AS Roma
AS Roma | |||
Basic data | |||
---|---|---|---|
Surname | Associazione Sportiva Roma SpA | ||
Seat | Rome , Italy | ||
founding | June 7, 1927 | ||
Colours | yellow Red | ||
owner | Romulus and Remus Investments LLC | ||
president | vacant | ||
Website | asroma.com | ||
First soccer team | |||
Head coach | Paulo Fonseca | ||
Venue | Olympic Stadium Rome | ||
Places | 72,698 | ||
league | Series A | ||
2018/19 | 6th place | ||
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The Associazione Sportiva Roma , short AS Roma or Roma , known in German-speaking countries as the or the Roma , is an established in 1927 Italian football club from the capital Rome . Other names are I Giallorossi ("The Yellow-Reds"), I Lupi ("The Wolves") or La Magica ("The Magical").
AS Roma is a nine-time Italian cup winner , three-time Italian champion and two-time Italian Supercup winner . The club is one of three Italian football companies listed on the Borsa Italiana .
The club's home venue is the Olympic Stadium , which is shared with local rivals Lazio Rome .
history
The beginnings
The history of AS Roma began in 1927, which was founded as an idea against the strong teams from northern Italy (north wind) . Italo Foschi , the then president of the Fortitudo Roma club , wanted to bring the championship title to the capital and merged the three clubs Alba Audace , Roma and Fortitudo (the latter had already incorporated the Pro Roma team ). The officials decided that the club's colors should be those of the city of Rome : yellow-red. Italo Foschi became president of the newly founded association. Roma immediately achieved success: in the 1927/28 season, the club won the Coppa Coni , the forerunner of today's Coppa Italia .
From the establishment of the new Serie A in 1929/30 , the club has always been a member for up to one year. Only in 1951 did AS Roma relegate, but as champions of the B series in 1951/52 managed to get promoted again immediately.
Exhibition Cities Cup 1961
AS Roma and Fiorentina won the first European Cup triumphs for Italy. In the 1960/61 season , the capital city triumphed in the trade fair cup , the predecessor of the UEFA Cup , and the club from Florence in the European Cup Winners' Cup . In the two finals against Birmingham City , there was initially a 2-2 away triumph and in Rome a 2-0 triumph. In 1963/64 AS Roma won the first Coppa Italia , followed by the second in 1969.
The golden 1980s
AS Roma experienced by far the most successful phase so far in the 1980s. The start came in 1980 with the third Coppa Italia, which the club was able to win in 1981, 1984 and 1986. Above all, however, the club was crowned Italian champions for the second time since 1941/42 in the 1982/83 season. In the subsequent participation in the European Cup , the club reached after victories over IFK Göteborg (3: 0, 1: 2), the army club Sofia (1: 0, 1: 0), BFC Dynamo (3: 0, 1: 2) and Dundee United (0: 2, 3: 0) the final in the Roman Olympic Stadium. This was lost to Liverpool FC on penalties with 2: 4, after 120 minutes it was 1: 1 with goals from Neal (Liverpool) and Pruzzo (Rome). The club experienced the greatest disappointment when they were eliminated 4-0 in the first round of the European Cup Winners' Cup in 1981 after a 3-0 home win against FC Carl Zeiss Jena .
Lean 1990s despite seventh cup win
The 1990s, however, turned out to be a lean decade for AS Roma. Although they achieved the seventh victory in the Coppa Italia in 1991, they also lost the UEFA Cup final in 1991 against Inter Milan (0: 2, 1: 0) and in 1993 also the national cup final against AC Turin . In the championship, AS Roma finished tenth in 1993 and only twelfth in 1997.
The new millennium: Third championship title in 2001
For the time being, the last big highlight was the third championship title (after 1942 and 1983) in 2001, when AS Roma replaced local rivals Lazio at the top of Serie A under the regiment of start coach Fabio Capello . This was followed by four runners-up (2002, 2004, 2006, 2007) and two mediocre eighth places (2003 and 2005) in Serie A. After Capello's departure at the end of the 2003/04 season, the team acquired the reputation of being untrainable and disdained four supervisors within one season: Cesare Prandelli , Rudi Völler , Luigi Delneri and Bruno Conti .
Record: 11 wins in a row
Coming from Udinese Calcio , Luciano Spalletti took over as coach on July 1, 2005. In the 2005/2006 season, AS Roma initially finished fifth, which would have qualified for participation in the UEFA Cup. After a bad start to the season, the team managed to win eleven games in a row, which at the time meant a new Italian record (today Inter Milan has this record with 17 games won in a row). Due to the football scandal in Italy (forced relegation for Juventus, points deduction for AC Milan , AC Florence , Lazio Rome ), AS Roma was subsequently declared runner-up and was thus able to play in the Champions League .
