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FC Südtirol

Fußball Club Südtirol is an Italian association football club, based in the city of Bolzano, in the autonomous province of South Tyrol.[1][2] The club was formerly known as its bilingual name F.C. Südtirol – Alto Adige.[3] They played for the first time in their history in Serie B during the 2022–23 season after having been crowned Serie C champions in the 2021–22 campaign.

Südtirol
Full nameFußball Club Südtirol s.r.l.
Nickname(s)(in Italian and German)
Biancorossi / Weiß-Rote (Whitereds)
Tirolesi / Tiroler (Tyroleans)
Altoatesini, Sudtirolesi / Südtiroler (South Tyroleans)
Short nameFCS
Founded1974 (as SV Milland Fussball)
GroundStadio Druso,
Bolzano, Italy
Capacity5,500
ChairmanGerhard Comper
ManagerFederico Valente
LeagueSerie B
2022–23Serie B, 6th of 20
WebsiteClub website
Current season

History edit

In the early ‘90s came the idea to bring professional football back to South Tyrol, because since the ‘80s with FC Bolzano, no South Tyrolean team played in a professional league. Negotiations for the takeover of FC Bolzano, which was in financial difficulties, failed. A South Tyrolean entrepreneurial group then took over SV Milland, founded in 1974 and based in a district of Brixen, which played before the acquisition in the season 1994/95 in the regional Eccellenza, but was relegated after that season into the Promozione.

1995-2000: In the amateur leagues edit

The team was renamed FC Südtirol–Alto Adige in 1995; Alto Adige is the Italian name of the province while Südtirol is its German indigenous name. The club started its first season in 1995 in the regional Promozione (then still the seventh-highest league in Italy). Immediate promotion to the Eccellenza was achieved via a first place finish. From the 1997/98 season, the club played in the national league Serie D (V). Each season, the FC Südtirol was able to improve. In 2000, then under coach Giuseppe Sannino, it was promoted to Serie C2 (IV), the lowest professional league.[4]

2000–2010: FC Südtirol in Serie C2 (IV) edit

In 2000, the company incorporated as Fußballclub Südtirol S.r.l., thus becoming F.C. Südtirol and relocating to Bolzano[5][non-primary source needed] (though it was legally based in Brixen until 2011[1]). The club was able to establish itself quickly in the professional league. The aim of the club was to achieve promotion into Serie C1 as soon as possible. The team failed in the following seasons each time in the play-offs. FC Südtirol got into financial difficulties and then focused more on youth work.
Just before the end of the season 2008/09, youth coach Alfredo Sebastiani took over the first team. With him, the club avoided relegation in the play-outs against Valenzana Calcio.[6] Under Sebastiani, the team in 2009/10 reached for the first time promotion to Serie C1 (III), by finishing the season in first place.[7]

2010 to today: from Serie C to the second division edit

In the 2010–11 Lega Pro Prima Divisione season, Südtirol was relegated to Lega Pro Seconda Divisione after the relegation "play-out",[8] but on 4 August 2011 was readmitted to Lega Pro Prima Divisione to fill vacancies.[9]

In the next season, the club hired Giovanni Stroppa, who was at that time youth coach of Milan. The team was able to establish itself in the third tier and narrowly missed the promotion play-offs. With good performances, players like Manuel Fischnaller and Alessandro Iacobucci moved to the Serie B.[10] After the season Stroppa became Coach of the Serie A club Pescara.[11]

In the 2012–13 Lega Pro Prima Divisione season, the team was coached by Stefano Vecchi. With him the team was able to reach the promotion playoffs of the Italian third tier for the first time in club history. In the play-off semi-final the team was eliminated by Carpi, which eventually won promotion. In the following season, Vecchi was hired by Carpi.[12]

