S.S.C. Napoli

S.S.C. Napoli
Napoli
SSC Napoli.svg
Full name Società Sportiva Calcio Napoli S.p.A.[1]
Nickname(s) Partenopei
Azzurri (The Blues)
Founded August 1, 1926; 85 years ago (1926-08-01)
(as Associazione Calcio Napoli)
Ground Stadio San Paolo,
Naples, Italy
(Capacity: 60,240)
Owner Aurelio De Laurentiis (through Filmauro srl)
President Aurelio De Laurentiis
Head Coach Walter Mazzarri
League Serie A
2010–11 Serie A, 3rd
Website Club home page
Home colours
Away colours
Third colours

Società Sportiva Calcio Napoli, commonly referred to as Napoli, is a professional Italian football club based in Naples and founded in 1926.[2] The club has spent most of its history in Serie A,[2] where it currently plays its 2011–12 season. Napoli has won Serie A twice, in 1986–87 and 1989–90.[2] They have also won the Italian Cup three times and the Italian Super Cup, and on the European stage have won the UEFA Cup in 1988–89. Napoli is also the most successful club in Southern Italy and the fourth most supported football club in Italy.[3]

The club has had several name changes since first appearing in 1926; the most important of these was in 1964, when it was changed from Associazione Calcio Napoli to Società Sportiva Calcio Napoli. The most recent change was in 2004,[4] when the club went bankrupt but was refounded by film producer Aurelio De Laurentiis as Napoli Soccer; he restored the name to Società Sportiva Calcio Napoli in early 2006.[2]

Contents

History

For more details on this topic, see History of S.S.C. Napoli

The first club was founded as Naples Foot-Ball & Cricket Club in 1904 by English sailor William Poths and his associate Hector M. Bayon.[5][6] Neapolitans such as Conforti, Catterina and Amedeo Salsi were also involved, the latter of which was the club's first president.[7] The original kit of the club was a sky blue and navy blue striped shirt, with black shorts.[8] The name of the club was shortened to Naples Foot-Ball Club in 1906.[citation needed]

Early into its existence, the Italian Football Championship was limited to just Northern clubs, so Southern clubs competed against sailors[5] or in cups such as Thomas Lipton's Lipton Challenge Cup. In the cup competed between Naples and Palermo FBC, Naples won three finals.[9] The foreign contingent at the club broke off in 1912 to form Internazionale Napoli,[5] in time for both club's debut in the Italian Championship of 1912–13.[10] Though the sides had a keen rivalry in the Campania section, they were not as successful outside of it and a few years after World War I, they merged as Foot-Ball Club Internazionale-Naples, also known as FBC Internaples.[citation needed]

Associazione Calcio Napoli

Attila Sallustro in the middle, with Napoli teammates in 1927.

Under the presidency of Giorgio Ascarelli, the club changed its name to Associazione Calcio Napoli on 23 August 1926.[11] After a poor start, with a sole point in an entire championship,[12] Napoli was readmitted to Serie A's forerunner National Division by the Italian FA, and began to improve thanks in part to Paraguayan-born Attila Sallustro, who was the first fully fledged hero to the fans.[13] He was a capable goal-scorer and eventually set the all-time goal-scoring record for Napoli, which still stands today.[14]

Napoli moved to the new Stadio San Paolo in 1959, where they have played since.

Napoli entered the Serie A-era under the management of William Garbutt.[15] During his six-year stint, the club would be dramatically transformed, frequently finishing in the top half of the table.[12] This included two third-place finishes during the 1932–33 and 1933–34 seasons,[12] with added notables such as Antonio Vojak, Arnaldo Sentimenti and Carlo Buscaglia.[16] For the years leading up to World War II Napoli went into decline, surviving relegation in 1939–40 by goal average.[12]

Napoli lost a closely contested relegation battle at the end of 1942 and were relegated to Serie B. They moved from Stadio Giorgio Ascarelli to Stadio Arturo Collana and stayed in Serie B until after the war. When play continued, Napoli earned the right to compete in Serie A,[12] but were relegated after two seasons for a bribery scandal.[17] The club bounced back to ensure top flight football at the start of the 1950s.[18] Napoli moved to their new home ground Stadio San Paolo in 1959. Despite erratic league form with highs and lows during this period, including a further relegation and promotion, Napoli had some cup success when they beat SPAL to lift the Coppa Italia in 1962, with goals from Gianni Corelli and Pierluigi Ronzon.[19] Their fourth relegation cut celebrations short the following season.[2]

Napoli on the rise: Maradona era

Napoli at the start of the '70s with Dino Zoff, José Altafini, and others.

