May 26, 1963: Padova Lazio 0-3
- Simon Basten

- 56 minutes ago
- 8 min read
Lazio Cruise Past Padova to Strengthen Grip on Third Place
Early goals from Maraschi and Bernasconi set the tone as Moschino seals a decisive win

The season so far
The previous season Lazio had lost out on promotion by just one point due to the infamous ghost goal.
Lazio had to play Napoli at the Stadio Flaminio on March 4, 1962. It was a big match, if Lazio won the immediate return to Serie A would have been downhill. In the 76th minute the referee, Iginio Rigato, gave a free kick to Lazio. Gianni Seghedoni with a splendid shot put the ball in the back of the net. The Lazio players and fans celebrated, the Napoli players despaired. Rigato laughed. “It’s not a goal, the ball was out”. He claimed there was a hole in the net and the ball went right through it. Lazio protested but there was nothing the players could do. The Rai TV footage proved the referee’s mistake and Lazio appealed to the Lega Calcio, but the game’s result remained 0-0. The referee never admitted his mistake. Lazio missed out on promotion by one point, Napoli went into Serie A thanks to that point.
In the summer transfer window not a lot was done, with perhaps the exception of the return of Pierluigi Pagni from his loan to Cosenza. More interesting were the autumn transfers with Gianfranco Garbuglia, Gianbattista Moschino on loan and the return of fan favourite Orlando Rozzoni. Also signed was Gianmarco Calleri who would have an important impact on Lazio but in another role in 20 years’ time. Leaving Lazio were, among many, Giacomo Del Gratta, Franco Pezzullo and Maurilio Prini.
After just four games Lazio had sacked manager Carlo Facchini and called up Juan Carlos Lorenzo for the first of his three stints with the Biancocelesti. The promotion race was very tight with lots of teams involved. At the end of the first half of the season Lazio were 6th just one point off Padova, Foggia and Lecco, third, and two behind Brescia. Messina were leaders.
Lazio reached second place in the second half of March after four consecutive wins and stayed in the promotion zone from then on. They were currently third, one point above Brescia.
The match: Sunday, May 26, 1963, Stadio S. Appiani, Padua
With only four fixtures left in the season, Lazio could not afford the slightest blunder on their trip to Padova, especially with Brescia lurking dangerously behind them in the race for third place. The hosts, sitting mid-table after a season of mixed fortunes, had begun the campaign with far greater expectations.
Juan Carlos Lorenzo’s side immediately seized control, effectively settling the contest within the opening half. After just four minutes, Paolo Bernasconi surged forward and released a pass toward Giancarlo Morrone. Giampaolo Lampredi attempted to intervene but mistimed his header, allowing Mario Maraschi to slip through. With a deft touch, he glided past the Padova defence and fired clinically into the net.
Three minutes later, Lazio struck again: Maraschi found Morrone, who easily eluded the veteran Aurelio Scagnellato and delivered a cross from the byline. Goalkeeper Bruno Bonollo mistimed his exit, leaving Bernasconi with the simplest of finishes to double the advantage.
The swift one-two blow knocked the wind out of Padova, while Lazio settled comfortably into a counterattacking rhythm. The home side offered little in response; only Giorgio Barbolini and Enrico Arienti showed real intent. Arienti skimmed the crossbar with a rising shot, and Idilio Cei then held Eliseo Zerlin II’s attempt. But Padova’s spurt faded quickly. Lazio resumed command as Landoni orchestrated a move that Morrone squared perfectly for Bernasconi, who somehow failed to convert from point-blank range. Moments later, Morrone dazzled the crowd, slaloming past four opponents before unleashing a thunderous strike that crashed off Bruno Bonollo’s crossbar.
The third goal arrived a minute before halftime. Graziano Landoni’s 20-metre free kick froze the Padova back line, and the alert Giambattista Moschino pounced on the loose ball to slot home with ease.
The second half offered the chance for a rout. In the 55th minute, Moschino struck the post, and soon after Giampiero Grevi produced an outstanding save to deny Morrone—who, moments later, suffered a painful ankle twist. Padova pushed late for a consolation goal, but Cei shut the door, stopping Rudolf Koelbl, Rino Bon, and Paolo Morosi in succession.
