SS Arezzo
{{short description|Italian football club}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=May 2020}}
{{Infobox football club
| clubname = Arezzo
| image = SS Arezzo crest.svg
| image_size = 160px
| fullname = Società Sportiva Arezzo
| nickname = Amaranto (Dark Reds)
Cavallo Rampante (Rampant Horse)
| founded = {{start date and years ago|df=yes|1923}}
| ground = Stadio Città di Arezzo,
Arezzo, Italy
| capacity = 13,128
| manager = Emanuele Troise
| league = {{Italian football updater|Arezzo}}
| season = {{Italian football updater|Arezzo2}}
| position = {{Italian football updater|Arezzo3}}
| current = 2023–24 SS Arezzo season
| website = {{URL|http://www.ssarezzo.it/}}
| pattern_b1 = _arezzo1920h
| body1 = 8E3145
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| leftarm1 = 8E3145
| pattern_ra1 = _arezzo1920h
| rightarm1 = 8E3145
| pattern_sh1 = _arezzo1920h
| shorts1 = 000000
| pattern_so1 = _arezzo1920h
| socks1 = 8E3145
| pattern_b2 = _arezzo1920a
| body2 = FFFFFF
| pattern_la2 = _arezzo1920a
| leftarm2 = FFFFFF
| pattern_ra2 = _arezzo1920a
| rightarm2 = FFFFFF
| pattern_sh2 = _arezzo1920a
| shorts2 = 8E3145
| pattern_so2 = _arezzo1920a
| socks2 = FFFFFF
| body3 = FFBEDA
| pattern_b3 = _arezzo1920t
| pattern_la3 = _arezzo1920t
| leftarm3 = FFBEDA
| pattern_ra3 = _arezzo1920t
| rightarm3 = FFBEDA
| pattern_sh3 = _arezzo1920t
| shorts3 = FFBEDA
| pattern_so3 = _arezzo1920t
| socks3 = 8E3145
}}
Società Sportiva Arezzo (formerly Associazione Sportiva Dilettantistica Atletico Arezzo and Associazione Calcio Arezzo) is an Italian association football club based in Arezzo, Tuscany. The club was formed in 1923, refounded in 1993 after going bankrupt and refounded in 2010 after being unable to enroll in the tournament. The club currently plays in Serie C, the third tier of Italian football.
History
The club was founded on 9 September 1923, by a group of friends, and football fans, as Juventus Football Club Arezzo (in honour of Juventus F.C.). In 1930, following a merge with several other minor Arezzo teams, the club became Unione Sportiva Arezzo, which was admitted in 1935 to new-born Serie C division. The team was relegated from Serie C in 1953, following several financial troubles, returning to Serie C division five years later. In 1961, Arezzo started to play its games in the Stadio Comunale, its current venue. In 1966, Arezzo promoted to Serie B for the first time; in order to celebrate the triumph, Arezzo played a friendly match with Brazilian team Vasco da Gama, winning it 2–1. However, the next year Arezzo was not able to remain in the division, and returned to Serie C the following year. But in 1969 Arezzo again won Serie C, and returned to play in Serie B, where it played until 1975. In 1971, Arezzo signed striker Francesco Graziani, who quickly became a fan favourite and a key player for the team.
The third promotion to Serie B came in 1982, under coach Antonio Valentin Angelillo, with Tullio Gritti as striker. The previous year, Arezzo had won its first (and only) Italy's Serie C Cup, defeating Ternana in the finals. In 1984, Arezzo barely missed promotion to Serie A, ending just five points back from the last promotion place. In 1988, despite a team accordingly built to promote to Serie A, Arezzo relegated to Serie C1. Arezzo disbanded in 1993, following financial troubles, being excluded by Serie C1 seven football days before the end of the season. Following the cancellation, a pool of shareholders led by former Arezzo star Ciccio Graziani founded Associazione Calcio Arezzo, admitted to Serie D. In 1996 an unknown coach with a few lower division experiences, Serse Cosmi, was appointed as new manager. Despite his complete lack of experience in the division, Cosmi immediately won hands down Serie D, leading Arezzo back to professional football. In 1998, again with Cosmi, Arezzo qualified to and won the Serie C2 promotion playoffs, gaining promotion to Serie C1. In 1999/2000, despite the contributions of Fabio Bazzani, Arezzo lost promotion playoffs; the following year, after Cosmi left Arezzo for Serie A side Perugia, Antonio Cabrini was appointed as new coach, and Mario Frick replaced Bazzani as forward. The team returned to Serie B in 2004, with Mario Somma as coach; the next season, which saw Pasquale Marino replacing Somma, who signed for Empoli, Arezzo barely maintained a Serie B place.
