Calcio Storico is an ancient game that has been described as the world’s most dangerous sport in the world, and the reason is not far-fetched.
A violent sport with a deep tradition, Calcio Storico Fiorentino (which means “historical Florentine football”) has origins dating as far back as 16th century Italy.
The game, also known as Calcio Fiorentino or Calcio Storico is a mix of football and rugby, with some mixed martial arts in there for good measure. It was played across the country before the creation of soccer as we know it today.
For most of the players, it seems like their motivation for playing is to honor Florentine tradition, as well as test their own personal limits. And test them they will, because in terms of rules, there aren’t many.
They were established in 1580 and haven’t changed much. You can’t sucker punch or kick anyone in the head. Otherwise, you can punch, headbutt, trip, wrestle and choke your way across the field.
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Players do seem adamant that Calcio Storico isn’t a sport, it’s a game. They might distinguish between the two by saying there isn’t really a season for the game.
Players can only participate in a max of two games a year, so you don’t really have the multi-month processes of seasonal sports. Instead, you get a massive, energetic display of violence and tradition that pits the four quarters of Florence, Italy, against each other.
After interest in the sport started to fall in the 17th century the “Florence kick game” saw a resurgence under Benito Mussolini in the 1930s. During this time most games were played with handmade balls in city squares.
In modern times it takes place in Piazza Santa Croce, with the area in front of Santa Croce church covered in dirt to create the pitch. After its resurgence, Calcio Storico Fiorentino evolved into the annual event seen today, with four teams taking part every summer.
Each team represents one of four historical neighborhoods of Florence: Santa Croce, who play in blue; Santo Spirito, who is known as the whites; Santa Maria Novella, the red team; and finally San Giovanni, who wear green.
All players that take part are volunteers, who know that after a 50-minute match they are highly likely to be leaving the field injured and bloody.
Cannon fire signals the start of a game and the two teams of 27 players attempt to score by moving the ball into the opposing team’s goal, or “Caccia”, that spans the 40m width of the pitch, by any means necessary.
If the ball is thrown over the net, however, half a point is given to the defending team. No substitutes are allowed and it is the aim of the 15 forwards on the pitch to injure or incapacitate their opponents while the backs run with the ball and attempt to score.
Calcio Storico Fiorentino is definitely a violent spectacle but this does not mean that everything goes. Punches, kicks, head butts, and wrestling are all considered legal by the rules of the game.
However, players are ejected for kicks to the head, as well as if more than one player attacks an opposing player at the same time.
In addition to the referee, each team is led by a captain and a standard-bearer who does not take part in games but is able to organize and maintain their side’s discipline when tempers flare.
The games themselves are a key element of the feast day celebrations in Florence for its patron saint St John the Baptist.
Spectators are treated to a parade of all four teams in traditional uniforms before the game, with the end-of-games celebration tak
ing place along the banks of the Arno.
As for the players, they are not allowed to receive any compensation for taking part, as no professionals are permitted. In the past, the winning team would win a Chianina calf (an Italian breed of cattle) but in recent years this prize has been reduced to a free dinner.
Those who are involved, however, are content just to take part, testing themselves in this most dangerous of games.