US Salernitana 1919

Salernitana
Full name Unione Sportiva Salernitana 1919 S.r.l.
Nickname(s) I Granata (The Garnets)
Founded 19 June 1919 (as Unione Sportiva Salernitana)
2005 (refounded as Salernitana Calcio 1919)
2011 (refounded as Salerno Calcio)
Ground Stadio Arechi
Capacity 37,800
CEO Danilo Iervolino
Head coach Filippo Inzaghi
League Serie A
2022–23 Serie A, 15th of 20
Website Club website
The performance of Salernitana in the Italian football league structure since the first season of a unified Serie A (1929/30).

Unione Sportiva Salernitana 1919, commonly referred to as Salernitana, is an Italian professional football club based in Salerno, Campania. The original club was founded in 1919 and has been reconstituted three times in the course of its history, most recently in 2011. The current club is the heir of the former Salernitana Calcio 1919, and it restarted from Serie D in the 2011–12 season. Salernitana returned to Serie A in 2021, after a break of 23 seasons, having finished second in Serie B.

History

From Unione Sportiva Salernitana to Salernitana Calcio 1919

The Salerno-based club was originally founded in 1919 as the Unione Sportiva Salernitana. The club was known as Società Sportiva Salernitanaudax for a time during the 1920s following a merger with Audax Salerno. In 1978, the club was renamed Salernitana Sport. The club has spent the majority of its history at the Serie B and Serie C levels of Italian football.

Salernitana play their home matches at Stadio Arechi.

In their early years, Salernitana competed in the regional Italian Football Championship. They played at this level for four seasons during the 1920s. After that time, the club returned to the top level of Italian football twice; they played in Serie A during 1947–48 and 1998–99.

In 2005, the club went bankrupt, but was restarted by Antonio Lombardi, changing the name from Salernitana Sport to Salernitana Calcio 1919.

In 2011, the club did not appeal against a decision by Commissione di Vigilanza sulle Società di Calcio Professionistiche (Co.Vi.So.C) and was excluded from Italian football.

Club refoundation: from Serie D to the top flight

Salernitana-Cosenza 2014–15

On 21 July 2011, following the exclusion of the original Salernitana club, Salerno mayor Vincenzo De Luca, in compliance with Article 52 of N.O.I.F., assigned the new title to Marco Mezzaroma, brother-in-law of Lazio owner and chairman Claudio Lotito. The new club was admitted to Serie D under the denomination of Salerno Calcio.

In the 2011–12 season, Salernitana was immediately promoted to Lega Pro Seconda Divisione after winning Group G of Serie D.

On 12 July 2012, the club was renamed US Salernitana 1919. In the 2012–13 Lega Pro Seconda Divisione season, Salernitana finished first in Girone B, and was promoted to Lega Pro Prima Divisione. This was the second consecutive promotion for the team. Finally Salernitana won Group C of Lega Pro and returned Serie B in 2014–15 season.

After several seasons at Serie B level, Salernitana won promotion to Serie A at the end of the 2020–21 Serie B season under the tenure of head coach Fabrizio Castori, finishing in 2nd place behind champions Empoli. Promotion was secured with a 3–0 victory over Pescara on the final matchday. Salernitana's return to Serie A, however, required Lotito and Mezzaroma to sell the club, due to Italian football laws not allowing two clubs from the same owner to play in the same league. On 7 July 2021, the FIGC Federal Council approved the trust of Salernitana to take control of the club, meaning it was officially enrolled in Serie A for the first time in 23 years.

Return to Serie A: 2021–present

Salernitana's first match in its return to the top flight was a 3–2 defeat against Bologna on 22 August 2021. After a poor start to the season, earning only one point from the first six matches, the club picked up its first Serie A victory against Genoa on matchday seven, winning 1–0 due to a goal from Milan Đurić. In October, the Salernitana board fired Castori after a 2–1 loss to Spezia had left the club at the bottom of the table, with four points from their opening eight league games. Stefano Colantuono was named as his replacement, returning for a second spell as head coach having previously led Salernitana from December 2017 to December 2018.

On 22 May 2022, Salernitana avoided relegation by finishing with the lowest points tally in Serie A history with just 31 points. Salernitana managed to pull off the great escape by securing 18 points from their last 15 matches.

Colours, badge and nicknames

Salernitana's original kit

Salernitana originally wore light blue and white striped shirts, known in Italy as biancocelesti. The blue on the shirt was chosen to represent the sea, as Salerno lies right next to the Gulf of Salerno and has a long tradition as a port city. In the 1940s, the club changed to garnet-coloured shirts, which has gained them the nickname granata in their homeland.

During the 2011–12 season their kit colours were striped blue and deep red, resembling F.C. Barcelona. The symbol of St. Matthew, patron saint of Salerno, was also a part of the redesigned kit.

Since renaming the club US Salernitana 1919, however, their home colours have again been the traditional garnet.

The 100th anniversary logo was announced on 24 June 2019, and appeared on their 2019–20 season kits.

