From Sivori to el Pipita. Higuain is the last heir of the Argentinian dinasty
Between Napoli and Buenos Aires there is a special feeling. We know that and probably  it's no coincidence. The Italians immigrants in Argentina were called tanos, diminutive of napolitanos.
 By this verbal expression it was "possible" to indicate 
indiscriminately all southern Italians that populated the streets of 
Argentinean cities. While tanos carried with them the sounds and the words of Neapolitan song, on the banks of Río de la Plata, the Tango Music took origin. Goodness knows if it's a "musical matter". For sure  the Argentinean football players have an important places in the history of SSC Napoli. 
BRUNO PESAOLA - Nicknamed Petisso for his 
small stature, he was a very speed left winger. He was born in 1925 in 
Buenos Aires. His parents were immigrants from Italy. In Argentine he 
played for River Plate and Dock Sud. In Italy for Roma, Novara and 
Genoa. His longest stay was with Napoli (240 matches, 27 gol). As coach 
of partenopei, he won an Italian Cup (1962). He said: "I'm a 
Neapolitan who was born in a foreign country". The municipality of the 
city bestowed on Petisso honorary citizenship. He stills lives in Napoli.
OMAR SÍVORI - He was born in Argentina in an Italian family in 1925. When he played for River Plate, he was nicknamed El Cabezón,
 the man with a bighead. When he moved to Juventus, other Argentines 
came to Italy (Humberto Maschio, Bologna; Antonio Angelillo, Inter) and 
the trio were nicknamed "the angels with the dirty face". With bianconeri team
 he won 3 Serie A, 2 Italian Cups, scoring 135 goals in 215 matches. In 
1965, when he joined to Napoli, the supporters said: "Sívori, you are my
 life". 63 matches, 12 goals, a second place and a Coppa delle Alpi (Cup
 of the Alps). He had audacious dribbling skills, a vindictive 
temperament and was a brilliant left-footed player . When he died, in 
2005, The Telegraph said: "He was a volatile blend of wizardry 
and devilry, of sublime audacity and sheer spitefulness. His sole object
 on the pitch appeared to be to hoodwink, to provoke and to humiliate 
both rivals and the referee. His hallmark was the nutmegging of
 defenders - pushing the ball between their legs - but his repertoire 
also included dazzling feints and flicks, superb dribbling, and powerful
 shooting from distance". In Italy, the football-addicted remember him 
as "the Maradona of the Sixties".
DIEGO ARMANDO MARADONA - An encyclopedia will not be
 sufficient to explain the Maradona era in the city of Napoli, the deep 
and sometimes "dangerous" relation of Diego with the city. When Diego 
visited the San Paolo stadium for the first time (5 July 1984), 80.000 
supporters screamed his name. He immediately became a star. With 
Maradona, Napoli won his only Serie A Championship (1986-87; 1989-1990),
 an Italian Cup (1987), a Uefa Cup (1989), an Italian Supercoppa and 
twice took Napoli to a runners up spot in serie A. In those years Serie A
 had the biggest football stars in the world. In the day of first scudetto, el pibe de oro
 said: "For the first time, I won something at my home". When Napoli won
 Uefa Cup against Stuttgart, in German stadium thousands of Italian 
immigrants lived that moment as their collective revenge. When Italy 
lost to Argentina the semi-final of Italy '90 Fifa World Cup in Napoli, 
it is said that Neapolitan people supported the team of Maradona. Diego 
is the best ever scorer in Napoli's history (115 goals). His last match 
at San Paolo was in 1991. When Maradona dies, we will outline a balance 
of this incredible history.
EZEQUIEL LAVEZZI - "The Argentinean dream goes on" 
said supporters when Lavezzi from San Lorenzo moved to Napoli in 2007. 
They watched his bravery on YouTube and they fallen in love of his speed
 and fantasy, in spite of the fact El pocho was not a left-footed like Sívori  and Maradona. After five seasons with azzurri (156
 matches, 38 goals), Lavezzi moved to Paris Saint Germain.  Anyway 
Lavezzi era coincides with Neapolitan Renaissance with the President De 
Laurentiis. Napoli signed Lavezzi after 2 years in third division and 
one in Serie B. With El Pocho, Napoli won an Italian Cup and 
got back to Uefa Champions League after  about 15 years. He will be 
remembered for his two goals against Chelsea at San Paolo.
GONZALO HIGUAÍN - El pipita has a double 
heritage in the city of San Gennaro: to honor Argentinean history and 
take the place of Edinson Cavani in the heart of supporters. El Matador moved like Lavezzi to Paris Saint Germain after three excellent season with azzurri,
 and De Laurentiis wanted the Real Madrid striker to win the Serie A and
 create a good impression in Uefa Champions League. For the supporters, 
Higuaín is a dream come true, the diamond point in the team of Rafa 
Benitez. El pipita doesn't need endorsements. He scored 107 
goals in 190 matches in the biggest football club in the world, Real 
Madrid. Napoli welcomed him with open arms and an Argentinean flag.
ANDREA MECCIA - http://www.serieaddicted.com/news.php?id=15 
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