UC Sampdoria

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Unione Calcio Sampdoria, commonly referred to as Sampdoria (Script error: No such module "IPA".), is an Italian professional football club based in Genoa, Liguria.

Sampdoria was formed in 1946 from the merger of two existing sports clubs whose roots can be traced back to the 1890s,[1] Sampierdarenese and Andrea Doria. Both the team name and colours reflect this union, the first being a combination of the names, the second taking the form of a unique kit design, predominantly blue (for Andrea Doria) with white, red and black bands (for Sampierdarenese) across the centre of the shirt, hence the nickname blucerchiati ("blue-circled").

Sampdoria play at Stadio Luigi Ferraris, capacity 33,205,[2] which they share with Genoa's older club, Genoa CFC. The fierce rivalry between the two teams is commonly known as the Derby della Lanterna, and has been contested in Serie A for most of its history.

Sampdoria have won the Scudetto once in their history, in 1991. The club has also won the Coppa Italia four times, in 1985, 1988, 1989 and 1994, and the Supercoppa Italiana once, in 1991. Their biggest European success came when they won the Cup Winners' Cup in 1990. They also reached the European Cup final in 1992, losing the final 1–0 to Barcelona after extra-time.

History

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Sampierdarenese and Andrea Doria (1891–1927)

File:Sampdoria through the ages 2025.jpg
The performance of Sampdoria in the Italian football league structure since the club's foundation in 1946.

Script error: No such module "anchor". The roots of Sampdoria are to be found in two teams born in the late 1890s: Società Ginnastica Sampierdarenese and Società Andrea Doria. The former was founded in 1891 and opened its football section in 1899.[1][3] The latter, named after Genoese admiral Andrea Doria, was founded in 1895.[4][5]

Andrea Doria did not join the first Italian Football Championship organised by the Italian Federation of Football (FIF) and played on 8 May 1898. Instead, they played in the football tournament organised by the Italian Federation of Ginnastica.[6] The first ancestor of Sampdoria to play in the Italian Football Championship was Sampierdarenese, who joined the third edition in 1900 for their only appearance before World War One.[7]

Andrea Doria eventually joined the competition in 1902, but did not win a game until the 1907 edition, when they beat local rivals Genoa 3–1.[7] It was not until 1910–11 that the club began to show promise, finishing above Juventus, Internazionale and Genoa in the main tournament.[7]

After the war Sampierdarenese finally began to compete in the Italian Championship replacing another club from Bolzaneto, then an independent town in the province of Genoa, called Associazione del Calcio Ligure.[7] Thus, during the 1919-20 edition Sampierdarenese and Andrea Doria met in the championship for the first time. Doria won the first-leg game (4–1 and 1–1) and finished second after Genoa in the Liguria group, qualifying for the National Round.[7]

Andrea Doria ended up first in the Liguria group above local rivals Genoa in the 1920-21 Championship.[7]

For the 1921–22 season the Italian top league was split into two competitions, one run by the Italian Football Federation and a second one organised by the secessionist Italian Football Confederation. Sampierdarenese joined the IFF tournament, while Andrea Doria and Genoa signed up for the one organised by the Confederation. Sampierdarenese won the Liguria section and then went on to the semi-finals, finishing top out of three clubs and thus reaching the final against Novese. Both legs of the final ended in 0–0 draws, thus a repetition match was played in Cremona on 21 May 1922. The match went into extra time with Novese eventually winning the tie (and the Championship) 2–1.[7]

By season 1924–25, Sampdoria's ancestors were competing against each other in the Northern League; Andrea Doria finished one place above their rivals and won one match 2–1, while Sampierdarenese were victorious 2–0 in the other.[7]

From La Dominante to Sampdoria (1927–1946)

A process of unification of the many professional football teams in Italy was started by the Fascist government. Particularly in 1927 multiple smaller clubs where merged into one all over the country. Among many other similar examples, four teams based in Rome merged and became AS Roma. Similarly, at the end of the 1926–27 season Sampierdarenese and Andrea Doria merged for the first time under the name La Dominante.[8]

