US Catanzaro 1929 explained

Clubname:Catanzaro
Nickname:Aquile del Sud (Southern Eagles)
Regina del Sud (Southern Queen)
Timore del Nord (Fear of the North)
Magico (Magic)
Giallorossi (The Red-Yellows)
Fullname:Unione Sportiva Catanzaro 1929[1]
Founded:1929
Owner:Unione Sportiva Catanzaro 1929 S.r.l.[2]
Chairman:Floriano Noto
Manager:Fabio Caserta
Current:2023–24 US Catanzaro 1929 season
Ground:Stadio Nicola Ceravolo,
Catanzaro, Italy
Capacity:14,650
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Unione Sportiva Catanzaro 1929,[1] or simply Catanzaro, is a professional football club based in Catanzaro, Calabria, Italy, that competes in Serie B, the second tier of the Italian football championship, following a 17-year absence from it.

The club was initially formed with the merger of two local clubs in 1927 before being officially founded in 1929.[3] Since then, the club has primarily competed in the lower divisions of the national competitions and has been re-founded twice, once in 2006 and again in 2011, both for financial reasons.

Since its foundation, the official colours of the club have been red and yellow. The team has used these colours predominantly in their kits, frequently playing in either all-red kits with yellow trims or in red and yellow stripes. The club's official emblem is the golden eagle, in honour of the city's coat of arms. The team plays its home matches at the Stadio Nicola Ceravolo, which was built in 1919 and is the oldest sports facility in Calabria.

In its history, Catanzaro has played seven seasons in Serie A, five of which were consecutive. The best performance in Serie A was a seventh place finish in 1981–82 and an eighth-place finish in 1980–81.

The club has won seven championships since its foundation. Six of these were in the third tier (one in Prima Divisione, two in Serie C, and three in Serie C1). The final championship was won in IV Serie in 1953. This year, the club was also national title holders after winning the Scudetto IV Serie. At youth level, the club won the Dante Berretti Trophy of Serie C in 1991–1992.

In the Coppa Italia, Catanzaro's best results were runners-up in 1965–66, and semi-finalists in 1978–79 and 1981–82.

On 30 May 2018, the club, which had already used the historic logo since 2011, announced the return of the old name "Unione Sportiva Catanzaro", with the final addition of "1929".[4] [5]

History

Origins to pre-World War II

The club was initially founded by the merger of two local teams (la Braccini and la Scalfaro) as Unione Sportiva Catanzarese in 1927,[3] and competed in the Terza Divisione interregional group of Calabria & Basilicata, which was the fourth tier of Italian football at the time. Following a visit to the city from fascist leader Benito Mussolini, the club was officially founded with the name change of Unione Sportiva Fascista Catanzarese in 1929. The club continued to compete in the Terza Divisione for the 1929–30 season where it gained promotion for a second place finish directly into the third tier, the Prima Divisione, for the 1930–31 season. After spending three seasons in this division, Catanzarese gained promotion into Serie B for the first time in the 1933–34 season. They would spend the next three out of four years in Serie B, culminating with a fifteenth place finish in 1936–37. This meant the club would be regulated to Serie C for the following season, however financial troubles struck the club, so they returned to regional leagues instead. There, they would win a couple of regional titles before the second world war would prevent any further competition.

Post World War II and first national title

When competition resumed post World War II, the club dropped the fascist moniker, simply becoming Unione Sportiva Catanzaro for the Serie C season. They would remain in Serie C for thirteen of the following fifteen seasons, participating in only the Serie B once in 1946–47 and IV Serie once following relegation from the 1951–52 Serie C season. Catanzaro would bounce quickly back to Serie C after the 1952–53 season, which saw them not only win their interregional group, but also become national scudetto winners following the play-offs between interregional winners. The club would go on to become Serie C group winners in 1958–59 to achieve promotion back to Serie B for the first time in thirteen years.

Serie B consistency to Serie A promotion

With promotion into Serie B for the 1959–60 season, the club would enter a period of stable success, competing for twelve consecutive years there, with generally mid-table placings. This period saw the club reach the Coppa Italia final in 1966, before finally winning promotion to Serie A for the first time in 1971, after they defeated Bari in the deciding fixture of a three-way play-off which also featured Atalanta.

Catanzaro's inaugural Serie A season saw them struggle and succumb to relegation on the final day with only 3 wins and 15 draws for 21 points. However, their first-ever Serie A win came in Round 16 with a 1–0 win over Juventus. After narrowly missing out on a return to Serie A in 1975, they bounced back in 1976 but once again lasted just one year.

