History of the first football clubs in Italy

Overview of the first football clubs in Italy (from the Museum of the Genoa CFC).

This article compiles information about the history of the first football clubs in Italy.

Historical context

Discussions about which Italian football clubs are the oldest are controversial due to the fact that some teams that were protagonists in the early days of modern football (in the country that includes distant versions of the ball game, such as calcio storico fiorentino)[1] were founded as football sections of multi-sport clubs that provided separate sections for different disciplines (e.g. athletics, gymnastics, cycling, and cricket),[2][3][4] or practiced the new sport within clubs before the formal creation of sections dedicated to football.[5] In some cases, no football section was formed and the sport remained unofficial.[6]

In addition, some of the first football events were the tournaments organized by the Italian National Gymnastics Federation (FGNI, later FGI), i.e. not a purely football organization.[7][8][9] Gymnastics football, officially called "giuoco del calcio", had its origins in the city of Rovigo, where the professor of physical education Francesco Gabrielli began to promote it in 1893, and in Treviso, where the first edition of the Gare Nazionali dei Giuochi Ginnastici was held in 1896.[7][8][9] The rules of gymnastic football, initially characterized by numerous peculiarities elaborated by Gabrielli himself, were gradually brought into line with the regulations established by the International Football Association Board (IFAB), until their complete adoption on May 6, 1903.[7][8][9]

A match of the first Italian football championship recognized by the FIGC, played at the Velodrome Humbert I in Turin on May 8, 1898.

Although the Federazione Ginnastica thus had an older football tradition than the Federazione Italiana Giuoco Calcio, founded on March 26, 1898 as FIF (Federazione Italiana del Football), and the aforementioned events were originally considered official national championships,[7][8][9] FIGC only recognized the tournaments it organized (the first of which was the 1898 Italian Football Championship won by the Genoa Cricket and Football Club), as well as the three First, Second and Third Division tournaments organized by the Italian Football Confederation (CCI) in the 1921-1922 season.[10] However, FIF, which, unlike FGNI, adopted the full IFAB regulations from the outset, did not join the organization until 1913, when the newly formed Fédération Internationale de Football Association (FIFA) became a member.[11] For this reason, the entire Italian football activity was technically born outside the IFAB, as was that of the entire world with the exception of the British Isles, an element that allowed the regulatory independence of the national federations (which in some cases has continued to exist).[citation needed]

This and other factors, such as the fact that some groups of sportsmen played football sporadically under the name of unregistered clubs, make it difficult to carry out a direct and definitive historical reconstruction to determine which was the first football team founded in Italy.[citation needed]

Overview of the oldest teams

The following is a list of the football clubs or sections founded in Italy up to 1900, by region to which they belong, with particular reference to the regional capitals; however, if there are no clubs founded in the 19th century in a given region, the oldest teams in the area and its administrative center are listed.[citation needed]

If the sources do not indicate a different date, the creation of the football section of a club is considered to be contemporary with the creation of the club itself.[citation needed]

Teams from the Aosta Valley

It seems that in the 19th century in and around Aosta there was no team dedicated officially or unofficially to football. The earliest known team in the city, as well as in the whole Valley, was the football section of the Augusta Praetoria, founded in 1908 and disbanded in 1910. It should not be confused with the almost homonymous Augusta Praetoria Sports, an early incarnation of the Unione Sportiva Aosta (1911).[12]

Further information on less recent football activity is scarce. The other most notable club in the area is Vallée d'Aoste of Saint-Christophe, which was founded in 1971.[13]

Piedmontese teams

One of the first line-ups of Sport-Club Juventus in 1899.

