Northern Edition

Select Edition

Northern Northern
Southern Southern
Global Global
New Zealand New Zealand
France France

How centurion Sara Barattin helped propel Italy to new heights

PARMA, ITALY - APRIL 29: Sara Barattin of Italy enters into the pitch during the TikTok Women's Six Nations match between Italy and Wales at Stadio Sergio Lanfranchi on April 29, 2023 in Parma, Italy. (Photo by Emmanuele Ciancaglini/Federugby via Getty Images)

Sara Barattin holds the record for most appearances in the Women’s Six Nations with 78, but when she debuted for Italy in 2005 the Azzurre weren’t even involved in the championship.

ADVERTISEMENT

In September 2021, she became the first Italian woman to play 100 Test matches, honoured in a ceremony at the Stadio Olimpico a year later, dedicated to all the Italian rugby players – male and female – who gained at least a century of caps.

In April 2023, Barattin captained Italy in her 116th and final international against Wales in Parma. In the 17 years her Test career spanned, the Azzurre achieved 51 of their then 67 all-time victories.

Video Spacer

‘This Energy Never Stops’ – Women’s Rugby World Cup 2025

Video Spacer

‘This Energy Never Stops’ – Women’s Rugby World Cup 2025

“Rugby has changed a lot throughout my career,” the scrum-half told RugbyPass. “The game has become faster and much more physical. The athletes train better, the rules have evolved, which presents new challenges and the visibility of women’s rugby has improved.

“When we started winning games the newspapers started following it and that added pressure to be prepared and perform strongly.”

Italy played their first women’s international against France in 1985, sharing a 0-0 draw. Opportunities for Tests thereafter were limited with the Azzurre only playing 48 times between 1986 and 2004.

Barattin was born and raised in Casale sul Sile, Treviso, close to Venice, in northeast Italy. She was initially a gymnast and track and field competitor before a desire to do something different saw her take up rugby.

ADVERTISEMENT

Treviso is an Italian rugby stronghold. The ‘Red Panthers’ won every national club title between 1984 and 2003. Barattin joined the club and helped to add another four titles to that tally up to 2010. She made her Test debut as a 19-year-old in 2005.

“My first Test match was the semi-final of the European Women’s Championship against Germany. What I remember is that the strength and conditioning coach told me to ‘cheer up, get on the pitch and score a try’ which I did,” Barattin laughed

Italy won the game 52-0 and kicked on to the title with a 22-3 victory over the Netherlands in the final.

Related

Spain was the sixth country in the Six Nations between 2000 and 2006. They fashioned a respectable record finishing third on three occasions and winning 10 of the 33 games, defeating Ireland, France, Scotland and Wales at least once.

ADVERTISEMENT

However, in 2007 they were replaced by Italy because the Six Nations Committee wished to align the women’s tournament with the men’s.

Italy struggled in their initial appearance, failing to win a game, though they did run Ireland close. In 2008 a breakthrough victory was secured against Scotland (31-10).

Barattin was crucial in driving Italian improvement. Her 50th cap was secured in a 65-22 World Cup qualifying win against Samoa in 2013. However, she highlighted maiden victories against Wales (19-15) in 2010, France (20-18) in 2011 and Ireland (29-27) in 2019 as pinnacle achievements in her career.

In fact, Italy defeated six-time Six Nations champions France three times in five years between 2011 and 2015. In 2013 Veronica Schiavon kicked an 83rd-minute penalty in a 13-12 victory in Rovato. Two years later, Maria Magatti broke a 12-12 deadlock with an 80th minute try in Rovigo.

The 2019 victory against Ireland was a genuine thriller with powerful loose forward Giada Franco scoring twice. Irish newspaper The42 reported: “The Azzurri (sic) attacked with dynamic energy backed up by silky handling skills and their movement caused problems for Ireland’s defence.”

Italy was second in the 2019 Six Nations following the victory against Ireland as well as defeats of Scotland (28-7), France (31-12) and a 3-3 draw against Wales.

Related

Barattin appeared in the Rugby World Cup twice. In 2017, she captained Italy in all five matches when they finished ninth in Ireland. The Azzurre lost all three pool matches but recovered strongly to topple Japan (22-0) and Spain (20-15) in their placing play-offs.

Italy almost missed out on qualifying for the 2021 Rugby World Cup in New Zealand altogether. In her 100th appearance, Italy were downed 15-7 by Ireland at the Stadio Sergio Lanfranchi, Parma in a European qualifying fixture.

That left Ireland only requiring a win against last-placed Scotland, in a four-country tournament, to secure a place at the World Cup. Stunningly Ireland were upset 20-18 by Scotland and Italy overpowered Spain 34-10 to make it.

“The qualifying tournament was a real satisfaction. We obviously take a lot of credit, but we have to pay tribute to Scotland too who helped us in the final game,” Barattin said.

“My heart was going 100 miles an hour during the Ireland vs Scotland game, I thought I was going to have a heart attack.”

On September 9, 2022, Italy caused a boilover in a World Cup warm-up match when they beat France 26-19 at Stadio del Rugby, Biella. France, who beat the Black Ferns twice in 2021, had won the weekend previous 21-0.

