fbpx
Wikipedia

ACF Fiorentina

ACF Fiorentina,[1][2] commonly referred to as Fiorentina ([fjorenˈtiːna]), is an Italian professional football club based in Florence, Tuscany, Italy. The original team was founded by a merger in August 1926, while the actual club was refounded in August 2002 following bankruptcy. Fiorentina have played at the top level of Italian football for the majority of their existence; only four clubs have played in more Serie A seasons.

Fiorentina
Full nameACF Fiorentina S.p.A.[1][2]
Nickname(s)I Viola (The Purples / The Violets)
I Gigliati (The Lilies)
Founded
  • 29 August 1926; 96 years ago (29 August 1926), as Associazione Calcio Fiorentina
  • 1 August 2002; 20 years ago (1 August 2002), as A.C. Fiorentina e Florentia Viola
GroundStadio Artemio Franchi
Capacity43,147[3]
OwnerNew ACF Fiorentina S.r.l.
ChairmanRocco B. Commisso
Head coachVincenzo Italiano
LeagueSerie A
2021–22Serie A, 7th of 20
WebsiteClub website
Current season
The performance of Fiorentina in the Italian football league structure since the first season of a unified Serie A (1929–30)

Fiorentina has won two Italian league titles, in 1955–56 and again in 1968–69, as well as six Coppa Italia trophies and one Supercoppa Italiana. On the European stage, Fiorentina won the UEFA Cup Winners' Cup in 1960–61 and lost the final one year later. They finished runners-up in the 1956–57 European Cup, losing against Real Madrid, and also came close to winning the 1989–90 UEFA Cup, finishing as runners-up against Juventus after losing the first leg in Turin and drawing in the second one in Avellino.

Fiorentina is one of fifteen European teams that have played in the finals of all three major continental competitions: the Champions League (1956–1957, the first Italian team to reach the final in the top continental competition), the UEFA Cup Winners (1960–1961 and 1961–1962) and the UEFA Cup (1989–1990).

Since 1931, the club have played at the Stadio Artemio Franchi, which currently has a capacity of 43,147. The stadium has used several names over the years and has undergone several renovations. Fiorentina are known widely by the nickname Viola, a reference to their distinctive purple colours.[4]

History

Foundation prior to World War II

 
1940–41 Fiorentina team

Associazione Calcio Fiorentina was founded in the autumn of 1926 by local noble and National Fascist Party member Luigi Ridolfi,[5] who initiated the merger of two older Florentine clubs, CS Firenze and PG Libertas. The aim of the merger was to give Florence a strong club to rival those of the more dominant Italian Football Championship sides of the time from Northwest Italy. Also influential was the cultural revival and rediscovery of Calcio Fiorentino, an ancestor of modern football that was played by members of the Medici family.[5]

After a rough start and three seasons in lower leagues, Fiorentina reached the Serie A in 1931. That same year saw the opening of the new stadium, originally named after Giovanni Berta, a prominent fascist, but now known as Stadio Artemio Franchi. At the time, the stadium was a masterpiece of engineering, and its inauguration was monumental. To be able to compete with the best teams in Italy, Fiorentina strengthened their team with some new players, notably the Uruguayan Pedro Petrone, nicknamed el Artillero. Despite enjoying a good season and finishing in fourth place, Fiorentina were relegated the following year, although they would return quickly to Serie A. In 1941, they won their first Coppa Italia, but the team were unable to build on their success during the 1940s due to World War II and other troubles.

First scudetto and '50–'60s

 
The first Italian champion Fiorentina

In 1950, Fiorentina started to achieve consistent top-five finishes in the domestic league. The team consisted of players such as well-known goalkeeper Giuliano Sarti, Sergio Cervato, Francesco Rosella, Guido Gratton, Giuseppe Chiappella, Aldo Scaramucci, Brazilian Julinho, and Argentinian Miguel Montuori. This team won Fiorentina's first scudetto (Italian championship) in 1955–56, 12 points ahead of second-place Milan. Milan beat Fiorentina to top spot the following year. Fiorentina became the first Italian team to play in a European Cup final, when a disputed penalty led to a 2–0 defeat at the hands of Alfredo Di Stéfano's Real Madrid. Fiorentina were runners-up again in the three subsequent seasons. In the 1960–61 season, the club won the Coppa Italia again and was also successful in Europe, winning the first Cup Winners' Cup against Scottish side Rangers.

After several years of runner-up finishes, Fiorentina dropped away slightly in the 1960s, bouncing from fourth to sixth place, although the club won the Coppa Italia and the Mitropa Cup in 1966.

 
Kurt Hamrin scored 150 goals for Fiorentina when he represented the club 1958–1967. This means that he is in second place for most goals in the club's history.

Second scudetto and '70s

While the 1960s did result in some trophies and good Serie A finishes for Fiorentina, nobody believed that the club could challenge for the title. The 1968–69 season started with Milan as frontrunners, but on matchday 7, they lost to Bologna and were overtaken by Gigi Riva's Cagliari. Fiorentina, after an unimpressive start, then moved to the top of the Serie A, but the first half of their season finished with a 2–2 draw against Varese, leaving Cagliari as outright league leader. The second half of the season was a three-way battle between the three contending teams, Milan, Cagliari and Fiorentina. Milan fell away, instead focusing their efforts on the European Cup, and it seemed that Cagliari would retain top spot. After Cagliari lost against Juventus, however, Fiorentina took over at the top. The team then won all of their remaining matches, beating rivals Juve in Turin on the penultimate matchday to seal their second, and last, national title. In the European Cup competition the following year, Fiorentina had some good results, including a win in the Soviet Union against Dynamo Kyiv, but they were eventually knocked out in the quarter-finals after a 3–0 defeat in Glasgow to Celtic.[6]

Viola players began the 1970s decade with scudetto sewed on their breast, but the period was not especially fruitful for the team. After a fifth-place finish in 1971, they finished in mid-table almost every year, even flirting with relegation in 1972 and 1978. The Viola did win the Anglo-Italian League Cup in 1974 and won the Coppa Italia again in 1975. The team consisted of young talents like Vincenzo Guerini and Moreno Roggi, who suffered bad injuries, and above all Giancarlo Antognoni, who would later become an idol to Fiorentina's fans. The young average age of the players led to the team being called "Fiorentina Ye-Ye".

Pontello era

In 1980, Fiorentina was bought by Flavio Pontello, who came from a rich house-building family. He quickly changed the team's anthem and logo, leading to some complaints by the fans, but he started to bring in high-quality players such as Francesco Graziani and Eraldo Pecci from Torino; Daniel Bertoni from Sevilla; Daniele Massaro from Monza; and a young Pietro Vierchowod from Como. The team was built around Giancarlo Antognoni, and in 1982, Fiorentina were involved in an exciting duel with rivals Juventus. After a bad injury to Antognoni, the league title was decided on the final day of the season when Fiorentina were denied a goal against Cagliari and were unable to win. Juventus won the title with a disputed penalty and the rivalry between the two teams erupted.

The following years were strange for Fiorentina, who vacillated between high finishes and relegation battles. Fiorentina also bought two interesting players, El Puntero Ramón Díaz and, most significantly, the young Roberto Baggio.

In 1990, Fiorentina fought to avoid relegation right up until the final day of the season, but did reach the UEFA Cup final, where they again faced Juventus. The Turin team won the trophy, but Fiorentina's tifosi once again had real cause for complaint: the second leg of the final was played in Avellino (Fiorentina's home ground was suspended), a city with many Juventus fans, and emerging star Roberto Baggio was sold to the rival team on the day of the final. Pontello, suffering from economic difficulties, was selling all the players and was forced to leave the club after serious riots in Florence's streets. The club was then acquired by the famous filmmaker Mario Cecchi Gori.

Cecchi Gori era: from Champions League to bankruptcy

 
Gabriel Batistuta, the most prominent Fiorentina player of the 1990s

The first season under Cecchi Gori's ownership was one of stabilisation, after which the new chairman started to sign some good players like Brian Laudrup, Stefan Effenberg, Francesco Baiano and, most importantly, Gabriel Batistuta, who became an iconic player for the team during the 1990s. In 1993, however, Cecchi Gori died and was succeeded as chairman by his son, Vittorio. Despite a good start to the season, Cecchi Gori fired the coach, Luigi Radice, after a defeat against Atalanta,[7] and replaced him with Aldo Agroppi. The results were dreadful: Fiorentina fell into the bottom half of the standings and were relegated on the last day of the season.

Claudio Ranieri was brought in as coach for the 1993–94 season, and that year, Fiorentina dominated Serie B, Italy's second division. Upon their return to Serie A, Ranieri put together a good team centred around new top scorer Batistuta, signing the young talent Rui Costa from Benfica and the new world champion Brazilian defender Márcio Santos. The former became an idol to Fiorentina fans, while the second disappointed and was sold after only a season. The Viola finished the season in tenth place.

The following season, Cecchi Gori bought other important players, namely Swedish midfielder Stefan Schwarz. The club again proved its mettle in cup competitions, winning the Coppa Italia against Atalanta and finishing joint-third in Serie A. In the summer, Fiorentina became the first non-national champions to win the Supercoppa Italiana, defeating Milan 2–1 at the San Siro.

Fiorentina's 1996–97 season was disappointing in the league, but they did reach the Cup Winners' Cup semi-final by beating Gloria Bistrița, Sparta Prague and Benfica. The team lost the semi-final to the eventual winner of the competition, Barcelona (away 1–1; home 0–2). The season's main signings were Luís Oliveira and Andrei Kanchelskis, the latter of whom suffered from many injuries.

At the end of the season, Ranieri left Fiorentina for Valencia in Spain, with Cecchi Gori appointing Alberto Malesani as his replacement. Fiorentina played well but struggled against smaller teams, although they did manage to qualify for the UEFA Cup. Malesani left Fiorentina after only a season and was succeeded by Giovanni Trapattoni. With Trapattoni's expert guidance and Batistuta's goals, Fiorentina challenged for the title in 1998–99 but finished the season in third, earning them qualification for the Champions League. The following year was disappointing in Serie A, but Viola played some historical matches in the Champions League, beating Arsenal 1–0 at the old Wembley Stadium and Manchester United 2–0 in Florence. They were ultimately eliminated in the second group stage.

At the end of the season, Trapattoni left the club and was replaced by Turkish coach Fatih Terim. More significantly, however, Batistuta was sold to Roma, who eventually won the title the following year. Fiorentina played well in 2000–01 and stayed in the top half of Serie A, despite the resignation of Terim and the arrival of Roberto Mancini. They also won the Coppa Italia for the sixth and last time.

The year 2001 heralded major changes for Fiorentina, as the terrible state of the club's finances was revealed: they were unable to pay wages and had debts of around US$50 million. The club's owner, Vittorio Cecchi Gori, was able to raise some more money, but this soon proved to be insufficient to sustain the club. Fiorentina were relegated at the end of the 2001–02 season and went into judicially-controlled administration in June 2002. This form of bankruptcy (sports companies cannot exactly fail in this way in Italy, but they can suffer a similar procedure) meant that the club was refused a place in Serie B for the 2002–03 season, and as a result effectively ceased to exist.

