A.S.D. Gallipoli Football 1909

S.S.D. Gallipoli Football 1909 is an Italian association football club, based in Gallipoli, Apulia.

Gallipoli
Full nameSocietà Sportiva Dilettantistica Gallipoli Football 1909
Nickname(s)Galletti (Roosters)
Founded1946
2010 (refounded)
GroundAntonio Bianco,
Gallipoli, Italy
Capacity5,000
ChairmanVincenzo Carrozza
ManagerAlberto Villa
LeagueEccellenza Apulia
2016–1712th

History

AC Gallipoli

The club was founded in 1999 as Associazione Calcio Gallipoli to represent the town of Gallipoli from the province of Lecce.[1] The club quickly rose up the Italian football system, being one of the two who were promoted from Eccellenza Apulia in 2003–04.

After gaining a promotion during their first ever season in Serie D, the club changed its name to Gallipoli Calcio in 2005.[1] Gallipoli then completed it by winning a third consecutive promotion to Serie C1, and making their absolute debut in the Italian third-highest level in the 2006–07 season, which ended in a mid-table place. Former Serie A star Dario Bonetti was then chosen as new boss for the 2007–08 season; he was however sacked later following disagreements with the board, in spite of impressive performances which gave the team a third place in the table. The club ultimately ended the season in ninth place, well below their initial expectations. Former AS Roma playing hero Giuseppe Giannini was successively appointed as new head coach for Gallipoli's 2008–09 campaign, which ended in triumph, as the giallorossi won a historic first promotion to Serie B as league winners in the final week.[2]

In July 2009, the club's future was put in doubt when President of the club, oil businessman and Senator Vincenzo Barba, announced that the club was up for sale at no cost. In addition, their home stadium (Stadio Antonio Bianco) was declared unfit as Serie B venue, so the club will be forced to play home games at the Via del Mare in Lecce. The situation seriously hampered their preparations for their first season in Serie B and the club was forced to play with its under-19 squad for their Coppa Italia second round match versus Lumezzane in which they were soundly beaten in a 6–0 defeat. With only two weeks before the start of the league, only four first team players were still under contract and no pre-season training camp was organized and no head coach was appointed yet.[3]

On 11 August 2009 an Udine-based company called "D'Odorico Group" took over the club from Barba, putting an end to weeks of speculation regarding the future of the club.[4] The new owner confirmed Giannini as coach. Despite being underdogs, Gallipoli managed to earn 28 points, thus ending the first half of the season in 11th place, but the situation crumbled in the second leg. Giannini resigned on 22 March 2010 after the club regularly failed to pay salaries to its players. After a two-game tenure under youth team coach Giovanni De Pasquale, former Triestina, Torino and Treviso boss Ezio Rossi was appointed. The change did not have any effect, as Gallipoli were relegated back to the third tier on 16 May 2010. The club had severe financial issues, and this caused at first the inability to request the admission to the Italian third tier (30 June 2010). The club owed Luca Pasqualin of P.D.P. srl for agent fee of €12,000 for signing Piergiuseppe Maritato and upheld by Tribunale Nazionale di Arbitrato per lo Sport of CONI.[5]

Then, in July 2010, a court in Lecce declared the club bankrupt.[6]

ASD Gallipoli Football 1909

A new club called A.S.D. Gallipoli Football 1909 was founded on 13 July 2010. Its goal is entering Promozione, the 7th tier of Italian football. The first season (2010–2011) finished with Gallipoli that reached the 3° place in graduatory, and then they lose the play-off to be promoted in Eccellenza Apulia.[7] Gallipoli finished 3rd Group B of Promozione Apulia and again lost promotion play-offs. But the club admitted to Eccellenza Apulia later. Gallipoli finished 7th in 2012–13 season. Finally Gallipoli won Eccellenza Apulia in 2013–14 season and promoted to Group H of Serie D. After two seasons in Italian Serie D and after many societary changes, the team downgrades again in Eccellenza Apulia in 2015–16.

Managerial history

Name Nationality Years
Salvatore Merico 2002–2003
Salvatore Nobile 2003
Antonio Toma 2003–2004
Franco Giugno 2004–2005
Gaetano Auteri 2005–2007
Dario Bonetti 2007–2008
Vincenzo Patania 2008
Giuseppe Giannini 2008–2010
Giovanni De Pasquale 2010
Ezio Rossi 2010–
Giovanni De Pasquale 2010–
Diego Favonio 2010–2011
Carmine Bray 2011
Amleto Massimo 2011–2012
Dario Levanto 2012–
Nicola Antonio Calabro 2012–2014
Alessandro Longo, Sergio Volturo, Raffaele Quaranta, Amleto Massimo-Benedetto Mangiapane 2014–2015
Loreto Stravato 2015–
Antonio Germano 2015–2016
Christian Cimarelli 2016–2017
Alberto Villa 2017–

Honours

Lega Pro Prima Divisione: 1

  • Winners: 2008–09

Supercoppa di Lega Pro Prima Divisione: 1

  • Winners: 2009

Serie C2: 1

  • Winners: 2005–06

Coppa Italia Serie C: 1

  • Winners: 2005–06

Serie D:

  • Promoted: 2004–05

Eccellenza Apulia: 2

  • Winners: 2003–04, 2013–14
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References

  1. "Gallipoli Calcio". WeltFussballArchiv.com. 24 June 2007.
  2. "Gallipoli in serie B Foggia nei playoff" (in Italian). La Gazzetta del Mezzogiorno. 17 May 2009. Archived from the original on 13 January 2016. Retrieved 18 May 2009.
  3. "Gallipoli in vendita a costo zero" (in Italian). tuttomercatoweb.com. 12 July 2009. Retrieved 9 August 2009.
  4. "Gallipoli ceduto, passa ai friulani" (in Italian). La Gazzetta del Mezzogiorno. 11 August 2009. Archived from the original on 13 January 2016. Retrieved 11 August 2009.
  5. "Dott. Luca Pasqualin – Gallipoli Calcio Srl" (PDF). CONI (in Italian). 22 July 2010. Archived from the original (PDF) on 30 September 2011. Retrieved 29 July 2011.
  6. Cappello, Linda (27 July 2010). "Gallipoli Calcio, il tribunale sentenzia il fallimento". Lecceprima.it (in Italian). Archived from the original on 30 July 2010. Retrieved 1 August 2010.
  7. "Nasce Gallipoli Football 1909. Giocherà in Promozione". Lecceprima.it (in Italian). 13 July 2010. Archived from the original on 22 July 2011. Retrieved 1 August 2010.
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