A third promotion in 1978 ushered in the club's golden era with a five-year stay in Serie A. With a team including Claudio Ranieri, Gianni Improta and the iconic Massimo Palanca, Catanzaro managed a highly credible 9th place in 1979. Though they finished 14th and would have been relegated for the following season, they won a reprieve thanks to forced relegations of AC Milan and Lazio. They managed 8th place in 1981 and 7th the following year before a dismal relegation in 1983. Much of the next four years was spent bouncing between Serie B and C1.

Return to Serie C and bankruptcy

Catanzaro initially emerged as promotion contenders once more in 1988, finishing 5th with the ageless Palanca having returned to the club after a fruitless spell at Napoli. However, they ultimately succumbed to successive relegations in 1990 and 1991, staying in Serie C2 for twelve seasons until 2003.

In 2005, after two consecutive promotions, Catanzaro returned to Serie B after a 15-year absence. However, after a poor season they ended their Serie B campaign in last place, meaning relegation to Serie C1. Catanzaro would immediately get another chance, the team being reinstated to Serie B due to vacancies related to the exclusion of other teams from Serie B. In its 2005–06 Serie B campaign, Catanzaro came last again and was relegated to Serie C1. The relegation was followed by financial troubles which led to the federation cancelling the club's registration.

F.C. Catanzaro (2006–2011)

In the summer 2006 the club was re-founded for the first time with the new name of F.C. Catanzaro and was registered to Serie C2 for the 2006–07 season, with the hope to return to the upper divisions.

In season 2010–11, they were initially relegated from Lega Pro Seconda Divisione group C to Serie D,[6] but due to the relegation of Pomezia to last place, the club was saved from relegation.[7]

On 18 July 2011 the club was excluded by the Federal Council from Lega Pro Seconda Divisione,[8] but on 27 July 2011 the club won its appeal to Tnas and be permitted to play in the 2011–12 Lega Pro Seconda Divisione.[9]

Catanzaro Calcio 2011 / U.S. Catanzaro 1929 (2011–present)

On 30 June 2011 the company Catanzaro Calcio 2011 acquired permanently the company branch of the bankrupt F.C. Catanzaro, following the cancellation of the previous club's registration because of financial troubles.[10] [11] [12] On 6 August 2011, the company purchased the historical brand and logo of U.S. Catanzaro.[1]

In the 2011–12 season, Catanzaro obtained a respectable second place in the Lega Pro Seconda Divisione and was promoted to Lega Pro Prima Divisione after playoffs. The following two seasons saw Catanzaro ending in tenth and fourth place respectively, and also a participation in the promotion play-offs (then lost to Benevento) in the latter case.

Finally in 2018, the club officially transitioned to the name Unione Sportiva Catanzaro 1929, after years of using the historical logo. The logo was also updated with the year '1929' added to highlight this change.[4] [5] The club would make promotion play-offs for three consecutive years, after finishing 3rd, 7th and 2nd but ultimately remain in Serie C.

In the 2021–22 season, Catanzaro again performed strongly in the league and also in the Coppa Italia Serie C. The start of the season began slowly with a number of draws interspersed with some wins. Ultimately, by 29 November 2021 Calabro was fired following a 1–1 draw with Monterosi[13] and was replaced by Vivarini.[14] The team had an immediate response with two wins and drew 1–1 away to Padova in the Coppa Italia Serie C semi-final. On the return leg at home, Catanzaro lost 0–1 and Padova went on to become eventual winners of the cup. Catanzaro continued to pick up points and finished the season strongly in second for a consecutive season, gaining direct entry into the quarter-final promotion playoffs. There they defeated Monopoli 3–1 on aggregate to once again find themselves matched up again Padova in the semi-finals. Unfortunately, they were unable to progress through to final as they lost 2–1 on aggregate.

In the 2022–23, Catanzaro return to Serie B for next season after defeat Gelbison 0-2 on Matchweek 33 and Champions of Serie C Group A.

Stadium, Colours and badge

Stadium

Catanzaro plays out of Stadio Nicola Ceravolo, which was built in 1919 and is the oldest sports facility in Calabria.

Colours

The team's colours, since foundation, are red and yellow, just as the whole city

The most used uniform in the eighty years of history of the Aquile is the solid red one, with the yellow V collar with red shorts and socks with yellow edges.

Those pairings have accompanied the Calabrians in the golden years of the Serie A and therefore are the most dear to the Catanzaro environment. Equally used was the vertical striped yellow and red shirt with red shorts and socks with yellow edges, especially in the post-failure years of 2006.

