Udinese Calcio

Udinese
logo
Full name Udinese Calcio SpA
Nickname(s) Bianconeri ("White-blacks"),
Zebrette ("little zebras")
Founded 1896
Ground Stadio Friuli,
Udine, Italy
(Capacity: 41,652 (current limit 30,900))
Owner Italy Giampaolo Pozzo
Chairman Italy Franco Soldati
Head Coach Italy Francesco Guidolin
League Serie A
2009–10 Serie A, 15th
Home colours
Away colours
Third colours
Current season

Udinese Calcio is an Italian football club based in Udine, Friuli-Venezia Giulia, and currently plays in the Serie A. Founded in 1896, Udinese is the second oldest club in the Serie A, and thought to be the second oldest professional football club in Italy, after Genoa C.F.C..

The traditional team home kit is black and white striped shirt, black shorts, and white socks. The club plays in the Stadio Friuli, which has a capacity of 41,652 (although it is currently limited to 30,900). It has a large number of fans in Friuli and surrounding areas, and it is sometimes seen as the best symbol of Friulian pride.

Contents

History

Foundation and early years

Udinese Calcio was established in 1896 as part of the Società Udinese di Ginnastica e Scherma, (Udinese Society of Gymnastics and Fencing). In its inaugural year, the club won the Torneo FNGI in Treviso beating Ferrara 2–0; however this title is not recognised as official.

On 5 July 1911, some gymnasts of Udinese, headed by Luigi Dal Dan, founded the A.C. Udinese which joined the FIGC. The new side made its debut in a friendly match against Juventus Palmanova, and won 6–0.

It was only in 1912–13 that Udinese first took part in an official FIGC championship. In that year they enrolled in the Campionato Veneto di Promozione, which consisted of just three teams (the others were Petrarca and Padova). With two victories against Padova (3–1 and 5–0), Udinese finished the tournament in second place behind Petrarca and were promoted to first-level Prima Categoria. In Prima Categoria, Udinese failed to reach the national stage, always knocked out in the Eliminatoria Veneta.

The 20s: Coppa Italia final

The 1920–21 season, which ended with the Friuliani eliminated in the Eliminatoria Veneta, was memorable because it was the debut of Gino Bellotto, who is still the player who has played more seasons with Udinese than any other, spending a total of 17 seasons with the Zebrette.

In 1922, Udinese, taking advantage the absence of big clubs, entered the F.I.G.C. Italian Football Championship and reached the Coppa Italia final losing 1–0 against Vado, thanks to an extra time goal.

In the league, Udinese came second in Girone Eliminatorio Veneto, which allowed them to remain in the top flight for the next season, despite a reform of the championships that reduced the number of sides in the competition.

The 1922–23 season was a disastrous one for Udinese, as they came last in and were relegated to the second division. The team risked failure for debts in 1923. On 24 August 1923, AS Udinese separated from AC Udinese Friuli, and the club was forced to set up a budget and an autonomous board. Fortunately, all debts were paid by President Alessandro Del Torso through the sale of some of his paintings and Udinese could thus join the Second Division in which they came fourth.

The 1924–25 season was memorable. The team was included in Group F II Div. The championship was very even and at the end of the tournament, three teams were in contention to win: Udinese, Vicenza and Olympia River. Playoffs were needed to determine who would reach the final round.

Udinese beat Olympia in a playoff 1–0 and drew 1–1 with Vicenza. In the play-off standings, Udinese and Vicenza were still in the lead with 3 points each. Another play-off was then played to determine the winner. After a first encounter finished 0–0, Udinese lost a replay 2–1 but were awarded the win as Vicenza fielded an ineligible player, a Hungarian called Horwart. Udinese reached the finals in place of Vicenza.

In the final round, Udinese finished first and was promoted, alongside Parma, to First Division. In the following season, Udinese finished 10th and was relegated again. However, the format of the championship was again reformed and Udinese had another chance to reclaim their place in the top flight. They competed in play-offs with seven other sides for the right to play in Serie A. The winner would remain in the top flight. The club, however, not lost in the play-off against Legnano and lost their place in the top flight.

They remained in Second Division until the end of the 1928–29 season when Serie A and Serie B were created, with Udinese falling into the third tier (Terza Serie). The first season in Terza Serie was a triumphant one and Udinese were promoted up to Serie B.