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Wearing green and black striped shirts, La Dominante Genova lived a short life, having played just three championships, and was not particularly successful. The team was admitted to the 1927-28 Divisione Nazionale Group B, ending the season in 10th place.[7] The next season was the last year of Divisione Nazionale, and Dominante finished in 10th place. Finally, in 1929 Dominante competed in the first-ever Serie B tournament where they finished third, just missing out on promotion.[7]

Dominante then absorbed the local team Corniglianese and competed in the 1930–31 Serie B under the name of Foot Ball Club Liguria. The team did not do well, finishing in 18th place and suffering relegation to Prima Divisione.[9]

Both Sampierdarenese and Andrea Doria reverted to their previous names in 1931 as separate clubs.[5] In the span of just a few years Sampierdarenese then climbed up from Prima Divisione to Serie B and finally Serie A. Ending up second in the Girone D of the 1931–32 Prima Divisione, they got promoted to Serie B. After the uneventful 1932–33 Serie B season, the team proceeded to win the 1933–34 Serie B championship and were promoted into Serie A for the first time.[9]

On 15 July 1937 Sampierdarenese absorbed Corniglianese and Rivarolese, with the club adopting the name Associazione Calcio Liguria.[10] This saw them reach fifth place in Serie A in 1939.[11] In the early 1940s, the club was relegated but bounced straight back up as Serie B champions in 1941.

File:Sampdoria 1946-1949.jpg
Sampdoria in the late 1940s

After World War II, both Andrea Doria and Sampierdarenese (the name Liguria was abolished in 1945) were competing in Serie A, but in a reverse of pre-war situations, Andrea Doria were now the top club out of the two. However, on 12 August 1946, a merger occurred to create Unione Calcio Sampdoria.

The first chairman of this new club was Piero Sanguineti, but the ambitious entrepreneur Amedeo Rissotto soon replaced him, while the first team coach during this period was a man from Florence named Giuseppe Galluzzi. To illustrate the clubs would be equally represented in the new, merged club, a new kit was designed featuring the blue shirts of Andrea Doria and the white, red and black midsection of Sampierdarenese. In the same month of the merger, the new club demanded they should share the Stadio Luigi Ferraris ground with Genoa. An agreement was reached, and the stadium began hosting Genoa's and Sampdoria's home matches.

Early years and the achievements in the Mantovani era (1946–1993)

File:Unione Calcio Sampdoria 1969-70.jpg
Sampdoria in the 1969–70 season

For about thirty years the Genoese played constantly in Serie A, with mixed results, the best of which was in the 1960–1961 season, in which they obtained fourth place in the championship. In the 1965–1966 season Sampdoria finished sixteenth, relegating to Serie B for the first time in its history; however, the following year they won the second-tier championship and immediately returned to Serie A.

In 1979, the club, then playing Serie B, was acquired by oil businessman Paolo Mantovani (1930–1993), who invested in the team to bring Sampdoria to the top flight. In 1982, Sampdoria made their Serie A return and won their first Coppa Italia in 1985. In 1986, Yugoslav Vujadin Boškov was appointed as the new head coach. The club won their second Coppa Italia in 1988, being admitted to the 1988–89 UEFA Cup Winners' Cup, where they reached the final, losing 2–0 to Barcelona.[12][13] A second consecutive triumph in the Coppa Italia gave Sampdoria a spot in the 1989–90 Cup Winners' Cup, which they won after defeating Anderlecht after extra time in the final.[14]

File:Gianluca Vialli - RISE 2017 (3).jpg
Gianluca Vialli, Sampdoria's number 9 in the golden years between late 1980s and early 1990s.

This was followed only one year later by their first and only Scudetto, being crowned as Serie A champions with a five-point advantage over second-placed Internazionale. The winning team featured several notable players, such as Gianluca Pagliuca, Gianluca Vialli, Roberto Mancini, Toninho Cerezo, Pietro Vierchowod and Attilio Lombardo, with Boškov as head coach.[15] In the following season, Sampdoria reached the European Cup final and were defeated once again by Barcelona, at Wembley Stadium.[16] Vujadin Boškov is recognised as one of Sampdoria's most successful managers winning a record amount of trophies and thus further establishing the club's reputation in Europe.

