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Palermo F.C.

Palermo Football Club, more simply known as Palermo F.C. or Palermo (Italian pronunciation: [paˈlɛrmo] (listen); Sicilian: Paliemmu, locally [paˈlɛmmʊ]), is an Italian football club based in the Sicilian city of Palermo, conventionally founded for the first time on 1 November 1900.

Palermo
Full namePalermo Football Club
Nickname(s)I Rosanero (The Pink and Blacks)
Le Aquile (The Eagles)
Founded1 November 1900; 122 years ago (1900-11-01) (Anglo Palermitan Athletic and Football Club)
GroundStadio Renzo Barbera
Capacity36,365[1]
OwnerCity Football Group (80%)
Hera Hora S.r.l. (20%)
ChairmanDario Mirri
Head coachEugenio Corini
LeagueSerie B
2021–22Serie C Group C, 3rd of 19 (promoted via play-offs)
WebsiteClub website
Current season
Clubs owned by CFG
(listed in order of acquisition/foundation)
Bold indicates the club was founded by CFG.
* indicates the club was acquired by CFG.
§ indicates the club is co-owned.
2008Manchester City F.C.*
2009–2012
2013New York City FC§
2014Melbourne City FC*
Yokohama F. Marinos*§
2015–2016
2017Montevideo City Torque*
Girona FC*§
2018
2019Sichuan Jiuniu F.C.*§
Mumbai City FC*§
2020Lommel S.K.*
ES Troyes AC*
2021
2022Palermo F.C.*§

Among the club’s accomplishments are a Coppa Italia Serie C, won in the 1992–93, and five Serie B league titles. It also appeared in three Italian Cup finals: in 1973-74, in 1978-79 and in 2010-11.

The club has made five appearances in European competitions, all in the UEFA Cup/Europa League.

They are currently playing in Serie B, after having won the 2021–22 Serie C promotion playoffs.

History

 
The performance of Palermo in the Italian football league structure since the first season of a unified Serie A (1929/30).

Early history (1898–1947)

 
Ancient Palermo FBC logo
 
Historical first Anglo-Palermitan Athletic & Football Club line-up, 1900

There is some debate and uncertainty about the exact date the club was founded. Some authorities believe that it may have been founded as early as 1898 due to the existence of papers addressed to Joseph Whitaker, English ornithologist in Palermo and originally believed to be first club president, about a Palermo football team founded in the month of April of that year.[2] Conversely, another source cites that in April 1897, the future founders of Palemo Calcio founded the association Sport Club.[3] The most common and officially stated foundation date is November 1, 1900,[4] as the Anglo Palermitan Athletic and Football Club. The club is thought to have been founded by Ignazio Majo Pagano, a young Palermitan colleague of Whitaker who had discovered football while at college in London in the UK, where the modern game of Association Football originated. The initial staff comprised three Englishmen and nine natives of Palermo,[5] with Whitaker as honorary chairman, Edward De Garston as inaugural president and with red and blue as the original team colours. The first recorded football match, played by the team on December 30, 1900, ended in a 5–0 defeat to an unidentified amateur English team. The club’s first official match, played on April 18, 1901 against Messina Football Club, ended in a 3–2 victory for the Palermitan side.[6]

In 1907, the club changed its name to Palermo Foot-Ball Club, and the team colours were changed to the current pink and black.[7] From 1908 until Italy’s entry in World War I in 1915, Palermo was featured in the Lipton Challenge Cup, organised by Scottish businessman Sir Thomas Lipton. The competition saw them face off against Naples FBC; Palermo won the competition three times, including a 6–0 victory in 1912.[8]

After a gap during the First World War, the club was refounded in 1919 as Unione Sportiva Palermo,[9] by a committee of young university students and sportsmen. During the early 1920s, the club mainly competed in the Campionato Lega Sud, a football league in Southern Italy, reaching the semi-finals in 1924 before being knocked out by Audace Taranto, Alba Roma and Internaples. The club was dissolved in 1927 due to financial problems, but was reformed one year later following a merger with Vigor Palermo under the name Palermo FootBall Club. Originally admitted to Prima Divisione (First Division), the equivalent of today's Serie C1,[10][11] the team was promoted to Serie B in 1930 and finally reached Serie A in 1932. From its debut season in Italy's top division, Palermo relocated to a new home, the Stadio Littorio (Lictorian Stadium) in the Favorita neighbourhood, today known as Stadio Renzo Barbera. The club played in Serie A until 1936, when they were relegated to Serie B and first played Catania in the Sicilian derby.[12]

In 1936, Palermo was forced by the fascist regime to change its colours to yellow and red, after the official colours of the local municipality.[13] Meanwhile, economic difficulties arose, and in 1940 the club was expelled by the Italian Football Federation because of financial problems.[13] A merger with Unione Sportiva Juventina Palermo brought the foundation of Unione Sportiva Palermo-Juventina, which joined Serie C in 1941 and Serie B in 1942.[14]

 
Palermo goalscorer, Santiago Vernazza

The club could not finish the 1942–43 season due to the outbreak of World War II. At the same time the pink-and-black colors were chosen because Sicily became a "war zone". After the conflict, the club changed its name to US Palermo.

Post-war years (1947–2002)

After World War II, the team returned to Serie A by winning the Serie B championship of 1947–48. The new Palermo squad featured players such as Czechoslovakian legend Čestmír Vycpálek who signed from Juventus alongside Conti, Carmelo Di Bella and Pavesi.[13] Palermo played Serie A until they were relegated in 1954.[13][15] Massive changes in the board, as well as the manager's job and the squad, proved successful and the club returned to Serie A in 1956. Palermo became a "yo-yo club", bouncing up and down between the top two Italian leagues. Several stars played for Palermo during this period, such as Argentine striker Santiago Vernazza (51 goals in 115 games with the Rosanero),[16] goalkeepers Roberto Anzolin and Carlo Mattrel, Giuseppe Furino and Franco Causio. Palermo marked its best campaign in 1961–62 season, finishing in eighth place in Serie A. In 1963, however, they were relegated to Serie B, where they played for five seasons. Palermo played again in Serie A between 1968 and 1970.

In 1970, Renzo Barbera took over the club as the new chairman. After 1973, Palermo FBC remained firmly rooted in Serie B. Despite this, Palermo reached two Italian Cup finals, both of which they narrowly lost: in 1974 to Bologna on penalty shoot-outs, and in 1979 to Juventus after extra time. Barbera left the club in 1980 and Palermo were relegated to Serie C1 four years later. The 1985–86 season, however, which ended in the summer was the last for Palermo FBC as having just saved themselves from relegation, the club was expelled by the football federation due to financial problems. In the summer of 1987, after a year without professional football in Palermo, the club was re-founded bearing a new name, and began to play in Serie C2, which it promptly won.

In the 1990s, Palermo played between Serie B and Serie C1 with a few highs, such as its 1995–96 Serie B and Coppa Italia campaign, the latter ending in the quarter-finals, and a number of lows such as the 1998 relegation to Serie C2 after defeat in the play-offs to Battipagliese, later revoked by the federation to fill a vacant league slot.[17]

In March 2000, Roma chairman Franco Sensi led a holding company to purchase Palermo and Sergio D'Antoni became the president of Palermo[18] and Palermo were promoted to Serie B one year later after a dramatic final week of the season, with Palermo coming back from behind to take first place from league-toppers Sicilian rivals Messina. The first comeback season in the Serie B, with Bortolo Mutti as head coach, was an eventless one, with Palermo ending in a mid-table placement.

The Zamparini era: back to Serie A and European years (2002–2013)

 
Palermo chairman and owner Maurizio Zamparini

In the summer of 2002, Friulian businessman and Venezia owner Maurizio Zamparini acquired the club from Franco Sensi in a €15 million bid, with the clear intention to bring Palermo back to Serie A and establish the club as a Serie A regular with aims of participations to European competitions.[19] Palermo failed in its first attempt to reach the Serie A in 2002–03 on the final week of the season, but later managed to achieve it after a hard but successful 2003–04 campaign which saw Palermo crowned as Serie B champions and promoted to Serie A after 31 years, under head coach Francesco Guidolin, who was hired in January 2004 as replacement for dismissed Silvio Baldini.

The 2004–05 season, the first in Serie A for the Palermo club since 1973, ended with an excellent sixth place, securing qualification for the 2005–06 UEFA Cup for the first time in its history. Luca Toni broke the Palermo Serie A scoring record by notching up 20 league goals. In the following season, despite an unimpressive eighth place in the Serie A table, Palermo reached the last 16 in the UEFA Cup as well as the Coppa Italia semi-finals. The club was however admitted to play UEFA Cup again due to the 2006 Calciopoli scandal, with Palermo players Andrea Barzagli, Cristian Zaccardo, Simone Barone and Fabio Grosso being crowned 2006 World Cup winners. A number of impressive signings were made to establish an ambitious team,[20] and a good beginning in the 2006–07 campaign appeared initially to confirm this. An 11-game winless streak, however, forced Palermo to fall down from third to seventh place, ending the season in fifth place and ensuring another UEFA Cup qualification. The club successively established as a force in the mid-table part of the Serie A league, also winning a Campionato Nazionale Primavera national title in 2009.[21]

The following season started with new manager Walter Zenga, whose appointment from Sicilian arch-rivals Catania was greeted with surprise and dismay from supporters of both parties;[22] Zenga's reign, however, lasted only 13 games, as he was dismissed on 23 November 2009 due to poor performances, ironically after a 1–1 home tie to Sicilian rivals and Zenga's former team, Catania,[23] with former Lazio boss Delio Rossi being appointed at his place.[24] Under the tutelage of Delio Rossi, results dramatically improved, and Palermo established a record of seven consecutive home wins, including wins against Italian giants Milan and Juventus, and emerging as serious contenders for a Champions League spot, which they ultimately lost to Sampdoria by only one point. Such season also launched new emerging stars such as midfielder Javier Pastore and goalkeeper Salvatore Sirigu, who went on to become integral part of their respective international teams.

