Calcio Foggia 1920, commonly referred to as Foggia, is an Italian football club based in Foggia, Apulia. It currently plays in Serie C, having last been in the top level Serie A in 1995.
Full name | Calcio Foggia 1920 S.r.l. | |||
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Nickname(s) | Rossoneri (The Red and Blacks) Satanelli (The Little Satans) Dauni (The Daunians) | |||
Founded | 1920 | as US Foggia|||
Ground | Stadio Pino Zaccheria, Foggia, Italy | |||
Capacity | 25,085 | |||
Owner | Corporate Investments Group S.r.l. (80%) Davide Pelusi (20%) | |||
Chairman | Nicola Canonico | |||
Manager | Ezio Capuano | |||
League | Serie C Group C | |||
2023–24 | Serie C Group C, 11th of 20 | |||
Website | https://www.calciofoggia1920.net/ | |||
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It plays in Serie C, the third division of the Italian championship. The team experienced the best periods in its history in the 1960s and 1970s, in Serie A, and above all in the first half of the 1990s, playing four seasons in the top flight, coming close to qualifying for the UEFA Cup and gaining media exposure in European level for expressing an unprecedented, fast and attacking football.
On 23 April 2017, the club regained promotion to Serie B after a 19-year absence, but folded again only two years later, to restart from Serie D in 2019 as Calcio Foggia.
History
editFoggia Calcio & U.S. Foggia
editFoundation and early years
editThe club was founded in 1920 as Foggia Calcio. The club spent its early history playing football in the lower leagues, winning a championship in the dilettanti in 1933.
In 1957–58, a merger took place between Foggia Calcio and Foggia Incedit, forming Unione Sportiva Foggia as the club is today. In 1961–62, the team was taken over by President Domenico Rosa Rosa, a wood industrialist, and coach Oronzo Pugliese, who quickly led them to promotion to Serie B.
Reaching Serie A
editHistory was made in the 1963–64 season, when Rosa Rosa and Oronzo Pugliese's Foggia reached Serie A for the first time. From 1964–65, Foggia managed to compete in three consecutive seasons in the top flight. On 31 January 1965, still under the guidance of coach Pugliese, Foggia recorded a historic 3–2 victory against Inter, who were at the time led by manager Helenio Herrera. The season was crowned by the national call-ups of Micelli and Nocera who played for Italy against Wales. Italy won 4–1 and Nocera managed to get on the scoresheet. At the end of the season, Pugliese left to take charge of Roma.
Pugliese was replaced by Egizio Rubino, and Foggia, although with more difficulty compared to the previous season, managed to survive the drop again. The following year, however, Foggia was relegated. It was a forgettable championship, after 10 matches Foggia had collected only three points and scored just 24 goals. Rubino was sacked and replaced by Bonazzini. The team improved under Bonazzini but failed to avoid relegation. At the end of the season, president Rosa Rosa also left the club, following their relegation.
Relegated at the end of the 1966–67 season, Foggia returned to the top flight in 1970–71, with Tommaso Maestrelli on the bench. Maestrelli would later win the 1973–74 scudetto with Lazio. Luigi Del Neri was, at the time, a Foggia player. The club was relegated again and returned to Serie A in 1973–74, before another relegation which came after a 6-point deduction for alleged corruption relating to the referee of a home match against Milan. The coach that season was Lauro Toneatto. Foggia played two more seasons in Serie A in 1976–77 and in 1977–78, when they were once more relegated to Serie B.
Glory years and Zemanlandia
editFollowing their relegation back to Serie B, Foggia were then dealt with a further blow with relegation to Serie C. They battled their way in Serie C1 throughout much of the 1980s. This was a particularly tough time for Foggia as their regional rivals, Bari, Lecce, Barletta and Taranto were all playing at higher levels.
