SSC Naples
SSC Naples | ||||
Basic data | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Surname | Società Sportiva Calcio Napoli SpA | |||
Seat | Naples , Italy | |||
founding | August 1, 1926 | |||
Colours | Light Blue | |||
owner | Filmauro Srl | |||
president | Aurelio De Laurentiis | |||
Website | sscnapoli.it | |||
First soccer team | ||||
Head coach | Gennaro Gattuso | |||
Venue | San Paolo Stadium | |||
Places | 54,726 | |||
league | Series A | |||
2019/20 | 7th place | |||
|
The Società Sportiva Calcio Napoli , SSC Napoli or Napoli for short , known in German-speaking countries as SSC Napoli , is an Italian football club from the Campanian capital, Naples .
The SSC Napoli is a six-time Italian cup winner , two-time Italian champion , two-time Italian Supercup winner , as well as a one-time UEFA Cup or UEFA Europe League winner and is traditionally one of the figureheads of southern Italy in football, as clubs from the north have been in Serie A for years the country can stand up to. The club's home ground is the Stadio San Paolo .
In Italy, the SSC Napoli team is often referred to as Azzurri ("the blues") or Partenopei (based on the ancient Greek colonial settlement of Parthenope , which is considered the nucleus of the later Neapolis and today's Naples).
history
founding
The club was founded in 1904 by English dock workers as Naples , the club colors were then set to light blue and white. Light blue (azzurro) should represent the color of the sea and the sky. In 1922 the association merged with Internazionale Agnano and renamed itself Internapoli . The re-establishment as SSC Napoli ( Società Sportiva Calcio Napoli ) took place in 1926. However, until the arrival of Diego Maradona decades later, the sporting successes were sparse and the greatest successes were victories in the Coppa Italia in 1962 and 1976.
The golden years
In 1984, Diego Maradona moved from FC Barcelona to Naples for around 13.5 billion Italian lire (around 7.5 million US dollars) , the most expensive transfer in football history at the time. This also marked the beginning of the sporting turnaround. In the years before Maradona, Napoli was closer to Serie B than to the league title. The influence of Maradona on the success of the club was correspondingly high. In 1987 Naples won the Italian championship for the first time and even won the double with the success at the Coppa Italia. Two years later, SSC Napoli won the UEFA Cup and in 1990 the Scudetto (championship) was celebrated again. Since these successes, Maradona has been worshiped like a god in Naples; its popularity remains unbroken to this day. After his resignation, the jersey with the number 10 was no longer awarded. Even at the Ciro Ferrara's farewell match in June 2005, when Maradona was only there as a spectator, he was celebrated by the sold-out Stadio San Paolo .
During the "golden years" Maradona was supported by the Italian striker Bruno Giordano and the Brazilian international Careca . The three formed the so-called "Ma-Gi-Ca" line of attack (Maradona-Giordano-Careca) . The documentary Diego Maradona by Asif Kapadia describes, among other things, this time of the SSC.
The sporty decline
Diego Maradona's active era in Naples ended abruptly when he was sentenced to a 15-month doping ban in 1991. The club was already over-indebted at that time, which was initially not known to the public. The problem became all the more acute in 1994 when the club received the license only because of the proceeds from the sale of some important players. SSC Naples initially saved a financial injection from investors. Until 1997 there was a slight easing of the financial situation, 1998, however, the club went into the series B from.
At the beginning of the new millennium, Naples experienced further setbacks. After promotion to Serie A in 2000, the club rose again to Serie B in the 2000/01 season , the accumulated debt increased even further. In August 2004, the SSC Napoli was finally no longer granted a license due to a mountain of debt that has now reached 70 million euros and had to file for bankruptcy.
In 2004 the film producer Aurelio De Laurentiis , a nephew of Dino De Laurentiis, who also worked in the film industry, became president of the association.