As the club changed their name to Società Sportiva Calcio Napoli on 25 June 1964[2] they began to rise up again, gaining promotion in 1964–65. Under the management of former player Bruno Pesaola, they won the Coppa delle Alpi[2] and were back amongst the elite in Serie A, with consistent top five finishes.[12] Napoli came very close to winning the league in 1967–68, finishing just behind AC Milan in second place.[12] Some of the most popular players from this period were Dino Zoff, José Altafini, Omar Sívori, and hometown midfielder Antonio Juliano. Juliano would eventually break the appearance records, which still stand today.[16]

The trend of Napoli performing well in the league continued into the 1970s, with third place spots in 1970–71 and 1973–74.[12] Under the coaching of former player Luís Vinício, this gained them entry into the early UEFA Cup competitions; in 1974–75 they reached the third round knocking out Porto 2–0 on the way. During the same season, Napoli finished second in Serie A; just two points behind champions Juventus.[12] Solid performances from locally born players such as Bruscolotti, Juliano and Esposito were relied upon during this period, coupled with goals from Giuseppe Savoldi.[16]

After beating Southampton 4–1 on aggregate to lift the Anglo-Italian League Cup,[20] Napoli were entered into the UEFA Cup Winners' Cup for 1976–77, where they reached the semi-finals, losing 2–1 on aggregate to Anderlecht.[21] The club won their second Coppa Italia trophy in 1975–76, knocking out Milan and Fiorentina en route, before beating rivals Verona 4–0 in the final.[2] In terms of the Italian league, Napoli were still very much a consistent top six side for much of the late 1970s.[12] Even into the earliest two seasons of the 1980s, the club were performing respectably with a third place finish in 1980–81, however by 1983 they had slipped dramatically and were involved in relegation battles.[12]

Diego Maradona holding the UEFA Cup for Napoli.

Napoli broke the world transfer record fee, turning to Diego Maradona with a €12 million deal from Barcelona on 30 June 1984.[22] The squad was gradually re-built, with the likes of Ciro Ferrara, Salvatore Bagni, and Fernando De Napoli filling the ranks.[16] The rise up the tables was gradual, by 1985–86, they had a third place finish under their belts, but better was yet to come. The 1986–87 season was the landmark in Napoli's history; they won the double, securing the Serie A title by three points and then beating Atalanta 4–0 to lift the Coppa Italia.[2]

Because a mainland Southern Italian team had never won the league before, this turned Diego Maradona into a cultural, social and borderline religious icon[23] for Neapolitans, which stretched beyond the realms of just football.[23]

The club were unsuccessful in the European Cup in the following season and finished runners-up in Serie A. However, Napoli were entered into the UEFA Cup for 1988–89 and won their first major European title.[2] Juventus, Bayern Munich, and PAOK were defeated on the way to the final, where Napoli beat Stuttgart 5–4 on aggregate, with two goals from Careca and one each from Maradona, Ferrara and Alemão.[24]

Napoli added their second Serie A title in 1989–90, beating Milan by two points in the title race.[2] However, this was surrounded by less auspicious circumstances as Napoli were awarded two points for a game, when in Bergamo, an Atalanta fan threw a ₤100 lira coin at Alemão's head.[12] A controversial set of events set off at the 1990 World Cup, when Maradona made comments pertaining to North-South inequality in the country and the risorgimento, asking Neapolitans to root for Argentina in the semi-finals against Italy in Naples.[25]

I don't like the fact that now everybody is asking Neapolitans to be Italian and to support their national team. Naples has always been marginalised by the rest of Italy. It is a city that suffers the most unfair racism.

