Como, Genoa, and Pisa Fortunato started his professional career as a left-back with the Como first team in 1988, at the age of 17, making his
Serie B (the second division of the
Italian football league system) debut with the club on 29 October 1989, in a 1–0 home win against
Cosenza. During the
1989–90 Serie B league, the young player from Salerno played 16 times in what was his first season, which saw Como
relegated to
Serie C1. He soon established himself in the team's starting line-up the following season, making 27 appearances in the league, as Como narrowly missed out on promotion to Serie B, losing out in the playoff to
Venezia. Fortunato's consistent performances caught the eye of bigger Italian clubs, most notably Genoa, the club who signed Fortunato in 1991; however, his limited opportunities with the club, due to the presence of the more experienced
Branco in his role, led to an argument with
Osvaldo Bagnoli's assistant manager Sergio Maddè. As a result, Fortunato was labelled as an "arrogant hothead", and was immediately loaned out to
Pisa for the
1991–92 Serie B season, where he made 25 appearances.
Juventus and international debut Fortunato's performances with Genoa during the 1992–93 season caught the attention of Juventus boss
Giovanni Trapattoni, who brought the promising youngster to the Turin club the following season for 12 billion
Lire. The left-back was an instant hit and was awarded the number 3 shirt, which had belonged to former Juventus full-back
Antonio Cabrini during the 1980s. Fortunato started the
1993–94 Serie A league (his first season with Juventus) strongly, and soon became known for his endless running along the flank and his fine left foot, which he would use to provide accurate
crosses for the likes of forwards
Roberto Baggio,
Fabrizio Ravanelli, and
Gianluca Vialli. His most important attribute was that he loved being a team player, both on and off the pitch. His charm and great personality won the hearts of many, so much so that former Italy coach
Arrigo Sacchi described him as "a revelation of Italian football", and called the Juventus star to make his one and only international appearance in a
World Cup qualifier against
Estonia, on 22 September 1993, in Tallinn. Fortunato took
Paolo Maldini's place and played alongside national team
captain and veteran
Franco Baresi in a game that Italy won 3–0. The left-back showed striking similarities to Maldini, and he was initially even in Sacchi's plans for the
1994 FIFA World Cup.
Illness and death During the second half of the 1993–94 season, Fortunato suffered an unexplained loss of form and struggled to complete matches due to a lack of energy; he was subsequently dropped from the national team after doctors announced that he had a rare form of leukaemia in May 1994. Fortunato initially struggled to find a suitable bone marrow donor, and underwent chemotherapy in a hospital in Turin and an unsuccessful bone marrow transplant from his sister, Paola; he was later transferred to a hospital in Perugia, and after a second bone marrow transplant from his father, he appeared to have made a full recovery. For the
1994–95 Serie A season, he was included in the Turin club's roster, and was even called up to join the team by new coach
Marcello Lippi for Juventus's clash with
Sampdoria in Genoa on 26 February 1995, although he later watched his teammates from the stands. the eve of Italy's game against
Lithuania in
Vilnius. His funeral took place on 27 April in his hometown of Salerno. That season, Lippi's Juventus went on to win their 23rd league title (
scudetto), dedicated to Fortunato, known as "Fortunato's Scudetto". Juventus also won the
Coppa Italia and the
Supercoppa Italiana that year, and reached the
UEFA Cup final. == Style of play ==