Enrico Mantovani Ownership (1993–2002)

On 14 October 1993, Paolo Mantovani died suddenly and was replaced by his son Enrico. During his first season (1993–94), Sampdoria won one more Coppa Italia and placed fourth in Serie A. During the following four seasons, many players from his father's tenure left the club but many important acquisitions were made which kept Sampdoria in the top tier Serie A. This included the likes of Argentine internationals Juan Sebastián Verón and Ariel Ortega, and international midfielders Clarence Seedorf and Christian Karembeu.[14] In April 1995 Sampdoria reached the semi-final stage of the Cup Winners' Cup, losing out to Arsenal on penalties after two legs.

In May 1999 Sampdoria were relegated from Serie A and did not return to the top flight until 2003.

Riccardo Garrone Ownership (2002–2013)

File:Luigi Delneri UC Sampdoria.jpg
Luigi Delneri managed Sampdoria to fourth place and Champions League qualification in 2010.

In 2002 Sampdoria was acquired by Riccardo Garrone, an Italian oil businessman. Sampdoria returned to Serie A in 2003 led by talisman Francesco Flachi, and ended their first season in eighth place. After several more top-half finishes, manager Walter Novellino gave way to Walter Mazzarri in 2007.[17]

With the signings of forwards Antonio Cassano from Real Madrid,[18] and Giampaolo Pazzini in January 2008, Sampdoria ended the 2007–08 season in sixth position and qualified for the 2008–09 UEFA Cup.[19] The following season, they came fourth and qualified for the UEFA Champions League play-offs under manager Luigi Delneri, who left for Juventus.[20] With the departures also of CEO Giuseppe Marotta, and both Cassano and Pazzini, and the squad being stretched by Champions League football, Sampdoria were relegated to Serie B after a 2–1 loss at home to Palermo in May 2011.[21] In the following season June 2012, Sampdoria won promotion back to Serie A after defeating Varese 4–2 on aggregate in the play-off final.[22]

Edoardo Garrone Ownership (2013–2014)

In 2013, following the death of his father, Edoardo Garrone took over the presidency of Sampdoria, but his main goal was to sell it as soon as possible to free himself of the debts that the company had incurred over the previous years.[23][24] The sale of Sampdoria to Massimo Ferrero was widely contested by Sampdoria fans.[25] A sell-off, which even after years, some fans continue to reproach in 2023.[26][27] In 2023, after Massimo Ferrero's arrest in 2021 and the continuous protests from the fans, he clarified that the sale was a mistake due to pressure from his family to sell Sampdoria as soon as possible. A further wrong choice defined by Garrone because it was sold to an unreliable person.[28]

Massimo Ferrero Ownership (2014–2023)

In June 2014 the club was purchased by the film producer Massimo Ferrero.[29][30] After sixth-placed rivals Genoa in the 2014–15 season failed to obtain a UEFA licence for the 2015–16 UEFA Europa League, seventh-placed Sampdoria took their spot.[31] The club built a solid foundation in Serie A for the next seven years. Notable managerial appointments were Marco Giampaolo and Claudio Ranieri, as well as the steady flow of goals from talismanic striker Fabio Quagliarella. Growing tensions however surrounded Ferrero's presidency, fuelled by his well-known and public support of AS Roma. Several attempts were made to sell the club, including to a consortium led by club legend Gianluca Vialli. On 6 December 2021 Massimo Ferrero was arrested by Italian police as part of ongoing investigations into corporate crimes and bankruptcy. He resigned from his position as President of Sampdoria with immediate effect, whilst a club statement assured fans that the affairs of the football club were not a part of the investigations.[32] On 27 December, former player Marco Lanna was appointed president. In January 2022 the club welcomed back former manager Marco Giampaolo after a disappointing start to the season under Roberto D'Aversa. On 6 February in his first home game back in charge, Sampdoria defeated Sassuolo 4–0. Results however began to dwindle, and after eight games and a winless start to the 2022–23 season the club parted company with Giampaolo. On 6 October former Serie A player legend Dejan Stanković was appointed to the role with the task of steering the club clear of the relegation zone. Sampdoria were later relegated in the 2022–23 season from Serie A to Serie B.