Della Valle era: from fourth tier to Europe (2000s and 2010s)

The club was promptly re-established in August 2002 as Associazione Calcio Fiorentina e Florentia Viola with shoe and leather entrepreneur Diego Della Valle as new owner and the club was admitted into Serie C2, the fourth tier of Italian football. The only player to remain at the club in its new incarnation was Angelo Di Livio, whose commitment to the club's cause further endeared him to the fans. Helped by Di Livio and 30-goal striker Christian Riganò, the club won its Serie C2 group with considerable ease, which would normally have led to a promotion to Serie C1. Due to the bizarre Caso Catania (Catania Case), the club skipped Serie C1 and was admitted into Serie B, something that was only made possible by the Italian Football Federation (FIGC)'s decision to resolve the Catania situation by increasing the number of teams in Serie B from 20 to 24 and promoting Fiorentina for "sports merits".[8] In the 2003 off-season, the club also bought back the right to use the Fiorentina name and the famous shirt design, and re-incorporated itself as ACF Fiorentina. The club finished the 2003–04 season in sixth place and won the playoff against Perugia to return to top-flight football.

 
Cesare Prandelli, the club's longest-serving manager (2005–2010, 2020–2021)

In their first season back in Serie A, the club struggled to avoid relegation, only securing survival on the last day of the season on head-to-head record against Bologna and Parma. In 2005, Della Valle decided to appoint Pantaleo Corvino as new sports director, followed by the appointment of Cesare Prandelli as head coach in the following season. The club made several signings during the summer transfer market, most notably Luca Toni and Sébastien Frey. This drastic move earned them a fourth-place finish with 74 points and a Champions League qualifying round ticket. Toni scored 31 goals in 38 appearances, the first player to pass the 30-goal mark since Antonio Valentin Angelillo in the 1958–59 season, for which he was awarded the European Golden Boot. On 14 July 2006, Fiorentina were relegated to Serie B due to their involvement in the Calciopoli scandal and given a 12-point penalty. The team was reinstated to the Serie A on appeal, but with a 19-point penalty for the 2006–07 season. The team's 2006–07 Champions League place was also revoked.[9] After the start of the season, Fiorentina's penalisation was reduced from 19 points to 15 on appeal to the Italian courts. In spite of this penalty, they managed to secure a place in the UEFA Cup.

Despite Toni's departure to Bayern Munich, Fiorentina had a strong start to the 2007–08 season and were tipped by Italy national team head coach Marcello Lippi, among others, as a surprise challenger for the scudetto,[10] and although this form tailed off towards the middle of the season, the Viola managed to qualify for the Champions League. In Europe, the club reached the semi-final of the UEFA Cup, where they were ultimately defeated by Rangers on penalties. The 2008–09 season continued this success, a fourth-place finish assuring Fiorentina's spot in 2010's Champions League playoffs. Their European campaign was also similar to that of the previous run, relegated to the 2008–09 UEFA Cup and were eliminated by Ajax in the end.

In the 2009–10 season, Fiorentina started their domestic campaign strongly before steadily losing momentum and slipped to mid-table positions at the latter half of the season. In Europe, the team proved to be a surprise dark horse: after losing their first away fixture against Lyon, they staged a comeback with a five-match streak by winning all their remaining matches (including defeating Liverpool home and away). The Viola qualified as group champions, but eventually succumbed to Bayern Munich due to the away goals rule. This was controversial due to a mistaken refereeing decision by Tom Henning Øvrebø, who allowed a clearly offside goal for Bayern in the first leg. Bayern eventually finished the tournament as runners-up, making a deep run all the way to the final. The incident called into attention the possible implementation of video replays in football. Despite a good European run and reaching the semi-finals in the Coppa Italia, Fiorentina failed to qualify for Europe.

During this period, on 24 September 2009, Andrea Della Valle resigned from his position as chairman of Fiorentina, and announced all duties would be temporarily transferred to Mario Cognini, Fiorentina's vice-president until a permanent position could be filled.[11]

 
Former manager Vincenzo Montella (2012–2015, 2019)

In June 2010, the Viola bid farewell to long-time manager Cesare Prandelli, by then the longest-serving coach in the team's history, who was departing to coach the Italy national team. Catania manager Siniša Mihajlović was appointed to replace him. The club spent much of the early 2010–11 season in last place, but their form improved and Fiorentina ultimately finished ninth. Following a 1–0 defeat to Chievo in November 2011, Mihajlović was sacked and replaced by Delio Rossi.[12] After a brief period of improvements, the Viola were again fighting relegation, prompting the sacking of Sporting Director Pantaleo Corvino in early 2012 following a 0–5 home defeat to Juventus. Their bid for survival was kept alive by a number of upset victories away from home, notably at Roma and Milan. During a home game against Novara, trailing 0–2 within half an hour, manager Rossi decided to substitute midfielder Adem Ljajić early. Ljajić sarcastically applauded him in frustration, whereupon Rossi retaliated by physical assaulting his player, an action that ultimately prompted his termination by the club.[13] His replacement, caretaker manager Vincenzo Guerini, then guided the team away from the relegation zone to a 13th-place finish to end the turbulent year.

To engineer a resurrection of the club after the disappointing season, the Della Valle family invested heavily in the middle of 2012, buying 17 new players and appointing Vincenzo Montella as head coach. The team began the season well, finishing the calendar year in joint third place and eventually finishing the 2012–13 season in fourth, enough for a position in the 2013–14 Europa League.

The club lost fan favourite Stevan Jovetić during the middle of 2013, selling him to English Premier League club Manchester City for a €30 million transfer fee. They also sold Adem Ljajić to Roma and Alessio Cerci to Torino, using the funds to bring in Mario Gómez, Josip Iličić and Ante Rebić, among others. During the season, Fiorentina topped their Europa League group, moving on to the round of 32 to face Danish side Esbjerg fB, which Fiorentina defeated 4–2 on aggregate. In the following round of 16, however, they then lost to Italian rivals Juventus 2–1 on aggregate, ousting Fiorentina from the competition. At the end of the season, the team finished fourth again in the league, and also finishing the year as Coppa Italia runners-up after losing 3–1 to Napoli in the final.

In 2014–15, during the 2015 winter transfer window, the team club sold star winger Juan Cuadrado to Chelsea for €30 million but were able to secure the loan of Mohamed Salah in exchange, who was a revelation in the second half of the season. Their 2014–15 Europa League campaign saw them progress to the semi-finals, where they were knocked-out by Spanish side Sevilla, the eventual champions. In the 2014–15 domestic season, Fiorentina once again finished fourth, thus qualifying for the 2015–16 Europa League. In June 2015, Vincenzo Montella was sacked as manager after the club grew impatient with the coaches inability to prove his commitment to the club,[14] and was replaced by Paulo Sousa, who lasted until June 2017 and the appointment of Stefano Pioli.[15] Club captain Davide Astori died suddenly at the age of 31 in March 2018.[16] Astori had suffered a cardiac arrest while in a hotel room before an away game. The club subsequently retired Astori's kit number, 13.[17] Fiorentina suffered during the 2018–19 Serie A campaign and ended the season on a 14 match winless streak, finishing in 16th place with only 41 points, 3 points from the relegation zone. On 9 April 2019, Pioli resigned as manager and was replaced by Montella.[18]

Commisso era

On 6 June 2019, the club was sold to Italian-American billionaire Rocco Commisso for around 160 million euros.[19] The sale marked the end of the Della Valle family's seventeen-year association with the club.[20] Vincenzo Montella was confirmed as coach for the first season of the new era despite the team's poor end to the previous campaign, which saw them finish only three points clear of the relegation zone.[21] Fiorentina continued their struggles from the previous year, spending the majority of the season in lower midtable. Montella was sacked on 21 December after a 7 match winless run which left the club in 15th place, and was replaced by Giuseppe Iachini. In November 2020 Cesare Prandelli returned to Fiorentina, replacing Giuseppe Iachini as coach.[22]

Players

Current squad

As of 31 January 2023[23]

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

Other players under contract

As of 11 January 2023

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

No. Pos. Nation Player
DF   ITA Davide Gentile

Out on loan

As of 31 January 2023

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

No. Pos. Nation Player
DF   ITA Lorenzo Cellai (at Virtus Verona until 30 June 2023)
DF   ITA Christian Dalle Mura (at SPAL until 30 June 2023)
DF   ROU Eduard Duțu (at Gubbio until 30 June 2023)
DF   ITA Gabriele Ferrarini (at Modena until 30 June 2023)
DF   ITA Filippo Frison (at Fiorenzuola until 30 June 2023)
DF   ITA Edoardo Pierozzi (at Como until 30 June 2023)
DF   DEN Jacob Rasmussen (at Feyenoord until 30 June 2023)
MF   ITA Vittorio Agostinelli (at Cosenza until 30 June 2023)
MF   ITA Marco Benassi (at Cremonese until 30 June 2023)
MF   ITA Giovanni Corradini (at Pro Vercelli until 30 June 2023)
MF   ITA Mattia Fiorini (at Fiorenzuola until 30 June 2023)
No. Pos. Nation Player
MF   CRO Toni Fruk (at Gorica until 30 June 2023)
MF   MAR Youssef Maleh (at Lecce until 30 June 2023)
MF   ITA Niccolò Pierozzi (at Reggina until 30 June 2023)
MF   MAR Abdelhamid Sabiri (at Sampdoria until 30 June 2023)
MF   POL Szymon Żurkowski (at Spezia until 30 June 2023)
FW   ITA Destiny Egharevba (at Fiorenzuola until 30 June 2023)
FW   ITA Gabriele Gori (at Reggina until 30 June 2023)
FW   RUS Aleksandr Kokorin (at Aris Limassol until 30 June 2023)
FW   ROU Louis Munteanu (at Farul Constanța until 30 June 2023)
FW   ITA Samuele Spalluto (at Novara until 30 June 2023)

Youth Sector

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

No. Pos. Nation Player
40 MF   ITA Costantino Favasuli
44 DF   BUL Dimo Krastev

Notable players

Retired numbers

Management staff

Position Staff
Head coach   Vincenzo Italiano
Assistant coach   Daniel Niccolini
Goalkeeping coach   Angelo Porracchio
Technical coach   Marco Turati
Chief analyst   Stefano Firicano
Athletic coach   Damir Blokar
  Ivano Tito
  Piero Campo
Sporting director   Daniele Pradè
Technical director   Nicolás Burdisso
Club doctor   Luca Pengue
  Federico Fofi
Physiotherapist   Maurizio Fagorzi
  Mauro Citzia
  Simone Michelassi
  Filippo Nannelli
  Daniele Misseri
  Luca Lonero
  Stefano Dainelli
Secretary   Luigi Curradi

Managerial history

Fiorentina have had many managers and head coaches throughout their history. Below is a chronological list from the club's foundation in 1926 to the present day.[25]

 
No Name Nationality Years
1 Károly Csapkay   1926–28
2 Gyula Feldmann   1928–30
3 Gyula Feldmann   1930–31
4 Hermann Felsner   1931–33
5 Wilhelm Rady   1933
6 József Ging [it]   1933–34
7 Guido Ara   1934–37
8 Ottavio Baccani [it]   1937–38
9 Ferenc Molnár   1938
10 Rudolf Soutschek   1938–39
11 Giuseppe Galluzzi   1939–45
12 Guido Ara   1946
13 Renzo Magli [it]   1946–47
14 Imre Senkey   1947
15 Luigi Ferrero   1947–51
16 Renzo Magli [it]   1951–53
17 Fulvio Bernardini   1953–58
18 Lajos Czeizler   1958–59
19 Luigi Ferrero   1959
20 Luis Carniglia   1959–60
21 Giuseppe Chiappella   1960
22 Nándor Hidegkuti   1960–62
23 Ferruccio Valcareggi   1962–64
24 Giuseppe Chiappella   1964–67
25 Luigi Ferrero   1967–68
 