In Turin, with the exception of the Reale Società Ginnastica di Torino (founded in 1844,[3] but which did not establish its football section until 1897),[14] the first club was the Torino Football & Cricket Club, founded in 1887.[15][16][17][18][19][20] The Torino Football & Cricket Club then merged with the Nobili Torino (a club founded in 1889),[15][21] to form Internazionale Torino in 1891.[15] Also in the Piedmontese capital, the Foot-Ball Club Torinese was founded in 1894 as the football section of the Circolo Pattinatori Valentino 1874,[15][21][22] (and became an autonomous club three years later),[23] followed in 1897 by Unione Football (a little-known gymnastics team whose founding date is purely indicative),[24] and Sport-Club Juventus, and in 1899 by Sport-Club Audace Torino.[15]

Outside of Turin, the people of Alessandria were the most involved in football. According to some accounts, the sport was introduced to the people of Alessandria in 1891 by Edoardo Bosio,[24] and in 1894 a match was played between a local team and Genoa.[25] Later, in 1896, the Unione Pro Sport Alessandria was founded, and in 1898 another team, about which there is no further information, was formed.[24] In the rest of Piedmont, the Società Ginnastica Pro Vercelli, founded in 1887, but whose section dedicated to football was founded in 1903,[26][27] and the Società Ginnastica Pietro Micca of Biella, founded in 1899 under the name Società Ginnastica Biellese, which officially began playing football in 1902, are particularly noteworthy.[28][29] Other clubs that practiced football, but exclusively in the context of gymnastics, were the Società Ginnastica Pro Novara, founded in 1881 as Società Ginnastica e Scherma Novara,[30] the Società Ginnastica Forza e Virtù, founded in Novi Ligure in 1892,[31] and the San Filippo Neri of Tortona, of uncertain date of foundation.[31] In 1898, there are also reports of a match between gymnastic teams in Cuneo,[32] and the foundation of the Unione Sportiva Trinese (fully active in football since 1919).[33] Finally, in 1900, the Ivrea Sporting Club was founded, whose football team was formed in 1901.[34]

Ligurian teams

Act of foundation of Genoa CFC, September 7, 1893

In 1893, Genoa CFC was founded in Genoa, the oldest Italian football club still active and the one with the oldest founding document,[2][35] although it was already active in 1890 without official status, using a pitch lent to the future Genoans by Wilson and McLaren, two Scottish industrialists.[36] Also competing to represent the capital of Liguria at the time were the Società Ginnastica Andrea Doria, founded in 1895,[37] with a football section founded in 1900,[38] and two clubs from the Sampierdarena district (then an independent town, not yet incorporated into the capital): the Liguria Foot Ball Club, founded in 1897,[39] and the Società Ginnastica Sampierdarenese, founded in 1891[40] but with a football section founded in 1899.[41][42] The Società Ginnastica Ligure Cristoforo Colombo, founded in 1877,[43] also established a football section, but not until 1907,[41] while the Società Ginnastica Raffaele Rubattino, founded in 1894, did not establish a dedicated section until 1906.[44][45] Similarly, the Unione Sportiva Sestri Ponente 1897, based in the Genoese suburb of the same name (an autonomous municipality at the time), founded a football section in the century following the one in question, which was later incorporated into the Fratellanza Sportiva Sestrese Calcio 1919,[46][47] while the Società Ginnastica Nicolò Barabino, founded in 1897 in Sampierdarena, did not create a specific section for football.[42]

Outside the context of Great Genoa, one finds the Fratellanza Ginnastica Savonese and the Unione Sportiva San Filippo Neri of Albenga, founded in 1883 and 1893 respectively, which did not develop the practice of football in an official capacity until the century following their foundation.[48][49] The Fratellanza Ginnastica Savonese, in particular, founded its "games section" (Savona Calcio) in 1907,[50] while the Società Ginnastica Pro Chiavari was also founded in 1893[51] and created its first "football section" in 1915, temporarily absorbing the Entella Foot-Ball Club.[52]

Lombard teams

Milan's oldest football team was the Societa' per l'Educazione Fisica Mediolanum, founded in 1896 as Societa' Ginnastica Mediolanum,[4] with its football section founded in 1898.[53] The second team in the capital was the Milan Foot-Ball and Cricket Club, founded in 1899.[54] Other old clubs that played football, albeit unofficially, were Forza e Coraggio, founded in 1870,[42][55] and Pro Patria Società Ginnastica di Milano,[56] founded in 1883,[42][55] in addition to Pro Italia and Civici Pompieri.[42]

Herbert Kilpin, one of the founders of the Milan Foot-Ball and Cricket Club in 1899.

