Italy are finally heading to the World Cup — just not in the sport most people might expect.

Amid dark times for the country’s storied, but ailing soccer team, some salvation comes in the form of the Azzurri’s unheralded cricketers after their first-ever qualification for a global tournament.

Add Italy to cricketing superpowers like India, Australia, England and South Africa competing at the T20 World Cup starting tomorrow.

Photo: AFP

“Just to be there and playing is the end of 45 years of hard work,” Italian Cricket Federation CEO Luca Bruno Malaspina said.

That is a reference to the formation of the sport’s national federation in 1980, but cricket in Italy dates back much further than that — to the late 19th century when it was played by expatriated British textile workers.

Genoa, Italy’s oldest soccer club founded in 1893, were — and still are — called Genoa Cricket and Football Club. The original name of AC Milan, the seven-time European champions, when they were founded in 1899 by an Englishman, Herbert Kilpin, was Milan Football and Cricket Club.

More than a century later, there might not be any grass cricket pitches in Italy, but there are about 4,000 registered men’s players, about 80 clubs in a two-tier league system and a burgeoning national team filled with players who have Italian heritage or who are first or second-generation immigrants from Asia.

For example, captain Wayne Madsen is a South African who qualifies because of his Italian grandmother, while bowler Crishan Kalugamage is a Sri Lankan who moved to Italy when he was 15. Wicketkeeper Marcus Campopiano was born in England and has an Italian father.

The 15-man World Cup squad contains two sets of Australian brothers with Italian family connections: Harry and Benjamin Manenti, and Anthony and Justin Mosca.

“The quality and the numbers are going up,” said Bruno Malaspina, who also praised the largely overseas-born coaching and backroom staff for changing mindsets and raising expectations.

The head coach is former Canada cricketer John Davison, who was raised in Australia and played first-class cricket there before becoming a star for Canada’s national team. Former Ireland batter Kevin O’Brien is an assistant coach.

Italy qualified for the expanded 20-team World Cup via European regional qualifying, finishing second to the Netherlands, and last week beat Ireland for their first-ever win over a full member of the International Cricket Council.

Contrast the national team’s progress in cricket to the regression of their soccer team.

Four-time World Cup winners, Italy missed out on qualification for soccer’s biggest tournament in 2018 and 2022 after losing unexpectedly in the playoffs. The Italians are back in the playoffs again in their bid to reach the upcoming World Cup in the US, Canada and Mexico.

Bruno Malaspina believes it is a chance for cricket to “capitalize” on Italy’s shortcomings in soccer.

The World Cup “is a good way to open up cricket to Italians,” he said in a video call. “We are not talking only about money … but visibility in the Italian sport organization, because they are learning now that cricket is an important sport. There are big numbers all around the world.”

The lack of cricket infrastructure in the country is a major obstacle for progress — Italy currently “hosts” its international games in nations such as the Netherlands and England — but he said the federation is working hard to improve the “very, very poor” cricket grounds and fund at least one turf pitch that can be the spiritual home of Italian cricket.

“The problem is money and the bureaucratic things you have to do in Italy,” he said.

In the short term, Italian cricket is ready to enjoy its landmark moment. The team are in Group C at the World Cup staged jointly by India and Sri Lanka, and would meet Scotland, Nepal, England and the West Indies.

It is the match Italy is least likely to win — against England — that stands out.

“For the players and people involved with cricket, it’s the top of our story: Playing against England. I’m not talking about the result. It’s not about result, the gap is too much,” Bruno Malaspina said. “But England is … what can I say? England is cricket.”