No Name Nationality Years
26 Andrea Bassi [it]   1968
27 Bruno Pesaola   1968–71
28 Oronzo Pugliese   1971
29 Nils Liedholm   1971–73
30 Luigi Radice   1973–74
31 Nereo Rocco   1974–75
32 Carlo Mazzone   1975–77
33 Mario Mazzoni   1977–78
34 Giuseppe Chiappella   1978
35 Paolo Carosi [it]   1978–81
36 Giancarlo De Sisti   1981–85
37 Ferruccio Valcareggi   1985
38 Aldo Agroppi   1985–86
39 Eugenio Bersellini   1986–87
40 Sven-Göran Eriksson   1 July 1987 – 30 June 1989
41 Bruno Giorgi   1 July 1989 – 25 April 1990
42 Francesco Graziani (int.)   26 April 1990 – 30 June 1990
43 Sebastião Lazaroni   1 July 1990 – 30 September 1991
44 Luigi Radice   1 October 1991 – 5 January 1993
45 Aldo Agroppi   6 January 1993 – 30 April 1993
46 Luciano Chiarugi (int.)   1 May 1993 – 30 June 1993
47 Claudio Ranieri   1 July 1993 – 30 June 1997
48 Alberto Malesani   1 July 1997 – 30 June 1998
49 Giovanni Trapattoni   1 July 1998 – 30 June 2000
50 Fatih Terim   1 July 2000 – 25 February 2001
 
No Name Nationality Years
51 Luciano Chiarugi   2001
52 Roberto Mancini   26 February 2001 – 14 January 2002
53 Ottavio Bianchi   14 January 2002 – 31 March 2002
54 Luciano Chiarugi (int.)   1 April 2002 – 30 June 2002
55 Eugenio Fascetti   June 2002 – July 2002
56 Pietro Vierchowod   1 July 2002 – 29 October 2002
57 Alberto Cavasin   29 October 2002 – 10 February 2004
58 Emiliano Mondonico   10 February 2004 – 25 October 2004
59 Sergio Buso   25 October 2004 – 25 January 2005
60 Dino Zoff   25 January 2005 – 30 June 2005
61 Cesare Prandelli   1 July 2005 – 3 June 2010
62 Siniša Mihajlović   4 June 2010 – 7 November 2011
63 Delio Rossi   8 November 2011 – 2 May 2012
64 Vincenzo Guerini (int.)   3 May 2012 – 11 June 2012
65 Vincenzo Montella   11 June 2012 – 8 June 2015
66 Paulo Sousa   21 June 2015 – 6 June 2017
67 Stefano Pioli   6 June 2017 – 9 April 2019
68 Vincenzo Montella   10 April 2019 – 21 December 2019
69 Giuseppe Iachini   23 December 2019 – 9 November 2020
70 Cesare Prandelli   9 November 2020 – 23 March 2021
71 Giuseppe Iachini   24 March 2021 – 30 June 2021
72 Vincenzo Italiano   30 June 2021 - Today

Colours and badge

Badge

 
The badge used by Florentia Viola, consisting solely of the fleur-de-lis of Florence
 
Former crest of Fiorentina, used until 2022

The official emblem of the city of Florence, a red fleur-de-lis on a white field, has been pivotal in the all-round symbolism of the club.

Over the course of the club's history, they have had several badge changes, all of which incorporated Florence's fleur-de-lis in some way.[26] The first one was nothing more than the city's coat of arms, a white shield with the red fleur-de-lis inside. It was soon changed to a very stylised fleur-de-lis, always red, and sometimes even without the white field. The most common symbol, adopted for about 20 years, had been a white lozenge with the flower inside. During the season they were Italian champions, the lozenge disappeared and the flower was overlapped with the scudetto.

The logo introduced by owner Flavio Pontello in 1980 was particularly distinct, consisting of one-half of the city of Florence's emblem and one-half of the letter "F", for Fiorentina. People disliked it when it was introduced, believing it was a commercial decision and, above all, because the symbol bore more of a resemblance to a halberd than a fleur-de-lis.[26]

Until the 2022–23 season, when the club unveiled a new, stylistically simplified badge, the logo was a kite shaped double lozenge bordered in gold. The outer lozenge had a purple background with the letters "AC" in white and the letter "F" in red, standing for the club's name. The inner lozenge was white with a gold border and the red Giglio of Florence.[26] This logo had been in use from 1992 to 2002, but after the financial crisis and resurrection of the club the new one couldn't use the same logo. Florence's comune instead granted Florentia Viola use of the stylised coat of arms used in other city documents. Diego Della Valle acquired the current logo the following year in a judicial auction for a fee of €2.5 million, making it the most expensive logo in Italian football.[citation needed]

Kit and colours

 
Gabriel Batistuta holding his old Fiorentina jersey at a 2014 ceremony inducting him into the club's Hall of Fame

When Fiorentina was founded in 1926, the players wore red and white halved shirts derived from the colour of the city emblem.[27] The more well-known and highly distinctive purple kit was adopted in 1928 and has been used ever since, giving rise to the nickname La Viola ("The Purple (team)"). Tradition has it that Fiorentina got their purple kit by mistake after an accident washing the old red and white coloured kits in the river.

The away kit has always been predominantly white, sometimes with purple and red elements, sometimes all-white. The shorts had been purple when the home kit was with white shorts. Fiorentina's third kit was first worn in the 1995–96 season and it was all-red with purple borders and two lilies on the shoulders. The red shirt has been the most worn 3rd shirt by Fiorentina, although they also wore rare yellow shirts ('97–'98, '99–'00 and '10–'11) and a sterling version, mostly in the Coppa Italia, in 2000–01.

For the 2017–18 season and the first time in its history, the club used five kits during the season, composing of one home kit (all-purple) and four away kits, each one representing one historic quartiere of the city of Florence: all-blue (Santa Croce), all-white (Santo Spirito), all-green (San Giovanni) and all-red (Santa Maria Novella).[28]

Anthem

"Canzone Viola" (Purple Song) is the title of the Fiorentina'a song, nowadays better known as "Oh Fiorentina".[29] It is the oldest official football anthem in Italy and one of the oldest in the world. Dated 1930 and born only four years after the creation of the club, the song was written by a 12-year-old child, Enzo Marcacci, and musically arranged by maestro Marco Vinicio. It was published for the first time by the publisher Marcello Manni, who later became the owner of the rights. It soon achieved notoriety thanks to the printed media and the Ordine del Marzocco, a sort of original viola-club, which printed the lyrics of the song and distributed it to a home match on November 22, 1931.[30] The song was recorded by Narciso Parigi in 1959 and again in 1965; the latter version replaced the original edition as the Fiorentina anthem. Subsequently, Narciso Parigi himself acquired the ownership of the rights, which he donated in 2002 to the supporter club Collettivo Autonomo Viola.[29]

Kit suppliers and shirt sponsors

Kit manufacturer

Shirt sponsors

Official partners

  • EA Sports – Football video gaming partner
  • Montezemolo – Fashion partner
  • Gruppoaf – Official partner
  • Sammontana – Official ice cream
  • Synlab – Health partner
  • OlyBet.tv – Infotainment partner[31]

Honours

National titles

Serie A

Coppa Italia

Supercoppa Italiana

European titles

European Cup Winners' Cup

Other titles

Serie B

Serie C2

  • Winners: 2002–03

Coppa Grasshoppers

  • Winners: 1957

Mitropa Cup

  • Winners: 1966

Anglo-Italian League Cup

  • Winners: 1975

Divisional movements

Series Years Last Promotions Relegations
A 84 2021–22   3 (1938, 1993, 2002)
B 5 2003–04   4 (1931, 1939, 1994, 2004) bankruptcy[32]
C 1 2002–03   1 (2003) never
90 years of professional football in Italy since 1929

Fiorentina as a company

A.C. Fiorentina S.p.A. was unable to register for 2002–03 Serie B due to financial difficulties, and then the sports title was transferred to a new company thanks to Article 52 of N.O.I.F., while the old company was liquidated. At that time the club was heavily relying on windfall profit from selling players, especially in pure player swap or cash plus player swap that potentially increased the cost by the increase in amortisation of player contracts (an intangible assets). For example, Marco Rossi joined Fiorentina for Lire 17 billion in 2000, but at the same time Lorenzo Collacchioni moved to Salernitana for Lire 1 billion, meaning the club had a player profit of Lire 997 million and extra Lire 1 billion to be amortised in 5-years.[33] In 1999, Emiliano Bigica also swapped with Giuseppe Taglialatela,[34] which the latter was valued for Lire 10 billion.[33] The operating income (excluding windfall profit from players trading) of 2000–01 season was minus Lire 113,271,475,933 (minus €58,499,835).[33] It was only boosted by the sales of Francesco Toldo and Rui Costa in June 2001 (a profit of Lire 134.883 billion; €69.661 million).[33] However, it was alleged they were to transfer to Parma[33] for a reported Lire 140 million.[35] The two players eventually joined Inter Milan and A.C. Milan in 2001–02 financial year instead, for undisclosed fees. Failing to have financial support from the owner Vittorio Cecchi Gori, the club was forced to windup due to its huge imbalance in operating income.

Since re-established in 2002, ACF Fiorentina S.p.A. are yet to self-sustain to keep the team in top division as well as in European competitions. In the 2005 financial year, which cover the first Serie A season, the club made a net loss of €9,159,356,[36] followed by a net loss of €19,519,789. In 2006 (2005–06 Serie A and 2006–07 Serie A), Fiorentina heavily invested on players, meaning the amortisation of intangible asset (the player contract) had increased from €17.7 million to €24 million.[37] However the club suffered from the 2006 Italian football scandal, which meant the club did not qualify for Europe. In 2007 Fiorentina almost broke-even, with a net loss of just €3,704,953. In the 2007 financial year the TV revenue increased after they qualified to the 2007–08 UEFA Cup.[38] Despite qualifying to the 2008–09 UEFA Champions League, Fiorentina made a net loss of €9,179,484 in 2008 financial year after the increase in TV revenue was outweighed by the increase in wage.[39] In the 2009 financial year, Fiorentina made a net profit of €4,442,803, largely due to the profit on selling players (€33,631,489 from players such as Felipe Melo, Giampaolo Pazzini and Zdravko Kuzmanović; increased from about €3.5 million in 2008). However it was also offset by the write-down of selling players (€6,062,545, from players such as Manuel da Costa, Arturo Lupoli and Davide Carcuro).[40]

After the club failed to qualify to Europe at the end of 2009–10 Serie A, as well as lack of player profit, Fiorentina turnover was decreased from €140,040,713 in 2009 to just €79,854,928, despite the wage bill also falling, la Viola still made a net loss of €9,604,353.[41][42] In the 2011 financial year, the turnover slipped to €67,076,953, as the club's lack of capital gains from selling players and 2010 financial year still included the instalments from UEFA for participating 2009–10 UEFA Europa League. Furthermore, the gate income had dropped from €11,070,385 to €7,541,260. The wage bill did not fall much and in reverse the amortisation of transfer fee had sightly increased due to new signings. La Viola had savings in other costs but counter-weighted by huge €11,747,668 write-down for departed players, due to D'Agostino, Frey and Mutu, but the former would counter-weight by co-ownership financial income, which all made the operating cost remained high as worse as last year. Moreover, in 2010 the result was boosted by acquiring the asset from subsidiary (related to AC Fiorentina) and the re-valuation of its value in separate balance sheet. If deducting that income (€14,737,855), 2010 financial year was net loss 24,342,208 and 2011 result was worse with €8,131,876 only in separate balance sheet.[43][44] In 2012, the club benefited from the sales of Matija Nastasić and Valon Behrami,[45][46] followed by Stevan Jovetić and Adem Ljajić in 2013.[47][48] In 2014, due to €28.4 million drop from the windfall profit of selling players, the club recorded their worst financial results since re-foundation, despite the fact the club maintained the same level of windfall profit, the result was still worse than in 2013.[49][50][51] Moreover, Fiorentina also revealed that the club had a relevant football net income of minus €19.5 million in the first assessment period of UEFA Financial Fair Play Regulations in the 2013–14 season (in May 2014).[52] (aggregate of 2012 and 2013 results), which within the limit of minus €45 million, as well as minus €25.5 million in assessment period 2014–15 (aggregate of 2012, 2013 and 2014 results). However, as the limit was reduced to minus €30 million in assessment period 2015–16, 2016–17 and 2017–18 season, the club had to achieve a relevant net income of positive €5.6 million in 2015 financial year. La Viola sold Juan Cuadrado to Chelsea in January 2015 for €30 million fee, to make the club eligible to 2016–17 edition of UEFA competitions.[49]

