Английская Википедия:Gian Piero Ventrone

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Gian Piero Ventrone (14 April 1960 – 6 October 2022) was an Italian athletic trainer.

An ISEF-qualified teacher,[1] he started his career in 1994, as athletic trainer for Marcello Lippi's Juventus until 1999 and from 2001 and 2004.[2] Once his Juventus experience ended, he collaborated with Lippi in the preparation for the 2006 FIFA World Cup, won by Italy.[3][4] He continued at Atalanta from September 2009 to January 2010.[5] He worked with Antonio Conte at Bari and Siena[6] and with Fabrizio Ravanelli, a player he trained at Juventus, as an assistant coach at Ajaccio.[6] He had been athletic trainer at Catania, Jiangsu and at Fabio Cannavaro's Guangzhou in the 2017–18 season, before joining his friend Conte at Tottenham Hotspur in November 2021.[7][4]

Profile

Style of work

When Ventrone joined Juventus, he brought 43 computers for the pursuit of perfection in every exercise and tools no one had ever used.[8] He made the players train by making them listen to the music of Queen and of Nirvana.[8] He gave the players a bell called the "bell of shame"; those who were exhausted would ring it.[8] He explained its use with, "in this sport there is no limit".[8]

Reception

Ventrone was nicknamed "marine" for his very hard and tiring training sessions.[9] His rhythms and workloads knocked out a number of professional athletes.[7][10] Images of Harry Kane collapsing and vomiting and Son Heung-min almost fainting and lying agonising on the ground in a summer preparation in Seoul went viral.[7] Alessio Tacchinardi, who was coached by Ventrone, considered Ventrone "a good sergeant, a reference point for everyone and a jackhammer".[8]

Personal life and death

Ventrone was born in Naples on 14 April 1960.[7] He took part in the 1st San Marco Regiment.[8] During his military service, he took a refresher course in America with the United States Army Special Forces.[1] When Lippi left Juventus in 1999, he remained in Turin.[8]

On the evening of 4 October 2022, Ventrone was taken to the Fratebenefratelli hospital in Naples and put into a coma for mechanical ventilation.[7] A few days earlier, he learned he had acute myeloid leukemia.[7] His death occurred at 6:45 on 6 October due to a brain haemorrhage.[7] He was 62,[2] though reported to be 61 in some English sources.[4][11][12][13][14] His funeral was held three days later in the San Luigi Gonzaga church in Naples.[15] Conte, out of respect for him, did not hold a press conference for the game against Brighton on the day he died.[7][11] Before the match, the Tottenham players warmed up wearing a shirt that read "Forever in our hearts".[16] During the minute's silence dedicated to him before the match, Conte cried.[17] Harry Kane dedicated his winning goal to him.[15]

References

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