Francesco Scoglio

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Franco Scoglio
Personal information
Full name Francesco Scoglio
Date of birth 2 May 1941
Place of birth    Lipari, Italy
Nickname Il Professore
Teams managed
1972-1973
1973-1974
1974-1975
1975-1976
1976-1977
1977-1978
1978-1979
1980-1981
1981-1982
1982-1983
1983-1984
1984-1988
1988-1990
1990-1991
1991-1992
1992-1993
1993
1993-1995
1995-1996
1996-1997
1997-1998
1998-2001
2001-2002
2002
2002-2003
Reggina youth team
Gioiese
Messina
Gioiese
Acireale
Spezia technical manager
Reggina
Messina
Gioiese
Reggina
Akragas
Messina
Genoa
Bologna
Udinese
Lucchese
Pescara
Genoa
Torino
Cosenza
Ancona
Tunisia national football team
Genoa
Libya national football team
Napoli


* Appearances (Goals)

Francesco "Franco" Scoglio (May 2, 1941 - Genoa, October 3, 2005) was an Italian football coach.

[edit] Biography

Francesco Scoglio was born in Lipari, in the province of Messina.

Nicknamed il Professore (the Professor) because of his past teaching activity (he was a pedagogy graduate), Scoglio never actually had a playing career. He started a managing career in 1972 in one of the Reggina youth teams. He then went on coaching at amateur and Serie C levels in Sicily and Calabria (Gioiese, Messina, Acireale, Akragas). It was Scoglio who discovered the great potential of Salvatore Schillaci, one of his players during Scoglio's second stint in Messina.

However, Scoglio is most remembered for his time in Genoa CFC, which was also the team for which he first coached in Serie A. After two enthusiastic years in Genoa, to where he returned in 1993 and 2001, Scoglio did not achieve great success with his next clubs, being often fired before the end of the season. He is also known for having coached the national teams of Tunisia and Libya. His last coaching (and unsuccessful) experience was on 2002/2003 for Napoli.

Scoglio then became a very popular TV commenter on football shows in Italy, and even worked for Al Jazeera as the technical expert reporting on the Italian league. He died of a heart attack at 64 years of age during a transmission in the Genoa private TV station "Primocanale", after a heated discussion over the phone with Genoa chairman Enrico Preziosi.

The Stadio San Filippo, the home ground of Messina, will be probably renamed after him from the 2006/2007 season.

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