The resurrection
The club was re-established on August 2, 2004 as Napoli Soccer and initially started in the C1 series . The main shareholder of Napoli Soccer became the film producer Aurelio De Laurentiis , who has since led the club as president and financier. When he took office, he set the goal of being among the top Italian teams again within two five-year cycles (Quinquennio). Despite the sporting and economic decline, the club was still very popular. The audience averages in the Stadio San Paolo with 37,080 visitors in the 2004/05 season were well above the Serie C average and in fifth place in Italy. In the 2004/05 season, Napoli Soccer narrowly missed promotion and failed in the play-off games. In the 2005/06 season he was promoted to Serie B and then in 2006/07 the march through to Serie A.
Current developments
In May 2006 the club bought back the naming rights of the old SSC Napoli.
On 10 June 2007, SSC Napoli rose on the last day of the season after a 0: 0 away against Genoa back into the Serie A on. In the following 2007/08 season they placed themselves in eighth place and then took part in the UEFA Intertoto Cup 2008 , through which they qualified for the 2008/09 UEFA Cup . There they just failed in the knockout round before the group stage to Benfica Lisbon . It was the first duel in the European Cup after almost 14 years for SSC Napoli.
In the following 2008/09 season , the club was only able to underline the ambitions in the first half of the season, which they finished fifth in the table. A slump in the second half of the season (only two points in eight games) led to the dismissal of coach Edoardo Reja in March 2009 , who had taken the team from the third division to new heights. The new coach Roberto Donadoni could not stop the decline. He achieved an average of one point per game and at the end of the season, the team finished twelfth.
This point average should not change in the 2009/10 season , so that after seven games in October 2009 there was another coach dismissal. The new coach Walter Mazzarri turned out to be a stroke of luck. In the remaining twelve games of the first half of the season, the team remained undefeated (seven wins, five draws) and climbed to fourth place. Among other things, they passed with flying colors against the Italian representatives in the Champions League (1-0 at AC Florence , 2-2 against AC Milan and 3-2 at Juventus Turin ). The club also reached the second round of the cup, which they lost 3-0 at Juventus. The second half of the 2009/10 season was initially bumpy with only nine points from ten games. However, the success soon returned. At the end of the season, sixth place was achieved, thus ensuring participation in the UEFA Europa League .
The 2010/11 season was dominated by the Uruguayan newcomer Edinson Cavani , who with 26 goals this season had a share in third place, which SSC Napoli secured with a 1-1 draw against Inter Milan on the penultimate matchday . This qualified for the group stage of the 2011/12 UEFA Champions League . Of the four Italian teams in the 2010/11 Europa League , the SSC Napoli was the only one to reach the knockout stage. There they failed, however, at FC Villarreal .
The 2011/12 season was also quite successful for SSC Napoli. In the Champions League , the team surprisingly prevailed as second in the group behind FC Bayern Munich (the eventual finalists) and ahead of Manchester City and FC Villarreal, and were only eliminated in the round of 16 after extra time against later Champions League winners Chelsea . However, the team in the league, u. a. Due to the double burden due to the Champions League participation, could not build on the success of the previous year and only ended the season in fifth place. But SSC Napoli won the Coppa Italia again after 25 years: In the final at the Olympic Stadium in Rome , the champions Juventus Turin, who had been unbeaten this season, was defeated 2-0 thanks to goals from Edinson Cavani and Marek Hamšík .
Thanks to the cup win last season, SSC Napoli were automatically qualified for the group stage of the 2012/13 UEFA Europa League . In a group with Dnipro Dnipropetrowsk , PSV Eindhoven and AIK Solna they reached second place and met Viktoria Plzeň in the second round . Against the Czech representative they were eliminated after a 0: 3 in the home stadium and a 0: 2 in Plzeň .
In the run-up to the Italian football scandal in 2013 , the offices of SSC Naples were searched in October 2012. The background to this was the suspicion of cartel formation, tax evasion and falsification of accounts, which were directed against several player advisors and agencies.
