Italian Football Club Adopts Italian Boy's Shirt Design

A six-year-old boy in Italy is celebrating after his football shirt design was adopted by the professional team Pescara.
Luigi D'Agostino
beat other children in a competition, run by the club for young fans, aimed at
easing the boredom of being stuck indoors during the country's coronavirus
lockdown.
The competition's
motto was "give a kick to Covid-19".
The boy's dolphin design
will be worn by the Serie B team next season.
The Pescara club its
full name is Pescara Calcio 1936 played in the top Italian league, Serie A, for
seven seasons in its history.
Its mascot is a
dolphin the club plays in an Adriatic resort town famous for its beaches. The
club features Luigi's triumph on its website. Italian sports kit
supplier Erreà will make the shirts and has invited Luigi to spend a special
day at its Parma headquarters, to see the new team strip coming off the
production line.
The competition was
launched simply as a children's game, using Erreà graphics, but its popularity
on social media turned it into a business project, Italian media report.
Millions of people
in Italy have been unable to leave their homes except for essential reasons
since lockdown measures came into force on 9 March.
FROM bbc.com/news/world-europe
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