The Manchester Debacle (April 2007)
Olympique Lyon (0-0 H / 2-0 A) were eliminated on the way to the quarter-finals of the Champions League . However, the quarter-finals against Manchester United were also the final destination for AS Roma. Roma's 2-1 win in the first leg was overshadowed by fan riots before, after and during the match and by brutal crackdowns by the Italian police in the away sector of United fans. In the second leg on April 10, 2007, the Romans lost at Old Trafford with a historic debacle of 7-1.
Six top scorer from Volk (1931) to Totti (2007)
AS Roma fared much better in the league and reached 2nd place at the end of the 2006/07 season and was thus qualified for the 2007/08 Champions League. Furthermore, the champions Inter Milan suffered the only defeat of the season (3-1 at San Siro ). One of the achievers of this successful season was Francesco Totti , who set his personal scoring record in one year with 26 goals and got the top scorer. A brand that was also enough to win the Golden Shoe (Europe's top goalscorer). In addition, the midfield director scored four goals in the last Champions League season. Totti became the sixth Roma player to become Italy's top scorer. Before him, this feat was also Rodolfo Volk (1931/29 goals), Enrique Guaita (1935/28 goals), Dino da Costa (1957/22 goals), Pedro Manfredini (1963/19 goals) and three times Roberto Pruzzo (1981/18 Goals, 1982/15 goals and 1986/19 goals).
Eighth cup win in 2007
In the cup, the team managed to move into the final in 2003, 2005 and 2006, where they were defeated. In 2007 AS Roma once again made it into the final of the Coppa Italia, with their opponent being Inter Milan for the third time in a row. In this pairing, the Roma were able to achieve the eighth cup win after a 6-2 in the first leg and a 1-2 away defeat. Almost three months later, the club met Inter again, in the Supercoppa italiana they got the upper hand again 1-0 in Milan. It was the second Supercoppa after 2001.
The triumph over Real Madrid (February 2008)
As runners-up in 2007, AS Roma qualified for the 2007/08 Champions League and came second in the group stage. In the round of 16, the Italians met Real Madrid , which they defeated with an aggregate result of 4-2. After the 2-1 home game (with goals from Pizarro and Mancini after an early deficit), the Romans also won away on February 19, 2008 2-1 with goals from Taddei and Vučinić with an interim equalization by Raúl. In addition, Aquilani and Vučinić (both Roma) and Baptista (Madrid) only hit aluminum in this game. As in the previous year, the quarter-finals at the beginning of April ended against Manchester United (0: 2 / h and 0: 1 / a).
Second for the tenth time
The 2007/08 championship was once again exciting for the club from the capital, which in February was eleven points behind Inter Milan in second place. The decision was not to be made until the 38th and final matchday. In these, Inter was the front runner with 82 points ahead of AS Roma with 81. But while the Romans only played 1: 1 (1: 0) in Catania despite an early lead by Vucinic, Inter won in Parma with two goals from Ibrahimovic after the break with 2: 0. As a result, AS Roma finished second in Serie A for the tenth time, for the third time in a row and for the fifth time in the last seven years.
Ninth cup triumph
As in the past three years, the 2008 cup final was again called Inter Milan against AS Roma. In contrast to the past, the 60th edition of the Coppa Italia was not decided this time in a return game, but only in one match. This took place in the Roman Olympic Stadium and ended with 2: 1 (1: 0) for the Roma. The goals were scored by Philippe Mexès and Simone Perrotta and Pele respectively . For the capital city, it was a small revenge for the championship missed the previous weekend against Inter, the second triumph in a row and the ninth overall, which they were able to catch up with the previous sole record holder Juventus Turin . It was also the 15th participation in the final, which means an Italian record ahead of Torino (14). In the meantime, AS Roma have made it into the final two more times and have held 17 appearances, but lost 1-0 to Inter in 2010 and to Lazio in 2013.
Financial difficulties and change of ownership
The constant transfer competition with the big clubs from the north, but also especially with local rivals Lazio , plunged AS Roma into financial difficulties. Top performers such as the Argentinian Walter Samuel and the Brazilians Lima and Emerson had to be transferred within Serie A or abroad. Only Francesco Totti - captain, playmaker and goalscorer in one person - was never an issue when it came to a possible sale. Italpetroli - owner of AS Roma, which is held by President Franco Sensi with 51 percent - owes around 370 million euros, according to newspaper reports. Daughter and AS-Rom managing director Rosella Sensi , who was elected president of the club with an absolute majority on August 29, 2008, ten days after the death of her father, therefore initiated a sale of the club in summer 2010.
