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5 THE INDEPENDENT SATURDAY 19 FEBRUARY 2011 llllll The Mario Balotelli story Sport 4 llllll SATURDAY 19 FEBRUARY 2011 THE INDEPENDENT Sport The Mario Balotelli story What makes the City striker such an arresting character? Ian Herbert talks to those closest to him and uncovers the man behind the myth REVEALED: THE COMPLEX AND WONDERFUL WORLD OF MARIO BALOTELLI M ario Balotelli cast his eye around the Prestbury man- sion once occu- pied by Robinho – the airy rooms, outlying fields and rack of remote control panels all took his eye – and wondered if the home comforts of a Cheshire life might be just the thing for him. It was his Italian friends, knowing him as they do, who asked the Manchester City striker how he would deal with all that rural isolation. “We couldn’t see what he would do out there all alone,” says one of them. “There are hours to kill for a footballer and we saw it becoming so solitary for him.” They were right. Balotelli heeded the advice and has settled instead in a ninth- floor penthouse flat, where the little con- gratulatory notes stuck to his door by the neighbours – and their bottles of wine presented at Christmas – attest to the way he seems to be settling. At first, City tried to find out the 20-year-old’s interests to help him fill his days. They learnt of his interest in wildlife and the Italian is consequently now more acquainted with Knowsley Safari Park than any other Pre- mier League footballer. But Balotelli has found his own way. “He has never wanted his life to be run for him,” says his sister, Cristina, an accomplished journalist now helping him navigate his way through the pitfalls attached to English celebrity status. “He does things his own way.” The emotional draw towards his old home life and to his parents back in Brescia has hardly been surprising, given their huge role in helping him through his challenging early years – a full picture of which can be revealed by The Independent today. The couple he has come to call father and mother are Franco Balotelli, a retired former warehouse supervisor in the pasta trade, and his wife Silvia, originally a nurse by profession and an indefatigable foster mother through much of her married life. But the surname he carries on his No 45 shirt at City is one which was legally denied him until 2008, such was the protracted nature of his wait to be legally adopted by the Balotellis from his Ghanaian parents, who rarely showed up during those years. The Balotellis – whose own three children, Corrado, Giovanni and Cristina were growing up when they learnt about Mario – thought their days of fostering were behind them when social services pleaded with them to care for the child, who was only two and a half but had undergone a series of operations at a local hospital. Franco had already retired from the warehouse and the couple were not wealthy. But they returned from a family holiday resolved on making him a part of their lives. The court decree under which he was fostered was renewed every two years until he was 18, which did not help the sense of permanency which the Balotellis created for him. Balotelli’s first memory of his new home was running and sliding down a long corridor, shattering several of his mother’s vases along the way, and it was the absence of attention and affection in his life until that time which seems to have dictated his pattern of behaviour. “I’d be in the bathroom drying my hair when he’d appear at the door, turn the light off and run away,” Cristina recalls. “It was the attention he wanted.” The relationship with his adoptive mother – in Manchester this weekend, just as she was after defying snow- delayed flights to join him in Manchester on Christmas Day and witness his first City hat-trick against Aston Villa three days later – has become one of extra- ordinary depth. “For a long time, he could not sleep without her there to hold his hand,” his sister adds. “He hated to be alone. To an extent, that’s how he still he is. He has always needed company, though we see the difference that Manchester is making, in giving him independence and helping him to mature.” His mother’s firmness when needed instilled discipline into his life. Balotelli tells a story of how one day she forbade him from attending football training in Mompiano because of his behaviour. But he crept out and made the journey from Brescia anyway – taking 50 minutes on foot. By the time he arrived, his mother had called the coach of the team – who sent him straight back. Franco Balotelli has been the one with the endless patience, driving his adoptive son to football, scouts, karate, judo, basketball, athletics and swimming. He was also the one who, within a year or so of the young boy joining the family, would be found in the midst of endless afternoon football matches with him in the parks of Brescia. The striker would have tried athletics or martial arts, had a career in football not been forthcoming for him. His brothers, both much older than him, have also followed and supported him closely since his