The 30s and 40s

The stay in Serie B lasted only two years, and after the 1931–32 season, the team returned to the third division. Udinese remained in the third tier (later renamed Serie C in 1935) until 1938–39, when coming second in Girone Finale Nord di Serie C, they were promoted to Serie B.

The Zebrette remained in Serie B for a dozen years, with average performances and were relegated to Serie C at the end of the 1947–48 season due to a reform of the championships. This relegation, however, was followed by two consecutive promotions, and thanks to an excellent second place finish in the Serie B 1949-50, the Friulani won a historic promotion to Serie A.

The 50s: Second place in A, and relegation back to B

Udinese remained in Serie A for five seasons and almost claimed an historic Scudetto in the 1954–55 season, when they came second only behind Milan. It was after that season, however, that Udinese was relegated because of an offence committed on May 31, 1953, the last day of the championship, which was exposed two years later. The Friuliani returned to Serie A after one season in B and in the following season was confirmed among the best Italian teams with an excellent fourth place finish.

The 60s and 70s: Decline

A decline followed those good seasons, however, with Udinese first relegated back down to Serie B in 1961–62 and then to Serie C in 1963–64. Udinese remained in C for about fifteen years missing promotion back to B on numerous occasions. It was only after the 1977–78 season that the Friuliani, led by manager Massimo Giacomini, returned to B winning Girone A. In the same season, they won the Coppa Italia Semiprofessionisti, beating Reggina and also won the Anglo-Italian Cup.

Ciro Belardi

The 80s: Mitropa Cup and the scandal of 1986

During the next season, Udinese with Giacomini as their manager, won Serie B and returned after more than two decades to Serie A. In their first year back after so long, the team survived after a disappointing 15th place finish. In Europe, they fared much better, winning the Mitropa Cup, a European Cup for teams that had won the previous season of Serie B.

In subsequent seasons the team managed to survive relegation without any particular difficulty also managing an impressive sixth place in 1982–83. At that time Udinese had on its books, one of the club's all time greatest players, the Brazilian Zico.

At the end of the 1985–86 season, the team was embroiled in a betting scandal and was penalised nine points for the 1986–87 season. Despite a desperate comeback towards the end of the season, Udinese were relegated to Serie B. Had they not been deducted points, Udinese would have survived the drop.

The 90s and 2000s: Europe

Stadio Friuli before a Champions League match

During the following years, Udinese got promoted to Serie A and relegated back to B on several occasions. This situation lasted until the 1995–96 season, from which point on, they established themselves in Serie A.

The 1996–97 season saw Udinese qualify for the UEFA Cup, with Alberto Zaccheroni as manager. The following season, they managed a resounding third place finish behind Juventus and Internazionale, largely thanks to Oliver Bierhoff's 27 goals.

In March 2001, Luciano Spalletti was appointed manager, replacing Luigi De Canio. Spalletti managed to lead the team to survival on the penultimate matchday. Following brief periods with Roy Hodgson and Giampiero Ventura on the bench, Spalletti was again appointed manager of Udinese at the beginning of the 2002–03 season, finding an organized and ambitious club which again reached the UEFA Cup, playing attacking and entertaining football.

The surprising fourth place finish at the end of the 2004–05 season saw Udinese achieve their first qualification for the UEFA Champions League in the history of the club. At the end of that same season, Spalletti announced his intention to leave Udinese.

The following season, Udinese played in the Champions League preliminary round, beating Sporting Clube de Portugal 4–2 on aggregate. Udinese were drawn in a tough group alongside Panathinaikos, Werder Bremen, and FC Barcelona.

Mauricio Isla (left) and Alexis Sánchez (right) playing for Udinese in the UEFA Cup.

Despite their first match ending in a brilliant 3–0 win over Panathinaikos, courtesy of a brilliant Vincenzo Iaquinta hat trick, the team failed to qualify for the knockout rounds, coming third in their group, equal on points with second placed Werder and behind eventual champions Barcelona.

After a year in the Champions League, Udinese finished 10th and returned once more to midtable mediocrity. The turning point occurred during the summer of 2007, when the club announced the appointment of Sicilian manager Pasquale Marino and also made various quality purchases including Fabio Quagliarella and Gökhan Inler.