 
Former club captain Fabrizio Miccoli

The 2010–11 season started with Delio Rossi still in charge of the club, and also marked Palermo's return into continental football in the form of the UEFA Europa League. Palermo reached their third Coppa Italia finals after defeating Milan 4–3 on aggregate on 10 May 2011, losing 3–1 to Internazionale in the final, in what is considered one of the peak moments of Zamparini's period at the club.

Zamparini's later years and Serie B return (2011–2018)

For the 2011–12 season, Delio Rossi was replaced by former Chievo boss Stefano Pioli, who was, however, sacked before the Serie A kickoff after being eliminated by Swiss minnows FC Thun in the Europa League third preliminary round; new head coach Devis Mangia, with no managerial experience other than at youth team and minor league level; despite that, Mangia turned Palermo fortunes by leading the Rosanero in fifth place thanks to an impressive string of six consecutive home wins, thus deserving a long-term deal at the club. A string of poor results, however, led Palermo to three consecutive defeats, including elimination from the Coppa Italia and a disappointing loss in the Sicilian derby, persuading Zamparini to replace Mangia with the more experienced Bortolo Mutti.[25] Palermo arrived 16th in that season.

 
Giuseppe Iachini, formerly a Palermo midfielder in the 1990s, replaced Gattuso as head coach during the 2013–14 season and led the club to a Serie B champions title and broke the highest-Serie-B-point record

For the 2012–13 season, Zamparini came with another staff revolution, appointing Giorgio Perinetti as the new director of football and Giuseppe Sannino as the manager, both coming from Siena. A complete squad restructuring, a total five managerial changes and some staff changes (including a short stint with Pietro Lo Monaco as sports director) did not help, and Palermo ended its season in 18th place, being thus relegated to Serie B after nine consecutive seasons in the top flight.

For the new Serie B campaign, Zamparini appointed former Milan and Italy international star Gennaro Gattuso as the new manager,[26] despite him having little prior managerial experience; he was sacked in September 2013, the 28th sacked manager in 11 years. Fortune was reversed rather rapidly, however, as Palermo regained promotion back to Serie A for the 2014–15 season under the guidance of new head coach Giuseppe Iachini, with the Rosanero completing a record-breaking Serie B season with 86 points, one more than previous record holders Juventus, Chievo and Sassuolo (all of them in the 22-team Serie B format).

With Iachini confirmed in charge, Palermo played a rather successful 2014–15 Serie A season, narrowly missing on a UEFA Europa League spot also thanks to the all-Argentine striking force of Paulo Dybala and Franco Vázquez.

In 2015–16 season, Palermo started their season without Dybala after the youngster moved to Juventus; the Rosanero therefore relied on senior striker Alberto Gilardino to play as a partner of Vázquez. Another long list of managerial changes during the season (seven in total, with Davide Ballardini as the final one) marked a very troublesome season, during which Palermo escaped relegation on the last day of the league with the necessary win over Hellas Verona 3–2, securing 16th place.[27]

For the 2016–17 season, Zamparini re-appointed Rino Foschi as director of football; he however resigned after just a month in charge and was replaced by former Trapani director Daniele Faggiano. Most senior players such as Gilardino, Sorrentino, Vázquez and Maresca were sold and mostly replaced with Alessandro Diamanti plus a number of young and quasi-unknown foreign players. Ballardini, who was originally confirmed as head coach, left his position after a draw at Inter Milan at the second matchday of the season and was replaced with Serie A newbie Roberto De Zerbi[28] who ended his stay after seven league losses in a row, with former club captain Eugenio Corini taking over.[29] More managerial and staff changes followed with little luck and, on 27 February 2017, Zamparini stepped down as chairman of Palermo after 15 years in charge, announcing he had agreed in principle to sell his controlling stake to an unspecified Anglo-American fund,[30] led by Italian-American Paul Baccaglini who was named new club president on 6 March.[31]

Palermo ended the season in 19th place, being relegated to Serie B. The takeover, originally scheduled to be finalized by 30 April 2017 and then delayed by 30 June, eventually collapsed after Zamparini, who in the meantime had appointed Bruno Tedino as new head coach for the 2017–18 Serie B campaign, rejected the final offer he received from Baccaglini.[32] On 4 July 2017, Baccaglini resigned as Palermo chairman, falling back into the hands of Zamparini, after the necessary funds were not in place.[33]

Palermo's campaign in the 2017–18 Serie B aimed for an immediate return to the top flight, with Bruno Tedino as head coach and Fabio Lupo as director of football. Initially, the team's form was good and the Rosanero ended the first half of the season in first place; however, a string of negative results led to the appointment of new manager Roberto Stellone, who was ultimately unable to win promotion, ending the regular season in fourth place and eventually losing the playoff finals to Frosinone.

New ownerships, financial issues and Serie B exclusion (2018–2019)

For the 2018–19 Serie B season, Palermo (with Rino Foschi back for a third time as sporting director) found themselves having to sell a number of players for financial reasons. On 22 November 2018, the club formally confirmed a takeover agreement between Zamparini and an undisclosed investor,[34][35] later confirmed to be the London based Sport Capital Group Investments Ltd., with English businessman Clive Richardson, head of the new group, being named as new club chairman.[36] Following a January 2019 transfer window with no signings at all and serious tensions within the board, Clive Richardson (chairman) and John Treacy (director) both resigned from the club with immediate effect on 4 February 2019, citing that the full nature of the serious financial situation at the club had not been fully disclosed to them at the time of their purchase.[37] Days later, the club was acquired for a nominal fee by Daniela De Angeli (former managing director from the Zamparini days) and Rino Foschi (appointed as chairman),[38][39] only for them to sell it again to hotel and tourism company Arkus Network S.r.l. later in May.[40][41][42][43] The new owner, Sporting Network S.r.l., subscribed a €5 million capital increase to the club.[43]

At the end of the 2018–19 Serie B, Palermo finished in third place with 63 points but was demoted by FIGC to last place in Serie B on 13 May due to serious financial irregularities, which meant relegation to Serie C for the following season.[44][45] The club appealed to FIGC against this ruling and were successful in having the penalty revised; rather than automatic demotion, the club was merely docked 20 points instead, which consequently placed them in a comfortable mid-table eleventh position.[46] However, on 24 June 2019, Palermo incorrectly submitted to FIGC their standard application for the following 2019–20 Serie B season, by failing to provide evidence of a valid insurance policy for the new season.[47] A club trading with no insurance is an extremely serious breach of Italian company law, and as such FIGC had no alternative but to formally exclude the club not only from Serie B, but indeed all professional leagues, on 12 July 2019.[48]

A fresh start, City Football Group ownership (2019–present)

On 23 July 2019, in compliance of Article 52 of N.O.I.F., Mayor of Palermo Leoluca Orlando confirmed six declarations of interests had been presented for a new phoenix club to be admitted in Serie D, the highest level of non-professional football in Italy, for the 2019–20 season.[49] The next day, Orlando announced his choice of a bid by a company named "Hera Hora srl", jointly owned by entrepreneurs Dario Mirri (a Palermo native, and Renzo Barbera's nephew) and a Sicilian-American, Tony DiPiazza.[50] Palermo completed their Serie D campaign in first place, and was awarded promotion to Serie C by the Italian Football Federation after all the amateur leagues were stopped in March 2020 due to the global COVID-19 pandemic.[51] On 16 July 2020, the club changed its name to Palermo Football Club.[52]

Palermo, under the guidance of Silvio Baldini, concluded the 2021–22 Serie C campaign in third place in the Group C, behind Bari and Catanzaro, and then made it to the promotion playoff final after eliminating Triestina, Virtus Entella and Feralpisalò in the process. On 12 June 2022, Palermo were promoted to Serie B after defeating Padova 2–0 on aggregate, thus returning to the Italian second division just three years after having been excluded from the league.[53] On 4 July 2022, at the presence of Manchester City F.C. CEO Ferran Soriano, the club was formally announced to have been acquired by City Football Group, with outgoing owner Dario Mirri (who was confirmed as club chairman) keeping a 20% of the quotes.[54][55]

Colours and badge

 
Airoldi's letter in which he suggests pink and black as the club's new official colours
 
 
 
 
 
 
Palermo's original red-blue kit, worn from 1900 until 1907.

The new official badge as of 2019 is a white eagle's head and three pink/black feathers within a black stylized letter 'P'. The eagle represents the city of Palermo, as it is also part of the city's official coat of arms. This new badge replaced the long-standing badge of the previous formation of the club, an escutcheon with an eagle poised for flight within it, and the previous official club denomination "U.S. Città di Palermo" in capital letters on the top.

