A.S. Bari

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Bari
logo
Full name Associazione Sportiva Bari
SpA
Nickname(s) Galletti (Cockerels)
Founded 1908
Ground Stadio San Nicola,
Bari, Italy
(Capacity 58,270)
Chairman Flag of Italy Vincenzo Matarrese
Manager Flag of Italy Antonio Conte
League Serie B
2006-07 Serie B, 13th
Team colours Team colours Team colours
Team colours
Team colours
 
Home colours
Team colours Team colours Team colours
Team colours
Team colours
 
Away colours

Associazione Sportiva Bari is an Italian football club founded in 1908, they are based in Bari, Apulia. The club have spent many seasons bouncing between the top two divisions in Italian football; Serie A and Serie B, they currently play in the latter.

During 1927 the original football club representing the city was merged with a team named Liberty Bari, a year following this the new club was merged too, this time with US Ideale; hense why the foundation date is sometimes given as 1928.

Statistically Bari are the most successful club from the Apulia region, in terms of the all-time Serie A records. They are amongst the elite in Southern Italian football and ranked 17th in the all-time Serie A records for all of Italy. Notably they won the Mitropa Cup in 1990.

One of the most notably achievements in the clubs history was in the 1996 season, when their forward Igor Protti became the top striker in the Serie A with 25 goals. The club are known in the wider footballing world for spawning Antonio Cassano who was born in Bari, he shone at the club as a youngster.

Contents

[edit] History

Foot-Ball Club Bari was founded in the city on the 15 January 1908,[1] like the majority of early Italian football clubs, foreign people were involved in the foundation of the club, amongst the main founders were; German Floriano Ludwig, Swiss Gustavo Kuhn and a native trader of Bari called Giovanni Tiberini.[2]

FBC Bari originals in 1908.
FBC Bari originals in 1908.

The first players included many non-Italians, the FBC Bari originals included; founder Ludwig, along with Barther (English), Bach (Swiss), Attoma, Roth (Swiss), Labourdette (Spanish), Jovinet (French), Giordano, Gazagne (French), Randi and Ziegler. Originally the club wore red shirts with white shorts, early on they would play against English sailors at the San Lorenzo field in the San Pasquale area of Bari.

Although the club was founded early on, clubs from the Mezzogiorno were not very well represented in the early Italian football championships and thus Bari did not take part in the early seasons. In fact only Campania had a regional section in the league from that area prior to the First World War. The war would see the original club becoming defunct, before being reorganised under the same name.

By this time other clubs from the city had begun playing too, including; Foot-Ball Club Liberty who originally wore blue and white stripes, they were founded as a dissident club from the original Bari in 1909[3] and their rivals Unione Sportiva Ideale who wore green and black stripes. In fact it was FBC Liberty who became the first ever side from the Province of Bari to take part in the Italian Football Championship, this was during the 1921–22 CCI season, when the main clubs in the country had a falling out with FIGC.

The following season Ideale became the first side from Bari to progress to the Southern Italian semi-finals round, but lost out to Lazio. All three clubs featured in the championship for the first time in 1924–25 however FBC Bari were relegated, Liberty on the other hand reached the Southern semi-finals before losing out heavily to Alba Roma.

[edit] Unione Sportiva Bari

A series of club mergers took place in the city over the course of two years, which would create one united club to represent Bari. The first merger took place between FBC Bari and FBC Liberty, they opted to keep the Bari name and first used it on 6 February 1927 in a match against Audace Taranto.

First squad shot as US Bari.
First squad shot as US Bari.

The whole of Italian football was changing during this period and begning to become more organised, similar mergers were taking place in Naples, Florence and Rome around the same time. The second part of the Bari merger was competed on 27 February 1928 when FBC Bari merged with US Ideale to create Unione Sportiva Bari. The original US Bari shirts incorporated the stripes of Ideale, with the red and white colours of FBC Bari.

After the Italian Championship of 1928–29, the league system was reorganised and Bari was placed in Serie B. One of their players was called up to the Italian national football team that season for the first time, in the form of Raffaele Costantino, this made Bari the first Serie B club to contribute a player and a scorer to the national side.[4]

[edit] League

The 1930s and 1940s were Bari's golden age, spending much of that time in Serie A with a finish of 7th in 1947 being the best they achieved.

In the 1950s Bari went into a sharp decline and an equally rapid revival towards the end of the decade to spend three more years in Serie A (1958-61). Stars of the team in this period included Biagio Catalano and Raul Conti. The club return to Serie A twice more in this period (1963-64 and 1969-70) with the latter proving especially harrowing with only 11 goals scored, the lowest of any top-flight club. In 1974 Bari descended to Serie C, finishing that season with only 12 goals scored and 26 conceded in 38 games.

By the late 1970s Bari were back in Serie A and on something of an upward swing, narrowly missing promotion in 1982. They managed promotion to Serie A in 1985 and acquired English players Gordon Cowans and Paul Rideout, but they were unable to prevent an instant return to Serie B.

