Alessandro Nista Explained

Alessandro Nista should not be confused with Alessandro Nesta.

Alessandro Nista
Fullname:Alessandro Nista
Birth Date:10 July 1965
Birth Place:Collesalvetti, Italy
Position:Goalkeeper
Youthyears1:1982–1985
Youthclubs1:Pisa
Years1:1985–1986
Years2:1986–1990
Years3:1990
Years4:1990–1995
Years5:1995–1999
Years6:1999–2001
Clubs1:Sorrento
Clubs2:Pisa
Clubs3:Leeds United
Clubs4:Ancona
Clubs5:Parma
Clubs6:Torino
Caps1:3
Caps2:38
Caps3:0
Caps4:139
Caps5:2
Caps6:1
Goals1:0
Goals2:0
Goals3:0
Goals4:0
Goals5:0
Goals6:0
Nationalyears1:1988
Nationalteam1:Italy U21
Nationalcaps1:3
Nationalgoals1:0

Alessandro Nista (born 10 July 1965) is a former Italian football goalkeeper. A talented goalkeeper in his youth, he was once thought to be the heir of Walter Zenga for the Italy national team, although he failed to live up to his reputation, despite a successful club career.[1]

Club career

Nista has played with Sorrento, Pisa, Leeds United, Ancona, Parma, and Torino in his career, serving mainly as a backup goalkeeper in later years. With Pisa, Nista won the Serie B title in 1985, and the Mitropa Cup in 1987, also winning the English Football League Second Division Title with Leeds in 1990. With Parma, Nista won a Coppa Italia and an UEFA Cup double in 1999, although he was mainly a reserve behind goalkeepers Giovanni Galli, Luca Bucci, and Gianluigi Buffon during his time at the club.[1] In total, he made 66 career appearances in Serie A, 114 in Serie B, and 3 in Serie C1.[2] Marco van Basten scored both his first and final goals in Serie A against Nista, in 1987 and 1993, respectively.[3]

International career

At international level, Nista also represented the Italy national under-21 football team on 3 occasions in 1988.[4]

Coaching career

Following his retirement in 2001, Nista worked as a goalkeeping coach with his former club, Torino. He later moved to work with Reggina, in 2007,[5] and Grosseto, in 2008, before moving to work at Juventus in 2009, training his former Parma teammate Gianluigi Buffon.[6] He worked as the goalkeeping coach for Serie A side Internazionale between 2010 and 2013.[7] He is currently the goalkeeping coach for Serie A side Napoli.

Honours

Club

Pisa[1]

1984–85

1987–88

Leeds United[1]

1989–90

Parma[1]

1998–99

1998–99

Torino[1]

2000–01

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Numeri 1: Alessandro Nista, l'erede (mancato) di Zenga. tuttopisa.it. Italian. Andrea Chiavacci. 2 April 2014. 28 April 2015.
  2. Web site: Alessandro Nista - Carriera. tuttocalciatori.net. Italian. 28 April 2015.
  3. Web site: Maradona commenta l’addio al calcio di Van Basten. sportreview.it. Italian. 28 April 2015.
  4. Web site: Nazionale in cifre: Nista, Alessandro. figc.it. FIGC. Italian. 28 April 2015. https://web.archive.org/web/20160304003113/http://www.figc.it/nazionali/DettaglioConvocato?codiceConvocato=749&squadra=1. 4 March 2016. dead. dmy-all.
  5. Web site: Staff tecnico stagione 2007-08: Reggina. corriere.it. Il Corriere della Sera. Italian. 28 April 2015.
  6. Web site: Sandro Nista va ad allenare Buffon. gelocal.it. La Repubblica. Italian. 20 July 2009. 28 April 2015. 1 December 2018. https://web.archive.org/web/20181201051250/http://ricerca.gelocal.it/iltirreno/archivio/iltirreno/2009/07/20/LPSLE_LPS02.html. dead.
  7. Web site: Staff. Inter.it. 3 February 2016. 16 March 2013. https://web.archive.org/web/20130316115450/http://www2.inter.it/aas/squadra/staff?L=en. dead.