In the rest of Lombardy, however, the first football section was founded by the Foot Ball Club Casteggio 1898. Previously, in 1874 in Lodi, the Società Lodigiana di Ginnastica e Scherma, which later became the Associazione Sportiva Fanfulla (which founded its football section in 1908),[57] in 1876 the Società Ginnastica Gallaratese (which founded its football section in 1909), in 1878 the Società Ginnastica Monzese Forti e Liberi[58] and the Società Bergamasca di Ginnastica e Scherma (the latter inaugurated its football section in 1913) were founded in the field of gymnastics, in 1879 the Sempre Liberi of Cassano Magnago (whose section was active in the following century),[59] and the Società Ginnastica Pavese (which managed Pavia internally for two years in 1912-1913),[60] in 1881 the Società Ginnastica Pro Patria et Libertate of Busto Arsizio, and in 1895 the Società Canottieri Lecco, which founded its football section in 1912. Also in the last years of the 19th century, but with doubtful dates, the Labor Sportiva of Seregno (which merged in 1920 with the Seregno Foot Ball Club 1913)[61] and the Unione Ginnastica Vogherese (which also officially founded its football section in 1920, later merged with the Associazione Vogherese Calcio) were founded.[62]

Teams from Trentino-Alto Adige

The oldest sports club in Trento, among those that have played football in their history, seems to be the Unione Ginnastica, founded in 1860. This club, together with the Pro Trento club (whose date of foundation is unknown), has been playing amateur football since the beginning of the 20th century.

Beyond the borders of the Municipality of Trento, three other multisport clubs, founded in the 19th century, had or have a football background: The Unione Sportiva Rovereto, founded in 1878 as the Unione Ginnastica Roveretana, which developed into a football club in 1921; the Turnverein Meran, founded in Merano in 1886 (the year in which activity in the discipline began is unknown, as is the creation of a section dedicated to football); and the Unione Sportiva Arco, founded in 1895 in the municipality of the same name, which formally initiated the practice of the sport in 1921.

Venetian teams

In Venice, the first sports club dedicated to football was the Società Sportiva Costantino Reyer, founded in 1872, which inaugurated its football section in 1904. In Mestre, a town that was first autonomous and later became part of the capital of Veneto in 1926, the Società Ginnastica Marziale was founded in 1878, whose section dedicated to football was unofficially created in 1892 and officially inaugurated in 1904 (already in 1889, British officers stationed in Mestre introduced the game to the inhabitants, eventually involving Marziale).[63]

Other early gymnastic associations in Veneto that were involved in football were the Istituzione Comunale Marcantonio Bentegodi, founded in 1868 as the Società Veronese di Ginnastica e Scherma (which began playing football in the early 20th century);[64] the Società Rodigina di Ginnastica Unione e Forza, founded in 1874 by the aforementioned Francesco Gabrielli and which began playing football on April 28, 1893; the Società Ginnastica Vicentina Umberto I[65][66] and the Fortitudo of Schio, the latter dating back to 1875. Also unknown is the year of foundation of the Società Ginnastica Velocipedistica Trevigiana and the Vittorio Veneto of Treviso, which took part in the first gymnastics federation tournament in 1896. The first club in the region to form an official section dedicated to football was Vicenza (March 9, 1902).[67]

Teams from Friuli-Venezia Giulia

Trieste teams did not play football until 1900. The first known team was the Black Star Football Club, founded in 1906 by Emilio Arnstein (future founder of the Bologna Football Club 1909).[68]