In 1989, with the appointment of Czech coach Zdeněk Zeman, the club began to enter the greatest period in its history. The aggressive and entertaining football of the Bohemian coach was based on a 4–3–3 formation. Pressure, offside tactics and frenetic movement of both players and the ball made up the trademark style of Zeman's Foggia. The club first returned to Serie B, and then the following season in 1990–91, they won the Serie B by a large margin and returned to Serie A.
After returning to Serie A in the 1991–92 season, Foggia dei Miracoli, as they were known, proved to be competitive with any opponent and was appreciated by the press because of the attractive football they played. The term Zemanlandia was then coined to indicate the style created by Zeman, and became strictly associated to the Foggia team of the 1990s. The Foggia team also featured star players, especially attacking trio of Giuseppe Signori, Francesco Baiano and Roberto Rambaudi, as well as Russian star Igor Shalimov. That season, Foggia achieved the amazing feat of scoring 58 goals while also conceding 58. Foggia soon lost many of these quality players, including their three key forwards, and had to replace them with young talent. The club completed three Serie A campaigns finishing mid-table. In Serie A 1993-94, Foggia's football continued but the depleted squad was no longer as competitive and the club was relegated back to Serie B in 1995.
Zeman left to join Lazio at the end of that season, marking the end of Zemanlandia whilst the club was beset with financial problems. The Foggia glory days had come to an end.
Decline, Serie C and Zeman's return
editFollowing the drop, Foggia spent two seasons in Serie B achieving mid-table finishes, before another relegation followed at the end of the 1997–98 season. They did not fare any better down in Serie C1, with another successive relegation to Serie C2.
Playing football in Italy's fourth tier was far less glamorous than the Zemanlandia days but the club set itself on the long road back in 2002–03, when led by coach Pasquale Marino and key players Roberto De Zerbi and Michele Pazienza, they were promoted back to Serie C1.
After the 2003–04 season, in which they finished mid-table but with good signs for the following year, Foggia were hit with financial problems and lost the coach Marino and all the best players.
Second U.S. Foggia
editThe news sent the fans into despair but Giuseppe Coccimiglio took over the reins of the club and gave confidence to the new club which assumed the team's historic name, Unione Sportiva Foggia, and was able to keep their place in the league, thanks to Comma 3 of the Article 52 of N.O.I.F.[1]
After two more seasons finishing in mid-table, during which there were five coaching changes, Coccimiglio was criticised for not paying players' wages, a situation which created instability. After complex negotiations, the company passed into the hands of a team of local entrepreneurs led by Tullio Capobianco.
The club spent the following years mid-table in C1, narrowly losing a promotion playoff in 2006–07 against Avellino which would have seen them return to Serie B. The following season, 2007–08, they again reached the playoffs, this time losing to Cremonese.
In June 2010 Pasquale Casillo, chairman and owner during the glory years of the 1990s, re-acquired the club, and reformed the old trio of Foggia heads by appointing back Zdeněk Zeman as manager and Giuseppe Pavone as director of football. However, despite impressive performances from several young and promising players who went on to play at the highest level like Lorenzo Insigne and Marco Sau, Foggia missed out on playoff qualification.
Second Foggia Calcio
editAfter the end of the 2011–12 season, Foggia was declined to enter Lega Pro Prima Divisione[2] and was thus was excluded from professional football.[3]
In the summer 2012 a new company named A.C.D. Foggia Calcio[4] was founded to continue the football history of the city of Foggia. The club restarted from Serie D[5] thanks to Article 52 of N.O.I.F.[6] and was immediately promoted to Lega Pro Seconda Divisione through a repechage, dropping the A.C.D. part of their denomination in the process.
Over the next 5 seasons, the club will make the climb from Serie D (fifth level) to Serie B (second level); all this thanks to the coaches Pasquale Padalino, Roberto De Zerbi (who also won a Serie C Italian cup) and Giovanni Stroppa.
Third Foggia Calcio
editAfter the end of the 2018–19 season, Foggia was declined to enter Serie C and was thus was excluded from professional football.
