Fulvio Pea

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Fulvio Pea
Personal information
Date of birth (1967-02-10) February 10, 1967[1]
Place of birthCasalpusterlengo[1]
Club information
Current clubPadova
Youth career
Team
Fanfulla[2]
Teams managed
YearsTeam
2005–2007Lucchese
2011–2012Sassuolo
2012Padova
2013Padova
2013 NovJuve Stabia

Fulvio Pea (born 10 February 1967) is an Italian football coach of Padova.

Career

Coaching

The first experiences

Pea has no playing experience whatsoever, as he entered directly into coaching in 1989 as youth coach of Fanfulla, when aged 22. He then took the same role at Milan-based youth club Alcione. In 1998 he was appointed in charge of the Esordienti youth team at Inter, then filling the same role at Ravenna. In 2001 he moved to Bulgaria to join Luigi Simoni at CSKA Sofia, working alongside him also in his following experiences at Ancona, Napoli and Siena. In 2005 he took his first head coaching role, as boss of Lucchese, with Simoni as technical director.

In June 2007 he was appointed new Primavera youth coach of Sampdoria by Giuseppe Marotta, winning the Campionato Nazionale Primavera and the Coppa Italia Primavera in 2008. In 2009 he left Sampdoria to become new Primavera coach at Inter, managing to win a Torneo di Viareggio championship in 2011.

Serie B

He left Inter in the summer of 2011 to accept the head coaching position of ambitious Serie B side Sassuolo, guiding the small Emilian club into the race for a historical promotion to the Italian top flight, coming up to the semifinal playoffs.

From the 10 June 2012 to the 17 December 2012[3] he was the head coach of Padova, still in Serie B. He was reinstated as manager of Padova on 20 March 2013.

Honours

With Sampdoria:

With Inter:

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 "Scheda di Fulvio Pea" [Profile of Fulvio Pea] (in Italian). US Sassuolo Calcio. Retrieved 17 April 2012. 
  2. "Il maestro cresciuto nei vivai" [The master who grew up as youth coach] (in Italian). Il Calcio Illustrato. Retrieved 17 April 2012. 
  3. "Padova: via Pea, arriva Colomba" [Padova, Pea goes, Colomba comes] (in Italian). La Gazzetta dello Sport. Retrieved 17 December 2012. 
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