It’s December 1, 2024, a Sunday like many others in our country: there are those who carry on with their Christmas shopping, those who enjoy their family and those who watch football matches. A fundamental challenge for the fate of the championship takes place in Florence: Fiorentina-Inter. The Viola are experiencing a moment of grace and come into the match looking for a coup against the Italian champions. The match begins, the intensity is maximum, when at minute 17 everything changes: Edoardo Bove collapses on the pitch, victim of a sudden illness.
The players around the midfielder immediately notice the severity and desperately call the medical staff. In those dramatic moments, the players of both teams form a human circle around him to protect him from the cameras, while the “Franchi” falls into a surreal silence, broken only by the prayers of the fans. The defibrillator is used on the field, then the race with sirens blaring towards the Careggi hospital.

While all of Italy holds its breath, the first diagnosis arrives from the hospital: cardiac arrest caused by a malignant ventricular arrhythmia. Edoardo spends critical days in intensive care and, before being discharged, undergoes surgery for the implantation of an ICD (automatic subcutaneous defibrillator). This device represents his “life insurance”: a silent guardian ready to intervene electrically if the heart should show new anomalies.
However, the installation of the ICD effectively marks the end of his career in Serie A. In Italy, in fact, COCIS guidelines for eligibility for competitive sport are among the strictest in the world: issuing the certificate to anyone wearing a subcutaneous defibrillator for contact sports is prohibited. It’s the same fate that befell him Christian Eriksenforced to leave Inter after the illness suffered at the 2020 European Championships during Denmark-Finland.
After more than a year of silent rehabilitation, exhausting physical tests and the termination of the contract with Rome (owner of the card), the opportunity for rebirth arrives for Edoardo: the Championship. The English “series B” championship is a world apart: full stadiums, elite infrastructures and an intensity that has nothing to envy of the top European tournaments. Watford, the “Hornets” club in north London, is betting on him.


In England the rules are different: the FA (Football Association) evaluates cases individually. Once the green light has been obtained from the club doctors and independent specialists, the player can take the field by signing an informed consent.
With the yellow and red striped shirt – colors that seem like a sign of destiny for a “son of Rome” – Edoardo makes his debut on the most romantic day of the year: Valentine’s Day. But the real consecration comes on February 17, 2026, in the match against theWrexham. At 94th: Bove follows the action, pounces on a loose ball and scores the final 3-1 with a left tap-in. 506 days after his last goal, scored in October 2024 against his beloved Roma.
Edoardo Bove’s career has officially restarted. Football had taken his breath away on a winter afternoon in Florence; England gave it back to him in the Watford rain. Welcome back, Edward.