American takeovers, twelfth runner-up
In April 2011, an American consortium led by the investor Thomas DiBenedetto took over the majority of shares in the association, whereupon Sensi announced her resignation from the presidency in June of the same year. In July 2011, 61-year-old DiBenedetto was introduced as the new club president. In August 2012, James J. Pallotta finally took over the presidency. In his era there has been a lost Cup final in 2013 and, after a coach change to Rudi Garcia , second place in the championship in the 2013/14 season. Despite the Italian record start of ten wins in a row and a club record of 85 points, AS Roma ended the Serie A for the twelfth time as runner-up. After all, the club was able to qualify for the Champions League for the first time since 2010. With Mia Hamm , a well-known figure from the American will on Oct. 27, 2014 women's football in the board of the capital club appointed. The club was also runner-up in the 2014/15 and 2016/17 seasons.
On April 10, 2018, the club moved into the semi-finals of the Champions League for the first time since 1991 after beating FC Barcelona 3-0 . In there the team was defeated by the eventual winners FC Liverpool - after a 2: 5 defeat in the first leg, the team was unable to equalize the goal difference in the second leg despite a 4: 2 win in the second leg. The following season ended the Roma in 5th place, which meant the direct qualification for the Europa League . The top scorer was Edin Džeko with 19 cross-competition goals and eleven assists. In contrast to city rivals Lazio, they had survived the group stage in the 2019/20 Europa League, but this time they failed in the round of 16 against later finalists FC Sevilla . In the run-up to the 2020/21 season , the US billionaire Dan Friedkin acquired 86.6% of the shares in the association with Romulus and Remus Investments LLC for the equivalent of 591 million euros and thus succeeded Neep Roma Holding SpA after eight years
Game and training facilities
Historic venues
The first venue was the Motovelodromo Appio from 1927 to 1928 . This was followed by the Campo Testaccio from 1929 to 1940 and the Stadio Nazionale del PNF from 1940 to 1953 (from 1943 Stadio Nazionale ).
Stadion
AS Roma has played its home games in the Olympic Stadium since 1953. The multifunctional stadium was built from 1927 to 1932 as part of the Foro Italico and has since served as the venue for numerous major sporting events such as the 1960 Summer Olympics , the World Athletics Championships in 1987 , the European Football Championships in 1968 and 1980 , the 1990 World Cup , and to date five European Cup finals. The annual Coppa Italia final has been held in the Olimpico since 2008 .
The Olympic Stadium is one of European football association UEFA in the category 4 (Elite Stadium) is arranged stadium and, with currently more than 70,000 spectators, the largest in Europe.
Fans and followers
The first large organized fan group was the Commando Ultrà Curva Sud for short CUCS , this was created through the merger of several small groups and was one of the most famous ultra groups in European football. In the 1990s, the CUCS was increasingly infiltrated by other groups and eventually dissolved. As a result, other groups emerged, such as the AS Roma Ultras , Boys , Giovinezza and Fedayn, which can be found in the Curva Sud today.
The club anthem Roma (non si discute, si ama) by the Italian musician Antonello Venditti is sung before each game. The song Grazie Roma , also by Venditti, is played and sung after winning home games.
Rivalries
Lazio Rome
AS Roma is part of one of the most famous football derbies in the world, the Derby della Capitale (German capital city derby), also Derby di Roma , Derby Capitolino or Derby del Cupolone , the city derby against Lazio Rome. The first meeting of the two clubs took place on December 8, 1929 in the Serie A instead.
The derby is particularly explosive because of the fan rivalry between the two Roman clubs. There are also historical and political reasons for this: The Roma were born in the politically left-wing working-class district of Testaccio in the south of Rome, while Lazio is based in the politically right-wing , affluent Parioli in northern Rome. Meanwhile, the Roma fan circles are politically and socially very mixed, while the Lazio Ultras, who often come from the surrounding area rather than the city itself, have a close connection to right-wing extremism . There are always violent riots.
Financial situation and ownership
The Associazione Sportiva Roma SpA is a subsidiary of the Italian Neep Roma Holding SpA
In the 2014/15 season, AS Roma generated sales of 180.4 million euros, making it the third football club in Italy with the highest sales , and the club is in 16th place worldwide in this category.
Suppliers and sponsors
The supplier has been the sporting goods manufacturer Nike since 2014 , the contract runs until 2024. The current main sponsor of AS Roma is Qatar Airways .
