Domenico Di Carlo

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Domenico Di Carlo
Domenico Di Carlo.jpeg
Di Carlo as coach of Sampdoria Genoa
Personnel
birthday March 23, 1964
place of birth CassinoItaly
size 179 cm
position midfield
Juniors
Years station
SS Cassino
Men's
Years station Games (goals) 1
1979-1981 SS Cassino 37 (1)
1981-1982 FBC Treviso 26 (1)
1982-1984 AC Como 0 (0)
1984-1986 FBC Treviso 55 (3)
1986-1987 Ternana Calcio 30 (3)
1987-1990 US Palermo 97 (6)
1990-1999 Vicenza Calcio 268 (9)
1999-2000 US Lecce 4 (0)
2000-2001 AS Livorno 27 (0)
2001 FC South Tyrol 0 (0)
Stations as a trainer
Years station
2003-2007 AC Mantova
2007-2008 Parma FC
2008-2010 Chievo Verona
2010-2011 Sampdoria Genoa
2011–2012 Chievo Verona
2014 AS Livorno
2014-2015 AC Cesena
2015-2017 Specia Calcio
2018 Novara Calcio
2018-2019 Chievo Verona
2019– LR Vicenza Virtus
1 Only league games are given.

Domenico Di Carlo , called Mimmo (born March 23, 1964 in Cassino , Italy ) is a former Italian football player and today's coach. He played for Vicenza Calcio , US Palermo and US Lecce , among others, and coached AC Mantova , FC Parma , Sampdoria Genua and Chievo Verona three times .

Player career

As a player, Domenico Di Carlo was active for various clubs. He played for the longest time in the Vicenza Calcio jersey , which he wore for nine years from 1990 to 1999. In Vicenza he was also most successful, he won with the Biancorossi in the 1996/97 season under coach Francesco Guidolin , the later coach of Udinese Calcio , the Coppa Italia in the final against SSC Napoli . After the first leg at the Stadio San Paolo in Naples was lost 1-0, Vicenza was able to achieve a 3-0 win after extra time at the Stadio Romeo Menti , which resulted in the cup victory. By winning the Coppa Italia, Domenico Di Carlo played with Vicenza Calcio the following season in the European Cup Winners' Cup , where they reached the semi-finals after victories over Legia Warsaw from Poland , Shakhtar Donetsk from Ukraine and Roda JC Kerkrade from the Netherlands , but there on FC Chelsea from England failed, which a little later won the European Cup Winners' Cup 1997/98 against the German representative VfB Stuttgart .

Domenico Di Carlo was also quite successful in the league with Vicenza Calcio. He made the leap from the third- tier Serie C1 to Serie A with the club and was relegated three times in the first division before relegating again in the 1998/99 season . By this time, Di Carlo had made 268 league games for Vicenza Calcio and scored nine goals in the first, second and third Italian football league. After relegation in 1999 he left Vicenza and went to US Lecce , where he was only used sporadically and soon moved to Livorno to the third division club AS Livorno , where he played for a year and then ended his career at FC Südtirol .

Coaching career

After the end of his career as an active football player, Domenico Di Carlo was initially the youth coach of his old club Vicenza Calcio. He coached the Primavera team at Vicenza Calcio from 2001 to 2003. In the last year he signed a contract with fourth division club AC Mantova , which he immediately led in his first season as the responsible coach in the C1 series. This was achieved by a first place in the series C2 2003/04 Girona A one point ahead of the US Cremonese . Together with Cremonese, Mantova made the direct march from fourth to second division in the following third division season. After you finished second behind Cremona , you completed the playoff games for promotion with success, won against Frosinone Calcio and AC Pavia and finally rose back to Serie B after 32 years . Even in the third year under coach Domenico Di Carlo, AC Mantova continued its successful streak and finished fourth in Serie B 2005/06 after all match days , only in the promotion playoffs they failed in the final at FC Turin only due to the fact that the tournaments in the final table were one place better than Mantua and thus in a draw - it was 5: 5 after the return leg - came on, and thus just missed the promotion. AC Mantova could not play at the top in Serie B 2006/07 , which is probably the best-occupied second division season of all time (with Juventus Turin , SSC Napoli, CFC Genoa , FC Bologna and Hellas Verona , five former Italian champions played second class) , you finished eighth.