In the 2012/13 season , the SSC Napoli won the runner-up for the fifth time and was thus directly qualified for the Champions League . Nevertheless, there was no contract extension with the successful coach Walter Mazzarri , who moved to Inter Milan in May 2013 . For this, Rafael Benítez was hired as the new coach.
In the 2013/14 cup season , SSC Napoli repeated the success of 2012. This time, Fiorentina were the opponents in the final in Rome, which was kicked off late due to crowd riots. Nevertheless, overall they fell short of the meanwhile increased expectations. The elimination in the group stage of the Champions League was very unfortunate , because never before had an eleven progressed with 12 points. In the league , they had to put up with third place behind Juventus Turin and AS Roma , which meant that they missed direct qualification for the Champions League . Even through the play-offs in August 2014, it was not possible to qualify for the premier class again.
In the 2015/16 season , after the departure of coach Rafael Benítez, Maurizio Sarri was presented as successor on June 12. After initial difficulties, the team moved to the top of the table, but in the end had to admit defeat Juventus Turin and ended the season in second place.
The 2017/18 season was similar to the previous ones. They were at the top of the Serie A table for a long time . At the end of the season, Juventus Turin again overtook SSC Napoli, which ultimately came second, which meant that the club qualified directly for the Champions League in the coming season. From the Coppa Italia , SSC Napoli was eliminated in the quarterfinals against Atalanta Bergamo . In the group stage of the Champions League it was only enough for 3rd place. With this placement, SSC Napoli qualified for the round of 32 in the Europa League , in which they were eliminated by RB Leipzig .
For the season 2018/19 we undertook as a successor of the Chelsea exchanged Sarri to the previous season when Bayern Munich exempted Carlo Ancelotti as coach. With him, Naples again reached second place in Serie A, with a greater distance behind the undisputed defending champion Juventus. In the group stage of the Champions League , the SSC landed again in third place, with which they qualified again for the round of 32 in the Europa League . There the SSC Napoli made it into the quarter-finals, in which they were eliminated against Arsenal . Also in the Coppa Italia they failed in the quarterfinals against the later semi-finalists AC Milan .
The preliminary round of the 2019/20 season was inconsistent. At the start of the group stage of the Champions League , a 2-0 home win against defending champions FC Liverpool and later made it into the final round succeeded. Nevertheless, coach Ancelotti was sacked on December 10, 2019 after winning the last group game. The club had previously remained without a win for nine games in all competitions and only finished seventh in the domestic Seria A. His successor was Gennaro Gattuso , who had previously been a player and coach, who had previously been a 73-time Italian national player with AC Milan . Even under Gattuso, the club was initially unable to catch up with the top flight of the league in the second half of the season, which was overshadowed by the Corona crisis , but won the Coppa Italia with a penalty shoot-out in the final against serial champions Juventus Turin .
Game and training facilities
Historic venues
The first venue was the Stadio Militare dell'Arenaccia from 1926 to 1929 . The Stadio Giorgio Ascarelli followed from 1930 to 1942 and the Stadio Arturo Collana from 1942 to 1959 .
Stadion
The SSC Napoli has played its home games at the Stadio San Paolo since 1959. The multifunctional stadium was built from 1948 to 1959 in the Fuorigrotta district and was initially called Stadio del Sole ( German sun stadium ) and offered space for 87,000 visitors. A few months after it opened, the stadium hosted four games of the 1960 Olympic football tournament . It was one of the stadiums for the European Football Championship in 1968 and 1980 . The stadium was completely modernized for the 1990 World Cup . For the Summer Universiade 2019 , the stadium received new seating, large screens, LED display boards, a new video surveillance system and a new parking garage, as well as a new sound system with soundproofing. The changing rooms, offices, conference rooms and the sanitary facilities were also modernized.
The Stadio San Paolo is the European football association UEFA in the category 3 is arranged stadium and, with currently around 55,000 spectators, the largest in Europe.