The 2007–08 season started well with a draw at home against champions Internazionale, but the enthusiasm was quickly erased after the first home match which finished in a 5–0 loss to newly promoted Napoli. After this match, Udinese's fortunes changed, starting with a victory over Juventus thanks to a late Antonio Di Natale goal. Approaching the end of the season, Udinese found themselves in fourth position surprising everyone. They could not maintain this pace however, and fell to 7th. The team continued to fight until the penultimate round for a Champions League place with AC Milan, Fiorentina and Sampdoria, however, and had to settle for a place in the UEFA Cup.

At the start of the 2008–09 season, during the press conference to present the new season's shirt, the new official website was also presented, and an absolute novelty in the Italian championship, the first Web TV channel dedicated to a football club called Udinese Channel was launched, totally free and visible worldwide. In 2008–2009, Udinese had a mixed bag of results in Serie A with 3–1 win at Roma and a 2–1 win over Juventus as the pleasing ones. But 1–0 losses against Reggina and Cheivo and Torino dented hopes of Champions League. Meanwhile in Europe, Udinese were in a group with potential favourites Tottenham Hotspur, N.E.C., Spartak Moscow, and Dinamo Zagreb, they eased through the group with a convincing 2–0 win against Tottenham. They beat Lech Poznań in the next round 4–3 on aggregate, and then they met holders Zenit St. Petersburg and won convincingly 2–1 on aggregate. Next up, Udinese were favourites against Werder Bremen but, with several injuries to star players Antonio Di Natale, Samir Handanović, and Felipe, they lost 6–4 on aggregate. Fabio Quagliarella managed eight goals in the campaign.

Honours

Current squad

As of 20 August 2010[1] Note: Flags indicate national team as has been defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Position Player
1 Slovenia GK Samir Handanovič
2 Colombia DF Cristián Zapata
3 Chile MF Mauricio Isla
4 Colombia DF Juan Guillermo Cuadrado
6 Italy GK Emanuele Belardi
7 Chile FW Alexis Sánchez
8 Serbia MF Dušan Basta
9 Italy FW Bernardo Corradi
10 Italy FW Antonio Di Natale (captain)
11 Italy DF Maurizio Domizzi
12 Slovenia GK Jan Koprivec
13 Italy DF Andrea Coda
15 Cameroon FW Steve Leo Beleck
16 Argentina FW Germán Denis
No. Position Player
17 Morocco DF Mehdi Benatia
19 Ghana MF Emmanuel Agyemang-Badu
20 Ghana MF Kwadwo Asamoah
21 Czech Republic FW Matej Vydra
23 Switzerland MF Almen Abdi
26 Italy DF Giovanni Pasquale
32 Italy DF Damiano Ferronetti
66 Italy MF Giampiero Pinzi
83 Italy FW Antonio Floro Flores
88 Switzerland MF Gökhan Inler
90 Venezuela GK Rafael Romo
Russia MF Viktor Budyanskiy
Colombia DF Pablo Armero

Out on loan 2010–11

Note: Flags indicate national team as has been defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Position Player
5 Italy MF Antonio Candreva (at Parma)
7 Italy MF Simone Pepe (at Juventus)
17 Brazil FW Alemão (co-ownership with Vicenza)
28 Denmark MF Niki Zimling (at NEC)
89 Nigeria FW Odion Ighalo (at Cesena)
Brazil FW Barreto (co-ownership with Bari)
Norway FW Jo Inge Berget (at Strømsgodset until 31 December 2010)
Italy FW Daniel Bradaschia (co-ownership with Lumezzane)
Argentina FW Leandro Caruso (at River Plate)
Italy DF Giovanni Formiconi (at Benevento)
Italy FW Federico Gerardi (at Portogruaro)
Italy DF Massimo Gotti (at Empoli)
Italy MF Andrea Mazzarani (at Modena)
No. Position Player
Italy DF Antonio Marino (at Ascoli)
Finland MF Sakari Mattila (at Bellinzona)
Cameroon MF Kelvin Ewome Matute (at Triestina)
Italy DF Marco Motta (at Juventus)
Switzerland DF Alain Nef (at Young Boys)
Nigeria MF Christian Obodo (at Torino)
Argentina DF Federico Paolucci (at Universidad de Concepción until 31 December 2010)
Ghana MF Mohammed Rabiu (at Évian TG)
Spain MF Jaime Romero (at Bari)
Switzerland MF Jonathan Rossini (co-ownership with Sampdoria)
Italy FW Ferdinando Sforzini (at CFR Cluj)
France DF Mahamadou Sissoko (at Kilmarnock)
Uruguay MF Juan Surraco (at Livorno)
Argentina MF Ricardo Villar (co-ownership with Triestina)