In 1981 AS Roma signed an advertising contract with Barilla , who placed their lettering on the jerseys. This was followed by Nuova Tirrena (1994–1995), INA Assitalia (1995–2002), Mazda (2002–2005), Banca Italease (2005–2006), Wind Telecomunicazioni (2007–2013), Roma Cares (2013–2014) and Qatar Airways (since 2017).
Period | Outfitter | Main sponsor |
---|---|---|
1970-1971 | Lacoste | - |
1972-1976 | In-house production | |
1977-1979 | Adidas | |
1979-1980 | Pouchain | |
1980-1981 | Playground | |
1981-1982 | Barilla | |
1982-1983 | Patrick | |
1983-1986 | Kappa | |
1986-1991 | NO | |
1991-1994 | Adidas | |
1994-1995 | Asics | Nuova Tirrena |
1995-1997 | INA Assitalia | |
1997-2000 | Diadora | |
2000-2002 | Kappa | |
2002-2003 | Mazda | |
2003-2005 | Diadora | |
2005-2006 | Banca Italease | |
2006-2007 | None | |
2007-2013 | Kappa | wind |
2013-2014 | In-house production | Roma Cares |
2014-2018 | Nike | - |
2017– | Qatar Airways |
Club colors and crests
AS Roma has been wearing the colors red and yellow since it was founded in 1927, with white trousers and red socks. The away jersey is traditionally mostly white. Today's club coat of arms combines the colors of the club and those of the city of Rome, it shows the Capitoline Wolf with the boys Romulus and Remus in the upper part, as well as the lettering Roma and the year of foundation in the lower part.
facts and figures
Club successes
National | title | season |
---|---|---|
Italian championship | 3 | 1941/42 , 1982/83 , 2000/01 |
Italian Cup | 9 | 1963/64 , 1968/69 , 1979/80 , 1980/81 , 1983/84 , 1985/86 , 1990/91 , 2006/07 , 2007/08 |
Italian Supercup | 2 | 2001 , 2007 |
International | title | season |
English-Italian cup competitions | 2 | 1969, 1972 |
Exhibition cities cup | 1 | 1960/61 |
Successes of the youth teams
- Italian Primavera Championship : 1972/73, 1973/74, 1977/78, 1983/84, 1989/90, 2004/05, 2010/11, 2015/16
- Italian Primavera Cup : 1973/74, 1974/75, 1993/94, 2011/12, 2016/17
- Supercoppa Primavera: 2012, 2016
- Torneo di Viareggio : 1981, 1983, 1991
AS Roma in the European Cup
staff
Professional team squad (2019/20)
No. | Nat. | Surname | Date of birth | in the team since | Contract until |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
goalkeeper | |||||
13 | Pau López | December 13, 1994 | 2019 | 2024 | |
63 | Daniel Fuzato | 4th July 1997 | 2018 | 2022 | |
83 | Antonio Mirante | July 8, 1983 | 2018 | 2021 | |
Defender | |||||
2 | Davide Zappacosta | June 11, 1992 | 2019 | 2020 | |
5 | Juan Jesus | June 10, 1991 | 2016 | 2021 | |
6th | Chris Smalling | November 22, 1989 | 2019 | 2020 | |
11 | Aleksandar Kolarov | November 10, 1985 | 2017 | 2020 | |
15th | Mert Çetin | January 1, 1997 | 2019 | 2024 | |
18th | Davide Santon | 2nd January 1991 | 2018 | 2022 | |
20th | Federico Fazio | March 17, 1987 | 2016 | 2020 | |
23 | Gianluca Mancini | April 17, 1996 | 2019 | 2020 | |
37 | Leonardo Spinazzola | March 25, 1993 | 2019 | 2023 | |
midfield player | |||||
4th | Bryan Cristante | March 3, 1995 | 2018 | 2023 | |
7th | Lorenzo Pellegrini | June 19, 1996 | 2017 | 2022 | |
21st | Jordan Veretout | March 1, 1993 | 2019 | 2020 | |
22nd | Nicolò Zaniolo | July 2, 1999 | 2018 | 2024 | |
27 | Javier Pastore | June 20, 1989 | 2018 | 2023 | |
42 | Amadou Diawara | July 17, 1997 | 2019 | 2024 | |
77 | Henrich Mchitarjan | January 21, 1989 | 2019 | 2020 | |
striker | |||||
8th | Diego Perotti | July 26, 1988 | 2016 | 2021 | |