The only club in Friuli-Venezia Giulia that played football before this date seems to have been the Società Udinese di Ginnastica e Scherma, founded in 1896 and winner of the first national gymnastics football competition held in the same year. Internally, however, it was not until 1911 that the Associazione Calcio Udine was founded.[citation needed]

Teams from Emilia-Romagna

The only old Bolognese club dedicated to football was the Società Sezionale di Ginnastica in Bologna, founded in 1871 (and now known as the Società di Educazione Fisica Virtus), which organized the first recorded football exhibition in Italy on May 9, 1891, and opened a section dedicated to the discipline in 1910.[42]

Outside the capital, the first club in Emilia-Romagna dedicated to football was founded in 1870, the Società di Ginnastica e Scherma del Panaro (originally the "Società Dilettanti di Ginnastica"),[69] which began playing football in 1903;[70] it was followed in 1874 by the Unione Sportiva Ravennate (whose football section, now the Società Cooperativa Ravenna Sport, was founded in 1913),[71] and in 1876 by the Società Ginnastica Persicetana.[72] These clubs were followed in 1879 by the Società Ginnastica La Patria of Carpi, which later also operated a football school,[73] and the Palestra Ginnastica Ferrara, which won the FGNI tournament in 1898 and operated exclusively in the gymnastics field;[74] in 1898 the Unione Sportiva Forti e Liberi of Forlì was founded, which in 1919 formed its football section (today's Forlì FC).[75] Finally, in the last years of the 19th century, the discipline made its first sporadic appearances in Piacenza.[76]

Tuscan teams

Piero Torrigiani, founder of the Florence Football Club, in 1898.

The capital of Tuscany also has a very old team. Its first football club, Florence Football Club,[77] was founded in 1898. It was preceded by the Palestra Ginnastica Fiorentina Libertas, founded in 1877, which did not establish a football section until 1912; in 1870, the Club Velocipedistico Fiorentino was founded, which merged with the Club Sportivo Ardire in 1903 to form the Club Sportivo Firenze, which established a football section in 1908.[78][79]

A similar fate befell the Sienese multisport club Mens Sana in Corpore Sano, founded in 1871. In 1904, some of its members split off to form the original nucleus of Siena FC SSD, which in 1972 founded its own football club, the Football Club Luigi Meroni.[citation needed]

Umbrian teams

The oldest club dedicated to football in Perugia, as in Umbria, seems to have been the Società Ginnastica Braccio Fortebraccio, founded in 1890 as a gymnastics club,[80] which became a multisport club in 1899 and officially dedicated to football in 1901.[80][81][82] However, the date of foundation of a similar club, Libertas,[83] which was active in football without apparently creating an official section, remains uncertain.[citation needed]

In addition to the Perugian clubs, Nestor Marsciano (1904), SPES Gubbio (1908) and Unione Sportiva Orvietana (1913) are also worth mentioning. While there is little information available on the first club, it is known that the other two were founded in 1913: however, both Gubbio and Orvietana have been unofficially active in football since 1910 (in the case of Orvietana, even before its actual foundation).[citation needed]

Teams from Marche

Colonel Candido Augusto Vecchi (1814-1869), after whom Ascoli Calcio was originally named.

The oldest football club in Ancona was AC Ancona, founded in 1905. Before that, British sailors had brought football to the capital of the Marche region, but the sport was only played sporadically.[citation needed]

However, the first team in the region was Candido Augusto Vecchi (later Ascoli Calcio), founded in Ascoli Piceno in 1898.[84][85] In the same year, the multisport club Vis Sauro Pesaro was founded, but did not start playing football until 1906. Also in 1899, the Società Polisportiva Grottammare was founded, whose football section was created in an unspecified year.[citation needed]

