ASD Fiammamonza 1970

Fiammamonza 1970
Full name Associazione Sportiva Dilettantistica Fiammamonza 1970
Nickname(s) Biancorosse, Fiammette
Founded 1966
Ground Stadio Gino Alfonso Sada, Monza
Ground Capacity 2.000
Chairman Roberto Lo Grosso
League Serie A2
2010-11 Serie A2, 10nd

ASD Fiammamonza 1970 is an Italian women's football team from Monza.

Founded in 1966 as SS Fiamma Ceraso, they joined the recently founded Italian league in 1971, and 1979 they reached the top division. That same year the team took its current name.

Fiammamonza consolidated itself in Serie A and ranked 4th in 1984, a record they improved in 1987 with a 3rd place. In 1991, 1992 and 1996 it reached the national Cup final, losing them to ASD Torres Calcio, ASDCF Reggiana and Lugo. In 1999 Fiammamonza was relegated, but one year later they were back to Serie A.

2006 marked Fiammamonza's most successful season as they won the Serie A,[1] as well as the national Supercup. The fiammette represented Italy in the 2006-07 UEFA Women's Cup,[2] failing to progress past the first qualifying stage. However the team declined in the subsequent seasons, and in 2010 they were relegated for a second time.[3] In 2011 they returned to Serie A.

2012–13 squad

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

No. Position Player
Italy GK Manuela Cazzaniga
Italy GK Giada Ferraro
Italy GK Chiara Vignati
Italy DF Carmelina D'Andolfo
Italy DF Andrea Belloni (footballer)
Italy DF Lidia Cereda
Italy DF Elisa Galbiati
Denmark DF Cathrine Jensen
Cameroon DF Charlene Tchetchoua
Italy DF Manuela Tolda
Italy DF Paola Zambetti
Italy DF Lidia Cereda
Italy MF Silvia Baldi
No. Position Player
Italy MF Viola Brambilla
Italy MF Gaia Missaglia
Italy MF Alessandra Nencioni
Italy MF Ester Postiglione
Italy MF Naila Ramera
Italy FW Martina Brambilla
Italy FW Giulia Brazzarolla
Italy FW Francesca Bruno
Italy FW Michela Cambiaghi
Italy FW Mariane Gaburro
Italy FW Valentina De Luca
Italy FW Cecilia Re

Honours

Titles

Official

Invitational

National competition record

Season Div. Pos. Coppa Italia
1971 2 (Gr. C) 8th ?
1972 2 (Gr. C) 5th ?
1973 3 (Gr. C) 2nd ?
1974 2 (Gr. C) 8th ?
1975 2 (Gr. B) 3rd ?
1976 2 (Gr. B) 4th ?
1977 2 (Gr. B) 3rd ?
1978 2 (Gr. B) 8th ?
1979 2 (Gr. B) 1st ?
1980 1 10th ?
1981 1 14th ?
1982 1 11th ?
1983 1 8th ?
1984 1 4th ?
1985 1 8th ?
1985–86 1 6th ?
1986–87 1 3rd ?
1987–88 1 10th ?
1988–89 1 9th ?
1989–90 1 6th ?
1990–91 1 7th ?
1991–92 1 9th ?
1992–93 1 10th ?
1993–94 1 8th ?
1994–95 1 4th ?
Season Div. Pos. Coppa Italia
1995–96 1 7th ?
1996–97 1 10th ?
1997–98 1 10th ?
1998–99 1 16th ?
1999–00 2 (Gr. A) 1st Quarterfinals
2000–01 1 7th Round 1
2001–02 1 5th ?
2002–03 1 6th ?
2003–04 1 6th Quarterfinals
2004–05 1 5th Round of 16
2005–06 1 1st Round 1
2006–07 1 3rd Quarterfinals
2007–08 1 3rd Semifinals
2008–09 1 6th Round 1
2009–10 1 12th Quarterfinals
2010–11 2 (Gr. A) 10th Round 2
2011–12 2 (Gr. A) 2nd Round 1
2012–13 1

UEFA competition record

Season Competition Stage Result Opponent Scorers
2006–07 Women's Cup Qualifying stage 1–0 Bosnia and Herzegovina Sarajevo Gazzoli
0–1 Belarus Universitet Vitebsk
3–0 Lithuania Gintra Universitetas Ramera 2, Balconi

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.