Most rarely Catanzaro has used a shirt with yellow and red horizontal stripes. However, this uniform was used by the Calabrians in the historic match in Turin, won against Juventus, in the 1965-66 Coppa Italia, which was to launch the Catanzaro in the final, then lost against the lilies of Florence.

For the away shirt, the most used is completely blue with references to the Giallorossi, but also completely white or yellow seals were worn.

Occasionally le Aquile, have also used a third uniform which, depending on the color of the home squad, could be either blue or white or yellow. Same for the fourth currency

Badges

The corporate coat of arms consists of a shield in which stands the historic symbol of Catanzaro, the Golden eagle, faithfully taken from the city's coat of arms, which holds a blue ribbon on its beak bearing the motto Sanguinis effusione, motivated by the losses reported in various battles by the Catanzaro fighters.

On the belly of the eagle takes place a shield that reproduces the three hills on which the city stands. A vertical line splits the emblem in two, so as to allow the insertion of the team's social colors, which is completed by the name of the company, placed at the top on a blue background.

Derbies and rivalries

Catanzaro has competed against other regional Calabrian teams throughout the professional competitions of Italian football. These derbies include:

Players

Current squad

[15]

Out on loan

Staff

Current

[16]

!Position!Name
ManagerVincenzo Vivarini
Assistant coachAndrea Milani
Goalkeeper coachFabrizio Zambardi
Fitness coachAntonio Del Fosco
Match analystMassimo Carcarino
Technical assistantRaffaele Talotta
Team ManagerNino Scimone
Chief Medical OfficerDr. Giuseppe Bova
Club DoctorsDr. Giuseppe Stillo, Dr. Maurizio Caglioti
PhysiotherapistBruno Berardocco
OsteopathFelisiano Villani

Hall of fame

Below is a list of players inducted into the Catanzaro Hall of Fame[17]

Player Role Years
Player
Manager
1967–79
1992–93, 1993, 1996
Player 1981–84
Player 1965–67
Player
Manager
1975–79
1993–95
Player
Manager
1952–55
1972–73, 1980, 1983, 1994–95
Player 1970–72
Player 1979–82
Player 1974–81, 1986–90

Presidential history

Below is a presidential history list of Catanzaro, from when they were founded in 1927, until the present day.[18]

 
NameYears
Antonio Susanna1927–1928
Enrico Talamo1928–1937
Arnaldo Pugliese1937–1944
Italo Paparazzo1944–1945
Umberto Riccio1945–1946
Giuseppe Zamboni Pesci1946–1948
Gino Guarnieri1948–1950
Aldo Ferrara1950–1958
Nicola Ceravolo1958–1979
Adriano Merlo1979–1984
Giuseppe Albano1984–1995
Giuseppe Soluri1995–1999
 
NameYears
Giovanni Mancuso1999–2003
Domenico Cavallaro2003
Claudio Parente2003–2006
Bernardo Colao2006
Domenico Cavallaro2006
Giancarlo Pittelli2006–2008
Pasquale Bove2008–2009
Antonio Aiello2009–2010
Maurizio Ferrara2010–2011
Giuseppe Santaguida2011
Giuseppe Cosentino2011–2017
Floriano Noto2017-

Managerial history

 
Name Nationality Years
Dino Baroni 1928–1931
1931–1933
Heinrich Schoenfeld (R1–11)
* Yuri Koszegi (R12–26)

1933–1934[19]
Yuri Koszegi 1934–1936
Remo Migliorini (R1–?)
* Heinrich Schoenfeld (R?–30)

1936–1937
Walter Colombati 1937–1938
Riccardo Mottola 1938–1939
1945–1946
Pietro Piselli 1946–1947
Gastone Boni
* Euro Riparbelli
1947–1948
Luciano Robotti
* Euro Riparbelli & Pasquali Ripepe
1948–1949
Euro Riparbelli 1949–1952
Orlando Tognotti 1952–1956
Renato Bottacini (R1–16)
* Vitoro Maschi & Pasquali Ripepe (R17–34)
1956–1957
Piero Pasinati 1957–1960
Piero Pasinati (R1–16, 18)
* Enzo Dolfin (R17, 19–38)
1960–1961
Bruno Arcari (R1–29)
* Enzo Dolfin (R30–38)
1961–1962
Enzo Dolfin 1962–1963
Leandro Remondini 1963–1965
Dino Ballacci 1965–1966
Carmelo Di Bella 1966–1967
Luciano Lupi 1967–1968
Luciano Lupi (R1–22)
* Umberto Sacco (R23–38)
1968–1969
Dino Ballacci 1969–1970
Gianni Seghedoni 1970–1972
Renato Lucchi (R1–25)
* Saverio Leotta (R25–38)
1972–1973
Gianni Seghedoni (R1–15)
* Carmelo Di Bella (R15–38)
1973–1974
Gianni Di Marzio 1974–1977
Giorgio Sereni 1977–1978
Carlo Mazzone 1978–1979
Carlo Mazzone (R1–25)
* Saverio Leotta (R25–30)
1979–1980
Tarcisio Burgnich 1980–1981
Bruno Pace 1981–1982
Bruno Pace (R1–15)
* Saverio Leotta (R16–30)
1982–1983
Mario Corso (R1–9)
* Antonio Renna (R10–38)
1983–1984
Giovan Battista Fabbri1984–1985
Pietro Santin (R1–20)
* Todor Veselinović (R21–38)

