When promoted to Serie A in 2004, Livorno had reached the top flight of Italian football since 1949. There may be trouble! The Livorno fans regarded themselves as the most left wing in the country, often displaying banners and flags of Che Guevara and sometimes Joseph Stalin, inevitably this would cause friction with the right-wing faction. Few would appreciate that the most voluble (new word??) opposition to this political stance would come from the pitch!
In retrospect, of course, that Lazio Striker, Paolo di Canio would become chief adversary of the Livorno support, is not so much of a surprise. Di Canio was a member of Lazio's neo-Nazi ultras as a youngster. he had a tatoo on his arm, reading DVX (Latin for Il Duce) and in his autobiography he advanced the argument that Mussolini (remember him?) was a "top chap" because he made the trains run on time!
After Lazio played host to Livorno in April 2005, a snarling Canio presented the travelling fans with an unambiguous single finger. He was caught on camera making the gesture to the club's far-right "Curva Nord" supporters on multiple occasions. Then, the season after, in the wake of a 2-1 defeat at Livorno, he antagonised them again with a palm-down, straight-arm salute to his own fans!! Imagine??!! "I am not a fascist", was di Canio's explanation. "The Roman salute is aimed at my people. The salute is from a comrade to his comrades and was meant for my people". "I expect a robust defence, otherwise I'm going to be pissed off!" The phrase "Sieg Heil" is a German Nazi-era slogan meaning "Hail Victory".
Happily, Lazio did not agree, releasing a statement which distanced the club from "any kind of rascism or politicisation of football." Paolo Di Canio was known for his fascist sympathies and for giving the controversial salute to fans during his career. Having twice before seig-heiled, the salute, at a Serie A match against Roma and Juventus, this marked the tipping point and di Canio was forced to promise, never to salute again.
He received a one-game ban and a fine from the Italian Football Federation for the salute.
