Unione Calcio Sampdoria
(commonly nicknamed Blucerchiati
, blue-ringed) is a football club based in Genoa, Italy. The club was formed in 1946 from the merger of two existing sports clubs whose roots can be traced back to the 1890s, Sampierdarenese and Andrea Doria. Both the team name and jersey do reflect this, the first being a combination of the former names, the second incorporating the former teams' colours (blue-white and red-black) in a single design.
Sampdoria currently compete in the Italian Serie A. The team's colours are blue with white, red and black hoops
, hence the nickname blucerchiati. Sampdoria play at Stadio Luigi Ferraris, capacity 36,536, [1] which it shares with Genoa's other club, Genoa Cricket and Football Club. The derby between the two teams is commonly known as the Derby della Lanterna.
Sampdoria have won the scudetto
once in their history, in the 1991 season. The club has also won the Coppa Italia four times (1985, 1988, 1989, and 1994). Their biggest European success came when they won the Cup Winners' Cup in 1990. They also reached the UEFA Champions League final in 1992 only to lose against the Spanish side FC Barcelona with an 1-0 score after extra time.
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History
The
Ginnastica Sampierdarenese
was founded in
1891, opening its football section in
1899. Also around this time, a club named
Society Andrea Doria
was founded in
1895, and began to increase their focus on dedicating itself to football.
Andrea Doria: early league participation
Andrea Doria did not participate in the first
Italian Football Championship which was organized by the Italian Federation of Football (F.I.F.) since instead they had enrolled themselves into a football tournament which was organized by the Italian Federation of Ginnastica. The club eventually joined the competition for the
Italian Football Championship 1903, but did not win a game in the tournament until 1907 when they beat local rivals
Genoa 3-1.
It was not until
1910-11 that the club began to show promise; during that season's tournament they finished above
Juventus,
Internazionale and Genoa in the
Piedmont-Lombardy-Liguria
section.
Post-World War I
After
World War I, Sampierdarenese finally began to compete in the Italian Championship, the first season back Andrea Doria were not present. However, in 1920 Doria returned and the two clubs met in the championship for the first time; Doria won in both games (4-1 and 1-0); they also were crowned winners of the Liguria region.
With the 1921-22 season, the Italian top league was split into two competitions; both of the clubs in Sampdoria's history were in separate competitions that year too. Sampierdarenese played in the
F.I.G.C. run competition, whereas Andrea Doria played in the
C.C.I. variation.
Sampierdarenese won the Ligura section and then went onto the semi-finals, finishing top out of three clubs; this lead them to the final against
Novese. Both legs of the final ended in 0-0 draws, thus a repetition match was played in
Cremona on
May 21 1922. Still intensely difficult to separate, the match went into extra time with Novese eventually winning the tie (and the Championship) 2-1.
After the league system in Italy was brought back into one item, Sampierdarenese remained stronger than Andrea Doria by qualifying for the league. By 1924-25 the clubs were competing against each other in the Northern League; Doria who finished one place above their rivals won one game 2-1, while Sampierdarenese were victorious 2-0 in the other. At the end of the 1926-27 season, the clubs merged under the name
La Dominante Genova
.
La Dominante Genova split: 1930s
Wearing
green and
black striped shirts, La Dominante Genova were admitted to the first ever season of
Serie B, where they finished 3rd just missing out on promotion. The next season, under the name
Liguria
they had a disastrous year, finishing bottom of the table and were relegated.
Because of this, both Sampierdarenese and Andrea Doria reverted to their previous names as separate clubs. Sampierdarenese were back in
Serie B for the 1932-33 season and finished in the upper part; the following year they were crowned champions and were promoted into
Serie A for the first time. Andrea Doria on the other hand, battled out the 1930s down in
Serie C.
The
15 July 1937 saw Sampierdarenese, melting itself with
Corniglianese
and
Rivarolese
with the club using the name
Associazione Liguria Calcio
; this saw them reach 5th place in Serie A during 1939. In the early 1940s, the club was relegated, but bounced straight back up as Serie B champions in 1941.
Merger
After
World War II, both clubs were competing in
Serie A; in a reverse of pre-war situations, Andrea Doria were now the top club out of the two. However on
12 August 1946 a merger took place that would stick for the two teams, together they formed
Unione Calcio Sampdoria
.
The first president of this new club was Piero Sanguineti, but the ambitious
entrepreneur Amedeo Rissotto soon replaced him, while the first team coach during this period was a man from
Florence named Giuseppe Galluzzi. In the same month of the merger, the new club demanded that they should share the
Stadio Luigi Ferraris ground with
Genoa; the agreement was carried off without problems. Consequently, the stadium was prepared to accommodate the games of both clubs.
