Playing football with glasses The history of spectacles in the sport doesn't begin or end with Edgar Davids

There are some different rituals that players make before entering the pitch: the music, the prayers, kissing the grass or looking up to the sky.

There are also some rules dictated by FIFA, that impose the footballers to do or not do certain things, such as the one that prevents wearing jewellery during a match. There is a particular ritual that is not enforced by FIFA: wearing glasses. In fact, is very difficult to see a player, but also a coach or a referee that wear them during a match.

In the history of football, however, there have been some players who brought them, making them part of the historical-aesthetic narrative of the sport. From the models not designed for sport worn at the 1936 Berlin Olympics to those designed by Nike for Edgar Davids, ergonomic and super-light, the glasses have been said to determine victories and helped great champions like Kakà or Firmino to not abandon the big stages.

What FIFA says

The basic equipment of a football player is settled in the 4th regulation rule and it is made by 5 parts: a jersey or shirt, shorts, stockings, shinguards and footwear. For the extra pieces of equipment FIFA says:

"A player may use equipment other than the basic equipment provided that its sole purpose is to protect him physically and it poses no danger to him or any other player."

There is also a paragraph where is written: "In view of the new technology that has made sports spectacles much safer, both for the wearer and for other players, referees should show tolerance when authorizing their use, particularly for younger players."

So it is explicitly written that thanks to new materials, the necessity of using glasses must not be an obstacle for players, above all in the youngest. Light problems with sight could be corrected in adulthood, but there are some situations when doctors prescribe the use of glasses.

Plexiglass and impact resistant lenses, protective frames made of rubber, elastic band to fix glasses and anti-fog technologies that allow a view always clear. More and more modern and better, they still remain and equipment not so popular among players. But in the history of football, there were some players that made their glasses a protagonist.


Annibale Frossi

The football story of Annibale Frossi, is a unique story which started in Udine in the first years of the 20th century. When he first moved to Padova, his widowed mother called the police because her son, who was underaged, was defiant and needed to return to finish school. She wanted her son to became a doctor like his father, but Annibale was able to convince his mother who eventually allowed him to play football. External attack with a quick run, Gianni Brera said of him:

"he didn't have a good touch of the ball and he was not good in acrobatics because he needed to play with glasses"

In fact, he was inseparable from his pair of glasses, which at that time were a normal pair with round lenses. But this aspect did not stop him from scoring lucrative goals that brought Italy to win its first gold medal during the 1936 Olympics Games in Berlin. That summer he moved to Inter, where he won two Serie A and then became an observer. At the end of his career, after graduating in law, he then attempted to become a coach without success.

Intercontinental Cup

From as early as the 70s, a Belgian player wore glasses as a necessity: Jef Jurion suffered from myopia and for this, his use of the accessory was mandatory. He also wore them during the night of 26th September 1962 when Anderlecht, after drawing 3 to 3 at Santiago Bernabeu, managed to pass the preliminary stage of Champions League by winning by a goal scored by the Belgian striker, which made an exploit and eliminated from the competition players like Di Stefano, Puskas, Gento and other Blancos.

Some years later during the 70's, during the Intercontinental Cup Estudiantes and Feyenoord appeared another case. In the Dutch team, there were two players that wore glasses: Rinus Israel and Joop Van Daele, a young defender. It was the latter, who took the place of the legendary Coen Moulijn (left wing that has the biggest number of attendance with Feyenoord, 607), that scored the lucrative goal that permitted the Hollander to raise the cup. During the exultation after having scored the goal, Argentinian players tore off his glasses, crushing them on the ground and complaining that he was not authorized to use them during the match. A unique fact to which this event was honoured in the song “Het Brilletje van Van Daele” (The Van Daele glasses) and a story that will always remain in the history of the club.

Even the younger player of Atletico Madrid Javier Montero wears protective glasses while he playing football: he had a retinal detachment but this fact did not compromise his debut in a Champions League match.

It is not so common but there are a lot of players who wear on the pitch: they are the proof that sight problems are not an obstacle that prevents you from becoming a professional football player.