“We studied our opponents and improved our game in comparison to the previous week. We were more precise and aggressive. Our goal at the World Cup is to at least make the quarter-finals,” Barattin said at the time.

Related

Italy achieved that goal in October by winning their pool matches in the World Cup against the USA (22-10) and Japan (21-8). Barattin started in the Japan game and was a study of composure against a committed opposition who produced their best performance in three losses at the tournament.

But Barattin was unable to prevent Italy being eliminated by France in their quarter-final in Whangarei, coming off the bench with 15 minutes of a 39-3 defeat remaining.

A fitness trainer, coach, and farmer, Barattin identified England duo Danielle Waterman and Katy Daley-Mclean as her toughest opponents.

In 2022 president of the Italian Rugby Federation Marzio Innocenti paid tribute to Barattin.

“Sara is an extraordinary athlete and an example for every rugby player in Italy,” he said. “The clarity in reading the game, her technical skills, determination and leadership are just some of the traits that make her one of the living legends of Italian rugby.

“She was Italy’s guiding light in the toughest moments and played a key role in leading the team to the highest positions in the world rankings.”

In April 2024, prop Lucia Gai emulated Barattin and became the second Italian woman to play 100 Tests in a 20-22 defeat to Wales in Cardiff.

Women's Rugby World Cup 2025 tickets

The Women's Rugby World Cup 2025 is coming to England. Click here to buy tickets.

ADVERTISEMENT

LIVE

{{item.title}}

Trending on RugbyPass

Comments

2 Comments
B
BC 27 days ago

It’s fascinating how all 6N teams think they are really improving. It is making for some great matches. Barattin has been a great servant and role model through thick and thin during her career.

C
CN 27 days ago

Lovely, lovely player. At her peak she was dynamic and difficult and always played with a smile. You got the feeling that as well as her teammates the opposition also respected her.

Join free and tell us what you really think!

Sign up for free
ADVERTISEMENT

Latest Features

Comments on RugbyPass

S
SK 24 minutes ago
'Haves and have nots': The Six Nations numbers reveal hidden truths

Really interesting stats, especially around the scrums and the props spending so little time in them. The game is changing and is becoming faster but its also heavily territory and momentum dependent now. The amount of tries scored by forwards in the top 3 teams shows the importance of forward firepower at the lineout and is also of great importance when you are 5m out trying to get over the line from general play. Ireland don’t have behemoths but do well in this area due to superior technique and quality, France have the biggest most powerful pack and replace them with an arguably bigger pack with the 7-1 and England have plenty of power in this area. Teams are choosing to retain territory and use pens as a launchpad for dominating territory. Exits have also never been as important as they are today with teams giving away turnovers in their own half being heavily punished. The 50-22 is also important in this respect and we have seen how kickers go for it when on or inside their own 10. This especially happens directly after an aerial duel contest is won or in the event of a turnover in midfield. With the winger out of place and defence scrambling at the line a kicker is well within his rights to go for the 50-22. Giving away back to back penalties is also a no no as this leads to a 60-80m retreat. The Six Nations proves that in the modern age territorial supremacy and forward based power is what is winning games and championships.

9 Go to comments
S
SK 53 minutes ago
South African rugby's top heavy house of cards

I think everyone knows that the SA teams are prioritising the URC which is why they have been so bad in Europe. The champions cup group stage fixtures couldnt come at a worse time for SA franchises. They come hot on the heels of the Autumn internationals and in December and Jan when its coldest in Europe and as hot as it gets in SA. During this period SA franchises have to leap from Africa to Europe one week after the next. SA franchises sometimes have to hop from Europe back to Africa and then back to Europe in 3 to 4 weeks. Mandatory Springbok rest periods are opted into by franchises to keep the players fit as the Springbok players cannot play year-round and injuries take their toll. Fatigue also sets in for players who have played non-stop since March as there is no global calendar. They don’t get a chance to regroup again until the six nations. SA teams prioritise what’s in front of them. The Springboks are top heavy and SA franchises are in Transition between the new and older generation. There are lots of youngsters coming through but they need more time at the top level. Coaching is also in transition in SA Rugby with many coaches at a young age. The age group levels SA has underperformed but the talent is there. Its coming through at franchise level and these players are getting great experience playing in a variety of comps. I would hardly call it a house of cards though. Succession planning has already become a reality. At Prop the Springboks are already replacing the seniors, at Scrum Half the Springboks are building depth and at 10 they have loads of options now and at 4 and 5 the Boks have used a host of players in recent years. Rassie has a plan for 2027 and the best coaching staff at international level. He has some difficult questions in front of him when it comes to the squad but is finding answers at the moment. Yes its possible Springbok performances could dip this year and perhaps in 2026 however I would not bet against them continuing to dominate while in transition. There were similar doubts cast about them last year and they proved the doubters wrong.

1 Go to comments
TRENDING
TRENDING Bryan Habana: 'I don't think Louis is faster than me' Bryan Habana: 'I don't think Louis is faster than me'
Search