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AS Roma

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Roma
logo
Full nameAssociazione Sportiva Roma
SpA
Nickname(s)Giallorossi (Yellow-red),
Magica (Magic)
FoundedJuly 22, 1927
GroundStadio Olimpico,
Rome
Capacity82,307
ChairmanItaly Franco Sensi
ManagerItaly Luciano Spalletti
LeagueSerie A
2005-06Serie A, 5th (2nd)

Associazione Sportiva Roma (BIT{{{2}}}) is an Italian football club and one of the major teams in Rome and in central part of Italy. Nicknamed the giallorossi (yellow-reds), they currently play in Serie A. Roma's home uniforms are maroon red shirts with golden yellow borders, white shorts and black socks.

The emblem of the team is the Capitoline she-wolf suckling twins, symbol of Rome, superimposed a bipartite golden-yellow over red shield; official colors are the same as those of the city of Rome, red for imperial dignity, and gold which represents the Pope or God in Christianity.

History

Foundation

A.S. Roma was founded in July 1927. The city of Rome, at the time, had several teams in the Italian football league: S.S. Alba-Audace Roma (founded in 1926 with the fusion of Alba - 1911 - and Audace), Fortitudo-Pro Roma S.G.S. (founded in 1926 with the fusion of Fortitudo - 1908 - and Pro Roma - 1912), Roman F.C. (1901) and S.S. Lazio (1910)[1]. However the Fascist regime wanted to merge the latter into one which the working classes could identify with and strong enough to challenge the traditional northern teams to reinforce Rome's image as regime capital for propaganda purposes.[citation needed] Lazio management refused to even discuss the matter, but Alba-Audace, Fortitudo-Pro Roma and Roman agreed to merge and thus A.S. Roma was founded. Roma was named after the city with the traditional colors of the city of Rome. Their first stadium was Motovelodromo Appio. The following grounds have been Testaccio, Stadio Flaminio and Stadio Olimpico (the latter was built in 1952).

AS Roma took part in their first national league in the 1929-30 season and won their first Scudetto in 1941-42. The second one was won in the 1982-83 season and the third in 2000-01. They were runners-up in 1930-31, 1935-36, 1980-81, 1983-84, 1985-86, 2001-02 and 2003-04. They were relegated only once, at the end of the 1950-51 season, returning to Serie A the next season.

File:Prati-DeSisti.jpg
Pierino Prati and Giancarlo De Sisti with As Roma's shirt in the 1970s.

1950s to 1970s

After returning to Serie A in 1952, Roma spent the remainder 1950s and early 1960s in the top half of Serie A. From 1963 to 1979 AS Roma endured a period of mediocrity with 3rd place in 1974-75 being the best they could manage, punctured by either mid-table mediocrity or flirtation with relegation. Notable players in this period include defender Giacomo Losi and midfielders Franco Cordova and Giancarlo De Sisti.

1970s to 1980s and onwards

File:Pruzzo 78-79.jpg
Roberto Pruzzo was Roma's most effective striker in the 1980s.

With talented players including Bruno Conti, Agostino Di Bartolomei, Roberto Pruzzo and Falcao, Roma would begin the 1980s in its best position to challenge for the title since 1942. After narrowly (and controversially) missing out in 1981 to Juventus FC, they broke through in 1983 amidst joyous celebrations in the capital. They reached the European Cup final the following year, only to lose to Liverpool on penalties.

They have more or less remained in the top half of Serie A ever since, occasionally mounting a serious challenge for the title, which they won again in the 2000/2001 season by beating parma 3-1 on the last day of the season, edging out Juventus by two points.

Francesco Totti was one of the main reasons for Roma's victory that season and has since become an icon of the club equal in status to Pruzzo and Conti before him. In Rome he is a hero, even more today thanks to Italy's 2006 FIFA World Cup success.

Roma came close to a successful defense of their title, but lost out as another title race with Juve went to the wire. They missed out by just one point and had to settle for second place and an automatic UEFA Champions League spot.

