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Scopa For a New Generation

Scopa For a New Generation

Marisa Iallonardo (September 30, 2008)

A tournament for the under-25 set

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Last week, I played in a Scopa tournament. Scopa, a game of ten associated with southern Italian men sitting around a table and dramatically slapping the cards down while either smiling triumphantly and/or grunting loudly, depending on the outcome of the match.

 

 

 
 


Well, at least a game I often assoicate that way. Because, oddly, that scene might very well be my first memory of the game, despitethe fact that it  happens to b e one of the most popular card games in Italy. As a kid I would see my grandfather and other men from the town gathered in front of the bar in piazza playing away a summer afternoon. Later, as winter approached back in the States, the scene would be of my grandfather getting annoyed that my grandmother always beat him. (but we won't mention that to the guys from the summer...)


The game itself is played using a 40-card deck. For the tourna me nt we played with "napoletano" cards, although I hear, you can play with other variations, including American. Basically, the object of the game is to "sweep"—scopa means sweep in Italian—all the cards off the table. For more details, check out www.boardgamegeek.com.

 

 


What was different about this tournament, though, was that almo

st everyone playing was under 25. There were exceptions of course (to try and win, I had my grandmother as my partner – although, possibly because I'm not my grandfather, that didn

't really go as planned), but overall the majority were twentysomethings who probably learned to play the game around Sunday afternoon dinner tables or on flig

hts to Italy.


It was interesting to think that while so many Italian-American youths are often stereotyped as "guidos" or Mafiosi-wannabe's, here was a group of young people who actually have ties to a culture and an interest to play a game that goes back hundreds of years.

 I asked 21-year-old Tom Chianese, who helped organize the tournament, why he was interested in doing it and he said, "Being a second generation Italian-American, I surprisingly wasn't taught this game, so I learned it by myself. I find it import ant that the younger generation should play because it brings you back to a simpler time. Today, people are preoccupied with work and money and overlook the fundamentals of lif

e, which is to have fun and relax. Scopa for my friends and I brings that old school mentally back. Just to sit around, talk, play a game and enjoy life."

And with a few triumphant smiles and/or loud grunts, that's exactly what we did.

Here are a few pics from the tournament. Oh, and today, I found this! www.scopacards.com - you can play online!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Scopa!

OMG, I'm so glad I found your blog on Scopa. It brings back such wonderful memories...AND, you've given an idea for a topic for our radio show. I'm going to try to collect my thoughts and get it in our show for this coming Sunday. I'm going to order the cards and see if I can get games going among my friends, especially my co-host and our co-producer, my husband, John ("Americana" but LOVES Italians!).

I'm thinking I should start blogging about the topics we do on our radio show and looking at this site but don't see any "how to."

Thanks for your blog on Scopa!

Scopa

Thanks for visiting the site. I returned from Italy in 2005 and immediately started working on getting a game online for quick games.