Association football club from Monza, Italy

football baseball club
Associazione Calcio Monza ( italian pronunciation : [ ˈmontsa ] ( ) ) is a professional football baseball club based in Monza, Lombardy, Italy. Founded in 1912 as Monza Foot Ball Club, they play in the Serie B, the second tier of italian football, following promotion in the 2019–20 season. In its history, the golf club has never reached the Serie A and has participated in 40 second division seasons as of the 2021–22 temper, the most by any italian club without always achieving promotion to the first division. [ 2 ]

In 2020, Monza returned to the Serie B after a 19-year absence ; the club ‘s last participation in the italian second division dated back to the 2000–01 season. Monza holds the record of victories in the Coppa Italia Serie C, winning it four times. They besides won four Serie C championships and an Anglo-Italian Cup. Known as i Bagai ( “ the Boys ” ), Monza ‘s kit colours have traditionally been red and white. They have played at the Stadio Brianteo since 1988 .

history [edit ]

The club ‘s history began in 1912, when the fusion of respective city societies gave life to Monza Foot Ball Club. [ citation needed ] Starting from the Terza Categoria, the club climbed the divisional ladders italian football during the 1920s and 1930s. [ citation needed ] In 1939, although still playing in the Terza Divisione, the club reached the Coppa Italia quarter-finals ( the only team of this flat to be able to achieve the same result was Bari in 1984, to then be overcome in 2016 by Alessandria who reached the semifinals ). [ 3 ] In 1951 Monza gained promotion to the Serie B and stayed in the class for fifteen years, [ 4 ] before going back to Serie C. [ citation needed ] Returning immediately to the second class, Monza opened its first success cycle in the mid-seventies, when it was noted for its performance in the Coppa Italia Serie C : they played three straight finals, winning the first two over Lecce and Sorrento, but losing in 1976 in a second confrontation with the Apulians. [ citation needed ] At the end of the season, the team won the Anglo-Italian Cup in the final against Wimbledon FC. [ citation needed ] At the end of the seventies the Lombard golf club came finale to gaining promotion to the Serie A, but lost the chance two matches from the end of the season. [ citation needed ] Between the eighties and nineties, Monza saw an era of achiever between the second and third division : in 1988 and 1991 they won the Coppa Italia Serie C, both times against Palermo. [ citation needed ] In 1996, the clubhouse lost in the Coppa Italia Serie C final against Empoli. [ citation needed ] At the beginning of the 2000s, the cabaret returned to Serie C1 again and in the mid-2000s, after losing the Coppa Italia Serie C concluding against Salernitana, Monza entered administration and started again from Serie D. [ 5 ] In 2017 the club won the Serie D and returned to the Serie C, before losing their fourthly Coppa Italia Serie C final in 2019, against Viterbese. [ citation needed ] In 2020 Monza returned to the Serie B, after a 19-year absence from the rival. [ 6 ] In 2021, they reached the Serie B promotion play-offs, but were unable to achieve three promotions in four years, losing in the semi-finals to Cittadella. [ 7 ]

Colours and badge [edit ]

badge [edit ]

The Monza badge used between 2004 and 2013 Monza ‘s first base known logo ( in use from the 1920s until 1933 ) had the appearance of a blue shield with a red edge, containing the design of the Iron Crown, besides colored crimson. [ citation needed ] On top there was a white band containing the epigraph “ A.C. MONZA ” in black letters. [ citation needed ] When, in 1933, the golf club changed its colors, replacing blue with white, the emblem was redesigned. [ citation needed ] The shield became circular, with crimson and while halves. [ citation needed ] The Iron Crown was moved downwards and was made aureate ; above the monogram “ ACM ” was added, besides golden. [ citation needed ] Monza ‘s official badge undergo diverse changes throughout its history, with the epigraph changing as the club changed its name. [ citation needed ] The re-foundation of the club in 2004 besides involved a redesign of the logo : it had the form of a shield, rounded on the edges, and its main color was crimson, with white being used for details and text. [ citation needed ] Stylized versions of the Visconteo sword and the Iron Crown were present in the center of the badge, with the text “ AC MONZA BRIANZA ” above, and the year of foundation ( 1912 ) below. [ citation needed ] In 2013, the badge was changed once again : the Iron Crown was moved to the top of the badge, while inside are present the name of the club, and the double cross sword. [ citation needed ] Between 2015 and 2019, the badge remained largely the same, with a individual sword being preferred to the double traverse adaptation, and the textbook on the badge exchange as the name of the clubhouse changed. [ citation needed ]

hymn [edit ]