New owners and Serie B (2023–present)

In late May 2023 former Leeds United owner Andrea Radrizzani and the businessman Matteo Manfredi[33] reached an agreement with previous owner Massimo Ferrero to buy Sampdoria and prevent it from bankruptcy. On 27 June 2023, former Italy and Serie A legend Andrea Pirlo was appointed as the manager.[34]

The change in ownership, however, has not led to an improvement of fortunes for the club, and financial hardship continued well into the 2023–24 season: although they finished their first season back in the second tier with qualification to the promotion playoffs, they were eliminated by Palermo in the first round. The 2024–25 season was meant to feature an even stronger push for promotion with the acquisition of players like Massimo Coda and M'baye Niang, but the club started out with two losses and a draw on the first three games on the season. Results were never delivered despite four managerial changes, and as a result, Sampdoria placed 18th, which implied its first ever relegation to Serie C, the third tier of Italian football.[35] However, Brescia's four-point deduction at the end of the regular season meant that the club was thrown one final lifeline not to drop down to Serie C, as the subsequent shuffling of placements signified that they would play a relegation play-out match against Salernitana.[36] They went on to win the play-off 5–0, Serie B officials awarded them a 3–0 win over Salernitana in the second leg of the playoff after it was abandoned.[37]

Colours, badge and nicknames

File:Colori Sampdoria murales Filippo Biagioli.jpg
Genoa graffiti depicting a fish from Sampdoria colours by Filippo Biagioli.

The white, blue, red and black colours represent the club's origins with a merger between two teams, Sampierdarenese and Andrea Doria, who wore respectively red/black and white/blue jerseys with a shield with Saint George's Cross.[38]

The club crest features a sailor in profile known by Genoese name of Baciccia, a diminutive of Ligurian Gio-Batta, Italian Giovanni Battista, i.e. John-Baptist. The image of a sailor is used due to Sampdoria being based in the port city of Genoa.

The precise design of the Baciccia came from a Disney-licensed comic, Topolino, in 1980.

Since 1980, the Baciccia has appeared on the shirts of Sampdoria, mostly on the chest but occasionally on the sleeve.[39]

Stadium

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File:Stadio Luigi Ferraris di Genova.jpg
Stadio Luigi Ferraris

Since 1946, the club have played at the Stadio Luigi Ferraris, also known as the Marassi from the name of the neighbourhood where it is located, which has a capacity of 33,205.[40] It is the ninth-largest stadium in Italy by capacity. The stadium is named after Luigi Ferraris (1887–1915), an Italian footballer, engineer and soldier who died during WWI.[41]

The ground is shared with Sampdoria's rivals, Genoa CFC[42] The stadium was dismantled and rebuilt before the 1990 FIFA World Cup, for which it hosted three Group C matches (between Costa Rica, Scotland and Sweden) and a round-of-16 match between the Republic of Ireland and Romania.[43]

Supporters and rivalries

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File:Sampdoria‘s „Curva Sud“.jpg
Sampdoria fans in the Gradinata Sud of the Stadio Luigi Ferraris

Sampdoria supporters come mainly from the city of Genoa. The biggest group are Ultras Tito Cucchiaroni, named after an Argentinian left winger who played for Sampdoria. The group were founded in 1969, making it one of the oldest ultra groups in Italy. They are apolitical, although there are smaller groups like Rude Boys Sampdoria, who are left-wing, but today this group is no longer active. The main support with flags and flares comes from the southern Curva, Gradinata Sud.

