Hellas Verona F.C.

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Hellas Verona
logo
Full name Hellas Verona Football Club SpA
Nickname(s) Gialloblu (Yellow-Blues),
Mastini (Mastiffs);
Scaligeri (Scalidgers)
Founded 1903
Ground Stadio Marcantonio Bentegodi,
Verona, Italy
(Capacity 39,211)
Chairman Pietro Arvedi D'Emilei
Caretaker coach Davide Pellegrini
League Serie C1/A
2006-07 Serie B, 18th (Relegated)
Team colours Team colours Team colours
Team colours
Team colours
 
Home colours
Team colours Team colours Team colours
Team colours
Team colours
 
Away colours

Hellas Verona Football Club S.p.A (commonly known simply as Verona, or Hellas within the city of Verona itself) is an Italian professional football team, based in Verona, Veneto. The team's colours are yellow and blue and gialloblu (literally, "yellow-blue" in Italian) is the team's most widely used nickname. The colours represent the city itself and Verona's emblem (a yellow cross on a blue shield) appears on most team apparel. Two more team nicknames are Mastini (the mastiffs) and Scaligeri, both references to Mastino I della Scala of the Della Scala princes that ruled the city during the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries.

The Scala family coat of arms is depicted on the team's jersey and on its trademark logo as a stylized image of two large, powerful mastiffs facing opposite directions. In essence, the term "scaligeri" is synonymous with Veronese, and therefore can describe anything or anyone from Verona (eg., Chievo Verona, a different team that also links itself to the Scala family - specifically to Cangrande della Scala).

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Founded in 1903 by a group of university students, the club was named Hellas (the Greek word for Greece), at the request of a professor of Classics. At a time in which football was played seriously only in the larger cities of the Northwest of Italy, most of Verona was indifferent to the growing sport. However, when in 1906 two city teams chose the city's Roman amphitheatre as a venue to showcase the game, crowd enthusiasm and media interest began to rise.

During these first few years Hellas were one of three or four area teams playing mainly at a municipal level while fighting against city rivals Bentegodi to become the city's premier football outfit. By the 1907-1908 season, Hellas were playing against regional teams and an intense rivalry with Vicenza Calcio that lasts to this day is born.

From 1898 to 1926 Italian football was organised into regional groups. In this period Hellas was one of the founding teams of the early league and often among its top final contenders. In 1911, the city helped Hellas replace the early, gritty football fields with a proper venue. This allowed the team to take part in its first regional tournament which, until 1926, was the qualifying stage for the national title.

In 1919, following a return to activity after a four year suspension of all football competition in Italy during World War I the team merged with city rival Verona and changed its name to Hellas Verona. Between 1926 and 1929 the elite "Campionato Nazionale" assimilated the top sides from the various regional groups and Hellas Verona joined the privileged teams, yet struggled to remain competitive.

Serie A, as it is structured today, began in 1929, when the Campionato Nazionale turned into a professional league. Still an amateur team, Hellas merged with two city rivals, Bentegodi and Scaligera, to form AC Verona. Hoping to build a first class contender for future years the new team debuted in Serie B in 1929. It would take the gialloblu 28 years to finally achieve their goal. After first being promoted to Serie A for one season in 1957-58, in 1959 the team merged with another city rival (called Hellas) and commemorated its beginnings by changing its name to Hellas Verona AC.

Coached by Nils Liedholm, the team returned to Serie A in 1968 and remained in the elite league almost without interruption until 1990. Along the way it scored a famous 5-3 win in the 1972-1973 season that cost AC Milan the scudetto (the Serie A title). The fact that the result came late during the last matchday of the season makes the sudden and unexpected end to the rossoneri's title ambitions all the more memorable.

In 1973-1974 Hellas finished the season in 4th last place thus avoiding relegation, but were sent down to Serie B during the summer months as a result of a scandal involving team president Saverio Garonzi. After a year in Serie B Hellas Verona returned to Serie A.

