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Atalanta BC

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Atalanta
Full nameAtalanta Bergamasca Calcio S.p.A.
Nickname(s)La Dea (The Goddess)
Gli Orobici (The Orobics)
I Nerazzurri (The Black and Blues)
Founded17 October 1907; 117 years ago (1907-10-17) as SBG Atalanta
30 March 1920; 104 years ago (1920-03-30) as Atalanta Bergamasca Calcio
GroundGewiss Stadium
Capacity24,950[1]
OwnerLa Dea S.r.l. (86%)
(Stephen Pagliuca and others 55%; Antonio Percassi 45%)[2]
Others (14%)
President[3]Antonio Percassi
ManagerGian Piero Gasperini
LeagueSerie A
2023–24Serie A, 4th of 20
Websiteatalanta.it
Current season

Atalanta Bergamasca Calcio, commonly referred to as Atalanta, is a professional football club based in Bergamo, Lombardy, Italy, who compete in Serie A, the top tier of the Italian league system.

Founded in 1907, Atalanta holds the record for having played the most Serie A seasons (63) without being based in a regional capital and without having won the league title. Furthermore, the club also holds the record for most promotions to the Serie A[a] and the joint-most Serie B titles, alongside Genoa.

Atalanta won the Coppa Italia in 1963 and the UEFA Europa League in 2023–24.[4] The club qualified for the UEFA Champions League four times, reaching the quarter-finals in 2020, and participated in six seasons of the UEFA Europa League (previously known as the UEFA Cup).[b] Atalanta also reached the semi-finals of the Cup Winners' Cup in 1988, when it was competing in Serie B. This is still the joint-best performance ever by a non-first division club in a major UEFA competition.[c]

The club plays its home games at the Gewiss Stadium and its main kit colors are black and blue. Atalanta has a long-standing rivalry with nearby club Brescia.[5][6] The club is also famed for its youth academy, which has produced several notable talents who have played in the top leagues of Europe.[7]

History

[edit]

Founding and establishment in Serie A (1907–1959)

[edit]
Line graph depicting Atalanta's performances in the Italian league since 1930
Performances of Atalanta in the Italian league since the first season of a unified Serie A

Atalanta was founded on 17 October 1907 by students of the Liceo Classico Paolo Sarpi and was named after the female athlete of the same name from Greek mythology.[8] Though it immediately established a football sector,[9] it was not the first football association based in Bergamo: Football Club Bergamo was founded by Swiss emigrants in 1904[10] and was absorbed into another club, Bergamasca, in 1911. The Italian Football Federation did not recognize Atalanta until 1914, and in 1919 announced that it would only allow one club from Bergamo to compete in the highest national league (then called the Prima Categoria).[11] As Atalanta and Bergamasca were rivals and did not come to an agreement, admission to the Prima Categoria was decided by a playoff match; Atalanta won this match 2–0.[12] A merger between the two clubs nevertheless occurred in 1920, forming the new club Atalanta Bergamasca di Ginnastica e Scherma 1907 (shortened to Atalanta Bergamasca Calcio) and establishing its black and blue (nerazzurri) colors.[11][13]

Atalanta competed in the Seconda Divisione, the second tier, during the early 1920s.[14] In the 1927–28 season, the club won its group and subsequently defeated Pistoiese in the playoffs to win promotion and its first second division league triumph.[15] The club inaugurated its current home stadium in the Borgo Santa Caterina neighborhood in 1928,[16] and was admitted to Serie B, the second tier of the restructured Italian league, in 1929.[17][18] After almost a decade in Serie B, Atalanta achieved its first promotion to Serie A in 1937 under coach Ottavio Barbieri,[19] though was relegated at the end of the season. The club returned to Serie A in 1940 as champion of Serie B.[14]

During the 1940s, Atalanta performed consistently in the top flight, though the national league was halted between 1943 and 1945 due to World War II.[20] Atalanta achieved a fifth-place finish in the 1947–48 Serie A under coach Ivo Fiorentini, its highest league finish until 2017.[21][22] The club earned a reputation as the provinciale terribile (terrible provincial team) during this time as a result of its successes against well-known metropolitan teams such as the Grande Torino, who won Serie A five times during the 1940s.[21][23] Atalanta achieved mid-table finishes during much of the 1950s and remained in Serie A until 1958,[14] when it was relegated due to accusations of match fixing. These accusations were found to be false a year later, after the club returned to Serie A by winning its second Serie B title.[24]

Coppa Italia victory, decline, and reemergence in Europe (1959–1994)

[edit]

Atalanta won the Coppa Italia in 1963, defeating Torino 3–1 in the final thanks to a hat-trick by striker Angelo Domenghini.[25] This was the senior team's first major trophy. During the early 1960s, the club made its debut in European competitions, among them the 1961–62 Mitropa Cup, the Coppa dell'Amicizia, and the Coppa delle Alpi.[26] As domestic cup winners, the club qualified for the 1963–64 European Cup Winners' Cup, its first major UEFA competition, though was eliminated by Portuguese club Sporting CP in the first round.[25] The club made a few more appearances in international (though not UEFA) cups during the 1960s,[26] though was relegated in 1969 after a decade in the top flight.[14][27]

During the 1970s, Atalanta experienced several movements between Serie A and Serie B, and was in the second tier for four consecutive seasons between 1973 and 1977.[17] Despite playing in Serie B at the time, the club developed several young players who moved on to historically bigger clubs and won the 1982 FIFA World Cup with Italy.[28][29] Several difficult seasons then saw Atalanta fall into Serie B in 1980 and Serie C1 in 1981, when for the first time in its history, the club would play outside the top two tiers. This was a blow that revitalized the club, from which many changes in management followed.[30]