9 | Edin Džeko | March 17, 1986 | 2015 | 2022 | |
17th | Cengiz Ünder | July 14, 1997 | 2017 | 2023 | |
19th | Nikola Kalinić | 5th January 1988 | 2019 | 2020 | |
99 | Justin Kluivert | May 5, 1999 | 2018 | 2023 | |
As of September 2, 2019 |
Squad changes for the 2019/20 season
Accesses | ||
---|---|---|
time | player | Previous club |
Summer break / preparation |
Mert Çetin | Gençlerbirliği Ankara |
Amadou Diawara | SSC Naples | |
Nikola Kalinić | Atlético Madrid (Loan) | |
Pau López | Sevilla FC | |
Gianluca Mancini | Atalanta Bergamo (Loan) | |
Henrich Mchitarjan | Arsenal FC (loan) | |
Chris Smalling | Manchester United (Loan) | |
Leonardo Spinazzola | Juventus Turin | |
Jordan Veretout | Fiorentina (loan) | |
Davide Zappacosta | Chelsea FC (Loan) |
Departures | ||
---|---|---|
time | player | New club |
Summer break / preparation |
Ante Ćorić | UD Almería (loan) |
Daniele De Rossi | Boca Juniors | |
Rick Karsdorp | Feyenoord Rotterdam (loan) | |
Kostas Manolas | SSC Naples | |
Iván Marcano | FC Porto | |
Steven Nzonzi | Galatasaray Istanbul (Loan) | |
Robin Olsen | Cagliari Calcio (Loan) | |
Luca Pellegrini | Juventus Turin | |
Patrik Schick | RB Leipzig (loan) | |
Stephan El Shaarawy | Shanghai Shenhua | |
End of January 2020 | Alessandro Florenzi | Valencia CF (loan) |
Club management
Coaching staff | |
---|---|
function | Surname |
Head coach | Paulo Fonseca |
Assistant coach | Nuno Campos |
Goalkeeping coach | Marco Savorani |
Technical trainer | Danilo Pierini |
Stefano Romano | |
Ed Lippie | |
Simone Beccaccioli | |
Athletic trainer | Manrico Ferrari |
Nicandro Vizoco |
management | |
---|---|
function | Surname |
president | James Pallotta |
CEO | Guido Fienga |
executive Director | Mauro Baldissoni |
Sports director | Gianluca Petrachi |
Team manager | Morgan De Sanctis |
Chief scout | Antonio Cavallo |
Junior coordinator | Bruno Conti |
Club doctor | Andrea Causarano |
Former players
- Adriano
- Aldair
- Luigi Allemandi
- Amedeo Amadei
- Amarildo
- Carlo Ancelotti
- Antonio Angelillo
- Luca Antei
- Francesco Antonioli
- Alberto Aquilani
- Abel Balbo
- Federico Barba
- Paolo Barison
- Agostino di Bartolomei
- Gabriel Batistuta
- Medhi Benatia
- Orvar Bergmark
- Fulvio Bernardini
- Thomas Berthold
- Luigi Di Biagio
- Zbigniew Boniek
- Marco Branca
- Helge Christian Bronée
- Cafu
- Vincent Candela
- Claudio Caniggia
- Fabio Capello
- Amedeo Carboni
- Andrea Carnevale
- Giorgio Carpi
- Antonio Cassano
- Toninho Cerezo
- John Charles
- Alberto Di Chiara
- Antonio Chimenti
- Cristian Chivu
- Fulvio Collovati
- Bruno Conti
- Paolo Conti
- Dino da Costa
- Fabio Cudicini
- Gaetano D'Agostino
- Mario David
- Marco Delvecchio
- Daniele De Rossi
- Angelo Domenghini
- Aldo Donati
- Emerson
- Paulo Roberto Falcão
- Matteo Ferrari (soccer player)
- Attilio Ferraris
- Daniel Fonseca
- Diego Fuser
- Daniele Galloppa
- Carmine Gautieri
- Alcides Ghiggia
- Giuseppe Giannini
- Ludovic Giuly
- Enrique Guaita
- pep Guardiola
- Gianni Guigou
- Sergei Gurenko
- Thomas Häßler
- Michael Konsel
- Naim Krieziu
- Erik Lamela
- Giacomo Losi
- Tommaso Maestrelli
- Aldo Maldera
- Mancini
- Pedro Manfredini
- Lionello Manfredonia
- Kostas Manolas
- Iván Marcano
- Guido Masetti
- Carlo Mazzone
- Giampaolo Menichelli
- Philippe Mexès
- Mario De Micheli
- Mido
- Siniša Mihajlović
- Vincenzo Montella
- Eraldo Monzeglio
- Francesco Moriero
- Hidetoshi Nakata
- Sebastiano Nela
- Bruno Nicolè
- Knut Nordahl
- Alberto Orlando
- Piero Pastore
- Lorenzo Pellegrini