A commanding victory delivered two vital points in the promotion battle. Elsewhere, Messina defeated Catanzaro, while Bari and Brescia both earned draws away from home.
Who played for Padova
Bonollo, Lampredi, Scagnellato, Bon, Grevi, Barbolini, Zerlin I, Arienti, Koelbl, Zerlin II, Morosi
Manager: Matè
Who played for Lazio
Cei, Zanetti, Garbuglia, Governato, Seghedoni, Gasperi, Maraschi, Landoni, Bernasconi, Morrone, Moschino
Manager: Lovati
TD: Lorenzo
Referee: Grignani
Goals: 4’ Maraschi, 7’ Bernasconi, 44’ Moschino
What happened next
Serie A arrived in the very last game, after winning 2-0 against Pro Patria. A triumphant year for Lazio who came second behind Messina and in the company of Bari. A deserved return to Serie A.
Idilio Cei and Diego Zanetti were the players with most appearances (39), Giancarlo Morrone, Paolo Bernasconi and Orlando Rozzoni the top goal scorers (10).
What happened in Serie B 1962-63

The previous season had seen Genoa, Napoli and Modena promoted up to Serie A. Lazio arrived fourth and the main culprit was a referee.
Lazio vs Napoli on March 4 was a big match, if Lazio won an immediate return to Serie A would then be downhill. In the 76th minute the referee, Iginio Rigato, gave a free kick to Lazio. Gianni Seghedoni with a splendid shot put the ball in the back of the net. The Lazio players and fans celebrated; the Napoli players despaired. Rigato laughed. “It’s not a goal, the ball went out”. There was a hole in the net and he claimed the ball went right through it. Lazio protested but there was nothing the players could do.
Lazio missed promotion by one point. Napoli were promoted by one point. If that goal had been given …
This season Lazio were obviously among the favourites along with Verona who had also missed out by one point the previous year. Coming down from Serie A were Padova, Lecco and Udinese so one could consider them also to be strong contenders for promotion even if Serie B is unpredictable and anything can happen.
September
Padova and Messina immediately took the lead while Lazio had a slow start with three draws. Still very early stages.
Padova 5, Messina 5, Cagliari 4, Pro Patria 4, Brescia 4, Lecco 4, Cosenza 4, Lucchese 3, Verona 3, Alessandria 3, Bari 3, Lazio 3, Monza 3, Foggia 3, Triestina 2, Sambenedettese 2, Parma 2, Udinese 1, Catanzaro 1, Como 1
October
Foggia were surprise leaders by the end of October and in the last game of the month they crushed Udinese 7-2 away from home. It does not happen very often in Serie B to see a match with 9 goals!!! Lazio after four consecutive draws sacked manager Carlo Facchini and chose Juan Carlos Lorenzo to lead the team. They managed to win three on the trot and were now fourth.
Foggia 11, Messina 10, Cosenza 10, Lazio 9, Pro Patria 9, Cagliari 8, Bari 8, Verona 8, Alessandria 8, Lecco 8, Padova 8, Brescia 8, Lucchese 7, Monza 6, Catanzaro 5, Sambenedettese 5, Triestina 4, Parma 4, Udinese 3, Como 1
November
Messina took the lead after Foggia were thoroughly beaten by Lazio. They were now followed by an array of teams and everything was still possible.
Messina 17, Brescia 15, Foggia 15, Lazio 14, Lecco 14, Bari 13, Padova 13, Cosenza 13, Cagliari 12, Pro Patria 12, Verona 11, Lucchese 10, Triestina 9, Catanzaro 9, Monza 9, Alessandria 8, Udinese 7, Sambenedettese 7, Parma 7, Como 5
December
Messina consolidated their first place by beating Lazio and were followed at a distance by Brescia. The Biancocelesti also lost at home to Verona and fell back a little. Below, Sambenedettese, Como and Alessandria needed to start picking up more points if they wanted to avoid relegation
Messina 23, Brescia 20, Bari 19, Padova 18, Foggia 18, Verona 17, Lazio 17, Lecco 16, Pro Patria 16, Cosenza 16, Cagliari 15, Catanzaro 14, Monza 13, Triestina 13, Udinese 12, Lucchese 12, Parma 12, Alessandria 10, Como 10, Sambenedettese 9
January
Messina consolidated their lead, with ten teams in just four points behind them. Alessandria left the relegation zone, substituted by Lucchese.
