Sampdoria Genoa
Sampdoria Genoa | ||||
Basic data | ||||
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Surname | Unione Calcio Sampdoria SpA | |||
Seat | Genoa , Italy | |||
founding | August 12, 1946 | |||
Colours | blue White | |||
president | Massimo Ferrero | |||
Website | sampdoria.it | |||
First soccer team | ||||
Head coach | Claudio Ranieri | |||
Venue | Stadio Luigi Ferraris | |||
Places | 36,599 | |||
league | Series A | |||
2019/20 | 15th place | |||
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The Unione Calcio Sampdoria , UC Sampdoria or Sampdoria for short , known in German-speaking countries as Sampdoria Genua , is an Italian football club from the Ligurian capital, Genoa .
UC Sampdoria is a four-time Italian cup winner , one-time Italian champion and Italian Supercup winner .
The home venue is the Stadio Luigi Ferraris , which can seat 36,599 spectators . The club shares this with city rivals CFC Genoa .
history
Sampdoria was founded on August 12, 1946 . The association was created through the merger of SG Sampierdarenese and SG Andrea Doria , from whose name the club name Sampdoria is derived. Since then, the Sampdoria played most of the time in Serie A , but for a long time there were no major successes. Until the 1980s, fourth place in the table from the 1960/61 season was the greatest success that the Genoese could show.
This could be discontinued in the 1984/85 season . In addition, the Sampdoria won their first title in that season: Against AC Milan , the Blucerchiati won the Italian Cup . Up to 1994 three more titles could be celebrated in this competition. Thanks to these successes, they regularly qualified for the European Cup Winners' Cup , where the Sampdoria also caused a stir. 1989 the Genoese reached the final of this competition for the first time, but ended up in the Wankdorf Stadium Bern the FC Barcelona 0: beaten second But already the year after the Sampdoria was again in the final and this time was the competition also be obtained: In the Ullevi Stadium was RSC Anderlecht 2: 0 defeat. Gianluca Vialli scored both goals in extra time for the Sampdoria.
The Blucerchiati celebrated the greatest success in the club's history in the following season ( 1990/91 ) when they secured the Italian championship in front of AC Milan . As a result, the club qualified for the 1991/92 European Cup , where the Sampdoria prevailed in their group against Red Star Belgrade , RSC Anderlecht and Panathinaikos Athens and reached the final. Like three years before, they met FC Barcelona there. But the Catalans also had the upper hand at Wembley Stadium : The game was lost 0: 1 from Blucerchiati's point of view after extra time.
The architect of this successful team was Yugoslav soccer coach Vujadin Boškov , who looked after the Sampdoria from 1986 to 1992. Key players of this period included goalkeeper Gianluca Pagliuca , defender Pietro Vierchowod , midfielder Attilio Lombardo and strikers Gianluca Vialli and Roberto Mancini .
After 1994 the Sampdoria could not build on past successes. Although a single-digit place in the table was always achieved up to the 1997/98 season , but in the 1998/99 season the Genoese rose to Serie B as sixteenth in the table . Only in the 2003/04 season should the Blucerchiati play first class again.
The Sampdoria celebrated the greatest success in the club's recent history in the 2009/10 season , when the team, led by captain Angelo Palombo and the two strikers Giampaolo Pazzini and Antonio Cassano , reached fourth place in the table and thus participated in the play-offs of Champions League 2010/11 secured. In the last qualifying round, however, they just failed to Werder Bremen ; After a 3-1 defeat in the first leg, Genoa led 3-0 in the second leg up to stoppage time in their own stadium, only to receive a goal from Markus Rosenberg and thus go into extra time. Sampdoria Genoa won 3-2 after 120 minutes, but failed due to a total score of 5-4. In the subsequent group stage of the Europa League , the team retired as third in the group behind PSV Eindhoven and Metalist Charkiw and before VSC Debrecen . The next disappointment followed a little later, because at the end of the 2010/11 season , the Sampdoria rose again in Serie B as eighth in the table.
The return to the top Italian league was not long in coming. As sixth in the table, Genoa reached the relegation mode in the 2011/12 season , the final winner of which takes the rank of third climber. In a return match, the club initially won 2: 1 and 1: 1 against US Sassuolo , before AS Varese could be defeated 3: 2 and 1: 0 in the finals . The incumbent club president Riccardo Garrone passed away on January 21, 2013 after a long and serious illness.
Club colors and crests
The club logo shows the silhouette of a pipe-smoking seaman named Baciccia (Baptist).
The club colors of the Sampdoria represent an absolute peculiarity and characteristic in Italian professional football. Blucerchiato would be translated in German as blue framed or blue ringed. For a more detailed explanation: The majority of the Samp home jersey and club emblem consists of a strong shade of blue that surrounds a small ring made of white, red-black and again white. The Sampdoria players and fans are therefore also referred to as Blucerchiati , those with a blue frame.