In the 1975-1976 season the team had a successful run in the Coppa Italia, eliminating highly rated teams such as AC Torino, Cagliari Calcio, and Internazionale from the tournament. However, in their first ever final in the competition Hellas Verona were trounced 4-0 by SSC Napoli.

Under the leadership of legendary coach Osvaldo Bagnoli, in 1982-1983 the team secured 4th place in Serie A (its highest finish at the time) and even lead the Serie A standings for a few weeks. The same season Hellas again reached the Coppa Italia final. After a 2-0 home victory Hellas Verona travelled to Turin to play Juventus F.C. where the team lost the Cup in extra-time (3-0 defeat).

Heartbreak would follow in the 1983-1984 season when the team again reached the Coppa Italia final only to lose the Cup in the final minutes of the return match against defending Serie A champions AS Roma.

Hellas Verona AC is certainly most famous for going on to win the scudetto the following season (1984-85) and for its regular presence in European club football in the mid 1980s. In those years its usual lineup was the following: Claudio Garella; Mauro Ferroni, Luciano Marangon, Roberto Tricella, Silvano Fontolan; Hans-Peter Briegel, Pietro Fanna, Domenico Volpati, Antonio Di Gennaro; Giuseppe Galderisi, Preben Elkjær Larsen and coach Osvaldo Bagnoli. Subs Luciano Bruni, Luigi Sacchetti and Fabio Turchetta were important regular contributors as well.

Although the 1984-1985 squad was made up of a healthy mix of emerging players and mature stars, at the beginning of the season no one would have regarded the team as having the necessary ingredients to make it to the end. Certainly the additions of Hans-Peter Briegel in midfield and of Danish striker Preben Elkjær Larsen to an attack that already featured the wing play of Pietro Fanna, the creative abilities of Antonio Di Gennaro and the scoring touch of Giuseppe Galderisi were to prove crucial.

To mention a few of the memorable milestones on the road to the scudetto: a decisive win against Juventus F.C. (2-0) set the stage early in the championship; an away win over Udinese Calcio (5-3) ended any speculation that the team was losing energy at the midway point; three straight wins (including a hard fought 1-0 victory against a strong AS Roma side) served notice that the team had kept its polish and focus intact during their rival's final surge; and a 1-1 draw in Bergamo against Atalanta secured the title with a game in hand.

Hellas Verona finished the year with a 15-13-2 record and 43 points, 4 points ahead of Torino with Internazionale and Sampdoria rounding out the top four spots.

The team made its first European appearance in 1983-1984 in the UEFA Cup and were knocked out in the second round of the tournament. In 1986 Hellas Verona AC were eliminated from the European Cup by fellow Serie A side Juventus F.C. (the title holders after their victory the previous year over Liverpool). In 1988 the team had its best international result when it reached the UEFA Cup quarter-finals with four victories and three draws. The decisive defeat came from German side Werder Bremen.

These were more than mere modest achievements for a mid-size city with a limited appeal to fans across the nation. But soon enough financial difficulties caught up with team managers. In 1991 the team folded and was reborn as Verona FC, regularly moving to and fro between Serie A and Serie B ever since. In 1995 the name was officially changed back to Hellas Verona FC.

After a three year stay, their last stint in Serie A ended in grief in 2002. That season emerging international talents such as Adrian Mutu, Mauro Camoranesi, Alberto Gilardino, Martin Laursen, Massimo Oddo, Marco Cassetti and coach Alberto Malesani failed to capitalize on an excellent start and eventually dropped into fourth-to-last place for the first time all season on the very last matchday, enforcing relegation into Serie B

That same season, with city rivals Chievo Verona also in the country's premier football league, Verona joined Milan, Rome, Turin and Genoa to become only the fifth Italian city to host a Serie A derby (known as il derby della Scala). The first ever Verona derby came on matchday 11 and saw the city's teams both ranked among the top four in Serie A. The match was won by the Hellas side, 3-2. Chievo gained revenge in the return match in the spring, winning 2-1.