Diego Armando Maradona, July 1990

Napoli ultras responded by displaying a banner in their curva that read: "Maradona, Naples loves you, but Italy is our homeland".[26] It was the only stadium during the competition where the Argentine national anthem wasn't jeered,[26] Maradona bowed to the Napoli fans at the end and his country went on to reach the final. However, after the final the Italian Football Federation forced Maradona to take a doping test, which he failed testing positive for cocaine; Napoli and he claimed it was a revenge plot for events at the World Cup.[23] Maradona was banned for 15 months and would never play for the club again.[23] The club still managed to win the Supercoppa Italiana that year, with a record 5–1 victory against Juventus, but it would be their last major trophy. In the European Cup however, they went out in the second round.[27]

Decline and rebirth

Though the club finished fourth during the 1991–92 season,[12] Napoli gradually went into decline after that season, both financially and on the field. Players such as Gianfranco Zola, Daniel Fonseca, Ciro Ferrara and Careca had all departed by 1994. Though Napoli did manage to qualify for the 1994–95 UEFA Cup, reaching the third round and in 1996–97, Napoli appeared at the Coppa Italia final, but lost 3–1 to Vicenza.[28] Napoli's league form had dropped lower, and relegation to Serie B came at the end of 1997–98 when they recorded only two wins all season.[12]

The club returned to Serie A after gaining promotion in the 1999–2000 season, though after a closely contested relegation battle they were relegated back down.[12] They failed to gain promotion following this and slipped further down. By August 2004, Napoli was declared bankrupt with debts estimated up to €70 million.[29] To secure football in the city, film producer Aurelio De Laurentiis refounded the club under the name Napoli Soccer,[4] as they were not allowed to use their old name. FIGC placed Napoli in Serie C1, where they missed out on promotion after losing 2–1 in play-offs to local rivals Avellino.[2]

Despite the fact that Napoli were playing in such a low division, they retained higher average attendances than most of the Serie A clubs, breaking the Serie C attendance record with 51,000 at one game.[30] The following season, they secured promotion to Serie B and De Laurentiis bought back the club's history, restoring its name to Società Sportiva Calcio Napoli in May 2006.[2] After just one season back in Serie B, they were promoted on the final day, along with fellow sleeping giants Genoa.[31] Napoli finished the season placed 8th in the Serie A, enough to secure a place in the Intertoto Cup third round. That same year, Napoli also defeated five major teams, Milan, Internazionale, Juventus, Fiorentina, and Udinese.

The 2008–09 season saw Napoli qualifying to the UEFA Cup via Intertoto Cup. However, the team was eliminated in the first round by Portuguese team Benfica. At the domestic level, Napoli made a very impressive start, proposing as one of the main candidates for a Champions League spot; however, results and performances quickly declined in mid-season, causing Napoli to fall down to 11th place in the league table, and leading to the dismissal of manager Edy Reja in March 2009, with Roberto Donadoni being appointed as his replacement.[32]

Despite reinforcements in the summer transfer window,[33] Napoli began the 2009–10 season began with a number of poor results. After a 2–1 loss to Roma in October 2009, Donadoni was relieved of his duties and replaced by former Sampdoria manager, Walter Mazzarri.[34] Under Mazzarri, Napoli climbed up the table, before finishing in 6th place to qualify for the Europa League.[35] Napoli, under Mazzarri's guide and reinforced by players such as Edinson Cavani, spent part of the 2010–11 season in the second place, finally finishing third and qualifying directly to the group phase of the 2011–12 UEFA Champions League.[36]

Players

Current squad

As of 8 September 2011[37][38]

Note: Flags indicate national team as has been defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Position Player
1 Italy GK Morgan De Sanctis
2 Italy DF Gianluca Grava
3 Argentina DF Ignacio Fideleff
4 Italy MF Marco Donadel
6 Italy DF Salvatore Aronica
7 Uruguay FW Edinson Cavani
8 Italy DF Andrea Dossena
9 Italy FW Giuseppe Mascara
11 Italy MF Christian Maggio
14 Argentina DF Hugo Campagnaro
15 Italy GK Roberto Colombo
17 Slovakia MF Marek Hamšík (vice-captain)
18 Colombia DF Juan Camilo Zúñiga
No. Position Player
19 Argentina MF Mario Santana
20 Switzerland MF Blerim Džemaili
21 Argentina DF Federico Fernández
22 Argentina FW Ezequiel Lavezzi
23 Uruguay MF Walter Gargano
28 Italy DF Paolo Cannavaro (captain)
29 Republic of Macedonia FW Goran Pandev (on loan from Inter Milan)
32 Argentina FW Cristian Chávez
33 Italy DF Leandro Rinaudo
83 Italy GK Antonio Rosati
85 Uruguay DF Miguel Britos
88 Switzerland MF Gökhan Inler
99 Italy FW Cristiano Lucarelli

