U.S. Lecce

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Lecce
logo
Full name Unione Sportiva Lecce SpA
Nickname(s) Giallorossi,
Salentini
Founded March 15, 1908
Ground Stadio Via del Mare,
Lecce, Italy
Capacity 40,800
Chairman Italy Giovanni Semeraro
Manager Czech Republic Zdeněk Zeman
League Serie B
2005-06 Serie A, 18th
Team colours Team colours Team colours
Team colours
Team colours
 
Home colours
Team colours Team colours Team colours
Team colours
Team colours
 
Away colours

Unione Sportiva Lecce is a football club based in Lecce, Apulia. The club was formed in 1908 and has spent a large part of its seasons bouncing between Italy's second division and Serie A.

The team plays in red and yellow stripes. Lecce's home games are played in the 40,800-seater Stadio Via del Mare. Currently Lecce are playing in the Italian league Serie B for the 2006-07 season.

Contents

[edit] History

Lecce was founded as Sporting Club Lecce on 15 March 1908[1], initially the club comprise of football, track-and-field and cycling sports. The first club president was Francisco Marangi. The first colours worn by Lecce during this time were black and white stripes, known in Italy as bianconeri.

In its formative years, Lecce played in mostly regional leagues and competitions. During the 1923/24 season the club broke up, before coming back on 16 September 1927 as Unione Sportiva Lecce. The club were still wearing black and white stripes (similar to Juventus) at this point, and the first president under the name Unione Sportiva Lecce was Luigi Lopez y Rojo.

[edit] League: Early years 1930s, 40s and 50s

Taranto Sport played Lecce in a game for promotion to Serie B from the local Southern Italian league, Lecce were victorious winning 3-2 after extra time. They were entered into Serie B for the 1929/30 season, the first game they played in the league was against Novara Calcio on 6 October 1929 , which they won 2-1. They would eventually finished 13th. But for the second time in the clubs history, it sized activity at the end of the 1931-32 season.

Four years later, Lecce came back and went into Serie C, finishing 11th in their return season. Around this time the club was in termoil, the following season they withdrew from Serie C after four days, and then during the 1938-39 season they finished in 3rd place but were moved down to 12th after it was revealed that the club had violated the league's federal regulations.

The club finished 1st during the 1943-44 season, but club football was suspended for the Second World War. Non the less, when club football resumed they finished as champions of Serie C once more, gaining promotion back into Serie B. Two decent seasons followed (finishing 4th and 3rd in respective seasons), with star Silvestri scoring 20 goals in one season, before the club were relegated.

Lecce stayed down in Serie C for six seasons during this period, though this was not a particually successful time for the club, striker Anselmo Bislenghi scored 83 goals for the club during this period becoming a hero. The club slipped even lower to Serie IV where they spent three years.

[edit] Seventeen seasons of Serie C: 1960s, 70s and 80s

From 1959 to 1975, Lecce had seventeen seasons in Serie C. They came extremely close to promotion several times during that period, finishing second three seasons in a row (1971-72, 1972-73, 1973-74) before gaining promotion in the 1975-76 season.

The same year as their promotion Lecce tasted cup success, winning the Coppa Italia Serie C. In 1977 Lecce took part in the Anglo-Italian Cup, notching up a 8-0 victory against Northwich Victoria.[2]

During 1980, a scandal which rocked Italian football, Lecce under president Franco Jurlano occurred. However, Jurlano was able to demonstrate his innocence and the scandal only lead to disqualification of the player Claudius Merlo. The club was struck by a tragedy in 1983, players Michele Lo Russo and Ciro Pezzella died in an automotive accident. To this day, Lo Russo remains the club record holder for most number of appearances with 415.

[edit] Promotion to Serie A: mid-1980s and 90s

Under the management of Eugenio Fascetti, Lecce would achieve promotion to Serie A for the first time in 1985. They finished bottom and were relegated after only one season, but defeated Roma 3-2 away in the penultimate game to deal a fatal blow to Roma's title hopes. Losing a promotion play-off 2-1 to Cesena the following season, they would return to Serie A in 1988.

Under Carlo Mazzone, Lecce finished a respectable 9th place in 1989. Stars of the side included striker Pedro Pasculli and midfielders Antonio Conte and Paolo Benedetti. They lasted three seasons before relegation, and returned two years later. Season 1993-94 saw Lecce finish last with a pitiful 11 points, the lowest ever of any Serie A team, and a second relegation came the following year.

Image:LeccePromoShot.jpg
Lecce during the 2000s

Giampiero Ventura saw Lecce achieve successive promotions before leaving for Cagliari. Once more, it proved a struggle in Serie A despite the best efforts of striker Francesco Palmieri and a famous away win against AC Milan in 1997. Nonetheless the team were good enough to return to Serie A in 1999 and begin another three-year stint in the top-flight, with yet another return to Serie A in 2003. In 2004, under Delio Rossi, who had been managing the club since 2002, Lecce achieved an impressive result, reaching the 9th final position after an awful first half of the season. Famous performances include two sensactional victories in a row, first against Italian giants Juventus 4-3 in Turin and then then they beat Internazionale FC 2-1 in Lecce, this helped the club to finish in 10th position. The following season in 2004-05 Zdenek Zeman oversaw a highly attack-minded team which scored plenty of goals, they ended up in 10th position.