Fan culture
Due to its popularity in southern Italy, the SSC Napoli had the highest average attendance of all football clubs worldwide in the 1970s and 1980s. The peak of 77,597 spectators per game from the 1984/85 season was only exceeded by AC Milan seven years later .
With the Curva A and the Curva B, SSC Napoli is one of the few clubs in Italy to have two spatially separate fan curves that are completely filled in almost all games. Curva B represents the older part of the Neapolitan fan scene and is home to the Ultrà groups Fedayn 1979 EAM (Estranei alla massa) and Ultras Napoli 1972. On the other side of the stadium, adjacent to the guest block, are the groups Mastiffs, Vecchi Lions, Teste matte, Brigata Carolina, Rione Sanità, Bronx, Sud 1996 and Fossato Flegreo. There is no rivalry between the two curves, although completely independent chants are intoned during the games. They also differ in that the Curva B takes a much more pacifistic attitude and allows swiveling flags, choreographies or other folkloric elements in the curve to be more important than the "vecchio stile" lived by its younger counterpart, which is largely limited to catching chants . Political extremism does not play a role in either of the two curves.
Financial situation and ownership
The Società Sportiva Calcio Napoli SpA is a subsidiary of the Italian media company Filmauro Srl
In the 2016/17 season, SSC Napoli generated sales of 200.7 million euros, making it the third football club in Italy with the highest sales , and the club is in 19th place worldwide in this category.
Suppliers and sponsors
The supplier has been the Italian sporting goods manufacturer Kappa since 2015 ; The contract runs until 2020. The main sponsors of SSC Napoli are Lete and MSC.
In 1981 the club signed an advertising contract with Snaidero, who placed their lettering on the jerseys. This was followed by Cirio (1982–1983), Latte Berna (1983–1984), Cirio (1984–1985), Buitoni (1985–1988), Mars (1988–1991), Voiello (1991–1994), Record Cucine (1994– 1996), Centrale del Latte di Napoli (1996–1997), Polenghi (1997–1999), Birra Peroni (1999–2003), Russo di Cicciano (2003–2004), Acqua Lete (2005–2011), Lete- MSC ( 2011–2014), Lete-Pasta Garofalo (2014–)
Period | Outfitter | Main sponsor |
---|---|---|
1978-1980 | puma | - |
1980-1981 | NR (Ennerre) | |
1981-1982 | Snaidero | |
1982-1983 | Cirio | |
1983-1984 | Latte Berna ( Parmalat ) | |
1984-1985 | Linea time | Cirio |
1985-1988 | NR (Ennerre) | Buitoni |
1988-1991 | Mars | |
1991-1994 | Umbro | Voiello |
1994-1996 | lotto | Record cucine |
1996-1997 | Central del Latte di Napoli | |
1997-1999 | Nike | Polenghi |
1999-2000 | Birra Peroni | |
2000-2003 | Diadora | |
2003-2004 | Legea | Russo di Cicciano |
2004-2006 | Kappa | Sky Italia |
2005-2006 | Lete | |
2006-2009 | Diadora | |
2009-2011 | Macron | |
2011-2014 | Lete , MSC Cruises | |
2014-2015 | Lete , pasta Garofalo, Kimbo | |
2015– | Kappa |
Logo history
facts and figures
Club successes
