U.C._Albinoleffe

UC AlbinoLeffe

UC AlbinoLeffe

Italian football club


Unione Calcio AlbinoLeffe is an Italian association football club representing Albino and Leffe, two small towns located in Val Seriana, Lombardy. The club played in Serie B for nine consecutive years and narrowly missed promotion in Serie A at the end of the 2007–08 season. It currently plays in Serie C and has been in the Italian third tier since its relegation in 2011–12.

Quick Facts Full name, Nickname(s) ...

History

The performance of AlbinoLeffe in the Italian football league structure since the first season of a unified Serie A (1929/30). The club's first season was 1998/99.

The club was created in 1998 as a result of the merger between former Serie C2 (fourth division) teams Albinese Calcio and Società Calcio Leffe, respectively from Albino and Leffe, two neighbouring towns. In their first season, the club finished 2nd in the Serie C2 and won a promotion having defeated AC Prato in the Girone A Play-offs final. After rising to Serie C1 (the Italian third division), they performed at the middle of the pack, finishing 9th in 2000 and 13th in 2001.

However, in 2002, the Seriani went to the finals of the Coppa Italia Serie C, where they defeated Livorno 2–1 at home before losing 2–3 on the road.[tone][clarification needed] They won the tournament on the tiebreaker (most away goals scored). In league play they again finished 13th. In 2003, AlbinoLeffe, under coach Elio Gustinetti, finished second in league play before heading to the promotion play-off. There, they defeated Padua in the semifinals, then had a surprising[according to whom?] triumph[tone] over Pisa Calcio, which pushed them up to Serie B.

The team moved from the small Martinelli Stadium in Leffe, where they used to play home matches before promotion to Serie B, to the bigger Stadio Atleti Azzurri d'Italia located in Bergamo, the chief-town of the province where both Albino and Leffe are located. Even though AlbinoLeffe was considered[by whom?] to be an outsider in Serie B, which historically includes several former Scudetto winners, the team remarkably[tone] managed to[tone] avoid relegation in the last two seasons. In 2005–2006, after a great[tone][according to whom?] comeback in the second half of the season following the appointment of Emiliano Mondonico as new head coach, Albinoleffe ended the season in eighteenth place and managed to[tone] save itself from relegation by prevailing[tone] in the playouts against Avellino (score: 2–0, 2–3). The 2006–2007 Serie B campaign, the fourth consecutive for the small Lombard team, ended with a good[tone][according to whom?] tenth place, well ahead of the relegation zone.

Historically, AlbinoLeffe's home games have been characterized[by whom?] by very low attendance, as shown by the average 2,400 spectators per game in the 2006–07 season, the most successful in the club history.[1]

With local hero[tone] Gustinetti back in charge of the team and despite a lineup composed of relative unknowns, the club's 2007–08 campaign started surprisingly[tone] well, with the team leading the Serie B table for a few[vague][quantify] weeks and arousing the interest of the national media, which began providing regular coverage of the team's games.[citation needed] This has thus far[vague][clarification needed] failed to improve the club's low home attendance, however. During the season, AlbinoLeffe confirmed as a potential candidate for direct promotion to Serie A, however a string of[tone] poor results, ended with four consecutive home defeats, the final one being a 0–4 loss to Rimini, denied them the chance to achieve a place in the top two, and persuaded club chairman Gianfranco Andreoletti to sack Gustinetti, who then confirmed not to be in good relationships with the chairman, and appoint youth team coach Armando Madonna as caretaker boss for the final regular season match and the following promotion playoffs.[2] Even after a 1–0 loss to Brescia, AlbinoLeffe managed to[tone] win at home in the second leg (2–1) and qualified for the final against Lecce. In the first leg they suffered[tone] a 1–0 loss. On 15 June, the second match was played in Lecce and its result was 1–1, so AlbinoLeffe did not reach Serie A.

At the end of the 2011–12 season, it was relegated to Lega Pro Prima Divisione after 9 consecutive years in Serie B.