Two years later (2003-04 season) Hellas Verona struggled in Serie B and spent most of the season fighting off the unthinkable: a disconcerting relegation to Serie C1. Undeterred, the fans supported their team and a string of late season wins eventually warded off the danger. Over 5000 of them followed Hellas to Como on the final day of the season to celebrate. In 2004-05 things have looked much brighter for the team. After a rocky start Hellas put together a string of results and climbed to third spot. The gialloblù held on to the position until January 2005, when transfers weakened the team, yet they managed to take the battle for Serie A to the last day of the season. The Serie B 2006-07 seemed to start with good premises due to the club takeover by Pietro Arvedi D'Emilei which ended nine years of rule by chairman Gianbattista Pastorello, heavily contested by the supporters in his late years at Verona. However Verona was immediately involved in the relegation battle, and Massimo Ficcadenti was replaced on December 2006, being replaced by Giampiero Ventura. Despite a recovery in the results, Verona ended in a 18th place, thus being forced to play a two-legged playoff against 19th-placed Spezia in order to save from relegation. A 2-1 away loss in the first leg at La Spezia was followed by a 0-0 home tie, and Verona were relegated to Serie C1 after 64 years of playing between the two highest divisions.

Verona appointed experienced coach Franco Colomba for the new season, with the aim to return back to Serie B as soon as possible, but a dismal start left the scaligeri in last place after seven matches, and convinced the club management to sack Colomba on early October and replace him with youth team coach (and former Verona player) Davide Pellegrini.[1]

Apart from the many local fan clubs whose main role is (for example) to provide a meeting place for fans and friends and organize away trips, since the late 60s many Italian fans rely on organized stadium groups known as Ultras. The main goal is to choreograph fan support with flags, banners, coloured smoke screens, drums, and chanting in unison. For most teams city rivalries, colours, coat of arms, symbols, and the overall iconography have roots in the Middle Ages and early Renaissance. Today, as the chosen names of most organized groups, the youth of most members, and the late 60s origins may suggest, the social trend is best understood as part of the popular culture and counter-culture that centre around the year 1968.

The best-known organized fan group of the team was called Brigate Gialloblù or "BG" (the "yellowblue brigades"). It came together in 1971 and no longer exists as such. Although to this day virtually all fans call themselves BG members when at the Bentegodi, today's hardcore BG group numbers about a few thousand members. From producing flags large enough to cover the entire Curva Sud section (about a third of the stadium) to singing Giuseppe Verdi's Aida, the BG (and Hellas fans in general) are one of Italy's most dedicated, imaginative and respected supporters.

Most Hellas fans have always kept football and politics apart, but right wing (Verona Front, Hellas Army) and left wing (Rude Boys) groups existed within the BG, as they do still among today's Hellas fans. Then and now, the wide majority of the fans are joyous and well behaved, but small groups, typically right wing fascist extremists[citation needed], aim to provoke trouble, cause public outrage and attract attention, whatever the cost to the team.

Repeated incidents throughout the 1970s, and crowd violence in the late 1980s, drew plenty of media attention and Verona was singled out as amongst the worst perpetratraors. Unfortunately similar events occur in many (but not all) Italian stadiums. The founders and "hard-core" groups within the BG did what they could to keep younger members from emulating or even joining the fascist extremists, yet decisive action clearly needed to be taken. After 20 years, in late 1991 the various BG groups unanimously decided to disband themselves completely in an attempt to pull the ground from beneath the extremists.

Today acts of violence are extremely rare and fans attend games to display their affection for Hellas Verona. Smaller organized groups still exist and fans regularly sing the Aida (the old BG anthem) in tribute. However, at least once or twice a year controversial choruses do make national headlines and much more needs to be done (by the fans, the team and local institutions) to keep the trend under check.

Hellas Verona fans are twinned with the supporters of Fiorentina. The friendship dates back to the mid 80s, when several old viola crowd favourites (Antonio Di Gennaro, Luigi Sacchetti and Luciano Bruni) left Florence and won the scudetto with Hellas Verona.