Fiorentina
separate financial statements
Financial year Turnover Result Total assets Net assets Re-capitalization
A.C. Fiorentina S.p.A. (PI 0039250485) exchange rate €1 = Lire 1936.27
1999–2000[33] €85,586,138# €5,550,939 €184,898,223 €13,956,954
2000–01[33]   €61,698,625#   €9,557,318   €219,996,389   €23,514,272 €0
2001–02 Not available due to bankruptcy
ACF Fiorentina S.p.A. (PI 05248440488) startup capital: €7,500,000
2002–03 (€6,443,549)   €5,256,451 €4.2 million
2003 (Jul–Dec)   (€3,885,968)   €6,370,483   €5 million
2004[36] €33,336,444   (€10,259,252) €99,357,403   €11,019,231   €14.908 million
2005[37]   €57,646,361   (€9,159,356)   €107,504,630   €35,951,875   €34.092 million
2006[37]   €60,961,502   (€19,519,789)   €123,327,412   €51,132,086   €34.7 million
2007[38]   €88,627,385   (€3,704,953)   €142,484,422   €67,427,133   €20 million
2008[39]   €108,521,983   (€9,179,484)   €171,220,969   €78,247,649   €20 million
2009[40]   €140,040,713   €4,442,803   €173,675,641   €92,690,451   €10 million
2010[41]   €79,854,927   (€9,604,352)   €178,314,364   €83,086,099   €0
2011[44]   €67,076,953   (€32,474,084)   €156,972,324   €50,612,014   €0
2012[45]   €109,060,686   €1,155,691   €182,081,303   €75,667,705   €23.9 million
2013[47]   €121,044,126   €1,448,376   €217,891,659   €92,216,081   €15.1 million
2014[49]   €94,339,505   (€37,023,231)   €188,847,357   €77,192,851   €22 million
Aggregate (€134,207,148) / / €203.9 million
Average (€10,736,572) €58,149,609 €16.312 million
Note: #Windfall profit from selling players excluded
Italian accounting standards was changed over the years

League history

  • 1926–1928 Prima Divisione (2nd tier)
  • 1928–1929 Divisione Nazionale (1st tier)
  • 1929–1931 Serie B (2nd tier) – Champions: 1931
  • 1931–1938 Serie A (1st tier)
  • 1938–1939 Serie B (2nd tier) – Champions: 1939
  • 1939–1943 Serie A (1st tier)
  • 1943–1946 no contests (WW II)
  • 1946–1993 liga 1 (1st tier) – Champions: 1956, 1969
  • 1993–1994 Serie B (2nd tier) – Champions: 1994
  • 1994–2002 Serie A (1st tier)
  • 2002–2003 Serie C2 (4th tier) – Champions: 2003
  • 2003–2004 Serie B (2nd tier)
  • 2004–present Serie A (1st tier)

References

  1. ^ a b (in Italian). AC Fiorentina Fiorentina. Archived from the original on 26 July 2008. Retrieved 29 November 2009.
  2. ^ a b (in Italian). Lega Calcio. Archived from the original on 25 February 2009. Retrieved 18 February 2009.
  3. ^ "ViolaChannel – Stadio Franchi".
  4. ^ "Rocco Commisso bought a football club. Then the trouble started". Financial Times. 13 January 2022. Retrieved 10 February 2023.
  5. ^ a b Martin, Simon (September 2004). Football and Fascism: The National Game Under Mussolini. Berg Publishers. ISBN 1-85973-705-6.
  6. ^ . Viralbola.com. Archived from the original on 2 February 2017. Retrieved 28 January 2017.
  7. ^ "Archivio Corriere della Sera".
  8. ^ "Serie B a 24 squadre. C'è anche la Fiorentina". La Repubblica (in Italian). 20 August 2003. from the original on 1 May 2008. Retrieved 4 April 2008.
  9. ^ "Italian trio relegated to Serie B". BBC News. 14 July 2006. Retrieved 1 January 2010.
  10. ^ "Lippi Tips Fiorentina For Surprise Scudetto Challenge". Goal.com. 11 November 2007.
  11. ^ "Fiorentina senza presidente Della Valle si è dimesso". La Gazzetta dello Sport (in Italian). 24 September 2009.
  12. ^ "Mihajlovic sacked as Fiorentina coach". CNN. 7 November 2011.
  13. ^ "Fiorentina boss Delio Rossi sacked for attacking player". BBC Sport. 3 May 2012.
  14. ^ "Official: Fiorentina sack Montella – Football Italia".
  15. ^ "Stefano Pioli: Fiorentina hire former Inter Milan and Lazio boss". BBC Sport. 7 June 2017. Retrieved 6 March 2018.
  16. ^ McLaughlin, Elliot C. (4 March 2018). "Fiorentina captain Davide Astori dies of 'sudden illness' at 31, team says". CNN. Retrieved 6 March 2018.
  17. ^ Fiorentina, A. C. F. (6 March 2018). "Per onorarne la memoria e rendere indelebile il ricordo di Davide Astori, @CagliariCalcio e Fiorentina hanno deciso di ritirare congiuntamente la maglia con il numero 13. #DA13pic.twitter.com/KXP6s8WFlG". @acffiorentina (in Italian). Retrieved 6 March 2018.
  18. ^ "UFFICIALE: Fiorentina, Pioli s'è dimesso. Oggi seduta affidata al suo vice" (in Italian). Retrieved 9 April 2019.
  19. ^ "U.S. billionaire Commisso buys Italy's Fiorentina". Reuters. 6 June 2019. Retrieved 1 July 2019.
  20. ^ "Official: Commisso buys Fiorentina". football-italia.net. 6 June 2019. Retrieved 1 July 2019.
  21. ^ "Montella confirmed as Fiorentina's head coach". SBS. 15 June 2019. Retrieved 1 July 2019.
  22. ^ "Head Coach Cesare Prandelli-returns to Fiorentina". CBS. 12 November 2020. Retrieved 1 January 2021.
  23. ^ "Prima Squadra Maschile". ACF Fiorentina. from the original on 29 October 2020. Retrieved 28 July 2021.
  24. ^ "Astori's number 13 shirt retired by Fiorentina and Cagliari following tragic passing". Goal.com. Retrieved 6 March 2018.
  25. ^ . Viola. Archived from the original on 27 October 2009.
  26. ^ a b c . Weltfussballarchiv.com. 24 June 2007. Archived from the original on 19 December 2012. Retrieved 10 January 2009.
  27. ^ "Stemma Comune di Firenze". Comuni-Italiani. 24 June 2007.
  28. ^ "First Club With 5 Player Kits – ACF Fiorentina 17–18 Home + 4 Away Kits Released". Footy Headlines. 5 July 2017. Retrieved 8 July 2017.
  29. ^ a b "ACF Fiorentina Anthem (English translation)". lyricstranslate.com. Retrieved 28 July 2021.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  30. ^ . Archived from the original on 5 May 2010. Retrieved 23 January 2021.
  31. ^ "Acf fiorentina and olybet announce betting partnership". acffiorentina. 30 September 2021. Retrieved 30 September 2021.
  32. ^ During summer 2002: Serie B membership lost without playing.
  33. ^ a b c d e f g A.C. Fiorentina S.p.A. bilancio (financial report and accounts) on 30 June 2001 (in Italian), PDF purchased from Italian C.C.I.A.A.
  34. ^ "Il Napoli sulle tracce di Gautieri L' albanese Myrtai va all' Alzano". La Gazzetta dello Sport (in Italian). 19 June 1999. Retrieved 21 January 2016.
  35. ^ "Toldo e Rui Costa al Parma Buffon a un passo dalla Juve". la Repubblica (in Italian). 29 June 2001. Retrieved 1 May 2013.
  36. ^ a b ACF Fiorentina S.p.A. bilancio (financial report and accounts) on 31 December 2005 (in Italian), PDF purchased from Italian C.C.I.A.A.
  37. ^ a b c ACF Fiorentina S.p.A. bilancio (financial report and accounts) on 31 December 2006 (in Italian), PDF purchased from Italian C.C.I.A.A.
  38. ^ a b ACF Fiorentina S.p.A. bilancio (financial report and accounts) on 31 December 2007 (in Italian), PDF purchased from Italian C.C.I.A.A.
  39. ^ a b ACF Fiorentina S.p.A. bilancio (financial report and accounts) on 31 December 2008 (in Italian), PDF purchased from Italian C.C.I.A.A.
  40. ^ a b ACF Fiorentina S.p.A. bilancio (financial report and accounts) on 31 December 2009 (in Italian), PDF purchased from Italian C.C.I.A.A.
  41. ^ a b ACF Fiorentina S.p.A. bilancio (financial report and accounts) on 31 December 2010 (in Italian), PDF purchased from Italian C.C.I.A.A.
  42. ^ "Bilancio Fiorentina 2010: in perdita, nonostante la cessione del ramo commerciale" (in Italian). ju29ro.com. 6 September 2011. Retrieved 4 March 2012.
  43. ^ Marotta, Luca (7 June 2012). "Bilancio Fiorentina 2011: perdita da rendimento sportivo" (in Italian). Ju29ro.com. Retrieved 13 June 2012.
  44. ^ a b ACF Fiorentina S.p.A. bilancio (financial report and accounts) on 31 December 2011 (in Italian), PDF purchased from Italian C.C.I.A.A.
  45. ^ a b ACF Fiorentina S.p.A. bilancio (financial report and accounts) on 31 December 2012 (in Italian), PDF purchased from Italian C.C.I.A.A.
  46. ^ Marotta, Luca (16 July 2013). "Bilancio Fiorentina 2012: in utile grazie a Nastasic" (in Italian). Retrieved 19 January 2016.
  47. ^ a b ACF Fiorentina S.p.A. bilancio (financial report and accounts) on 31 December 2013 (in Italian), PDF purchased from Italian C.C.I.A.A.
  48. ^ Marotta, Luca (23 July 2014). "Bilancio Fiorentina 2013: secondo utile consecutivo con plusvalenze" (in Italian). Retrieved 19 January 2016.
  49. ^ a b c ACF Fiorentina S.p.A. bilancio (financial report and accounts) on 31 December 2014 (in Italian), PDF purchased from Italian C.C.I.A.A.
  50. ^ "Fiorentina joins club of teams forced to embrace austerity". il sole 24 ore. 17 September 2015. Retrieved 19 January 2016.
  51. ^ Marotta, Luca (18 July 2015). "Bilancio Fiorentina 2014: 37 milioni di perdita e l'obiettivo "imperativo" di Della Valle" (in Italian). Retrieved 19 January 2016.
  52. ^ "Financial fair play: all you need to know". UEFA. 30 June 2015. Retrieved 19 January 2016.