Teams from Lazio

As in Genoa, football was brought to Rome by foreigners from across the Channel. More precisely, it was the seminarians of the Catholic colleges reserved for British students who imported the new sport. In particular, the English and Welsh boys of the Venerable English College were responsible for the debut of football in the city, which dates back to 1892.[86][87] Within a few years, several sports clubs in the capital of Italy, all coming from the gymnastics sphere, began playing football: Società Ginnastica Roma, founded in 1890 and active since 1895;[88][89][90] the Football Club Roma, founded in 1896;[88][89][90] the Sporting Club Roma, founded in 1897;[88][89][90] the Associazione Gioventù Cristiana (a political organization founded in the second half of the 19th century and involved in sports since at least 1898);[88] the Società Podistica Lazio, the Veloce Club Podistico, and the Audace Club Podistico, founded in 1900.[86][88] Notably, Lazio, dedicated to the game since 1901, was the only club among the aforementioned, along with Ginnastica Roma,[91][92] to abandon the gymnastic variant of football in favor of the IFAB variant, joining FIF at least since 1908[93] and opening a section dedicated to football on October 3, 1910.[88][94][95][96][97] These teams were joined by the Società Ginnastica Forza e Coraggio, whose year of foundation is doubtful.[88]

In the rest of the Lazio region, the sport was also practiced by the Associazione Ginnastica Forza e Libertà of Rieti, founded in 1891, which participated in the 1901 FGNI tournament.[28][41]

Teams from Abruzzo

Information on the early history of football in Abruzzo is fragmentary and all dates back to the 19th century. The first records of football in L'Aquila date back to the 1910s, when the football sections of multisport clubs such as Amiternina and Folgore developed. In 1915 the L'Aquila Foot-Ball Club was founded.

However, it is likely that the regional capital was preceded by other cities such as Teramo (where the Gran Sasso multisport club was active), Pratola Peligna (where Pratola Calcio was founded in 1910, the first team whose founding year is known) and Vasto (where the sport began to be played in 1902 and the Società Sportiva Umberto I was founded in 1911).

Teams from Molise

No football club was founded in Molise in the 19th century. The first one was probably the Unione Sportiva Campobasso (1919).[citation needed]

After the club of the capital, ASD Termoli Calcio 1920 was founded in 1920, S.S. Samnium Isernia was founded in 1928 (the year the team debuted in the Italian league),[98] and Associazione Sportiva Agnone was founded in 1929 (the date of the first documented reference to it).[99]

Campanian teams

The oldest sports club in Naples, among those that practice football, both at the gymnastic level (it participated in the FGNI tournament in 1901) and in its 5-a-side variant, turns out to be Virtus Partenopea, founded in 1866[28][41] (within which Sportiva Napoli was founded in 1907).[100][101] Football made regional headlines in 1896, when the city hosted a football match between the Reale Club Canottieri Italia, a rowing and sailing club founded in 1889, and a mixed team from the other local nautical clubs.[102] However, the creation of a Neapolitan football club had to wait until 1905, when the Football Club Partenopeo (also known as the Napoli Foot-Ball Club) was founded in April on the initiative of the sons of Edoardo Scarfoglio and Matilde Serao,[103] and the Naples Foot-Ball Club (the football section of the Canottieri Italia) was founded in November.[103][104][105]

The first club in Campania, however, was Puteoli Sport, founded in Pozzuoli in 1902. Before that, the employees of the English shipyard Armstrong helped to spread the sport in the city.[citation needed]

Apulian teams

Apulia was one of the first areas in southern Italy where football was played, especially in Bari, where English merchant ships, especially those of the Cunard Line, docked and traded with the city. The first football events in the region took place in the capital: the first matches on June 22 and 29, 1899, organized by Professor Giuseppe Pezzarossa and played by the teams of the Nautical Institute and the Technical Institute; the first tournament took place on July 24, 1900, during a provincial exhibition, in which the joint team of the institutes competed in twelve matches against the team of the high school boys.[106][107][108] In February 1901, also in Bari, the first football club in the history of Apulia was founded, the Foot-Ball Challenge Club, formed by students who made their debut against the sailors of the English steamer Osiris.[109][110]