Under new management,[31] Atalanta comfortably won Group A of Serie C1 in 1982,[30] returning to Serie B the next season and then to Serie A in 1984, where it would remain until 1987.[14] Atalanta reached its second Coppa Italia final in 1987, though lost 4–0 to Napoli over two legs.[32] As Napoli also won Serie A that season and therefore qualified for the European Cup, Atalanta qualified for its second European Cup Winners' Cup.[33] This was a turning point for the club; Emiliano Mondonico was appointed as coach and the club would achieve promotion after only one season in Serie B. In the Cup Winners' Cup, Atalanta lost its first match against Welsh club Merthyr Tydfil, but won the return fixture and went on to reach the semi-finals, where it would be eliminated 4–2 on aggregate by Belgian club K.V. Mechelen, who would eventually win the tournament.[34] In doing so, Atalanta achieved the best finish in a UEFA competition of a club playing outside its country's top flight league.[35][d] With a sixth-place finish in the 1988–89 Serie A, Atalanta qualified for its first UEFA Cup, though was eliminated by Russian club Spartak Moscow in the first round.[31] Atalanta then finished seventh in the 1989–90 Serie A and reached the quarterfinals of the 1990–91 UEFA Cup, losing to local rival and eventual winner Internazionale.[38]

Atalanta players lifting the 1962–63 Coppa Italia
Atalanta players Angelo Domenghini and Piero Gardoni hoisting the 1962–63 Coppa Italia

Fluctuating performances (1994–2016)

[edit]

After several upper mid-table finishes and a narrowly missed UEFA cup qualification in 1993,[39][40] the club was relegated in 1994 after several investments to raise the club's goals failed,[41] though would return to Serie A in 1995.[14] In the 1995–96 season, Atalanta reached the Coppa Italia final again, losing against Fiorentina. In 1996–97 season, striker Filippo Inzaghi scored 24 league goals and became the first (and so far only) Atalanta player to be named capocannoniere (Serie A top scorer).[42][e] The club then sold several key players, causing it to struggle and return to Serie B in 1998;[43] it would remain there until 2000, when coach Giovanni Vavassori revitalized the team with youth academy players in a successful promotion campaign.[44][45]

In the 2000s, Atalanta experienced more divisional movements: it was relegated in 2002–03 (despite finishing seventh two years prior) and 2004–05,[39] but achieved promotion to Serie A after only one season in Serie B both times, winning the 2005–06 edition.[46][47] After a tumultuous 2009–10 season, which saw the club change coach three times, the club was once again relegated;[48] after this relegation, entrepreneur Antonio Percassi became the club's new president.[49][f] and Stefano Colantuono returned as coach. The club won Serie B in 2011 and thus immediately returned to Serie A.[50] Despite this success, club captain Cristiano Doni was named among the suspects in a match-fixing scandal (also known as Calcioscommesse);[51] Doni was handed a three-and-a-half-year ban from football and the club was docked six points in the 2011–12 league table and two points in the 2012–13 league table.[52][53] Throughout the early and mid-2010s, Atalanta generally lingered in lower-midtable in Serie A.[39]

New heights under Gasperini (2016–present)

[edit]
2016–17 Atalanta team at its home stadium
Atalanta team that finished fourth in Serie A in 2017

Former Genoa coach Gian Piero Gasperini was appointed before the 2016–17 season. Despite initial difficulties, the club's results steadily improved throughout the season. Gasperini integrated players from the club's youth sector and led the club to a fourth-place league finish with 72 points, besting its previous records and qualifying for the 2017–18 UEFA Europa League after a 26-year absence from UEFA competitions.[22][54] In the Europa League, the club reached the round of 32, losing 4–3 on aggregate to Borussia Dortmund.[55] In 2017–18, Atalanta finished seventh in the league, entering the qualifying rounds for 2018–19 UEFA Europa League, though was eliminated in a penalty shootout by Danish club Copenhagen.[56] Despite a difficult start to the 2018–19 season, Atalanta achieved many positive results and finished third in Serie A, its best ever league finish; with this result, the club qualified for the UEFA Champions League group stage for the first time in its history.[57] Atalanta also reached the Coppa Italia final, though lost 2–0 to Lazio.[58]

In the 2019–20 season, Atalanta lost its first three Champions League matches, but went on to qualify for the round of 16.[59][g] Atalanta then defeated Spanish club Valencia in both legs of the round of 16, reaching the quarterfinals,[60] where it would be eliminated by French champion Paris Saint-Germain.[61] The club also repeated its third-place finish in Serie A and achieved a second consecutive Champions League qualification, breaking several club records.[62] In the 2020–21 season, Atalanta reached the round of 16 in the Champions League for the second time, following an away victory over Ajax.[63] The later secured Champions League qualification and third place in Serie A for the third consecutive time,[64] and reached the Coppa Italia final for the second time in three years, though lost 2–1 to Juventus.[65]

On 19 February 2022, a US-based consortium led by Stephen Pagliuca acquired a 55% stake of La Dea srl, the controlling company of Atalanta, previously wholly owned by the Percassi family. Under the new agreement, Pagliuca was named co-chairman, with Antonio Percassi staying on as chairman.[2] Atalanta finished eighth in Serie A in 2022, failing to qualify for European competitions, though rebounded the next season with a fifth-place finish in Serie A and qualification to the Europa League.[66] On 4 August 2023, Atalanta established a reserve team in Serie C, becoming the second Italian club to do so.[67] In the 2023–24 season, Atalanta reached the 2024 Coppa Italia final, losing to Juventus 1–0,[68] and made its debut appearance in a European final, the UEFA Europa League final. In that match, the team defeated Bayer Leverkusen 3–0, thanks to a hat-trick by Ademola Lookman, to claim its first trophy since 1963;[4][69] this was the first time an Italian club won the competition since it changed the name and format. In addition, Atalanta qualified for the 2024–25 UEFA Champions League after a three-year absence from the competition.[70]