The 2013–14 season started with Lorenzo D'Anna as coach, previously youth coach of Chievo. Under him, the team could score only five points in the first five matches, which was not enough for the promotion ambitions of the club.[13] They changed coaches and hired Claudio Rastelli. During the championship, the team was able to prevail better and in the end reached third place in the table. That was the best result of the club's history and the repeated achievement of the play-offs. In the quarterfinals, the team prevailed against Como on penalties. In the semi-final, Cremonese was defeated over two legs. The final round for promotion to Serie B was lost against Pro Vercelli.[14]

Südtirol's 2021–22 season turned out to be the most successful in club history, as they won the title race on the final matchday, with a five-point advantage to runners-up Padova, and also reached the 2021–22 Coppa Italia Serie C final, losing on aggregate to Padova. Therefore they acquired their place in the Serie B for the 2022–23 season, which was to be both Südtirol's first time in the league, as well as the very first time a club from Südtirol/Alto Adige qualified for a spot in the Italian second division.[15]

The 2022-23 season turned out to be an even bigger success for Südtirol. While losing their first three league matches and suffering an embarrassing early knockout from the Coppa Italia on home turf against Serie C opponent Feralpisalò, the team quickly picked up the pace of the league and were in constant contention for promotion to Serie A, either directly or via play-offs. A late campaign blow to their form meant that Südtirol clinched 6th place in the league with 58 points, which meant they qualified to the promotion play-off preliminary round, coming 15 points short of directly promoted Genoa's 73 points in second place, and only two points short of play-off semi-final qualifiers Parma in fourth place.

The preliminary play-off round saw Südtirol hosting Reggina in a one-match showdown, where Pierpaolo Bisoli's squad managed to clinch a nail-biting 1-0 victory with a late Daniele Casiraghi goal in the 89th minute to advance into the semi-finals where they met 3rd place finishers Bari in a two-match pairing. On home turf, Südtirol managed to win with an even more late goal by Matteo Rover in the 90+2nd minute to put Südtirol in the lead. The second leg saw Südtirol being one man up in the San Nicola after a first half red card on behalf of Bari, but a 70th minute Leonardo Benedetti goal meant that Bari equalized the aggregate score, which meant that Südtirol got eliminated as the higher regular season finish is used as a tiebreaker.

Colors and badge edit

Colors edit

The team's colors are white and red. With these colors, the club shows its roots in the Province of South Tyrol and the city of Bolzano, which both have the colors of white and red in their traditional coats of arms and flags. Historically, the home jerseys of the club are white. Most of the time the team plays away matches in red jerseys, but from time to time they can be black as well.

Badge edit

The current logo of the association is a slightly different form of the badge used since the club was founded in 1995 to 2016. Among other things, the lettering "Alto Adige" was removed.
The logo of the association is a circular badge with a white-red diamond pattern and a football inside. The logo is circled with the words "FC Südtirol" (German term for "FC South Tyrol") and "Bolzano - Bozen". Compared to the previous badge, the diamond pattern was renewed and the red color darkened slightly.[16]

Club facilities edit

Stadium edit

The home games of FC Südtirol are played in the Drusus stadium in Bolzano, named after Nero Drusus, a Roman general. Built in 1936 as a multi-sport facility and wholly renovated between 2019 and 2021 as a pure football ground,[17] the Drusus stadium has a main and opposite tribune and it can accommodate up to 5,500 spectators.[18]

FCS Center edit

 
The FCS Center in Eppan, near Bolzano.

The FCS Center is the training center of the team in Eppan, near Bolzano. In 2015, the training areas were completed and include two natural turf pitches, two artificial turf pitches and another small artificial turf pitch. The service center was opened in 2018 and offers the club changing rooms, offices, a gym with a medical department, meeting rooms, a restaurant and a fan shop. In the training center also the championship games of the national youth teams of FC Südtirol are held.[19]
In 2010, the training center was the training camp of the Germany national football team for the preparation of the World Cup in South Africa. In 2018, the Germany national team again used the center for the preparation of the World Cup in Russia.[20]

