Francesco Moriero

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Francesco Moriero
Personnel
Surname Francesco Tranquillo Moriero
birthday March 31, 1969
place of birth LecceItaly
size 173 cm
position Right midfield
Men's
Years station Games (goals) 1
1986-1992 US Lecce 158 (11)
1992-1994 Cagliari Calcio 54 0(4)
1994-1997 AS Roma 75 0(8)
1997 AC Milan 0 0(0)
1997-2000 Inter Milan 56 0(6)
2000-2002 SSC Naples 24 0(1)
National team
Years selection Games (goals)
1990 Italy U-21 1 0(0)
1998-2000 Italy 8 0(2)
Stations as a trainer
Years station
2006-2007 Africa Sports National
2007-2008 SS Virtus Lanciano
2008-2009 FC Crotone
2009-2010 Frosinone Calcio
2010-2011 US Grosseto
2011–2012 FC Lugano
2012 US Grosseto
2013 US Grosseto
2013 US Lecce
2014 US Catanzaro
1 Only league games are given.

Francesco Tranquillo Moriero (born March 31, 1969 in Lecce , Italy ) is a former Italian football player and current coach .

During his playing days, Moriero was considered a fast, technically strong right winger .

Player career

In the club

Francesco Moriero began his football career at the club in his hometown, the US Lecce , for which he made his Serie B debut in 1986/87 . In the following season, at the age of less than 20, he was already a regular in the Apulian team coached by Carlo Mazzone , which made it to Serie A by finishing second behind FC Bologna . In the 1988/89 season , Moriero made his debut for the Giallorossi in Italy's top division, in which you could hold until 1991 .

In the summer of 1992, Francesco Moriero moved to the Sardinian club Cagliari Calcio , where he was under contract for two seasons and made his European debut. From 1994 to 1997 the midfielder played for the capital club AS Roma .

In May 1997, Francesco Moriero signed a contract with AC Milan . In July of the same year, however, he went to local rivals Inter without ever having played a game for Milan . His transfer took place in exchange with André Cruz , who had a preliminary contract with the Nerazzurri and had never played for them, for a symbolic price of one million lire . In his first season, Moriero made 28 Serie A appearances, scoring three goals, and won the UEFA Cup with the Luigi Simoni- coached team after beating Lazio 3-0 in the final . In the following two seasons, the midfielder only played a total of 28 Serie A games for the Nerazzurri .

In 2000, Francesco Moriero moved to SSC Napoli , for which he completed 24 games in Serie A and Serie B before he ended his active career at the end of the 2001/02 season.

In the national team

Francesco Moriero made his debut on January 28, 1998 in the 3-0 victory against Slovakia under Cesare Maldini in the Italian national team . In the same year he was in Maldini's squad for the World Cup in France , where he played four games and advanced to the quarter-finals with the Azzurri , where the hosts and eventual world champions France were beaten 3: 4 on penalties .

The midfielder completed the last of his eight international matches for Italy on October 9, 1999, when the 0-0 defeat in Belarus . His only two goals for the Squadra Azzurra scored Moriero on April 22, 1998 in a 3-1 win over Paraguay .

Coaching career

Francesco Moriero's first position as head coach was the Ivorian club Africa Sports National , which he was in charge of from 2006 to 2007. On his return to Italy trained 2007/08 SS Virtus Lanciano and 2008/09 FC Crotone , with his promotion to the Serie B succeeded.

On June 24, 2009, Moriero was introduced as the coach of Frosinone Calcio . After the club occupied the bottom of the table until the end of the season, Moriero was removed from his office on April 25, 2010 and replaced by Guido Carboni . With two points ahead of the play-out ranks, Frosinone finally managed to maintain the league under his successor. After Luigi Apolloni's dismissal , Moriero was introduced as a new coach at US Grosseto in September 2010 . He was released on January 13, 2011 in Grosseto.

From September 27, 2011, Francesco Morriero coached the Swiss Challenge League club FC Lugano . In June 2012, his return to the Italian second division US Grosseto was announced, with whom he signed a one-year contract. In early October 2012, however, he was dismissed from the Tuscans and replaced by Mario Somma as head coach. Both Somma and his successors Lamberto Magrini and Leonardo Menichini failed to lead the Tuscan team out of the Serie B cellar on the sidelines, so Moriero was again appointed head coach of US Grosseto in February 2013. For the 2013/14 season he returned as a coach to his hometown club US Lecce, but was dismissed on September 24, 2013 after four games without a win at the start of the season.

successes

References

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Giancarlo Padovan, Alberto Costa, Fabio Monti: L'Italia scopre un Moriero mondiale. archiviostorico.corriere.it, April 23, 1998, accessed December 16, 2009 (Italian).
  2. Fabio Monti: Moriero, l'eroe per caso nel paradiso Inter. archiviostorico.corriere.it, October 2, 1997, accessed December 16, 2009 (Italian).
  3. Frosinone Calcio: ESONERATO Francesco Moriero
  4. US Grosseto: Esonerato Luigi Apolloni