'It was hard for me, for my family' - cult Leeds United hero Gaetano Berardi reveals when and why he decided to leave Elland Road - YEP 19/2/22
Gaetano Berardi has opened up on the difficulty of letting go of Leeds United after seven seasons at Elland Road.
By Flora Snelson
One of the club’s most loyal servants of recent times,
Berardi made more than 150 appearances for the Whites and captured the hearts
of the Elland Road faithful by playing with a ferocity otherwise confined to a
bygone era.
The club repaid Berardi’s service by handing him a one-year
contract extension after the full-back tore his ACL during the penultimate game
of the Whites’ Championship-winning campaign, even though the injury was set to
sideline him for most of the following season.
The decision to go was all his, but it wasn’t an easy one to
make.
“It was hard,” Berardi said, in an interview with The Square
Ball.“It was hard for me, for my family because we spent a lot of time, a lot
of years in Leeds, with the people, with the club.
“I was thinking about it in the months before the end of
last season, so I took it in a good way. I spoke also with the club, with the
coach before the end and I told them that that was my decision.
“It was hard because it was like leaving a lot of friends, a
good place, a big part of our life.
“But it's still there - Leeds is still there for us. We know
we can come back when we want.
“It was a decision that we wanted to take for our life, for
my career as well. So it's OK now - I'm moving on with my career and with my wife,
my life.”
Berardi has since become a father and joined top-flight
Swiss side Sion FC, having satisfied the greatest wish of his Leeds United
career.
“My dream was to take the team to the Premier League,”
Berardi said. “What I was thinking before was never to play in the Premier
League.
“It was just to take the club to the first division - that
was my biggest dream.
“We did it, I was there, and it was the biggest gift in my career.”
Berardi recovered from his ACL rupture in time for a
swansong against West Brom at the close of Leeds’ first season back as a
Premier League team, a status which Berardi fought long and hard to win for the
club and its fans.
The home crowd, returning to Elland Road for the first time
in 14 months after the lifting of pandemic restrictions, held nothing back in
their tributes to departing heroes Berardi and Pablo Hernández.
“It was very emotional,” Berardi said.
“It was starting to be sad already in the morning, but it
was cool because, like I said before, it was my decision.
“I knew what I had to face, what I wanted to face. I knew
what step I wanted to take for my future.
“So I took the day in the best way possible. And it was
unbelievable - it was great feelings before, during and at the end of the game.
“An unforgettable day.”