The Società Sportiva Pro Italia of Taranto, on the other hand, was the first to be founded outside of the regional capital: its origins date back to 1904. In the same year, however, Taranto's Circolo Studentesco Mario Rapisardi began practicing the sport unofficially.[citation needed]

Lucanian teams

As for Basilicata, Potenza Calcio is the first football club of the region and has been in existence since 1920.[111]

The Unione Sportiva Moliternese, founded in 1922 in Moliterno, was the first to popularize the sport outside the capital,[112] while the Circolo Sportivo Vultur, founded in 1921 in Rionero in Vulture, only started playing football in 1929.[citation needed]

Calabrian teams

The first club in Calabria officially involved in football was probably Juventus Catanzaro, a multisport club founded in 1908 in the region's capital.

However, there are uncertainties about this fact, because in the same year football began to be played in Cosenza and from then on clubs like the Virides Sport Club, the Brutium, the Liberta, the Milan Sport Club, the Meridionale, the Fratelli Bandiera, the Savoia and the Speranza appeared; however, the exact dates of foundation of these clubs remain unknown. It is known that the Associazione Calcistica Locri 1909 was founded one year later.

Sicilian teams

The first lineup of the Anglo-Panormitan Athletic and Foot-Ball Club, 1900.

The first contact with football by the citizens of Palermo dates back to 1897, probably thanks to English sailors and the Sport Club.[113] In 1900, however, the first football club in Sicily, the Anglo-Panormitan Athletic and Foot-Ball Club, was founded in the capital.[114][115]

Also in 1900, the Messina Football Club was founded. However, the beginning of football in Messina is attributed to the Società Ginnastica Garibaldi of the nineteenth century, which founded its football section in 1910 by incorporating the Messina Football Club.[citation needed]

Sardinian teams

The first football match recorded in the history of Cagliari was played in 1902 between a group of students from the city and a team of sailors from Genoa. The first multisport clubs in Sardinia to play football, albeit unofficially, were all from Cagliari: the Società Canottieri Ichnusa (1891), the Società Ginnastica Amsicora (1897) and the Società Ginnastica Eleonora d'Arborea (1900). The participation of Amsicora's athletes in a football competition held during the Turin International Exhibition of 1911 is well documented.[116][117]

The first recorded football matches on the island, however, took place in Calangianus at the end of the 19th century between British workers and technicians called in to build a railway line.[117] The two clubs that inaugurated the official Sardinian football activity were the Società Educazione Fisica Torres of Sassari and the Associazione Sportiva Dilettantistica Ilvamaddalena of La Maddalena (1903). Torres also played in the aforementioned Turin event.[citation needed]

Ranking by founding date

Despite the fact that Genoa is the Italian football club with the oldest official charter, sources attribute the record of the first football team founded in Italy to the Turin Football & Cricket Club.[15][16][17][18][19][20]

The table in this section lists the association football teams that were officially established by the end of the 19th century. The names of those that still exist today are in bold. The list is not exhaustive, as there is a lack of information on some clubs.

With the exception of the multisport clubs Ginnastica Torino (1844),[3] Sampierdarenese (June 6, 1891),[40] Andrea Doria (September 5, 1895),[37] and Mediolanum (February 11, 1896),[4] the founding dates of the football sections coincide with the official founding dates of the clubs to which they belonged. At the same time, the disappearance of the football teams coincided with the definitive dissolution of the corresponding association, with the exception of the four clubs mentioned above, which are still active.[3][4][37][40]