- Simone Pepe
- Simone Perrotta
- Bruno Pesaola
- Miralem Pjanic
- Matteo Politano
- Pierino Prati
- Herbert Prohaska
- Roberto Pruzzo
- Claudio Ranieri
- Ubaldo Righetti
- Enzo Robotti
- Ruggiero Rizzitelli
- Francesco Rocca
- Antonio Rudiger
- Walter Samuel
- Mauro Sandreani
- Sergio Santarini
- Juan Schiaffino
- Jürgen Schütz
- Arne Selmosson
- Pietro Serantoni
- Paulo Sérgio
- Stephan El Shaarawy
- Giancarlo De Sisti
- Luciano Spinosi
- Giuliano Taccola
- Franco Tancredi
- Francesco Tavano
- Damiano Tommasi
- Francesco Totti
- Arcadio Venturi
- Rodolfo people
- Rudi Völler
- Pietro Vierchowod
- Mirko Vučinić
- Antonio Carlos Zago
- Cristiano Zanetti
- Jonathan Zebina
- Gyula Zsengellér
Player records
Status: end of season 2018/19; All competitive games and goals are indicated, players in bold are still active in the club
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Coach history
Head coach | |
---|---|
Term of office | Surname |
1927-1929 | William Garbutt |
1929-30 | Guido Baccani |
1930-32 | Francis Burgess |
1932-33 | Jonas Baar |
1933 | Lajos Kovács |
1933-1937 | Luigi Barbesino |
1937-1940 | Guido Ara |
1940-41 | Alfréd Schaffer |
1941 | Géza Kertész |
1941-43 | Alfréd Schaffer |
1943–1945, | Géza Kertész |
1945-1947 | Giovanni Degni |
1947-48 | Imre Senkey |
1948-49 | Luigi Brunella |
1949-50 | Fulvio Bernardini |
1950 | Luigi Brunella |
1950-51 | Adolfo Baloncieri |
1951 | Pietro Serantoni |
1951 | Guido Masetti |
1951-52 | Giuseppe Viani |
1952-54 | Mario Varglien |
1954-55 | Jesse Carver |
1955-56 | György Sárosi |
1956-57 | György Sárosi |
1957 | Guido Masetti |
1957-58 | Alec Stock |
1958 | Gunnar Nordahl |
1958 | György Sárosi |
1958-59 | Gunnar Nordahl |
Head coach | |
---|---|
Term of office | Surname |
1959-1961 | Alfredo Foni |
1961-62 | Luis Carniglia |
1962-63 | Luis Carniglia |
1963 | Alfredo Foni |
1963 | Naim Krieziu |
1963-64 | Luis Miró |
1964-65 | Juan Carlos Lorenzo |
1965-1968 | Oronzo Pugliese |
1968-1970 | Helenio Herrera |
1970 | Helenio Herrera |
1970 | Luciano Tessari |
1971-72 | Helenio Herrera |
1972 | Helenio Herrera |
1972-73 | Tonino Trebiciani |
1973-74 | Manlio Scopigno |
1974-1977 | Nils Liedholm |
1977-78 | Gustavo Giagnoni |
1978-79 | Gustavo Giagnoni |
1979 | Ferruccio Valcareggi |
1979-1984 | Nils Liedholm |
1984-1986 | Sven-Göran Eriksson |
1986 | Sven-Göran Eriksson |
1986-87 | Angelo Sormani |
1987-88 | Nils Liedholm |
1988 | Nils Liedholm |
1988 | Luciano Spinosi |
1988-89 | Nils Liedholm |
1989-90 | Luigi Radice |
1990-1992 | Ottavio Bianchi |
Head coach | |
---|---|
Term of office | Surname |
1992-93 | Vujadin Boškov |
1993-1996 | Carlo Mazzone |
1996 | Carlos Bianchi |
1996 | Nils Liedholm |
1996-97 | Ezio Sella |
1997-1999 | Zdenek Zeman |
1999-2004 | Fabio Capello |
2004 | Cesare Prandelli |
2004 | Rudi Völler |
2004-2005 | Luigi Delneri |
2005-2005 | Bruno Conti |
2005-2009 | Luciano Spalletti |
2009-2011 | Claudio Ranieri |
2011 | Vincenzo Montella |
2011–2012 | Luis Enrique |
2012-2013 | Zdenek Zeman |
2013 | Aurelio Andreazzoli |
2013-2016 | Rudi Garcia |
2016-2017 | Luciano Spalletti |
2017-2019 | Eusebio Di Francesco |
2019 | Claudio Ranieri |
2019– | Paulo Fonseca |
Presidential history
President | |
---|---|
Term of office | Surname |
1927-1928 | Italo Foschi |
1927-1935 | Renato Sacerdoti |
1935-1936 | Vittorio Scialoja |
1936-1941 | Igino Betti |
1941-1944 | Edgardo Bazzini |
1944-1949 | Pietro Baldassarre |
1949-1950 | Pier Carlo Restagno |