1985–1986
Claudio Tobia1986–1987
Vincenzo Guerini1987–1988
Tarcisio Burgnich (R1–7)
* Gianni Di Marzio (R8–38)
1988–1989
Fausto Silipo (R1–14, 21–38)
* Renzo Aldi & Giovan Battista Fabbri (R15–20)
1989-1990
Claudio Sala (R1–6, 16–24)
* Francesco Brignani (R7–15)
* Gennaro Rambone (R25–34)
1990–1991
 
Name Nationality Years
Gennaro Rambone (R1–20)
* Franco Selvaggi (R21–38)
1991–1992
Franco Selvaggi (R1–6)
* Adriano Banelli (R7–18, 26–34)
* Paolo Dal Fiume (R19–25)
1992–1993
Gianni Improta1993–1994
Gianni Improta (R1–3)
* Enrico Nicolini (R4–26, 29–34)
* Saverio Leotta (R27–28)
1994–1995
Mauro Zampollini (R1–5)
* Marcello Pasquino (R6–27)
* Adriano Banelli (R28–34)
1995–1996
Rino Lavezzini (R1–26, play-off)
* Giuseppe Sabadini (R27–34)
1996–1997
Francesco Paolo Specchia (R1–26)
* Giuseppe Vuolo (R27–34)
1997–1998
Juan Carlos Morrone1998–1999
Salvatore Esposito (R1–8)
* Fortunato Torrisi (R9–27)
* Giuseppe Galluzzo (R26–34)
1999–2000
Agatino Cuttone2000–2001
Leonardo Bitetto (R1–21)
* Massimo Morgia (R22–34)
2001–2002
Franco Dellisanti2002–2003
Piero Braglia2003–2004
Piero Braglia (R1–5)
* Luigi Cagni (R6–25)
* Bruno Bolchi (R26–42)
2004–2005
Sergio Buso (R1–13)
* Vincenzo Guerini (R14–24)
* Bruno Giordano (R25–37)
* Franco Cittadino (R37–42)
2005–2006
Manuele Domenicali2006–2007
Fausto Silipo (R1–5)
* Franco Cittadino (R6–21)
* Agatino Cuttone (R22–34)
2007–2008
Nicola Provenza2008–2009
Gaetano Auteri2009–2010
Zé Maria (R1–9)
* Antonio Aloi (R10–30)

2010–2011
2011–2012
Francesco Cozza (R1–27)
* Fulvio D'Adderio (R28–30)
2012–2013
Oscar Brevi2013–2014
Francesco Moriero (R1–12)
* Massimo D’Urso (R13, 38)
* Stefano Sanderra (R14–37)
2014–2015
Massimo D’Urso (R1–8)
* Alessandro Erra (R9–34)
2015–2016
Giulio Spader (R1)
* Mario Somma (R2–9)
* Nunzio Zavettieri (R10–25)
* Alessandro Erra (R26–play out)
2016–2017
Alessandro Erra (R1–8)
* Davide Dionigi (R9–28)
* Giuseppe Pancaro (R29–38)
2017–2018
Gaetano Auteri2018–2019
Gaetano Auteri (R1–10, 23–30)
* Gianluca Grassadonia (R11–22)
2019–2020
Antonio Calabro2020–21
Antonio Calabro (R1–16)
* Vincenzo Vivarini (R17–38)
2021–22
Vincenzo Vivarini2022–23

* Denotes took over as manager during the season

Honours

Leagues

Cups

European

Notes

Competitions

League

Level League Seasons Debut LastTotal
A 7 7
B 29 29
C 3 1932–3331
22 2022–23
6 2013–14
18 18
D1 1952–53 1
Notes