In the summer 2019 a new company named Calcio Foggia 1920 was founded to continue the football history of the city of Foggia. The club restarted from Serie D thanks to Article 52 of N.O.I.F. and was soon promoted to Serie C.
Supporters
editFootball has always been a popular sport to follow in the city of Foggia, especially since the Zeman years. I Satanelli can also count on support from across the Province of Foggia.
The only twinning Foggia fans have is with the supporters of Cagliari and more specifically with the Sconvolts 1987 ultras. However, each group has personal friendships, notable are those with Monza, Latina and Budapest Honvéd.
93 year-old Foggia fan Nonno Ciccio has been attending matches consistently since 1937, with the exception of wartime years. Nonno is now cited as the oldest ultra in Italy and still regularly attends Foggia matches, home and away.[7]
Current squad
edit- As of 29 August 2024[8]
Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.
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Club officials
edit
Board of directorsedit |
Current technical staffedit
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Managerial history
editFoggia have had many managers and trainers throughout the history of the club, in some seasons more than one manager was in charge. Here is a chronological list of them from 1923 onwards.[9]
- Roberto Fini– 1923–28
- Severino Rosso– 1928–29
- Béla Károly– 1929–32
- Tony Cargnelli– 1932–33
- Engelbert König– 1933–34
- Silvio Stritzel– 1934–35
- Giovanni Batista Rebuffo– 1935
- Wilmos Wilhelm– 1935–36
- Béla Károly– 1936–37
- Angelo Benincasa– 1937–39
- István Fogl – 1939–40
- Ferenc Plemich– 1940
- István Fogl – 1940–41
- Ferenc Plemich– 1941
- Angelo Benincasa– 1941–46
- Piero Andreoli– 1946–47
- Lajos Politzer– 1947–48
- Angelo Benincasa– 1948–49
- András Kuttik– 1949
- Vincenzo Marsico– 1949–50
- András Kuttik– 1950
- Vincenzo Marsico– 1950–51
- Tony Cargnelli– 1951–52
- Cesare Migliorini – 1952
- Vincenzo Marsico– 1952–53
- Cesare Migliorini – 1953–54
- Lajos Kovács– 1954–55
- Leandro Remondini– 1955
- Vincenzo Marsico– 1955–59
- Leonardo Costagliola – 1959–60
- Paolo Tabanelli– 1960–61
- Leonardo Costagliola – 1961
- Oronzo Pugliese– 1961–65
- Egizio Rubino – 1965–66
- Luigi Bonizzoni– 1966–68
- Serafino Montanari – 1968
- Tommaso Maestrelli– 1968–71
- Ettore Puricelli– 1971–72
- Lauro Toneatto– 1972–74
- Cesare Maldini– 1974–76
- Roberto Balestri – 1976
- Ettore Puricelli– 1976–78
- Cinesinho– 1978–79
- Giorgio Sereni– 1979–80
- Ettore Puricelli– 1980–81
- Vasco Tagliavini– 1981–82
- Fernando Veneranda– 1982
- Lamberto Leonardi– 1982–83
- Lamberto Giorgis– 1983
- Romano Fogli – 1983–84
- Ettore Puricelli– 1984
- Lamberto Giorgis– 1984–85
- Graziano Landoni – 1985
- G.B. Fabbri– 1985
- Corrado Viciani – 1985–86
- G.B. Fabbri– 1986
- Zdeněk Zeman– 1986–87
- Roberto Balestri– 1987
- Pippo Marchioro– 1987–88
- Roberto Balestri– 1988