National | title | season |
---|---|---|
Italian championship | 2 | 1986/87 , 1989/90 |
Italian Cup | 6th | 1961/62 , 1975/76 , 1986/87 , 2011/12 , 2013/14 , 2019/20 |
Italian Supercup | 2 | 1990 , 2014 |
International | title | season |
UEFA Cup / UEFA Europa League |
1 | 1989 |
Coppa delle Alpi | 1 | 1966 |
English-Italian League Cup | 1 | 1976 |
Successes of the youth teams
- Torneo di Viareggio : 1975
- Coppa Italia Primavera : 1996/97
staff
Professional team squad (2019/20)
No. | Nat. | Surname | Date of birth | in the team since | Contract until |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
goalkeeper | |||||
1 | Alex Meret | March 22, 1997 | 2018 | 2023 | |
25th | David Ospina | August 31, 1988 | 2018 | 2022 | |
27 | Orestis Karnezis | July 11, 1985 | 2018 | 2021 | |
Defender | |||||
2 | Kévin Malcuit | July 31, 1991 | 2018 | 2022 | |
6th | Mario Rui | May 27, 1991 | 2017 | 2022 | |
13 | Sebastiano Luperto | September 6, 1996 | 2015 | 2023 | |
19th | Nikola Maksimović | November 25, 1991 | 2017 | 2021 | |
22nd | Giovanni Di Lorenzo | 4th August 1993 | 2019 | 2024 | |
23 | Elseid Hysaj | February 2, 1994 | 2015 | 2021 | |
26th | Kalidou Koulibaly | June 20, 1991 | 2014 | 2023 | |
31 | Faouzi Ghoulam | February 1, 1991 | 2014 | 2022 | |
44 | Kostas Manolas | June 14, 1991 | 2019 | 2024 | |
62 | Lorenzo Tonelli | 17th January 1990 | 2016 | 2021 | |
midfield player | |||||
4th | Diego Demme | November 21, 1991 | 2020 | 2024 | |
5 | Allan | January 8, 1991 | 2015 | 2023 | |
8th | Fabian | April 3, 1996 | 2018 | 2023 | |
12 | Eljif Elmas | September 24, 1999 | 2019 | 2024 | |
20th | Piotr Zieliński | May 20, 1994 | 2016 | 2021 | |
34 | Amin Younes | August 6, 1993 | 2018 | 2023 | |
68 | Stanislav Lobotka | November 25, 1994 | 2020 | 2024 | |
70 | Gianluca Gaetano | May 5, 2000 | 2015 | 2023 | |
striker | |||||
7th | José Callejón | February 11, 1987 | 2013 | 2020 | |
11 | Hirving Lozano | July 30, 1995 | 2019 | 2024 | |
14th | Dries Mertens | May 6, 1987 | 2013 | 2020 | |
18th | Fernando Llorente | February 26, 1985 | 2019 | 2021 | |
21st | Matteo Politano | 3rd August 1993 | 2020 | 2021 | |
24 | Lorenzo Insigne | 4th June 1991 | 2011 | 2022 | |
98 | Leandrinho | October 11, 1998 | 2017 | 2021 | |
99 | Arkadiusz Milik | February 28, 1994 | 2016 | 2021 | |
As of February 25, 2020 |
Squad changes for the 2019/20 season
Accesses | ||
---|---|---|
time | player | Previous club |
Summer break / preparation |
Eljif Elmas | Fenerbahçe Istanbul |
Giovanni Di Lorenzo | FC Empoli | |
Fernando Llorente | Tottenham Hotspur | |
Hirving Lozano | PSV Eindhoven | |
Kostas Manolas | AS Roma | |
Lorenzo Tonelli | Sampdoria Genoa (loanee) | |
Amir Rrahmani | Hellas Verona |
Departures | ||
---|---|---|
time | player | New club |
Summer break / preparation |
Raúl Albiol | Villarreal CF |
Vlad Chiricheș | US Sassuolo Calcio (Loan) | |
Amadou Diawara | AS Roma | |
Adam Ounas | OGC Nice (loan) | |
Simone Verdi | Torino FC (loan) | |
Amir Rrahmani | Hellas Verona (loan) |