From its foundation, Palermo originally played with a red and blue shirt as its official colours, but decided to switch to the unusual current choice of pink and black on 27 February 1907, contemporaneously with the change of denomination to "Palermo FootBall Club".[56]

The colour choice of pink and black was suggested by Count Giuseppe Airoldi, a prominent founding member of the club. In a personal letter Airoldi wrote on 2 February 1905 to English club councillor Joseph Whitaker, he defined pink and black poetically as "colours of the sad and the sweet", a choice he amusingly asserted to be suited for a team characterised by "results as up and down as a Swiss clock", noting also the fact that red and blue were a very commonly used choice of colours around Italy at the time.[2]

The club had to wait for their new jerseys for three months, because no pink cotton flannel material was available in Palermo and the appointed tailoring company could only find suitable material from England and had to import it from there.[56] The vivid new shirts were first worn in a friendly match against Sir Thomas Lipton's crew team; the match ended in a 2–1 win for Palermo.[56] From 1936 to 1940, the team were forced to play in red and yellow jerseys due to an imposition by the fascist regime of Benito Mussolini (red and yellow being the official colours of the municipality of Palermo.) When the club was refounded in 1941 following a merger with Juventina Palermo, they started dressing in light blue shirts on the pitch, but switched back to the very popular pink and black only one year later.[14]

Shirt sponsors and manufacturers

Period Kit manufacturer Shirt sponsor[57][unreliable source?]
1979–80 Pouchain None
1981–82 NR Vini Corvo
1983–84 Pasta Ferrara
1985–86 Juculano
1987–90 Città di Palermo
1989–90 Hummel
1990–91 ABM
1991–92 Seleco
1992–93 Giornale di Sicilia
1993–94 Toka
1994–96 Provincia Regionale di Palermo
1996–97 Kappa Giornale di Sicilia
1997–98 Tomarchio Naturà
1998–99 Palermo Provincia Turistica
1999–00 Kronos Tele+
2000–01 Lotto Alitalia
2001–02 LTS
2002–06 Provincia di Palermo
2006–08 None
2008 Pramac
2008–09 None
2009–10 Betshop
2010 Eurobet
2010–11 Legea
2011–12 Eurobet & Burger King
2012–2013 Puma Eurobet & Italiacom
2013–2014 Palermocalcio.it & Sigma
2014–2015 Joma RosaneroCares & CBM
2015–2017 None
2017–2019 Legea
2019 Gruppo Arena c/o Super Conveniente[58][59]
2019–current Kappa Bisaten, Gruppo Arena, Nuova Sicilauto, Sicilgesso and Gagliano Gioielli

Stadium

 
Stadio Renzo Barbera, Palermo

Palermo plays its home matches at Stadio Renzo Barbera. The stadium was opened in 1932, during the fascist regime, with the name Stadio Littorio (after the Italian name for the fasces symbol). The inaugural match, won by Palermo 5–1, was played on 24 January 1932 against Atalanta. In 1936, the Littorio was renamed Stadio Michele Marrone after a fascist soldier who died in the Spanish Civil War.[60]

Initially the stadium featured a running track and no spectator space behind the goals, only terraces and a stand along the side. In 1948, following the end of World War II and the fall of the fascist regime, the stadium was renamed Stadio La Favorita, after the Favorita neighbourhood where it was located. It was also restructured to remove the running track and add two curved end sections, increasing its capacity to 30,000.[60] In 1984 it was enlarged to 50,000. The new capacity was reached only twice: for a Serie C1 league match against Sicilian rivals Messina and for a friendly match against Juventus.[60] On the occasion of the 1990 FIFA World Cup, the stadium was renovated, some new seats added, but the overall capacity reduced to 37,619. During the 1989 renovation works, five employees died following the collapse of a section of the stadium.[60] In 2002 the stadium was renamed in honour of Renzo Barbera, legendary Palermo chairman in the 1970s.[60]

In 2007 Palermo chairman and owner Maurizio Zamparini announced plans to move the club to a new state-of-the-art stadium possibly to be located in the ZEN neighbourhood of Palermo not far from the Velodromo Paolo Borsellino, a smaller stadium which had previously hosted some Palermo matches.[61]

Supporters

 
Palermo supporters in the 2006 Sicilian derby

The majority of Palermo supporters come from the city and its neighbourhood. However, Palermo is also widely popular throughout Western Sicily, as well as among Sicilian immigrants in northern Italy, For example, a number of Palermo fans living in and around the German city of Solingen have even founded a club named FC Rosaneri in honour of Palermo which, as of 2007, plays in the Kreisliga B league.[62][63][64]

Support for Palermo is traditionally closely associated with a strong sense of Sicilian identity; indeed, it is not uncommon to see Sicilian flags waved by fans and ultras during Palermo matches. Palermo fans are also twinned with Lecce ultras.[65] This friendship was strengthened by the acquisition of Fabrizio Miccoli, who is originally from the city of Lecce and a well-known Lecce supporter who went on to become captain of Palermo and also the club's most prolific player, setting records for: most Serie A league goals (74, from 2007 to 2013); most goals in all competitions (81, from 2007 to 2013); and most Serie A league appearances (165, from 2007 to 2013).

Palermo's biggest rivals are fellow islanders Catania. Matches between Palermo and Catania are usually referred to as Sicilian derbies, despite the existence of a third Sicilian team, Messina, who played in Serie A alongside Palermo and Catania in recent years. Rivalry with Messina, although historically older, is generally less intense than that with Catania.

The 2006–07 return match between Palermo and Catania, played on 2 February 2007 at Stadio Angelo Massimino, Catania, is remembered due to the death of policeman Filippo Raciti who was injured during riots between the local police and the Catania supporters.

According to a survey of 2008, the team has about 1.47 million fans domestically, placing it among the top ten best-supported Italian teams. For example, at the Coppa Italia final played in Rome on 29 May 2011 against Inter, which Palermo lost 3–1, it was estimated that there were 25,000 - 35,000 fans from Palermo, easily outnumbering the Nerazzurri fans present.

Players

Current squad

As of 18 January 2023[66]

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 Giovanni Grotta
3 DF   ITA Marco Sala (on loan from Sassuolo)
4 DF   URU Renzo Orihuela (on loan from Montevideo City Torque)
5 MF   FRA Claudio Gomes
7 FW   ITA Gennaro Tutino (on loan from Parma)
8 MF   ITA Jacopo Segre
9 FW   ITA Matteo Brunori (Captain)
10 FW   ITA Francesco Di Mariano
12 GK   ITA Samuele Massolo
14 MF   ITA Jérémie Broh
15 DF   ITA Ivan Marconi
16 MF   SVN Leo Štulac (on loan from Empoli)
No. Pos. Nation Player
18 DF   ROU Ionuț Nedelcearu
19 FW   ITA Luca Vido (on loan from Atalanta)
21 MF   ITA Samuele Damiani
22 GK   ITA Mirko Pigliacelli
25 DF   ITA Alessio Buttaro
27 FW   ITA Edoardo Soleri
28 MF   BIH Dario Šarić
30 MF   ITA Nicola Valente
37 DF   CZE Aleš Matějů
48 DF   ITA Davide Bettella (on loan from Monza)
77 MF   ITA Salvatore Elia (on loan from Atalanta)
79 DF   ITA Edoardo Lancini

Out on loan

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

No. Pos. Nation Player
FW   ITA Giacomo Corona (at Torino until 30 June 2023)
DF   ITA Roberto Crivello (at Padova until 30 June 2023)
DF   SRB Mladen Devetak (at Viterbese until 30 June 2023)
DF   ALB Masimiliano Doda (at Imolese until 30 June 2023)
FW   ITA Giuseppe Fella (at Monopoli until 30 June 2023)
No. Pos. Nation Player
DF   GAM Bubacarr Marong (at Gelbison until 30 June 2023)
DF   ITA Enrico Mauthe (at Sambenedettese until 30 June 2023)
DF   ITA Manuel Peretti (at Recanatese until 30 June 2023)
FW   ITA Andrea Silipo (at Juve Stabia until 30 June 2023)

Former players

In 2020, as part of the celebrations for the club's 120th anniversary, Palermo announced a hall of fame selection, with eleven players and a manager selected from a list of over 100 proposals.

The most voted players were:[67]

Club officials

Managers

In 2020, as part of the celebrations for the club's 120th anniversary, Palermo announced a hall of fame selection, asking their supporters to select the best manager in the club's history among a list of successful ones from the past.