Colours, kits, and crest

[edit]

Colours and kits

[edit]

The first kits adopted by Atalanta after its founding featured thin black and white vertical stripes.[11][71] These were Atalanta's colours until 1920, when the club merged with local rival Bergamasca (which had blue and white kits) in order to compete in the Italian league. Following the merger, the common colour white was eliminated, leaving black and blue (nerazzurri) as the colours of the newly-formed Atalanta Bergamasca Calcio.[11][72][73] In the first years following this merger, the club's kits featured black and blue quarters. Atalanta adopted its classic black and blue vertical stripes several years later.[73][74]

Atalanta's home kits have characteristically had black and blue vertical stripes since their adoption in the 1920s. Slight variations in thickness of the stripes have existed over the years, though the club never strayed far from the classic design for its home kits. Atalanta's away kits have traditionally been mostly white, with various touches of black and blue and other details. The club's third kits and goalkeeper kits have not historically adhered to any strict pattern; many colours (among them green, red, light blue, and black) have been used for these over the years.[74][75][76][77]

Since 2010, Atalanta plays its final home match of the calendar year, a "Christmas Match", in specially designed kits. The kits are then auctioned to raise money for charity.[78][79]

Kit suppliers and shirt sponsors

[edit]
Gianpaolo Bellini in an Atalanta home kit
Gianpaolo Bellini with Atalanta in 2016
Josip Iličić in an Atalanta away kit
Josip Iličić with Atalanta in 2020 (away kit, featuring the running girl in place of the club's crest)
Period Kit manufacturer[75] Main shirt sponsor[75]
1976–80 Umbro[80] None
1980–81 Le Coq Sportif[80] None[h]
1981–82 Puma[80] None
1982–84 Sit-In[74][81][83][84]
1984–86 NR[74][80][81]
1986–87 N2[80]
1987–89 Latas[74][80]
1989–91 NR[74][81] Tamoil[74][83]
1991–94 Lotto[80]
1994–95 Asics[74]
1995–00 Somet[74][83]
2000–02 Ortobell[83]
2002–05 Promatech[83]
2005–06 Sit-In Sport (main)[83][84] – Elesite
2006–07 Sit-In Sport (main)[83]Daihatsu[85]
2007–10 Erreà[74]
2010–11 AXA (main)[83] – Daihatsu[86]
2011–14 AXA (main)[83] – Konica Minolta
2014–
February 2017
Nike[80] SuisseGas (main)[83][87][i] – Konica Minolta / STONE CITY / Modus FM – Elettrocanali (back)
February–
June 2017
TWS (main)[83][87] – Modus FM – Elettrocanali (back)
2017–18 Joma[88] Veratour (main)[89] – Modus FM – Elettrocanali (back) – Radici Group (Europa League kits)[89]
2018–19 Radici Group (main)[90] – UPower[91] – Elettrocanali (back) – Automha (sleeve)[92]
2019–20[76] Radici Group (main)[90][j] – UPower[91]Gewiss [it] (back)[93] – Automha (sleeve)[92]
2020–23 Plus500 (main)[94][j] – Radici Group[90] – Gewiss (back)[93] – Automha (sleeve)[92]
2023–24 Paramount+ (Europa League/Coppa Italia final) – Radici Group[90] – Gewiss (back)[93]

Crest

[edit]

Atalanta has had five crests since its foundation, all of which depict some combination of the team's name (except between 1984 and 1993), colours, and (since 1963) the Greek mythological athlete Atalanta, from whom the club derives its name as well as its nickname La Dea.[95][96]

The club's first three crests were shields featuring the name Atalanta on top, coloured stripes on the left, and another symbolic representation on the right. The original crest dates back to 1907 and had the club's original black and white stripes alongside a blue patch. In 1963, after the club won the Coppa Italia, the crest was redesigned to feature black and blue stripes alongside a running girl representing Atalanta.[95][96] The crest's colours and representation of Atalanta changed again in the 1970s, though followed the same basic shape as the 1963 version.[97]

In 1984, the crest underwent a major redesign: the club's name and the running girl's body were removed from the crest and its shape was changed from a shield to a circle. This "classic" crest featured a white silhouette of Atalanta's head on a black and blue background, enclosed in three concentric white, black, and golden yellow circles. Black, blue, and white were retained—as the club's colours—while yellow was added to represent the golden apples, which according to mythology, Hippomenes tossed to Atalanta to distract her and defeat her in a footrace.[96]

The club's modern crest was designed in 1993. It incorporates the 1984 crest into its design, though tilts Atalanta's head and lacks the yellow circle. The name Atalanta and founding year 1907 were added respectively above and below the circle, which is enclosed in an ellipse featuring the same split black and blue background as the 1984 design.[95][96]

Stadium

[edit]

Atalanta has played at its current stadium, the 24,950-seater Gewiss Stadium in the Borgo Santa Caterina neighborhood of Bergamo, since 1928.[1] Prior to its opening, Atalanta played at several other grounds in Bergamo. Between its founding in 1907 and recognition by the FIGC in 1914, the club did not have a dedicated playing field and only played friendly matches in public spaces—the Piazza d'Armi and the Campo di Marte in Bergamo.[98] In 1914, Atalanta's first playing field was established on the Via Maglio del Lotto,[99] near the Bergamo–Milan railway. It measured 90 by 45 metres (295 by 148 ft) and had a seated capacity of 1,000 spectators.[100][101][102] Due to financial hardship during World War I, though, Atalanta was forced to sell the land containing its field, leaving it without a home ground. As a solution, entrepreneur and philanthropist Betty Ambiveri sold the Clementina field, an older venue in Seriate that hosted sporting events such as cycling, to the club.[103] The new field was inaugurated as the Atalanta Stadium and it hosted 14,000 spectators in its first match against La Dominante of Genoa.[99]