Club management
Coaching staff | |
---|---|
function | Surname |
Head coach | Gennaro Gattuso |
Assistant coach | Luigi Riccio |
Goalkeeping coach | Alessandro Nista |
Roberto Perrone | |
Fitness trainer | Francesco Sinatti |
Francesco Mauri |
management | |
---|---|
function | Surname |
president | Aurelio De Laurentiis |
Chief Executive Officer | Laura Belli |
Sports director | Cristiano Giuntoli |
Team manager | Paolo De Matteis |
Junior coordinator | Luigi Caffarelli |
Gianluca Grava | |
Chief scout | Maurizio Micheli |
Medical director | Alfonso De Nicola |
Marketing manager | Alessandro Formisano |
Former players
- Raúl Albiol
- Inglés
- José Altafini
- Amedeo Amadei
- Amauri
- Miguel Andreolo
- Roberto Ayala
- Salvatore Bagni
- Francesco Baiano
- Paolo Barison
- Valon Behrami
- Mauro Bellugi
- Daniel Bertoni
- Laurent Blanc
- Alain Boghossian
- Giuseppe Bruscolotti
- Ottavio Bugatti
- Tarcisio Burgnich
- Nicola Caccia
- Careca
- Jarbas Faustinho Cané
- Andrea Carnevale
- Luciano Castellini
- Paolo Di Canio
- Fabio Cannavaro
- Benito Carbone
- Giuseppe Casari
- Domenico Caso
- Edinson Cavani
- Luciano Chiarugi
- Giancarlo Corradini
- Massimo Crippa
- André Cruz
- Amadou Diawara
- Blerim Dzemaili
- Edmundo
- Flavio Emoli
- Ciro Ferrara
- Pietro Ferraris
- Daniel Fonseca
- Giovanni Francini
- Luca Fusi
- Giovanni Galli
- Carmine Gautieri
- Giuseppe Giannini
- Bruno Giordano
- Aristide Guarneri
- Kurt Hamrin
- Marek Hamšík
- Gonzalo Higuaín
- Gökhan Inler
- Armando Izzo
- Marek Jankulovski
- Hate Jeppson
- Antonio Juliano
- Naim Krieziu
- Ruud Krol
- Spartaco Landini
- Ezequiel Lavezzi
- Diego Maradona
- Matuzalém
- Massimo Mauro
- Francesco Moriero
- Fernando De Napoli
- Arturo Di Napoli
- Massimo Oddo
- Goran Pandev
- Reynald Pedros
- Bruno Pesaola
- Gino Pivatelli
- Roberto Policano
- Massimo Rastelli
- Pepe Reina
- Anthony Reveillere
- Freddy Rincon
- Nereo Rocco
- Francesco Romano
- Humberto Rosa
- Claudio Sala
- Attila Sallustro
- Giuseppe Savoldi
- Omar Sívori
- Guillermo Stábile
- Attilio Tesser
- Jonas Thern
- Luís Vidigal
- Antonio Vojak
- Luís Vinício
- Giancarlo Vitali
- Marcelo Zalayeta
- Dino Zoff
- Gianfranco Zola
Records
Player records
(As of June 28, 2020; all competitive games and goals are indicated, players in bold are still active in the club)
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Club records
- Biggest win: 8: 1 against Pro Patria 1919 (1954/55 season)
- Biggest defeat: 0: 6 against AS Roma (season 1958/59)
- Most goals in one season: 36 goals Gonzalo Higuaín (2015/16 season)
- Highest average attendance in one season: 77,597 spectators per game (1984/85 season)
- So far the only club that won the Coppa Italia as a second division team (1962)
Coach history
Head coach | |
---|---|
Term of office | Surname |
1926-1927 | Anton Kreuzer / Bino Skasa |
1927-1928 | Giovanni Terrile / Rolf Steiger / Ferenc Molnár |
1928-1929 | Karl Fischer / Giovanni Terrile |
1929-1935 | William Garbutt |
1935-1936 | Károly Csapkay |
