The 40-year-old drew a sell-out crowd to the Stadio Olimpico for his farewell but Genoa briefly looked like spoiling his party through a player born in 2001

Francesco Totti tried to raise a smile. Striding out on to the Stadio Olimpico pitch for a farewell address at the end of his last-ever match for Roma, he shushed the home crowd and then teased that staying quiet “ought to be easy for you”.

European football season review: how did your club do this season? Read more

Some fans chuckled. More of them sobbed. The tears had been flowing from before kick-off – Totti confessed that crying has been a daily occurrence in his own household of late – but by now it seemed there was not a dry eye left in the house.

“You know I’m a man of few words,” he continued, but Totti had prepared some for this occasion. At the start he was not sure if he would be capable of reading out the letter he had written for his supporters, suggesting his daughter might have to take over. But, in the end, he made it through.

“Do you know that feeling of being a kid, and dreaming about something beautiful, but then your mum wakes you up to go to school when you only wanted to carry on sleeping?” he asked. “You try to hold on to the thread of the story you were caught up in but you can’t do it. This time it’s not a dream. It’s real life.”

What a life it has been so far. Totti has, at different times, fired Roma to a Scudetto, won a World Cup with Italy and earned a European Golden Shoe. Only Paolo Maldini has played more than his 619 Serie A games. Only Silvio Piola can trump his 250 goals in that league.

BT Sport Football (@btsportfootball) "He wanted to emulate Giuseppe Giannini, The Prince. He didn't just emulate him he became The King."



Francesco Totti: A legend departs. 👏 pic.twitter.com/QNAp9BOLUu

There will always be those who insist on pointing out that he could have won more, could have pushed his limits further by moving elsewhere. But how could a few measly medals ever mean more than doing all this in the service of your boyhood club? Sunday’s pre-game choreography in the Curva Sud declared that “Totti is Roma”. It is still hard to imagine the two of them apart.

And what other city would have thrown a retirement party like this one? Totti Day had the feel of a public festival in Rome, buses commandeered to display a “Thanks Captain” message in lieu of their destination, while fans flocked to take their photo with “selfie statues” commissioned by Corriere dello Sport. Planes trailed messages of support overhead.

Inside the Stadio Olimpico it felt as though we had gone back in time. Average attendances for Roma’s home games this season have hovered around the 33,000 mark but this clash with Genoa was sold out long in advance. To hear the roar that greeted Totti’s introduction by the stadium PA before kick-off was to remember how this place used to feel on an almost weekly basis back when his career began.

Facebook Twitter Pinterest Fans pose with a ‘selfie statue’ of Francesco Totti outside the Stadio Olimpico. Photograph: Vincenzo Pinto/AFP/Getty Images

He was not in the starting XI on Sunday. Roma still needed one more win to be certain of second place, and with it a direct route to the Champions League group stage. The prize money on offer was too important to the club’s financial plans to be overlooked for sentiment’s sake.

And if anyone presumed Genoa had come along just to play a supporting role in these festivities, then they would be quickly disabused of that thought. The visitors took the lead in the third minute, through a 16-year-old named Pietro Pellegri. He was born in 2001 – the same year Totti won his Scudetto.

Edin Dzeko soon grabbed an equaliser but Roma frittered away chances to get their noses in front before half-time. In the stands fans fretted. Would Totti’s introduction be delayed if the result stayed in the balance?

Apparently not. Roma’s iconic No10 was sent on with just under 10 minutes played in the second half. The scores were still level and, in truth, his arrival did cost the hosts some momentum. Totti replaced Mohamed Salah, whose pace and directness had unsettled the Genoa defence. Now the buildup play became slower, more ponderous. At times he dropped so deep that he seemed to be playing in midfield.

There were glimpses of class to admire. One moment Totti was taming a high ball over his shoulder with a first-time pass, the next shifting the ball effortlessly between his left and right feet before slipping a through-ball between two defenders. He completed one pass off the back of his shoulders. Totti might have had an assist in the 69th minute, when he floated a 40-yard ball over the defence for Stephan El Shaarawy – whose close-range header was saved by Eugenio Lamanna at close range. And perhaps he would have had a goal of his own in the 75th, had Daniele De Rossi not beaten him to a loose ball inside Genoa’s penalty area, driving it into the bottom corner.

Facebook Twitter Pinterest Francesco Totti replaced Mohamed Salah early in the second half against Genoa to make his final appearance for Roma. Photograph: Stefano Rellandini/Reuters

There was a flash of frustration on Totti’s face as his team-mates ran to celebrate under the Curva, although he got over it in time to join them. It felt as though a baton had been passed. De Rossi was known through the early part of his career in Rome as “Capitan Futuro”. At last it was his turn to lead.

Genoa, though, still had no interest in narratives. They equalised through Darko Lazovic, then very nearly took the lead when the same player struck the post. With Napoli romping towards a comfortable win at Sampdoria, Roma were set to fall to third.

It was not Totti who rode to their rescue, but another substitute with a name that rhymes. In the 90th minute Diego Perotti pounced on Dzeko’s knock-down for the winner. The Stadio Olimpico erupted with joy.

