F.C. Messina Peloro

Messina
Full name Football Club Messina
Peloro SRL
Nickname(s) Peloritani (Peloritans)
Giallorossi (Yellow-red)
Founded 1900
1972 (reformed)
1997 (F.C. Messina Peloro)
Ground Stadio San Filippo,
Messina, Italy
(Capacity: 40,200)
Chairman Vincenzo Franza
Head Coach Gaetano Di Maria
League Serie D/I
2007-08 Serie B, 14th
Team colours Team colours Team colours
Team colours
Team colours
Home colours
Team colours Team colours Team colours
Team colours
Team colours
Away colours

Football Club Messina Peloro are an Italian football club based in Messina, Sicily originally founded in 1900. The club has spent most of its history in the lower Italian football leagues. They last competed in Serie B in 2007–08, this following three consecutive seasons in Serie A. On July 2008 Messina were excluded from professional football due to financial issues, being later registered into amateur Serie D, where they are currently playing.

The furthest Messina has reached in the Coppa Italia is the last 16, both of which were achieved in the 2000s. In the past, they have also reached the semi-finals in the Coppa Italia Serie C.[1]

Messina have appeared in the Italy's top league Serie A, for a total of five seasons during their history. The club's first spell in the league was in the 1960s, the second began in the 2000s. The highest ever position they have finished is 7th,[2] which happened during the 2004-05 season.

Contents

History

Main article: History of F.C. Messina Peloro

The history of Messina Football Club began when Alfredo Marangolo returned to Sicily in August 1900 from studying in London, England. In Great Britain the game of football was fast gathering popularity with the The Football League in its early stages.

Messina Football Club were officially founded in 1 December 1900[3] by Marangolo with the help of Anglican reverend "Caulifield".[4]

At the college where Marangolo visited he had also made the acquaintance of Ignazio Majo Pagano who formed Anglo Palermitan (Palermo) on his return, only a month before Messina. Indeed the first Sicilian derby was held between Messina and Palermo on 18 April 1901, 1000 fans turned out to Via Notarbartolo in support their respective club for the match. The game ended 3-2 to the Palermitan side.[5]

A strong bond, and healthy rivalry had built up between the two Sicilian clubs and a competition named the Whitaker Challenge Cup was arranged to be played between them. The first was held in 1905; Messina won the game (once again the result was 3-2) and in doing so captured their first trophy. Messina proved the result was no fluke the following year at San Ranieri; capturing the trophy in a 2-1 victory.

Messina team photograph from 1910.

The earthquake of 1908, which killed 60,000 people in Messina, later affected the club in a large manner; deaths included Charles Bousfield Huleatt, players Frank John Carter, Walter Oates and financial backer George H. Peirce. Football resumed in Messina during the following year, thanks largely to Arthur Barret Lascelles who used money from his own pocket to ensure football activity in the city would continue. By 1910 the funds of Barret had dried up and the club was folded, Società Ginnastica Garibaldi Messina (Gymnastic Society Garibaldi Messina) briefly took its place until it too was dissolved due to the First World War.[6]

After World War I, a club under the name U.S. Messinese was founded and entered to play in the Coppa Federale Siciliana the following year; an all Sicilian championship disputed in Messina, Catania and Palermo. Messina finished as runners-up.

The club participated in the Italian Football Championship of 1921-22 organized by the C.C.I. finishing 3rd in the Sicilian group section; this was the first Championship in which clubs from the Island were entered. The following season the FIGC and CCI were unified. This coincided with unifications in Messina, as another side Umberto Messina was incorporated into U.S. Messinese, and thus the club changed its name to U.S. Messinese Umberto in October 1922. The following month this new side was fused once again, this time with Messina Sporting Club; creating the Messina Football Club. Only two years later in December 1924 FC Messina was melted, and the players became part of the reformed U.S. Messinese.[7]

Finally, Messinese qualified for the semi-finals of the International league, after beating Palermo 3-0 in the Sicilian championship of 1924-25. Here Messinese played against Alba Roma, Cavese and Liberty Bari, but failed to win a single match, scoring only two goals in six games. Messina would be promoted to Serie B for the 1932-33 campaign under the presidency of Francesco Lombardo and Koenig's coaching, and remained in the league for six seasons. The spell in Serie B was also notable for the local rivalry between them and Calcio Catania.