Current squad edit

As of 1 February 2024

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

No. Pos. Nation Player
1 GK   ITA Giacomo Poluzzi
2 DF   ITA Filippo Scaglia
3 DF   ITA Andrea Cagnano
4 MF   ITA Tommaso Arrigoni (on loan from Como)
5 DF   FRA Kevin Vinetot
8 MF   ITA Alessandro Mallamo (on loan from Atalanta)
9 FW   ITA Emanuele Pecorino (on loan from Juventus)
11 MF   ITA Riccardo Ciervo (on loan from Sassuolo)
12 GK   ITA Giacomo Drago
15 MF   ITA Jérémie Broh (on loan from Palermo)
17 MF   ITA Daniele Casiraghi
18 FW   ITA Matteo Rover
21 MF   ITA Fabian Tait
22 GK   ITA Stefan Alex Dregan
No. Pos. Nation Player
23 FW   ITA Nicola Rauti (on loan from Torino)
24 DF   ITA Simone Davì
26 FW   ITA Andrea Cisco
27 MF   SVN Jasmin Kurtić
28 DF   ITA Raphael Kofler
30 DF   ITA Andrea Giorgini
33 FW   ALB Silvio Merkaj
42 MF   BEL Daouda Peeters (on loan from Juventus)
55 DF   ITA Andrea Masiello
77 MF   ITA Lorenzo Lonardi
79 MF   ITA Salvatore Molina
90 FW   ITA Raphael Odogwu
94 DF   MAR Hamza El Kaouakibi (on loan from Benevento)

Out on loan edit

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 Giuseppe Cuomo (at Vicenza until 30 June 2024)
DF   ITA Marco Curto (at Como until 30 June 2024)
DF   ITA Luca Ghiringhelli (at SPAL until 30 June 2024)
DF   ITA Jonas Heinz (at Fermana until 30 June 2024)
No. Pos. Nation Player
DF   ALB Cristian Shiba (at Recanatese until 30 June 2024)
DF   ITA Alessandro Vimercati (at Renate until 30 June 2024)
MF   ITA Francesco Di Tacchio (at Ascoli until 30 June 2024, on loan from Ternana)
MF   GHA Shaka Mawuli (at Arezzo until 30 June 2024)

Honours edit

Notable players edit

 
Omar El Kaddouri

The following list includes players who played or have played more than 10 matches in either Serie A or Serie B.

Notable managers edit

The following list includes managers who coached or have coached teams in the Serie A or Serie B.

References edit

  1. ^ a b . SportNews.bz. 17 February 2011. Archived from the original on 19 March 2012. Retrieved 30 July 2011.
  2. ^ "L'FCS ha ottenuto la cittadinanza bolzanina!" (in Italian). F.C. Südtirol. Retrieved 17 March 2018.
  3. ^ Willis, Craig; Hughes, Will; Bober, Sergiusz. "ECMI Minorities Blog. National and Linguistic Minorities in the Context of Professional Football across Europe: Five Examples from Kin-State Situations". ECMI. Retrieved 21 June 2023.
  4. ^ "Geschichte". FC Südtirol. Retrieved 17 March 2018.
  5. ^ "Storia". F.C. Südtirol. Retrieved 30 July 2011.
  6. ^ "FC Südtirol bezwingt Valenzana 2:0 und bleibt in der Lega Pro". FC Südtirol. Retrieved 17 March 2018.
  7. ^ "Der FC Südtirol steigt in die 1. Division auf". FC Südtirol. Retrieved 17 March 2018.
  8. ^ . Il Pallonaro. 6 June 2011. Archived from the original on 14 August 2011. Retrieved 30 July 2011.
  9. ^ "Calcio, Lega Pro; Ripescaggi: 5 in prima divisione e rimnini in seconda". La Repubblica (in Italian).
  10. ^ "Manuel Fischnaller wechselt zu Reggina Calcio" (Press release). F.C. Südtirol. Retrieved 17 March 2018.
  11. ^ "Conosciamo meglio Giovanni Stroppa". forzapescara.com. Retrieved 17 March 2018.
  12. ^ "Ende des Rätselratens: Stefano Vecchi verlässt den FC Südtirol" (Press release). F.C. Südtirol. Retrieved 10 March 2018.
  13. ^ "LORENZO D'ANNA ALS CHEFTRAINER ENTLASSEN" (Press release) (in Italian). F.C. Südtirol. Retrieved 10 March 2018.
  14. ^ "Das Wunder von Vercelli bleibt aus:FCS verpasst den Aufstieg". sportnews.bz. Retrieved 10 March 2018.
  15. ^ "La favola del Südtirol: batte la Triestina e vola in Serie B". La Gazzetta dello Sport (in Italian). Retrieved 24 April 2022.
  16. ^ "NEUES LOGO: EINE ERKLÄRUNG". FC Südtirol. Retrieved 9 March 2018.
  17. ^ "gmp Erweiterung Drusus-Stadion Bozen". floornature.de. Retrieved 10 March 2018.
  18. ^ "TECHNISCHE DATEN". FC Südtirol. Retrieved 10 March 2018.
  19. ^ "FCS Trainingszentrum". FC Südtirol. Retrieved 10 March 2018.
  20. ^ "WM 2018: TRAININGSLAGER WIEDER IN SÜDTIROL". Retrieved 10 March 2018.