career began at Lumezzane, near Brescia, at the age of 11. Though his family life became a settled one, the colour of his skin has been a more intractable problem. The racism he experienced as a player at Internazionale was overt – Juventus were ordered to play a match behind closed doors a few years ago, such was the racist abuse – but as a child it manifested itself in Balotelli feeling that he was invisible. “Two things were close to my heart, like all boys at a certain age: girls and getting attention,” he reflected in one of the few interviews he granted in Italy. “But it was like I was transparent. I’m no Clooney but I couldn’t explain it why I was ignored. My friends explained. They told me people didn’t like blacks.” Football has offered some great sources of strength against that affliction. Lilian Thuram, another black player with experience of Italy, has been one, though Balotelli has never revealed what advice the former Juventus defender offered. Balotelli has spoken out against racism when he has needed to, though his crusades have been reserved for a differ- ent, eclectic mix of causes which have absorbed him over the past few years. One of them is a Brazilian refuge for destitute children and women in the Brazilian favelas, where Balotelli spent the Christmases of 2007 and 2008. Cristi- na recalls the latter as a time when he was at his happiest. “His friends and brothers went out there too and I remem- ber he was so animated, playing football barefoot on the beach. It showed his love of being with those who are close to him. It showed his love of being free, among people who don’t judge him and whom he feels are as straightforward as he is.” The same can be said of the WWF summer camp he joined at Sicily’s Zingaro Nature Reserve two years ago – not the typical close-season break for an Inter player. Absorbed by the time he was having with friends of his own age there, he cancelled his flight home and made the day-long train journey with them all, instead. “The most distinctive part of his personality is his playful character,” says Cristina. “He loves to joke and play around.” The type of absorption which will con- tribute much to his contentment in Man- chester seems to be unscheduled, like that long trip north through Italy. It was the same last May when he encountered two young representatives of the cam- paign to stop the use of child soldiers at a hotel in Milan, ahead of a conference. It turned into a two-hour private conversa- tion with Bosnian Zlata Filipovic (who lived with the bombs during an adoles- cence in Sarajevo) and the Sudanese John Kon Kelei (who was kidnapped and forced to fight in his own country for seven years). The plight of child soldiers has become a cause Balotelli has taken up again this month. It is a story which confounds the sim- plistic characterisation of Balotelli as a perpetually angry individual with nothing to smile about. “There are contradictions in him but like many people, often the bullishness is there to cover a weakness,” his sister reflects. Another friend says: “Those who come to know him realise the kind of person he really is. Manchester has not been the easiest city to get accus- tomed to and is not as busy as London. ‘For a long time he could not sleep without his mother there to hold his hand. He just hated to be alone’ Cristina Balotelli on her brother’s difficult early years As these previously unpublished family photographs of Mario Balotelli show he supports various causes including a children’s refuge in the favelas of Salvador de Bahia in Brazil. ‘He loves being with people who don’t judge him,’ says his sister You do feel a bit like a fish out of water at first. That’s because Italians are used to a better climate and a different language.” Different cars, too. His family’s advice that he own a right-hand drive model has been heeded after an altercation with a BMW in his left-hand drive Audi R8. The Manchester Christmas markets, where he bought the memorable five-pointed woolly hat he wore the night City played Everton, have long gone and there’s not been much call for the quad bike he enjoys but life does seem to be developing. So now for the biggest challenge – to shake off the knee injury which has so truncated Balotelli’s season and emerge as a genuine force, starting against Notts County in the FA Cup tomorrow. City sent him to the Green Mountains of Vermont, under the care of knee specialist Bill Knowles, as much for the focus on recovery that isolation brings, as for Knowles’ own work. Mancini, desperate to find any way to get him fit, knows that life off the field counts for nothing until he is delivering on it. “He is a young man learning to live away from home,” his sister concludes. “Success for him and the team on the field will make so much difference but he has just needed time to adapt. He has settled and now he is just desperate to prove what he can do when he plays.” BEHIND THE SCENES ‘He is a man of contradictions and like many people the bullishness is there to cover a weakness’ Cristina Balotelli on her brother
Transcript

