Sergio Portesan of Shoreview, a founder of the USA Cup international youth soccer tournament held in Blaine, grew up in war-torn Italy playing soccer with a ball made of rags.
When he first coached kids in Shoreview, soccer balls were plentiful, but playing fields were not. Many of his players worked soccer in around Little League schedules.
But Portesan wasn't deterred. In 1969, he started with one youth team at Shoreview's St. Odilia Catholic Church; it grew into the North Suburban Soccer Association with more than 30 teams.
Portesan, 77, who had suffered from several illnesses, including heart disease and diabetes, died Feb. 25 in St. Paul after surgery for a broken hip.
"When you brought up soccer 40 years ago, people would look at you like you were from the moon," Portesan said in a 1992 Star Tribune article.
He served as president of the Minnesota Youth Soccer Association from 1977 to 1991, and in the mid-1980s helped found the Blaine tournament, the largest of its kind in North and South America.
During World War II, he played a lot of soccer with a homemade ball. For several years, his school was closed because of heavy fighting, and the family home was bombed, said his wife of 55 years, Marian, of Shoreview.
In 1952, the machinist and tool-and-diemaker attended Hamline University in St. Paul under a program sponsored by the Marshall Plan to rebuild Europe. He returned to Italy for a short while but moved to the Twin Cities, having met his wife-to-be at Hamline.