The best manager in the club's history was selected to be Francesco Guidolin, who led Palermo to win promotion to Serie A in 2004 after a 31-year absence, and sixth place in the top flight (best result in the club's history) and consequent first ever European qualification the year after.[67]

Other candidates for all-time manager were (in order of votes):

Chairmen history

Over the years Palermo has had various owners and chairmen; here is a chronological list of the known chairmen:[3]

 
Joseph Whitaker, honorary chairman during the early 1900s
  •   Edward De Garston (1900–1903)
  •   Barone Michele Vannucci (1903–1904)
  •   Cavaliere Ignazio Majo Pagano (1904–1908)
  •   Barone Roberto Pottino (1908–1915)
  •   Valentino Colombo (1920–1923)
  •   Cavaliere Michele Utveggio (1923–1925)
  •   Valentino Colombo (1925–1926)
  •   Conte Liotta di Lemos (1928)
  •   Barone Giovanni Sergio (1928)
  •   Conte Guido Airoldi (1928–1929)
  •   Barone Luigi Bordonaro di Gebbiarossa (1929–1931)
  •   Francesco Paolo Barresi (1931–1933)
  •   Cavaliere Giovanni Lo Casto Valenti (1933–1934)
  •   Valentino Colombo (1934–1935)
  •   Giovanni De Luca (1935)
  •   Luigi Majo Pagano (1935–1936)
  •   Valentino Colombo (1936–1937)
  •   Paolo Di Pietra (1937–1938)
  •   Salvatore Barbaro (1938–1940)
  •   Duilio Lanni (1941–1942)
  •   Giuseppe Agnello (1942–1947)
  •   Stefano La Motta (1947–1948)
  •   Giuseppe Guazzardella (1948–1951)
  •   Raimondo Lanza di Trabia (1951–1952)
  •   Barone Carlo La Lomia (1952–1953)
  •   Mario Fasino (1953–1954)
  •   Ernesto Pivetti (1954–1955)
  •   Giuseppe Trapani (1955)
  •   Conte Arturo Cassina (1955–1956)
  •   Giuseppe Seminara (1956–1957)
  •   Casimiro Vizzini (1957–1963)
  •   Conte Guglielmo Pinzero (1963–1964)
  •   Ernesto Di Fresco,   Luigi Barbaccia,   Franz Gorgone (1964)
  •   Casimiro Vizzini (1964)
  •   Conte Guglielmo Pinzero (1964)
  •   Totò Vilardo (1964–1965)
  •   Franco Spagnolo (1965)
  •   Franz Gorgone (1965)
  •   Luigi Gioia (1965)
  •   Giuseppe Pergolizzi (1967–1970)
  •   Renzo Barbera (1970–1980)
  •   Gaspare Gambino (1980–1982)
  •   Roberto Parisi (1982–1985)
  •   Salvatore Matta (1985–1986)
  •   Salvino Lagumina (1987–1989)
  •   Giovanni Ferrara (1989–1993)
  •   Liborio Polizzi (1993–1995)
  •   Giovanni Ferrara (1995–2000)
  •   Sergio D'Antoni (2000–2002)
  •   Maurizio Zamparini (2002–2017)
  •    Paul Baccaglini (2017)
  •   Giovanni Giammarva (2017-2018)
  •   Clive Richardson (2018-2019)
  •   Rino Foschi (2019)
  •   Alessandro Albanese (2019)[70]
  •   Dario Mirri (2019–)

Honours

Other Titles

  • Winners (1): 1920
  • Whitaker Challenge Cup
  • Winners (1): 1908
  • Winners (5): 1910, 1912, 1913, 1914, 1915

Records

 
Italian striker Luca Toni holds the record for most goals in a single season with Palermo, scoring 30 times during the club's 2003–04 Serie B campaign
  • Most appearances in all competitions – 372, Roberto Biffi (1988–1999)
  • Most European appearances – 15, Andrea Barzagli, Franco Brienza and Mattia Cassani
  • Most Serie A league appearances – 165, Fabrizio Miccoli (2007–2013)
  • Most league goals – 74, Fabrizio Miccoli (2007–2013)
  • Most Serie A league goals – 74, Fabrizio Miccoli (2007–2013)
  • Most Coppa Italia cup goals – 7, Massimo De Stefanis (1979–1984)
  • Most Europa League/UEFA Cup goals – 4, Franco Brienza (2000–2013), Abel Hernández (2009–2014)
  • Most goals in all competitions – 81, Fabrizio Miccoli (2007–2013)
  • Most goals in a season – 30, Luca Toni (2003–2004)
  • Current player with most appearances – 78, Roberto Floriano (as of 12 June 2022)
  • Biggest win and biggest home win in Serie A – 8–0 (v. Pro Patria, 5 November 1950)
  • Biggest away win – 8–1 (v. Potenza, 1 March 1942)
  • Biggest defeat and biggest away defeat – 0–9 (v. Milan, 18 February 1951)
  • Biggest home defeat – 0–7 (v. Udinese, 27 February 2011)
  • Highest number of points in Serie A league – 65 pt. (2009–10) 5th position
  • Best series without home defeats – 26 (Palermo–Lecce 5–2, 15 March 2009 – Palermo–Cagliari 0–0, 29 August 2010)
  • Greatest series of consecutive victories in Serie A league – 5 (2006–07)

Competitions

League

Level Category Participations Debut Last season Moves

A

Serie A 29 1932–33 2016–17   9

B

Serie B 44 1930–31 2018–19   9
  3 ✟ 3

C

Prima Divisione 1 1929–30   6
Serie C 3 1941–42 2021–22
Serie C1 9 1984–85 2000–01
Serie C2 1 1987–88   1
87 out of 90 years of professional football in Italy since 1929

D

Serie D 1 2019–2020   1

National cups

Competition Participation Debut Last season
Coppa Italia 63 1935–36 2016–17
Coppa Italia Serie C 10 1984–85 2000–01
Supercoppa di Serie C 1 2000–01 2000–01

International competitions

Category Participations Debut Last season
Europa League
ex UEFA Cup
5 2005–06 2011–12
Mitropa Cup 2 1960 1968–69
Coppa delle Alpi 1 1960 1960

In Europe

UEFA Cup / UEFA Europa League

Season Round Opposition Home Away Aggregate Reference
2005–06 First round   Anorthosis 2–1 4–0 6–1 [71]
Group B   Maccabi Petah Tikva 2–1 1st
  Lokomotiv Moscow 0–0
  Espanyol 1–1
  Brøndby 3–0
Round of 32   Slavia Prague 1–0 1–2 2–2 (a)
Round of 16   Schalke 04 1–0 0–3 1–3
2006–07 First round   West Ham United 3–0 1–0 4–0 [72]
Group H   Eintracht Frankfurt 2–1 4th
  Newcastle United 0–1
  Fenerbahçe 0–3
  Celta Vigo 1–1
2007–08 First round   Mladá Boleslav 0–1 (a.e.t.) 1–0 1–1 (2–4 p) [73]
2010–11 Play-off round   Maribor 3–0 2–3 5–3 [74]
Group F   Sparta Prague 2–2 2–3 3rd
  Lausanne-Sport 1–0 1–0
  CSKA Moscow 0–3 1–3
2011–12 Third qualifying round   Thun 2–2 1–1 3–3 (a) [75]

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Bibliography

  • Del Tappo, Luca; Mazzola, Calogero (2005). Il Palermo. Saggio sociologico-sportivo (in Italian) (III ed.). Palermo: Edizioni il foglio. p. 313.
  • Tarantino, Giovanni; Paterna, Massimiliano (2014). Una storia in rosa e nero. La maglia del Palermo, i colori di una città (in Italian). Palermo: il Palindromo. p. 105. ISBN 9788898447077.
  • Prestigiacomo, Vincenzo; Bagnati, Giuseppe; Maggio, Vito (2001). Il Palermo: una storia di cento anni (in Italian). Palermo: Corrado Rappa. p. 232.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  • Prestigiacomo, Vincenzo; Bagnati, Giuseppe; Maggio, Vito (2004). Il Palermo racconta: storie, confessioni e leggende rosanero (in Italian). Palermo: Grafill. p. 253. ISBN 88-8207-144-8.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  • Giordano, Giovanni; Brandaleone, Carlo (1982). Calcio Palermo: gli ottantaquattro anni di storia della societa rosanero (in Italian). Palermo: Giada. p. 432. ISBN 88-8207-144-8.
  • Ginex, Roberto; Gueli, Roberto (1996). Breve storia del grande Palermo (in Italian). Rome: Newton. p. 66. ISBN 88-8183-361-1.