1950-1951 | Romolo Vaselli |
1951-1958 | Renato Sacerdoti |
1958–1962 | Anacleto Gianni |
1962-1965 | Francesco Marini-Dettina |
1965-1968 | Franco Evangelisti |
President | |
---|---|
Term of office | Surname |
1968-1969 | Francesco Ranucci |
1969-1971 | Alvaro Marchini |
1971-1979 | Gaetano Anzalone |
1979-1991 | Dino viola |
1991 | Flora Viola |
1991-1993 | Giuseppe Ciarrapico |
1993 | Ciro Di Martino |
1993-2008 | Franco Sensi |
2008-2011 | Rosella Sensi |
2011–2012 | Thomas DiBenedetto |
2012– | James Pallotta |
Club statistics
- Biggest home win: 9-0 against Cremonese (1929)
- The biggest away wins: 6-1 in Alessandrina (1935) and 5-0 in Cremonese (1985)
- Biggest home draws: 4-4 against Catania (1964) and Napoli (2007)
- The biggest draws away from home: 4: 4 at AC Milan (1935) and in Verona against Chievo (2006)
- The biggest home defeat: 7-1 against Torino (1947) and Bayern Munich (2014)
- Biggest away defeat: 7-1 to Juventus (1932), Manchester United (2007) and Fiorentina (2019)
- Most wins in a row: 11 (2005/06 season)
- Undefeated for the longest time: 24 games (2001/02 season)
- Most wins in one season: 26 (2013/14 season)
- Fewest wins in one season: 6 (1975/76)
- Most points in a season: 85 (2013/14 season)
- Record player in Serie A: Francesco Totti (560 games / as of July 16, 2014) ahead of Giacomo Losi (386)
- Record players / all competitive games: Francesco Totti (631 games / March 2013) ahead of Giacomo Losi (451)
- Record scorer in Serie A: Francesco Totti (235 goals / as of July 16, 2014) ahead of Roberto Pruzzo (106)
- Set a new start record in one season with ten wins in the first ten games (2013/14 season)
Season positions
- 1928 - 8th place in group B of the Italian championship winner Coppa Coni (forerunner of Coppa Italia )
- 1929 - 3rd place in the group of finalists of the Italian championship. Then the new Serie A
- 1930 - 6th of the series A
- 1931 - 2nd of the series A
- 1932 - 3rd of the series A
- 1933 - 5th of the series A
- 1934 - 5th of the series A
- 1935 - 4th of Series A
- 1936 - 2nd of Series A
- 1937 - 10th of the series A
- 1938 - 6th of the series A
- 1939 - 5th of the series A
- 1940 - 7th of the series A
- 1941 - 10th of the series A
- 1942 - master
- 1943 - 9th of the series A
- 1944 - 2nd place in the Romano championship (local competition because of the Second World War )
- 1945 - 1st place in the Lazio championship (local competition because of the Second World War)
- 1946 - 3rd place in the Central South Championship - 6th place in the group of finalists (local competition because of the Second World War)
- 1947 - 15th of Serie A
- 1948 - 17th of the Serie A
- 1949 - 14th of the Serie A
- 1950 - 17th of the Serie A
- 1951 - 19th in Serie A - relegation to Serie B
- 1952 - 1st in Serie B - promotion to Serie A
- 1953 - 6th in Serie A
- 1954 - 6th in Serie A
- 1955 - 3rd in Series A
- 1956 - 6th in Serie A
- 1957 - 14th of Serie A
- 1958 - 5th in Series A
- 1959 - 6th in Serie A
- 1960 - 9th of Serie A
- 1961 - 5th in Serie A - UEFA Cup winner
- 1962 - 5th in series A
- 1963 - 5th in series A
- 1964 - 12th of the Serie A - winner Coppa Italia
- 1965 - 9th of the series A
- 1966 - 8th of the Serie A
- 1967 - 10th of Serie A
- 1968 - 10th of Serie A
- 1969 - 8th in Serie A - winner Coppa Italia
- 1970 - 11th of Serie A
- 1971 - 6th in Serie A
- 1972 - 7th in Serie A - Torneo Anglo-Italiano winner
- 1973 - 11th of Serie A
- 1974 - 8th of the Serie A
- 1975 - 3rd in Series A