External links edit

  • Official website (in Italian and German)

südtirol, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citat. This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources FC Sudtirol news newspapers books scholar JSTOR March 2018 Learn how and when to remove this message This article needs to be updated Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information May 2023 Learn how and when to remove this message Fussball Club Sudtirol is an Italian association football club based in the city of Bolzano in the autonomous province of South Tyrol 1 2 The club was formerly known as its bilingual name F C Sudtirol Alto Adige 3 They played for the first time in their history in Serie B during the 2022 23 season after having been crowned Serie C champions in the 2021 22 campaign SudtirolFull nameFussball Club Sudtirol s r l Nickname s in Italian and German Biancorossi Weiss Rote Whitereds Tirolesi Tiroler Tyroleans Altoatesini Sudtirolesi Sudtiroler South Tyroleans Short nameFCSFounded1974 as SV Milland Fussball GroundStadio Druso Bolzano ItalyCapacity5 500ChairmanGerhard ComperManagerFederico ValenteLeagueSerie B2022 23Serie B 6th of 20WebsiteClub websiteHome coloursAway coloursCurrent season Contents 1 History 1 1 1995 2000 In the amateur leagues 1 2 2000 2010 FC Sudtirol in Serie C2 IV 1 3 2010 to today from Serie C to the second division 2 Colors and badge 2 1 Colors 2 2 Badge 3 Club facilities 3 1 Stadium 3 2 FCS Center 4 Current squad 4 1 Out on loan 5 Honours 6 Notable players 7 Notable managers 8 References 9 External linksHistory editIn the early 90s came the idea to bring professional football back to South Tyrol because since the 80s with FC Bolzano no South Tyrolean team played in a professional league Negotiations for the takeover of FC Bolzano which was in financial difficulties failed A South Tyrolean entrepreneurial group then took over SV Milland founded in 1974 and based in a district of Brixen which played before the acquisition in the season 1994 95 in the regional Eccellenza but was relegated after that season into the Promozione 1995 2000 In the amateur leagues edit The team was renamed FC Sudtirol Alto Adige in 1995 Alto Adige is the Italian name of the province while Sudtirol is its German indigenous name The club started its first season in 1995 in the regional Promozione then still the seventh highest league in Italy Immediate promotion to the Eccellenza was achieved via a first place finish From the 1997 98 season the club played in the national league Serie D V Each season the FC Sudtirol was able to improve In 2000 then under coach Giuseppe Sannino it was promoted to Serie C2 IV the lowest professional league 4 2000 2010 FC Sudtirol in Serie C2 IV edit In 2000 the company incorporated as Fussballclub Sudtirol S r l thus becoming F C Sudtirol and relocating to Bolzano 5 non primary source needed though it was legally based in Brixen until 2011 1 The club was able to establish itself quickly in the professional league The aim of the club was to achieve promotion into Serie C1 as soon as possible The team failed in the following seasons each time in the play offs FC Sudtirol got into financial difficulties and then focused more on youth work Just before the end of the season 2008 09 youth coach Alfredo Sebastiani took over the first team With him the club avoided relegation in the play outs against Valenzana Calcio 6 Under Sebastiani the team in 2009 10 reached for the first time promotion to Serie C1 III by finishing the season in first place 7 2010 to today from Serie C to the second division edit In the 2010 11 Lega Pro Prima Divisione season Sudtirol was