Out on loan

Note: Flags indicate national team as has been defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Position Player
12 Italy FW Nicolao Dumitru (at Empoli)
13 Italy DF Fabiano Santacroce (at Parma)
Italy GK Luigi Sepe (at Pisa)
Italy DF Luigi Vitale (at Bologna)
Italy MF Lorenzo Insigne (at Pescara)
Italy MF Luca Cigarini (at Atalanta B.C.)
No. Position Player
Italy MF Alessandro Diana (at Cavese)
Italy MF Daniele Mannini (at A.C. Siena)
Italy FW Camillo Ciano (at Crotone)
Austria FW Erwin Hoffer (at Eintracht Frankfurt)

Retired numbers

Notable players

Presidents

Below is the official presidential history of Napoli, from when Giorgio Ascarelli took over at the club in 1926, until the present day.[40]

 
Name Years
Giorgio Ascarelli 1926–27
Gustavo Zinzaro 1927–28
Giovanni Maresca 1928–29
Giorgio Ascarelli 1929–30
Giovanni Maresca
Eugenio Coppola
1930–32
Vincenzo Savarese 1932–36
Achille Lauro 1936–40
Gaetano Del Pezzo 1940
Tommaso Leonetti 1940–41
Luigi Piscitelli 1941–43
Annibale Fienga 1943–45
Vincenzo Savarese 1945–46
 
Name Years
Pasquale Russo 1946–48
Egidio Musollino 1948–51
Alfonso Cuomo 1951–52
Achille Lauro 1952–54
Alfonso Cuomo 1954–63
Luigi Scuotto 1963–64
Roberto Fiore 1964–67
Gioacchino Lauro 1967–68
Antonio Corcione 1968–69
Corrado Ferlaino 1969–71
Ettore Sacchi 1971–72
Corrado Ferlaino 1972–83
Marino Brancaccio 1983
 
Name Years
Corrado Ferlaino 1983–93
Ellenio F. Gallo 1993–95
Vincenzo Schiano di Colella
(honorary president)
1995–96
Gian Marco Innocenti
(honorary president)
1997–98
Federico Scalingi
(honorary president)
1999–00
Giorgio Corbelli 2000
Salvatore Naldi 2002–04
Aurelio De Laurentiis 2004–

Managers

Napoli have had many managers and trainers, some seasons they have had co-managers running the team. Here is a chronological list of them from 1926 onwards:[41]

 
Name Nationality Years
Antonio Kreutzer Austria 1926–27
Bino Skasa Austria 1927
Technical Commission
Rolf Steiger
Giovanni Terrile
Ferenc Molnar

Austria
Italy
Hungary
1927–28
Otto Fischer Austria 1928–29
William Garbutt England 1929–35
Károly Csapkay Hungary 1935–36
Angelo Mattea Italy 1936–38
Eugen Payer Hungary 1938
Paolo Jodice Italy 1938–39
Adolfo Baloncieri Italy 1939–40
Antonio Vojak Italy 1940–43
Giuseppe Innocenti Italy 1943
Raffaele Sansone Italy Uruguay 1945–46
Attila Sallustro
Giovanni Vecchina
Italy
Italy
1947–48
Arnaldo Sentimenti Italy 1948
Felice Placido Borel
Paolo Jodice
Italy
Italy
1948–49
Domenico Mattioli
Luigi de Manes
Italy
Italy
1949
Vittorio Mosele Italy 1949
Eraldo Monzeglio Italy 1949–56
Amedeo Amadei Italy 1956–59
Annibale Frossi Italy 1959
Amedeo Amadei Italy 1959–61
Amedeo Amadei
Renato Cesarini
Italy
Italy
1961
Attila Sallustro Italy 1961
Fioravante Baldi Italy 1961–62
Bruno Pesaola Argentina 1962
Bruno Pesaola
Eraldo Monzeglio
Argentina
Italy
1962–63
Roberto Lerici Italy 1963–64
Giovanni Molino Italy 1964
Bruno Pesaola Argentina 1964–68
Giuseppe Chiappella Italy 1968–69
Egidio di Costanzo Italy 1969
Giuseppe Chiappella Italy 1969–73
Luis Vinicio Brazil 1973–76
Alberto del Frati Italy 1976
 