- 1976 - 10th of Serie A
- 1977 - 8th of Serie A
- 1978 - 8th of Serie A
- 1979 - 12th of Serie A
- 1980 - 7th in Serie A - Coppa Italia winner
- 1981 - 2nd in Serie A - winner Coppa Italia
- 1982 - 3rd in Series A
- 1983 - master
- 1984 - 2nd in Serie A - Coppa Italia winner
- 1985 - 7th of Serie A
- 1986 - 2nd in Serie A - Coppa Italia winner
- 1987 - 7th of Serie A
- 1988 - 3rd in Serie A
- 1989 - 8th of Serie A
- 1990 - 6th in Serie A
- 1991 - 9th in Serie A - winner Coppa Italia
- 1992 - 5th in Series A
- 1993 - 10th of Serie A
- 1994 - 7th in Serie A
- 1995 - 5th in series A
- 1996 - 5th in Serie A
- 1997 - 12th of Serie A
- 1998 - 4th in Serie A
- 1999 - 5th in Serie A
- 2000 - 6th of the series A
- 2001 - master
- 2002 - 2nd in Serie A - Supercoppa Italiana winner
- 2003 - 8th of Serie A
- 2004 - 2nd in Serie A
- 2005 - 8th in Serie A
- 2006 - 2nd in Serie A - (originally 5th; however, due to the soccer scandal in Italy 2005/06)
- 2007 - 2nd in Serie A - winner Coppa Italia
- 2008 - 2nd in Serie A - winner Supercoppa Italiana , winner Coppa Italia
- 2009 - 6th in Serie A
- 2010 - 2nd in Serie A
- 2011 - 6th in Serie A
- 2012 - 7th in Serie A
- 2013 - 6th in Serie A
- 2014 - 2nd in Serie A
- 2015 - 2nd in Serie A
- 2016 - 3rd in Serie A
- 2017 - 2nd in Serie A
- 2018 - 3rd in Serie A
- 2019 - 6th in Serie A
Web links
- AS Roma official website (Italian, English, Arabic, Indonesian)
- AS Roma on legaseriea.it
- AS Roma on UEFA.com
- AS Roma on FIFA.com
- Romazone - German-speaking fansite
Individual evidence
- ↑ asroma.com - History
- ^ UEFA.com - UEFA Champions League , UEFA.com, May 9, 2008.
- ^ Italian soccer: top players - Campionato: i cannonieri , Dossier.net, May 9, 2008.
- ↑ http://calcio.leonardo.it/albo-serie-a.php (link not available), Calcio.com, May 18, 2008.
- ^ Italy: Rosella Sensi new president of AS Roma , Homepage Focus, 29 August 2008.
- ↑ Sensi resigns as president , sport1.de from June 28, 2011 (accessed June 28, 2011)
- ↑ DiBenedetto new Roma boss , sport1.de from July 14, 2011 (accessed on July 14, 2011)
- ↑ AS ROMA APPOINTS NEW BOARD OF DIRECTORS Press release from AS Roma (accessed on October 28, 2014)
- ↑ Roma sensationally throws Barcelona out of the Champions League. In: kurier.at. Retrieved April 11, 2018 .
- ↑ For almost 600 million: AS Roma is taken over by US billionaire Friedkin , transfermarkt.de, accessed on August 17, 2020
- ↑ The Friedkin Group are the new owners of AS Roma , asroma.com, accessed August 17, 2020 (Italian)
- ↑ worldstadiumdatabase.com - List of UEFA Category 4 Stadiums
- ↑ lineone.net - Italian Ultra Scene ( Memento from May 8, 2009 in the Internet Archive )
- ↑ bloomberg.com - Company Overview of Neep Roma Holding SPA
- ↑ deloitte.com - Deloitte Football Money League
- ↑ reuters.com - AS Roma sign 10-year kit supply deal with Nike
- ↑ asroma.com - Roma announce Qatar Airways as Main Global Partner
- ^ All Players and Staff. In: asroma.com. Associazione Sportiva Roma, accessed August 30, 2018 (Italian).
- ↑ AS Roma squad. In: transfermarkt.de . Transfermarkt GmbH & Co. KG, accessed on September 11, 2019 .
- ↑ a b transfermarkt.de - AS Rome
- ↑ storia_tutticampionati ( memento of April 30, 2008 in the Internet Archive ), AS Roma Ultras homepage, May 22, 2008.
- ↑ Gazzetta.it , Gazzetta dello Sport homepage, May 23, 2008.
- ^ AS Roma 2007/2008 - football data ( Memento from April 18, 2008 in the Internet Archive ), Fussballdaten.de, May 9, 2008.