Clubname: | Mazara |
Fullname: | Unione Sportiva Dilettantistica Mazara |
Nickname: | I Gialloblù (The Yellow-and-Blues) I Canarini (The Canaries) |
Founded: | 1946 (U.S. Mazara) 1996 (merger) |
Capacity: | 3,266 |
Chairman: | Salvatore Asaro |
Mgrtitle: | Head coach |
Manager: | Salvatore Asaro |
League: | Promozione Sicily/A |
Season: | 2023–24 |
Position: | Eccellenza Sicily/A, 16th (relegated) |
Pattern B1: | thin_darkbluestripes |
Leftarm1: | FFFF00 |
Body1: | FFFF00 |
Rightarm1: | FFFF00 |
Shorts1: | 373770 |
Socks1: | FFFF00 |
Pattern B2: | thin_yellowsides |
Leftarm2: | 000090 |
Body2: | 000090 |
Rightarm2: | 000090 |
Shorts2: | 000090 |
Socks2: | 000090 |
U.S.D. Mazara, commonly known just as Mazara, is an Italian football team from Mazara del Vallo, Sicily. They currently play in the amateur Promozione league.
Mazara was founded in 1946. However, a team representing Mazara del Vallo — Unione Sportiva Mazara — was not founded until 1957–1958. Initially, the team played in the Promozione league. They played in Serie D from 1960 to 1961 but were relegated three years later. The club played in Serie D from 1971 to 1972 before they were relegated again. They returned to play in Serie D in 1976–1977 after winning a promotion playoff to Canicattì 1–0. The playoff match took place at Stadio Renzo Barbera, Palermo, attended by 12,000 people, the majority of whom were Mazara supporters. Following the promotion, the club consecutively played in Serie D for 19 seasons.
During the 1980s and early 1990s, Mazara often aimed to win the Serie D league but always missed their goal. In 1985, coach Ignazio Arcoleo led Mazara to win Serie D, so they were planned to be promoted to Serie C2, but the Football Federation later cancelled the promotion because of alleged match-fixing, and Mazara's bitter rivals Trapanis were promoted in their place. Mazara narrowly missed promotion on several occasions: the club placed second in 1988–1989, just one point behind winners Acireale; in 1990–1991, third behind Gangi, who then lost the playoff match to Matera; in 1993–1994, seventh after having led the point count for almost the whole first half of the season.
After nineteen Serie D seasons, Mazara encountered serious financial troubles. In 1994–1995, they were relegated to Eccellenza, where another local team, S.C. Mazara 2000, was already playing. Mazara 2000 was a minor, young team that quickly climbed the football pyramid to Eccellenza. Mazara proper appeared to be an old team under decline. Both teams played in Eccellenza in 1995–1996, challenging each other in a local derby. Mazara placed fourth at the end of the season, whereas Mazara 2000 obtained seventh place. Mazara, under growing economic difficulties, agreed to merge with Mazara 2000. The merged team's name was Gruppo Sportivo Mazara 1946 (Mazara 1946 Sports Group).
The new football team included almost all the best players from the two former local clubs. Their first season in 1996–1997 was very successful, winning Eccellenza hands down and returning to Serie D. The first season for the new club in the Italian fifth-ranked division ended with just Mazara earning one point above the relegation limit. The 1998–1999 campaign was even harder. Since Mazara ended the season with the same number of points as Sancataldese, they were forced to play a single-legged relegation playoff. Held in Termini Imerese, the match ended in a 1–0 win for Mazara, which escaped relegation again.
Affected by heavy financial struggles, Mazara's team comprised young and inexperienced players in the 1999–2000 Serie D season. They were relegated to Eccellenza with just 8 points in 34 matches, placed last in number of points in the league.
Mazara experienced a period of decline. It was relegated to the Promozione (7th-ranked division) in 2003–2004 after losing relegation playoffs to Licata. With a new property, the club returned to Eccellenza in 2005–2006 under coach Filippo Cavataio, a native of Mazara and a former centre back of several Serie C teams. In 2006–2007, the club, again coached by Cavataio, ended the regular season phase in third place, behind Alcamo and Carini. They were admitted to the promotion playoff semifinal, where they eliminated Kamarat (from Cammarata) in a one-legged semifinal after a 0–0 tie. Mazara moved to the next round because of their best placement in the regular season. However, another tie with second-placed Carini in the final caused Mazara to be eliminated. Mazara failed to receive promotion in the following season, finishing in fifth place after a long battle with Nissa and bitter rivals Trapani, who then defeated and eliminated Mazara in the following promotion play-off tournament. All three matches (two in the regular season, plus a one-legged play-off match) against Trapani were played behind closed doors.