5THE INDEPENDENT SATURDAY19FEBRUARY 2011 l l l l l l

The Mario Balotelli story Sport4 l l l l l l SATURDAY19FEBRUARY 2011 THE INDEPENDENT

Sport The Mario Balotelli story

What makes the City striker such an arresting character? Ian Herberttalks to those closest to him and uncovers the man behind the myth

REVEALED: THE COMPLEXAND WONDERFUL WORLD OF MARIO BALOTELLI

Mario Balotellicast his eyearound thePrestbury man-sion once occu-pied by Robinho– the airyrooms, outlying

fields and rack of remote control panelsall took his eye – and wondered if thehome comforts of a Cheshire life might bejust the thing for him. It was his Italianfriends, knowing him as they do, whoasked the Manchester City striker howhe would deal with all that rural isolation.“We couldn’t see what he would do outthere all alone,” says one of them. “Thereare hours to kill for a footballer and wesaw it becoming so solitary for him.”

They were right. Balotelli heeded theadvice and has settled instead in a ninth-floor penthouse flat, where the little con-gratulatory notes stuck to his door by theneighbours – and their bottles of winepresented at Christmas – attest to theway he seems to be settling. At first, Citytried to find out the 20-year-old’s intereststo help him fill his days. They learnt of hisinterest in wildlife and the Italian isconsequently now more acquainted withKnowsley Safari Park than any other Pre-mier League footballer. But Balotelli hasfound his own way. “He has never wanted

his life to be run for him,” says his sister,Cristina, an accomplished journalist nowhelping him navigate his way through thepitfalls attached to English celebritystatus. “He does things his own way.”

The emotional draw towards his oldhome life and to his parents back inBrescia has hardly been surprising, giventheir huge role in helping him through hischallenging early years – a full picture ofwhich can be revealed by The Independenttoday. The couple he has come to callfather and mother are Franco Balotelli, aretired former warehouse supervisor inthe pasta trade, and his wife Silvia,originally a nurse by profession and anindefatigable foster mother throughmuch of her married life.

But the surname he carries on his No45 shirt at City is one which was legallydenied him until 2008, such was theprotracted nature of his wait to be legallyadopted by the Balotellis from hisGhanaian parents, who rarely showed upduring those years.

The Balotellis – whose own threechildren, Corrado, Giovanni and Cristinawere growing up when they learnt aboutMario – thought their days of fosteringwere behind them when social servicespleaded with them to care for the child,who was only two and a half but hadundergone a series of operations at a local

hospital. Franco had already retired fromthe warehouse and the couple were notwealthy. But they returned from a familyholiday resolved on making him a part oftheir lives. The court decree under whichhe was fostered was renewed every twoyears until he was 18, which did not helpthe sense of permanency which theBalotellis created for him.

Balotelli’s first memory of his newhome was running and sliding down along corridor, shattering several of hismother’s vases along the way, and it wasthe absence of attention and affection inhis life until that time which seems tohave dictated his pattern of behaviour.“I’d be in the bathroom drying my hairwhen he’d appear at the door, turn thelight off and run away,” Cristina recalls.“It was the attention he wanted.”

The relationship with his adoptivemother – in Manchester this weekend,just as she was after defying snow-delayed flights to join him in Manchesteron Christmas Day and witness his firstCity hat-trick against Aston Villa threedays later – has become one of extra-ordinary depth. “For a long time, he couldnot sleep without her there to hold hishand,” his sister adds. “He hated to bealone. To an extent, that’s how he still heis. He has always needed company,though we see the difference that

Manchester is making, in giving himindependence and helping him tomature.”

His mother’s firmness when neededinstilled discipline into his life. Balotellitells a story of how one day she forbadehim from attending football training inMompiano because of his behaviour. Buthe crept out and made the journey fromBrescia anyway – taking 50 minutes on

foot. By the time he arrived, his motherhad called the coach of the team – whosent him straight back.

Franco Balotelli has been the one withthe endless patience, driving his adoptiveson to football, scouts, karate, judo,basketball, athletics and swimming. Hewas also the one who, within a year or soof the young boy joining the family, wouldbe found in the midst of endless afternoonfootball matches with him in the parks ofBrescia. The striker would have triedathletics or martial arts, had a career infootball not been forthcoming for him. Hisbrothers, both much older than him, havealso followed and supported him closelysince his career began at Lumezzane,near Brescia, at the age of 11.