# Team[118] City[119] Establishment of the team[120] Official debut[121]
01 Torino Football & Cricket Club Turin March 13,[16] spring[17] or November[18] 1887 Did not occur
02 Nobili Torino Turin 1889 Did not occur
03 Internazionale Torino Turin September 7-December 31[122] 1891 May 8, 1898, 09:00 a.m. - FIF Italian Championship.
04 Genoa Cricket and Football Club Genoa September 7, 1893 May 8, 1898, 11:00 a.m. - FIF Italian Championship.
05 Football Club Torinese Turin 1894 May 8, 1898, 09:00 a.m. - FIF Italian Championship.
06 Unione Pro Sport Alessandria Alessandria August 1896 Did not occur[123]
07 Reale Società Ginnastica di Torino Turin January 1-October 31[124] 1897 May 8, 1898, 11:00 a.m. - FIF Italian Championship.
07 Liguria Foot Ball Club Sampierdarena (GE)[125] April 1897 December 10, 1911 - FIGC Seconda Categoria.
07 Juventus Football Club Turin Autumn[126] 1897 March 11, 1900 - FIF Italian Championship
10 Foot Ball Club Casteggio 1898 Casteggio (PV) 1898 1913 - FIGC Promozione.
10 Società per l'Educazione Fisica Mediolanum Milan May 15, 1898 April 14, 1901 - FIF Italian Championship
10 Florence Football Club 1898 Florence May 26, 1898 March 15, 1908 - FIF Terza Categoria.
10 Ascoli Calcio 1898 FC Ascoli Piceno November 1[84][85] 1898 1926 - FIGC Terza Divisione.
14 Sport Club Audace Torino Turin January 1-May 13,[127] 1899 March 2, 1902 - FIF Italian Championship
14 Associazione Calcio Sampierdarenese Genoa[128] March 19, 1899 April 8, 1900, 3:00 p.m. - FIF Italian Championship.
16 Associazione Calcio Milan Milan December 18[129] 1899 April 15, 1900 - FIF Italian Championship
17 Società Ginnastica Andrea Doria Genoa January 1-August 10,[130] 1900 March 9, 1902 - FIF Italian Championship
18 Palermo Football Club Palermo November 1[113] 1900 December 18, 1921 - CCI Prima Divisione
19 Associazioni Calcio Riunite Messina Messina December 1, 1900 December 18, 1921 - CCI Prima Divisione

