27 March 2025

Sara Gama - footballer

Role model who captained Italy Women to first World Cup quarter-final

Sara Gama won 140 caps for the Italy  national women's football team
Sara Gama won 140 caps for the Italy 
national women's football team
The footballer Sara Gama, a pioneer for women’s professional football in Italy who as captain led Italy’s national team to their best performance at a FIFA Women’s World Cup, was born on this day in 1989 in Trieste.

Central defender Gama, who retired from international football in 2024 with 140 caps but still captains Juventus in the Women’s Serie A, is one of only eight female players in the Italian football Hall of Fame. She has become a role model for young girls wishing to make a career in football.

Only three Italian women have won more international caps, the peak of Gama’s international career arriving in 2019 when Italy’s women qualified under her captaincy for the World Cup finals for the first time in 20 years. Italy's quarter-final appearance was their best performance in the history of the competition.

In a highly-decorated club career, Gama is a six-times Serie A champion - once with Brescia, five times with Juventus. In addition, she has also won the Coppa Italia three times and the Supercoppa Italiana five times.  


Gama was also one of the driving forces as Italian women’s football turned fully professional in 2022, having been at the forefront of a campaign to remove the wage cap previously imposed on women players and introduce a contractual right to health insurance and pensions.

Gama played in France with Paris St Germain
Gama played in France
with Paris St Germain
Born to an Italian mother and a Congolese father, Gama was raised from a young age by her mother and her extended family, who largely originated in Croatia. She recalled recently that she was so fanatical about football as a child that the only time she did not have a ball at her feet was when she was swimming in the sea at nearby Barcola or Miramare Castle.

It was unusual for young girls to play football in the 1990s but Gama’s relatives willingly helped, particularly her grandfather, who would drive her long distances in search of opportunities to play. Her first, mixed team - she was the only girl - was at Muggia, near the border with Slovenia, while her first all-girls team, for which she played for six years, was 22km (14 miles) along the coast in the other direction at Villaggio del Pescatore.

Gama was paid to play for the first time when she signed for Tavagnacco, a Serie A Femminile team based just outside Udine, 80km (50 miles) northwest of Trieste, although the €100 per month she received was intended only to cover expenses.

Tavagnacco, though not a name familiar with fans of men’s football in Italy, had a good women’s team. They finished third in Serie A and twice reached the later stages of the Coppa Italia and the exposure it brought was enough to see Gama selected for the Italy national squad, winning her first call-up as a 16-year-old for a World Cup qualifier against Ukraine in 2006.

Although her career was on a firmly upwards trajectory, Gama did not neglect her education, graduating from high school in Trieste and enrolling at Udine University, where she obtained a degree in foreign languages. She speaks French, English and Spanish as well as her native tongue. 

As a player, meanwhile, she joined another Serie A club, Brescia, where her form earned her a first professional contract to play in France for Paris St Germain. Ultimately, injuries wrecked that move, although she did play in a Champions League final with the French champions.

Gama is women's captain at Juventus, where she has won five Serie A titles
Gama is women's captain at Juventus,
where she has won five Serie A titles 
Back with Brescia, Gama became a Serie A champion for the first time in 2016 before taking the decision to sign for Juventus, who had established a women’s team for the first time and wanted Gama to join them as captain. 

Under her captaincy, Juventus won the Serie A title five seasons in a row between 2017 and 2022. The success of the women’s team captured the attention of the club’s supporters so much that when they were finally allowed to play a match in the Allianz Stadium, where the Turin club’s men’s team play their home fixtures, a crowd of more than 39,000 spectators turned out to watch them beat rivals Fiorentina. It was almost three times the previous attendance record for a women’s match in Italy.

She was named as Italy’s captain by then-head coach Antonio Cabrini in 2014. As well as reaching the World Cup quarter-finals in 2019, losing to the Netherlands, Gama and the azzurri were twice runners-up in the prestigious Algarve Cup in Portugal, in 2020 and 2022. On the first of those occasions, they reached the final but withdrew because the Covid-19 pandemic was taking hold at home.

Milena Bertolini, who had succeeded Cabrini as coach of the national team in 2017, caused a shock by omitting Gama from her squad for the 2023 World Cup, even though she was still captain. Bertolini’s successor, Andrea Soncin, recalled her, which allowed her to announce her retirement from international football on her own terms, making her final appearance in February 2024.

At the age of 36, Gama remains captain of Juventus, for whom she recently completed 150 appearances.

The Castello di Miramare is located at the point of a spur jutting out into the Gulf of Trieste
The Castello di Miramare is located at the point
of a spur jutting out into the Gulf of Trieste
Travel tip:

The Castello di Miramare stands over the harbour at Grignano, one of the places along the Gulf of Trieste waterfront where Sara Gama would go swimming as a child. The castle is located on the end of a rocky spur jutting into the gulf, about 8km (5 miles) from Trieste itself. The Habsburg castle was built between 1856 and 1860 for Austrian Archduke Ferdinand Maximilian and his wife, Charlotte of Belgium, based on a design by Carl Junker.  The castle's grounds include an extensive cliff and seashore park of 22 hectares (54 acres) designed by the archduke, which features many tropical species of trees and plants.  Legend has it that Ferdinand chose the spot to build the castle after taking refuge from a storm in the gulf in the sheltered harbour of Grignano that sits behind the spur.

The Piazza Unità d’Italia is the large main square of the maritime city of Trieste in northern Italy
The Piazza Unità d’Italia is the large main square
of the maritime city of Trieste in northern Italy
Travel tip:

Trieste, where Sara Gama was born, had been disputed territory for thousands of years until it was granted to Italy in 1922, following the First World War.  Previously, it had been one of the most important cities of the Austrian Empire (since 1867 Austria-Hungary), thanks to the development of a thriving shipping industry that brought a period of prosperity. After the Second World War, it was the capital of the Free Territory of Trieste, staying for nine years under Allied Military administration. It officially became part of the Italian Republic in 1954 and since 1963 it has been the capital of the Friuli-Venezia Giulia region, although the final border dispute with the part of the former Yugoslavia that is now Slovenia was not settled until the 1975 Treaty of Osimo. The area today is again prosperous and Trieste is a lively, cosmopolitan city and a major centre for trade and ship building.  The city retains a coffee house culture that dates back to the Habsburg era.  Caffè Tommaseo, in Piazza Nicolò Tommaseo, near the grand open space of the Piazza Unità d’Italia, is the oldest in the city, dating back to 1830.

Also on this day:

1799: The birth of military leader Alessandro La Marmora

1968: The birth of politician Luca Zaia

1969: The birth of footballer Gianluigi Lentini

2007: The death of singer Joe Sentieri


Home


No comments:

Post a Comment