External links

  • Official website (Italian and English)
  • Team page at Goal.com
  • Team page at ESPN Soccernet
  • Team Page at Football-Lineups.com
  • Artemio Franchi Stadium at Stadium Journey
  • Fiorentina Supporters I poeti della curva

fiorentina, commonly, referred, fiorentina, fjorenˈtiːna, italian, professional, football, club, based, florence, tuscany, italy, original, team, founded, merger, august, 1926, while, actual, club, refounded, august, 2002, following, bankruptcy, fiorentina, ha. ACF Fiorentina 1 2 commonly referred to as Fiorentina fjorenˈtiːna is an Italian professional football club based in Florence Tuscany Italy The original team was founded by a merger in August 1926 while the actual club was refounded in August 2002 following bankruptcy Fiorentina have played at the top level of Italian football for the majority of their existence only four clubs have played in more Serie A seasons FiorentinaFull nameACF Fiorentina S p A 1 2 Nickname s I Viola The Purples The Violets I Gigliati The Lilies Founded29 August 1926 96 years ago 29 August 1926 as Associazione Calcio Fiorentina1 August 2002 20 years ago 1 August 2002 as A C Fiorentina e Florentia ViolaGroundStadio Artemio FranchiCapacity43 147 3 OwnerNew ACF Fiorentina S r l ChairmanRocco B CommissoHead coachVincenzo ItalianoLeagueSerie A2021 22Serie A 7th of 20WebsiteClub websiteHome coloursAway coloursThird coloursCurrent seasonThe performance of Fiorentina in the Italian football league structure since the first season of a unified Serie A 1929 30 Fiorentina has won two Italian league titles in 1955 56 and again in 1968 69 as well as six Coppa Italia trophies and one Supercoppa Italiana On the European stage Fiorentina won the UEFA Cup Winners Cup in 1960 61 and lost the final one year later They finished runners up in the 1956 57 European Cup losing against Real Madrid and also came close to winning the 1989 90 UEFA Cup finishing as runners up against Juventus after losing the first leg in Turin and drawing in the second one in Avellino Fiorentina is one of fifteen European teams that have played in the finals of all three major continental competitions the Champions League 1956 1957 the first Italian team to reach the final in the top continental competition the UEFA Cup Winners 1960 1961 and 1961 1962 and the UEFA Cup 1989 1990 Since 1931 the club have played at the Stadio Artemio Franchi which currently has a capacity of 43 147 The stadium has used several names over the years and has undergone several renovations Fiorentina are known widely by the nickname Viola a reference to their distinctive purple colours 4 Contents 1 History 1 1 Foundation prior to World War II 1 2 First scudetto and 50 60s 1 3 Second scudetto and 70s 1 4 Pontello era 1 5 Cecchi Gori era from Champions League to bankruptcy 1 6 Della Valle era from fourth tier to Europe 2000s and 2010s 1 7 Commisso era 2 Players 2 1 Current squad 2 2 Other players under contract 2 3 Out on loan 2 4 Youth Sector 2 5 Notable players 2 6 Retired numbers 2 7 Management staff 3 Managerial history 4 Colours and badge 4 1 Badge 4 2 Kit and colours 4 3 Anthem 5 Kit suppliers and shirt sponsors 5 1 Kit manufacturer 5 2 Shirt sponsors 5 3 Official partners 6 Honours 6 1 National titles 6 2 European titles 6 3 Other titles 7 Divisional movements 8 Fiorentina as a company 9 League history 10 References 11 External linksHistory EditFurther information History of ACF Fiorentina Foundation prior to World War II Edit 1940 41 Fiorentina team Associazione Calcio Fiorentina was founded in the autumn of 1926 by local noble and National Fascist Party member Luigi Ridolfi 5 who initiated the merger of two older Florentine clubs CS Firenze and PG Libertas The aim of the merger was to give Florence a strong club to rival those of the more dominant Italian Football Championship sides of the time from Northwest Italy Also influential was the cultural revival and rediscovery of Calcio Fiorentino code ita promoted to code it an ancestor of modern football that was played by members of the Medici code ita promoted to code it family 5 After a rough start and three seasons in lower leagues Fiorentina reached the Serie A code ita promoted to code it in 1931 That same year saw the opening of the new stadium originally named after Giovanni Berta a prominent fascist but now known as Stadio Artemio Franchi At the time the stadium was a masterpiece of engineering and its inauguration was monumental To be able to compete with the best teams in Italy Fiorentina strengthened their team with some new players notably the Uruguayan Pedro Petrone nicknamed el Artillero Despite enjoying a good season and finishing in fourth place Fiorentina were relegated the following year although they would return quickly to Serie A code ita promoted to code it In 1941 they won their first Coppa Italia but the team were unable to build on their success during the 1940s due to World War II and other troubles First scudetto and 50 60s Edit The first Italian champion Fiorentina In 1950 Fiorentina started to achieve consistent top five finishes in the domestic league The team consisted of players such as well known goalkeeper Giuliano Sarti Sergio Cervato Francesco Rosella Guido Gratton Giuseppe Chiappella Aldo Scaramucci Brazilian Julinho and Argentinian Miguel Montuori This team won Fiorentina s first scudetto Italian championship in 1955 56 12 points ahead of second place Milan Milan beat Fiorentina to top spot the following year Fiorentina became the first Italian team to play in a European Cup final when a disputed penalty led to a 2 0 defeat at the hands of Alfredo Di Stefano s Real Madrid Fiorentina were runners up again in the three subsequent seasons In the 1960 61 season the club won the Coppa Italia again and was also successful in Europe winning the first Cup Winners Cup against Scottish side Rangers After several years of runner up finishes Fiorentina dropped away slightly in the 1960s bouncing from fourth to sixth place although the club won the Coppa Italia and the Mitropa Cup in 1966 Kurt Hamrin scored 150 goals for Fiorentina when he represented the club 1958 1967 This means that he is in second place for most goals in the club s history Second scudetto and 70s Edit While the 1960s did result in some trophies and good Serie A finishes for Fiorentina nobody believed that the club could challenge for the title The 1968 69 season started with Milan as frontrunners but on matchday 7 they lost to Bologna and were overtaken by Gigi Riva s Cagliari Fiorentina after an unimpressive start then moved to the top of the Serie A but the first half of their season finished with a 2 2 draw against Varese leaving Cagliari as outright league leader The second half of the season was a three way battle between the three contending teams Milan Cagliari and Fiorentina Milan fell away instead focusing their efforts on the European Cup and it seemed that Cagliari would retain top spot After Cagliari lost against Juventus code ita promoted to code it however Fiorentina took over at the top The team then won all of their remaining matches beating rivals Juve in Turin on the penultimate matchday to seal their second and last national title In the European Cup competition the following year Fiorentina had some good results including a win in the Soviet Union against Dynamo Kyiv code ukr promoted to code uk but they were eventually knocked out in the quarter finals after a 3 0 defeat in Glasgow to Celtic 6 Viola players began the 1970s decade with scudetto sewed on their breast but the period was not especially fruitful for the team After a fifth place finish in 1971 they finished in mid table almost every year even flirting with relegation in 1972 and 1978 The Viola did win the Anglo Italian League Cup in 1974 and won the Coppa Italia again in 1975 The team consisted of young talents like Vincenzo Guerini and Moreno Roggi who suffered bad injuries and above all Giancarlo Antognoni who would later become an idol to Fiorentina s fans The young average age of the players led to the team being called Fiorentina Ye Ye Pontello era Edit In 1980 Fiorentina was bought by Flavio Pontello who came from a rich house building family He quickly changed the team s anthem and logo leading to some complaints by the fans but he started to bring in high quality players such as Francesco Graziani and Eraldo Pecci from Torino Daniel Bertoni from Sevilla Daniele Massaro from Monza and a young Pietro Vierchowod from Como The team was built around Giancarlo Antognoni and in 1982 Fiorentina were involved in an exciting duel with rivals Juventus After a bad injury to Antognoni the league title was decided on the final day of the season when Fiorentina were denied a goal against Cagliari and were unable to win Juventus won the title with a disputed penalty and the rivalry between the two teams erupted The following years were strange for Fiorentina who vacillated between high finishes and relegation battles Fiorentina also bought two interesting players El Puntero Ramon Diaz and most significantly the young Roberto Baggio In 1990 Fiorentina fought to avoid relegation right up until the final day of the season but did reach the UEFA Cup final where they again faced Juventus The Turin team won the trophy but Fiorentina s tifosi once again had real cause for complaint the second leg of the final was played in Avellino Fiorentina s home ground was suspended a city with many Juventus fans and emerging star Roberto Baggio was sold to the rival team on the day of the final Pontello suffering from economic difficulties was selling all the players and was forced to leave the club after serious riots in Florence s streets The club was then acquired by the famous filmmaker Mario Cecchi Gori Cecchi Gori era from Champions League to bankruptcy Edit Gabriel Batistuta the most prominent Fiorentina player of the 1990s The first season under Cecchi Gori s ownership was one of stabilisation after which the new chairman started to sign some good players like Brian Laudrup Stefan Effenberg Francesco Baiano and most importantly Gabriel Batistuta who became an iconic player for the team during the 1990s In 1993 however Cecchi Gori died and was succeeded as chairman by his son Vittorio Despite a good start to the season Cecchi Gori fired the coach Luigi Radice after a defeat against Atalanta 7 and replaced him with Aldo Agroppi The results were dreadful Fiorentina fell into the bottom half of the standings and were relegated on the last day of the season Claudio Ranieri was brought in as coach for the 1993 94 season and that year Fiorentina dominated Serie B Italy s second division Upon their return to Serie A Ranieri put together a good team centred around new top scorer Batistuta signing the young talent Rui Costa from Benfica and the new world champion Brazilian defender Marcio Santos The former became an idol to Fiorentina fans while the second disappointed and was sold after only a season The Viola finished the season in tenth place The following season Cecchi Gori bought other important players namely Swedish midfielder Stefan Schwarz The club again proved its mettle in cup competitions winning the Coppa Italia against Atalanta and finishing joint third in Serie A In the summer Fiorentina became the first non national champions to win the Supercoppa Italiana defeating Milan 2 1 at the San Siro Fiorentina s 1996 97 season was disappointing in the league but they did reach the Cup Winners Cup semi final by beating Gloria Bistrița Sparta Prague and Benfica The team lost the semi final to the eventual winner of the competition Barcelona away 1 1 home 0 2 The season s main signings were Luis Oliveira and Andrei Kanchelskis the latter of whom suffered from many injuries At the end of the season Ranieri left Fiorentina for Valencia in Spain with Cecchi Gori appointing Alberto Malesani as his replacement Fiorentina played well but struggled against smaller teams although they did manage