[edit] Recent times

The 2005-06 was a continual struggle for Lecce. The club has changed its manager two times (Silvio Baldini for Angelo Adamo Gregucci, and then to youth team coach Roberto Rizzo supported by goalkeeper coach Franco Paleari). The numerous managerial moves could not turn Lecce's fortune as they were relegated in 19th place. In June Giovanni Semeraro returned at the helm of the club after 9 months. The club re-appointed Zdenek Zeman as manager, just one year after he had left for Brescia.

Lecce were unable to avoid relegation from Serie A despite some initial hope due to the Serie A match-fixing scandal. The club had a mixed start to the 2006-07 season in Serie B, winning three home games (including a win against early league leaders, Genoa), though they have suffered poor away form.

[edit] Current first team squad

As of September 9, 2006

No. Position Player
1 Italy GK Francesco Benussi
2 Italy MF Alfonso Camorani
3 Italy DF Erminio Rullo
4 Slovakia DF Martin Petráš
5 Mali DF Souleymane Diamoutene
6 Brazil DF Ângelo
7 Italy MF Giuseppe Vives
8 Italy DF Tiziano Polenghi
9 Italy FW Alessandro Tulli
10 Argentina FW Pablo Daniel Osvaldo
11 Italy FW Giuseppe Caccavallo (from youth team)
13 Brazil FW Babù
15 France DF Hemza Mihoubi
16 Italy MF Antonio Tundo (from youth team)
No. Position Player
17 Italy GK Davide Petrachi (from youth team)
18 Uruguay MF Guillermo Giacomazzi
19 Italy FW Giuseppe Cozzolino
20 Chile FW Jaime Andrés Valdés
22 Italy GK Antonio Rosati
23 Italy DF Raffaele Schiavi
24 Italy DF Alessandro Camisa
25 Slovakia MF Ondřej Herzán
26 Italy DF Christian Arrieta
27 Brazil MF Elizeu Vicentini Juliano
28 Italy DF Fabio Franceschini (from youth team)
29 Italy MF Gionata Mingozzi
30 Italy FW Vittorio Triarico (from youth team)

[edit] Squad change during 06/07 season

In

Brazil DF Ângelo (from Crotone) (return from loan)
Italy DF Raffaele Schiavi (from Brescia) (return from loan)
Italy MF Carlo Vicedomini (from Sambenedettese) (return from loan)
Italy MF Gionata Mingozzi (from Sampdoria) (on loan)
Italy MF Giuseppe Vives (from Giugliano) (co-ownership)
Italy DF Christian Arrieta (from Lecco)
France DF Hemza Mihoubi (from FC Metz)
Argentina FW Pablo Daniel Osvaldo (from Atalanta, co-ownership)
Slovakia DF Martin Petráš (free, last club: AC Sparta Praha)

Out

  • Players in italics were out on loan during the previous season too.
77 Italy MF Marco Cassetti (to AS Roma) (co-ownership)
40 Tunisia DF Karim Saidi (to Feyenoord (return from loan))
5 Venezuela DF Gabriel Alejandro Cichero (to Wanderers FC (return from loan))
1 Italy GK Vincenzo Sicignano (to Chievo Verona)
40 Italy MF Gennaro Del Vecchio (return to Sampdoria)
24 Argentina MF Cristian Ledesma (to Lazio)
Italy MF Francesco Marianini (to Empoli)
Montenegro FW Mirko Vučinić (to Roma)
Italy FW Graziano Pellè (from Cesena) (on loan)
Italy FW Italo Mattioli (to Salernitana) (on loan)
Italy MF Cristian Agnelli (to Sambenedettese) (on loan)
Italy GK Luca Anania (to Grosseto) (on loan)
Italy MF Francesco Giorgetti (to San Marino) (on loan)
Italy DF Mauro Rizzo (to Andria BAT) (on loan)
Italy DF Andrea Esposito (to Sambenedettese) (on loan)
Côte d'Ivoire MF Drissa Diarra (to Lucchese) (on loan)
Italy DF Marco Pecorari (to Ascoli Calcio) (on loan)
Italy FW Alex Pinardi (to Modena) (on loan)
Côte d'Ivoire FW Cédric Axel Konan (on loan to Torino)

[edit] Notable former players

See Also: Category:U.S. Lecce players

[edit] Honours and Club Records

  • Serie B
    • Champions - 1945-46, 1984-85, 1995-96
    • Promoted - 1987-88, 1992-93, 1996-97, 1998-99, 2002-03
  • Serie C
    • Champions - 1942-43, 1975-76
    • Promoted - 1928-29

[edit] Player records

All-time Top 10 Lecce Goalscorers
Player Goals
Italy Anselmo Bislenghi 87
Italy Franco Cardinali 66
Argentina Pedro Pasculli 54
Italy Aurelio De Marco 50
Italy Gaetano Montenegro 49
Uruguay Javier Chevantón 45
Italy Luigi Silvestri 45
Italy Pietro De Santis 43
Italy Ennio Fiaschi 40
Italy Giancarlo Ferrari 36

[edit] Stadium Information

[edit] References

  1. ^ Player History - Lecce formed 1908
  2. ^ English Football Archieve

[edit] External links


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