Genoa_1893 Genoa_1893

Genoa 1893 - Definition and Overview

Genoa
Full nameGenoa Cricket and
Football Club SpA
NicknameGrifoni
Founded1893
GroundStadio Luigi Ferraris,
Genoa, Italy
Capacity40,122
ChairmanEnrico Preziosi
ManagerSerse Cosmi
LeagueSerie B
2003-04Serie B, 16th
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Home colours
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Away colours

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logo

Genoa Cricket and Football Club is a football club based in Genoa, Italy. Genoa, in fact, was the first Italian football club. The club currently play at Stadio Luigi Ferraris, which has a seating capacity of 40,122.

On September 7, 1893, Charles De Grave Sells, S. Blake, G. Green, W. Riley, D.G. Fawcus, Sandys, E. De Thierry, Jonathan Summerhill Senior and Junior and the British diplomat Sir Charles Alfred Payton started Genoa Cricket & Athletic Club.

Since the club were set up to represent England abroad, the club's shirts were originally white, the same colour as the England football team's shirt. Oddly, Italians were not allowed into the team! The first field for the club was the Piazza d'Armi of the Campasso.

Between 1893 and 1895, the club played cricket against the crews of various British ships that docked in the harbour from time to time. In 1898, some of the club's early football matches were against the HMS Clementine crew and the crew of HMS Revenge. In 1896, Mr. James Richardson Spensley, considered to be the founder of Italian football, arrived and set up the football team. He played as a goalkeeper for a while, but wasn't particularly good. In 1897, not unreasonably, Italian players were allowed to join and a new field was found. The following year, Genoa played their first friendly game, losing 1-0 to a team made up of players from International Torino and FBC Torinese.

On May 8, 1898, Genoa became the first ever Italian champions. In 1899, the club changed its name to Genoa Cricket & Football Club, dropping 'Athletic' from its name. The shirt also changed, from white, to white and blue vertical stripes. On April 16 of that year, the club won the Italian title again. Genoa would do so again in 1900.

In 1901, the club changed strip again to its famous garnet-blue halves and therefore became known as the Rossoblu. From 1902, Genoa were to win three titles in a row, after setting up the II Categoria Tournament, which was won by the reserve team in its first season (1904).

In 1915, the club was to win its first title for eleven years. Little did this successful club know, but its title of 1924 would be its last (at time of writing). The club won the Coppa Italia in 1937, which was to be its last major trophy up to now.

In recent years, Genoa have played mostly in Serie B, so the glory days may not return for some time, although in the early '90s Genoa managed a fourth-place finish in Serie A, and a UEFA Cup semifinal. Current players include Sabri Lamouchi and Nicola Caccia.

Trophies

  • Italian Champions (9): 1898, 1899, 1900, 1902, 1903, 1904, 1915, 1923, 1924
  • Coppa Italia (1) : 1937
  • Coppa delle Alpi (2): 1962, 1964
  • Anglo-Italian Cup (1): 1996
  • Spagnolo Trophy (5): 1995, 1996, 2000, 2001, 2003

Trainers

  • Serse Cosmi (2004-current)
  • Luigi De Canio (2003-04)
  • Roberto Donadoni (2003-04)
  • Claudio Onofri (2002-03)
  • Franco Scoglio (2001-02)
  • Bruno Bolchi (2000-01)
  • Delio Rossi (1999-00)
  • Giuseppe Pillon (1998-99)
  • Gaetano Salvemini (1997-98)
  • Attilio Perotti (1996-97)
  • Luigi Radice (1995-96)
  • Franco Scoglio (1994-95)
  • Claudio Maselli (1993-94)
  • Bruno Giorgi (1992-93)
  • Osvaldo Bagnoli (1990-92)
  • Franco Scoglio (1988-90)
  • Gigi Simoni (1987-88)
  • Attilio Perotti (1986-87)
  • Tarcisio Burgnich (1985-86)
  • Tarcisio Burgnich (1984-85)
  • Gigi Simoni (1980-84)
  • Gianni Di Marzio (1979-80)
  • Pietro Maroso (1978-79)
  • Gigi Simoni (1975-78)
  • Guido Vincenzi (1974-75)
  • Arturo Silvestri (1970-74)
  • Franco Viviani (1969-70)
  • Aldo Campatelli (1968-69)
  • Livio Fongaro (1967-68)
  • Giorgio Ghezzi (1966-67)
  • Luigi Bonizzoni (1965-66)
  • Paulo Amaral (1964-65)
  • Beniamino Santos (1963-64)
  • Renato Gei (1961-63)
  • Annibale Frossi (1960-61)
  • Antonio Busini & Gipo Poggi (1959-60)
  • Annibale Frossi (1958-59)
  • Renzo Magli (1955-58)
  • Giorgio Sarosi (1953-55)
  • Giacinto Ellena (1952-53)
  • Imre Senkey (1951-52)
  • Manlio Bacigalupo (1950-51)
  • Alan Astley (1949-50)
  • Federico Allasio (1948-49)
  • William Garbutt (1946-48)
  • Ottavio Barbieri (1945-46)
  • Guido Ara (1941-43)
  • Ottavio Barbieri (1940-41)
  • Ottavio Barbieri & William Garbutt (1939-40)
  • William Garbutt (1937-39)
  • Ermanno Fellsner (1936-37)
  • Giorgio Orth (1935-36)
  • Vittorio Faroppa (1934-35)
  • Giuseppe Nagy (1933-34)
  • Carlo Rumbold (1932-33)
  • Luigi Burlando & Guillermo Stábile (1931-32)
  • Gèyza Szekany (1930-31)
  • Renzo De Vecchi (1927-30)
  • William Garbutt (1919-27)
  • William Garbutt (1912-15)
  • Technical Commission (1907-12)
  • James Richardson Spensley (1896-07)
  • Technical Commission (1893-96)

External Links


Serie B
Albinoleffe | Arezzo | Ascoli | Bari | Catania | Catanzaro | Cesena | Crotone | Empoli | Genoa | Modena
Perugia | Pescara | Piacenza | Salernitana | Ternana | Torino | Treviso | Triestina | Venezia | Hellas Verona | Vicenza
edit (http://www.wordiq.com/definition/Template:Serie_B)


Example Usage of Genoa

SoccerOnline: Player Ratings: Genoa 3-0 Sampdoria http://bit.ly/4qlqi3
SoccerOnline: We Played A Great Match - Genoa Coach Gasperini http://bit.ly/4rOWwn
SoccerOnline: Genoa Deserved This Victory - Sampdoria Coach Del Neri http://bit.ly/51pUlB
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