Edmondo Fabbri

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Edmondo Fabbri
Personnel
birthday November 16, 1921
place of birth Castel BologneseItaly
date of death July 8, 1995
Place of death Castel San Pietro TermeItaly
position midfield
Men's
Years station Games (goals) 1
1938-1939 Imolese 12 0(8)
1939-1940 Forlì Football Club 28 0(8)
1940-1942 Atalanta Bergamo 51 (12)
1942-1943 Ambrosiana-Inter 17 0(6)
1944 Faenza Calcio 9 0(3)
1945-1946 Ambrosiana-Inter 30 0(6)
1946-1947 Sampdoria Genoa 30 0(3)
1947-1950 Atalanta Bergamo 77 (19)
1950-1951 Brescia Calcio 26 0(4)
1951-1955 AC Parma 93 (36)
1955-1957 AC Mantua 3 0(0)
Stations as a trainer
Years station
1957-1962 AC Mantua
1962-1966 Italy
1967-1969 Torino FC
1969-1972 Bologna FC
1972-1973 Cagliari Calcio
1974-1975 Torino FC
1976 Ternana Calcio
1981 AC Pistoiese
1 Only league games are given.

Edmondo Fabbri (born November 16, 1921 in Castel Bolognese ( RA ), † July 8, 1995 in Castel San Pietro Terme ( BO )) was an Italian football player and coach . From 1962 to 1966 he coached the Italian national team.

Career as a player

He began his football career in 1938 with the lower class club Imolese in Imola and a year later moved to Forlì FC in the third-class Serie C , with which he reached fourth place. From 1940 to 1942 he played for two seasons with Atalanta Bergamo in Serie A (6th and 13th place, 51 games, 12 goals) and then played for Ambrosiana Inter in the 1942/43 season . With Inter, he finished fourth in the last pre-war championship and scored six goals in 17 games. During the war break he played with Faenza Calcio in regional competitions, after which he returned to Milan. In the then two-part Divisione Nazionale Campionato Alta Italia Serie A 1945/46 he scored six goals in 30 games for Ambrosiana-Inter, the team was fourth in the overall table. For the first single-track post-war series A championship in 1946/47 , he moved to the newly merged team from Sampdoria Genoa , with whom he reached 10th place and scored three times in 30 games. For the following three seasons he returned to Atalanta Bergamo, who placed fifth, 16th and eighth. On his second engagement in Bergamo he scored a total of 18 goals in 77 games. He spent the 1950/51 season in Serie B at Brescia Calcio (9th place, 26 games, 4 goals). He played the following four seasons for AC Parma , the first three of them in Serie C. After winning the championship in Serie C in 1953/54, he spent another year with Parma in Serie B (9th place, 8th place) Games, no goal). He let his active playing career end from 1955 to 1957 with the fourth class AC Mantua in the IV series .

Career as a coach

Also at AC Mantua, he began his career as a football coach in 1957 and immediately led the team as first in the table in Serie C. In his second coaching season 1958/59 he managed to march straight through, again as first in the table, into Serie B. After a fifth place succeeded in 1961 promotion as second in the table in Serie A. There the team reached ninth place in 1961/62 in the last season under Fabbri. In 1962 he was awarded the Trainer Award Seminatore d'oro of the Federazione Italiana Giuoco Calcio .

After failing in the preliminary round of the 1962 World Cup in Chile , he took over the Italian national soccer team from Paolo Mazza . His debut as national coach took place on November 11, 1962 in Vienna in a friendly against Austria , which Italy won 2-1. In qualifying for the European Football Championship in 1964 , the team failed in the round of 16 with 0: 2 and 1: 1 at the national football team of the USSR . In qualifying for the 1966 World Cup in England , the Italian team prevailed as group first, but failed in the preliminary round with a 0-1 in the last group game against North Korea . After the World Cup he was replaced by Ferruccio Valcareggi . In 29 games as the person in charge of the Italian national team, he achieved 18 wins, six draws and five defeats.

From 1967 to 1969 he coached the team from FC Turin , with whom he finished fifth and sixth in Serie A and won the Coppa Italia in 1968 . In the subsequent European Cup Winners' Cup in 1968/69 Turin lost the quarter-finals against eventual winners ŠK Slovan Bratislava . In 1969 he moved to league rivals FC Bologna and also won the Coppa Italia in his first season in Bologna. In the 1970/71 European Cup Winners' Cup , Bologna failed in the first round at FC Viktoria in Frankfurt after two draws under the away goals rule . The team placed in Serie A in tenth, fifth and eleventh place in the table. For the 1972/73 season he took over Cagliari Calcio and led them to eighth place, in the UEFA Cup they failed in the first round to Olympiacos . He then returned to Turin for a year and reached sixth place in Serie A, in the 1974/75 UEFA Cup they lost Fortuna Düsseldorf in the first round. In 1976 he coached Ternana Calcio from Terni in Serie B. His last coaching station was in 1981/82 at AC Pistoiese , which he was in charge of in his only Serie A season to date.

successes

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Puntosport.net ( memento of March 26, 2011 in the Internet Archive ), accessed on August 6, 2010
  2. Almannacco illustrato del Calcio 2010, Modena 2009, ISSN  1129-3381 , p. 586