to qualify for the UEFA Cup Malesani left Fiorentina after only a season and was succeeded by Giovanni Trapattoni With Trapattoni s expert guidance and Batistuta s goals Fiorentina challenged for the title in 1998 99 but finished the season in third earning them qualification for the Champions League The following year was disappointing in Serie A but Viola played some historical matches in the Champions League beating Arsenal 1 0 at the old Wembley Stadium and Manchester United 2 0 in Florence They were ultimately eliminated in the second group stage At the end of the season Trapattoni left the club and was replaced by Turkish coach Fatih Terim More significantly however Batistuta was sold to Roma who eventually won the title the following year Fiorentina played well in 2000 01 and stayed in the top half of Serie A despite the resignation of Terim and the arrival of Roberto Mancini They also won the Coppa Italia for the sixth and last time The year 2001 heralded major changes for Fiorentina as the terrible state of the club s finances was revealed they were unable to pay wages and had debts of around US 50 million The club s owner Vittorio Cecchi Gori was able to raise some more money but this soon proved to be insufficient to sustain the club Fiorentina were relegated at the end of the 2001 02 season and went into judicially controlled administration in June 2002 This form of bankruptcy sports companies cannot exactly fail in this way in Italy but they can suffer a similar procedure meant that the club was refused a place in Serie B for the 2002 03 season and as a result effectively ceased to exist Della Valle era from fourth tier to Europe 2000s and 2010s Edit The club was promptly re established in August 2002 as Associazione Calcio Fiorentina e Florentia Viola with shoe and leather entrepreneur Diego Della Valle as new owner and the club was admitted into Serie C2 the fourth tier of Italian football The only player to remain at the club in its new incarnation was Angelo Di Livio whose commitment to the club s cause further endeared him to the fans Helped by Di Livio and 30 goal striker Christian Rigano the club won its Serie C2 group with considerable ease which would normally have led to a promotion to Serie C1 Due to the bizarre Caso Catania Catania Case the club skipped Serie C1 and was admitted into Serie B something that was only made possible by the Italian Football Federation FIGC s decision to resolve the Catania situation by increasing the number of teams in Serie B from 20 to 24 and promoting Fiorentina for sports merits 8 In the 2003 off season the club also bought back the right to use the Fiorentina name and the famous shirt design and re incorporated itself as ACF Fiorentina The club finished the 2003 04 season in sixth place and won the playoff against Perugia to return to top flight football Cesare Prandelli the club s longest serving manager 2005 2010 2020 2021 In their first season back in Serie A the club struggled to avoid relegation only securing survival on the last day of the season on head to head record against Bologna and Parma In 2005 Della Valle decided to appoint Pantaleo Corvino as new sports director followed by the appointment of Cesare Prandelli as head coach in the following season The club made several signings during the summer transfer market most notably Luca Toni and Sebastien Frey This drastic move earned them a fourth place finish with 74 points and a Champions League qualifying round ticket Toni scored 31 goals in 38 appearances the first player to pass the 30 goal mark since Antonio Valentin Angelillo in the 1958 59 season for which he was awarded the European Golden Boot On 14 July 2006 Fiorentina were relegated to Serie B due to their involvement in the Calciopoli scandal and given a 12 point penalty The team was reinstated to the Serie A on appeal but with a 19 point penalty for the 2006 07 season The team s 2006 07 Champions League place was also revoked 9 After the start of the season Fiorentina s penalisation was reduced from 19 points to 15 on appeal to the Italian courts In spite of this penalty they managed to secure a place in the UEFA Cup Despite Toni s departure to Bayern Munich Fiorentina had a strong start to the 2007 08 season and were tipped by Italy national team head coach Marcello Lippi among others as a surprise challenger for the scudetto 10 and although this form tailed off towards the middle of the season the Viola managed to qualify for the Champions League In Europe the club reached the semi final of the UEFA Cup where they were ultimately defeated by Rangers on penalties The 2008 09 season continued this success a fourth place finish assuring Fiorentina s spot in 2010 s Champions League playoffs Their European campaign was also similar to that of the previous run relegated to the 2008 09 UEFA Cup and were eliminated by Ajax in the end In the 2009 10 season Fiorentina started their domestic campaign strongly before steadily losing momentum and slipped to mid table positions at the latter half of the season In Europe the team proved to be a surprise dark horse after losing their first away fixture against Lyon they staged a comeback with a five match streak by winning all their remaining matches including defeating Liverpool home and away The Viola qualified as group champions but eventually succumbed to Bayern Munich due to the away goals rule This was controversial due to a mistaken refereeing decision by Tom Henning Ovrebo who allowed a clearly offside goal for Bayern in the first leg Bayern eventually finished the tournament as runners up making a deep run all the way to the final The incident called into attention the possible implementation of video replays in football Despite a good European run and reaching the semi finals in the Coppa Italia Fiorentina failed to qualify for Europe During this period on 24 September 2009 Andrea Della Valle resigned from his position as chairman of Fiorentina and announced all duties would be temporarily transferred to Mario Cognini Fiorentina s vice president until a permanent position could be filled 11 Former manager Vincenzo Montella 2012 2015 2019 In June 2010 the Viola bid farewell to long time manager Cesare Prandelli by then the longest serving coach in the team s history who was departing to coach the Italy national team Catania manager Sinisa Mihajlovic was appointed to replace him The club spent much of the early 2010 11 season in last place but their form improved and Fiorentina ultimately finished ninth Following a 1 0 defeat to Chievo in November 2011 Mihajlovic was sacked and replaced by Delio Rossi 12 After a brief period of improvements the Viola were again fighting relegation prompting the sacking of Sporting Director Pantaleo Corvino in early 2012 following a 0 5 home defeat to Juventus Their bid for survival was kept alive by a number of upset victories away from home notably at Roma and Milan During a home game against Novara trailing 0 2 within half an hour manager Rossi decided to substitute midfielder Adem Ljajic early Ljajic sarcastically applauded him in frustration whereupon Rossi retaliated by physical assaulting his player an action that ultimately prompted his termination by the club 13 His replacement caretaker manager Vincenzo Guerini then guided the team away from the relegation zone to a 13th place finish to end the turbulent year To engineer a resurrection of the club after the disappointing season the Della Valle family invested heavily in the middle of 2012 buying 17 new players and appointing Vincenzo Montella as head coach The team began the season well finishing the calendar year in joint third place and eventually finishing the 2012 13 season in fourth enough for a position in the 2013 14 Europa League The club lost fan favourite Stevan Jovetic during the middle of 2013 selling him to English Premier League club Manchester City for a 30 million transfer fee They also sold Adem Ljajic to Roma and Alessio Cerci to Torino using the funds to bring in Mario Gomez Josip Ilicic and Ante Rebic among others During the season Fiorentina topped their Europa League group moving on to the round of 32 to face Danish side Esbjerg fB which Fiorentina defeated 4 2 on aggregate In the following round of 16 however they then lost to Italian rivals Juventus 2 1 on aggregate ousting Fiorentina from the competition At the end of the season the team finished fourth again in the league and also finishing the year as Coppa Italia runners up after losing 3 1 to Napoli in the final In 2014 15 during the 2015 winter transfer window the team club sold star winger Juan Cuadrado to Chelsea for 30 million but were able to secure the loan of Mohamed Salah in exchange who was a revelation in the second half of the season Their 2014 15 Europa League campaign saw them progress to the semi finals where they were knocked out by Spanish side Sevilla the eventual champions In the 2014 15 domestic season Fiorentina once again finished fourth thus qualifying for the 2015 16 Europa League In June 2015 Vincenzo Montella was sacked as manager after the club grew impatient with the coaches inability to prove his commitment to the club 14 and was replaced by Paulo Sousa who lasted until June 2017 and the appointment of Stefano Pioli 15 Club captain Davide Astori died suddenly at the age of 31 in March 2018 16 Astori had suffered a cardiac arrest while in a hotel room before an away game The club subsequently retired Astori s kit number 13 17 Fiorentina suffered during the 2018 19 Serie A campaign and ended the season on a 14 match winless streak finishing in 16th place with only 41 points 3 points from the relegation zone On 9 April 2019 Pioli resigned as manager and was replaced by Montella 18 Commisso era Edit On 6 June 2019 the club was sold to Italian American billionaire Rocco Commisso for around 160 million euros 19 The sale marked the end of the Della Valle family s seventeen year association with the club 20 Vincenzo Montella was confirmed as coach for the first season of the new era despite the team s poor end to the previous campaign which saw them finish only three points clear of the relegation zone 21 Fiorentina continued their struggles from the previous year spending the majority of the season in lower midtable Montella was sacked on 21 December after a 7 match winless run which left the club in 15th place and was replaced by Giuseppe Iachini In November 2020 Cesare Prandelli returned to Fiorentina replacing Giuseppe Iachini as coach 22 Players EditCurrent squad Edit As of 31 January 2023 23 Note Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules Players may hold more than one non FIFA nationality No Pos Nation Player1 GK ITA Pietro Terracciano2 DF BRA Dodo3 DF ITA Cristiano Biraghi captain 4 DF SRB Nikola Milenkovic5 MF ITA Giacomo Bonaventura 3rd captain 7 FW SRB Luka Jovic8 MF ITA Riccardo Saponara9 FW BRA Arthur Cabral10 MF ITA Gaetano Castrovilli11 FW FRA Jonathan Ikone15 DF SRB Aleksa Terzic16 DF ITA Luca Ranieri22 FW ARG Nicolas Gonzalez No Pos Nation Player23 DF ITA Lorenzo Venuti vice captain 28 DF ARG Lucas Martinez Quarta31 GK ITA Michele Cerofolini32 MF GHA Alfred Duncan33 FW ITA Riccardo Sottil34 MF MAR Sofyan Amrabat38 MF ITA Rolando Mandragora42 MF ITA Alessandro Bianco56 GK ITA Salvatore Sirigu72 MF CZE Antonin Barak77 MF CRO Josip Brekalo98 DF BRA Igor99 FW CIV Christian KouameOther players under contract Edit As of 11 January 2023Note Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules Players may hold more than one non FIFA nationality No Pos Nation Player DF ITA Davide GentileOut on loan Edit As of 31 January 2023Note Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules Players may hold more than one non FIFA nationality No Pos Nation Player DF ITA Lorenzo Cellai at Virtus Verona until 30 June 2023 DF ITA Christian Dalle Mura at SPAL until 30 June 2023 DF ROU Eduard Duțu at Gubbio until 30 June 2023 DF ITA Gabriele Ferrarini at Modena until 30 