External links

  • Official website (in Italian)

palermo, palermo, football, club, more, simply, known, palermo, italian, pronunciation, paˈlɛrmo, listen, sicilian, paliemmu, locally, paˈlɛmmʊ, italian, football, club, based, sicilian, city, palermo, conventionally, founded, first, time, november, 1900, pale. Palermo Football Club more simply known as Palermo F C or Palermo Italian pronunciation paˈlɛrmo listen Sicilian Paliemmu locally paˈlɛmmʊ is an Italian football club based in the Sicilian city of Palermo conventionally founded for the first time on 1 November 1900 PalermoFull namePalermo Football ClubNickname s I Rosanero The Pink and Blacks Le Aquile The Eagles Founded1 November 1900 122 years ago 1900 11 01 Anglo Palermitan Athletic and Football Club GroundStadio Renzo BarberaCapacity36 365 1 OwnerCity Football Group 80 Hera Hora S r l 20 ChairmanDario MirriHead coachEugenio CoriniLeagueSerie B2021 22Serie C Group C 3rd of 19 promoted via play offs WebsiteClub websiteHome coloursAway coloursThird coloursCurrent seasonClubs owned by CFG listed in order of acquisition foundation Bold indicates the club was founded by CFG indicates the club was acquired by CFG indicates the club is co owned 2008Manchester City F C 2009 20122013New York City FC 2014Melbourne City FC Yokohama F Marinos 2015 20162017Montevideo City Torque Girona FC 20182019Sichuan Jiuniu F C Mumbai City FC 2020Lommel S K ES Troyes AC 20212022Palermo F C Among the club s accomplishments are a Coppa Italia Serie C won in the 1992 93 and five Serie B league titles It also appeared in three Italian Cup finals in 1973 74 in 1978 79 and in 2010 11 The club has made five appearances in European competitions all in the UEFA Cup Europa League They are currently playing in Serie B after having won the 2021 22 Serie C promotion playoffs Contents 1 History 1 1 Early history 1898 1947 1 2 Post war years 1947 2002 1 3 The Zamparini era back to Serie A and European years 2002 2013 1 4 Zamparini s later years and Serie B return 2011 2018 1 5 New ownerships financial issues and Serie B exclusion 2018 2019 1 6 A fresh start City Football Group ownership 2019 present 2 Colours and badge 2 1 Shirt sponsors and manufacturers 3 Stadium 4 Supporters 5 Players 5 1 Current squad 5 2 Out on loan 5 3 Former players 6 Club officials 6 1 Board of directors 6 2 Current technical staff 7 Managers 8 Chairmen history 9 Honours 9 1 Other Titles 10 Records 11 Competitions 11 1 League 11 2 National cups 11 3 International competitions 12 In Europe 12 1 UEFA Cup UEFA Europa League 13 References 14 Bibliography 15 External linksHistory EditMain article History of Palermo F C The performance of Palermo in the Italian football league structure since the first season of a unified Serie A 1929 30 Early history 1898 1947 Edit Ancient Palermo FBC logo Historical first Anglo Palermitan Athletic amp Football Club line up 1900 There is some debate and uncertainty about the exact date the club was founded Some authorities believe that it may have been founded as early as 1898 due to the existence of papers addressed to Joseph Whitaker English ornithologist in Palermo and originally believed to be first club president about a Palermo football team founded in the month of April of that year 2 Conversely another source cites that in April 1897 the future founders of Palemo Calcio founded the association Sport Club 3 The most common and officially stated foundation date is November 1 1900 4 as the Anglo Palermitan Athletic and Football Club The club is thought to have been founded by Ignazio Majo Pagano a young Palermitan colleague of Whitaker who had discovered football while at college in London in the UK where the modern game of Association Football originated The initial staff comprised three Englishmen and nine natives of Palermo 5 with Whitaker as honorary chairman Edward De Garston as inaugural president and with red and blue as the original team colours The first recorded football match played by the team on December 30 1900 ended in a 5 0 defeat to an unidentified amateur English team The club s first official match played on April 18 1901 against Messina Football Club ended in a 3 2 victory for the Palermitan side 6 In 1907 the club changed its name to Palermo Foot Ball Club and the team colours were changed to the current pink and black 7 From 1908 until Italy s entry in World War I in 1915 Palermo was featured in the Lipton Challenge Cup organised by Scottish businessman Sir Thomas Lipton The competition saw them face off against Naples FBC Palermo won the competition three times including a 6 0 victory in 1912 8 After a gap during the First World War the club was refounded in 1919 as Unione Sportiva Palermo 9 by a committee of young university students and sportsmen During the early 1920s the club mainly competed in the Campionato Lega Sud a football league in Southern Italy reaching the semi finals in 1924 before being knocked out by Audace Taranto Alba Roma and Internaples The club was dissolved in 1927 due to financial problems but was reformed one year later following a merger with Vigor Palermo under the name Palermo FootBall Club Originally admitted to Prima Divisione First Division the equivalent of today s Serie C1 10 11 the team was promoted to Serie B in 1930 and finally reached Serie A in 1932 From its debut season in Italy s top division Palermo relocated to a new home the Stadio Littorio Lictorian Stadium in the Favorita neighbourhood today known as Stadio Renzo Barbera The club played in Serie A until 1936 when they were relegated to Serie B and first played Catania in the Sicilian derby 12 In 1936 Palermo was forced by the fascist regime to change its colours to yellow and red after the official colours of the local municipality 13 Meanwhile economic difficulties arose and in 1940 the club was expelled by the Italian Football Federation because of financial problems 13 A merger with Unione Sportiva Juventina Palermo brought the foundation of Unione Sportiva Palermo Juventina which joined Serie C in 1941 and Serie B in 1942 14 Palermo goalscorer Santiago Vernazza The club could not finish the 1942 43 season due to the outbreak of World War II At the same time the pink and black colors were chosen because Sicily became a war zone After the conflict the club changed its name to US Palermo Post war years 1947 2002 Edit After World War II the team returned to Serie A by winning the Serie B championship of 1947 48 The new Palermo squad featured players such as Czechoslovakian legend Cestmir Vycpalek who signed from Juventus alongside Conti Carmelo Di Bella and Pavesi 13 Palermo played Serie A until they were relegated in 1954 13 15 Massive changes in the board as well as the manager s job and the squad proved successful and the club returned to Serie A in 1956 Palermo became a yo yo club bouncing up and down between the top two Italian leagues Several stars played for Palermo during this period such as Argentine striker Santiago Vernazza 51 goals in 115 games with the Rosanero 16 goalkeepers Roberto Anzolin and Carlo Mattrel Giuseppe Furino and Franco Causio Palermo marked its best campaign in 1961 62 season finishing in eighth place in Serie A In 1963 however they were relegated to Serie B where they played for five seasons Palermo played again in Serie A between 1968 and 1970 In 1970 Renzo Barbera took over the club as the new chairman After 1973 Palermo FBC remained firmly rooted in Serie B Despite this Palermo reached two Italian Cup finals both of which they narrowly lost in 1974 to Bologna on penalty shoot outs and in 1979 to Juventus after extra time Barbera left the club in 1980 and Palermo were relegated to Serie C1 four years later The 1985 86 season however which ended in the summer was the last for Palermo FBC as having just saved themselves from relegation the club was expelled by the football federation due to financial problems In the summer of 1987 after a year without professional football in Palermo the club was re founded bearing a new name and began to play in Serie C2 which it promptly won In the 1990s Palermo played between Serie B and Serie C1 with a few highs such as its 1995 96 Serie B and Coppa Italia campaign the latter ending in the quarter finals and a number of lows such as the 1998 relegation to Serie C2 after defeat in the play offs to Battipagliese later revoked by the federation to fill a vacant league slot 17 In March 2000 Roma chairman Franco Sensi led a holding company to purchase Palermo and Sergio D Antoni became the president of Palermo 18 and Palermo were promoted to Serie B one year later after a dramatic final week of the season with Palermo coming back from behind to take first place from league toppers Sicilian rivals Messina The first comeback season in the Serie B with Bortolo Mutti as head coach was an eventless one with Palermo ending in a mid table placement The Zamparini era back to Serie A and European years 2002 2013 Edit Palermo chairman and owner Maurizio Zamparini In the summer of 2002 Friulian businessman and Venezia owner Maurizio Zamparini acquired the club from Franco Sensi in a 15 million bid with the clear intention to bring Palermo back to Serie A and establish the club as a Serie A regular with aims of participations to European competitions 19 Palermo failed in its first attempt to reach the Serie A in 2002 03 on the final week of the season but later managed to achieve it after a hard but successful 2003 04 campaign which saw Palermo crowned as Serie B champions and promoted to Serie A after 31 years under head coach Francesco Guidolin who was hired in January 2004 as replacement for dismissed Silvio Baldini The 2004 05 season the first in Serie A for the Palermo club since 1973 ended with an excellent sixth place securing qualification for the 2005 06 UEFA Cup for the first time in its history Luca Toni broke the Palermo Serie A