With the growth of football in the 1920s, Atalanta needed a new stadium.[99] The new stadium was constructed on Viale Margherita (now Viale Giulio Cesare),[10] replacing a hippodrome that once occupied the site.[16][104] Construction of the new stadium took one year; it opened in 1928 and cost 3.5 million lire.[99] The stadium was named after fascist Mario Brumana; this was common naming practice in fascist Italy.[16][99] The Brumana stadium was much larger than the Clementina field, having a seated capacity of 12,000 spectators in two tribune (side stands) and a larger field measuring 110 by 70 metres (360 by 230 ft);[1] it also featured a running track, as it was planned to form part of a larger complex. On 1 November 1928, Atalanta played its first unofficial match at the stadium (a 4–2 victory against Triestina); the stadium was then officially inaugurated on 23 December 1928, when Atalanta defeated La Dominante Genova 2–0 in front of over 14,000 spectators.[16]

Curva Nord (north stand) of the Gewiss Stadium
View of the old Curva Nord from the Tribuna Giulio Cesare at the Bergamo stadium in 2012
Original concrete Curva Nord in 2012
Pitchside view of the reconstructed Curva Nord in 2020
Reconstructed Curva Nord in 2020

After World War II, the stadium was renamed the Stadio Comunale ("Municipal Stadium"), as fascism no longer existed in Italy.[105] Expansion of the stadium began in the years following the war: the construction of a south stand (the Curva Sud) began in 1949,[104] and a second stand at the north end (the Curva Nord) followed during the 1960s, opening in 1971.[16][106] Later, in 1984, the running track was removed in order to expand the stadium's capacity upon Atalanta's return to Serie A after five years.[104] The club's first match in the 1984–85 Serie A, a 1–1 draw against Inter, had an attendance of over 43,000 spectators, a record attendance for the Stadio Comunale.[106][107][k]

The Tribuna Giulio Cesare underwent modernization during the early 1990s, and the stadium was renamed the Stadio Atleti Azzurri d'Italia ("Blue Athletes of Italy") in 1994.[99] In 1997, following the death of 22-year-old forward Federico Pisani in a car accident, the Curva Nord was nicknamed the Curva Pisani in his honor.[108] Similarly, the Curva Sud was nicknamed the Curva Morosini in 2012 to posthumously honor 25-year-old youth academy player Piermario Morosini,[109] who died following collapse on the field during a Serie B match between Pescara and Livorno.[110] In 2015, the stadium also expanded its side stands to offer pitchside views only several meters (feet) from the benches, a revolutionary feature of Italian stadiums at the time.[104][105]

On 10 May 2017, Atalanta announced the acquisition of the stadium from the comune for 8.6 million euros,[104] becoming one of only four Serie A clubs to own its home stadium.[111][l] This acquisition allowed the club to authorize a renovation project for the stadium,[111] for like many Italian stadiums, much of its structure and facilities were considered outdated.[105][112] This renovation project was also necessary to upgrade the stadium to meet UEFA standards for hosting matches in UEFA competitions. Because the stadium was not ready at the time, Atalanta had to play its Europa League home matches at the Mapei Stadium in Reggio Emilia and its Champions League home matches in its debut season at San Siro in Milan.[113][114]

Following a sponsorship agreement with electronics company Gewiss lasting at least until 2025, the stadium was renamed the Gewiss Stadium on 1 July 2019.[115][116] On 6 October 2019, the renovated Curva Nord was inaugurated for Atalanta's home match against Lecce;[117] it has covered seating for over 9,000 spectators.[118] A year later, both side stands underwent modernization and the Curva Sud had temporary seats installed on the concrete.[119][120] These upgrades allowed Atalanta to play its Champions League matches in Bergamo starting in the 2020–21 season.[121][122] The final phase will feature a rebuilt Curva Sud (mirroring the rebuilt Curva Nord), which will increase the stadium's capacity to about 25,000, as well as construction of a new underground parking garage and other improvements to the stadium's surroundings.[123] It was originally expected to be completed in 2021, though following several delays,[16][124] the start of construction its completion is expected by August 2024,[125] with demolition of the Curva Sud beginning in June 2023.[126] Atalanta will still be able to play its home matches at the Gewiss Stadium during construction,[123] though the stadium will have a capacity of 3,500 fewer spectators.[126]

The stadium in Bergamo has also been used as a home ground by local Serie C club AlbinoLeffe from 2003 to 2019 (when it moved to Gorgonzola), a period during which AlbinoLeffe spent nine years in Serie B and met Atalanta on several occasions.[105][127][128] On occasion, Atalanta's youth team also plays competitive matches at the Gewiss Stadium, most recently the Supercoppa Primavera in 2021.[129]

Training ground

[edit]

Atalanta trains at the Centro Sportivo Bortolotti in Zingonia [it], a complex first constructed during the community's development in the 1960s, before being acquired for Atalanta by president Achille Bortolotti and inaugurated in 1977.[130][131] The complex is used by the senior team for training and some friendlies, and the youth teams for training and home matches in youth competitions such as the Campionato Primavera 1.[132][133] Atalanta's renowned youth academy (Scuola di Calcio; see below) is also based in Zingonia, and has been a continuous point of investment for the club since its establishment.[130][134]

Supporters

[edit]

"Being a fan of Atalanta is part of the identity of Bergamo."[135]