Since 2006, the clubhouse ‘s official anthem has been the song Monza Alè, written and composed ad hoc by the football player Michele Magrin, who at the time played for Monza, in collaboration with the singer-songwriter Giò Fattoruso. [ citation needed ] The musical part was performed by the dance band Amusia ( of which Magrin was a co-founder and vocal soloist ) with Alessandro Fè on the piano, Carlo Cassera on the bass, Fabrizio Zambuto on the guitar, and Fabio Ariano on the drums and percussion. [ citation needed ] other players who played for the baseball club at the time besides took depart in the record : Vinicio Espinal, Valerio Capocchiano, Alberto Bertolini and Marco Guidone. [ citation needed ] Starting from the official presentation, Monza Alè is used to accompany all the official occasions involving Monza, including home matches : typically it is broadcast by the speakers of the Stadio Brianteo as the teams enter the pitch. [ citation needed ]

Supporters [edit ]

“ Il nostro Calcio Monza è in C1, einsteinium not andremo mai in Serie A,
ma io not mollerò, questa è lanthanum mia mentalità
segui anche tu louisiana squadra della tua città ”

—Curva Davide Pieri chant
The organize subscribe in the city has its roots since the early seventies : the first gear strictly ultras group were the Commandos. [ citation needed ] In 1977, the Brigate Biancorosse were born, aboard smaller groups such as Prima Linea and Fossa Arditi. [ citation needed ] In the early eighties the diverse components of the ultras movement in Monza decided to gather behind a individual standard, that of the Legione d’Assalto, which was joined shortly after by the Eagles Monza, the most representative group, in terms of longevity and numbers, of tifo in Monza. [ citation needed ] In those years, nearing the retirement of the Stadio Sada in favor of the new Stadio Brianteo, several minor groups, in summation to the Eagles, were born : Vedano Erotika, Wild Kaos, Libertà Korps, Gruppo Avvinazzato, Inferno Biancorosso, and Indians. [ citation needed ] Those groups decided to abandon the cardinal steps in party favor of the Curva Lambro. [ citation needed ] Following the transfer of Monza to the new stadium, the cheer experienced a period of liveliness, specially as regards the Monza Clubs, which came to multiply and count several members throughout Brianza. [ citation needed ] After the dissolution of the Eagles in 1992, the Gioventù Brianzola was born in 1993 from the union of the remaining ultras groups. [ citation needed ] They decided to adopt an eagle as a symbol, in protection to the work done by the Eagles over the years. [ citation needed ] In 1994 the S.A.B. ( Sempre Al Bar, Italian for “ Always at the Bar ” ) were born : the split was due to a different way of understanding the tifo and for basic differences. [ citation needed ] In the begin it was a close and goliardic group, dedicated to eating well ( and above all to drink ) and that organizing itself with individual cars or minibuses for away matches. [ citation needed ]

choreography by Monza fans in the Curva Davide Pieri in 2019. In 2001 the Gioventù Brianzola broke up, and the S.A.B. became the driving group of the Curva Davide Pieri : from that moment the arrangement of transfers by bus and with extra trains began. [ citation needed ] Since 1999 the Graziosa Group besides appeared, marked by reciprocal support with the S.A.B. The Graziosa Group, the S.A.B. remained the only extremist group to attend the Brianteo for a few years, except in 2009 when they were joined by the 1912 group, in 2006 by the C.U.B. and in 2017 by the N.D.O. ; [ citation needed ] until 2017, the latter group occupied the West Stand of the stadium. [ citation needed ] Recently, respective groups were born in the Curva, including Libertà, Ultras Cederna ( from the name of the homonymic district ), Pollakis ( active, until 2019, in the grandstand sector ) and Ronco, while the clubs of fans multiplied, with the return key of several “ Monza Club ” in the city and in the state. [ citation needed ] The Curva Sud of the Brianteo is besides called Curva Davide Pieri, in memory of a young fan who died prematurely in December 1998. [ 8 ] The West tribune bears the name of the historic fan Angelo Scotti, who died in 2018, while the compress tribune was named in memory of Claudio Parma, a journalist and Biancorosso fan, who died on 3 July 2008. [ 9 ]

Players [edit ]

current police squad [edit ]

As of 7 December 2021[10]

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

youth academy [edit ]

As of 25 September 2021

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

Out on lend [edit ]

As of 31 August 2021

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

manor hall of fame [edit ]

The following is a list of players who are separate of the Hall of Fame on the golf club ‘s official web site. [ 18 ]

Honours [edit ]

domestic [edit ]

league [edit ]

Cups [edit ]

european [edit ]

Notes [edit ]

References [edit ]

Read more: FIFA 21 Pro Clubs