The previous Bari club logo
The previous Bari club logo

A return to Serie A in 1989 with stars including stalwart defender Giovanni Loseto, midfielder Pietro Maiellaro and Brazilian striker João Paulo saw a respectable 10th place finish in 1990, their last season at the Della Vittoria. The following season saw Bari move to the San Nicola stadium, built for the 1990 World Cup, but by 1992- despite the signing of David Platt- they would be relegated once more.

Promotion in 1994 saw another two-year stay in Serie A with Igor Protti a regular scorer, and another promotion in 1997 saw the emergence of promising youngsters like Nicola Ventola and Diego De Ascentis. This time they managed a four-year stay in Serie A under the guidance of Eugenio Fascetti, despite his uneasy relationship with many sections of the club's support. The club has since had a generally indifferent spell in Serie B.

The club is currently for sale after the Matarrese family had a falling out with local fans. Amongst the potential buyers, Roman Abramovich owner of English side Chelsea has been strongly linked by the media.[5]

[edit] Current squad

As of 2008-02-01[6]

No. Position Player
1 Flag of Belgium GK Jean-François Gillet
3 Flag of Italy DF Marco Esposito
5 Flag of Italy DF Palmiro Di Dio (on loan from Ternana)
7 Flag of Italy FW Davide Lanzafame (on loan from Juventus)
8 Flag of Croatia MF Ivan Rajčić
9 Flag of Italy FW Vicenzo Santoruvo
10 Flag of Italy MF Andrea Carozza
11 Flag of Italy FW Massimo Ganci
12 Flag of Italy GK Fabio Fusco
13 Flag of France MF Pedro Kamata
14 Flag of Italy MF Alessandro Gazzi
15 Flag of Italy DF Giacinto Allegrini
18 Flag of Italy DF Nicola Belmonte
No. Position Player
19 Flag of Italy MF Nicola Strambelli
20 Flag of Italy FW Simone Cavalli
21 Flag of Morocco MF Jadid Abderrazzak (on loan from Brescia)
22 Flag of Argentina MF Mariano Donda
23 Flag of Italy GK Vitangelo Spadavecchia
25 Flag of Argentina DF Santiago Ladino
26 Flag of Italy DF Gianluca Galasso
27 Flag of Italy DF Cristian Stellini
30 Flag of Belgium MF Tony Sergeant
33 Flag of Italy MF Davide Desideri
77 Flag of Italy MF Massimo Bonanni (on loan from Sampdoria & Palermo)
86 Flag of Italy DF Andrea Masiello
Flag of Italy DF Giovanni Marchese (on loan from Chievo Verona)

[edit] Famous players

Flag of Italy Italy

 


 


Flag of Argentina Argentina

Flag of Belgium Belgium

  • Jean François Gillet (2000-)

Flag of Brazil Brazil

Flag of Croatia Croatia

Flag of England England

Flag of Germany Germany

Flag of Romania Romania

Flag of South Africa South Africa

Flag of Sweden Sweden

Flag of Hungary Hungary

 

[edit] Presidential history

The official presidential history of Bari, since 1929 until present day.

  • 1929-1931 - Alfredo Atti
  • 1931-1932 - Liborio Mincuzzi
  • 1932-1933 - Sebastiano Roca
  • 1933-1934 - Raffaele Tramonte
  • 1934-1935 - Giovanni Tomasicchio
  • 1935-1936 - Giovanni Di Cagno Abbrescia
  • 1936-1937 - Vincenzo Signorile
  • 1937-1938 - Giuseppe Abbruzzese
  • 1938-1939 - Giambattista Patarino
  • 1939-1940 - Angelo Albanese
  • 1940-1941 - Pasquale Ranieri
  • 1941-1942 - Giuseppe Santoro
  • 1941-1944 - Antonio De Palma
  • 1942-1943 - Andrea Somma
  • 1944-1950 - Tommaso Annoscia
  • 1950-1951 - Rocco Scafi
  • 1951-1952 - Florenzo Brattelli
  • 1952-1953 - Francesco Saverio Lonero
  • 1953-1956 - Achille Tarsia Incuria
  • 1956-1959 - Gianfranco Brunetti
  • 1959-1961 - Vincenzo La Gioia
  • 1961-1963 - Angelo Marino
  • 1961-1977 - Angelo De Palo
  • 1977-1983 - Antonio Matarrese
  • 1983-present - Vincenzo Matarrese

[edit] Managerial history

Bari have had many managers and trainers, some seasons they have had co-managers running the team, here is a chronological list of them from 1928 onwards.[7]