Name Nationality Years
Bruno Pesaola Argentina 1976–77
Rosario Rivellino Italy 1977
Giovanni di Marzio Italy 1977–78
Luis Vinicio Brazil 1978–80
Angelo Sormani Italy Brazil 1980
Rino Marchesi Italy 1980–82
Massimo Giacomini Italy 1982
Bruno Pesaola Argentina 1982–83
Pietro Santi Italy 1983–84
Rino Marchesi Italy 1984–85
Ottavio Bianchi Italy 1985–89
Alberto Bigon Italy 1989–91
Claudio Ranieri Italy 1991–93
Ottavio Bianchi Italy 1993
Marcello Lippi Italy 1993–94
Vincenzo Guerini Italy 1994
Vujadin Boškov
Jarbas Faustinho Cané
Federal Republic of Yugoslavia
Brazil
1994–95
Vujadin Boškov
Aldo Sensibile
Federal Republic of Yugoslavia
Italy
1995–96
Luigi Simoni Italy 1996–97
Vincenzo Montefusco Italy 1997
Bortolo Mutti Italy 1997
Carlo Mazzone Italy 1997
Giovanni Galeone Italy 1997–98
Vincenzo Montefusco Italy 1998
Renzo Ulivieri Italy 1998–99
Vincenzo Montefusco Italy 1999
Walter Novellino Italy 1999–00
Zdeněk Zeman Czech Republic 2000
Emiliano Mondonico Italy 2000–01
Luigi De Canio Italy 2001–02
Franco Colomba Italy 2002
Sergio Buso Italy 2002
Francesco Scoglio Italy 2002–03
Franco Colomba Italy 2003
Andrea Agostinelli Italy 2003
Luigi Simoni Italy 2003–04
Giampiero Ventura Italy 2004
Edoardo Reja Italy 2005–09
Roberto Donadoni Italy 2009
Walter Mazzarri Italy 2009–

Statistics and records

Antonio Juliano holds Napoli's official appearance record, having made 502 over the course of 16 years from 1962 until 1978.[42] Juliano also holds the record for league appearances with 394.[16] The all-time leading goalscorer for Napoli is Attila Sallustro, with 118 league goals scored.[16] In Serie A the only Napoli player to finish the season as the league's topscorer, known in Italy as the capocannoniere, is Diego Maradona in the 1987–88 season with 15 goals.[43]

The biggest ever victory recorded by Napoli was 8–1 against Pro Patria, in the 1955–56 season of Serie A.[12] Napoli's heaviest championship defeat came during the 1927–28 season when eventual champions Torino beat them 11–0.[12]

Below are appearance and goalscoring records pertaining to Napoli players in the Italian leagues.

Name Nationality Appearances
1 Antonio Juliano Italy 394
2 Giuseppe Bruscolotti Italy 387
3 Moreno Ferrario Italy 310
4 Attila Sallustro Italy 273
5 Bruno Gramaglia Italy 273
6 Carlo Buscaglia Italy 259
7 Ottavio Bugatti Italy 256
8 Ciro Ferrara Italy 247
9 Bruno Pesaola Argentina 240
10 Arnaldo Sentimenti Italy 227
Name Nationality Goals
1 Attila Sallustro Italy 118
Italy Antonio Vojak Italy 102
3 Diego Maradona Argentina 81
4 Careca Brazil 73
5 José Altafini Brazil Italy 71
6 Luís Vinício Brazil 69
7 Canè Brazil 56
8 Savoldi Italy 55
9 Jeppson Sweden 52
10 Hamsik Slovakia 50

Colours, badge and nicknames

An AC Napoli period club logo.

As Naples is a coastal city, the colours of the club have always been derived from the blue waters of the Gulf of Naples.[44] Originally while using the name Naples FBC, the colours of the club implemented two shades of blue.[45] Since the 1920s however, a singular blue tone has been used in the form of azure; as thus they share the nickname azzurri with the Italian national side.[46]

One of the nicknames of Napoli is I ciucciarelli which means "the little donkeys" in the local dialect, they were given this name after a particularly poor performance during the 1926–27 season. It was originally meant to be derogatory, as the Neapolitan symbol is a rampant black horse,[47] the club however adopted the donkey as a mascot called 'O Ciuccio, displaying it with pride.[48]

The club badge Napoli are most famous for is a large N placed within a circle. This crest can be traced back to Internazionale Napoli, who used a similar design on their shirts.[49] Since the club officially adopted the N badge as its representative, Napoli have altered it slightly at various times; sometimes it features the club's name around it, sometimes it does not.[50] The main difference between each badge is the shade of blue used. Usually the N is white, although it has occasionally been gold.[50]