As of 2005-06, Roma have matched Milan's record (in 1989-1990) for consecutive wins, beating (on February 26th) Lazio 2-0 in the Rome derby for their 11th consecutive win.

AS Roma also made it to the final of the 2005/06 Coppa Italia to face Inter Milan. They drew the First leg 1-1 but lost the return leg 3-1, losing 4-2 on aggregate.

After Serie A rivals Lazio, AC Milan, Juventus and Fiorentina were all banned from entry into the 2006/07 Champions League on 14th July 2006, AS Roma gained automatic entry into the competition, as the aforementioned teams' point deductions meant that they effectively finished second to Inter Milan for the Serie A 2005-06 season.

During the 2006 World Cup five A.S. Roma players competed: Samuel Osei Kuffour played for Ghana which was the only African team to qualify for the last 16. Leandro Cufré played for Argentina and was sent off in their quarter final defeat to Germany. Francesco Totti, Daniele De Rossi, and Simone Perrotta all played for World Cup Champions Italy and all of them played a part in the World Cup final in which Italy defeated France 5-3 in Penalty kicks after a 1-1 draw.

Supporters

File:0001romaparmasaltomontella.jpg
Vincenzo Montella celebrating a goal in Roma-Parma 3-1 league match, which marked the winning of the Scudetto in 2001

The club plays at the 82,656 seater Stadio Olimpico, shared with S.S. Lazio. The two teams play one another each year in the Rome derby, a fiery, emotional match often marked with tension and occasional crowd trouble in and around the stadium. Two extreme incidents in particular have left their mark on the history of this fixture. In 1979, Lazio fan Vincenzo Paparelli was hit in the eye and killed by a flare fired by a Roma fan from the opposite end of the stadium (entering in Italian history as the first mortal episode of football-related violence), and in 2003 an unprecedented event occurred when the Roma Ultras forced the game to be suspended after spreading false rumours among the crowd present that a child had been killed by the police prior to the beginning of the game.

Roma's Ultras traditionally represented the working classes of the city, usually left-wing. During the last decades, however, an increasing number of fans have turned rightwards, acquiring some notoriety for the association of some of its members with the Italian extra-parliamentary extreme right (a trademark traditionally associated with S.S. Lazio). The fanbase is now extremely divided politically speaking, yet still shares the passionate support the club always drew (Roma is currently the fourth club in Italy in terms of support, right after the three biggest and most successful clubs Juventus, Inter and Milan).

Generally speaking, A.S. Roma fans are a majority in Rome.

First team squad

As of 12 September 2006

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 Italy ITA Gianluca Curci
2 DF Italy ITA Christian Panucci
3 DF Costa Rica CRC Gilberto Martínez
5 DF France FRA Philippe Mexès
7 MF Chile CHI David Pizarro
8 MF Italy ITA Alberto Aquilani
9 FW Italy ITA Vincenzo Montella
10 FW Italy ITA Francesco Totti (captain)
11 MF Brazil BRA Rodrigo Taddei
12 GK Italy ITA Pietro Pipolo
13 DF Romania ROU Cristian Chivu
14 MF France FRA Ricardo Faty
16 MF Italy ITA Daniele De Rossi
18 FW Italy ITA Valerio Virga
19 DF Brazil BRA Rodrigo Defendi
No. Pos. Nation Player
20 MF Italy ITA Simone Perrotta
21 DF Italy ITA Matteo Ferrari
22 MF Italy ITA Max Tonetto
23 FW Montenegro MNE Mirko Vučinić
24 GK Italy ITA Carlo Zotti
27 GK Brazil BRA Julio Sergio
28 MF Italy ITA Aleandro Rosi
30 MF Brazil BRA Mancini
32 GK Brazil BRA Doni
33 DF Italy ITA Gianluca Freddi
34 MF Italy ITA Massimiliano Marsili
35 FW Italy ITA Stefano Okaka Chuka
36 MF Italy ITA Simone Palermo
37 MF Italy ITA Andrea Giacomini
77 DF Italy ITA Marco Cassetti