Granada

Note: Flags indicate national team as has been defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Position Player
27 Spain FW Alexandre Geijo
35 Paraguay DF Jonni Cabrera
86 Brazil MF Guilherme Siqueira
Spain DF Iván Amaya
Spain MF Carlos Calvo
Ghana DF Jonathan Mensah
Colombia FW Luis Muriel
Chile FW Fabián Orellana
No. Position Player
Colombia MF Jeison Murillo
Colombia FW Wilson Cuero
France DF Allan Nyom
Belgium MF Ritchie Kitoko
Spain MF Dani Benítez
Spain DF Diego Mainz
Spain MF Óscar Pérez
Spain FW Tariq

other under contract players

Note: Flags indicate national team as has been defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Position Player
15 Colombia DF Ricardo Chará
24 Italy MF Piermario Morosini
66 Turkey MF Ergün Berisha (loan return from İstanbul B.B.)
Italy FW Fernando Forestieri
Sweden DF Andreas Landgren
Greece MF Thanasis Karagounis
Italy DF Gaetano Cala (loan return from Alghero)
No. Position Player
Algeria FW Mohammed Gulraiz (loan return from Granada)
Argentina FW Federico Raúl Laurito (loan return from Huracán)
Italy MF Rosario Licata (loan return from SPAL)
Italy MF Girolamo Provenzano (loan return from Canavese)
Spain FW Felipe Sanchón (loan return from Granada)
Brazil MF Sodinha (loan return from Triestina)
Montenegro DF Nikola Vujadinović (at Unirea Alba Iulia)

For all transfers and loans pertaining to Udinese for the current season, please see: 2009–10 transfers.

Notable players

Including only players with at least 100 appearances in the club, a topscorer title during their stay with the club, or an appearance in a FIFA World Cup edition

Italy

  • Italy Valerio Bertotto
  • Italy Marco Branca
  • Italy Franco Causio
  • Italy Morgan De Sanctis
  • Italy Francesco Dell'Anno
  • Italy Luigi Delneri
  • Italy Giuliano Giannichedda
  • Italy Vincenzo Iaquinta
  • Italy Paolino Pulici
  • Italy Dino Zoff

Argentina

  • Argentina Roberto Nestor Sensini
  • Argentina Abel Balbo
  • Argentina Daniel Bertoni

Belgium

  • Belgium Johan Walem

Brazil

  • Brazil Edinho
  • Brazil Zico
  • Brazil Márcio Amoroso

Chile

  • Chile David Pizarro
  • Chile Alexis Sánchez
  • Chile Mauricio Isla

Costa Rica

  • Costa Rica Winston Parks

Czech Republic

  • Czech Republic Marek Jankulovski

Denmark

  • Denmark Thomas Helveg
  • Denmark Martin Jørgensen

Egypt

  • Egypt Hazem Emam

Germany

Ghana

Honduras

  • Honduras Carlos Pavon

Israel

  • Israel Ronny Rosenthal

Peru

  • Peru Gerónimo Barbadillo

Poland

  • Poland Marek Koźmiński

Spain

  • Spain Ricardo Gallego

Managerial history

 
Name Nationality Years
Bora Milutinović Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia 1987–88
Alberto Bigon Italy 1992–93
Giovanni Galeone Italy 1994–95
Alberto Zaccheroni Italy 1995–98
Francesco Guidolin Italy 1998–99
Luigi De Canio Italy 1999–00
Luciano Spalletti Italy 2000–01
Roy Hodgson England 2001–02
Luciano Spalletti Italy 2002–05
Serse Cosmi Italy 2005–06
Loris Dominissini Italy 2006
Giovanni Galeone Italy 2006–07
Alberto Malesani Italy 2007
Pasquale Marino Italy 2007–09
Gianni De Biasi Italy 2009–10
Pasquale Marino Italy 2010
Francesco Guidolin Italy 2010–

World Cup winners

Famous coaches

References

  1. "Assegnati i numeri di maglia per la Stagione Sportiva 2010/2011" (in Italian). Udinese Calcio. 20 August 2010. http://www.udinese.it/script/view.php?id=637. Retrieved 20 August 2010. 

External links