The gialloblu are bitter rivals of Vicenza, Brescia, Atalanta, and Napoli. Like many other Serie A fans, Hellas supporters have no liking for Juventus, Milan and Inter (the three biggest clubs in Italian football).

Italians

Osvaldo Bagnoli
Marco Cassetti
Aimo Diana
Antonio Di Gennaro
Marco Di Vaio
Pietro Fanna
Mauro Ferroni
Silvano Fontolan
Giuseppe Galderisi
Roberto Galia
Claudio Garella

 

Alberto Gilardino
Filippo Inzaghi
Maurizio Iorio
Virgilio Levratto
Luciano Marangon
Emiliano Mascetti
Massimo Oddo
Aldo Olivieri
Angelo Orazi
Domenico Penzo
Angelo Peruzzi

 

Gianluca Pessotto
Ugo Pozzan
Paolo Rossi
Sergio Sega
Guido Tavellin
Roberto Tricella
Damiano Tommasi
Paolo Vanoli
Domenico Volpati
Renato Zaccarelli
Gianfranco Zigoni

Foreigners

Flag of Brazil Adaílton

Flag of Switzerland Valon Behrami

Flag of Germany Thomas Berthold

Flag of Germany Hans-Peter Briegel

Flag of Argentina Flag of Italy Mauro Camoranesi

Flag of Argentina Claudio Caniggia

Flag of Brazil Sergio Clerici

Flag of Brazil Emanuele Del Vecchio

 

Flag of Brazil Dirceu

Flag of France Sebastien Frey

Flag of Liechtenstein Mario Frick

Flag of Argentina Nelson Daniel Gutierrez

Flag of Scotland Joe Jordan

Flag of Denmark Preben Elkjær Larsen

Flag of Denmark Martin Laursen

Flag of Romania Adrian Mutu

 

Flag of Sweden Robert Prytz

Flag of Romania Florin Răducioiu

Flag of Croatia Anthony Šerić

Flag of Argentina Victor Hugo Sotomayor

Flag of Yugoslavia Dragan Stojković

Flag of Argentina Pedro Troglio

Flag of Poland Władysław Żmuda

Flag of Wales Craig Davies (2006)

As of 08 September 2007[2]
No. Position Player
Flag of Italy GK Francesco Franzese
Flag of Brazil GK Rafael
Flag of Italy GK Luca Cecchini
Flag of Italy DF Lorenzo Sibilano
Flag of Italy DF Alberto Comazzi (captain)
Flag of Italy DF Luigi Martinelli
Flag of Italy DF Giovanni Orfei
Flag of Italy DF Emanuele Politti
Flag of Finland DF Jarkko Hurme
Flag of Italy DF Giovanni Morabito
Flag of Italy MF Gianluca Di Giulio
Flag of Italy MF Marco Mancinelli
Flag of Burkina Faso MF Salif Dianda
No. Position Player
Flag of Italy MF Marco Iovine
Flag of Italy MF Francesco Giraldi
Flag of Italy MF Alessandro Castellan
Flag of Italy MF Nicola Corrent
Flag of Italy MF Claudio Ferrarese
Flag of Uzbekistan MF Ilyas Zeytulaev
Flag of the Czech Republic MF Ondrej Herzan
Flag of Italy MF Leandro Greco
Flag of Brazil FW William da Silva
Flag of Italy FW Andrea Cossu
Flag of Russia FW Dimitri Iakovlevski
Flag of Italy FW Daniele Morante
Flag of Guinea FW Karamoko Cisse

Note: only players on loan to Serie A and Serie B teams are listed.

Flag of Italy MF Giuseppe Colucci (on loan to Catania)
Flag of Italy MF Gianni Munari (co-ownership with Palermo)
Flag of Italy Alessandro Ferri (on loan to Mantova)

  1. ^ "Punch-drunk Verona fire Colomba", Football Italia, 2007-10-08. Retrieved on 2007-11-14. 
  2. ^ Squad at hellasverona.it. Retrieved on 2007-06-22.


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