—Local newspaper L'Eco di Bergamo editor-in-chief Andrea Valesini (translated), 2020

According to a 2022 survey, Atalanta is the 9th-most supported club in Italy, with an estimated 314,000 supporters.[136] Although Atalanta supporters are vastly outnumbered in Italy by fans of more titled clubs, the club's performances in recent years have drawn additional support, especially among younger generations. An increase of 43% was reported since 2019,[137][138] peaking at about 350,000 in 2021,[137] and decreasing by 10% after the club failed to qualify for European competitions in 2022.[136] The club has also worked to grow its fanbase with the Neonati Atalantini initiative, implemented in 2010 by president Percassi, which gifts a free Atalanta replica shirt to all newborns born within the city limits of Bergamo. As of 2020, over 36,000 shirts have been distributed; similar programs have been more recently adopted by other Italian clubs as well.[139]

Most of the club's fans reside within the Province of Bergamo; conversely, there are very strong ties between Atalanta and Bergamo's residents, who often gather together in close-knit groups in support of the club.[140] Atalanta supporters (tifosi) are considered to be among the most passionate and loyal fans in Italy.[112] Atalanta's Ultras gather mostly in the Curva Nord as the unified group Curva Nord 1907, formed from members of various Ultras groups under the leadership of Claudio "Il Bocia" Galimberti during the early 2000s.[141] The Curva Nord Ultras were historically leftist but are now apolitical.[112][142] A separate Ultras group, Forever Atalanta, gathers in the Curva Sud, and is believed to still be leftist.[112] Atalanta Ultras have a reputation as one of the most violent Ultras groups in Italy, self-describing as "we hate everybody", and indeed having few friends and many strong rivalries.[112][142][143] The club and its Ultras have been punished on multiple occasions by the Italian Football League for violent or racist conduct.[144][145]

Chroreography, including a large black-and-blue striped flag, on display at the Curva Nord during an Atalanta match
Choreography on display in the Curva Nord during the 1996 Coppa Italia Final, including the large striped flag

On match days, the Curva Nord often features flares, fireworks, and choreography, and sometimes is covered by a large black-and-blue striped flag (see image).[112][143] During the 2018–19 season,[m] Atalanta matches had an average home attendance of 18,248,[146] of whom an estimated 15,676 were season ticket holders.[146]

Since 2002, Atalanta supporters have organized La Festa della Dea (the Festival of the Goddess), a multi-day festival to celebrate the club, almost every summer.[112][143][147] The celebration features music, local cuisine, and reverence for the club's history, management, and players (both former and current players).[148][140] Some contemporary players and coaches also have appeared at the celebration, most recently in 2018.[149]

Friendships and rivalries

[edit]

Atalanta supporters have a long-standing friendship (gemellaggio; twinning) with supporters of Ternana.[112] The friendship between the two clubs' supporters is one of the oldest and strongest in Italy, persevering since the 1980s.[150][151] Historically, both clubs' Ultras were brought together by shared political views, and they frequently visit the other club's Curva.[142][152] Supporters of the club also have a historical twinning with supporters of German club Eintracht Frankfurt, a friendship similarly rooted in shared political views.[142][153] There are also friendly relations between fans of Atalanta and fans of Spezia (since Atalanta's run in the European Cup Winners' Cup in 1988),[154] Cosenza, Cavese, and Austrian club Wacker Innsbruck.[142]

Atalanta supporters share their most intense rivalry [it] with supporters of nearby club Brescia.[155] Meetings between the two clubs are sometimes known as the Derby Lombardo (Lombard Derby).[156][157] This rivalry has its roots in a historical feud between Bergamo and Brescia dating back to the Middle Ages, beginning in 1126 when Bergamo expanded its territory by acquiring land put up for sale by Brescia; this led to a series of territorial disputes and armed conflicts between the two cities, among them the Battle of Cortenuova in 1237.[155][6] Although armed conflict eventually ended and both cities were unified under the Kingdom of Italy in 1861, the cities' historical rivalry has defined the atmosphere of matches between Atalanta and Brescia for the entirety of the clubs' history. In 1993, tension between the clubs' supporters escalated further following a match (won 2–0 by Brescia) that was suspended three times due to violence in the stands, which resulted in over 20 spectators being hospitalized.[5][6]

Since at least 1977, a heartfelt rivalry has existed between fans of Atalanta and Torino.[158] There have been various altercations between the clubs' Ultras during matches between the clubs, though some fans share a mutual respect or consider each other "respected enemies".[159] The Atalanta–Torino rivalry also gave rise to a short-lived friendship (lasting until the early 1980s) between supporters of Atalanta and Juventus—Torino's city rival—though Atalanta supporters now also consider Juventus a hated rival.[142][158] In addition to Juventus, there are also strong rivalries between Atalanta and Italy's other well-supported clubs:[137] Roma, Milan, Inter, Napoli, and Lazio, and Fiorentina.[142] The rivalry between Atalanta and Roma emerged in 1984 after once-friendly relations between the two clubs' Ultras deteriorated.[160] Milan and Atalanta have had a long-standing rivalry fueled by the friendship between fans of Brescia and Milan[151] as well as a controversial episode during a Coppa Italia match in 1990 that infuriated the Atalanta fans.[161] Matches between Inter and Atalanta have seen violence among Ultras since the early 1970s, fueled by political differences as well as the clubs' shared black and blue colors.[162] Atalanta's rivalry with Lazio has been historically characterized by opposing political views[163]—respectively far left against far right[151]—though greatly intensified following Lazio's Coppa Italia triumph over Atalanta in 2019.[164] The rivalry between Atalanta and Fiorentina has intensified during Gian Piero Gasperini's tenure as Atalanta manager (also corresponding to Atalanta's qualification to European competitions); multiple tense episodes have occurred during and after matches between the two clubs.[165] There are also strong rivalries between supporters of Atalanta and supporters of Bologna, Como (a regional rivalry since the 1980s),[166] Genoa, Hellas Verona, Pisa, and Vicenza, as well as Croatian club Dinamo Zagreb.[142]