In 2008–09, Mazara returned, expecting to win the league, and established themselves in the top positions of the league. However, in January 2009, the club unwillingly gained national news coverage due to a key home game against first-placed Villabate. Mazara striker Francesco Erbini scored a goal in the first minutes of the match, but the referee disallowed the goal and restarted the game as Mazara's players were celebrating, thus allowing Villabate to score a goal with no significant opposition on the pitch. Due to heavy protests, the referee sent off three Mazara footballers in succession and abandoned the pitch minutes later.[1] [2] The Sicilian Football Federation then announced that the match was to be replayed on 10 March; Mazara won the game 2–0 and established themselves in first place.[3] On 22 March, after a 4–0 home win against Marsala in a local derby, Mazara mathematically ensured first place in the league table. They had a six-point advantage over Villabate and only one remaining match to be played, marking their return to the Serie D after nine years.[4]
The club's comeback season to Serie D was hailed by financial problems, mostly caused by the move from a regional league to a national one. Former player Giovanni Iacono was appointed head coach on an unusual part-time basis. Throughout the season, Mazara found themselves at the bottom side of the league despite managing to achieve some prominent results, such as home wins to fallen giants Messina, and arch-rivals and league leaders Trapani. The club also experienced the loss of former Palermo striker and its team captain, Francesco Erbini. He was banned from the league for ten months in February 2010 because he greeted two club staff members under criminal investigation.[5] Despite these issues, the club ended the season above the relegation playoff zone, ensuring that they would play in the next Serie D season. In July 2010, a fusion was announced between the main Mazara club and the historical local youth system club Aurora Mazara. The new club took the name Mazara Calcio A.S.D.[6]
Mazara successfully returned to Serie D in 2010 as Eccellenza Sicily champions and played two seasons. They were relegated in 2011 as second-last placed in the Round I of the top amateur league in Italy. In their first season back in Eccellenza, Mazara clearly stated their intent to return immediately to Serie D by acquiring several top players, including former Torino striker Akeem Omolade. Despite several attempts, the club suffered difficult times. The 2013–14 season was particularly disastrous: Mazara narrowly escaped relegation through playoffs, which were decided by a last-minute extra-time draw against Rocca di Caprileone.
For the 2014–15 season, Mazara appointed Nicola Terranova, former assistant coach and older brother of Serie A defender Emanuele Terranova, as the new head coach. The club ended the season in second place behind winners Marsala. Qualifying for the national playoff phase, they were eliminated in the finals by Apulia-based club Nardò.
The 2015–16 season started with Terranova again at the team's helm. A Palermo-based consortium took over the club. New leader Elio Abbagnato (former club chairman from 1989 to 1991, and father-in-law of former Italy international Federico Balzaretti) appointed former Serie A player Tommaso Napoli as Mazara's new manager. Playing in Eccellenza, the club ended in seventh place. Mazara had a very successful campaign in the Coppa Italia Dilettanti, winning the regional cup for the first time. They ended the national phase, which offered an additional Serie D spot to the competition winners, as runners-up, losing to Unione Sanremo in the final.
In the new season, Andrea Pensabene became the new head coach, replacing Mazara-born Giacomo Modica in September. In November 2016, Abbagnato sold the club to managing director Filippo Franzone.[7]
The club changed ownership again in 2019, sold by Palermo-based Franzone to a local consortium. In 2023, the club was renamed U.S.D. Mazara.[8] Mazara were relegated by the end of the 2023–24 season, finishing dead last in the Group A of the Eccellenza Sicily league.
The official team colours for every major sports team in Mazara are canary yellow and blue, which are also the official colours of Mazara del Vallo.
Mazara's original team badge was reminiscent of the 1996 merger between the two local and rival clubs U.S. Mazara and S.C. Mazara 2000. Both two characteristic elements of the respective original crests, respectively the canary bird and the seahorse, were present on it, along with the words "GS MAZARA 1946". That logo was dropped in 2010 in favour of a new version depicting only the canary.
Mazara plays its home matches at Stadio Nino Vaccara, a small stadium along the local Mazaro river. Originally a dirt floor stadium without seats, Stadio Nino Vaccara undertook a massive restructuring in the early 2000s, implementing a synthetic field and a numbered seats-only grandstand with a roof.
