The Laziali
·8. Juni 2025
This Week In Lazio History: June 2-8

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Yahoo sportsThe Laziali
·8. Juni 2025
The week of June 2-8 in Lazio history sees some fundamental matches for promotion, a record (three wins in a day) and we remember Nello Governato.
Date: Sunday, June 2, 1935 Venue: Stadio PNF, Rome Fixture: Lazio Ambrosiana Inter 4-2 By beating Ambrosiana Inter in the last game of the season, Lazio hand the scudetto to Juventus. A prequel of May 5, 2002.
Date: Sunday, June 3, 1923 Venue: Campo Rondinella, Rome Fixture: Lazio Libertas Palermo 10-2 Lazio score ten but the game is never competitive as Sicilians take the field in ten men and are soon reduced to nine. One of the biggest wins in Lazio’s history.
Date: Sunday, June 4 1972 Venue: Stadio Olimpico, Rome Fixture: Lazio Foggia 2-0 Lazio beat Foggia 2-0 with goals by Massa and Chinaglia and can almost touch Serie A paradise.
Date: Sunday, June 5, 1983 Venue: Stadio Olimpico, Rome Fixture: Lazio Catania 2-1 In inhumane conditions, Lazio beat the Sicilians thanks to former player Mastropasqua’s own goal.
Date: Sunday, June 7, 1908 Venue: Piazza d’Armi, Pisa Fixtures: Lucca FBC Lazio 0-3, Spes Livorno Lazio 0-4, Virtus Juventusque Livorno Lazio 0-1, Pisa Interregional Tournament Lazio win three games in one day in Pisa, playing with the same XI. No other club in history has ever managed such a feat.
Dates: Sunday, June 6, 1982 & Sunday June 8, 1986 Venues: Stadio Olimpico, Rome & Stadio Comunale, Catanzaro Fixtures: Lazio Varese 3-2 & Catanzaro Lazio 2-3
Two similar games, two similar situations, two identical scores for two identical outcomes.
The seasons are 1981-82 and 1985-86. Lazio in both of them started out as one of the favourites for promotion and in both failed miserably. The situation was so bad that they were risking relegation to Serie C.
There were two games to the end of the season and in 1982 the Biancocelesti were ninth but just three points above the relegation zone. They had to face Varese, fourth, who desperately needed to win to maintain their promotion hopes.
In 1986 Lazio were 14th and if the season had finished then there would be a four-team playoff to avoid relegation. They had to face Catanzaro away from home and the Giallorossi from Calabria were in an even worse situation since they were two points behind Lazio and they too needed to win to keep hopes of staying in Serie B alive. The worst thing was that the Biancocelesti had not scored a single goal in the last four games and had not won away from home since Cremonese Lazio 0-1 on March 6, 1983. Winning these games was fundamental not only to avoid Serie C but for the survival of the club.
Back to 1982 and Lazio Varese. After 14 minutes the visitors were 2-0 up. Descent to hell was now a concrete possibility. But, like many times before, captain Vincenzo D’Amico took the team by the hand. He scored a penalty in the 26th minute and a superb free-kick three minutes later. In the second half there was another penalty for the Biancocelesti and Vincenzino scored his hat-trick. All of this with a deep cut on his leg. Lazio won and were out of trouble.
In Catanzaro four years later, the Biancocelesti scored early. An own goal to break the scoring drought but the Calabrians equalised almost immediately. But then two goals from Mimmo Caso and Gabriele Podavini gave the advantage to Lazio who held strong despite Catanzaro reducing the deficit in the second half. A miraculous victory, yet again.
Lazio supporters probably thought that was it as far as flirting with Serie C was concerned. Been there, done that, survived. But the situation would be even more desperate in the 1986-87 season.
Nello Governato, “Il Professore” (The Professor), was one of the pillars of the Lazio squad in the 1960s.
Born in Turin on September 14 1938, he started his career in the Torino youth team, playing sometimes as centre forward and sometimes in midfield. In 1957-58 he was sold to Como in Serie B where he stayed for four very productive years.
Lazio set eyes on him and he joined the good side of the Tiber in 1961 for Lazio’s first year of Serie B. But it was a jinxed season. Managers coming and going, Lazio’s too many ups and downs and then there was the famous ghost goal.
Lazio had to play Napoli at the Stadio Flaminio on March 4 1962. It was a big match, if Lazio had won the immediate return in Serie A would be downhill from then on. In the 76th minute the referee, Iginio Rigato, gave a free kick to Lazio. Gianni Seghedoni with a splendid shot put the ball in the back of the net. The Lazio players and fans celebrated, the Napoli players despaired. Rigato laughed. “It’s not a goal, the ball went out”. There was a hole in the net and the ball went right through it. Lazio protested but there was nothing the players could do. The Rai TV footage demonstrated the referee’s mistake and Lazio appealed to the Lega Calcio, but the game’s result remained 0-0. The ref never admitted his mistake. Lazio missed out on promotion by one point, Napoli went into Serie A thanks to that point.
In that season Governato suffered three managerial changes and the fact that he played as centre forward instead of playmaker. All this changed in the next season, when new Manager Juan Carlos Lorenzo decided to use him in his more natural role of playmaker.
He had a great ability to read games and situations as well pass the ball with both feet precisely and intelligently to his fellow players. He was also very good at man marking. The star midfield players of the 1960s always had problems when they had to play against him. He was never nasty or rough, always elegant in the way he played, hence the nickname “The Professor”.
He was so good that when Inter called, Lazio, who never had much money, could not say no to Angelo Moratti so in 1966 they sold him. However, Governato had a very hard time in finding a way into a team full of players with strong personalities (he never played a game for Inter) and in November the Nerazzurri sold him to Vicenza where at least he was able to play.
Lazio called him back in 1967 and he stayed for another four years until the club let him go as a free agent when Tommaso Maestrelli arrived. The maestro wanted to work with a clean slate so three of the older players, Governato, Giancarlo Morrone and Rino Marchesi, were allowed to go.
He played the last few years of his career with Savona in Serie C.
After football he studied to become sporting director and worked for Lazio for a couple of years from 1983. He was later at Bologna, Juventus and Fiorentina. In the 1990s, Sergio Cragnotti asked him to make Lazio the strongest team in the world and that is exactly what he did. He left when the Cragnotti era ended.
Governato was not just able with the ball but also with the pen. He became a journalist and worked for Tuttosport newspaper. He also wrote books. The first one in the 1970s and the others once he stopped working for Lazio.
A Second book, Gioco Sporco “Dirty Play” of 2004, anticipated the events that would lead to the Calciopoli scandal of 2006. He also wrote about Matthias Sindelar, the Austrian footballer who refused to play for Germany and the Anschluss and one about Angelo Vassalo, the Mayor of a small town near Salerno killed by the Camorra.
Nello Governato died on June 8 2019, aged 80.
He played 265 games for Lazio (131 In Serie A, 105 in Serie B, 15 in Coppa Italia, two in the Fairs Cup, 2 in the Mitropa Cup, 4 in the Anglo-Italian Cup and six in the Cup of the Alps) and scored 17 goals (9 in Serie A, 7 in Serie B and one in Coppa Italia).
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This Article Was Written by Dag Jenkins & Simon Basten from Lazio Stories. More Information on the Above Matches and Players can be found on LazioStories.com.