- Giuseppe Caramanno– 1988–89
- Zdeněk Zeman– 1989–94
- Enrico Catuzzi – 1994–95
- Delio Rossi– 1995–96
- Tarcisio Burgnich– 1996–97
- Domenico Caso– 1997
- Beniamino Cancian– 1997–98
- Domenico Caso– 1998
- Lorenzo Mancano– 1998–99
- Fabio Brini– 1999
- Piero Braglia– 1999–00
- Lorenzo Mancano– 2000
- Ignazio Arcoleo– 2000–01
- Bruno Pace– 2001–02
- Carlo Florimbi– 2002
- Pasquale Marino– 2002–04
- Giuseppe Giannini– 2004–05
- Massimo Morgia– 2005–06
- Giorgio Rumignani– 2006
- Silvano Fiorucci– 2006
- Stefano Cuoghi– 2006–07
- Fulvio D'Adderio– 2007
- Salvatore Campilongo– 2007–08
- Giuseppe Galderisi– 2008
- Raffaele Novelli– 2008–09
- Antonio Porta– 2009
- Guido Ugolotti– 2010
- Zdeněk Zeman– 2010–11
- Valter Bonacina– 2011
- Paolo Stringara– 2011–12
- Valter Bonacina– 2012
- Pasquale Padalino– 2012–13
- Roberto De Zerbi– 2014–16
- Giovanni Stroppa– 2016–18
- Gianluca Grassadonia– 2018
- Pasquale Padalino– 2018–19
- Gianluca Grassadonia– 2019
- Amantino Mancini– 2019
- Ninni Corda– 2019-2020
- Ezio Capuano– 2020
- Vincenzo Maiuri– 2020
- Marco Marchionni– 2020–2021
- Zdeněk Zeman– 2021–Present
Honours
edit- Winners: 1990–91
- Winners: 2002–2003
- Winners: 2019–2020
- Winners: 2006–07, 2015–16
- Winners: 2017
Divisional movements
editSeries | Years | Last | Promotions | Relegations |
---|---|---|---|---|
A | 11 | 1994–95 | - | 5 (1967, 1971, 1974, 1978, 1995) |
B | 25 | 2018–19 | 5 (1964, 1970, 1973, 1976, 1991) | 7 (1936, 1947, 1961, 1979, 1983, 1998, 2019✟) |
C +C2 |
41 +5 |
2021–22 | 7 (1933, 1946, 1960, 1962, 1980, 1989, 2017) 6 (2003 C2, 2014 C2) |
3 (1952, 1999 C1, 2012✟) |
82 out of 90 years of professional football in Italy since 1929 | ||||
D | 8 | 2019–20 | 2 (1958, 2013, 2020) | never |
References
edit- ^ Carraro, Franco (30 June 2004). "C.U. N°199/A (2003–04)" (PDF). Presidente Federale (in Italian). FIGC. Retrieved 11 July 2015.
- ^ "Comunicato Ufficiale N°8/A (2012–13)" (PDF) (in Italian). FIGC. 19 July 2012. Retrieved 24 May 2017.
- ^ Giannini, Amleto (5 March 2017). "1000esima panchina amara per Zeman • Focus". FantaMaster News (in Italian). Retrieved 16 March 2019.[permanent dead link ]
- ^ "Foggia Calcio Mania". www.foggiacalciomania.com. Archived from the original on 14 May 2014. Retrieved 22 May 2022.
- ^ "Pubblicati i gironi di Serie D: ammesse Spal, Foggia e Taranto e ripescato il Cynthia" (in Italian). FIGC. 9 August 2012. Retrieved 24 May 2017.
- ^ "Foggia Calcio Mania". foggiacalciomania.com. Archived from the original on 7 September 2013. Retrieved 22 May 2022.
- ^ "Meet 90-year-old Foggia fan, Nonno Ciccio, the oldest ultra in Italy". The Guardian. 10 March 2016. Retrieved 12 March 2016.
- ^ "Foggia squad". Soccerway. Retrieved 21 September 2022.
- ^ "Gli allenatori e i presidenti". USFoggia.it. 1 April 2007. Archived from the original on 24 July 2011. Retrieved 15 September 2007.
External links
editMedia related to Foggia Calcio at Wikimedia Commons
- Official website (in Italian)