facts and figures
Club successes
National | title | season |
---|---|---|
Italian championship | 1 | 1990/91 |
Italian Cup | 4th | 1984/85 , 1987/88 , 1988/89 , 1993/94 |
Italian Supercup | 1 | 1991 |
International | title | season |
UEFA Cup Winners' Cup | 1 | 1989/90 |
Successes of the youth teams
- Torneo di Viareggio (4): 1950, 1958, 1963, 1977
- Campionato Primavera (1): 2008
- Coppa Italia Primavera (1): 2008
Individual successes
Italy's Footballer of the Year (5)
- Roberto Mancini (1988), Roberto Mancini (1991), Enrico Chiesa (1996), Roberto Mancini (1997)
- Top scorer
Series A (2)
- Sergio Brighenti : 27 (1961), Gianluca Vialli : 17 (1991)
- Gianluca Vialli : 7 (1990)
staff
Current squad 2018/19
As of January 31, 2019
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Former players
- Ivano Bordon
- Paolo Conti
- Gianluca Pagliuca
- Walter Zenga
- David Balleri
- Gianfranco Bedin
- Gaudenzio Bernasconi
- Hans-Peter Briegel
- Amedeo Carboni
- Michele Fornasier
- Srečko Katanec
- Marcello Lippi
- Attilio Lombardo
- Moreno Mannini
- Siniša Mihajlović
- Francesco Morini
- Shkodran Mustafi
- Giuseppe Sabadini
- Stefano Sacchetti
- Nenad Sakic
- Michele Serena
- Pietro Vierchowod
- Guido Vincenzi
- The walker's
- Cristian Zenoni
- Alain Boghossian
- Liam Brady
- Toninho Cerezo
- Aimo Diana
- Dorival Guidoni Júnior
- Giuseppe Dossena
- Alberico Evani
- Osvaldo Fattori
- Mario Frustalupi
- Luca Fusi
- Vladimir Jugović
- Christian Karembeu
- Pierre Laigle
- Giovanni Lodetti
- Giacomo Mari
- Bruno Mora
- Víctor Muñoz
- Ernst Ocffekt
- Ariel Ortega
- David Platt
- Patrizio Sala
- Giancarlo Salvi
- Clarence Seedorf
- Graeme Souness
- Luis Suarez
- Juan Sebastián Verón
- Sergio Volpi
- Giuseppe Baldini
- Paolo Barison
- Adriano Bassetto
- Fabio Bazzani
- Marco Branca
- Sergio Brighenti
- Antonio Cassano
- Luciano Chiarugi
- Enrico Chiesa
- Eddie Firmani
- Francesco Flachi
- Trevor Francis
- Manolo Gabbiadini
- Ruud Gullit
- Jürgen Klinsmann
- Roberto Mancini
- Vincenzo Montella
- Bruno Nicolè
- Stefano Okaka
- Giampaolo Pazzini
- Lennart Skoglund
- Gianluca Vialli
- Simone Zaza
Player records
(Status: end of season 2018/19; all competitive games and goals are indicated, players in bold are still active in the club)
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Coach history
Head coach | |
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Term of office | Surname |
1946-1947 | Giuseppe Galluzzi |
1947-1950 | Andrea Stigliano |
1950-1951 |
Giuseppe Galluzzi Gipo Poggi and Alfredo Foni |
1951-1952 | Alfredo Foni |
1952-1953 |
Gipo Poggi Ivo Fiorentini |
1953-1954 | Paolo Tabanelli |
1954-1955 |
Paolo Tabanelli Lajos Czeizler |
1955-1956 | Lajos Czeizler |
1956-1957 |
Lajos Czeizler Pietro Rava Ugo Amoretti Bill Dodgin sr. |
1957-1958 |
Bill dodgin sr. Adolfo Baloncieri |
1958-1961 | Eraldo Monzeglio |
1961–1962 |
Eraldo Monzeglio Roberto Lerici |
1962-1963 |
Roberto Lerici Ernst Ocffekt |
1963-1964 | Ernst Ocffekt |
1964-1965 |
Ernst Ocffekt Giuseppe Baldini |
Head coach | |
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Term of office | Surname |
1965-1966 |
Giuseppe Baldini Fulvio Bernardini |
1966-1968 | Fulvio Bernardini |
1971-1973 | Heriberto Herrera |
1973-1974 | Guido Vincenzi |
1974-1975 | Giulio Corsini |
1975-1977 | Eugenio Bersellini |
1977-1988 | Giorgio Canali |
1979-1980 |
Lamberto Giorgis Lauro Toneatto |
1980-1981 | Enzo Riccomini |
1981-1982 |
Enzo Riccomini Renzo Ulivieri |
1982-1984 | Renzo Ulivieri |
1984-1986 | Eugenio Bersellini |
1986-1992 | Vujadin Boškov |
1992-1997 | Sven-Göran Eriksson |
1997-1998 |
César Luis Menotti Vujadin Boškov |
1998-1999 |
Luciano Spalletti David Platt and Giorgio Veneri Luciano Spalletti |
1999-2000 | Gian Piero Ventura |
2000-2001 | Luigi Cagni |
Head coach | |
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Term of office | Surname |
2001-2002 |
Luigi Cagni Gianfranco Bellotto |
2002-2007 | Walter Novellino |
2007-2009 | Walter Mazzarri |
2009-2010 | Luigi Delneri |
2010-2011 |
Domenico Di Carlo Alberto Cavasin |
2011–2012 |
Gianluca Atzori Giuseppe Iachini |
2012 | Ciro Ferrara |
2012-2013 | Delio Rossi |
2013-2015 | Siniša Mihajlović |
2015 | Walter Zenga |
2015-2016 | Vincenzo Montella |
2016-2019 | Marco Giampaolo |
2019 | Eusebio Di Francesco |
2019– | Claudio Ranieri |
Web links
Individual evidence
- ↑ SE N'È ANDATO UN SAMPDORIANO. CIAO E GRAZIE, PRESIDENTE ( Memento of the original from January 24, 2013 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. (Italian), accessed January 22, 2013
- ↑ team. In: sampdoria.it. Unione Calcio Sampdoria, accessed March 1, 2018 (Italian).
- ↑ archiviotoro.it - see Allenatori