As if to further show that the merger really was equal parts of both previous clubs, a new football kit was designed for the club; it implemented the blue shirts of Andrea Doria with the white, red and black mid-section of Sampierdarenese.
European and domestic successes
In
1979 the club, then playing Serie B, was acquired by oil businessman
Paolo Mantovani, who invested in the team in order to bring Sampdoria to the top flights. In
1982 Sampdoria made their Serie A return, and they won their first
Coppa Italia three years later. In
1986 Vujadin Boskov was appointed as new head coach; the club won their second Coppa Italia in
1988, being admitted to the
UEFA Cup Winners' Cup 1988-89, where they reached the final, being defeated 2-0 by
Barcelona. A second consecutive triumph in the Coppa Italia gave Sampdoria a spot in the
UEFA Cup Winners' Cup 1989-90, which they finally won defeating
Anderlecht after
extra time in the final. This was followed only one year later by their first (and, as of 2009, only)
scudetto
, being crowned as Serie A champions with a five points advantage to second-placed Inter Milan. The winning team featured several notable players, such as
Gianluca Pagliuca,
Gianluca Vialli,
Roberto Mancini,
Toninho Cerezo,
Pietro Vierchowod and
Attilio Lombardo, with
Vujadin Boskov as head coach. In the following season, Sampdoria reached the
European Cup final, and was defeated again by Barcelona at the
Wembley Stadium.
Since this period Sampdoria have made a limited number of appearances in European cup competitions. During the 1994/1995 campaign they reached the semi-finals of the European Cup Winners' Cup before being eliminated on penalties in a memorable tie against
Arsenal. The club also participated in the 1997/1998 UEFA Cup but were eliminated by
Atletico Bilbao of Spain in the First Round. The 2005/2006 season also proved to be a significant one, with Sampdoria returning to European competition for the first time since their promotion back to Serie A, with the club narrowly missing out on Champions League qualification and entering the UEFA cup. During this campaign, the team was minutes away from qualification to the last 32 when
Lens of France eliminated them by beating them 2-1. The club recently also took part in the 2007/2008 UEFA Cup, entering via the Intertoto cup. However it was to be a short and disappointing campaign, with Sampdoria being eliminated on
away goals by
AaB of Denmark in the First Round.
Decline and resurgence
On
October 14,
1993 Paolo Mantovani suddenly died; he was replaced by his son Enrico. During Enrico Mantovani's first season (1993/94) Sampdoria won one more Italian Cup and placed 3rd in the national championship. During the following four seasons many players from his father's team left the club but many important acquisitions were made which kept Sampdoria in the top tier of the Italian Serie A. Players the likes of Enrico Chiesa, Juan Sebastian Veron, Ariel Ortega, Vincenzo Montella, Clarence Seedorf, and Christian Karembeu were all major signings.
Despite this, in May 1999 Sampdoria were relegated from Serie A, and did not return to the top flight until 2002. Around this time Sampdoria was acquired by
Riccardo Garrone, an Italian oil businessman. Two of Garrone's most important initial moves were to inject new cash into the club and to appoint
Walter Novellino as new head coach. Sampdoria returned to Serie A in
2003 lead by talisman
Francesco Flachi, and ended their first season in eighth place. In the
Serie A 2004-05 they lost a spot in the UEFA Champions League to
Udinese in the final matchdays of the season, ending in fifth place. This was followed by a poor season; despite this, Novellino was confirmed for one more season and Sampdoria ended
the 2006-07 Serie A campaign in ninth place. As the 8th placed team in Serie A were not granted a UEFA licence, Sampdoria was able to enter the
UEFA Intertoto Cup 2007 as a result. Novellino announced his farewell to Sampdoria soon after, with
Walter Mazzarri unveiled shortly after as his replacement.
The
2007-08 campaign started very early for Sampdoria, which defeated
PFC Cherno More Varna in the Intertoto Cup and
Hajduk Split in the second qualifying round of UEFA Cup, before being eliminated in the First Round proper by
AaB on away goals. The club took actively part in the transfer market, persuading
Vincenzo Montella to make a comeback at Samp and signing
Antonio Cassano from
Real Madrid on a loan basis. Having had such a successful loan period, Sampdoria have made the move permanent from the 2008/09 season. Sampdoria ended the season in sixth place of the Italian Serie A and qualified for the
UEFA Cup 2008-09.
Supporters
U.C Sampdoria supporters come mainly from the city of Genova. The biggest group is Ultras Tito Cucchiaroni, named after an Argentinian left winger who played for Sampdoria. The group was founded in 1969, making it one of the oldest ultra groups in Italy.