At the end of the 2009–10 Lega Pro Prima Divisione season the club, due to financial problems, were unable to enroll to the next season tournament. A new club with the Associazione Sportiva Dilettantistica Atletico Arezzo denomination was entered in Serie D.{{cite news|url=http://www.comune.arezzo.it/retecivica/URP/Comunicati.nsf/ComunicatiStampaBoxWeb/6A5581979E2795B9C1257770003EB3EC?opendocument|language=it|date=30 July 2010|access-date=17 August 2010|publisher=Comune di Arezzo|title=L'Arezzo riparte dalla serie D: nasce l'ASD Atletico Arezzo, presidente Marco Massetti}}
In November 2010 the club was acquired by a consortium of Rome-based entrepreneurs (including popular actor Luca Zingaretti) for a sum of €400,000; the new owners immediately made a number of changes, appointing former Cagliari player Maurizio Coppola as head coach and former Serie A star Abel Balbo as assistant coach and technical area coordinator.{{cite news |url=http://www.blitzquotidiano.it/sport/calcio-d-arezzo-zingaretti-montalbano-balbo-648430/|publisher=Blitz Quotidiano |language=it |access-date=28 November 2010 |date=21 November 2010 |title=Calcio D, Arezzo: Zingaretti-Montalbano dirigente, a Abel Balbo l'area tecnica}}{{cite news |url=http://www.coloreamaranto.it/default.asp?pagina=dettaglioarticoli&articolo=545&ogtit=Ufficiale%20Fratini%20esonerato,%20al%20suo%20posto%20Coppola%20affiancato%20da%20Balbo&ogima=admin/contenuti/articoli/0034_23102010_008.jpg |language=it |publisher=Colore Amaranto |access-date=28 November 2010 |date=23 November 2010 |title=Ufficiale Fratini esonerato, al suo posto Coppola affiancato da Balbo |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110722030530/http://www.coloreamaranto.it/default.asp?pagina=dettaglioarticoli&articolo=545&ogtit=Ufficiale%20Fratini%20esonerato%2C%20al%20suo%20posto%20Coppola%20affiancato%20da%20Balbo&ogima=admin%2Fcontenuti%2Farticoli%2F0034_23102010_008.jpg |archive-date=22 July 2011}}
On 1 July 2012 the club was renamed Unione Sportiva Arezzo[http://www.atleticoarezzo.it/comunicati/1163-comunicato-della-societa- Unione Sportiva Arezzo – Official Web Site] with Balbo as new head coach, replaced since 30 October 2012 by Michele Bacis.
On 9 January 2013 Mauro Ferretti, an enreprenuer from Rome, bought the club.{{cite news |url=http://www.amarantomagazine.it/news_dett.php?id=1288 |language=it |publisher=Unione Sportiva Arezzo – Official Web Site |access-date=29 July 2013 |date=10 January 2013 |title=Mauro Ferretti nuovo presidente dell'Arezzo. Ieri sera le firme, sabato la presentazione }} A few weeks later, on 28 January, Federico Nofri replaced Bacis as coach.{{cite news |url=http://www.arezzocalcio.com/it/news//federico-nofri-nuovo-allenatore-amaranto-domani-alle-1130-la-presentazione.html |language=it |publisher=Unione Sportiva Arezzo – Official Web Site |access-date=29 July 2013 |date=28 January 2013 |title=Federico Nofri nuovo allenatore amaranto. Domani alle 11:30 la presentazione}}
For the 2013–14 season, Davide Mezzanotti was appointed as new coach.{{cite news |url=http://www.arezzocalcio.com/it/news/news-squadra/mezzanotti-nuovo-allenatore-amaranto.html |language=it |publisher=Unione Sportiva Arezzo – Official Web Site |access-date=29 July 2013 |date=5 June 2013 |title=Mezzanotti nuovo allenatore amaranto}} After the club ended in third place, Ezio Capuano was named new head coach; later in September 2014, Arezzo was readmitted to Lega Pro to fill a vacancy. Under Capuano's tenure (which lasted until April 2016), the club safely escaped relegation on both seasons. For the 2016–17 season, the club came with a new head coach, Stefano Sottili, and a number of major signings such as former Serie A player Davide Moscardelli.