See also

References

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  58. ^ The Società Ginnastica Monzese Forti e Liberi sent its own representative in 1896 to attend the first exhibitions of gymnastic soccer in Treviso promoted by Francesco Gabrielli, cf. Romanato (2008)
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  81. ^ Sappino (2000, p. 986).
  82. ^ Various authors (1967, p. 823).
  83. ^ Ranieri di Sorbello (2005, p. 356).
  84. ^ a b "La storia". Archived from the original on 3 November 2016. Retrieved 2 November 2016.
  85. ^ a b Although 1898 is traditionally considered the year of the team's foundation, Ascoli newspapers of the time date the beginning of the club's activity in 1901. However, the historiographical work Ascoli Calcio: Album Storico Fotografico 1898-1974, points out that this discrepancy is due to the fact that the club was founded in 1898 "quietly, so as not to let the families know that they had 'dared' to do so much and that they would boldly straddle the powerful 'bicycles'", and that it was only "in 1901, when Prof. Fortis took over the presidency of this club, that it became official".
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  87. ^ Marco Impiglia (16 October 2011). "The precursors of soccer in Rome". Il Tempo. In 1892, Venerabile took the field for the first time with a soccer team.... It was in 1892, during a vacation at Monte Porzio Catone, that the students of Venerabile received permission from their rector to play association football.
  88. ^ a b c d e f g Impiglia (2003).
  89. ^ a b c Gallian (1928).
  90. ^ a b c Valentini (2011).
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  92. ^ "Ginnastica Roma, la storia". Archived from the original on 26 April 2013. Retrieved 10 April 2013.
  93. ^ See F.I.F. Affiliate List 1908. The list was given to the AIA by former president Luigi Bosisio, who published it in the magazine L'Arbitro in 1925. The magazine collection was digitized and put on 3 CD-ROMs in 2004 by AIA historian Luciano Lupi of Genoa. The box containing the 3 CD-ROMs is not for sale, but is still available free of charge at all offices of the Regional Arbitration Commissions (C.R.A.).
  94. ^ The exact date is given in a September 29, 1910 article in the newspaper Il Messaggero.
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  100. ^ Athos Zontini. Storia del Napoli
  101. ^ Francesco Esposito (15 May 2023). "Come è nato l'amore tra Napoli e il calcio". Retrieved 23 May 2023.
  102. ^ Signorelli (2002, p. 135).
  103. ^ a b Renna (2008, p. 23).
  104. ^ "Il giuoco del Calcio a Napoli". La Stampa Sportiva. 12 February 1911. p. 13.
  105. ^ Romolo Acampora. "Un romanzo lungo cent'anni". Retrieved 2 June 2013.
  106. ^ Gianni Antonucci, Il Bari... 105 anni fa, La Gazzetta Meridionale, 19 gennaio 2013
  107. ^ Raffaele Caruso, Bari, 22 giugno 1899: in via Nicolai si disputa la prima partita di calcio della storia, Barinedita, 27 giu 2018
  108. ^ "Football was a great success at the Expo yesterday and was enthusiastically received by the public, who took a keen interest in all seven matches, which were played with energy and speed.", cf. Corriere delle Puglie.
  109. ^ Antonucci (2008).
  110. ^ Giovine (2018).
  111. ^ "Sport Club Lucano". Giornale di Basilicata. 26 June 1920. p. 3.
  112. ^ 80 anni di Calcio a Moliterno. Capitolo 1: Introduzione storica dal 1922 al 1949
  113. ^ a b "La Maglia del Palermo - La storia del Palermo Calcio". Retrieved 26 March 2014.
  114. ^ "Le Origini - Rosanero.net". Retrieved 26 March 2014.
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  116. ^ "Prima parte 1900 - 1919". La Storia del Cagliari. Archived from the original on 21 April 2022. Retrieved 25 March 2014.
  117. ^ a b "Le origini della società". Archived from the original on 29 September 2014. Retrieved 5 April 2013.
  118. ^ The current and/or last used company name and the current and/or last used company colors are displayed for each team.
  119. ^ The current and/or last company location is displayed for each team.
  120. ^ Understood as a football section in the case of multisport clubs.
  121. ^ Competitions organized by FGI/FGNI are not taken into account as they are not recognized as official by FIF/FIGC.
  122. ^ After the first friendly match (played either on September 6, 13, 20 or 27) played by Herbert Kilpin, the team's founder, in September 1891 against the future FC Torinese, a few weeks after his arrival in Italy, cf. Papa & Panico (1993). Verso il venticinquennio del football
  123. ^ The club played only in FGNI national competitions, starting on May 29, 1897.
  124. ^ It is assumed to be before November 1, 1897, the date of the first tournament in which the football section appears to have participated, cf. "Il «match» al Foot-ball". La Stampa. 2 November 1897. p. 2.
  125. ^ In 1926, 12 years after the dissolution of the team, the municipality of Sampierdarena became an integral part of the territory of Genoa. Regio Decreto Legge 14 gennaio 1926, n. 74.
  126. ^ By convention, the anniversary is celebrated on November 1, cf. Bocca (2010)
  127. ^ It is presumed to be before May 14, 1899, the start date of the first tournament in which the football section appears to have participated, cf. "Trofeo Juventus 1899, Amichevole 1898-1899 21/05/1899 - Juventus-Audace Torino (2ª giornata)". Retrieved 25 August 2023.
  128. ^ Until 1926, the club's headquarters were in the municipality of Sampierdarena, which later became part of the territory of Genoa. Regio Decreto Legge 14 gennaio 1926, n. 74.
  129. ^ Due to an oversight, most sources incorrectly list December 16 as the date, cf. "La nascita di un mito". Retrieved 30 April 2015.
  130. ^ It was probably before August 11, 1900, when the first game of the football section took place, cf. Nino Gotta. "L'Andrea Doria... Fedele nemica del Genoa". Archived from the original on 21 July 2010. Retrieved 21 May 2013.

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