A.C. Voghera

Associazione Calcio Voghera was an Italian football club, basedd in Voghera, Lombardy. It played at Stadio Comunale, in Voghera, with 4,000 seats.

Voghera
Full nameAssociazione Calcio Voghera
Founded1919
1959 (refounded)
Dissolved2013
GroundStadio Comunale, Voghera
Capacity4,000

Foundation

Associazione Vogherese Calcio was founded on 26 November 1919 at the Trattoria Pistone.

After a dozen championships between second and first division, in 1930 Vogherese lost the playoff for promotion to Serie B in Piacenza for three goals to two.

In 1932, the Italian national team played a friendly in Voghera, winning by six to two.

In the late 1930s until 1942 the Vogherese were called V.I.S.A. Voghera, only to return to A.V.C. Vogherese in championship 1942–43.

Between 1945 and 1948 was the peak for football in Voghera with three consecutive seasons in Serie B. Then the relegation to Serie C in the 1950s, in 1959 the company experienced a severe financial crisis that lead to the cessation of sport.

Refoundation

To continue the football tradition of A.C. Voghera, the Associazione Ragazzi Cairoli, founded in 1948 took the place of Vogherese, recovering only in 1994 the name of the bankrupt company, competing in amateur championships Lombard until it return to Serie D.

At the end of the 1980–81 season it was promoted to the Serie C2 in which it remained until the 1987–88 season.

Demoted in Serie D, it would still play between this league and Serie C2: it was relegated from C2 at the end of the 1998–99 season.

In 2005 the team after finishing the season in third place, won the play offs, but this was not enough to get the repechage to Serie C2.

In the 2010–11 season Voghera gained access to the Serie D promotion play-off advancing through the group stage to the semifinals, where it was eliminated by Rimini.

Liquidation

In summer 2013 the club wasn't able to enter 2013–14 Serie D and was so subsequently liquidated.

Colors and badge

Its colors were red and black.

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gollark: What if number of repeated applications of `ln(2x)` or something?
gollark: Fascinating.
gollark: Mathological™ sequence idea: number of repeated applications of `ln` required to reach a negative result, for each integer.
gollark: Too bad, hyperreals initiated.
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