1994–95 S.S.C. Napoli season

S.S.C. Napoli performed about the same as it had in the 1993-94 season, finishing seventh in the championship, but having a better domestic cup run. Napoli also reached the Last 16 of the UEFA Cup, where it lost to Eintracht Frankfurt. The squad had been depleted due to losses of several offensive key players in the seasons before, so seventh in the domestic league would normally have been regarded as a positive result, but it was only after Vujadin Boškov had been appointed to lead the team in place of Vincenzo Guerini that Napoli could stay well clear of the relegation zone. Brazilian signing André Cruz was crucial to the defense, and also showed unusual offensive skills for a central defender, scoring several goals. Fabio Cannavaro also had a spectacular season, which ended with Parma buying the defender.

Napoli
1994-95 season
ManagerVincenzo Guerini
Vujadin Boškov
Serie A7th
Coppa ItaliaQuarter Finals
UEFA CupLast 16
Top goalscorerMassimo Agostini (9)

Squad

Goalkeepers

Defenders

Midfielders

Attackers

Serie A

League table

Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Qualification or relegation
5 Roma 34 16 11 7 46 25 +21 59 Qualification to UEFA Cup first round
6 Internazionale 34 14 10 10 39 34 +5 52
7 Napoli 34 13 12 9 40 45 5 51
8 Sampdoria 34 13 11 10 51 37 +14 50
9 Cagliari 34 13 10 11 40 39 +1 49
Source: Serie A, RSSSF.com, Soccerway
Rules for classification: 1) Points; 2) Head-to-head points; 3) Head-to-head goal difference; 4) Goal difference; 5) Goals scored; 6) Draw. (Note: Head-to-head record is used only after all the matches between the teams in question have been played).[1]

Matches

4Genoa3–3Napoli
Nappi  8'
Bortolazzi  43'
Cannavaro  59' (o.g.)
Buso  22'
Policano  31'
André Cruz  83'
5Napoli3–3Padova
Rincón  52' 84' (pen.)
Agostini  55'
Longhi  66' (pen.)
Maniero  85, 86'
6Lazio5–1Napoli
Bokšić  3'
Winter  20, 42'
Casiraghi  36'
Negro  38'
Pecchia  33'
7Napoli3–0Bari
Agostini  43, 75'
Carbone  90' (pen.)
10Napoli2–5Fiorentina
Agostini  56, 59' André Cruz  15' (o.g.)
Cannavaro  73' (o.g.)
Cois  81'
Batistuta  84' 90' (pen.)
11Foggia1–1Napoli
Mandelli  31' Bianchini  58' (o.g.)
12Napoli1–1Torino
Carbone  51' Angloma  43'
13Inter0–2Napoli
Jonk  29' (o.g.)
André Cruz  67'
15Milan1–1Napoli
Simone  73' Cannavaro  87'
17Parma2–0Napoli
Asprilla  4'
Zola  50' (pen.)
18Reggiana1–2Napoli
Zanutta  90' Rincón  38'
André Cruz  74'
22Padova2–0Napoli
Franceschetti  62'
Longhi  66' (pen.)
23Napoli3–2Lazio
Rincón  49, 56'
Buso  87'
Casiraghi  20, 40'
24Bari1–1Napoli
Tovalieri  5' Fontana  27'
27Fiorentina4–0Napoli
Sottil  17'
Márcio Santos  47'
Batistuta  55'
Cois  82'
28Napoli2–1Foggia
André Cruz  23'
De Vincenzo  73' (o.g.)
Biagioni  42'
29Torino1–1Napoli
Rizzitelli  90' Buso  31'
30Napoli1–3Inter
André Cruz  34' Orlandini  11'
Berti  65'
Bergkamp  84'
31Brescia1–2Napoli
Galli  82' Imbriani  39'
Agostini  49'
34Napoli1–0Parma
Agostini  24' (pen.)

Topscorers

gollark: I learned vaguely how it worked from porting and then debugging it a ton, so:
gollark: Well, it's a port of a Haskell program, hence the name `fractalart-rs`, but running much faster, which is important as the algorithm is O(n³) or something.
gollark: Observe, "fractal art".
gollark: For instance, there is now `fractalart-rs`, now that I've fixed it, *and* `calibre-indexer`, from a while ago.
gollark: https://github.com/osmarks/random-stuff ← updates have occurred to this

References

  1. Almanacco Illustrato del Calcio - La Storia 1898-2004, Panini Edizioni, Modena, September 2005 "Norme organizzative interne della F.I.G.C. - Art. 51.6" (PDF) (in Italian). Italian Football Federation. 12 September 2018. Retrieved 11 November 2018.

Sources

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