Atalanta BC
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Full name | Atalanta Bergamasca Calcio S.p.A. | |||
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Nickname(s) | La Dea (The Goddess), Nerazzurri (Black-blues) Orobici (Orobics) | |||
Founded | 1907 | |||
Ground | Stadio Atleti Azzurri d'Italia, Bergamo, Italy | |||
Capacity | 24,642 | |||
President | Antonio Percassi | |||
Head Coach | Stefano Colantuono | |||
League | Serie A | |||
2011–12 | Serie A , 12th | |||
Website | Club website | |||
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Atalanta Bergamasca Calcio, commonly known as just Atalanta, Atalanta Bergamo or the abbreviation Atalanta BC, is an Italian football club based in Bergamo, Lombardy.
They are nicknamed the Nerazzurri and the orobici. Atalanta play in blue-and-black vertically striped shirts, black shorts and black socks.
The club stadium is the 26,638 seater Atleti Azzurri d'Italia. In Italy, Atalanta is sometimes called Regina delle provinciali (queen of the provincial clubs) to mark the fact that the club is historically one of the best among non-metropolitan ones.
In 2010-11, the club gained promotion from Serie B to Serie A. Atalanta reached the Cup Winners' Cup Semifinal in 1988, when it was still competing in Serie B. This is still the best ever performance by a non-first division club in a major UEFA competition (together with Cardiff City).[1]
History
The club was founded in 1907. A football club had existed in Bergamo since 1904. Founded by wealthy Swiss immigrants, it was known as FC Bergamo. The rival Atalanta club grew out of a division between different sporting societies in the town. The name is taken from the female athlete of Greek mythology. The FIGC was unimpressed with the new club and did not officially recognize them until 1914. The current club is the result of a merger between Atalanta and a third team called Bergamasca. The first, black and white coloured and the second wearing a blue and white shirt, merged in 1924 as Atalanta Bergamasca di Ginnastica e Scherma 1907. The team moved to the site of the current ground, on the Viale Giulio Cesare, in 1928.23
Atalanta joined the Italian league in 1929. The club first reached Serie A in 1937, but was relegated immediately. The club returned in 1940 and remained in A until 1959; after a single season in Serie B the club was promoted and lasted a further decade in A, before relegation in 1973 led to an uncertain period of promotion and relegation between the two levels.
The club achieved its highest position in 1948, finishing in 5th place. In 1981 the club fell into Serie C1, a blow which revitalised the club. The team returned to B the next season and made it back to A in 1984. The club's form in Serie A remains uncertain, as it was relegated in 1987, 1994, 1998, 2003, 2005 and 2010. After a change of ownership,[2] in 2011 Atalanta has immediately come back to Serie A: it will dispute its 51st season in the major level of Italian football system.
In terms of titles the club has won little, their sole silverware is the 1963 Coppa Italia. The club has had a few good runs in Europe, on several occasions being eliminated by the eventual winners.
Welsh club Merthyr Tydfil F.C. caused an upset in the 1987-88 European Cup Winners' Cup beating Atalanta 2-1 in their First Round First Leg match at their Penydarren Park ground. A defeat which must have spurred Atalanta on as, after winning the Second Leg 2-0, they went on to reach the Semi-Finals, losing to eventual winners KV Mechelen, but in the process becoming one of only two teams in the competition’s history to reach the penultimate round while playing their football outside of the national top flight league. Oddly enough, the only other team to do so being Merthyr Tydfil’s countrymen at Cardiff City.
Atalanta reached the UEFA Cup Quarter Finals in the 1990-91 season, losing to local rivals Internazionale who went on to beat another Italian side, AS Roma, in the final to win the tournament.
Reputation
Over the years Atalanta has earned the reputation of being a feeder team within the league, mostly for their highly acclaimed and much vaunted youth policy. Over the years the club has produced a number or players who went on to bigger clubs though they have also launched the careers of other players, either by loan or co-ownership, who came to the club and developed before they moved on. Names such as the now disgraced Cristiano Doni and the likes of Sergio Floccari, Maurizio Ganz, Filippo Inzaghi, Paolo Montero, Sergio Porrini, Alessio Tacchinardi and Christian Vieri all came to notice while playing for Atalanta with players such as Germán Denis and Gianluigi Lentini rebooting their careers on loan at the club.
Players
Current squad
Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.
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Out on loan
Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.
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Retired numbers
14 - Federico Pisani, Forward (1991–97) - posthumous honour.
12 - Dedication to fans, in particularly for Pisani Curve ones
80 - Elio Corbani, radio journalist[5].
Primavera
Noted players
- See also: Category:Atalanta B.C. players
Presidential history
Atalanta have had several presidents over the course of their history. Some of them have been the main shareholder of the club, while others have been honorary presidents. The past president is Ivan Ruggeri, who was relieved of his duties after he suffered a stroke in January 2008, being replaced by his son Alessandro[6] that was named president of Atalanta in September 2008.Alessandro's father is unable to manage the team due to the consequences of the stroke.[7] In June 2010 after another relegation in Serie B Alessandro Ruggeri sold his share of Atalanta to Antonio Percassi that become president of Atalanta.[2]
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Managerial history
Atalanta have had many managers and head coaches throughout their history, below is a chronological list of them from when Serie A was changed into a league format, from 1929–30 onwards.
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Honours
- Coppa Italia
- Winners 1962/63
- Serie B
- Serie C1
- Northern Champions 1981/82
Supporters
Atalanta's supporters are considered very loyal. When Atalanta plays at the Atleti Azzurri d'Italia, the supporters in the Curva Nord (North Curve) encourage the team with their chants during the entire match.
The biggest rivalry is with the neighbouring supporters of Brescia, and there are strong rivalries also with supporters of Verona, Genoa, Fiorentina, Roma, Lazio, Napoli, Milan, Inter, Torino; while there has been a long-standing friendship with Ternana, fans of the German Bundesliga club Eintracht Frankfurt and fans of the Austrian club Wacker Innsbruck.
On special occasions Atalanta supporters display a very large black and blue flag called Bandierone which covers the whole Curva Nord stand.
References
- ^ Cardiff City
- ^ a b From Gazzetta dello Sport website
- ^ "Squadra - Atalanta.it" (in Italian). Atalanta B.C. Retrieved 5 September 2011.
- ^ "Numerazione Maglie per TIM Cup" (PDF) (in Italian). Lega Serie A. Retrieved 18 August 2012.
- ^ http://www.atalanta.it/live/-/articles/detail/article/123594
- ^ News from Yahoo news
- ^ http://www.eco.bg.it/EcoOnLine/SPORT/2008/09/03_ruggeri_intervista.shtml
- ^ http://www.endtoendstuff.co.uk/main-book.php?element_id=1&chapter_id=130
External links
- Template:It Official Atalanta BC Website
- Template:It Official Atalanta BC fans site
- Template:It Tutto Atalanta: Atalanta News & Gossip
- Russian Atalanta BC fans site
![](http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/thumb/4/4a/Commons-logo.svg/30px-Commons-logo.svg.png)
- Use dmy dates from January 2011
- Atalanta B.C.
- Sport in Bergamo
- Football clubs in Italy
- Football clubs in Lombardy
- Association football clubs established in 1907
- Italian football (soccer) First Division clubs
- Serie A clubs
- Serie B clubs
- Lega Pro Prima Divisione clubs
- Coppa Italia winners
- 1907 establishments in Italy