Sampdoria's biggest rivals are Genoa, against whom they play the Derby della Lanterna.[44]

Honours

Domestic

European

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Friendly

Records and statistics

Player records

Most appearances

Competitive, professional matches only.
# Name Years Matches
1 Template:Flagicon Roberto Mancini 1982–1997 567
2 Template:Flagicon Moreno Mannini 1984–1999 501
3 Template:Flagicon Pietro Vierchowod 1983–1995 493
4 Template:Flagicon Angelo Palombo 2002–2012, 2012–2017 459
5 Template:Flagicon Fausto Pari 1983–1992 401
6 Template:Flagicon Fausto Salsano 1979–1981, 1984–1990, 1993–1998 377
7 Template:Flagicon Luca Pellegrini 1980–1991 363
8 Template:Flagicon Guido Vincenzi 1958–1969 353
9 Template:Flagicon Gaudenzio Bernasconi 1954–1965 351
10 Template:Flagicon Gianluca Vialli 1984–1992 328

Top goalscorers

Competitive, professional matches only.
# Name Years Goals
1 Template:Flagicon Roberto Mancini 1982–1997 171
2 Template:Flagicon Gianluca Vialli 1984–1992 141
3 Template:Flagicon Francesco Flachi 1999–2007 110
4 Template:Flagicon Fabio Quagliarella 2006–2007, 2016–2023 106
5 Template:Flagicon Adriano Bassetto 1946–1953 89
6 Template:Flagicon Giuseppe Baldini 1946–1950, 1953–1955 71
7 Template:Flagicon Vincenzo Montella 1996–1999, 2007–2008 66
8 Template:Flagicon Giancarlo Salvi 1963–1964, 1965–1976 55
9 Template:Flagicon Eddie Firmani 1955–1958 52
Template:Flagicon Manolo Gabbiadini 2013–2015, 2019–2023
10 Template:Flagicon Attilio Lombardo 1989–1995, 2001–2002 51

Players

Current squad

As of 2 September 2025Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".[45]

<templatestyles src="Template:Football squad player/styles.css" /> Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules; some limited exceptions apply. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Pos. Nation Player
1 GK Template:Fba/core Simone Ghidotti
3 DF Template:Fba/core Andrei Coubiș (on loan from AC Milan)
4 MF Template:Fba/core Jordan Ferri
5 DF Template:Fba/core Alessandro Pio Riccio
6 DF Template:Fba/core Simone Romagnoli
7 FW Template:Fba/core Marvin Çuni (on loan from Rubin Kazan)
8 MF Template:Fba/core Matteo Ricci
9 FW Template:Fba/core Massimo Coda
10 FW Template:Fba/core Luigi Cherubini (on loan from Roma)
11 FW Template:Fba/core Estanis Pedrola
14 MF Template:Fba/core Alessandro Bellemo
15 DF Template:Fba/core Giorgio Altare (on loan from Venezia)
16 MF Template:Fba/core Liam Henderson
17 DF Template:Fba/core Dennis Hadžikadunić (on loan from Rostov)
18 DF Template:Fba/core Lorenzo Venuti
19 MF Template:Fba/core Stefano Girelli
No. Pos. Nation Player
20 FW Template:Fba/core Simone Pafundi (on loan from Udinese)
21 DF Template:Fba/core Simone Giordano
23 DF Template:Fba/core Fabio Depaoli
25 DF Template:Fba/core Alex Ferrari (captain)
28 MF Template:Fba/core Oliver Abildgaard
30 GK Template:Fba/core Nicola Ravaglia
31 DF Template:Fba/core Stipe Vulikić
33 MF Template:Fba/core Francesco Conti
39 DF Template:Fba/core Lorenzo Malanca
44 DF Template:Fba/core Nikolas Ioannou
70 FW Template:Fba/core Víctor Narro
72 MF Template:Fba/core Antonín Barák (on loan from Fiorentina)
77 MF Template:Fba/core Lorenzo Malagrida
80 MF Template:Fba/core Leonardo Benedetti
98 GK Template:Fba/core Gaëtan Coucke

Sampdoria Primavera

<templatestyles src="Template:Football squad player/styles.css" /> Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules; some limited exceptions apply. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Pos. Nation Player
34 MF Template:Fba/core Tommaso Casalino
37 DF Template:Fba/core Alessio Papasergio
No. Pos. Nation Player
38 DF Template:Fba/core Karim Diop