After the end of the 2006/07 season Domenico Di Carlo left AC Mantova and became the new coach at FC Parma . With the three-time European Cup winner, things went less well for Di Carlo and they played against relegation. When the results of the Parma team deteriorated in the spring of 2008, the club management dismissed coach Domenico Di Carlo on March 9, 2008 after a 2-1 defeat by Sampdoria Genoa . But even Di Carlo's successor in Parma, the Argentine Héctor Cúper , could not prevent the club's first relegation from Serie A. After half a year without employment, Domenico Di Carlo became the new coach of Chievo Verona on November 4, 2008, succeeding the dismissed Giuseppe Iachini , which he saved from relegation when he started the season and at the end of the 2008/09 Serie A ranked sixteenth in the table occupied. Chievo ranked two places higher at the end of the following season, with the fifth best defense in Serie A, but also the second worst attack with only 37 goals this season in 38 games. However, the relegation was safely managed with nine points ahead of the first relegated Atalanta Bergamo .

In the summer of 2010 Chievo Verona and Domenico Di Carlo parted ways. He signed a contract with Sampdoria Genoa. With last year's fourth he started qualifying for the 2010/11 UEFA Champions League , but was defeated by the German representative Werder Bremen . Nevertheless, they were allowed to start in the Europa League , where they were eliminated in the group stage as third behind PSV Eindhoven from the Netherlands and Metalist Charkiw from Ukraine and ahead of the Hungarian representative VSC Debrecen . Sampdoria also had a bad season under Di Carlo in the league. After the first half of the season was still passably completed, the club's management gave the two top strikers Antonio Cassano and Giampaolo Pazzini to AC Milan and Inter Milan , respectively , which led to deteriorating performance and slipping into the relegation regions. On March 7, 2011, Sampdoria parted ways with Domenico Di Carlo after a 3-2 defeat against relegation candidate AC Cesena and nominated Alberto Cavasin as the new coach. But even this could not prevent the descent of Sampdoria.

For the 2011/12 season , Domenico Di Carlo was introduced as the coach of Chievo Verona for the second time and he inherited Stefano Pioli , who moved to US Palermo . In his first season back in Verona, Di Carlo Chievo led to tenth place in the final score and thus to secure relegation. At the beginning of the 2012/13 season, however, things went less well for the northern Italians. After an initial 2-0 win against FC Bologna , five defeats followed. Two days after a 1: 4 defeat at US Palermo, which is also in the table cellar, Domenico Di Carlo was sacked at Chievo Verona. His successor was Eugenio Corini , once a player at Chievo, when the club was enjoying its most successful years under coach Delneri.

During the winter break of the 2013/14 season, he became the new coach of AS Livorno . After his release, he worked at AC Cesena , Spezia Calcio and Novara Calcio . On November 13, 2018, Di Carlo returned for the third time to the coaching bench at Chievo Verona, where he replaced Gian Piero Ventura , who had resigned due to unsuccessfulness .

successes

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. focus.de Parma signs coach Di Carlo
  2. fifa.com Cúper successor to Di Carlo at FC Parma
  3. fussball.com Chievo Verona signs coach Di Carlo ( Memento of the original from December 4, 2015 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.fussball.com
  4. kicker.de Di Carlo takes over Sampdoria
  5. kicker.de Match analysis Sampdoria against Bremen
  6. goal.com Sampdoria fires coach Di Carlo
  7. uefa.com Di Carlo returns to Chievo
  8. fifa.com Di Carlo expelled, Corini new coach
  9. Transfermarkt.de Di Carlo new Livorno coach