relegated to Lega Pro Seconda Divisione after the relegation play out 8 but on 4 August 2011 was readmitted to Lega Pro Prima Divisione to fill vacancies 9 In the next season the club hired Giovanni Stroppa who was at that time youth coach of Milan The team was able to establish itself in the third tier and narrowly missed the promotion play offs With good performances players like Manuel Fischnaller and Alessandro Iacobucci moved to the Serie B 10 After the season Stroppa became Coach of the Serie A club Pescara 11 In the 2012 13 Lega Pro Prima Divisione season the team was coached by Stefano Vecchi With him the team was able to reach the promotion playoffs of the Italian third tier for the first time in club history In the play off semi final the team was eliminated by Carpi which eventually won promotion In the following season Vecchi was hired by Carpi 12 The 2013 14 season started with Lorenzo D Anna as coach previously youth coach of Chievo Under him the team could score only five points in the first five matches which was not enough for the promotion ambitions of the club 13 They changed coaches and hired Claudio Rastelli During the championship the team was able to prevail better and in the end reached third place in the table That was the best result of the club s history and the repeated achievement of the play offs In the quarterfinals the team prevailed against Como on penalties In the semi final Cremonese was defeated over two legs The final round for promotion to Serie B was lost against Pro Vercelli 14 Sudtirol s 2021 22 season turned out to be the most successful in club history as they won the title race on the final matchday with a five point advantage to runners up Padova and also reached the 2021 22 Coppa Italia Serie C final losing on aggregate to Padova Therefore they acquired their place in the Serie B for the 2022 23 season which was to be both Sudtirol s first time in the league as well as the very first time a club from Sudtirol Alto Adige qualified for a spot in the Italian second division 15 The 2022 23 season turned out to be an even bigger success for Sudtirol While losing their first three league matches and suffering an embarrassing early knockout from the Coppa Italia on home turf against Serie C opponent Feralpisalo the team quickly picked up the pace of the league and were in constant contention for promotion to Serie A either directly or via play offs A late campaign blow to their form meant that Sudtirol clinched 6th place in the league with 58 points which meant they qualified to the promotion play off preliminary round coming 15 points short of directly promoted Genoa s 73 points in second place and only two points short of play off semi final qualifiers Parma in fourth place The preliminary play off round saw Sudtirol hosting Reggina in a one match showdown where Pierpaolo Bisoli s squad managed to clinch a nail biting 1 0 victory with a late Daniele Casiraghi goal in the 89th minute to advance into the semi finals where they met 3rd place finishers Bari in a two match pairing On home turf Sudtirol managed to win with an even more late goal by Matteo Rover in the 90 2nd minute to put Sudtirol in the lead The second leg saw Sudtirol being one man up in the San Nicola after a first half red card on behalf of Bari but a 70th minute Leonardo Benedetti goal meant that Bari equalized the aggregate score which meant that Sudtirol got eliminated as the higher regular season finish is used as a tiebreaker Colors and badge editColors edit The team s colors are white and red With these colors the club shows its roots in the Province of South Tyrol and the city of Bolzano which both have