scoring record by notching up 20 league goals In the following season despite an unimpressive eighth place in the Serie A table Palermo reached the last 16 in the UEFA Cup as well as the Coppa Italia semi finals The club was however admitted to play UEFA Cup again due to the 2006 Calciopoli scandal with Palermo players Andrea Barzagli Cristian Zaccardo Simone Barone and Fabio Grosso being crowned 2006 World Cup winners A number of impressive signings were made to establish an ambitious team 20 and a good beginning in the 2006 07 campaign appeared initially to confirm this An 11 game winless streak however forced Palermo to fall down from third to seventh place ending the season in fifth place and ensuring another UEFA Cup qualification The club successively established as a force in the mid table part of the Serie A league also winning a Campionato Nazionale Primavera national title in 2009 21 The following season started with new manager Walter Zenga whose appointment from Sicilian arch rivals Catania was greeted with surprise and dismay from supporters of both parties 22 Zenga s reign however lasted only 13 games as he was dismissed on 23 November 2009 due to poor performances ironically after a 1 1 home tie to Sicilian rivals and Zenga s former team Catania 23 with former Lazio boss Delio Rossi being appointed at his place 24 Under the tutelage of Delio Rossi results dramatically improved and Palermo established a record of seven consecutive home wins including wins against Italian giants Milan and Juventus and emerging as serious contenders for a Champions League spot which they ultimately lost to Sampdoria by only one point Such season also launched new emerging stars such as midfielder Javier Pastore and goalkeeper Salvatore Sirigu who went on to become integral part of their respective international teams Former club captain Fabrizio Miccoli The 2010 11 season started with Delio Rossi still in charge of the club and also marked Palermo s return into continental football in the form of the UEFA Europa League Palermo reached their third Coppa Italia finals after defeating Milan 4 3 on aggregate on 10 May 2011 losing 3 1 to Internazionale in the final in what is considered one of the peak moments of Zamparini s period at the club Zamparini s later years and Serie B return 2011 2018 Edit For the 2011 12 season Delio Rossi was replaced by former Chievo boss Stefano Pioli who was however sacked before the Serie A kickoff after being eliminated by Swiss minnows FC Thun in the Europa League third preliminary round new head coach Devis Mangia with no managerial experience other than at youth team and minor league level despite that Mangia turned Palermo fortunes by leading the Rosanero in fifth place thanks to an impressive string of six consecutive home wins thus deserving a long term deal at the club A string of poor results however led Palermo to three consecutive defeats including elimination from the Coppa Italia and a disappointing loss in the Sicilian derby persuading Zamparini to replace Mangia with the more experienced Bortolo Mutti 25 Palermo arrived 16th in that season Giuseppe Iachini formerly a Palermo midfielder in the 1990s replaced Gattuso as head coach during the 2013 14 season and led the club to a Serie B champions title and broke the highest Serie B point record For the 2012 13 season Zamparini came with another staff revolution appointing Giorgio Perinetti as the new director of football and Giuseppe Sannino as the manager both coming from Siena A complete squad restructuring a total five managerial changes and some staff changes including a short stint with Pietro Lo Monaco as sports director did not help and Palermo ended its season in 18th place being thus relegated to Serie B after nine consecutive seasons in the top flight For the new Serie B campaign Zamparini appointed former Milan and Italy international star Gennaro Gattuso as the new manager 26 despite him having little prior managerial experience he was sacked in September 2013 the 28th sacked manager in 11 years Fortune was reversed rather rapidly however as Palermo regained promotion back to Serie A for the 2014 15 season under the guidance of new head coach Giuseppe Iachini with the Rosanero completing a record breaking Serie B season with 86 points one more than previous record holders Juventus Chievo and Sassuolo all of them in the 22 team Serie B format With Iachini confirmed in charge Palermo played a rather successful 2014 15 Serie A season narrowly missing on a UEFA Europa League spot also thanks to the all Argentine striking force of Paulo Dybala and Franco Vazquez In 2015 16 season Palermo started their season without Dybala after the youngster moved to Juventus the Rosanero therefore relied on senior striker Alberto Gilardino to play as a partner of Vazquez Another long list of managerial changes during the season seven in total with Davide Ballardini as the final one marked a very troublesome season during which Palermo escaped relegation on the last day of the league with the necessary win over Hellas Verona 3 2 securing 16th place 27 For the 2016 17 season Zamparini re appointed Rino Foschi as director of football he however resigned after just a month in charge and was replaced by former Trapani director Daniele Faggiano Most senior players such as Gilardino Sorrentino Vazquez and Maresca were sold and mostly replaced with Alessandro Diamanti plus a number of young and quasi unknown foreign players Ballardini who was originally confirmed as head coach left his position after a draw at Inter Milan at the second matchday of the season and was replaced with Serie A newbie Roberto De Zerbi 28 who ended his stay after seven league losses in a row with former club captain Eugenio Corini taking over 29 More managerial and staff changes followed with little luck and on 27 February 2017 Zamparini stepped down as chairman of Palermo after 15 years in charge announcing he had agreed in principle to sell his controlling stake to an unspecified Anglo American fund 30 led by Italian American Paul Baccaglini who was named new club president on 6 March 31 Palermo ended the season in 19th place being relegated to Serie B The takeover originally scheduled to be finalized by 30 April 2017 and then delayed by 30 June eventually collapsed after Zamparini who in the meantime had appointed Bruno Tedino as new head coach for the 2017 18 Serie B campaign rejected the final offer he received from Baccaglini 32 On 4 July 2017 Baccaglini resigned as Palermo chairman falling back into the hands of Zamparini after the necessary funds were not in place 33 Palermo s campaign in the 2017 18 Serie B aimed for an immediate return to the top flight with Bruno Tedino as head coach and Fabio Lupo as director of football Initially the team s form was good and the Rosanero ended the first half of the season in first place however a string of negative results led to the appointment of new manager Roberto Stellone who was ultimately unable to win promotion ending the regular season in fourth place and eventually losing the playoff finals to Frosinone New ownerships financial issues and Serie B exclusion 2018 2019 Edit For the 2018 19 Serie B season Palermo with Rino Foschi back for a third time as sporting director found themselves having to sell a number of players for financial reasons On 22 November 2018 the club formally confirmed a takeover agreement between Zamparini and an undisclosed investor 34 35 later confirmed to be the London based Sport Capital Group Investments Ltd with English businessman Clive Richardson head of the new group being named as new club chairman 36 Following a January 2019 transfer window with no signings at all and serious tensions within the board Clive Richardson chairman and John Treacy director both resigned from the club with immediate effect on 4 February 2019 citing that the full nature of the serious financial situation at the club had not been fully disclosed to them at the time of their purchase 37 Days later the club was acquired for a nominal fee by Daniela De Angeli former managing director from the Zamparini days and Rino Foschi appointed as chairman 38 39 only for them to sell it again to hotel and tourism company Arkus Network S r l later in May 40 41 42 43 The new owner Sporting Network S r l subscribed a 5 million capital increase to the club 43 At the end of the 2018 19 Serie B Palermo finished in third place with 63 points but was demoted by FIGC to last place in Serie B on 13 May due to serious financial irregularities which meant relegation to Serie C for the following season 44 45 The club appealed to FIGC against this ruling and were successful in having the penalty revised rather than automatic demotion the club was merely docked 20 points instead which consequently placed them in a comfortable mid table eleventh position 46 However on 24 June 2019 Palermo incorrectly submitted to FIGC their standard application for the following 2019 20 Serie B season by failing to provide evidence of a valid insurance policy for the new season 47 A club trading with no insurance is an extremely serious breach of Italian company law and as such FIGC had no alternative but to formally exclude the club not only from Serie B but indeed all professional leagues on 12 July 2019 48 A fresh start City Football Group ownership 2019 present Edit On 23 July 2019 in compliance of Article 52 of N O I F Mayor of Palermo Leoluca Orlando confirmed six declarations of interests had been presented for a new phoenix club to be admitted in Serie D the highest level of non professional football in Italy for the 2019 20 season 49 The next day Orlando announced his choice of a bid by a company named Hera Hora srl jointly owned by entrepreneurs Dario Mirri a Palermo native and Renzo Barbera s nephew and a Sicilian American Tony DiPiazza 50 Palermo completed their Serie