early '90s, FIFA lowered the age
limit from 50. Perhaps it will be raised again in time
for Collina to enjoy one more World Cup.
Until
then, rumor has it that some rieh Italian clubs, tired
of their Superstars blanching from Collina's bug-eyed
stare, are passing the hat around to finance a spacecraft
to lift off Collina back to Mars, or whatever other
planet he originally spawned from. That should suit
him fine because he'll likely want to be there for the
opening game of the Galaxy Champions League between
Venus and Jupiter — no pushover, that one!
However,
it's quite likely that before he rejoins his spaceship,
Collina will continue to enjoy his popularity, well
aware that it could all end any day. "I keep my
head in check," he chuckles, "knowing that
my next mistake could bring down the critics on me."
Renowned
soccer author and official Stanley Lover refereed more
than 1,000 matches in European and international leagues
and tournaments. Presently living near Paris, he is
the author of several books, including Soccer Rules
Explained and Soccer and Its Rules, which are available
from Soccer Learning Systems, San Ramon, Calif.
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