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Men’s football Federico Bernardeschi: We have the duty to give something more to the people who follow us

THE weeks without playing have given Juventus striker Federico Bernardeschi more time than ever to reflect on his responsibilities as a footballer.

Family comes first, and the Italy forward has thought back to the financial sacrifices by his family that allowed him to embark on the long journey to Serie A.

It began with three-and-a-half-hour-round car trips across Tuscany to training sessions for an eight-year-old Bernardeschi.

“They invested their money in me,” he recalls. “And of course, sometimes we arrived at the end of the month with little money.”

Now, concerns about wider economic hardship are on Bernardeschi’s mind as the country emerges from the coronavirus lockdown. Italy was the initial European epicentre of the Covid-19 outbreak and has seen more than 32,000 people known to have died from the disease in three months.

“I’m very attached to social issues because, in short, my story also represents this a bit,” Bernardeschi said. “All the difficulties I’ve gone through, all the sacrifices that I’ve made, my family made sacrifices. I’ve gone down that street, so I know what it’s like to make sacrifices in order to get to the top and how much you have to sweat."

So Bernardeschi has been trying to help those struggling through the pandemic, backing a fundraising initiative that provided eight portable ventilators for the Humanitas Gradenigo Hospital in Turin, raising more than $80,000 (£70,000).

“It’s fundamental because we have the duty to do this, being public figures,” Bernardeschi said. “We have the duty to give positive examples, we have the duty to give something more to the people who follow us, to our fans who follow us, and transmit positive things.

“For me, every public figure that has an influence on other people should do that because it’s only that way that you can give the best example and change things that don’t work, aren’t right."

Bernardeschi has not played for Juventus since March 8,in  a 2-0 victory over Inter Milan without any fans in Turin, before the competition was suspended.

Games closed off to spectators is the way it will be indefinitely when the league resumes — potentially by June 13. It's a tight title race, with Juventus only a point ahead of Lazio in the quest for a ninth championship in a row.

“There is obviously the desire to finish the season; but there is also a great responsibility that we can’t not look at, which is the situation of the whole world and of our country," Bernardeschi said. “So we have to do things with a lot of responsibility.”

After weeks of fitness work at home while on lockdown with his partner and young daughter, the rhythm of life as a professional player is returning, with Juve back in training.

“All of us are in a great emergency,” he said. “But I think that this moment helps us also to reflect and understand what is important in life because, in short, there are many people who are dying every day in the world and that’s not good. It’s time for us all to come closer together and help each other.”

Fundraising for Covid-19 relief has inspired Bernardeschi to launch a foundation, with the support of Roc Nation, the agency founded by Jay-Z.

“I mustn’t just be a footballer,” he said. “But also an important and influential figure on a social level.”

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