Vatican Pulls Support for Seminarians’ Soccer League | Sojourners

Vatican Pulls Support for Seminarians’ Soccer League

Catholic seminary players during their first 'Clericus Cup' in Rome. Getty Image
Catholic seminary players during their first 'Clericus Cup' at St. Peter Oratory in Rome, 24 February 2007. Via Getty Images.

VATICAN CITY — A Vatican department has withdrawn its support from a soccer tournament that pits teams from Rome's seminaries against each other because it has lost its "educational" value.
   
Sixteen teams from Rome's seminaries and religious orders compete against each other in the Clericus Cup tournament, including the "Martyrs" from the Pontifical North American College, the U.S. seminary in Rome, which placed fourth in 2011.
   
The Rev. Kevin Lixey, who heads the Church and Sport office at the Pontifical Council for the Laity, said the decision came after the Clericus Cup stopped offering programs to help seminarians reach out to youth and teach them good sportsmanship, which was part of the original intent of the tournament.
   
"They are just organizing a soccer tournament, and they are doing a good job. But this is not what we are interested in: we want to equip seminarians for their job in the field, to help them reach youth through sport," he said.
   
Clericus Cup organizers declined to comment on the matter but stressed that, this year, the tournament had obtained the patronage of another Vatican department, the Pontifical Council for Culture.
   
The Clericus Cup was launched six years ago, after the Vatican Secretary of State, Cardinal Tarcisio Bertone, said he hoped the Vatican could one day field its own team in international competitions.
   
Just as Italy's Serie A soccer tournament was embroiled in a match-fixing scandal, the Clericus Cup league stressed fair-play and integrity in its players, with the motto "a different soccer is possible."
   
But in 2010, a bitter fight broke out among players during a match. There have also been reports in the Italian press of supporters chanting sharp-tongued songs against rival teams.

Alessandro Speciale writes for Religion News Service. Via RNS.