League and cup history
bgcolor="#f7f8ff" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="2" border="1" style="font-size: 95%; border: gray solid 1px; border-collapse: collapse; text-align:center" | ||||||||||||||||
bgcolor="#868686" style="color: #ffffff"
| width="65" align="center"| Season | width="35" align="center"|A | width="35" align="center"|Tier 2 | width="35" align="center"|Tier 3 | width="35" align="center"|Tier 4 | width="35" align="center"|Tier 5 | width="35" align="center"|Tier 6 | width="35" align="center"|Tier 7 | width="35" align="center"|Tier 8 | width="25" align="center"|Pts. | width="25" align="center"|Pl. | width="25" align="center"|W | width="25" align="center"|L | width="25" align="center"|T | width="25" align="center"|GF | width="25" align="center"|GA | width="25" align="center"|GD | ||||||||||||||||
2004–05 | 14 | 51 | 42 | 12 | 15 | 15 | 51 | 52 | −1 | |||||||
2005–06 | 7 | 66 | 42 | 17 | 15 | 10 | 45 | 34 | +11 | |||||||
2010–11 | 9 (E) | 45 | 34 | 11 | 11 | 12 | 42 | 41 | +11 |
Scoring history
Highest scoring and best win:
- 2004–05 season: 5–3, defeated Verona
Players
=Current squad=
{{updated|19 February 2025}}
{{Fs start}}
{{Fs player | no = 1 | pos=GK | nat= ITA | name= Luca Trombini}}
{{Fs player | no = 2 | pos=DF | nat= ITA | name= Alberto Montini}}
{{Fs player | no = 5 | pos=DF | nat= ITA | name= Matteo Gilli}}
{{Fs player | no = 6 | pos=MF | nat= ITA | name= Alessandro Renzi}}
{{Fs player | no = 7 | pos=MF | nat= ITA | name= Filippo Guccione}}
{{Fs player | no = 8 | pos=MF | nat= ITA | name= Andrea Settembrini}}
{{Fs player | no = 9 | pos=FW | nat= ITA | name= Roberto Ogunseye|other={{small|on loan from Cesena}}}}
{{Fs player | no = 10 | pos=FW | nat= ITA | name= Emiliano Pattarello}}
{{Fs player | no= 11 | pos=FW | nat= ITA | name= Mario Ravasio}}
{{Fs player | no = 12 | pos=GK | nat= ITA | name= Amoris Galli}}
{{Fs player | no = 14 | pos=MF | nat= ITA | name= Simone Fiore}}
{{Fs player | no = 15 | pos=DF | nat= ITA | name= Nicolò Gigli}}
{{Fs player | no = 16 | pos=MF | nat= GHA | name= Shaka Mawuli|other={{small|on loan from Südtirol}}}}
{{fs mid}}
{{Fs player | no = 17 | pos=DF | nat= ITA | name= Mirko Lazzarini}}
{{Fs player | no = 18 | pos=MF | nat= ITA | name= Mattia Damiani}}
{{Fs player | no = 19 | pos=DF | nat= ITA | name= Marco Chiosa}}
{{Fs player | no = 20 | pos=MF | nat= ITA | name= Salvatore Santoro}}
{{Fs player | no = 21 | pos=MF | nat= ITA | name= Camillo Tavernelli}}
{{Fs player | no = 22 | pos=GK | nat= ITA | name= Daniele Borra}}
{{Fs player | no = 23 | pos=DF | nat= ITA | name= Samuele Righetti}}
{{Fs player | no = 24 | pos=MF | nat= ITA | name= Luca Chierico}}
{{Fs player | no = 26 | pos=DF | nat= ITA | name= Niccolò Bigi}}
{{Fs player | no = 27 | pos=DF | nat= ITA | name= Lorenzo Coccia}}
{{Fs player | no = 28 | pos=FW | nat= ITA | name= Alessandro Capello}}
{{Fs player | no = 30 | pos=DF | nat= ITA | name= Filippo Barboni}}
{{Fs player | no = 33 | pos=MF | nat= ITA | name= Jacopo Dezi}}
{{Fs end}}
=Out on loan=
{{Fs start}}
{{Fs player | no = | pos=GK | nat= ITA | name= Jacopo Ermini|other={{small|at Terranuova Traiana until 30 June 2025}}}}
{{Fs player | no = | pos=DF | nat= ITA | name= Dario Del Fabro|other={{small|at Catania until 30 June 2025}}}}
{{Fs player | no = | pos=DF | nat= ITA | name= Omar Giubbolini|other={{small|at Lavagnese until 30 June 2025}}}}
{{Fs player | no= | pos=DF | nat= ALB | name= Rajan Maloku|other={{small|at Pistoiese until 30 June 2025}}}}
{{Fs player | no = | pos=DF | nat= ITA | name= Lorenzo Masetti|other={{small|at Pianese until 30 June 2025}}}}
{{Fs player | no = | pos=DF | nat= ITA | name= Michelangelo Scichilone|other={{small|at Terranuova Traiana until 30 June 2025}}}}
{{Fs mid}}
{{Fs player | no = | pos=DF | nat= ITA | name= Samuele Zona|other={{small|at Follonica Gavorrano until 30 June 2025}}}}
{{Fs player | no = | pos=MF | nat= ITA | name= Sebastiano Bianchi|other={{small|at Casertana until 30 June 2025}}}}
{{Fs player | no = | pos=MF | nat= ALB | name= Alessandro Zhupa|other={{small|at Terranuova Traiana until 30 June 2025}}}}
{{Fs player | no = | pos=FW | nat= ITA | name= Yuri Armini|other={{small|at Atletico Lodigiani until 30 June 2025}}}}
{{Fs player | no = | pos=FW | nat= ITA | name= Mattia Gaddini|other={{small|at Pontedera until 30 June 2025}}}}
{{Fs player | no = | pos=FW | nat= ITA | name= Niccolò Gucci|other={{small|at Livorno until 30 June 2025}}}}
{{Fs end}}
Notable players
{{see also|Category:SS Arezzo players}}
Notable managers
{{Flagicon|ITA}} Antonio Conte
{{Flagicon|ITA}} Maurizio Sarri
Honours
References
{{Reflist}}
External links
- [http://www.arezzocalcio.com/ Official website]
{{Serie C}}
{{Serie D}}
{{Serie B}}
{{Football in Italy}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Arezzo}}
Category:Football clubs in Italy
Category:Football clubs in Tuscany
Category:Association football clubs established in 1923