Stronger Than a Stalker: Quagliarella’s Return from Hell

In 2009, 26-year-old Fabio Quagliarella was in his athletic prime. The current Serie A top scorer, who has been making headlines for his recent exploits with Sampdoria, was a starting forward for the Italian national team and had just signed a dream deal to move from Udinese to Napoli. Wearing the Partenopei jersey was the childhood dream of every footballer born in the immense Neapolitan suburbia.

But Quaglia’s football honeymoon with his hometown would last only one year. The following summer, Napoli’s number 27 abruptly moved to Juventus. Despicable Juventus, the worst possible destination for a Napoli player in the eyes of their passionate fan base. It was inexplicable. Fabio Quagliarella, a child of Naples who had made it to Serie A and had come back to play for his own people, was now a traitor – an infame.

The reality behind his transfer would emerge only many years later, when Quagliarella – after having played for Juventus, Torino, and Sampdoria – could finally confess that he had to leave Napoli due to a stalker. On February 17, 2017, former postal police agent Raffaele Piccolo was sentenced to four years and eight months in jail for harassing Quagliarella and his family with threatening letters and messages for five years.

That’s when Fabio could finally reveal his ordeal. He did so at the end of a match with Cagliari, when he emotionally announced that his nightmare – a nightmare he had to keep secret from anyone but his closest people – was over.

But how could all this happen?

But even as he tried to keep his professional career going, his inner torment went on. For five years. The harassment continued and its perpetrator seemed untouchable. Until the stalker decided to go too far with his game and finally made a mistake.

During one of his many conversations with Quagliarella’s father, Piccolo claimed that he too had started to receive some threatening SMS. When Vittorio asked to see it, he replied: “I’m sorry, I’m afraid I deleted it.

…What?

We are breaking our heads to catch this bastard, Vittorio thought, and you just delete such a piece of evidence? That was an eye-opener for Mr. Quagliarella. Vittorio called his son:

You know what? I think it’s him.”

He then went to the police headquarters and quickly found out that none of the charges filed by the Quagliarellas had ever been recorded – as they had never left Piccolo’s hands. That led to a real police investigation, which eventually found Raffaele Piccolo guilty of blackmail and extortion. The sentence to four years and eight months was confirmed on appeal in October 2018, hopefully putting an end to his plots.

Fabio Quagliarella went on to play for Sampdoria. His performance peaked in the last two seasons, the first before the end of the nightmare, where he scored a career-best 19 and 21 goals. That cannot be just a coincidence.

Napoli’s former number 27 is now living a personal renaissance. At 36, he has just become the oldest player to have ever scored for Italy, after breaking a nine-year gap from wearing the Azzurri jersey. He is the current Serie A top scorer. And still, even with this chilling story now fully behind him, his life must be haunted by a plethora of painful what ifs.     

What if some twisted mind didn’t rip him off the best years of his career?

What if he was not forced to leave the club he had always dreamed to play for?

The Partenopei supporters obviously apologized to him as soon as they learned the terrible truth behind his departure from Napoli. The first time he came back to play at the San Paolo, the South Stands dedicated him a touching banner, praising the dignity he had shown while facing that hell.

When he accepted to talk about his experience in a TV interview, Quagliarella was asked whether he would ever come back to play for Napoli. “I always had imagined myself as captain of Napoli,” he replied.

Then he added, his voice choked with emotion: “If none of this had happened, I’m sure I would still be playing there now.