Out on loan

DF Ghana GHA Samuel Kuffour (at Livorno)
FW Italy ITA Alessio Cerci (at Brescia)
MF Italy ITA Leandro Greco (at Hellas Verona)
DF Italy ITA Paolo Seppani (at Frosinone)
MF Italy ITA Daniele Magliocchetti (at Hellas Verona)
FW Democratic Republic of the Congo COD Shabani Nonda (at Blackburn Rovers)
MF Italy ITA Raffaele Longo (at Genoa)
MF Honduras HON Edgar Álvarez (at Messina)
MF Italy ITA Daniele Galloppa (at Ascoli)
MF Italy ITA Matteo Brighi (at Chievo)
DF Italy ITA Gianluca Comotto (at Torino)

2006/2007 transfers

In
GK Brazil BRA Julio Sergio (from América) (free transfer)
MF Italy ITA Max Tonetto (from Sampdoria) (free transfer)
MF Honduras HON Edgar Álvarez (from Peñarol) (€1.5m)
MF France FRA Ricardo Faty (from Strasbourg) (€360K)
DF Italy ITA Marco Cassetti (from Lecce) (€1.5m, co-ownership deal)
MF Chile CHI David Pizarro (from Internazionale) (€6.5m, co-ownership deal)
DF Costa Rica CRC Gilberto Martinez (on loan from Brescia)
DF Brazil BRA Rodrigo Defendi (on loan from Tottenham)
FW Montenegro MNE Mirko Vucinic (on loan from Lecce)
Out
DF Italy ITA Cesare Bovo (to Palermo) (co-ownership resolved in favour of Palermo)
MF Italy ITA Gaetano D'Agostino (to Udinese via Messina) (co-ownership resolved in favour of Messina)
GK Italy ITA Ivan Pelizzoli (to Reggina) (co-ownership resolved in favour of Reggina)
FW Italy ITA Alessandro Tulli (co-ownership to Lecce) (€0.5m)
FW Italy ITA Daniele Corvia (to Siena) (50% of contract sold in co-ownership deal)
FW Egypt EGY Mido (to Tottenham) (€6.75m)
DF Argentina ARG Leandro Cufré (to Monaco) (€4m)
MF France FRA Olivier Dacourt (to Inter) (free transfer)
MF Italy ITA Damiano Tommasi (to Levante) (free transfer)
GK Greece GRE Dimitrios Eleftheropoulos (to Ascoli) (free transfer)
MF Morocco MAR Houssine Kharja (to Ternana) (end loan)

Retired numbers

As of 2006, AS Roma has officially retired only one shirt, the number 6 worn by Aldair, centre back, 1990-2003.

Team honours

AS Roma has won three Italian Championships (Scudetti), seven Italian Cups (Coppa Italia) in 1963-64, 1968-69, 1979-80, 1980-81, 1983-84, 1985-86, and 1990-91; the Supercoppa Italiana in 2001, and the Inter-Cities Fairs Cup once in 1960-61, defeating Birmingham City. In 1984 AS Roma lost the final match of the European Cup, played in Rome, against Liverpool F.C., after a penalty shootout.

Notable former players

for a complete list see also: List of AS Roma players

Note: In the list below players with double nationality have the flag of their second country next to their names

Albania Albania
Argentina Argentina
Austria Austria
Brazil Brazil
France France
Japan Japan
Germany Germany
 
Italy Italy
 
Poland Poland
Russia Russia
Serbia Serbia
Sweden Sweden
Uruguay Uruguay
Wales Wales

Coaches

 

Traianos Dellas

References

  1. ^ S.S. Lazio was founded in 1900 as a road racing society.[1] Only in 1902 Lazio played its first football matches, and only in 1910 the football division was officially created, after the Roman Football Club had already been founded in 1901. Thus the claim that Lazio brought football in Rome is wrong, as well as the claim that Lazio was the first Roman football team. (Fontanelli, Carlo, and Simona Carboncini, I colori del calcio, Geo Edizioni)

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