Out on loan

<templatestyles src="Template:Football squad player/styles.css" /> Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules; some limited exceptions apply. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Pos. Nation Player
GK Template:Fba/core Elia Tantalocchi (at Campobasso until 30 June 2026)
GK Template:Fba/core Nicholas Scardigno (at Virtus Verona until 30 June 2026)
FW Template:Fba/core Antonino La Gumina (at Inter Milan U23 until 30 June 2026)
FW Template:Fba/core Luca Polli (at Obermais until 30 June 2026)
No. Pos. Nation Player
FW Template:Fba/core Gennaro Tutino (at Avellino until 30 June 2026)
FW Template:Fba/core Nikola Sekulov (at Carrarese until 30 June 2026)
FW Template:Fba/core Giuseppe Forte (at Roma Primavera until 30 June 2026)
FW Template:Fba/core Lorenzo Paratici (at Roma Primavera until 30 June 2026)

Club officials

<templatestyles src="Col-begin/styles.css"/>

Presidential history

Name Period
1946 Template:Flagicon Piero Sanguineti
1946–1948 Template:Flagicon Amedeo Rissotto
1948–1953 Template:Flagicon Aldo Parodi
1953–1961 Template:Flagicon Alberto Ravano
1961–1965 Template:Flagicon Glauco Lolli Ghetti
1965–1966 Template:Flagicon Enrico De Franceschini
1966–1968 Template:Flagicon Arnaldo Salatti
1968–1973 Template:Flagicon Mario Colantuoni
1973–1974 Template:Flagicon Giulio Rolandi
1974–1978 Template:Flagicon Glauco Lolli Ghetti
1978–1979 Template:Flagicon Edmondo Costa
1979–1993 Template:Flagicon Paolo Mantovani
1993–2000 Template:Flagicon Enrico Mantovani
2000–2002 Template:Flagicon Enzo Garufi
2002 Template:Flagicon Pietro Sgarlata
2002–2013 Template:Flagicon Riccardo Garrone
2013–2014 Template:Flagicon Edoardo Garrone
2014–2021 Template:Flagicon Massimo Ferrero
2021–2024 Template:Flagicon Marco Lanna
2024– Template:Flagicon Matteo Manfredi

