Massimo Drago

Massimo Drago (born March 2, 1971) is an Italian professional football coach and a former player.

Massimo Drago
Personal information
Date of birth (1971-03-02) March 2, 1971
Place of birth Crotone, Italy
Height 1.76 m (5 ft 9 12 in)
Playing position(s) Defender
Youth career
Pescara
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1988–1989 Kroton 33 (0)
1989–1990 Nola 27 (0)
1990–1991 Avellino 1 (0)
1991 Licata 4 (0)
1991–1992 Vigor Lamezia 31 (3)
1992–1994 Licata 60 (1)
1994–1996 Catania 52 (1)
1996–1999 Potenza 95 (9)
1999–2000 Castrovillari 27 (2)
2000–2001 Chieti 34 (0)
2001–2003 L'Aquila 57 (3)
2003–2004 Potenza 15 (0)
Teams managed
2008–2012 Crotone (assistant)
2012–2015 Crotone
2015–2016 Cesena
2019 Reggina
* Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only

Playing career

Born in Crotone, Drago started his career at hometown club Kroton in the Serie C2 league. In 1990–91 he had a short stint at Serie B level with Avellino, in what was his highest point as a footballer. He successively played at Serie C1, Serie C2 and Serie D level with a variety of teams before retiring in 2004.

Coaching career

After retiring as a player, Drago joined Crotone's coaching staff in 2005 as a youth coach for the Giovanissimi (under-15) level. In 2008, he was promoted as technical collaborator for the first team, and was successively named as assistant coach to Leonardo Menichini in 2011. After the latter's dismissal as head coach, Drago was then promoted new head coach of Crotone in January 2012,[1] successfully guiding the Calabrian club to safety in the 2011–12 Serie B and being successively appointed as permanent manager by the end of the season.[2]

Drago was successively admitted to the UEFA Pro Licence course due to his role as manager of a Serie B club in December 2012. Under his tenure, Crotone achieved a twelfth place in the 2012–13 season and, then, an impressive sixth place in the 2013–14 Serie B, the best result in the club history to date, thus qualifying to the promotion playoffs (then lost to Bari).

On 4 February 2019, Drago was appointed as the manager of Reggina.[3] The adventure at Reggina ended after only 9 games. He was fired after a defeat to Sicula Leonzio on 4 April 2019, after only managing to get 9 points in 9 games.[4]

gollark: Non-evil FS API ideas:- direct `write`/`read` access - no handles or handles emulated on top of this - either that or your thing can implement *either* handles *or* direct read/write and have the API translate it- no `fs.find`, `fs.combine`, `fs.complete`, `fs.getDir`, `fs.getName`- `mount`/`unmount`- per-file metadata
gollark: Well, actually, potatOS does support it, unless your handle happens to be to a virtualized file, at which point it'll just crash horribly somewhere.
gollark: Also you'll doom all VFS writers to an eternity of suffering.
gollark: Why would you use it?! PotatOS has no support.
gollark: So, theoretically yes, except nobody uses that so it's fine.

References

  1. "Crotone, esonerato Menichini: Drago nuovo allenatore" (in Italian). SportLive.it. 24 January 2012. Archived from the original on 5 March 2016. Retrieved 10 August 2014.
  2. "UFFICIALE: Crotone, Massimo Drago in panchina fino al 2015" (in Italian). TuttoMercatoWeb. 29 May 2012. Retrieved 10 August 2014.
  3. Ad allenare la Reggina Massimo Drago, il sidernese Galluzzo sarà allenatore in seconda, larivieraonline.com, 4 February 2019
  4. Calcio, Massimo Drago esonerato: già finita l’avventura sulla panchina della Reggina, ilcrotonese.it, 4 February 2019
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