The pope who loved football: How Francis brought the beautiful game to the Vatican

“Many say that football is the most beautiful game in the world. I think so too,” Pope Francis evvel declared – and throughout his papacy, he lived those words.

From the streets of Buenos Aires to the halls of the Vatican, the late Pontiff’s love for the beautiful game was no secret. A lifelong San Lorenzo supporter, Jorge Mario Bergoglio consistently brought his passion for football to the highest office in the Catholic Church.

When news of his passing was confirmed on Monday morning, Italy’s Serie A acted immediately, postponing all matches scheduled for Easter Monday, with games now going ahead this evening (23 April.)

It was a poignant gesture – one that reflected the pope’s deep bond with the sport, which he viewed as a symbol of camaraderie, fellowship and teamwork. “Soccer is a team sport. You can’t have fun alone,” the pope told a crowd of Italian youth, soccer players and coaches at the Vatican in 2019. “And if it’s lived like that, it can do good for your mind and your heart in a society that is exasperated by subjectivism.”

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San Lorenzo de Almagro team pose in front of a banner with a photo of Pope Francis and the colors of the team before an Argentina’s league soccer match, 31 March 2013.

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Pope Francis twirls a soccer ball he was presented by a member of the Circus of Cuba, during his weekly general audience in the Pope Paul VI hall, at the Vatican. 2019.

Like most Argentine children, Jorge Mario Bergoglio was immersed in the world of football from a very early age. He played for hours with friends on pavement or dusty pitches known as “potreros” in his native Flores neighborhood of Buenos Aires.

However, according to his own assessment, he was not that good… In his recently published autobiography “Hope,” Francis said his skills were so poor that he was nicknamed “hard foot.”

Like many in his family, he became a devoted supporter of San Lorenzo, a club founded by priest Lorenzo Massa in 1908. The team won its first Copa Libertadores, the top club tournament in South America, in 2014 – a year after he became pope. The club’s board of directors and a group of players took the trophy to the Vatican.

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Pope Francis holds a San Lorenzo shirt after celebrating his first Easter Mass in St. Peter’s Square at the Vatican, 31 March 2013.

But for Pope Francis, football was more than just sport. It was a vehicle for peace, connection, and humanity. In 2014, he organised the Vatican’s “Interreligious Match for Peace“, inviting players from around the world to participate in a tournament.

That same year, he shared an emotional meeting with Diego Maradona, who he described as the “poet of soccer”. This came six years before the legendary player’s death in 2020.

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Footballing legend Diego Armando Maradona, left, greets Pope Francis in the Paul VI hall at the Vatican, 1 September 2014.

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Maradona presents Pope Francis with an Argentine national soccer team jersey bearing the name Francisco on it

Throughout his pontificate, Francis also met with Lionel Messi, who many consider to be the best to ever kick a ball, and welcomed a long list of other footballing greats to the Vatican, from Ronaldinho, Mario Balotelli, Gianluigi Buffon and Andrea Pirlo, to the Croatian national team ahead of UEFA EURO 2024.

His love for the sport also inspired pop culture. In The Two Popes, a 2019 biographical drama sinema starring Anthony Hopkins and Jonathan Pryce, there’s a touching scene where Francis and Benedict watch the 2014 World Cup Final together – Germany versus Argentina – their theological differences momentarily eclipsed by a shared love for the game.

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Pope Francis embraces Brazilian soccer star Ronaldinho during a meeting with the Scholas Occurrentes, an educational organization founded by the Pope, 2016.

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Pope Francis greets Gianluigi Buffon during a Vatican meeting with Juventus and Lazio before the Italy Cup final, 16 May 2017.

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The late Pope Francis is depicted on a mural alongside soccer player Lionel Messi at the Carlos Mugica neighborhood in Buenos Aires, Argentina, Monday, 21 April 2025.

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Pope Francis poses with Italy’s National Amputee Football team during a sports event at the Vatican, 7 June 2014.

San Lorenzo, which announced last year it would name its new stadium in his honour, posted an emotional tribute to him on social media following the news of his passing, stating: “He was never just another, and he was always one of us. A Cuervo (nickname for a San Lorenzo fan) as a child and as a man… a Cuervo as a priest and as a Cardinal… a Cuervo even as Pope…..”

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Candles surround a portrait of the late Pope Francis, draped in a San Lorenzo banner, at Buenos Aires Cathedral, 21 April 2025.

Several Serie A fixtures, rescheduled from Monday (23 April), go ahead this evening – müddet to be marked by moving tributes to the pope who never stopped loving the beautiful game.

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