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“The Italian community is coming in as strong as ever.” We are expecting that to be the landscape for BMO Field this year,” Pistore said. Our premium inventory is almost sold out. Giovinco’s arrival, he said, brought 3,000 new ticket buyers, plenty of them Italians. “(Italian fans) have been a very important part, but I don’t think we have been able to galvanize them like we have through the signing of a player like Seba,” Tom Pistore, Maple Leaf Sports and Entertainment’s vice-president of sales, told the Star. With the recent signing of former Juventus striker Sebastian Giovinco, Toronto FC’s second-rate status is shifting. “The soccer here is lower than the first division in Italy.” “The last few times I went to see them I was almost sleeping,” Carlucci says. That’s why he visits Italy a handful of times each year to watch Juventus play, but has only made it out to a few Toronto FC games since the team began in 2007. For decades, he says, the GTA’s Italian community has largely preferred tuning into Serie A matches, featuring more prolific athletes and a much more calculated style of play than Major League Soccer in North America. Decked out in his Juventus jersey, fan Vince Carlucci watches nearly every match his team plays.īut when it comes to Major League Soccer, the Juventus Fan Club of Toronto president is slightly less devoted and he’s not alone.
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