Almanacco Illustrato del Calcio explained

Football Illustrated Almanac
Author:Various journalists
Title Orig:Almanacco Illustrato del Calcio
Country:Italy
Language:Italian
Discipline:Association football
Publisher:Panini Group (1971–present)
Pub Date:1939–present
Media Type:Print
Website:Panini Italy

The Almanacco Illustrato del Calcio (English: '''Football Illustrated Almanac''') is an annual publication concerning football in Italy, from the first division (Serie A) to lower leagues that compose the league system in the country.[1]

The Almanacco revisites the football activities within the year, including statistics, results, and curiosities. Currently edited by Panini, the annual has been published since 1939.

History

The first Italian football almanacs were launched in 1913 and 1938, under different names.[2] In 1939 the book took its current form,[2] under the name Enciclopedia Illustrata del Calcio Italiano.[3] The reported statistics and information of the 1937–38 season (in Italy and worldwide, for example third World Cup) have, in addition, colour spots.[2]

Publishing has always been annual, except during World War II,[2] but the 1947 edition covered those seasons, as well as other seasons.[2] Panini started publishing in 1971.[2]

Content

The Almanacco combines numbers, photos and information about previous and current seasons. The usual chapters are as follows:

Some editions also contains specials about tournaments (FIFA World Cup, UEFA Euro, Confederations Cup), biographies of players and clubs (e.g. on the anniversary of foundation, or when they go bankrupt). The book is published in autumn, and it is updated to November.

Format changes

Until 2002, the Almanacco, which was printed in black and white covered history of Italian championships (before and after 1929 split - known as "girone unico" - with results, tables and champion squads) and the list of Italian national games (from 1910).[12] The principal format changes are listed below:

Later editions also have brought news, such as lists of record-holders for Serie A clubs and focus.[4] [15]

Non-canonical editions

Catania's 2003 scandal meant for the next season, Serie B was expanded from 20 to 24 teams. The Almanacco printed in late 2004 (with 2005 on its cover) was, as result, longer than previous editions. Panini therefore decided, starting with the following edition, to produce a shorter book. Statistics replied until that moment were cut, to being published in a special publication (Almanacco: La Storia 1898-2004) not counted as canonical. It was published in September 2005, months before the regular publication.[16]

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. News: Ora devo andare allo stadio con l'Almanacco Panini.... Francesco Bollorini. la Repubblica. January 22, 2004. 9. italian.
  2. Book: Almanacco Illustrato del Calcio 2012. Panini Group. 2011. 500. italian. 1129-3381.
  3. http://www.jcmelegnano.net/e107_plugins/autogallery/autogallery.php?show=GLI+ALMANACCHI+DEL+CALCIO%2FALMANACCO_DEL_CALCIO_1939.jpg&full=1 Almanaco del Calcio 1939
  4. The opening section, beginning with the 2010 edition, covers topics related to several areas of football: transfers, financial fair play, oriundi players, and laws of the game.
  5. Information contains personal (height, weight, date and place of birth) and sport infos (matches, goals and careers).
  6. Clubs participating in Serie A, Serie B and Lega Pro with infos about their squad (official and youth) and histories.
  7. Results, statistics, tables and scores of: Serie A, Serie B, Lega Pro, Serie D, Coppa Italia and youth competitions.
  8. List of teams, calendars and other tables.
  9. Only derbies of Milan, Rome, Genoa, Turin and Verona are included.
  10. List of champions, regulamentations and records: promotions, relegations, goals scored and conceded, top scorers, recordmen (appearances and goals), penalty scorers (with at least 5 penalties scored).
  11. Matches and statistics of Italian and other national teams; results of European and other continental competitions.
  12. News: La matita di Silva rivive su Internet. Gabriella Mancini. La Gazzetta dello Sport. April 12, 2000. italian.
  13. The album was only present in the 2004 and 2005 editions (with 3 and 5 pages, respectively).
  14. https://www.libreriadellosport.it/libri/almanacco-illustrato-del-calcio-2005.php 2005 Almanacco show
  15. https://www.libreriadellosport.it/libri/almanacco-illustrato-del-calcio-2006.php 2006 Almanacco show
  16. News: Oltre cent' anni in un solo almanacco. Vincenzo Cito. La Gazzetta dello Sport. September 28, 2005. italian.