Honours

League

Winners: 1946–47 (Group C), 1997–98
Winners: 1937–38, 1965–66, 2007–08, 2014–15
Winners: 2012–13
Winners: 2011–12 (as Salerno Calcio)

Cups

Winners: 2013–14
Winners: 2012–13

Internationally

Quarter Finalist: 1994-1995

Divisional movements

Series Years Last Promotions Relegations
A 4 2022–23 Decrease 2 (1948, 1999)
B 30 2020–21 Increase 3 (1947, 1998, 2021) Decrease 6 (1939, 1956, 1967, 1991, 2005✟, 2010)
C
+C2
55
+1
2014–15 Increase 7 (1938, 1943, 1966, 1990, 1994, 2008, 2015)
Increase 1 (2013 C2)
Decrease 1 (2011✟)
89 out of 90 years of professional football in Italy since 1929
D 1 2011–12 Increase 1 (2012) never

Players

Current squad

As of 18 January 2024

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

No. Pos. Nation Player
1 GK ITA Vincenzo Fiorillo
3 DF CRO Domagoj Bradarić
5 DF AUT Flavius Daniliuc
6 DF FRA Junior Sambia
7 MF ARG Agustín Martegani (on loan from San Lorenzo)
9 FW NGA Simy
10 FW SEN Boulaye Dia
11 FW NOR Erik Botheim
13 GK MEX Guillermo Ochoa
17 DF ARG Federico Fazio (captain)
18 MF MLI Lassana Coulibaly
19 FW JAM Trivante Stewart
20 MF CYP Grigoris Kastanos
21 FW CPV Jovane (on loan from Sporting CP)
No. Pos. Nation Player
22 FW NGA Chukwubuikem Ikwuemesi
23 DF SVK Norbert Gyömbér
25 MF ITA Giulio Maggiore
26 MF CRO Toma Bašić (on loan from Lazio)
27 DF ITA Niccolò Pierozzi (on loan from Fiorentina)
28 DF TUN Dylan Bronn
33 FW FRA Loum Tchaouna
56 GK FRA Benoît Costil
59 DF ITA Alessandro Zanoli (on loan from Napoli)
66 DF ITA Matteo Lovato
87 MF ITA Antonio Candreva
98 DF ITA Lorenzo Pirola
99 MF POL Mateusz Łęgowski

Players out on loan

As of 18 January 2024

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

No. Pos. Nation Player
GK ITA Luigi Sepe (at Lazio until 30 June 2024)
DF MDA Andrei Moțoc (at Legnago Salus until 30 June 2024)
MF NOR Emil Bohinen (at Genoa until 30 June 2024)
MF SEN Mamadou Coulibaly (at Palermo until 30 June 2024)
MF ITA Edoardo Iannoni (at Perugia until 30 June 2024)
No. Pos. Nation Player
MF ITA Antonio Pio Iervolino (at Vis Pesaro until 30 June 2024)
MF ESP Kaleb Joel Jiménez Castillo (at Vicenza until 30 June 2024)
FW ITA Federico Bonazzoli (at Hellas Verona until 30 June 2024)
FW CHI Diego Valencia (at Atromitos until 30 June 2024)

Primavera

As of 28 October 2023.

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

No. Pos. Nation Player
40 DF ITA Emanuele Elia
51 MF ITA Ciro Borrelli (on loan from Napoli Primavera)
No. Pos. Nation Player
62 GK ITA Pasquale Allocca
65 GK ITA Gregorio Salvati

Non-playing staff

As of 16 October 2023
Position Staff
Sporting director Walter Sabatini
Head coach Filippo Inzaghi
Assistant coach Maurizio D'Angelo
Technical collaborator Nicola Corrent
Goalkeeping coach Mauro Lamberti
Athletic coach Luca Alimonta
Daniele Cominotti
Vincenzo Laurino
Marco Celia
Daniele Tozzi
Match analyst Simone Baggio
Sandro Antonini
Team manager Salvatore Avallone
Referee Caretaker Cristina Lambiase Savage
Kit Manager Gerardo Salvucci
Rosario Fiorillo
Mario Gaeta
Team Doctor Dott.Italo Leo
Dott.Gennaro Alfano
Head of medical staff Dott.Vincenzo Rosciano
Nutritionist Dott.Stefano Gallo
Physiotherapist - Osteopath Giovanni Carmando
Giuseppe Magliano
Paolo Chianese
Massophysiotherapist Davide Bisogno
Physiotherapist Simone Sigillo
Francesco Minieri
Andrea Ciccarino
Scientific consultant Prof.Marcello Zappia
Dott.Antonio Lambiase
Dott.Daniele Masarone
Dott.Luca Bardi
Podiatrist Sergio Di Palma
Technical director (first team football) Giulio Migliaccio
Simone Lo Schiavo
Youth system director Stefano Colantuono

National team players

These current and former players have recorded starts for their respective national teams.

Players from the Italy national football team:

Italy

Players from other national football teams:

Albania
Argentina
Australia
Austria
Bosnia and Herzegovina
Cameroon
Cape Verde
Chile
Croatia
Cyprus
France
Ivory Coast
Jamaica
Mali
Mexico
Netherlands
Nigeria
Norway
Peru
Poland
Romania
Russia
Senegal
Serbia
Slovakia
Slovenia
South Africa
Sweden
Switzerland
Tunisia
Turkey
Uruguay

World Cup players

The following players have been selected by their country in a World Cup Final Squad, while playing for Salernitana.

Managers