Ultras Tito Cucchiaroni are a-political, although there are smaller groups like Rude Boys Sampdoria, who are left wing. The main support with flags & flares comes from the south stand (Gradinata Sud).
Players
Current squad
As of 2009-09-01
[2]
No.
|
| Position
| Player
|
1
| {{flagicon
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| Luca Castellazzi
|
3
| {{flagicon
|
| Reto Ziegler
|
5
| {{flagicon
|
| Pietro Accardi
|
6
| {{flagicon
|
| Stefano Lucchini
|
7
| {{flagicon
|
| Daniele Mannini
|
8
| {{flagicon
|
| Luciano Zauri (on loan from S.S. Lazio)
|
9
| {{flagicon
|
| Nicola Pozzi (on loan from Empoli F.C.)
|
10
| {{flagicon
|
| Giampaolo Pazzini
|
11
| {{flagicon
|
| Claudio Bellucci
|
12
| {{flagicon
|
| Fernando Tissone
|
13
| {{flagicon
|
| Marco Rossi (footballer born 1987) (on loan from Parma F.C.)
|
15
| {{flagicon
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| Vasco Regini
|
16
| {{flagicon
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| Andrea Poli
|
|
|
No.
|
| Position
| Player
|
17
| {{flagicon
|
| Angelo Palombo
|
19
| {{flagicon
|
| Daniele Franceschini
|
20
| {{flagicon
|
| Marco Padalino
|
21
| {{flagicon
|
| Matteo Guardalben
|
22
| {{flagicon
|
| Fabrizio Cacciatore
|
23
| {{flagicon
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| Marius Stankevicius
|
28
| {{flagicon
|
| Daniele Gastaldello
|
77
| {{flagicon
|
| Franco Semioli
|
88
| {{flagicon
|
| Salvatore Foti
|
90
| {{flagicon
|
| Vincenzo Fiorillo
|
91
| {{flagicon
|
| Roberto Soriano
|
99
| {{flagicon
|
| Antonio Cassano
|
|
Out on loan
No.
|
| Position
| Player
|
| {{flagicon
|
| Mattia Mustacchio (at A.C. Ancona)
|
| {{flagicon
|
| Guido Marilungo (at U.S. Lecce)
|
| {{flagicon
|
| Gabriel Ferrari (at U.S. Foggia)
|
| {{flagicon
|
| Bruno Fornaroli (at Recreativo de Huelva)
|
| {{flagicon
|
| Paolo Sammarco (at Udinese Calcio)
|
| {{flagicon
|
| Francesco Signori (at Vicenza Calcio)
|
| {{flagicon
|
| Vladimir Koman (at A.S. Bari)
|
| {{flagicon
|
| Danilo Soddimo (at Salernitana Calcio 1919)
|
|
|
No.
|
| Position
| Player
|
| {{flagicon
|
| Daniele Dessena (at Cagliari)
|
| {{flagicon
|
| Alessandro Bastrini ( at Salernitana Calcio 1919)
|
| {{flagicon
|
| Massimo Volta (at A.C. Cesena)
|
| {{flagicon
|
| Gianluigi Bianco (at Sassuolo)
|
| {{flagicon
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| Jonathan Rossini ( at Sassuolo)
|
| {{flagicon
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| Matteo Lanzoni (at A.C. Mantova)
|
| {{flagicon
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| Daniele Padelli ( at A.S. Bari)
|
| {{flagicon
|
| Antonio Mirante (at F.C. Parma)
|
|
Notable former players
See also; :Category:U.C. Sampdoria players
1946 - 1970s
- Vujadin Boškov
- Todor Veselinovic
- Ernesto Cucchiaroni
- Marcello Lippi
- Giovanni Lodetti
- Angelo Sormani
- Luis Suárez
- Roberto "Bob" Vieri
1980s
- Ivano Bordon
- Liam Brady
- Hans-Peter Briegel
- Toninho Cerezo
- Giuseppe Dossena
- Trevor Francis
- Moreno Mannini
- Roberto Mancini
- Víctor Muñoz
- Gianluca Pagliuca
- Fausto Pari
- Luca Pellegrini
- Graeme Souness
- Gianluca Vialli
- Pietro Vierchowod
- Fausto Salsano
|
1990s - 2000s
- Alain Boghossian
- Ivano Bonetti
- Marco Branca
- Renato Buso
- Antonio Cassano
- Enrico Chiesa
- Sandro Cois
- Oumar Dieng