the colors of white and red in their traditional coats of arms and flags Historically the home jerseys of the club are white Most of the time the team plays away matches in red jerseys but from time to time they can be black as well Badge edit The current logo of the association is a slightly different form of the badge used since the club was founded in 1995 to 2016 Among other things the lettering Alto Adige was removed The logo of the association is a circular badge with a white red diamond pattern and a football inside The logo is circled with the words FC Sudtirol German term for FC South Tyrol and Bolzano Bozen Compared to the previous badge the diamond pattern was renewed and the red color darkened slightly 16 Club facilities editStadium edit The home games of FC Sudtirol are played in the Drusus stadium in Bolzano named after Nero Drusus a Roman general Built in 1936 as a multi sport facility and wholly renovated between 2019 and 2021 as a pure football ground 17 the Drusus stadium has a main and opposite tribune and it can accommodate up to 5 500 spectators 18 nbsp The Drusus stadium in Bolzano before the renovation nbsp and after the renovation the athletics track has been removed FCS Center edit nbsp The FCS Center in Eppan near Bolzano The FCS Center is the training center of the team in Eppan near Bolzano In 2015 the training areas were completed and include two natural turf pitches two artificial turf pitches and another small artificial turf pitch The service center was opened in 2018 and offers the club changing rooms offices a gym with a medical department meeting rooms a restaurant and a fan shop In the training center also the championship games of the national youth teams of FC Sudtirol are held 19 In 2010 the training center was the training camp of the Germany national football team for the preparation of the World Cup in South Africa In 2018 the Germany national team again used the center for the preparation of the World Cup in Russia 20 Current squad editAs of 1 February 2024 Note Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules Players may hold more than one non FIFA nationality No Pos Nation Player 1 GK nbsp ITA Giacomo Poluzzi 2 DF nbsp ITA Filippo Scaglia 3 DF nbsp ITA Andrea Cagnano 4 MF nbsp ITA Tommaso Arrigoni on loan from Como 5 DF nbsp FRA Kevin Vinetot 8 MF nbsp ITA Alessandro Mallamo on loan from Atalanta 9 FW nbsp ITA Emanuele Pecorino on loan from Juventus 11 MF nbsp ITA Riccardo Ciervo on loan from Sassuolo 12 GK nbsp ITA Giacomo Drago 15 MF nbsp ITA Jeremie Broh on loan from Palermo 17 MF nbsp ITA Daniele Casiraghi 18 FW nbsp ITA Matteo Rover 21 MF nbsp ITA Fabian Tait 22 GK nbsp ITA Stefan Alex Dregan No Pos Nation Player 23 FW nbsp ITA Nicola Rauti on loan from Torino 24 DF nbsp ITA Simone Davi 26 FW nbsp ITA Andrea Cisco 27 MF nbsp SVN Jasmin Kurtic 28 DF nbsp ITA Raphael Kofler 30 DF nbsp ITA Andrea Giorgini 33 FW nbsp ALB Silvio Merkaj 42 MF nbsp BEL Daouda Peeters on loan from Juventus 55 DF nbsp ITA Andrea Masiello 77 MF nbsp ITA Lorenzo Lonardi 79 MF nbsp ITA Salvatore Molina 90 FW nbsp ITA Raphael Odogwu 94 DF nbsp MAR Hamza El Kaouakibi on loan from Benevento Out on loan edit 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 nbsp ITA Giuseppe Cuomo at Vicenza until 30 June 2024 DF nbsp ITA Marco Curto at Como until 30 June 2024 DF nbsp ITA Luca Ghiringhelli at SPAL until 30 June 2024 DF nbsp ITA Jonas Heinz at Fermana until 30 June 2024 No Pos Nation Player DF nbsp ALB Cristian Shiba at Recanatese until 30 June 2024 DF nbsp ITA Alessandro Vimercati at Renate until 30 June 2024 MF nbsp ITA Francesco Di Tacchio at Ascoli until 30 June 2024 on loan from