Though his family life became a settledone, the colour of his skin has been amore intractable problem. The racism heexperienced as a player at Internazionalewas overt – Juventus were ordered toplay a match behind closed doors a fewyears ago, such was the racist abuse – butas a child it manifested itself in Balotellifeeling that he was invisible. “Two thingswere close to my heart, like all boys at acertain age: girls and getting attention,”he reflected in one of the few interviewshe granted in Italy. “But it was like I wastransparent. I’m no Clooney but Icouldn’t explain it why I was ignored. My

friends explained. They told me peopledidn’t like blacks.”

Football has offered some greatsources of strength against that affliction.Lilian Thuram, another black player withexperience of Italy, has been one, thoughBalotelli has never revealed what advicethe former Juventus defender offered.Balotelli has spoken out against racismwhen he has needed to, though hiscrusades have been reserved for a differ-ent, eclectic mix of causes which haveabsorbed him over the past few years.

One of them is a Brazilian refuge fordestitute children and women in theBrazilian favelas, where Balotelli spentthe Christmases of 2007 and 2008. Cristi-na recalls the latter as a time when hewas at his happiest. “His friends andbrothers went out there too and I remem-ber he was so animated, playing footballbarefoot on the beach. It showed his loveof being with those who are close to him.It showed his love of being free, amongpeople who don’t judge him and whom hefeels are as straightforward as he is.”

The same can be said of the WWFsummer camp he joined at Sicily’sZingaro Nature Reserve two years ago –not the typical close-season break for anInter player. Absorbed by the time he washaving with friends of his own age there,he cancelled his flight home and made the

day-long train journey with them all,instead. “The most distinctive part of hispersonality is his playful character,” saysCristina. “He loves to joke and playaround.”

The type of absorption which will con-tribute much to his contentment in Man-chester seems to be unscheduled, likethat long trip north through Italy. It wasthe same last May when he encounteredtwo young representatives of the cam-paign to stop the use of child soldiers at ahotel in Milan, ahead of a conference. Itturned into a two-hour private conversa-tion with Bosnian Zlata Filipovic (wholived with the bombs during an adoles-cence in Sarajevo) and the Sudanese JohnKon Kelei (who was kidnapped and forcedto fight in his own country for sevenyears). The plight of child soldiers hasbecome a cause Balotelli has taken upagain this month.

It is a story which confounds the sim-plistic characterisation of Balotelli as aperpetually angry individual with nothingto smile about. “There are contradictionsin him but like many people, often thebullishness is there to cover a weakness,”his sister reflects. Another friend says:“Those who come to know him realise thekind of person he really is. Manchesterhas not been the easiest city to get accus-tomed to and is not as busy as London.

‘For a long timehe could notsleep withouthis motherthere to holdhis hand. He just hated to be alone’Cristina Balotellion her brother’sdifficult early years

As these previously unpublished family photographsof Mario Balotelli show he supports various causesincluding a children’s refuge in the favelas of Salvadorde Bahia in Brazil. ‘He loves being with people whodon’t judge him,’ says his sister

You do feel a bit like a fish out of water atfirst. That’s because Italians are used to abetter climate and a different language.”

Different cars, too. His family’s advicethat he own a right-hand drive model hasbeen heeded after an altercation with aBMW in his left-hand drive Audi R8. TheManchester Christmas markets, wherehe bought the memorable five-pointedwoolly hat he wore the night City playedEverton, have long gone and there’s notbeen much call for the quad bike he enjoysbut life does seem to be developing.

So now for the biggest challenge – toshake off the knee injury which has sotruncated Balotelli’s season and emergeas a genuine force, starting against NottsCounty in the FA Cup tomorrow. City senthim to the Green Mountains of Vermont,under the care of knee specialist BillKnowles, as much for the focus onrecovery that isolation brings, as forKnowles’ own work. Mancini, desperateto find any way to get him fit, knows thatlife off the field counts for nothing until heis delivering on it.

“He is a young man learning to liveaway from home,” his sister concludes.“Success for him and the team on the fieldwill make so much difference but he hasjust needed time to adapt. He has settledand now he is just desperate to provewhat he can do when he plays.”

B E H I N D T H E S C E N E S

‘He is a man ofcontradictionsand like manypeople thebullishness isthere to cover a weakness’Cristina Balotellion her brother

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