Down in Serie C, AC Messina were withdrawn and folded during 1940-41. The following season in 1941-42 a club named US Peloro 1906 changed its name and became US Mario Passamonte (named after a fallen hero of the war in Africa). The idea was to enter the club into Serie C in place of Messina, however this was unsuccessful, until the following season.

It would not be long before all activity was halted in Italian football for World War II. After several mergers in 1945, including one between US Passamonte and AP Messina, the club AS Messina subsequently emerged as a post-war representative of Messina. This was not a clean cut merger however, some players and officials formed the rival club Giostra Messina; both Giostra and AS Messina reached the finals of the Southern League but eventually finished 4th and 5th respectively. At the end of the season, the two teams reunited as one merged club Associazione Calcio Riunite Messina, abbreviated as ACR Messina.

The 1950s for Messina began in glorious fashion, they were crowned champions of Serie C under the management of Yugoslavian manager Mihaly Balacics. Messina did not falter in Serie B, during their first season in the league they avoided relegation. Giuseppe Melazzo and the Comitato Reggenza owned the club during this new period of relative success. During the following season, Messina finished in third place.

Throughout the rest of the 1950s, Messina remained in the division as a whole finishing in a respectful position. Goffredo Muglia took over as president in 1958 to begin a brand new era for the club. For the first time in their history, Messina were crowned champions of Serie B during the 1962-63 season. The race for the championship was a very close one which went down to the last day of the season, with Messina finishing above Bari and Lazio.

For their first ever season in Serie A, the football squad for Messina included; Morelli, Brambilla, Stucchi, Pagani, Dotti, Peruvian Benitez, Ghelfi, Fascetti, Morbello, Canuti and Clerici. Messina's first game in Serie A took place on 15 September 1963, it ended in a 3-1 defeat against Sampdoria at Stadio Luigi Ferraris. As a whole the first part of the season was not a success, they won only 2 games, but they managed to turn it around in the second half of the season, with 7 wins; beating Juventus (1-0), Fiorentina (1-0) and Sampdoria (4-3). The surge of wins in the latter part of the season helped them stay up, finishing 14th.

The next season for the club in Serie A would not be so fortunate, they were relegated in 17th place. Some notable high points of the season included a 1-0 victory over Roma at the Stadio Olimpico. A team from Rome would also be the opposition for Messina's other most impressive result of the season, they stunned Lazio by beating them 4-0 on the last day of the season.

The Sicilian side were not able to bounce straight back up into Serie A, and in fact during their third season back down in Serie B were relegated. After several seasons finishing in and around the top 10 positions of Serie C, Messina were relegated down to Serie D in the 1972-73 season. The club managed to bounce straight back however, winning the Serie D championship and achieving promotion back into C. After a few decent seasons in the upper parts of the table, relegation struck Messina again. In the 1979 season Serie C2 was formed and Messina were placed into it.

By 1983 Messina were champions of Serie C2 and had a future star amongst their ranks in Salvatore Schillaci. The club, now back on the right tracks came close to promotion to Serie B in 1985 with a third place finish just behind Palermo, and won Serie C1 and earned themselves promotion back to Serie B the following season.

Time in Serie B during the 1980s was a pleasant one for the Sicilian side, they notched up 7th and 8th place finishes. In 1989 Schillaci was sold to Turin giants Juventus and, just three seasons after Schillaci's departure, Messina lost their position in Serie B and were relegated down to C1 and then spiraled into further trouble. The club finished 12th in Serie C1, but due to financial difficulties the FIGC canceled all professional football activity for Messina.

The decision was thought to be unjust by the club and fans, with Messina been thrown into a footballing abyss never known before. In the summer A.S. Messina was founded with the president Pietro La Malfa, beginning in the amateurs national championship (C.N.D.) with the objective to bring back the giallorossi to professional football.

They played in the Campionato Nazionale Dilettanti for four seasons, finishing high up for the first three of them, but due to more due to financial problems in 1996, they were relegated to the Sicilian Eccellenza league. Instead of going through with the relegation Messina was merged in July 1997 with a local club named Peloro, the new name of the club was Football Club Messina Peloro. In a few short seasons, the club ramped up the Italian league system, from Campionato Nazionale Dilettanti in the 1997-98 season, Messina were promoted into Serie C2 as champions. Promoted to Serie C1 in 2000, they immediately managed to fight hard for a promotion spot back to Serie B, winning promotion to Calcio Catania after play-offs. In less than a decade, under the presidency of Aliotta, Messina had climbed back up from the abyss and were back in the upper part of the Italian league system.

