Presidential history

Below is the presidential history of Genoa, from when the club was first founded playing cricket and athletics, until the present day.[40]

 
Name Years
Charles De Grave Sells 1893–1897
Hermann Bauer 1897–1899
Daniel G. Fawcus 1899–1904
Edoardo Pasteur 1904–1909
Vieri A. Goetzloff 1909–1910
Edoardo Pasteur 1910–1911
Luigi Aicardi 1911–1913
Geo Davidson 1913–1920
Guido Sanguineti 1920–1926
Vincent Ardissone 1926–1933
Aldo Tarabini 1933–1934
Alfredo Costa 1934–1936
Juan Culiolo 1936–1941
Nino Bertoni 1941–1942
 
Name Years
Giovanni Gavarone 1942–1943
Nino Bertoni 1943–1944
Aldo Mairano 1944–1945
Antonio Lorenzo 1945–1946
Edoardo Pasteur 1946
Giovanni Peragallo 1946
Massimo Poggi 1946–1950
Ernesto Cauvin 1951–1953
Ugo Valperga 1953–1954
Presidential Committee 1954–1958
Fausto Gadolla 1958–1960
Presidential Committee 1960–1963
Giacomo Berrino 1963–1966
Ugo Maria Failla 1966–1967
 
Name Years
Renzo Fossati 1967–1970
Virgilio Bazzani 1970
Angelo Tongiani 1970–1971
Gianni Meneghini 1971–1972
Giacomo Berrino 1972–1974
Renzo Fossati 1974–1985
Aldo Spinelli 1985–1997
Massimo Mauro 1997–1999
Gianni E. Scerni 1999–2001
Luigi Dalla Costa 2001–2003
Stefano Campoccia 2003
Enrico Preziosi 2003–2007
Giambattista Pastorello 2007–present

Managerial history

Genoa have had many managers and trainers, some seasons they have had co-managers running the team, here is a chronological list of them from 1896 when they became a football club, onwards.[41]

 
Name Nationality Years
James Richardson Spensley Flag of England 1896–1907
Technical Commission Flag of England 1907–1912
William Garbutt Flag of England 1912–1927
Renzo De Vecchi Flag of Italy 1927–1930
Gèza Székány Flag of Hungary 1930–1931
Luigi Burlando
Guillermo Stábile
Flag of Italy
Flag of Argentina
1931–1932
Karl Rumbold Flag of Austria 1932–1933
József Nagy Flag of Hungary 1933–1934
Vittorio Faroppa Flag of Italy 1934–1935
György Orth Flag of Hungary 1935–1936
Hermann Felsner Flag of Austria 1936–1937
William Garbutt Flag of England 1937–1939
Ottavio Barbieri
William Garbutt
Flag of Italy
Flag of England
1939–1940
Ottavio Barbieri Flag of Italy 1940–1941
Guido Ara Flag of Italy 1941–1943
Ottavio Barbieri Flag of Italy 1945–1946
William Garbutt Flag of England 1946–1948
Federico Allasio Flag of Italy 1948–1949
John David Astley Flag of England 1949–1950
Manlio Bacigalupo Flag of Italy 1950–1951
Imre Senkey Flag of Hungary 1951–1952
Giacinto Ellena Flag of Italy 1952–1953
György Sárosi Flag of Hungary 1953–1955
Renzo Magli Flag of Italy 1955–1958
Annibale Frossi Flag of Italy 1958–1959
Antonio Busini
Gipo Poggi
Flag of Italy
Flag of Italy
1959–1960
Annibale Frossi Flag of Italy 1960–1961
Renato Gei Flag of Italy 1961–1963
Beniamino Santos Flag of Argentina 1963–1964
Paulo Amaral Flag of Brazil 1964–1965
Luigi Bonizzoni Flag of Italy 1965–1966
Giorgio Ghezzi Flag of Italy 1966–1967
Livio Fongaro Flag of Italy 1967–1968
Aldo Campatelli Flag of Italy 1968–1969
Franco Viviani Flag of Italy 1969–1970
 