Players

[edit]

Current squad

[edit]
As of 30 August 2024[167]

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

No. Pos. Nation Player
2 DF Italy ITA Rafael Tolói (captain)
3 DF Ivory Coast CIV Odilon Kossounou (on loan from Bayer Leverkusen)
4 DF Sweden SWE Isak Hien
5 DF England ENG Ben Godfrey
6 MF Ghana GHA Ibrahim Sulemana
7 MF Colombia COL Juan Cuadrado
8 MF Croatia CRO Mario Pašalić
9 FW Italy ITA Gianluca Scamacca
10 FW Italy ITA Nicolò Zaniolo (on loan from Galatasaray)
11 FW Nigeria NGA Ademola Lookman
13 MF Brazil BRA Éderson
15 MF Netherlands NED Marten de Roon (vice-captain)
16 MF Italy ITA Raoul Bellanova
No. Pos. Nation Player
17 FW Belgium BEL Charles De Ketelaere
19 DF Albania ALB Berat Djimsiti (3rd captain)
22 MF Italy ITA Matteo Ruggeri
23 DF Bosnia and Herzegovina BIH Sead Kolašinac
24 MF Serbia SRB Lazar Samardžić (on loan from Udinese)
28 GK Portugal POR Rui Patrício
29 GK Italy ITA Marco Carnesecchi
31 GK Italy ITA Francesco Rossi
32 FW Italy ITA Mateo Retegui
42 DF Italy ITA Giorgio Scalvini
44 MF Italy ITA Marco Brescianini (on loan from Frosinone)
77 MF Italy ITA Davide Zappacosta
93 DF France FRA Brandon Soppy

Atalanta U23

[edit]
As of 30 August 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
25 FW Italy ITA Federico Cassa
27 MF Italy ITA Marco Palestra
40 DF Italy ITA Pietro Comi
41 DF Italy ITA Pietro Tornaghi
43 MF Italy ITA Lorenzo Riccio
45 FW Italy ITA Dominic Vavassori
No. Pos. Nation Player
46 MF Italy ITA Alberto Manzoni
47 MF Italy ITA Lorenzo Bernasconi
48 FW Serbia SRB Vanja Vlahović
49 DF Italy ITA Tommaso Del Lungo
50 MF Italy ITA Federico Steffanoni

Youth sector

[edit]

Out on loan

[edit]
As of 30 August 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 Italy ITA Pierluigi Gollini (at Genoa until 30 June 2025)
GK Argentina ARG Juan Musso (at Atlético Madrid until 30 June 2025)
GK Italy ITA Jacopo Sassi (at Modena until 30 June 2025)
GK Italy ITA Paolo Vismara (at Sampdoria until 30 June 2025)
DF Netherlands NED Mitchel Bakker (at Lille until 30 June 2025)
DF Italy ITA Giovanni Bonfanti (at Pisa until 30 June 2025)
DF Italy ITA Tommaso Cavalli (at Pro Patria until 30 June 2025)
DF Italy ITA Giorgio Cittadini (at Frosinone until 30 June 2025)
DF Italy ITA Alessio Guerini (at Crotone until 30 June 2025)
DF Italy ITA Iacopo Regonesi (at Renate until 30 June 2025)
DF Italy ITA Daniele Solcia (at Giugliano until 30 June 2025)
MF France FRA Michel Adopo (at Cagliari until 30 June 2025)
MF Italy ITA Matteo Colombo (at Pianese until 30 June 2025)
MF Italy ITA Jacopo Da Riva (at Foggia until 30 June 2025)
No. Pos. Nation Player
MF Italy ITA Samuel Giovane (at Carrarese until 30 June 2025)
MF Italy ITA Leonardo Mendicino (at Cesena until 30 June 2025)
MF Italy ITA Andrea Oliveri (at Bari until 30 June 2025)
MF Italy ITA Federico Zuccon (at Juve Stabia until 30 June 2025)
FW Italy ITA Christian Capone (at Vicenza until 30 June 2025)
FW Guinea GUI Moustapha Cissé (at St. Gallen until 30 June 2025)
FW Spain ESP Siren Diao (at Granada until 30 June 2025)
FW Italy ITA Alessandro Falleni (at Pianese until 30 June 2025)
FW Cameroon CMR Jonathan Italeng (at Pontedera until 30 June 2025)
FW Italy ITA Simone Mazzocchi (at Cosenza until 30 June 2025)
FW Italy ITA Roberto Piccoli (at Cagliari until 30 June 2025)
FW Italy ITA Alessio Rosa (at Folgore Caratese until 30 June 2025)
FW Mali MLI El Bilal Touré (at VfB Stuttgart until 30 June 2025)

Retired numbers

[edit]

12 – Dedication to fans, in particular for Curva Pisani ones
14 – Italy Federico Pisani, forward (1991–97) – posthumous honor[108]
80 – Elio Corbani [it], radio journalist.[168]

Managers

[edit]
Portrait of Gian Piero Gasperini
Gian Piero Gasperini as Atalanta coach in 2019