D campaign in first place and was awarded promotion to Serie C by the Italian Football Federation after all the amateur leagues were stopped in March 2020 due to the global COVID 19 pandemic 51 On 16 July 2020 the club changed its name to Palermo Football Club 52 Palermo under the guidance of Silvio Baldini concluded the 2021 22 Serie C campaign in third place in the Group C behind Bari and Catanzaro and then made it to the promotion playoff final after eliminating Triestina Virtus Entella and Feralpisalo in the process On 12 June 2022 Palermo were promoted to Serie B after defeating Padova 2 0 on aggregate thus returning to the Italian second division just three years after having been excluded from the league 53 On 4 July 2022 at the presence of Manchester City F C CEO Ferran Soriano the club was formally announced to have been acquired by City Football Group with outgoing owner Dario Mirri who was confirmed as club chairman keeping a 20 of the quotes 54 55 Colours and badge Edit Airoldi s letter in which he suggests pink and black as the club s new official colours Palermo s original red blue kit worn from 1900 until 1907 The new official badge as of 2019 is a white eagle s head and three pink black feathers within a black stylized letter P The eagle represents the city of Palermo as it is also part of the city s official coat of arms This new badge replaced the long standing badge of the previous formation of the club an escutcheon with an eagle poised for flight within it and the previous official club denomination U S Citta di Palermo in capital letters on the top From its foundation Palermo originally played with a red and blue shirt as its official colours but decided to switch to the unusual current choice of pink and black on 27 February 1907 contemporaneously with the change of denomination to Palermo FootBall Club 56 The colour choice of pink and black was suggested by Count Giuseppe Airoldi a prominent founding member of the club In a personal letter Airoldi wrote on 2 February 1905 to English club councillor Joseph Whitaker he defined pink and black poetically as colours of the sad and the sweet a choice he amusingly asserted to be suited for a team characterised by results as up and down as a Swiss clock noting also the fact that red and blue were a very commonly used choice of colours around Italy at the time 2 The club had to wait for their new jerseys for three months because no pink cotton flannel material was available in Palermo and the appointed tailoring company could only find suitable material from England and had to import it from there 56 The vivid new shirts were first worn in a friendly match against Sir Thomas Lipton s crew team the match ended in a 2 1 win for Palermo 56 From 1936 to 1940 the team were forced to play in red and yellow jerseys due to an imposition by the fascist regime of Benito Mussolini red and yellow being the official colours of the municipality of Palermo When the club was refounded in 1941 following a merger with Juventina Palermo they started dressing in light blue shirts on the pitch but switched back to the very popular pink and black only one year later 14 Shirt sponsors and manufacturers Edit This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed May 2019 Learn how and when to remove this template message Period Kit manufacturer Shirt sponsor 57 unreliable source 1979 80 Pouchain None1981 82 NR Vini Corvo1983 84 Pasta Ferrara1985 86 Juculano1987 90 Citta di Palermo1989 90 Hummel1990 91 ABM1991 92 Seleco1992 93 Giornale di Sicilia1993 94 Toka1994 96 Provincia Regionale di Palermo1996 97 Kappa Giornale di Sicilia1997 98 Tomarchio Natura1998 99 Palermo Provincia Turistica1999 00 Kronos Tele 2000 01 Lotto Alitalia2001 02 LTS2002 06 Provincia di Palermo2006 08 None2008 Pramac2008 09 None2009 10 Betshop2010 Eurobet2010 11 Legea2011 12 Eurobet amp Burger King2012 2013 Puma Eurobet amp Italiacom2013 2014 Palermocalcio it amp Sigma2014 2015 Joma RosaneroCares amp CBM2015 2017 None2017 2019 Legea2019 Gruppo Arena c o Super Conveniente 58 59 2019 current Kappa Bisaten Gruppo Arena Nuova Sicilauto Sicilgesso and Gagliano GioielliStadium EditMain article Stadio Renzo Barbera Stadio Renzo Barbera Palermo Palermo plays its home matches at Stadio Renzo Barbera The stadium was opened in 1932 during the fascist regime with the name Stadio Littorio after the Italian name for the fasces symbol The inaugural match won by Palermo 5 1 was played on 24 January 1932 against Atalanta In 1936 the Littorio was renamed Stadio Michele Marrone after a fascist soldier who died in the Spanish Civil War 60 Initially the stadium featured a running track and no spectator space behind the goals only terraces and a stand along the side In 1948 following the end of World War II and the fall of the fascist regime the stadium was renamed Stadio La Favorita after the Favorita neighbourhood where it was located It was also restructured to remove the running track and add two curved end sections increasing its capacity to 30 000 60 In 1984 it was enlarged to 50 000 The new capacity was reached only twice for a Serie C1 league match against Sicilian rivals Messina and for a friendly match against Juventus 60 On the occasion of the 1990 FIFA World Cup the stadium was renovated some new seats added but the overall capacity reduced to 37 619 During the 1989 renovation works five employees died following the collapse of a section of the stadium 60 In 2002 the stadium was renamed in honour of Renzo Barbera legendary Palermo chairman in the 1970s 60 In 2007 Palermo chairman and owner Maurizio Zamparini announced plans to move the club to a new state of the art stadium possibly to be located in the ZEN neighbourhood of Palermo not far from the Velodromo Paolo Borsellino a smaller stadium which had previously hosted some Palermo matches 61 Supporters Edit Palermo supporters in the 2006 Sicilian derby The majority of Palermo supporters come from the city and its neighbourhood However Palermo is also widely popular throughout Western Sicily as well as among Sicilian immigrants in northern Italy For example a number of Palermo fans living in and around the German city of Solingen have even founded a club named FC Rosaneri in honour of Palermo which as of 2007 plays in the Kreisliga B league 62 63 64 Support for Palermo is traditionally closely associated with a strong sense of Sicilian identity indeed it is not uncommon to see Sicilian flags waved by fans and ultras during Palermo matches Palermo fans are also twinned with Lecce ultras 65 This friendship was strengthened by the acquisition of Fabrizio Miccoli who is originally from the city of Lecce and a well known Lecce supporter who went on to become captain of Palermo and also the club s most prolific player setting records for most Serie A league goals 74 from 2007 to 2013 most goals in all competitions 81 from 2007 to 2013 and most Serie A league appearances 165 from 2007 to 2013 Palermo s biggest rivals are fellow islanders Catania Matches between Palermo and Catania are usually referred to as Sicilian derbies despite the existence of a third Sicilian team Messina who played in Serie A alongside Palermo and Catania in recent years Rivalry with Messina although historically older is generally less intense than that with Catania The 2006 07 return match between Palermo and Catania played on 2 February 2007 at Stadio Angelo Massimino Catania is remembered due to the death of policeman Filippo Raciti who was injured during riots between the local police and the Catania supporters According to a survey of 2008 the team has about 1 47 million fans domestically placing it among the top ten best supported Italian teams For example at the Coppa Italia final played in Rome on 29 May 2011 against Inter which Palermo lost 3 1 it was estimated that there were 25 000 35 000 fans from Palermo easily outnumbering the Nerazzurri fans present Players EditFor a list of footballers see List of Palermo F C players For all former and current Palermo players with a Wikipedia article see Category Palermo F C players Current squad Edit As of 18 January 2023 66 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 Giovanni Grotta3 DF ITA Marco Sala on loan from Sassuolo 4 DF URU Renzo Orihuela on loan from Montevideo City Torque 5 MF FRA Claudio Gomes7 FW ITA Gennaro Tutino on loan from Parma 8 MF ITA Jacopo Segre9 FW ITA Matteo Brunori Captain 10 FW ITA Francesco Di Mariano12 GK ITA Samuele Massolo14 MF ITA Jeremie Broh15 DF ITA Ivan Marconi16 MF SVN Leo Stulac on loan from Empoli No Pos Nation Player18 DF ROU Ionuț Nedelcearu19 FW ITA Luca Vido on loan from Atalanta 21 MF ITA Samuele Damiani22 GK ITA Mirko Pigliacelli25 DF ITA Alessio Buttaro27 FW ITA Edoardo Soleri28 MF BIH Dario Saric30 MF ITA Nicola Valente37 DF CZE Ales Mateju48 DF ITA Davide Bettella on loan from Monza 77 MF ITA Salvatore Elia on loan from Atalanta 79 DF ITA Edoardo LanciniOut 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 FW ITA Giacomo Corona at Torino until 30 June 2023 DF ITA Roberto Crivello at Padova until 30 June 2023 DF SRB Mladen Devetak at Viterbese until 30 June 2023 DF ALB Masimiliano Doda at Imolese until 30 June 2023 FW ITA Giuseppe Fella at Monopoli until 30 June 2023 No Pos Nation Player DF GAM Bubacarr Marong at Gelbison until 30 June 2023 DF ITA Enrico Mauthe at Sambenedettese until 30 June 2023 DF ITA Manuel Peretti at Recanatese until 30 June 2023 FW ITA Andrea Silipo at Juve Stabia until 30 June 2023 Former players Edit In 2020 as part of the celebrations for the club s 120th anniversary Palermo announced a hall of fame selection with eleven players and a manager selected from a list of over 100 proposals The most voted players were 67 Stefano Sorrentino Federico Balzaretti Andrea Barzagli Fabio Grosso Eugenio Corini Josip Ilicic Javier Pastore Lamberto Zauli Paulo Dybala Fabrizio Miccoli Luca