After two seasons in B, local entrepreneur Pietro Franza took over, and in 2003-04 the Sicilians gain promotion back into Serie A under coach Bortolo Mutti. The club had not appeared in the top Italian league since 1965, a total of forty years.

After being tipped as underdogs in Serie A for the 2004-05 season, Messina surprised doubters by producing several good results including defeating both of the Milanese clubs. They beat AC Milan first at the San Siro 2-1[8] then later in the season at home, they beat Internazionale for the first time in their history; the winning goal was struck by Rafael in the third minute of extra time.[9]

Messina managed to stay clear of relegation throughout the whole season, and eventually finished in 7th place in the table, just a single place away from securing a UEFA Cup place. Also during this period, for the first time in the club's history[10] Messina players were called up to the Italian national football team, first was Alessandro Parisi in 2004, then Carmine Coppola in 2005 who was called up twice by the azzurri.

Despite this impressive form, Messina still were in danger of being relegated from Serie A at the end of the season due to a possibility of not having enough finances available to compete in the league. Eventually, though, they successfully managed to stay in the Serie A league. In the 2005-06 season Messina were however unable to repeat their previous impressive season, leading this to the sacking of Mutti, who was replaced by Giampiero Ventura; despite all, they looked to be mathematically relegated from the top division after Day 36 losing the derby against Reggina 3-0. However, due to the Serie A scandal of 2006, Messina avoided relegation to Serie B despite finishing 18th.

Messina started the 2006-07 season with Bruno Giordano as head coach; however, he was replaced on January 30, 2007, by Alberto Cavasin because of poor results. On April 2, following a 2-0 away defeat to Cagliari Calcio, another team involved in the battle to avoid relegation, Cavasin was sacked too, and Giordano was recalled to fill the coaching position. Giordano made even worse in his second time at Messina, with four defeats in four matches; with Messina second-last placed in the table five matchdays prior to the end of the season, Giordano was sacked once again on April 23 and replaced by Bruno Bolchi.

A notable achievement for Messina so far this season, was reaching the last 16 of the Coppa Italia for only the second time in their history. Messina knocked out S.S. Lazio on the way in a thrilling show down, which went to extra time; Messina won the game 4-3 with goals from Iliev, Cordova and two from Di Napoli.[11] They went out in the next round to eventual finalists Internazionale.

On July 2008, Messina chairman Pietro Franza announced he did not find any investor ready to take over the club, and that he was consequently giving up the club's Serie B membership, declaring also he would look forward to enter the club into an amateur league. FC Messina's future is uncertain, with all the players being consequently made redundant under Italian Football Federation rules, and the club being expected to play either Serie C2 or Serie D next season. On August 1, 2008, it was confirmed that Messina will start the new season from Serie D.

Retired numbers

Main article: Retired numbers in football (soccer)

41Flag of Italy Salvatore Sullo, central midfielder, 2001-2007[12]

Notable former players

  • Flag of England Charles Bousfield Huleatt
  • Flag of Italy Nicola Amoruso
  • Flag of Italy Gaetano D'Agostino
  • Flag of Italy Arturo Di Napoli
  • Flag of Italy Massimo Donati
  • Flag of Italy Christian Riganò
  • Flag of Italy Igor Protti
  • Flag of Italy Salvatore Schillaci
  • Flag of Italy Marco Storari
  • Flag of Italy Giuseppe Sculli
  • Flag of Paraguay Tomás Guzmán
  • Flag of Iran Rahman Rezaei
  • Flag of Bosnia and Herzegovina Zlatan Muslimović
  • Flag of Japan Atsushi Yanagisawa
  • Flag of Japan Mitsuo Ogasawara

See also: Category:F.C. Messina Peloro players

Most appearances

As of December, 2006, the players with the most league appearances for Messina are:[13]

# Name Career Goals
1 Angelo Stucci 235 1
2 Salvatore Schillaci 219 61
3 Renato Ferretti I 189 87
4 Constantino Lo Bosco 188 3
5 Franco Radaelli 180 10
Romolo Re 180 ?
7 Renato Avellani 178 0
Agostino Maglio 178 0
9 Nicolo Napoli 175 20
10 Franco Polizzo 157 14

Staff

Managerial History

This list is a chronological history of Messina's managers; in some cases managers have left and then returned to the club in the same season, hence some names feature twice in the same year.