1936-1937 | Angelo Mattea |
1937-1938 | Angelo Mattea / Eugen Payer |
1938-1939 | Eugen Payer / Paolo Iodice |
1939-1940 | Adolfo Baloncieri |
1940-1942 | Antonio Vojak |
1942-1943 | Antonio Vojak / Giuseppe Innocenti |
1945-1947 | Raffaele Sansone |
1947-1948 | Raffaele Sansone / Giovanni Vecchina / Arnaldo Sentimenti |
1948-1949 | Felice Borel / Gigino De Manes / Vittorio Mosele |
1949-1955 | Eraldo Monzeglio |
1955-1956 | Eraldo Monzeglio / Amedeo Amadei |
1956-1959 | Amedeo Amadei |
1959-1960 | Annibale Frossi / Amedeo Amadei |
1960-1961 | Amedeo Amadei / Renato Cesarini / Attila Sallustro |
1961–1962 | Fioravante Baldi / Bruno Pesaola |
1962-1963 | Bruno Pesaola |
1963-1964 | Roberto Lerici / Giovanni Molino |
1964-1968 | Bruno Pesaola |
1968-1969 | Giuseppe Chiappella / Egidio Di Costanzo / Giuseppe Chiappella |
1973-1975 | Luís Vinício |
1975-1976 | Luís Vinício / Alberto Del Frati |
1976-1977 | Bruno Pesaola / Rosario Rivellino |
1977-1988 | Gianni Di Marzio |
1978-1979 | Gianni Di Marzio / Luís Vinício |
1979-1980 | Luís Vinício / Angelo Sormani |
Head coach | |
---|---|
Term of office | Surname |
1980-1982 | Rino Marchesi |
1982-1983 | Massimo Giacomini / Bruno Pesaola |
1983-1984 | Nello Santin / Rino Marchesi |
1984-1985 | Rino Marchesi |
1985-1989 | Ottavio Bianchi |
1989-1991 | Alberto Bigon |
1991-1992 | Claudio Ranieri |
1992-1993 | Claudio Ranieri / Ottavio Bianchi |
1993-1994 | Marcello Lippi |
1994-1995 | Vincenzo Guerini / Vujadin Boškov |
1995-1996 | Vujadin Boškov |
1996-1997 | Luigi Simoni / Vincenzo Montefusco |
1997-1998 | Bortolo Mutti / Carlo Mazzone / Giovanni Galeone / Vincenzo Montefusco |
1998-1999 | Renzo Ulivieri / Vincenzo Montefusco |
1999-2000 | Walter Novellino |
2000-2001 | Zdeněk Zeman / Emiliano Mondonico |
2001-2002 | Luigi De Canio |
2002-2003 | Franco Colomba / Franco Scoglio / Franco Colomba |
2003-2004 | Andrea Agostinelli / Luigi Simoni |
2004-2005 | Gian Piero Ventura / Edoardo Reja |
2005-2009 | Edoardo Reja |
2009 | Roberto Donadoni |
2009-2013 | Walter Mazzarri |
2013-2015 | Rafael Benítez |
2015-2018 | Maurizio Sarri |
2018-2019 | Carlo Ancelotti |
2019– | Gennaro Gattuso |
Presidential history
President | |
---|---|
Term of office | Surname |
1926-1927 | Giorgio Ascarelli |
1927-1928 | Gustavo Zinzaro |
1928-1929 | Giovanni Maresca |
1929-1930 | Giorgio Ascarelli |
1930-1932 | Giovanni Maresca & Eugenio Coppola |
1932-1936 | Vincenzo Savarese |
1936-1940 | Achille Lauro |
1940 | Gaetano Del Pezzo |
1940-1941 | Tommaso Leonetti |
1941-1943 | Luigi Piscitelli |
1943-1945 | Annibale Fienga |
1945-1946 | Vincenzo Savarese |
1946-1948 | Pasquale Russo |
1948-1951 | Egidio Musollino |
1951-1952 | Alfonso Cuomo |
1952-1954 | Achille Lauro |
1954-1963 | Alfonso Cuomo |
President | |
---|---|
Term of office | Surname |
1963-1964 | Luigi Scuotto |
1964-1967 | Roberto Fiore |
1967-1968 | Gioacchino Lauro |
1968-1969 | Antonio Corcione |
1969-1971 | Corrado Ferlaino |
1971-1972 | Ettore Sacchi |