ToniClub officials EditBoard of directors Edit Role NamePresident Dario MirriExecutive President Giovanni GardiniGeneral Secretary Giuseppe Li VigniInterim Sporting Director Leandro RinaudoTeam Manager amp Press Officer Andrea SiracusaManager of Youth System Leandro RinaudoChief of Youth System Fabrizio GiambonaSupporter Liaison Officer Francesco MeliHead of Security Antonino LentiniRSPP amp Supervisory Tiziana CaracappaLast updated 7 August 2022 Source Board of directors 68 Current technical staff Edit Role NameHead Coach Eugenio CoriniAssistant Coach Salvatore LannaTechnical Collaborator Mario SantanaTechnical Collaborator Stefano OlivieriGoalkeeping Coach Michele MarottaFitness Coach Marco PetrucciMatch Analyst Matteo CamoniScout Vincenzo LeonardiChief Doctor Roberto MatraciaClub Doctor Giuseppe PuleoPhysiotherapists Gianluca Chinnici Claudio Fici Mirko GenzardiNutritionist Leandro CarolloPodologist Alberto CroceLast updated 7 August 2022 Source Technical staff 69 Managers EditMain article List of Palermo F C managers In 2020 as part of the celebrations for the club s 120th anniversary Palermo announced a hall of fame selection asking their supporters to select the best manager in the club s history among a list of successful ones from the past The best manager in the club s history was selected to be Francesco Guidolin who led Palermo to win promotion to Serie A in 2004 after a 31 year absence and sixth place in the top flight best result in the club s history and consequent first ever European qualification the year after 67 Other candidates for all time manager were in order of votes Delio Rossi Giuseppe Iachini Ignazio Arcoleo Cestmir Vycpalek Fernando Veneranda Giuseppe Caramanno Rosario Pergolizzi Corrado Viciani Carmelo Di Bella Gipo Viani Benigno De GrandiChairmen history EditOver the years Palermo has had various owners and chairmen here is a chronological list of the known chairmen 3 Joseph Whitaker honorary chairman during the early 1900s Edward De Garston 1900 1903 Barone Michele Vannucci 1903 1904 Cavaliere Ignazio Majo Pagano 1904 1908 Barone Roberto Pottino 1908 1915 Valentino Colombo 1920 1923 Cavaliere Michele Utveggio 1923 1925 Valentino Colombo 1925 1926 Conte Liotta di Lemos 1928 Barone Giovanni Sergio 1928 Conte Guido Airoldi 1928 1929 Barone Luigi Bordonaro di Gebbiarossa 1929 1931 Francesco Paolo Barresi 1931 1933 Cavaliere Giovanni Lo Casto Valenti 1933 1934 Valentino Colombo 1934 1935 Giovanni De Luca 1935 Luigi Majo Pagano 1935 1936 Valentino Colombo 1936 1937 Paolo Di Pietra 1937 1938 Salvatore Barbaro 1938 1940 Duilio Lanni 1941 1942 Giuseppe Agnello 1942 1947 Stefano La Motta 1947 1948 Giuseppe Guazzardella 1948 1951 Raimondo Lanza di Trabia 1951 1952 Barone Carlo La Lomia 1952 1953 Mario Fasino 1953 1954 Ernesto Pivetti 1954 1955 Giuseppe Trapani 1955 Conte Arturo Cassina 1955 1956 Giuseppe Seminara 1956 1957 Casimiro Vizzini 1957 1963 Conte Guglielmo Pinzero 1963 1964 Ernesto Di Fresco Luigi Barbaccia Franz Gorgone 1964 Casimiro Vizzini 1964 Conte Guglielmo Pinzero 1964 Toto Vilardo 1964 1965 Franco Spagnolo 1965 Franz Gorgone 1965 Luigi Gioia 1965 Giuseppe Pergolizzi 1967 1970 Renzo Barbera 1970 1980 Gaspare Gambino 1980 1982 Roberto Parisi 1982 1985 Salvatore Matta 1985 1986 Salvino Lagumina 1987 1989 Giovanni Ferrara 1989 1993 Liborio Polizzi 1993 1995 Giovanni Ferrara 1995 2000 Sergio D Antoni 2000 2002 Maurizio Zamparini 2002 2017 Paul Baccaglini 2017 Giovanni Giammarva 2017 2018 Clive Richardson 2018 2019 Rino Foschi 2019 Alessandro Albanese 2019 70 Dario Mirri 2019 Honours EditSerie B Champions 5 1931 32 1947 48 1967 68 2003 04 2013 14 Serie C1 Champions 4 1941 42 1945 46 1992 93 2000 01 Serie C2 Champions 1 1987 88 Serie D Champions 1 2019 20 Prima Divisione Champions 1 1929 30 Coppa Italia Serie C Winners 1 1992 93Other Titles Edit Coppa Federale SicilianaWinners 1 1920Whitaker Challenge CupWinners 1 1908Lipton Challenge CupWinners 5 1910 1912 1913 1914 1915Torneo di Tunisi Winners 1 1923 Campionato Primavera Winners 1 2008 09 Campionato Nazionale Dante Berretti Winners 1 2000 01 Coppa Allievi Professionisti Winners 1 1997 98 Campionato Giovanissimi Regionali Winners 2 2011 12 2012 13Records Edit Italian striker Luca Toni holds the record for most goals in a single season with Palermo scoring 30 times during the club s 2003 04 Serie B campaign Most appearances in all competitions 372 Roberto Biffi 1988 1999 Most European appearances 15 Andrea Barzagli Franco Brienza and Mattia Cassani Most Serie A league appearances 165 Fabrizio Miccoli 2007 2013 Most league goals 74 Fabrizio Miccoli 2007 2013 Most Serie A league goals 74 Fabrizio Miccoli 2007 2013 Most Coppa Italia cup goals 7 Massimo De Stefanis 1979 1984 Most Europa League UEFA Cup goals 4 Franco Brienza 2000 2013 Abel Hernandez 2009 2014 Most goals in all competitions 81 Fabrizio Miccoli 2007 2013 Most goals in a season 30 Luca Toni 2003 2004 Current player with most appearances 78 Roberto Floriano as of 12 June 2022 Biggest win and biggest home win in Serie A 8 0 v Pro Patria 5 November 1950 Biggest away win 8 1 v Potenza 1 March 1942 Biggest defeat and biggest away defeat 0 9 v Milan 18 February 1951 Biggest home defeat 0 7 v Udinese 27 February 2011 Highest number of points in Serie A league 65 pt 2009 10 5th position Best series without home defeats 26 Palermo Lecce 5 2 15 March 2009 Palermo Cagliari 0 0 29 August 2010 Greatest series of consecutive victories in Serie A league 5 2006 07 Competitions EditLeague Edit Level Category Participations Debut Last season MovesA Serie A 29 1932 33 2016 17 9B Serie B 44 1930 31 2018 19 9 3 3C Prima Divisione 1 1929 30 6Serie C 3 1941 42 2021 22Serie C1 9 1984 85 2000 01Serie C2 1 1987 88 187 out of 90 years of professional football in Italy since 1929D Serie D 1 2019 2020 1National cups Edit Competition Participation Debut Last seasonCoppa Italia 63 1935 36 2016 17Coppa Italia Serie C 10 1984 85 2000 01Supercoppa di Serie C 1 2000 01 2000 01International competitions Edit Category Participations Debut Last seasonEuropa Leagueex UEFA Cup 5 2005 06 2011 12Mitropa Cup 2 1960 1968 69Coppa delle Alpi 1 1960 1960In Europe EditUEFA Cup UEFA Europa League Edit Season Round Opposition Home Away Aggregate Reference2005 06 First round Anorthosis 2 1 4 0 6 1 71 Group B Maccabi Petah Tikva 2 1 1st Lokomotiv Moscow 0 0 Espanyol 1 1 Brondby 3 0 Round of 32 Slavia Prague 1 0 1 2 2 2 a Round of 16 Schalke 04 1 0 0 3 1 32006 07 First round West Ham United 3 0 1 0 4 0 72 Group H Eintracht Frankfurt 2 1 4th Newcastle United 0 1 Fenerbahce 0 3 Celta Vigo 1 1 2007 08 First round Mlada Boleslav 0 1 a e t 1 0 1 1 2 4 p 73 2010 11 Play off round Maribor 3 0 2 3 5 3 74 Group F Sparta Prague 2 2 2 3 3rd Lausanne Sport 1 0 1 0 CSKA Moscow 0 3 1 32011 12 Third qualifying round Thun 2 2 1 1 3 3 a 75 References Edit Renzo Barbera in Italian PalermoCalcio it Archived from the original on 23 April 2011 Retrieved 4 May 2011 a b Oltre un secolo di storia da via Notarbartolo alla A PDF in Italian La Repubblica Palermo Archived from the original PDF on 30 June 2007 Retrieved 4 May 2007 a b Il 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release in Italian U S Citta di Palermo 2 May 2019 Archived from the original on 3 May 2019 Retrieved 20 May 2019 a b c d e Lo stadio Renzo Barbera in Italian U S Citta di Palermo Archived from the original on 29 April 2007 Retrieved 4 May 2007 Si studia un impianto alla tedesca il progetto e ancora in alto mare L Espresso Archived from the original on 15 October 2007 Retrieved 4 May 2007 Die Party ist noch lange nicht vorbei in German Solinger Tageblatt Retrieved 4 May 2007 dead link Cuori rosanero in terra tedesca PDF in Italian Provincia di Palermo Archived from the original PDF on 30 June 2007 Retrieved 4 May 2007 Kreisliga B Gruppe 2 Saison 2006 07 in German ESV Opladen Archived from the original on 29 September 2007 Retrieved 4 May 2007 Lecce l 8 agosto sfida con il Palermo in Italian Yahoo Italia Sport Archived from the original on 19 September 2007 Retrieved 4 May 2007 First Team 2022 23 palermofc com a b LA HALL OF FAME ROSANERO in Italian Palermo F C Retrieved 20 February 2021 Board of directors Technical staff COMUNICATO DELLA SOCIETA Press release in Italian U S Citta di Palermo 3 May 2019 Archived from the original on 3 May 2019 Retrieved 20 May 2019 UEFA Europa League 2005 06 UEFA Retrieved 28 August 2017 UEFA Europa League 2006 07 UEFA Retrieved 28 August 2017 UEFA Europa League 2007 08 UEFA Retrieved 28 August 2017 UEFA Europa League 2010 11 UEFA Retrieved 28 August 2017 UEFA Europa League 2011 12 UEFA Retrieved 28 August 2017 Bibliography EditDel Tappo Luca Mazzola Calogero 2005 Il Palermo Saggio sociologico sportivo in Italian III ed Palermo Edizioni il foglio p 313 Tarantino Giovanni Paterna Massimiliano 2014 Una storia in rosa e nero La maglia del Palermo i colori di una citta in Italian Palermo il Palindromo p 105 ISBN 9788898447077 Prestigiacomo Vincenzo Bagnati Giuseppe Maggio Vito 2001 Il Palermo una storia di cento anni in Italian Palermo Corrado Rappa p 232 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Prestigiacomo Vincenzo Bagnati Giuseppe Maggio Vito 2004 Il Palermo racconta storie confessioni e leggende rosanero in Italian Palermo Grafill p 253 ISBN 88 8207 144 8 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Giordano Giovanni Brandaleone Carlo 1982 Calcio Palermo gli ottantaquattro anni di storia della societa rosanero in Italian Palermo Giada p 432 ISBN 88 8207 144 8 Ginex Roberto Gueli Roberto 1996 Breve storia del grande Palermo in Italian Rome Newton p 66 ISBN 88 8183 361 1 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Palermo FC Official website in Italian Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Palermo F C amp oldid 1134618102, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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