Ternana MF nbsp GHA Shaka Mawuli at Arezzo until 30 June 2024 Honours editSerie C Winner 2021 22 Serie C2 Winner 2009 10Notable players edit nbsp Omar El Kaddouri This section needs additional citations for verification Relevant discussion may be found on the talk page Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed November 2017 Learn how and when to remove this message Main category FC Sudtirol players The following list includes players who played or have played more than 10 matches in either Serie A or Serie B nbsp Michael Agazzi nbsp Dario Bova nbsp Massimiliano Caputo nbsp Michael Cia nbsp Carlo Gervasoni nbsp Andrea Guerra nbsp Marco Mallus nbsp Manuel Mancini nbsp Luca Mazzitelli nbsp Marco Moro nbsp Simone Motta nbsp Alessandro Noselli nbsp Manuel Scavone nbsp Andrea Seculin nbsp Alessio Sestu nbsp Giampietro Zecchin nbsp Arturo Lupoli nbsp Omar El Kaddouri nbsp Nicolas Corvetto This list is incomplete you can help by adding missing items November 2017 Notable managers editThis section needs additional citations for verification Relevant discussion may be found on the talk page Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed November 2017 Learn how and when to remove this message Main category FC Sudtirol managers The following list includes managers who coached or have coached teams in the Serie A or Serie B nbsp Giovanni Stroppa nbsp Giuseppe Sannino nbsp Attilio Tesser nbsp Stefano Vecchi nbsp Marco Baroni This list is incomplete you can help by adding missing items November 2017 References edit a b L FC Sudtirol e un club bolzanino SportNews bz 17 February 2011 Archived from the original on 19 March 2012 Retrieved 30 July 2011 L FCS ha ottenuto la cittadinanza bolzanina in Italian F C Sudtirol Retrieved 17 March 2018 Willis Craig Hughes Will Bober Sergiusz ECMI Minorities Blog National and Linguistic Minorities in the Context of Professional Football across Europe Five Examples from Kin State Situations ECMI Retrieved 21 June 2023 Geschichte FC Sudtirol Retrieved 17 March 2018 Storia F C Sudtirol Retrieved 30 July 2011 FC Sudtirol bezwingt Valenzana 2 0 und bleibt in der Lega Pro FC Sudtirol Retrieved 17 March 2018 Der FC Sudtirol steigt in die 1 Division auf FC Sudtirol Retrieved 17 March 2018 Il portiere perde la testa retrocede il Sudtirol Video Il Pallonaro 6 June 2011 Archived from the original on 14 August 2011 Retrieved 30 July 2011 Calcio Lega Pro Ripescaggi 5 in prima divisione e rimnini in seconda La Repubblica in Italian Manuel Fischnaller wechselt zu Reggina Calcio Press release F C Sudtirol Retrieved 17 March 2018 Conosciamo meglio Giovanni Stroppa forzapescara com Retrieved 17 March 2018 Ende des Ratselratens Stefano Vecchi verlasst den FC Sudtirol Press release F C Sudtirol Retrieved 10 March 2018 LORENZO D ANNA ALS CHEFTRAINER ENTLASSEN Press release in Italian F C Sudtirol Retrieved 10 March 2018 Das Wunder von Vercelli bleibt aus FCS verpasst den Aufstieg sportnews bz Retrieved 10 March 2018 La favola del Sudtirol batte la Triestina e vola in Serie B La Gazzetta dello Sport in Italian Retrieved 24 April 2022 NEUES LOGO EINE ERKLARUNG FC Sudtirol Retrieved 9 March 2018 gmp Erweiterung Drusus Stadion Bozen floornature de Retrieved 10 March 2018 TECHNISCHE DATEN FC Sudtirol Retrieved 10 March 2018 FCS Trainingszentrum FC Sudtirol Retrieved 10 March 2018 WM 2018 TRAININGSLAGER WIEDER IN SUDTIROL Retrieved 10 March 2018 External links editOfficial website in Italian and German Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title FC Sudtirol amp oldid 1215866423, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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