National Cups

CompetitionParticipationDebutLast seasonBest finish
45 align=left bgcolor=silverRunners-Up (1966)
31 align=left Semifinalist (2021–22)
2 2004 2023 align=left bgcolor=goldChampions (2023)
1 1952–53 align=left bgcolor=goldChampions (1953)

International record

Anglo-Italian Cup

Season Round Opposition Home Away Ref
Group Stage 0–3 0–2 [21]
Group Stage 0–1 1–4

Overall Record

Notes and References

  1. Web site: UsCatanzaro.net – Il Catanzaro Calcio torna US. UsCatanzaro.net. uscatanzaro.net. 6 August 2011. 2 April 2018.
  2. http://www.uscatanzaro1929.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=3&Itemid=2 La Societa'
  3. Web site: LA STORIA GIALLOROSSA – catanzaronelpallone. https://web.archive.org/web/20150522140352/http://www.catanzaronelpallone.net/la-storia-giallorossa/. dead. 22 May 2015. 22 May 2015. 19 October 2019.
  4. Web site: US Catanzaro: slitta annuncio di Auteri ma niente panico. 30 May 2018. CatanzaroInforma.it. 19 October 2019.
  5. Web site: E' ritornata l'U.S. Catanzaro 1929. Catanzaro Sport 24. it. 19 October 2019.
  6. Web site: Calcio. La Reggina la spunta nel finale sul Novara. Catanzaro retrocesso | Calabria Living . 24 April 2011 . https://web.archive.org/web/20110911142711/http://www.calabrialiving.it/web/2011/04/calcio-la-reggina-la-spunta-nel-finale-sul-novara-catanzaro-quasi-retrocesso/ . 11 September 2011 . dead .
  7. Web site: Lega Pro 2/C: Pomezia retrocesso in serie D – Calcio, 2010–2011, Legapro, Generico – Datasport.it. https://web.archive.org/web/20170508052007/http://www.datasport.it/calcio/legapro/generico/lega-pro-2c-pomezia-retrocesso-in-serie-d.htm. dead. 8 May 2017. datasport.it. 2 April 2018.
  8. Web site: Dal Consiglio federale ok alla Lega Pro a 76 squadre – Riviera Oggi. 19 July 2011. rivieraoggi.it. 2 April 2018.
  9. Web site: Catanzaro, Tnas accoglie ricorso: ok a Lega Pro. Corriere dello Sport – Stadio. 2 April 2018. https://web.archive.org/web/20161006205642/http://www.corrieredellosport.it/calcio/lega_pro_serie_d/lega_pro/2011/07/27-185866/Catanzaro,+Tnas+accoglie+ricorso%3A+ok+a+Lega+Pro. 6 October 2016. dead.
  10. Web site: 2^ Divisione, il punto sul Catanzaro e le altre calabresi. tuttolegapro.com. 2 April 2018.
  11. http://www.calabrialiving.it/web/2011/07/il-catanzaro-calcio-2011-si-aggiudica-il-titolo-dellfc/{{Dead link|date=August 2018 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}
  12. Web site: Giornale di Calabria. Giornale di Calabria.
  13. Web site: Catanzaro esonerato il tecnico Calabro e il suo staff Spader guidera l'allenamento. tuttomercatoweb.com. 31 May 2022.
  14. Web site: Serie C Catanzaro il nuovo allenatore e Vivarini. corrieredellosport.it. 30 November 2021 . 31 May 2022.
  15. Web site: US Catanzaro 1929 squad. Soccerway. 20 September 2022.
  16. Web site: Staff Tecnico. uscatanzaro1929.com. 24 May 2024.
  17. Web site: US Catanzaro Hall of Fame. 16 October 2021. https://web.archive.org/web/20040814190012/http://www.us-catanzaro.it/hall_of_fame.asp. 14 August 2004.
  18. News: La Storia Del Catanzaro. USCatanzaro.net. 23 June 2007. 29 August 2013. https://web.archive.org/web/20130830114427/http://www.uscatanzaro.net/autohtml.php?op=modload&name=storia.htm&file=index. 30 August 2013. dead.
  19. Web site: 1933–34 Serie B Girone A. www.webalice.it. https://web.archive.org/web/20160224184940/http://www.webalice.it/stasin/pdf/1933-34.pdf. 29 April 2021. 24 February 2016.
  20. Web site: 1960 Cup of the Alps. www.rssf.com. 30 October 2021.
  21. Web site: 1972 Anglo-Italian Cup. www.rssf.com. 30 October 2021.