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Toto Schillaci and Ray Houghton share their Italia 90 memories

When it comes to cult heroes from Italia 90 - and it's fair to say there were many who fit that description - you cannot look past the host nation's striker Toto Schillaci.

Albeit not so much from an Irish perspective, given it was his goal in the quarter-final that knocked Jack Charlton's side out after the most memorable of runs.

Schillaci would prove to be a one-hit wonder of sorts at international level for Italy. While he won the Golden Boot at the 1990 World Cup with six goals, he only scored one other goal for his country.

But shining on the grandest stage of all means he has an indelible place in the history of the game and as it happened, Schillaci was in Dublin alongside Republic of Ireland legend Ray Houghton for an exhibition of football stickers called 'Chasing the Ball' on display at the Printworks Building in Dublin Castle.

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RTÉ's Game On caught up with both Schillaci and Houghton - reunited for the first time since they both attended last September's Ploughing Championships in Laois - to reminisce about their memories of sharing the stage at Italia 90 and the now 58-year-old Italian, speaking through his translator, quipped that such is his love for Irish people and football supporters, he's hopeful of citizenship coming his way.

And his respect for the Irish squad of yore remains strong: "(We) were expecting that Ireland were going to be a strong team, very united. So (we) were expecting a difficult match to play. It proved to be a difficult match."

On the long-term

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