June 2023 DF ITA Filippo Frison at Fiorenzuola until 30 June 2023 DF ITA Edoardo Pierozzi at Como until 30 June 2023 DF DEN Jacob Rasmussen at Feyenoord until 30 June 2023 MF ITA Vittorio Agostinelli at Cosenza until 30 June 2023 MF ITA Marco Benassi at Cremonese until 30 June 2023 MF ITA Giovanni Corradini at Pro Vercelli until 30 June 2023 MF ITA Mattia Fiorini at Fiorenzuola until 30 June 2023 No Pos Nation Player MF CRO Toni Fruk at Gorica until 30 June 2023 MF MAR Youssef Maleh at Lecce until 30 June 2023 MF ITA Niccolo Pierozzi at Reggina until 30 June 2023 MF MAR Abdelhamid Sabiri at Sampdoria until 30 June 2023 MF POL Szymon Zurkowski at Spezia until 30 June 2023 FW ITA Destiny Egharevba at Fiorenzuola until 30 June 2023 FW ITA Gabriele Gori at Reggina until 30 June 2023 FW RUS Aleksandr Kokorin at Aris Limassol until 30 June 2023 FW ROU Louis Munteanu at Farul Constanța until 30 June 2023 FW ITA Samuele Spalluto at Novara until 30 June 2023 Youth Sector Edit Main article ACF Fiorentina Youth Sector Note Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules Players may hold more than one non FIFA nationality No Pos Nation Player40 MF ITA Costantino Favasuli44 DF BUL Dimo KrastevNotable players Edit Main article List of ACF Fiorentina players Retired numbers Edit Main article Retired numbers in association football 13 Davide Astori defender 2015 18 posthumous honour 24 Management staff Edit Position StaffHead coach Vincenzo ItalianoAssistant coach Daniel NiccoliniGoalkeeping coach Angelo PorracchioTechnical coach Marco TuratiChief analyst Stefano FiricanoAthletic coach Damir Blokar Ivano Tito Piero CampoSporting director Daniele PradeTechnical director Nicolas BurdissoClub doctor Luca Pengue Federico FofiPhysiotherapist Maurizio Fagorzi Mauro Citzia Simone Michelassi Filippo Nannelli Daniele Misseri Luca Lonero Stefano DainelliSecretary Luigi CurradiManagerial history EditFiorentina have had many managers and head coaches throughout their history Below is a chronological list from the club s foundation in 1926 to the present day 25 No Name Nationality Years1 Karoly Csapkay 1926 282 Gyula Feldmann 1928 303 Gyula Feldmann 1930 314 Hermann Felsner 1931 335 Wilhelm Rady 19336 Jozsef Ging it 1933 347 Guido Ara 1934 378 Ottavio Baccani it 1937 389 Ferenc Molnar 193810 Rudolf Soutschek 1938 3911 Giuseppe Galluzzi 1939 4512 Guido Ara 194613 Renzo Magli it 1946 4714 Imre Senkey 194715 Luigi Ferrero 1947 5116 Renzo Magli it 1951 5317 Fulvio Bernardini 1953 5818 Lajos Czeizler 1958 5919 Luigi Ferrero 195920 Luis Carniglia 1959 6021 Giuseppe Chiappella 196022 Nandor Hidegkuti 1960 6223 Ferruccio Valcareggi 1962 6424 Giuseppe Chiappella 1964 6725 Luigi Ferrero 1967 68 No Name Nationality Years26 Andrea Bassi it 196827 Bruno Pesaola 1968 7128 Oronzo Pugliese 197129 Nils Liedholm 1971 7330 Luigi Radice 1973 7431 Nereo Rocco 1974 7532 Carlo Mazzone 1975 7733 Mario Mazzoni 1977 7834 Giuseppe Chiappella 197835 Paolo Carosi it 1978 8136 Giancarlo De Sisti 1981 8537 Ferruccio Valcareggi 198538 Aldo Agroppi 1985 8639 Eugenio Bersellini 1986 8740 Sven Goran Eriksson 1 July 1987 30 June 198941 Bruno Giorgi 1 July 1989 25 April 199042 Francesco Graziani int 26 April 1990 30 June 199043 Sebastiao Lazaroni 1 July 1990 30 September 199144 Luigi Radice 1 October 1991 5 January 199345 Aldo Agroppi 6 January 1993 30 April 199346 Luciano Chiarugi int 1 May 1993 30 June 199347 Claudio Ranieri 1 July 1993 30 June 199748 Alberto Malesani 1 July 1997 30 June 199849 Giovanni Trapattoni 1 July 1998 30 June 200050 Fatih Terim 1 July 2000 25 February 2001 No Name Nationality Years51 Luciano Chiarugi 200152 Roberto Mancini 26 February 2001 14 January 200253 Ottavio Bianchi 14 January 2002 31 March 200254 Luciano Chiarugi int 1 April 2002 30 June 200255 Eugenio Fascetti June 2002 July 200256 Pietro Vierchowod 1 July 2002 29 October 200257 Alberto Cavasin 29 October 2002 10 February 200458 Emiliano Mondonico 10 February 2004 25 October 200459 Sergio Buso 25 October 2004 25 January 200560 Dino Zoff 25 January 2005 30 June 200561 Cesare Prandelli 1 July 2005 3 June 201062 Sinisa Mihajlovic 4 June 2010 7 November 201163 Delio Rossi 8 November 2011 2 May 201264 Vincenzo Guerini int 3 May 2012 11 June 201265 Vincenzo Montella 11 June 2012 8 June 201566 Paulo Sousa 21 June 2015 6 June 201767 Stefano Pioli 6 June 2017 9 April 201968 Vincenzo Montella 10 April 2019 21 December 201969 Giuseppe Iachini 23 December 2019 9 November 202070 Cesare Prandelli 9 November 2020 23 March 202171 Giuseppe Iachini 24 March 2021 30 June 202172 Vincenzo Italiano 30 June 2021 TodayColours and badge EditBadge Edit The badge used by Florentia Viola consisting solely of the fleur de lis of Florence Former crest of Fiorentina used until 2022 The official emblem of the city of Florence a red fleur de lis on a white field has been pivotal in the all round symbolism of the club Over the course of the club s history they have had several badge changes all of which incorporated Florence s fleur de lis in some way 26 The first one was nothing more than the city s coat of arms a white shield with the red fleur de lis inside It was soon changed to a very stylised fleur de lis always red and sometimes even without the white field The most common symbol adopted for about 20 years had been a white lozenge with the flower inside During the season they were Italian champions the lozenge disappeared and the flower was overlapped with the scudetto The logo introduced by owner Flavio Pontello in 1980 was particularly distinct consisting of one half of the city of Florence s emblem and one half of the letter F for Fiorentina People disliked it when it was introduced believing it was a commercial decision and above all because the symbol bore more of a resemblance to a halberd than a fleur de lis 26 Until the 2022 23 season when the club unveiled a new stylistically simplified badge the logo was a kite shaped double lozenge bordered in gold The outer lozenge had a purple background with the letters AC in white and the letter F in red standing for the club s name The inner lozenge was white with a gold border and the red Giglio of Florence 26 This logo had been in use from 1992 to 2002 but after the financial crisis and resurrection of the club the new one couldn t use the same logo Florence s comune instead granted Florentia Viola use of the stylised coat of arms used in other city documents Diego Della Valle acquired the current logo the following year in a judicial auction for a fee of 2 5 million making it the most expensive logo in Italian football citation needed Kit and colours Edit Gabriel Batistuta holding his old Fiorentina jersey at a 2014 ceremony inducting him into the club s Hall of Fame When Fiorentina was founded in 1926 the players wore red and white halved shirts derived from the colour of the city emblem 27 The more well known and highly distinctive purple kit was adopted in 1928 and has been used ever since giving rise to the nickname La Viola The Purple team Tradition has it that Fiorentina got their purple kit by mistake after an accident washing the old red and white coloured kits in the river The away kit has always been predominantly white sometimes with purple and red elements sometimes all white The shorts had been purple when the home kit was with white shorts Fiorentina s third kit was first worn in the 1995 96 season and it was all red with purple borders and two lilies on the shoulders The red shirt has been the most worn 3rd shirt by Fiorentina although they also wore rare yellow shirts 97 98 99 00 and 10 11 and a sterling version mostly in the Coppa Italia in 2000 01 For the 2017 18 season and the first time in its history the club used five kits during the season composing of one home kit all purple and four away kits each one representing one historic quartiere of the city of Florence all blue Santa Croce all white Santo Spirito all green San Giovanni and all red Santa Maria Novella 28 Anthem Edit Canzone Viola Purple Song is the title of the Fiorentina a song nowadays better known as Oh Fiorentina 29 It is the oldest official football anthem in Italy and one of the oldest in the world Dated 1930 and born only four years after the creation of the club the song was written by a 12 year old child Enzo Marcacci and musically arranged by maestro Marco Vinicio It was published for the first time by the publisher Marcello Manni who later became the owner of the rights It soon achieved notoriety thanks to the printed media and the Ordine del Marzocco a sort of original viola club which printed the lyrics of the song and distributed it to a home match on November 22 1931 30 The song was recorded by Narciso Parigi in 1959 and again in 1965 the latter version replaced the original edition as the Fiorentina anthem Subsequently Narciso Parigi himself acquired the ownership of the rights which he donated in 2002 to the supporter club Collettivo Autonomo Viola 29 Kit suppliers and shirt sponsors EditKit manufacturer Edit 1978 1981 Adidas 1981 1983 J D Farrow s 1983 1988 Ennerre 1988 1991 Abbigliamento Sportivo 1991 1993 Lotto 1993 1995 Uhlsport 1995 1997 Reebok 1997 2000 Fila 2000 2001 Diadora 2001 2002 Mizuno 2002 2003 Mizuno Garman Puma 2003 2005 Adidas 2005 2012 Lotto 2012 2015 Joma 2015 2020 Le Coq Sportif 2020 KappaShirt sponsors Edit 1981 1983 J D Farrow s 1983 1986 Opel 1986 1989 Crodino 1989 1991 La Nazione 1991 1992 Giocheria 1992 1994 7up 1994 1997 Sammontana 1997 1999 Nintendo 1999 2002 Toyota 2002 2004 Fondiaria Sai 2004 2010 Toyota 2010 2011 Save The Children 2011 2014 Mazda 2014 2016 Volkswagen Save The Children 2016 2019 Vorwerk Folletto Save The Children Dream Loud 2019 present MediacomOfficial partners Edit EA Sports Football video gaming partner Montezemolo Fashion partner Gruppoaf Official partner Sammontana Official ice cream Synlab Health partner OlyBet tv Infotainment partner 31 Honours EditFurther information List of ACF Fiorentina records and statistics National titles Edit Serie A Winners 2 1955 56 1968 69Coppa Italia Winners 6 1939 40 1960 61 1965 66 1974 75 1995 96 2000 01Supercoppa Italiana Winners 1 1996European titles Edit Further information ACF Fiorentina in European football European Cup Winners Cup Winners 1 1960 61Other titles Edit Serie B Winners 1930 31 1938 39 1993 94Serie C2 Winners 2002 03Coppa Grasshoppers Winners 1957Mitropa Cup Winners 1966Anglo Italian League Cup Winners 1975Divisional movements EditSeries Years Last Promotions RelegationsA 84 2021 22 3 1938 1993 2002 B 5 2003 04 4 1931 1939 1994 2004 bankruptcy 32 C 1 2002 03 1 2003 never90 years of professional football in Italy since 1929Fiorentina as a company EditA C Fiorentina S p A was unable to register for 2002 03 Serie B due to financial difficulties and then the sports title was transferred to a new company thanks to Article 52 of N O I F while the old company was liquidated At that time the club was heavily relying on windfall profit from selling players especially in pure player swap or cash plus player swap that potentially increased the cost by the increase in amortisation of player contracts an intangible assets For example Marco Rossi joined Fiorentina for Lire 17 billion in 2000 but at the same time Lorenzo Collacchioni moved to Salernitana for Lire 1 billion meaning the club had a player profit of Lire 997 million and extra Lire 1 billion to be amortised in 5 years 33 In 1999 Emiliano Bigica also swapped with Giuseppe Taglialatela 34 which the latter was valued for Lire 10 billion 33 The operating income excluding windfall profit from players trading of 2000 01 season was minus Lire 113 271 475 933 minus 58 499 835 33 It was only boosted by the sales of Francesco Toldo and Rui Costa in June 2001 a profit of Lire 134 883 billion 69 661 million 33 However it was alleged they were to transfer to Parma 33 for a reported Lire 140 million 35 The two players eventually joined Inter Milan and A C Milan in 2001 02 financial year instead for undisclosed fees