The stadium is divided into three sectors: the numbered grandstand (tribuna centrale) with a capacity of 1,086; the curva (not a curved sector), where organized supporters sit down, with a capacity of 800; and the gradinata in front of the grandstand, with a capacity of 1,380, usually opened in exceptional cases.[9]
Outside the stadium, right beside the main entrance, murals depict fishermen and fishing boats characteristic of Mazara del Vallo.
Season | League | Placement | Other | |
---|---|---|---|---|
1956–57 | Prima Divisione | 5th | ||
1957–58 | Prima Divisione | 1st | promoted | |
1958–59 | Prima Categoria | 7th | ||
1959–60 | Prima Categoria | 1st | promoted after playoff against Milazzo | |
1960–61 | Serie D | 10th | ||
1961–62 | Serie D | 7th | ||
1962–63 | Serie D | 8th | ||
1963–64 | Serie D | 17th | relegated | |
1964–65 | Prima Categoria | 7th | ||
1965–66 | Prima Categoria | 11th | ||
1966–67 | Prima Categoria | 15th | ||
1967–68 | Prima Categoria | 7th | ||
1968–69 | Prima Categoria | 2nd | ||
1969–70 | Prima Categoria | 1st | 6 points later deducted because of match fixing, AMAT Palermo promoted at its place | |
1970–71 | Promozione | 1st | promoted | |
1971–72 | Serie D | 17th | relegated | |
1972–73 | Promozione | 2nd | ||
1973–74 | Promozione | 3rd | ||
1974–75 | Promozione | 3rd | ||
1975–76 | Promozione | 1st | promoted after playoff against Canicattì | |
1976–77 | Serie D | 7th | ||
1977–78 | Serie D | 10th | ||
1978–79 | Serie D | 12th | ||
1979–80 | Serie D | 8th | ||
1980–81 | Serie D | 18th | 2 points deducted; no relegations in that season | |
1981–82 | Serie D | 14th | ||
1982–83 | Interregionale | 12th | ||
1983–84 | Interregionale | 8th | ||
1984–85 | Interregionale | 1st | 5 points later deducted because of match fixing, Trapani promoted in their place | |
1985–86 | Interregionale | 11th | ||
1986–87 | Interregionale | 7th | ||
1987–88 | Interregionale | 12th | ||
1988–89 | Interregionale]] | 2nd | ||
1989–90 | Interregionale | 6th | ||
1990–91 | Interregionale | 3rd | ||
1991–92 | Interregionale | 4th | ||
1992–93 | Campionato Nazionale Dilettanti | 14th | ||
1993–94 | Campionato Nazionale Dilettanti | 7th | ||
1994–95 | Campionato Nazionale Dilettanti | 17th | relegated | |
1995–96 | Eccellenza | 4th | merged with Mazara 2000 at the end of the season | |
1996–97 | Eccellenza | 1st | promoted | |
1997–98 | Campionato Nazionale Dilettanti | 14th | ||
1998–99 | Campionato Nazionale Dilettanti | 14th | saved from relegation after playoff against Sancataldese | |
1999–00 | Campionato Nazionale Dilettanti | 18th | relegated | |
2000–01 | Eccellenza | 6th | ||
2001–02 | Eccellenza | 7th | ||
2002–03 | Eccellenza | 3rd | ||
2003–04 | Eccellenza | 13th | relegated after playoff against Licata | |
2004–05 | Promozione | 5th | ||
2005–06 | Promozione | 1st | promoted | |
2006–07 | Eccellenza | 3rd | ||
2007–08 | Eccellenza | 5th | ||
2008–09 | Eccellenza | 1st | promoted | |
2009–10 | Serie D | 12th | ||
2010–11 | Serie D | 18th | relegated | |
2011–12 | Eccellenza | 9th | ||
2012–13 | Eccellenza | 10th | ||
2013–14 | Eccellenza | 13th | ||
2014–15 | Eccellenza | 2nd | lost national playoff finals to Nardò | |
2015–16 | Eccellenza | 7th | Coppa Italia Dilettanti Sicilia winners, Coppa Italia Dilettanti runners-up after losing to Sanremese in the final | |
2016–17 | Eccellenza | 9th | ||
2017–18 | Eccellenza | 6th | ||
2018–19 | Eccellenza | 8th | ||
2019–20 | Eccellenza | 6th | ||
2020–21 | Eccellenza | 3rd | ||
2021–22 | Eccellenza | 9th | ||
2022–23 | Eccellenza | 7th | ||
2023–24 | Eccellenza | 16th | relegated | |
2024–25 | Promozione |