 
Name Nationality Years
F.L. Padgett Flag of England 1901–1902
Charles Bousfield Huleatt Flag of England 1902–1909
Nazzareno Allegra Flag of Italy 1909–1923
Giovanni Stracuzzi Flag of Italy 1923–1926
Gottardi Flag of Italy 1926–1928
Giovanni Panosetti Flag of Italy 1928–1930
Clemente Morando Flag of Italy 1930–1931
Luigi Cevenini Flag of Italy 1931–1932
Engelbert König Flag of Austria 1932–1933
Gyorgy Orth Flag of Hungary 1933–1935
Pietro Piselli Flag of Italy 1935
Ezio Sclavi Flag of Italy 1935–1936
Angelo Mattea Flag of Italy 1936–1937
Richard Klug Flag of Hungary 1937
Heinrich Bachmann Flag of Switzerland 1937–1938
Cesare Migliorini Flag of Italy 1938
Rudolph Plemich Flag of Hungary 1938–1939
Albino Carraro Flag of Italy 1939–1940
Engelbert König Flag of Austria 1940–1941
Domenico Mazzotta Flag of Italy 1941–1945
Giuseppe Celeste Flag of Italy 1945–1946
Oronzo Pugliese Flag of Italy 1946–1947
Renato Ferretti Flag of Italy 1947–1948
Attilio Sudati Flag of Italy 1948
Virgilio Levratto Flag of Italy 1948–1949
Engelbert König Flag of Austria 1949–1950
Mihaly Balacics Flag of Hungary 1950
Oronzo Pugliese Flag of Italy 1950–1951
Carlo Rigotti Flag of Italy 1951–1953
Rodolphe Hiden Flag of Austria 1953–1954
Cesare Gallea Flag of Italy 1954
Manlio Bacigalupo Flag of Italy 1955–1957
Tonino Colomban Flag of Italy 1957
Ivo Fiorentini Flag of Italy 1957–1958
Bruno Arcari Flag of Italy 1959–1962
Umberto Mannocci Flag of Italy 1962–1965
Tonino Colomban Flag of Italy 1965–1969
Paolo Todeschini Flag of Italy 1969–1970
Tonino Colomban Flag of Italy 1970–1972
Oscar Alberto Massei Flag of Italy 1972–1973
Emilio Zanotti Flag of Italy 1974
Giusto Lodi Flag of Italy 1974–1975
Franco Scoglio Flag of Italy 1975
Luigi Moschella Flag of Italy 1975
Leandro Remondini Flag of Italy 1975
Franco Scoglio Flag of Italy 1975–1976
Bruno Bolchi Flag of Italy 1976–1977
Giorgio Rumignani Flag of Italy 1977
Adelchi Brach Flag of Italy 1977
Giorgio Rumignani Flag of Italy 1977–1978
Enrico Hanset Flag of Italy 1978
Adelchi Brach Flag of Italy 1978–1979
Nicola Trimarchi Flag of Italy 1979
Lino De Petrillo Flag of Italy 1979–1980
Paolo Ferrario Flag of Italy 1980
Nicola Trimarchi Flag of Italy 1980
Antonio De Bellis Flag of Italy 1980
 