AlbinoLeffe following the systematic match fixing as a club controlled by Singapore-based organized crime[vague][clarification needed][3][4][5] was penalized 10 points in the 2012–13 Lega Pro Prima Divisione.[citation needed]

Stadium and colours

From the 2003–04 Serie B season and until 2019, AlbinoLeffe played its home games at the Atleti Azzurri d'Italia stadium in the city of Bergamo. Previously they played in Stadio Carlo Martelli of Leffe.

Following Atalanta's renovation works on the stadium, the club reached a venue sharing agreement with Giana Erminio from the nearby city of Gorgonzola allowing the club to play their home matches for the 2019–20 Serie C season at the Stadio Città di Gorgonzola.[6]

In 2021, the club opened a brand-new stadium in the town of Zanica with a capacity of 1,791 (with possibility of expansion to up to 5,500 in case of a promotion in Serie B) built next to the club's headquarters and training centre; the stadium was formally approved by the Italian National Olympic Committee in March 2019.[7] The stadium makes AlbinoLeffe the first Serie C team to own their home stadium. the[vague][clarification needed] inauguration match was played on 21 December 2021, a Serie C league game against Pro Patria.[8]

The club's official colours are dark blue and azure blue, also used for home matches, while the outfit worn by the players for away matches is red and yellow. Up until the 2022/2023 season, the official stadium speaker of the club was Simone Altrocchi.[9]

Honours

Domestic

Coppa Italia Serie C

Serie B

Serie C1

Serie C2

Players

Current squad

As of 1 February 2024[10]

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

More information No., Pos. ...

Out on loan

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

More information No., Pos. ...

Club officials

More information Role, Name ...

Seasons

More information Season, Div ...

Notable former players

The footballers enlisted below have had international cap(s) for their respective countries at junior and/or senior level and/or a significant[vague][clarification needed] number of caps and goals accumulated throughout a certain number of seasons[vague][quantify][clarification needed] for UC AlbinoLeffe.

Notable former managers


References

  1. "Serie B 06-07 attendances". Retrieved 20 June 2007.
  2. "Albinoleffe, via Gustinetti" (in Italian). Corriere dello Sport. 26 May 2008. Retrieved 26 May 2008.
  3. "L'ALBINOLEFFE ALLO STADIO CITTÀ DI GORGONZOLA" (in Italian). AS Giana Erminio. 27 May 2019. Retrieved 14 July 2019.
  4. "Stadio dell'AlbinoLeffe a Zanica Via libera dal Coni al progetto" (in Italian). L'Eco di Bergamo. 2 March 2019. Retrieved 14 July 2019.
  5. "Zanica, debutta lo stadio dell'AlbinoLeffe: è il primo impianto di proprietà in serie C" (in Italian). L'Eco di Bergamo. 18 December 2021. Retrieved 18 December 2021.
  6. "Dall'ottobre scorso, sono lo Speaker, la voce dell'Albinoleffe" (in Italian). Simone Altrocchi. 12 January 2022. Retrieved 6 January 2023.
  7. "Rosa AlbinoLeffe - Serie C 2020/21". www.albinoleffe.com (in Italian). Retrieved 9 September 2023.
  8. "STAFF" (in Italian). UC AlbinoLeffe. Retrieved 1 September 2023.
  9. "STAFF" (in Italian). UC AlbinoLeffe. Retrieved 1 September 2023.
  10. promoted through playoffs
  11. won relegation playoffs to Avellino
  12. lost promotion playoff finals to Lecce
  13. won relegation playoff against Piacenza
  14. lost in quarterfinals of promotion playoffs to Cremonese
  15. relegated to Serie D, but reinstated in Lega Pro by Italian Football Federation
  16. relegated to Serie D for the second time, but reinstated one more time in Lega Pro by Italian Football Federation

Share this article:

This article uses material from the Wikipedia article U.C._Albinoleffe, and is written by contributors. Text is available under a CC BY-SA 4.0 International License; additional terms may apply. Images, videos and audio are available under their respective licenses.