Messina 28, Brescia 24, Padova 23, Foggia 23, Lecco 23, Bari 22, Verona 22, Lazio 22, Pro Patria 21, Cosenza 21, Cagliari 20, Monza 18, Udinese 17, Catanzaro 17, Triestina 16, Alessandria 14, Parma 14, Lucchese 12, Sambenedettese 12, Como 11
February
Messina were unstoppable and now their lead was +6. Lazio moved up a little and were just one point behind Brescia, second. The gap between the bottom three and safety increased to three. There was still time, but not a lot.
Messina 34, Brescia 28, Bari 27, Verona 27, Lazio 27, Foggia 27, Lecco 26, Padova 26, Cosenza 25, Cagliari 24, Pro Patria 24, Monza 23, Triestina 22, Udinese 19, Alessandria 19, Catanzaro 19, Parma 18, Lucchese 15, Como 15, Sambenedettese 15
March
Messina lost at Monza and their lead was reduced. Lazio moved into third place. Eleven games left.
Messina 39, Brescia 35, Lazio 34, Bari 33, Verona 31, Lecco 30, Foggia 30, Cagliari 29, Padova 29, Cosenza 29, Monza 28, Pro Patria 26, Triestina 24, Udinese 23, Catanzaro 23, Parma 22, Alessandria 21, Como 19, Sambenedettese 19, Lucchese 16
April
Lazio won an important game in Brescia and with Messina losing two matches this month, the Biancocelesti reached second place and were just three points from the Sicilians. Below, Como Alessandria and Sambenedettese reduced the gap and dragged Parma right into the battle to avoid relegation. Lucchese were practically in Serie C.
Messina 43, Lazio 40, Bari 38, Brescia 38, Verona 35, Cagliari 34, Foggia 33, Padova 33, Lecco 32, Monza 31, Cosenza 31, Pro Patria 30, Catanzaro 29, Udinese 28, Triestina 28, Parma 26, Como 24, Alessandria 24, Sambenedettese 24, Lucchese 19
May
Lazio crushed Messina 5-1 but lost at Verona and Cagliari, allowing Bari to move up. No problem for the Sicilians since they still had a 5-point lead over fourth place with three games left. Serie A was well within their reach. Below, seven teams in four points with still two places for Serie C.
Messina 47, Lazio 44, Bari 44, Brescia 42, Lecco 39, Foggia 38, Cagliari 37, Verona 37, Padova 37, Pro Patria 35, Monza 34, Triestina 33, Udinese 32, Cosenza 32, Catanzaro 32, Parma 31, Alessandria 30, Sambenedettese 29, Como 28, Lucchese 19
June
Only 3 games to go.
Messina clinched promotion two games early thanks to a draw at Bari and the fact that Brescia were unable to beat Udinese. With two games left Lazio had a three-point lead over the Rondinelle and Bari two. In the penultimate match Lazio collapsed in Puglia and Bari reached second place. Lazio’s advantage over Brescia had been reduced to just one point. But in the last game of the season Brescia lost at home to Padova hence Lazio and Bari were also promoted.
Below with two games to the end it was practically all over in the battle to avoid relegation. Sambenedettese and Como lost, Alessandria won. 90 minutes later it was all over with one match to go.
Final Table: Messina 50, Bari 48, Lazio 48, Brescia 45, Foggia 43, Lecco 42, Verona 41, Padova 40, Pro Patria 38, Monza 38, Cagliari 38, Catanzaro 37, Parma 35, Udinese 34, Alessandria 34, Cosenza 34, Triestina 33, Como 31, Sambenedettese 30, Lucchese 21
Source




Comments