1972-1983 | Corrado Ferlaino |
1983 | Marino Brancaccio |
1983-1993 | Corrado Ferlaino |
1993-1995 | Francesco Ellenio Gallo |
1995-1996 | Vincenzo Schiano di Colella |
1997-1998 | Gian Marco Innocenti |
1999-2000 | Federico Scalingi |
2000 | Giorgio Corbelli |
2002-2004 | Salvatore Naldi |
2004– | Aurelio De Laurentiis |
literature
- Oliver Birkner: One day in May: The history of SSC Napoli . The workshop 2013; ISBN 3-7307-0009-X
Web links
- SSC Naples website (Italian, English, Spanish, Chinese)
- SSC Naples on legaseriea.it
- SSC Napoli on UEFA.com
- SSC Napoli on FIFA.com
- napolicalcio.net (Italian)
- calcionapoli1926.it (Italian)
Individual evidence
- ↑ Dal Naples Football Club all'Internaples
- ↑ Dall'Associazione Calcio Napoli alla prima Coppa Italia
- ↑ L'era di Corrado Ferlaino, “l'ingegnere”
- ↑ Maradona - King of Naples (1984–1991)
- ↑ Diego Maradona Backs Ezequiel Lavezzi To Earn Napoli Number 10 Shirt (English)
- ↑ Article on Giordano in English
- ↑ 70 million euros in debt - Napoli has to go down
- ↑ SSC Naples: Club of Passions
- ^ L'avvento di Aurelio De Laurentiis, e la storia continua ...
- ↑ Europa League - matchday / table: Season 2012/13 - intermediate round . In: kicker.de , accessed on February 15, 2013.
- ↑ Julius Müller-Meiningen: The next scandal looms. In: FAZ.net (Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung). June 25, 2013. Retrieved June 28, 2013 .
- ↑ Naples weeps for the most absurd from history . In: welt.de , December 12, 2013.
- ↑ League Table: Lega Serie A. Retrieved May 28, 2018 .
- ↑ Fixtures and Results: Lega Serie A. Retrieved May 28, 2018 .
- ^ UCL tables. In: UEFA.com. Retrieved May 28, 2018 .
- ↑ UEL - Games. In: UEFA.com. Retrieved May 28, 2018 .
- ↑ SSC Napoli press release (Italian) , May 23, 2018, accessed on July 12, 2020.
- ↑ UEFA Europa League 2019 season games , accessed July 12, 2020.
- ↑ Coppa Italia Results Quarterfinal , accessed July 12, 2020.
- ↑ SSC Napoli press release (Italian) , December 10, 2019, accessed on July 12, 2020.
- ↑ Coppa Italia Results , accessed July 12, 2020.
- ↑ worldstadiumdatabase.com - List of UEFA Category 3 Stadiums
- ↑ Overview of the average viewership for Serie A in the eighties ( Memento from December 15, 2007 in the Internet Archive )
- ↑ Overview of the average viewership of Serie A in the nineties ( Memento from December 8, 2007 in the Internet Archive )
- ↑ Iamnaples.it: Storie di tifo: Napoli curva curva A e B
- ↑ ilsole24ore.com - SSC Napoli e Gruppo Filmauro
- ↑ deloitte.com - Deloitte Football Money League 2018
- ↑ napolicalciolive.com - Napoli-Kappa: contratto da 5 anni. Ecco quanto incasseranno gli azzurri
- ↑ sscnapoli.it - sponsor
- ↑ sscnapoli.it - SSC Napoli e Aqua Lete ancora insieme
- ↑ Prima Squadra. In: sscnapoli.it. Società Sportiva Calcio Napoli, accessed January 15, 2020 (Italian).
- ↑ Squad of SSC Napoli. In: transfermarkt.de. Transfermarkt GmbH & Co. KG, accessed on February 25, 2020 .
- ^ A b transfermarkt.de: SSC Naples - employees