
Dress like Roberto Baggio The unrivaled style of the Divin Codino
It was May 16, 2004 when Roberto Baggio was playing his last match in a packed San Siro. From the Rossoneri curve - which Baggio praised from '95 to '97 - a banner appeared that made history: "Dio esiste… e ha il codino". The Divin Codino will be the protagonist of the homonymous series to be released in the next few hours produced by Netflix and directed by Letizia Lamartire, with one of the best # 10 in the history of Italian football played by Andrea Arcangeli.
The biopic on Caldogno's talent will tell the ups and downs of an unrepeatable career - for better or for worse - but will focus above all on the man whose personal history has often been underestimated to understand Baggio's relationship with football. In addition to wearing the number 10 shirt in a unique way, the former Inter, Milan and Juve was a stylistic icon on and off the pitch. At the turn of the eighties and nineties, Baggio represented a personal aesthetic that is still considered unparalleled due to the way in which the Divin Codino wore the most disparate outfits. Exactly like success on the pitch, Baggio's stylistic career also had high peaks - as in the case of the USA94 World Cup - and moments of downturn - such as the 1993 Ballon d'Or ceremony. But if on the one hand everyone would like to have the feet by Roby Baggio, on the other hand there are those who would like to have the style that has the most famous pigtail in the world.
Formal for special occasions
Nothing, however, is comparable to Roberto Baggio's street style. The formal tells the important occasions, the casual the worldly and official occasions with the teams he played for, the American style the sporting adventures and not that he lived at the height of his career, the sportswear from which world he comes, but none style best represents the genius and creativity of a player who did with his feet what Pirandello did with his pen. A cut above all others, on and especially off the pitch.