Alberto Di Chiara

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Alberto Di Chiara
Personnel
birthday March 29, 1964
place of birth RomeItaly
size 178 cm
position defense
Juniors
Years station
AS Roma
Men's
Years station Games (goals) 1
1980-1982 AS Roma 4 0(0)
1982-1983 AC Reggiana 22 0(1)
1983-1986 US Lecce 91 (13)
1986-1991 AC Florence 142 (10)
1991-1996 AC Parma 142 0(5)
1996-1997 AC Perugia 24 0(0)
National team
Years selection Games (goals)
1992-1993 Italy 7 0(0)
1 Only league games are given.

Alberto Di Chiara (born March 29, 1964 in Rome ) is a former Italian football player . Also active, for example, for US Lecce and AC Florence , he celebrated his greatest successes with AC Parma . He also played in seven international matches for the Italian national soccer team .

Career

Alberto Di Chiara, born in 1964 in the Italian capital Rome , began playing football at AS Roma , in contrast to his older brother Stefano , who began his career at Roma rival Lazio . In the AS Roma jersey, Di Chiara also sniffed professional football from 1980, and between 1980 and 1982 he made four Serie A league games for the Swedish coach Nils Liedholm . In the summer of 1982 Di Chiara went for a year to the then second division club AC Reggiana , where the defender made 22 league games with a goal, but could not avoid relegation to the third division. He then joined the up-and-coming southern Italian club US Lecce and stayed there for three years. With Lecce , he experienced his first jump into Serie A, when under coach Eugenio Fascetti in Serie B in 1984/85, second place, only behind SC Pisa, and thus promotion to the Italian elite league was achieved. However, the newcomer could not hold himself there and was relegated to bottom of the table after only one year. Alberto Di Chiara made 91 league games for US Lecce in three years, scoring thirteen goals before leaving the club for Florence .

When Fiorentina Alberto Di Chiara was from 1986 to 1991 under contract and made at this time 142 league games with ten goals for Fiorentina . Alberto Di Chiara was able to achieve the greatest success with the Tuscans in the 1989/90 season when they reached the final of the UEFA Cup . After Atlético Madrid from Spain , FC Sochaux from France , Dynamo Kiev from the Soviet Union , AJ Auxerre also from France and the German representative Werder Bremen had been eliminated one after the other , the team of coach Francesco Graziani failed in the final at Juventus Turin .

Alberto Di Chiara remained under contract with Fiorentina until 1991 before joining AC Parma , something of a newcomer to Italian football at the time. It was not until 1990 that the club was promoted to Serie A when the financially well-positioned club became a surprise team and finished sixth in Serie A in 1991/92 , Di Chiara's first season in Parma . A year later they not only finished seventh, but also secured victory in the Coppa Italia , the Italian football cup , with a 2-1 win on a two-way leg against Juventus Turin . As a result, eligible to compete in the 1992/93 European Cup Winners' Cup , the team of Nevio Scala worked their way up to the final with successes over Újpest Budapest from Hungary , Boavista Porto from Portugal , Sparta Prague from Czechoslovakia and the Spanish representative Atlético Madrid to the final, where one also won 3-1 against Royal Antwerp from Belgium and won the first international title in a decade that was enormously successful for AC Parma. Alberto Di Chiara was in Parma's squad, which won the London final . Two years later, Alberto Di Chiara was instrumental in AC Parma's second international success, namely winning the 1994/95 UEFA Cup . They prevailed in a purely Italian final against Juventus Turin with 2-1 on a two-way leg, which was the last major success in Alberto Di Chiara's playing career. A year later he turned his back on Parma and went to AC Perugia , where he ended his career in Serie A in 1996/97, relegated at the end of the season and made another 24 league games.

successes

1994/95 with AC Parma
1992/93 with AC Parma
1993 with AC Parma
1980/81 with AS Roma
1991/92 with AC Parma

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