Partenopei is a popular nickname for the club and people from the city of Naples in general.[51] It is derived from Greek mythology where the siren Parthenópē tried to enchant Odysseus from his ship to Capri. In the story Odysseus had his men tie him to the ship's mast so he was able to resist the song of the siren; as a result Parthenope, unable to live with the rejection of her love, drowned herself and her body was washed up upon the shore of Naples.[52]

Sponsors and manufacturers

Period Kit manufacturer Shirt sponsor
1978–80 Puma None
1981–82 Snaidero
1981–81 NR
1982–83 Cirio
1983–84 Latte Berna
1984–85 Linea Time Cirio
1985–88 NR Buitoni
1985–91 Mars
1991–94 Umbro Voiello
1994–96 Lotto Record Cucine
1996–97 Centrale del Latte di Napoli
1997–99 Nike Polenghi
1999–00 Peroni
2000–03 Diadora
2003–04 Legea Russo Cicciano
2004–06 Kappa Manuale d'amore / Sky Captain / Crash – Contatto fisico / Christmas in Love / Mandi
2005–06 Lete
2006–09 Diadora
2009–2011 Macron
2011– Lete-MSC

Supporters and rivalries

Napoli ultras at Stadio San Paolo.

Napoli is the fourth most supported football club in Italy with around 8% of Italian football fans supporting the club.[3] Like other top clubs in the country, Napoli's fanbase goes beyond the Italian border; it has been estimated by the club that there are around 5 to 6 million fans worldwide.[53][54]

Napoli have several rivalries, the most significant of which is with Roma. In terms of location Napoli and Roma are quite close, together they compete in the Derby del Sole ("Derby of the Sun"), a rivalry which was at its peak in the 1980s.[55] There are also strong rivalries with Lazio and Hellas Verona,[56] as well as local Campanian ones with Salernitana and Avellino.[55]

Conversely, the fans of Napoli have a long standing friendship with Genoa, which goes back to 1982,[57] and with Palermo and Catania. On the last day of the 2006–07 season, the club drew 0–0 with Genoa ensuring both were promoted back into Serie A; Genoa ultras could be seen holding up banners saying "Benvenuto fratello napoletano", meaning "Welcome, Neapolitan brother".[58]

SSC Napoli as a company

S.S.C. Napoli S.p.A.
Revenue increase €110,849,458 (2009–10)
Operating income decrease €3,221,598 (2009–10)
Net income decrease €343,686 (2009–10)
Total assets increase €117,237,581 (2009–10)
Total equity increase €25,107,223 (2009–10)

Since refound in 2004, SSC Napoli had a sustainable management strategy. The club has one of thee largest supporting group in Italy which was the main source of income, in terms of gate revenue and TV rights. Except the first few seasons, Npaoli made a aggregate profit in successive years: in 2004–05 and 2005–06 season the net loss were €7,061,463 and €9,088,780.[59] In 2006–07 Serie B, Napoli made its first profit of €1,416,976[60] The first Serie A season made new born Napoli had a net profit of €11,911,041[61] It followed by a net profit of €10,934,520[62], due to the income from European matches was offset by the increase in cost. In 2009–10 season, Napoli heavily invested on players, made that season had a net profit of just €343,686.[63]

Honours

National titles

Serie A: 2

  • Champions: 1986–87; 1989–90

Serie B: 1

  • Champions: 1949–50

Serie C1: 1

  • Southern Champions: 2005–06

Coppa Italia: 3

Supercoppa Italiana: 1

  • Winners: 1990–91

European titles

UEFA Cup: 1

  • Winners: 1988–89

Coppa delle Alpi: 1

  • Winners: 1966

Anglo-Italian League Cup: 1

  • Winners: 1976

References

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  8. ^ "La Storia – Periodo 1904–1926". Napolissimo. 23 June 2007. http://spazioinwind.libero.it/napolissimo/cenni%20storici%201904-1926.htm. 
  9. ^ "I Primi 60 Anni: Dalla Nascita Aalla Coppa Lipton" (in Italian). Cuore Rosanero. 23 June 2007. http://www.cuorerosanero.com/primianni.htm. 
  10. ^ "La Storia. – Periodo 1904–1926 – La Preistoria" (in Italian). Napolissimo. 26 June 2007. http://spazioinwind.libero.it/napolissimo/cenni%20storici%201904-1926.html. 
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