Name Nationality Years
Arturo Silvestri Flag of Italy 1970–1974
Guido Vincenzi Flag of Italy 1974–1975
Gigi Simoni Flag of Italy 1975–1978
Pietro Maroso Flag of Italy 1978–1979
Gianni Di Marzio Flag of Italy 1979–1980
Gigi Simoni Flag of Italy 1980–1984
Tarcisio Burgnich Flag of Italy 1984–1986
Attilio Perotti Flag of Italy 1986–1987
Gigi Simoni Flag of Italy 1987–1988
Franco Scoglio Flag of Italy 1988–1990
Osvaldo Bagnoli Flag of Italy 1990–1992
Bruno Giorgi Flag of Italy 1992–1993
Claudio Maselli Flag of Italy 1993–1994
Franco Scoglio Flag of Italy 1994–1995
Gigi Radice Flag of Italy 1995–1996
Attilio Perotti Flag of Italy 1996–1997
Gaetano Salvemini Flag of Italy 1996–1997
Claudio Maselli Flag of Italy 1997
Tarcisio Burgnich Flag of Italy 1997–1998
Giuseppe Pillon Flag of Italy 1998
Luigi Cagni Flag of Italy 1998
Delio Rossi Flag of Italy 1999–2000
Bruno Bolchi Flag of Italy 2000
Guido Carboni
Alfredo Magni
Flag of Italy
Flag of Italy
2000–2001
Bruno Bolchi Flag of Italy 2001
Franco Scoglio Flag of Italy 2001
Edoardo Reja Flag of Italy 2001–2002
Claudio Onofri Flag of Italy 2002
Vincenzo Torrente
Rino Lavezzini
Flag of Italy
Flag of Italy
2003
Roberto Donadoni Flag of Italy 2003
Luigi De Canio Flag of Italy 2004
Serse Cosmi Flag of Italy 2004–2005
Francesco Guidolin Flag of Italy 2005
Giovanni Vavassori Flag of Italy 2005–2006
Gian Piero Gasperini Flag of Italy 2006–present

Colours, badge and nicknames

A previous badge.

As Genoa was founded by Englishmen the first ever colours of the club resembled that of the England national football team.[1] Not long into the club's footballing history, the kit was changed to white and blue stripes in 1899; the blue was chosen to represent the sea as Genoa is a port city. Finally the club settled for their most famous red and blue halves shirt, this gained them the nickname of rossoblu.[42]

One of the nicknames of Genoa is Il Grifone which means "the griffin"; this is derived from the coat of arms belonging to the city of Genoa. The coat of arms features two golden griffins, either side of the St George's Cross.[43] The presence of the St. George's Cross on the crest, unlike it's presence on the crest of FC Barcelona, does not reflect the club's English founders; rather, the cross is present on both the flag and coat of arms of the city of Genoa. The actual club badge of Genoa Cricket and Football Club is heavily derived from the city coat of arms, but also incorporated the club's red and blue colours.

Supporters and rivalries

Genoa have around a million fans in Italy, mostly from Liguria, however they are also popular in Piedmont and the Aosta Valley.[44] The seafaring traditions of the Genoese and the presence of Genoese communities in distant countries did much to spread the appeal of Genoa much further than just Italy, and there are fan clubs in Buenos Aires, Amsterdam, Tokyo, Toronto, New York, San Francisco, Iceland and other places.

Genoa fans in 2007, celebrating their return to Serie A.

The most significant and traditional rivalry for Genoa, is the inner-city one with the club whom they share a ground with; Sampdoria. The two clubs compete together in the heated Derby della Lanterna ("Derby of the Lantern"); a reference to the Genoa lighthouse.[45] The ultras of Genoa also have a strong distaste for AC Milan, after a tragedy in January 1995 when Genoa fan Vincenzo Spagnolo was stabbed to death by a Milanese hooligan.[46]

Conversely, the fans of Genoa have a long standing friendship with Napoli[47] which goes back to 1982. On the last day of the 2006–07 season, the clubs drew 0–0 ensuring both were promoted back into Serie A; Genoa ultras could be seen holding up banners saying "benvenuto fratello napoletano", meaning, "Welcome, Neapolitan brother," and the two sets of fans celebrated together.[48]

Honours

National titles

Italian Football Championship / Serie A: 9

Italian Cup: 1

  • Winners: 1936–37
  • Runners-up: 1939-40

Serie B: 6

Serie C / Serie C1: 1

Palla Dapples: 13

  • Winners: 1903–1909

European titles

UEFA Cup

Mitropa Cup:

  • Runners-up: 1990
  • Quarter-finalists: 1929

Coppa delle Alpi: 3

  • Winners: 1962, 1964, 1991

Anglo-Italian Cup: 1

  • Winners: 1996

Spagnolo Trophy: 5

  • Winners: 1995, 1996, 2000, 2001, 2003, 2006

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k "Genoa Cricket & Football Club - Short Historical Overview 1893-1960". RSSSF.com. http://www.rsssf.com/tablesg/genoa.html. Retrieved on August. 
  2. ^ a b c d "Storia del Genoa - Part 1". EnciclopediaDelCalcio.com. http://www.enciclopediadelcalcio.com/Genoa1.html. Retrieved on August. 
  3. ^ "Genoa", FourFourTwo.com (23 June 2007). 
  4. ^ "Storia", GenoaCFC.it (23 June 2007). 
  5. ^ "Italy -All-Time Table 1898-2002". RSSSF.com. http://www.rsssf.com/tablesi/italalltimeall.html. Retrieved on July 2007. 
  6. ^ a b c "Campionato Serie A - Albo D'oro". Lega Calcio. http://www.lega-calcio.it/ita/atim_albo.shtml. Retrieved on August. 
  7. ^ "Stadio Luigi Ferraris". GenoaCFC.it. http://www.genoacfc.it/stadio.asp. Retrieved on August 2007. 
  8. ^ "Genoa". Channel4.com. http://www.channel4.com/sport/football_italia/clubs/genoa.html. Retrieved on August. 
  9. ^ "Edoardo Bosio and Football in Turin". Life in Italy. http://www.lifeinitaly.com/sport/history-italian-soccer.asp. Retrieved on August. 
  10. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Modena, Panini Edizioni (2005). Almanacco Illustrato del Calcio - La Storia 1898-2004. 
  11. ^ "Genoa All-Time XI". Chanel4.com. http://www.channel4.com/sport/football_italia/alltime/genoaxi.html. Retrieved on August. 
  12. ^ "Club Profiles - Genoa". Forza Azzurri. http://www.homestead.com/forza_azzurri/clubs_prof_F.html. Retrieved on August. 
  13. ^ a b c d "Il Genoa leggendario". La storia del Genoa. http://web.dsc.unibo.it/~lauri/ig/storia2.html. Retrieved on August. 
  14. ^ "Levratto - Profile". Encilopedia Del Calcio. http://www.enciclopediadelcalcio.com/Levratto.html. Retrieved on August. 
  15. ^ "Storia del Genoa - Part 4". EnciclopediaDelCalcio.com. http://www.enciclopediadelcalcio.com/Genoa4.html. Retrieved on August. 
  16. ^ "Italy - Coppa Italia History". RSSSF.com. http://www.rsssf.com/tablesi/italcuphistfull.html. Retrieved on August. 
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  18. ^ "Genoa". Weltfussballarchiv. http://www.weltfussballarchiv.com/Vereinsprofil.php?ID=1255&lang=en. Retrieved on August. 
  19. ^ a b "Mister Genoani", Genoa1983.org (27 August 2007). 
  20. ^ "Italy 1948–49". RSSSF.com. http://www.rsssf.com/tablesi/ital49.html. Retrieved on August. 
  21. ^ a b c d "I campionati". GenoaDomani.it. http://www.genoadomani.it/modules.php?name=Content&pa=showpage&pid=46. Retrieved on August. 
  22. ^ "Cup of the Alps 1962". RSSSF.com. http://www.rsssf.com/tablesa/alpi62.html. Retrieved on August. 
  23. ^ "Cup of the Alps 1964". RSSSF.com. http://www.rsssf.com/tablesa/alpi64.html. Retrieved on August. 
  24. ^ "Presidenti Genoa", Genoa 1893 (23 June 2007). 
  25. ^ "Italy Championship 1977-78". RSSSF.com. http://www.rsssf.com/tablesi/ital78.html. Retrieved on August. 
  26. ^ "Roberto "Bomber" Pruzzo". ASR Talenti. http://www.asrtalenti.altervista.org/index.php?a=pruzzo.htm. Retrieved on August. 
  27. ^ "Totonero: Le foot italien retient son souffle". LexPress.fr. http://www.lexpress.fr/info/quotidien/actu.asp?id=4577. Retrieved on August. 
  28. ^ "Genoa - Napoli" (DOC). FootballData.it. http://www.footballdata.it/Anteprima%20Genoa-Napoli.doc. Retrieved on August. 
  29. ^ "Italy Championship 1983-84". RSSSF.com. http://www.rsssf.com/tablesi/ital84.html. Retrieved on August. 
  30. ^ "Italy Championship 1990-91". RSSSF.com. http://www.rsssf.com/tablesi/ital91.html. Retrieved on August. 
  31. ^ "The XI at 11: Liverpool home defeats in Europe". Setanta.com. http://www.setanta.com/en/TV-and-Entertainment/Entertainment/XI-at-11/XI-at-11-Liverpool-home-defeats-in-Europe/. Retrieved on August. 
  32. ^ "Storia del Genoa: 1986 - 1995". MaggioAntonio.it. http://www.maggioantonio.it/genoa/storia_12.htm. Retrieved on August. 
  33. ^ "Anglo-Italian Cup 1995-96". RSSSF.com. http://www.rsssf.com/tablesa/angloit96.html. Retrieved on August. 
  34. ^ "Presidenti Genoa", Genoa 1893 (23 June 2007). 
  35. ^ "Genoa demoted after match-fixing". BBC.co.uk. http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport1/hi/football/europe/4721329.stm. Retrieved on August. 
  36. ^ "Serie B - Playoff no, playout sì", Eurosport (24 June 2007). 
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  38. ^ The number retirement could not be observed during the 2005–06 season because Serie C1 sides must use traditional 1 to 11 numbers
  39. ^ "La Gradinata Nord", La storia del Genoa (23 June 2007). 
  40. ^ "Presidenti Genoa", Genoa 1893 (23 June 2007). 
  41. ^ "Mister Genoani", Genoa1983.org (27 August 2007). 
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  47. ^ "Italian Ultras Scene", View from the Terrace (29 June 2007). 
  48. ^ "Genoa and Napoli", SSCNapoli.it (29 June 2007). 

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