- Alberigo Evani
- Riccardo Ferri
- Francesco Flachi
- Ruud Gullit
- Giovanni Invernizzi
- Vladimir Jugovic
- Srecko Katanec
- Christian Karembeu
- Jürgen Klinsmann
- Pierre Laigle
- Attilio Lombardo
- Siniša Mihajlovic
- Alexei Mikhailichenko
- Vincenzo Montella
- Ariel Ortega
- Fabrizio Ferron
- David Platt
|
- Fabio Quagliarella
- Clarence Seedorf
- Lee Sharpe
- Giuseppe Signori
- Hugo
- Paulo Silas
- Doriva
- Juan Sebastián Verón
- Sergio Volpi
- Des Walker
- Walter Zenga
- Christian Zenoni
- Bratislav Živkovic
- Nenad Sakic
- Zoran Jovicic
- Vitali Kutuzov
- François Omam-Biyik
- Saliou Lassissi
|
Managerial history
|
Name
| Nationality
| Years
|
Giuseppe Galluzzi
|
| 1946–1947
|
Adolfo Baloncieri
|
| 1947–1950
|
Giuseppe Galluzzi
|
| 1950
|
Matteo Poggi Alfredo Foni
|
| 1950–1951
|
Alfredo Foni
|
| 1951–1952
|
Matteo Poggi
|
| 1952
|
Ivo Fiorentini
|
| 1952–1953
|
Paolo Tabanelli
|
| 1953–1955
|
Lajos Czeizler
|
| 1955–1956
|
Pietro Rava
|
| 1956–1957
|
Ugo Amoretti
|
| 1957
|
William Dodgin
|
| 1957–1958
|
Adolfo Baloncieri
|
| 1958
|
Eraldo Monzeglio
|
| 1958–1961
|
Roberto Lerici
|
| 1961–1963
|
Ernst Ocwirk
|
| 1963–1965
|
Giuseppe Baldini
|
| 1965–1966
|
Fulvio Bernardini
|
| 1966–1971
|
Heriberto Herrera
|
| 1971–1973
|
Guido Vincenzi
|
| 1973–1974
|
|
|
Name
| Nationality
| Years
|
Giulio Corsini
|
| 1974–1975
|
Eugenio Bersellini
|
| 1975–1977
|
Giorgio Canali
|
| 1977–1978
|
Lamberto Giorgis
|
| 1978–1979
|
Lauro Toneatto
|
| 1979–1980
|
Enzo Riccomini
|
| 1980–1981
|
Renzo Ulivieri
|
| 1981–1984
|
Eugenio Bersellini
|
| 1984–1986
|
Vujadin Boškov
|
| 1986–1992
|
Sven-Göran Eriksson
|
| 1992–1997
|
César Luis Menotti
|
| 1997
|
Vujadin Boškov
|
| 1997–1998
|
Luciano Spalletti
|
| 1998
|
David Platt Giorgio Veneri
|
| 1998–1999
|
Luciano Spalletti
|
| 1999
|
Giampiero Ventura
|
| 1999–2000
|
Luigi Cagni
|
| 2000–2001
|
Gianfranco Bellotto
|
| 2001–2002
|
Walter Novellino
|
| 2002–2007
|
Walter Mazzarri
|
| 2007–2009
|
Luigi Del Neri
|
| 2009-
|
|
Colours, badge and nicknames
{{#if:March 2007{{#ifexist:Category:Articles to be expanded since March 2007
The club crest features a sailor in profile known by the old Genoese name of Baciccia, which translates to Giovanni-Battista in Italian or John-Baptist in English. The image of a sailor is appropriate due to Sampdoria being based in the port city of Genoa.
The white, blue, red and black colours within the crest represent the clubs origins of a merger between two teams, Sampierdarenese and Andrea Doria, who wore respectively red/black and white/blue jerseys.
[3]
Genoa C.F.C. supporters often play jokes at the "cousins" four-coloured attire by dubbing them "cyclists" since striped jerseys were often associated with this sport in the 40s and 50s.
Honours
Serie A: 1
- Champions
: 1990-91
- Runners-up
: 1921-22 (F.I.G.C. as Sampierdarenese
)
Serie B: 2
- Champions
: 1933-34, 1966-67
- Runners-up
: 1981-82, 2002-03
Coppa Italia: 4
- Winners
: 1984-85, 1987-88, 1988-89, 1993-94
- Runners-up
: 1985-86, 1990-91, 2008-09
Supercoppa Italiana: 1
- Winners
: 1991
- Runners-up
: 1988, 1989, 1994
UEFA Champions League
UEFA Cup Winners' Cup: 1
- Winners
: 1989-90
- Runners-up
: 1988-89
References
- www.genoacfc.it
- Rosa 2009-2010
- What percentage of Frank Lampard's goals are deflected?