Atalanta's current manager (head coach) is Gian Piero Gasperini, who assumed the role on 14 June 2016.[169] The club has had a total of 59 managers (including player-managers, assistants acting as head coach, and caretaker managers) since the club hired its first professional coach, Cesare Lovati, in 1925.[170][171] Current manager Gasperini, who led the club to its highest league finishes and UEFA Champions League qualification between 2019 and 2021, has the most appearances as manager in the club's history (387 as of 2 June 2024)[citation needed] and the longest uninterrupted tenure as Atalanta manager (seven consecutive seasons).[172][173] The club's second-longest-serving manager is Emiliano Mondonico, who oversaw 299 matches in all competitions—including a European Cup Winners' Cup and a UEFA Cup—in two spells (1987–90 and 1994–98).[174][172] Stefano Colantuono, who also was manager on two different occasions (2005–07 and 2010–15), is the club's third-longest serving manager, with 281 appearances in total.[citation needed]

Managerial history

[edit]
 
Name Nationality Years[171]
Cesare Lovati Italy 1925–1927
Imre Payer Hungary 1927–1929
Luigi Cevenini Italy 1929–1930
József Viola[n] Hungary 1930–1933
Imre Payer Hungary 1933
Angelo Mattea Italy 1933–1935
Imre Payer Hungary 1935–1936
Ottavio Barbieri Italy 1936–1938
Géza Kertész Hungary 1938–1939
Ivo Fiorentini Italy 1939–1941
János Nehadoma Hungary 1941–1945
Giuseppe Meazza[n] Italy 1945–1946
Luis Monti Italy 1946
Ivo Fiorentini Italy 1946–1949
Alberto Citterio[n] Italy 1949
Carlo Carcano Italy 1949
Giovanni Varglien Italy 1949–1950
Denis Charles Neville England 1951
Carlo Ceresoli Italy 1951–1952
Luigi Ferrero Italy 1952–1954
Francesco Simonetti,
Luigi Tentorio[o]
Italy
Italy
1954
Luigi Bonizzoni Italy 1954–1957
Carlo Rigotti Italy 1957
Giuseppe Bonomi Italy 1957
 
Name Nationality Years[171]
Karl Adamek Austria 1957–1959
Ferruccio Valcareggi Italy 1959–1962
Paolo Tabanelli Italy 1962–1963
Carlo Alberto Quario Italy 1963–1964
Carlo Ceresoli Italy 1964
Ferruccio Valcareggi Italy 1964–1965
Héctor Puricelli Uruguay 1965
Stefano Angeleri Italy 1965–1967
Paolo Tabanelli Italy 1967–1968
Stefano Angeleri Italy 1968–1969
Silvano Moro Italy 1969
Carlo Ceresoli Italy 1969
Corrado Viciani Italy 1969
Renato Gei Italy 1969–1970
Battista Rota Italy 1970
Giulio Corsini Italy 1970–1973
Heriberto Herrera Paraguay 1973–1974
Angelo Piccioli Italy 1974–1975
Giancarlo Cadé Italy 1975–1976
Gianfranco Leoncini Italy 1976
Battista Rota Italy 1976–1980
Bruno Bolchi Italy 1980–1981
Giulio Corsini Italy 1981
Ottavio Bianchi Italy 1981–1983
 
Name Nationality Years[171]
Nedo Sonetti Italy 1983–1987
Emiliano Mondonico Italy 1987–1990
Pierluigi Frosio Italy 1990–1991
Bruno Giorgi Italy 1991–1992
Marcello Lippi Italy 1992–1993
Francesco Guidolin Italy 1993
Andrea Valdinoci,
Cesare Prandelli[p][o]
Italy
Italy
1993–1994
Emiliano Mondonico Italy 1994–1998
Bortolo Mutti Italy 1998–1999
Giovanni Vavassori Italy 1999–2003
Giancarlo Finardi Italy 2003
Andrea Mandorlini Italy 2003–2004
Delio Rossi Italy 2004–2005
Stefano Colantuono Italy 2005–2007
Luigi Delneri Italy 2007–2009
Angelo Gregucci Italy 2009
Antonio Conte Italy 2009–2010
Valter Bonacina[p] Italy 2010
Bortolo Mutti Italy 2010
Stefano Colantuono Italy 2010–2015
Edoardo Reja Italy 2015–2016
Gian Piero Gasperini Italy 2016–

Coaching staff

[edit]
As of 13 October 2023
Position Staff
Manager Italy Gian Piero Gasperini[175][176]
Assistant manager Italy Tullio Gritti[175][176]
Technical collaborators Italy Mauro Fumagalli[176]
Italy Cristian Raimondi[176]
Goalkeeping coach Italy Massimo Biffi[176][177]
Fitness trainers Italy Domenico Borelli[176]
Italy Gabriele Boccolini[176]
Italy Giacomo Milesi[176]
Match analysts Italy Luca Trucchi[176]
Italy Stefano Brambilla[176]
Head of Medical Italy Riccardo Del Vescovo[176]
Head of First Team Medical Italy Carmine Stefano Poerio[176]
Healthcare professionals Italy Umberto Improta[176]
Italy Marcello Ginami[176]
Morocco Omar Souaada[176]
Italy Francesco Palvarini[176]
Nutritionist Italy Danilo Azara[176]

Finances and ownership

[edit]

Presidential history

[edit]

Atalanta have had several presidents (chairmen) (Italian: presidenti, lit.'presidents' or Italian: presidenti del consiglio di amministrazione, lit.'chairmen of the board of directors') over the course of their history. Some of them have been the main shareholder of the club. The longest-serving chairman is Ivan Ruggeri, who was relieved of his duties after he suffered a stroke in January 2008, being replaced by his son Alessandro[178] who was named chairman of Atalanta in September 2008. Alessandro's father was unable to manage the team due to the consequences of the stroke.[179] In June 2010, after another relegation to Serie B, Alessandro Ruggeri sold his share of the club to Antonio Percassi, who became the new chairman of Atalanta.[49]