Failing to have financial support from the owner Vittorio Cecchi Gori the club was forced to windup due to its huge imbalance in operating income Since re established in 2002 ACF Fiorentina S p A are yet to self sustain to keep the team in top division as well as in European competitions In the 2005 financial year which cover the first Serie A season the club made a net loss of 9 159 356 36 followed by a net loss of 19 519 789 In 2006 2005 06 Serie A and 2006 07 Serie A Fiorentina heavily invested on players meaning the amortisation of intangible asset the player contract had increased from 17 7 million to 24 million 37 However the club suffered from the 2006 Italian football scandal which meant the club did not qualify for Europe In 2007 Fiorentina almost broke even with a net loss of just 3 704 953 In the 2007 financial year the TV revenue increased after they qualified to the 2007 08 UEFA Cup 38 Despite qualifying to the 2008 09 UEFA Champions League Fiorentina made a net loss of 9 179 484 in 2008 financial year after the increase in TV revenue was outweighed by the increase in wage 39 In the 2009 financial year Fiorentina made a net profit of 4 442 803 largely due to the profit on selling players 33 631 489 from players such as Felipe Melo Giampaolo Pazzini and Zdravko Kuzmanovic increased from about 3 5 million in 2008 However it was also offset by the write down of selling players 6 062 545 from players such as Manuel da Costa Arturo Lupoli and Davide Carcuro 40 After the club failed to qualify to Europe at the end of 2009 10 Serie A as well as lack of player profit Fiorentina turnover was decreased from 140 040 713 in 2009 to just 79 854 928 despite the wage bill also falling la Viola still made a net loss of 9 604 353 41 42 In the 2011 financial year the turnover slipped to 67 076 953 as the club s lack of capital gains from selling players and 2010 financial year still included the instalments from UEFA for participating 2009 10 UEFA Europa League Furthermore the gate income had dropped from 11 070 385 to 7 541 260 The wage bill did not fall much and in reverse the amortisation of transfer fee had sightly increased due to new signings La Viola had savings in other costs but counter weighted by huge 11 747 668 write down for departed players due to D Agostino Frey and Mutu but the former would counter weight by co ownership financial income which all made the operating cost remained high as worse as last year Moreover in 2010 the result was boosted by acquiring the asset from subsidiary related to AC Fiorentina and the re valuation of its value in separate balance sheet If deducting that income 14 737 855 2010 financial year was net loss 24 342 208 and 2011 result was worse with 8 131 876 only in separate balance sheet 43 44 In 2012 the club benefited from the sales of Matija Nastasic and Valon Behrami 45 46 followed by Stevan Jovetic and Adem Ljajic in 2013 47 48 In 2014 due to 28 4 million drop from the windfall profit of selling players the club recorded their worst financial results since re foundation despite the fact the club maintained the same level of windfall profit the result was still worse than in 2013 49 50 51 Moreover Fiorentina also revealed that the club had a relevant football net income of minus 19 5 million in the first assessment period of UEFA Financial Fair Play Regulations in the 2013 14 season in May 2014 52 aggregate of 2012 and 2013 results which within the limit of minus 45 million as well as minus 25 5 million in assessment period 2014 15 aggregate of 2012 2013 and 2014 results However as the limit was reduced to minus 30 million in assessment period 2015 16 2016 17 and 2017 18 season the club had to achieve a relevant net income of positive 5 6 million in 2015 financial year La Viola sold Juan Cuadrado to Chelsea in January 2015 for 30 million fee to make the club eligible to 2016 17 edition of UEFA competitions 49 Fiorentinaseparate financial statements Financial year Turnover Result Total assets Net assets Re capitalizationA C Fiorentina S p A PI 0039250485 exchange rate 1 Lire 1936 271999 2000 33 85 586 138 5 550 939 184 898 223 13 956 9542000 01 33 61 698 625 9 557 318 219 996 389 23 514 272 02001 02 Not available due to bankruptcyACF Fiorentina S p A PI 05248440488 startup capital 7 500 0002002 03 6 443 549 5 256 451 4 2 million2003 Jul Dec 3 885 968 6 370 483 5 million2004 36 33 336 444 10 259 252 99 357 403 11 019 231 14 908 million2005 37 57 646 361 9 159 356 107 504 630 35 951 875 34 092 million2006 37 60 961 502 19 519 789 123 327 412 51 132 086 34 7 million2007 38 88 627 385 3 704 953 142 484 422 67 427 133 20 million2008 39 108 521 983 9 179 484 171 220 969 78 247 649 20 million2009 40 140 040 713 4 442 803 173 675 641 92 690 451 10 million2010 41 79 854 927 9 604 352 178 314 364 83 086 099 02011 44 67 076 953 32 474 084 156 972 324 50 612 014 02012 45 109 060 686 1 155 691 182 081 303 75 667 705 23 9 million2013 47 121 044 126 1 448 376 217 891 659 92 216 081 15 1 million2014 49 94 339 505 37 023 231 188 847 357 77 192 851 22 millionAggregate 134 207 148 203 9 millionAverage 10 736 572 58 149 609 16 312 millionNote Windfall profit from selling players excludedItalian accounting standards was changed over the yearsLeague history Edit1926 1928 Prima Divisione 2nd tier 1928 1929 Divisione Nazionale 1st tier 1929 1931 Serie B 2nd tier Champions 1931 1931 1938 Serie A 1st tier 1938 1939 Serie B 2nd tier Champions 1939 1939 1943 Serie A 1st tier 1943 1946 no contests WW II 1946 1993 liga 1 1st tier Champions 1956 1969 1993 1994 Serie B 2nd tier Champions 1994 1994 2002 Serie A 1st tier 2002 2003 Serie C2 4th tier Champions 2003 2003 2004 Serie B 2nd tier 2004 present Serie A 1st tier References Edit a b Organigramma in Italian AC Fiorentina Fiorentina Archived from the original on 26 July 2008 Retrieved 29 November 2009 a b Fiorentina in Italian Lega Calcio Archived from the original on 25 February 2009 Retrieved 18 February 2009 ViolaChannel Stadio Franchi Rocco Commisso bought a football club Then the trouble started Financial Times 13 January 2022 Retrieved 10 February 2023 a b Martin Simon September 2004 Football and Fascism The National Game Under Mussolini Berg Publishers ISBN 1 85973 705 6 Prediksi Skor Serie A Fiorentina Vs Genoa 29 Januari 2017 Viralbola com Archived from the original on 2 February 2017 Retrieved 28 January 2017 Archivio Corriere della Sera Serie B a 24 squadre C e anche la Fiorentina La Repubblica in Italian 20 August 2003 Archived from the original on 1 May 2008 Retrieved 4 April 2008 Italian trio relegated to Serie B BBC News 14 July 2006 Retrieved 1 January 2010 Lippi Tips Fiorentina For Surprise Scudetto Challenge Goal com 11 November 2007 Fiorentina senza presidente Della Valle si e dimesso La Gazzetta dello Sport in Italian 24 September 2009 Mihajlovic sacked as Fiorentina coach CNN 7 November 2011 Fiorentina boss Delio Rossi sacked for attacking player BBC Sport 3 May 2012 Official Fiorentina sack Montella Football Italia Stefano Pioli Fiorentina hire former Inter Milan and Lazio boss BBC Sport 7 June 2017 Retrieved 6 March 2018 McLaughlin Elliot C 4 March 2018 Fiorentina captain Davide Astori dies of sudden illness at 31 team says CNN Retrieved 6 March 2018 Fiorentina A C F 6 March 2018 Per onorarne la memoria e rendere indelebile il ricordo di Davide Astori CagliariCalcio e Fiorentina hanno deciso di ritirare congiuntamente la maglia con il numero 13 DA13pic twitter com KXP6s8WFlG acffiorentina in Italian Retrieved 6 March 2018 UFFICIALE Fiorentina Pioli s e dimesso Oggi seduta affidata al suo vice in Italian Retrieved 9 April 2019 U S billionaire Commisso buys Italy s Fiorentina Reuters 6 June 2019 Retrieved 1 July 2019 Official Commisso buys Fiorentina football italia net 6 June 2019 Retrieved 1 July 2019 Montella confirmed as Fiorentina s head coach SBS 15 June 2019 Retrieved 1 July 2019 Head Coach Cesare Prandelli returns to Fiorentina CBS 12 November 2020 Retrieved 1 January 2021 Prima Squadra Maschile ACF Fiorentina Archived from the original on 29 October 2020 Retrieved 28 July 2021 Astori s number 13 shirt retired by Fiorentina and Cagliari following tragic passing Goal com Retrieved 6 March 2018 geocities com violaequipe Viola Archived from the original on 27 October 2009 a b c ACF Fiorentina Weltfussballarchiv com 24 June 2007 Archived from the original on 19 December 2012 Retrieved 10 January 2009 Stemma Comune di Firenze Comuni Italiani 24 June 2007 First Club With 5 Player Kits ACF Fiorentina 17 18 Home 4 Away Kits Released Footy Headlines 5 July 2017 Retrieved 8 July 2017 a b ACF Fiorentina Anthem English translation lyricstranslate com Retrieved 28 July 2021 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link L Inno Archived from the original on 5 May 2010 Retrieved 23 January 2021 Acf fiorentina and olybet announce betting partnership acffiorentina 30 September 2021 Retrieved 30 September 2021 During summer 2002 Serie B membership lost without playing a b c d e f g A C Fiorentina S p A bilancio financial report and accounts on 30 June 2001 in Italian PDF purchased from Italian C C I A A Il Napoli sulle tracce di Gautieri L albanese Myrtai va all Alzano La Gazzetta dello Sport in Italian 19 June 1999 Retrieved 21 January 2016 Toldo e Rui Costa al Parma Buffon a un passo dalla Juve la Repubblica in Italian 29 June 2001 Retrieved 1 May 2013 a b ACF Fiorentina S p A bilancio financial report and accounts on 31 December 2005 in Italian PDF purchased from Italian C C I A A a b c ACF Fiorentina S p A bilancio financial report and accounts on 31 December 2006 in Italian PDF purchased from Italian C C I A A a b ACF Fiorentina S p A bilancio financial report and accounts on 31 December 2007 in Italian PDF purchased from Italian C C I A A a b ACF Fiorentina S p A bilancio financial report and accounts on 31 December 2008 in Italian PDF purchased from Italian C C I A A a b ACF Fiorentina S p A bilancio financial report and accounts on 31 December 2009 in Italian PDF purchased from Italian C C I A A a b ACF Fiorentina S p A bilancio financial report and accounts on 31 December 2010 in Italian PDF purchased from Italian C C I A A Bilancio Fiorentina 2010 in perdita nonostante la cessione del ramo commerciale in Italian ju29ro com 6 September 2011 Retrieved 4 March 2012 Marotta Luca 7 June 2012 Bilancio Fiorentina 2011 perdita da rendimento sportivo in Italian Ju29ro com Retrieved 13 June 2012 a b ACF Fiorentina S p A bilancio financial report and accounts on 31 December 2011 in Italian PDF purchased from Italian C C I A A a b ACF Fiorentina S p A bilancio financial report and accounts on 31 December 2012 in Italian PDF purchased from Italian C C I A A Marotta Luca 16 July 2013 Bilancio Fiorentina 2012 in utile grazie a Nastasic in Italian Retrieved 19 January 2016 a b ACF Fiorentina S p A bilancio financial report and accounts on 31 December 2013 in Italian PDF purchased from Italian C C I A A Marotta Luca 23 July 2014 Bilancio Fiorentina 2013 secondo utile consecutivo con plusvalenze in Italian Retrieved 19 January 2016 a b c ACF Fiorentina S p A bilancio financial report and accounts on 31 December 2014 in Italian PDF purchased from Italian C C I A A Fiorentina joins club of teams forced to embrace austerity il sole 24 ore 17 September 2015 Retrieved 19 January 2016 Marotta Luca 18 July 2015 Bilancio Fiorentina 2014 37 milioni di perdita e l obiettivo imperativo di Della Valle in Italian Retrieved 19 January 2016 Financial fair play all you need to know UEFA 30 June 2015 Retrieved 19 January 2016 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to ACF Fiorentina Official website Italian and English Team page at Goal com Team page at ESPN Soccernet Team Page at Football Lineups com Artemio Franchi Stadium at Stadium Journey Fiorentina Supporters I poeti della curva Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title ACF Fiorentina amp oldid 1157716396, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.