Name Nationality Years
Nicola Trimarchi Flag of Italy 1980–1981
Franco Scoglio Flag of Italy 1981
Mario Santececca Flag of Italy 1981–1982
Alfredo Ballarò Flag of Italy 1982
Gennaro Rambone Flag of Italy 1982
Giovanni Bonetti Flag of Italy 1982
Alfredo Ballarò Flag of Italy 1982–1984
Alberto Spelta Flag of Italy 1984
Giovanni Seghedoni Flag of Italy 1984–1985
Franco Scoglio Flag of Italy 1985–1989
Zdeněk Zeman Flag of the Czech Republic 1989–1990
Francesco Scorsa Flag of Italy 1990
Adriano Buffoni Flag of Italy 1990–1991
Giuseppe Materazzi Flag of Italy 1991
Tonino Colomban Flag of Italy 1991
Pietro Ruisi Flag of Italy 1991–1992
Mario Colautti Flag of Italy 1992
Fernando Veneranda Flag of Italy 1992–1993
Pietro Ruisi Flag of Italy 1993
Tonino Colomban Flag of Italy 1993
Gianni Anna Flag of Italy 1993–1994
Angelo Busetta Flag of Italy 1994
Vincenzo Domingo Flag of Italy 1994
Marcello Prima Flag of Italy 1994
Giuseppe Cannavò Flag of Italy 1994–1995
Nino Barone Flag of Italy 1995
Angelo Busetta Flag of Italy 1995
Carmelo Miceli Flag of Italy 1995
Nino Barone Flag of Italy 1995–1996
Giuseppe Sabadini Flag of Italy 1996
Pino Aneri Flag of Italy 1996–1997
Alfredo Ballarò Flag of Italy 1997
Antonio Aloi Flag of Italy 1997
Loris De Carolis Flag of Italy 1997
Pino Irrera Flag of Italy 1997
Loris De Carolis Flag of Italy 1997
Pino Irrera Flag of Italy 1997
Bruno Caneo Flag of Italy 1997
Loris De Carolis Flag of Italy 1997–1998
Pietro Ruisi Flag of Italy 1998–1999
Stefano Cuoghi Flag of Italy 1999–2001
Paolo Beruatto Flag of Italy 2001
Carlo Florimbi Flag of Italy 2001–2002
Daniele Arrigoni Flag of Italy 2002
Ernesto Apuzzo Flag of Italy 2002
Daniele Arrigoni Flag of Italy 2002–2003
Stefano Cuoghi Flag of Italy 2003
Francesco Oddo Flag of Italy 2003
Bruno Bolchi Flag of Italy 2003–2004
Vincenzo Patania Flag of Italy 2004
Bortolo Mutti Flag of Italy 2004–2006
Giampiero Ventura Flag of Italy 2006–2007
Bruno Giordano Flag of Italy 2007
Alberto Cavasin Flag of Italy 2007
Bruno Giordano Flag of Italy 2007
Bruno Bolchi Flag of Italy 2007
Nello Di Costanzo Flag of Italy 2007–present

Presidential History

Over the years Messina has had various owners, chairmen or presidential figures; here is a cronological list of them;

  • 1900 Walter Becker
  • 1901 Arthur Barret Lascelles
  • 1919 Giovanni Vento
  • 1922 Augusto Salvato
  • 1924 Augusto Salvato & Giovanni Vento
  • 1927 Court consul of Military service
  • 1928 Augusto Salvato
  • 1929 Sgoj-Savoja
  • 1930 Francesco Lombardo
  • 1940 Francesco Grosso
  • 1941 Carmelo Garofalo
  • 1944 Salvatore Saya
  • 1945 Vincenzo Nicotra, Giuseppe Gensabella
  • 1947 Francesco Sajia
  • 1948 Principe Carlo D'Alcontres
  • 1951 Giuseppe Melazzo & Comitato Reggenza
  • 1957 Giuseppe Nunnari
  • 1958 Goffredo Muglia
  • 1970 Giuseppe Fusco
  • 1971 Giovanni Gulletta
  • 1977 Angelo Presti
  • 1980 Lamberto Sapone
  • 1983 Michelangelo Alfano
  • 1984 Salvatore Massimino
  • 1991 Maria Leone
  • 1992 Maria Leone & Giovanni Massimino
  • 1993 Pietro La Malfa
  • 1995 Antonino Trimarchi
  • 1996 Antonio Ingemi
  • 1997 Emanuele Aliotta
  • 2002 Pietro Franza

Stadium

Main article: Stadio San Filippo

Messina FC have played their home matches in the new stadium San Filippo since the 2004/2005 season. Its capacity is (about) 40,200 seats. The name take place from Messina fraction where it is placed, but a couple of petitions aim to rename it after the former Messina manager Franco Scoglio or the Messina Saint Hannibal Mary Di Francia.

The old stadium, the 11,000 seater Stadio Comunale Giovanni Celeste, is now used as a training field.

Honours

Serie B

Serie C

Serie C2

Serie D

Campionato Nazionale Dilettanti

I Divisione

Sicilian Championship

Coppa Federale Siciliana

Whitaker Challenge Cup

References

External links