Marino Perani

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Marino Perani
Personnel
birthday October 27, 1939
place of birth Ponte NossaItaly
date of death 18th October 2017
Place of death BolognaItaly
size 178 cm
position striker
Juniors
Years station
before 1956 Atalanta Bergamo
Men's
Years station Games (goals) 1
1956-1958 Atalanta Bergamo 31 0(6)
1958-1959 Bologna FC 25 0(3)
1959-1960 AC Padova 28 0(8)
1960-1974 Bologna FC 296 (61)
1975 Toronto Blizzard 8 0(1)
National team
Years selection Games (goals)
1966 Italy 4 0(1)
Stations as a trainer
Years station
1978-1980 Bologna FC
1980-1981 Udinese Calcio
1981-1982 Brescia Calcio
1982-1983 US Salernitana
1983-1985 AC Parma
1985-1986 Calcio Padova
1986-1987 Sanremese Calcio
1987-1988 AC Reggiana
1989-1990 Ravenna Calcio
1997-1998 Iperzola Calcio
1 Only league games are given.

Marino Perani (born October 27, 1939 in Ponte Nossa , † October 18, 2017 in Bologna ) was an Italian football player and coach . Senior career especially when Bologna FC successful, he took the national team of his home country and at the 1966 FIFA World Cup in part. Later he trained alongside FC Bologna, among others, Udinese Calcio and AC Parma .

Player career

Club career

Marina Perani, born in 1939 in the Lombard town of Ponte Nossa , began his football career in the youth team of Atalanta Bergamo . At the age of 17 at this club in 1956, he also made the leap to the first professional team. Perani played in Bergamo for two years and played 31 league games in that time, in which the young attacker scored six goals. After relegation from Serie A had to be accepted in the 1957/58 season , Perani changed clubs and joined the FC Bologna for the new season , where he was under contract for a year. After 25 league games with three goals, he moved on at the end of the season and played for AC Padova , for which he completed 28 games in the league with eight goals in one year.

For the 1960/61 season Marino Perani returned to Bologna FC. He then stayed with the Emilia-Romagna club for fifteen years until 1974 . He was part of the FC Bologna team around players like the German Helmut Haller , the Danish striker Harald Nielsen or the great captain Giacomo Bulgarelli , who were able to bring the Italian football championship to Bologna in 1964 . In the Serie A 1963/64 they finished first place at the end of the season, tied with the then dominant Inter Milan . So a decisive game for the championship title was necessary, which FC Bologna won 2-0 on June 7, 1964 at the Stadio Olimpico in Rome with goals from Romano Fogli and Harald Nielsen. This was the first championship title of FC Bologna after the end of the Second World War and to this day also the last great triumph of the club, which has long since ceased to play for the championship. Marino Perani made 28 league games in the championship season, mainly in midfield of Bologna, where he contributed six goals to win the title. Six years later, Perani celebrated his second title with FC Bologna. In the Coppa Italia 1969/70 the final round was the first to end with one point ahead of AC Turin , which meant the first ever cup win for the traditional club. 1973/74 Bologna was again in the final of the Coppa Italia and this time prevailed against the SSC Palermo . However, the now 35-year-old Marino Perani was no longer part of the FC Bologna squad in the final. A little later, Perani left his employer after fifteen years. During this time he had made 296 appearances in the league for FC Bologna, in which he hit the opposing goal 61 times.

After leaving Bologna, Marino Perani spent another year in the North American Soccer League at Toronto Blizzard , where he played eight games and announced the end of his football career in 1975 at the age of 36.

National team

In 1966, Marino Perani made four appearances in the Italian national football team . He succeeded in scoring. He was appointed to the Italian squad for the 1966 World Cup in England by national coach Edmondo Fabbri . At the tournament he was used in two of the three Italian preliminary round matches. He was involved in both the 2-0 win over Chile and the sensational 0-1 defeat against North Korea , but the 0-1 win against the Soviet Union was missed. In general, the 1966 World Cup was disappointing for the Italian team, and after the preliminary round came third behind the Soviet Union and North Korea.

Coaching career

After the end of his career as a football player, Marino Perani became a coach. From 1978 to 1980 he coached his old club, FC Bologna . After relegation to Serie B could only be prevented due to the better goal difference against Lanerossi Vicenza in the first year, a very good seventh place in the table jumped out in the 1979/80 season . In the 1980/81 season he trained Udinese Calcio and led the club in twelfth place, relegation was only possible due to the better goal difference compared to Brescia Calcio . The following year Perani took over exactly this club, but could not bring in any decent results. He took over from Alfredo Magni after fourteen game days and relegated to the third division with Brescia at the end of the season.

After a one-year engagement with the US Salernitana , Marino Perani became coach of AC Parma in 1983 , with whom he won Serie C1 and was promoted to Serie B in his first season . A year later, however, the relegation followed, which ended the work of Marino Perani in the first and second Italian league. He coached Calcio Padova, AC Reggiana or Ravenna Calcio , for example, but he was denied any notable successes.

successes

As a player

1963/64 with FC Bologna
1969/70 and 1973/74 with FC Bologna
1961 with FC Bologna
1970 with FC Bologna

As a trainer

1983/84 with AC Parma

Web links