 
Name Years
Enrico Luchsinger 1920–1921
Antonio Gambirasi 1926–1928
Pietro Capoferri 1928–1930
Antonio Pesenti 1930–1932
Emilio Santi 1932–1935
Lamberto Sala 1935–1938
Nardo Bertoncini 1938–1944
Guerino Oprandi 1944–1945
Daniele Turani 1945–1964
Attilio Vicentini 1964–1969
 
Name Years
Giacomo "Mino" Baracchi 1969–1970
Achille Bortolotti 1970–1974
Enzo Sensi 1974–1975
Achille Bortolotti 1975–1980
Cesare Bortolotti 1980–1990
Achille Bortolotti 1990
Antonio Percassi 1990–1994
Ivan Ruggeri 1994–2008
Alessandro Ruggeri 2008–2010
Antonio Percassi 2010–

Honours

[edit]

Domestic

[edit]

European

[edit]

Divisional movements

[edit]
Series Years Last Promotions Relegations
A 63 2023–24 Decrease 12 (1929, 1938, 1958, 1969, 1973, 1979, 1987, 1994, 1998, 2003, 2005, 2010)
B 28 2010–11 Increase 13 (1928, 1937, 1940, 1959, 1971, 1977, 1984, 1988, 1995, 2000, 2004, 2006, 2011) Decrease 1 (1981)
C 1 1981–82 Increase 1 (1982)
92 years of professional football in Italy since 1929

UEFA club coefficient ranking

[edit]

The UEFA coefficient ranking:

As of 13 July 2024[180]
Rank Team Points
18 Spain Barcelona 67.000
19 England Arsenal 62.000
20 Italy Atalanta 61.000
21 Italy Napoli 61.000
22 Italy AC Milan 59.000

Youth system

[edit]
A young Gaetano Scirea, one of the most famous footballers produced by the Atalanta youth system, during the 1972–73 season

The Atalanta youth system consists of four men's teams that participate in separate national leagues (Primavera, Allievi Nazionali A and B, and Giovanissimi Nazionali) and two that participate at a regional level (Giovanissimi Regionali A and B).[181]

The first person who was committed to set up the Atalanta youth teams was Giuseppe Ciatto. Every organisational aspect was dealt with and resolved by him, and he also took care to train the various teams. In 1949 Atalanta won the Campionato Ragazzi.

In the late 1950s former Atalanta player Luigi Tentorio (then Special Commissioner of the club) felt the need to start investing more systematically in youth: he decided to create a real youth sector, with its own independent structure from the first team. The youth sector was entrusted to Giuseppe Brolis, who created a partnership with various clubs in the Veneto and Friuli regions, building a network of scouts and young coaches.

A crucial step in the history of the Bergamo youth sector took place in the early 1990s when the president Antonio Percassi implemented a new investment policy, especially at the youth level. He managed to convince Fermo Favini to leave Como and entrusted him with the responsibility of the youth sector.

The Atalanta youth system not only continued to increase the production of players for the first team, but began to win several honours in the most important national leagues. From 1991 to 2014, the various youth teams have won 17 national titles.

Apart from successes at youth level, the Atalanta youth system is also one of the most highly regarded in Europe: according to a ranking by the study centre in Coverciano, Atalanta have the top youth system in Italy and the sixth in Europe, behind Real Madrid, Barcelona and three French teams. The parameters used were the number of first division players produced by the club.[182] In the 2007–08 season, 22 players from Atalanta's youth played in Serie A, 32 in Serie B and 3 abroad.[182]

In 2014, a global study of the "CIES Football Observatory", placed the Atalanta youth system eighth place in the world, with 25 former youth players who play in the top 5 European leagues.[183]

On 4 August 2023, Atalanta established a reserve team in Serie C, becoming the second Italian club to do so.[67]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^ Thirteen times, the first in 1927–28 and the latest in 2010–11.
  2. ^ This includes one appearance in the knockout stage after a group-stage elimination in the same season's Champions League.
  3. ^ Together with Cardiff City
  4. ^ Welsh club Cardiff City also reached the semi-finals of the 1967–68 Cup Winners' Cup while playing outside a top flight league.[36] However, it played in the English Football League Second Division because Wales did not have its own league system at the time.[37] Atalanta therefore achieved the best run at a UEFA competition of a club playing in its country's second tier.
  5. ^ This was Inzaghi's only season at the club before he would move on to Juventus and Milan, though his 24 league goals for Atalanta remained the most he scored in a Serie A season.[42]
  6. ^ This was his second spell as president; his first was from 1990 to 1994.
  7. ^ This was only the second time a club has advanced to the round of 16 after losing its opening three matches, after Newcastle United in 2002–03.[59]
  8. ^ Manifattura Sebina had a sponsorship agreement with Atalanta, but only appeared on the club's pre-match kits.[81][82]
  9. ^ Atalanta's sponsorship deal with SuisseGas was originally set to last until June 2017, though was terminated early due to the company's financial struggles and failure to pay the club. As a result, the deal was terminated early (on 17 February 2017) and the club announced TWS as a replacement main shirt sponsor for the remainder of the season.[87]
  10. ^ a b Only the main shirt sponsor appeared on the club's UEFA Champions League kits.
  11. ^ The club's home attendance record was later broken in 2020, though that match was not played in Bergamo.[106]
  12. ^ The other three are Juventus, Sassuolo, and Udinese. All the remaining Serie A clubs play in municipally-owned stadiums.[111]
  13. ^ This was the last complete season prior to the COVID-19 pandemic, which resulted in capacity reduction or matches played behind closed doors.
  14. ^ a b c Player-manager
  15. ^ a b Co-managers
  16. ^ a b Caretaker manager

References

[edit]
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