 
Name Nationality Years
Egri Erbstein Flag of Hungary 1928–1929
Josef Uridil Flag of Austria 1929–1930
Hajdu Flag of Hungary 1930–1931
Árpád Weisz Flag of Hungary 1931–1932
Egri Erbstein
Lászlo Barr
Flag of Hungary
Flag of Hungary
1932–1933
Tony Cargnelli Flag of Austria 1933–1934
Engelbert Koenig Flag of Austria 1934–1935
András Kuttik Flag of Hungary 1935–1936
Tony Cargnelli Flag of Austria 1936–1938
Jozsef Ging Flag of Hungary 1938–1939
András Kuttik Flag of Hungary 1939
Raffaele Costantino Flag of Italy 1939–1940
Luigi Ferrero Flag of Italy 1940–1941
András Kuttik Flag of Hungary 1941
Raffaele Costantino Flag of Italy 1941
Stanislao Klein Flag of Hungary 1941–1942
Raffaele Costantino Flag of Italy 1942–1943
Giovanni Vanicsek Flag of Hungary 1943
Raffaele Costantino Flag of Italy 1944–1945
András Kuttik Flag of Hungary 1946
Raffaele Costantino Flag of Italy 1946–1947
Janos Nekadoma Flag of the Czech Republic 1947
András Kuttik Flag of Hungary 1947–1948
Ferenc Plemich Flag of Hungary 1948
András Kuttik Flag of Hungary 1948
Raffaele Costantino Flag of Italy 1948–1949
Ferenc Plemich Flag of Hungary 1949
György Sárosi
Francesco Capocasale
Flag of Hungary
Flag of Italy
1949–1950
Raffaele Costantino Flag of Italy 1950
Francesco Capocasale Flag of Italy 1950
Federico Allasio Flag of Italy 1950
Ambrogio Alfonso Flag of Italy 1950–1951
Mario Sandron Flag of Italy 1951
Paolo Giammarco Flag of Italy 1951
Pietro Piselli Flag of Italy 1951
Raffaele Costantino Flag of Italy 1951–52
Vincenzo Marsico Flag of Italy 1952
Raffaele Sansone Flag of Italy 1952–1953
Francesco Capocasale Flag of Italy 1953–1956
Federico Allasio Flag of Italy 1956–1958
Paolo Tabanelli Flag of Italy 1958–1959
 
Name Nationality Years
Francesco Capocasale Flag of Italy 1959–1961
Onofrio Fusco Flag of Italy 1961
Luis Carniglia Flag of Argentina 1961
Federico Allasio Flag of Italy 1961–1962
Onofrio Fusco Flag of Italy 1962
Pietro Magni Flag of Italy 1962–1963
Tommaso Maestrelli Flag of Italy 1963–1964
Paolo Tabanelli Flag of Italy 1964
Francesco Capocasale Flag of Italy 1964–1965
Onofrio Fusco Flag of Italy 1965
Ugo Lamanna Flag of Argentina 1965–1966
Filippo Calabrese Flag of Italy 1966
Lauro Toneatto Flag of Italy 1966–1969
Oronzo Pugliese Flag of Italy 1969–1970
Carlo Matteucci Flag of Italy 1970
Lauro Toneatto Flag of Italy 1970–1972
Carlo Regalia Flag of Italy 1972–1974
Luciano Pirazzini Flag of Italy 1974–1975
Gianni Seghedoni Flag of Italy 1975–1976
Giuseppe Pozzo Flag of Italy 1976
Giancomo Losi Flag of Italy 1976–1978
Mario Santececca Flag of Italy 1978–1979
Giulio Corsini Flag of Italy 1979
Enrico Catuzzi Flag of Italy 1979
Antonio Renna Flag of Italy 1979–1981
Enrico Catuzzi Flag of Italy 1981–1983
Luigi Radice Flag of Italy 1983
Bruno Bolchi Flag of Italy 1983–1986
Enrico Catuzzi Flag of Italy 1986–1988
Getano Salvemini Flag of Italy 1988–1992
Zbigniew Boniek Flag of Poland 1992
Sebastiao Lazaroni Flag of Italy 1992–1993
Giuseppe Materazzi Flag of Italy 1993–1996
Eugenio Fascetti Flag of Italy 1996–2000
Arcangelo Sciannimanico Flag of Italy 2001–2002
Attilio Perotti Flag of Italy 2002–2003
Marco Tardelli Flag of Italy 2003–2004
Giuseppe Pillon Flag of Italy 2004
Guido Carboni Flag of Italy 2004–2006
Rolando Maran Flag of Italy 2006
Giuseppe Materazzi Flag of Italy 2006–2007
Antonio Conte Flag of Italy 2007-present

[edit] Honours

Serie B: 2

  • Champions: 1934-35, 1941-42
  • Runners-up: 1930–31, 1933-34, 1957-58, 1962-63, 1988-89, 1993-94
  • Promoted: 1968-69, 1984-85, 1996-97

Mitropa Cup: 1

  • Winners: 1990

[edit] References

[edit] External links