The tears would follow soon afterwards. Totti was granted a guard of honour by his team-mates, took a slow lap of the stadium and gave his final address. Cynics might scoff at the melodrama but beneath the pageantry lay something that most of us can relate to: that feeling of a happy chapter of life ending, of saying goodbye to the familiar and stepping into the unknown.

We still do not know, officially, what Totti will do next. Perhaps he has not decided yet, either. There is a deal on the table for him to become a director of Roma, but many have suggested he will end his status as a one-club man by flying out to America for a season with Miami FC.

At one point during his post-game monologue, he admitted candidly, “I’m afraid.” No wonder. For 28 of his 40 years Totti has spent his days doing the same thing: kicking a ball around with his Roma team-mates. He quite literally does not know what another life might look like.

What is known is that Serie A will not be the same without him, a player whom Diego Maradona described as “the best I have ever seen”, a man of few words but many goals, the inimitable Francesco Totti.

BT Sport Football (@btsportfootball) Long live the King... 👑



🏃 786 Roma games

⚽️ 307 goals

🏆 Six trophies



Francesco Totti: The King of Rome! 👏👏👏 pic.twitter.com/1ka4VeQozd

The greatest escape

The final day drama was not restricted to events at the Stadio Olimpico. Crotone completed one of the greatest escapes in Serie A history, beating Lazio 3-1 and leapfrogging Empoli to avoid relegation.

Such a scenario seemed implausible less than two months ago. On 1 April, with nine games left, the Calabrians had a paltry 14 points. They finish the season with 34, courtesy of a bonkers nine-game run in which they collected a further 20 – outperforming 17 of Serie A’s other 19 teams. Only Juventus beat them in this stretch.

If it is true that they benefited from some lacklustre performances from opponents with nothing left to play for, then it would equally be uncharitable to pretend that this is the whole story. Crotone took four points off the two Milan clubs at a time when the latter were scrapping for a spot in Europe.

Besides, it is not as though Empoli’s schedule was all that different. The Tuscans needed only to beat a relegated Palermo team to keep their noses in front on Sunday. They lost 2-1.

The true secret to Crotone’s success might lie in simple consistency. They stuck with their manager, Davide Nicola, at a time when many other clubs would not have. The club responded to a run of five consecutive defeats by issuing a vote of confidence in February and did not waver when he took just one point from the next three games after that.

Some reports claimed it was only a lack of alternatives that drove Crotone to stand by their man. Perhaps that was so. But the club’s directors also publicly accepted their share of the blame. It was not Nicola’s fault, after all, that they had begun the season playing home games in Pescara – almost 400 miles away – while their Stadio Ezio Scida was being brought up to Serie A standards.

One way or another Nicola turned things round – not with any great tactical masterstroke but a mix of sheer bloodymindedness and a Mike Bassett-esque four-four-fucking-two.

Well, that and a healthy dose of Diego Falcinelli, who scored his 13th goal of the season on Sunday. Viewed in the context of his team’s performances, and the relative scarcity of chances that generated, his was one of the most impressive seasons of any striker in the division. He is on the radar of Italy’s manager, Giampiero Ventura, and by now perhaps those of some wealthier clubs as well.

This was a triumph of the collective, too, though, and Crotone’s other two goals against Lazio came from Andrea Nalini – a winger who had made only six previous starts and never scored in the top flight. And so we turn back to Nicola, the man who made it all click.

Last month he vowed to cycle from Crotone to Turin – a journey of around 800 miles – if his team avoided the drop. It is a promise he intends to keep. As Nicola observed on Sunday: “That was always the easy part.”

Talking points

Just some quick final thoughts, then, on the final weekend …

• Edin Dzeko is Serie A’s capocannoniere for 2016-17, with 29 goals. His nine assists were also a personal best, though according to the stats bods at Whoscored.com he missed more clear-cut chances than any other player in Serie A as well. Regardless, it was certainly a fun chase this season, with Dries Mertens (who, of course, started playing up front only in October) finishing one behind.

• Indeed, after Juventus seemed to cruise to their sixth-consecutive title, this feels like an opportune moment to note that both Roma and Napoli set club records for points earned this season – with 87 and 86 respectively. They both did it in style, too, scoring more than 90 goals each. Lorenzo Insigne’s gorgeous chip for Napoli’s second against Samp was indicative of the quality we have seen.

• Moise Kean became the first player born in the 2000s to score in one of Europe’s top-five leagues, when he snatched a late winner against Bologna. But then Pellegri, 13 months younger, topped him 24 hours later.

• Three more goals conceded for Joe Hart in his final match with Torino, making a total of 62 in 36 Serie A appearances. As noted here previously, he can hardly shoulder all of the blame cast on a team that attacks so brazenly and defends so shakily. He has made plenty of mistakes along the way, though, and Torino’s current run of 19 league games without a clean sheet is an unwanted club record. He remains popular with the club’s fans, for his enthusiasm and commitment, but they are happy enough now to see the club move on.

Results: Atalanta 1-0 Chievo, Bologna 1-2 Juventus, Cagliari 2-1 Milan, Crotone 3-1 Lazio, Fiorentina 2-2 Pescara, Internazionale 5-2 Udinese, Palermo 2-1 Empoli, Roma 3-2 Genoa, Sampdoria 2-4 Napoli, Torino 5-2 Udinese