Managerial history

File:Vujadin Boškov (1976).jpg
Serbian Vujadin Boškov, former Sampdoria player in the early 1960s, became the longest serving and most successful manager in the club's history, and managed the team to their only Serie A title in 1991.
Period Name
1946–1947 Template:Flagicon Giuseppe Galluzzi
1951 Template:Flagicon Giovanni Rebuffo
1947–1950 Template:Flagicon Adolfo Baloncieri
1950–1951 Template:Flagicon Giuseppe Galluzzi
1951 Template:Flagicon Gipo Poggi
1951–1952 Template:Flagicon Alfredo Foni
1952 Template:Flagicon Gipo Poggi
1952–1953 Template:Flagicon Ivo Fiorentini
1953–1954 Template:Flagicon Paolo Tabanelli
1954–1956 Template:Flagicon Lajos Czeizler
1956–1957 Template:Flagicon Pietro Rava
1957 Template:Flagicon Ugo Amoretti
1957–1958 Template:Flagicon Bill Dodgin
1958 Template:Flagicon Adolfo Baloncieri
1958–1962 Template:Flagicon Eraldo Monzeglio
1962–1963 Template:Flagicon Roberto Lerici
1963–1965 Template:Flagicon Ernst Ocwirk
1965–1966 Template:Flagicon Giuseppe Baldini
1966–1971 Template:Flagicon Fulvio Bernardini
1971–1973 Template:Flagicon Heriberto Herrera
1973–1974 Template:Flagicon Guido Vincenzi
1974–1975 Template:Flagicon Giulio Corsini
1975–1977 Template:Flagicon Eugenio Bersellini
1977–1978 Template:Flagicon Giorgio Canali
1978–1979 Template:Flagicon Lamberto Giorgis
1979–1980 Template:Flagicon Lauro Toneatto
1980–1981 Template:Flagicon Enzo Riccomini
1981–1984 Template:Flagicon Renzo Ulivieri
1984–1986 Template:Flagicon Eugenio Bersellini
1986–1992 Template:Flagicon Vujadin Boškov
1992–1997 Template:Flagicon Sven-Göran Eriksson
1997 Template:Flagicon César Menotti
1997–1998 Template:Flagicon Vujadin Boškov
1998 Template:Flagicon Luciano Spalletti
1998–1999 Template:Flagicon David Platt / Template:Flagicon Giorgio Veneri
1999 Template:Flagicon Luciano Spalletti
1999–2000 Template:Flagicon Gian Piero Ventura
2000–2001 Template:Flagicon Luigi Cagni
2001–2002 Template:Flagicon Gianfranco Bellotto
2002–2007 Template:Flagicon Walter Novellino
2007–2009 Template:Flagicon Walter Mazzarri
2009–2010 Template:Flagicon Luigi Delneri
2010–2011 Template:Flagicon Domenico Di Carlo
2011 Template:Flagicon Alberto Cavasin
2011 Template:Flagicon Gianluca Atzori
2011–2012 Template:Flagicon Giuseppe Iachini
2012 Template:Flagicon Ciro Ferrara
2012–2013 Template:Flagicon Delio Rossi
2013–2015 Template:Flagicon Siniša Mihajlović
2015 Template:Flagicon Walter Zenga
2015–2016 Template:Flagicon Vincenzo Montella
2016–2019 Template:Flagicon Marco Giampaolo
2019 Template:Flagicon Eusebio Di Francesco
2019–2021 Template:Flagicon Claudio Ranieri
2021–2022 Template:Flagicon Roberto D'Aversa
2022 Template:Flagicon Marco Giampaolo
2022–2023 Template:Flagicon Dejan Stanković
2023–2024 Template:Flagicon Andrea Pirlo
2024 Template:Flagicon Andrea Sottil
2024-2025 Template:Flagicon Leonardo Semplici
2025 Template:Flagicon Alberico Evani
2025 Template:Flagicon Massimo Donati
2025- Template:Flagicon Angelo Gregucci

Recent seasons

Template:Main article The recent season-by-season performance of the club:

Season Division Tier Position
1995–96 Serie A I 8th
1996–97 6th
1997–98 9th
1998–99 16th ↓
1999–2000 Serie B II 5th
2000–01 6th
2001–02 11th
2002–03 2nd ↑
2003–04 Serie A I 8th
2004–05 5th
2005–06 12th
2006–07 9th
2007–08 6th
2008–09 13th
2009–10 4th
2010–11 18th ↓
2011–12 Serie B II 6th ↑
2012–13 Serie A I 14th
2013–14 12th
2014–15 7th
2015–16 15th
2016–17 10th
2017–18
2018–19 9th
2019–20 15th
2020–21 9th
2021–22 15th
2022–23 20th ↓
2023–24 Serie B II 7th
2024–25 17th
2025–26
Key
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Divisional movements

Series Years Last Promotions Relegations
A 65 2022–23 - Decrease 5 (1966, 1977, 1999, 2011, 2023)
B 12 2024–25 Increase 4 (1967, 1982, 2003, 2012)
79 years of professional football in Italy since 1946

World Cup winners

References

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  1. a b Il Calcio Ginnastico Template:Webarchive
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  4. SG Andrea Doria Template:Webarchive
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  12. Cup Winners' Cup 1988–89. The Rec.Sport.Soccer Statistics Foundation. (Retrieved 3 June 2011).
  13. 1988/89: Hat-trick for Barcelona Template:Webarchive. 1 June 1989. UEFA. (Retrieved on 3 June 2011).
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  25. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  26. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  27. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  28. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  29. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  30. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  31. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  32. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  33. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  34. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  35. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  36. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  37. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  38. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  39. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  40. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  41. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  42. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  43. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  44. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  45. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  46. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  47. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".

Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".

External links

Template:Sister project

Template:U.C. Sampdoria Template:U.C. Sampdoria seasons Template:UEFA Cup Winners' Cup winners Template:Italian Championship winners Template:Coppa Italia winners Template:Italian Super Cup winners Script error: No such module "navbox".

Template:Authority control