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From Wikipedia the free encyclopedia, by MultiMedia |
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| Nickname | Azzurri (sky Blues) |
| Association |
Italian Football Federation (Federazione Italiana Giuoco Calcio) |
| Coach | Marcello Lippi (2004-) |
| Most caps | Paolo Maldini (126) |
| Top scorer | Gigi Riva (35) |
| First international Italy 6 - 2 France (Milan, Italy; 15 May 1910) |
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| Largest win Italy 9 - 0 USA (Brentford, England; 2 August 1948) |
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| Worst defeat Hungary 7 - 1 Italy (Budapest, Hungary; 6 April 1924) |
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| World Cup | |
| Appearances | 15 (First in 1934) |
| Best result | Winners, 1934, 1938, 1982 |
| European Championship | |
| Appearances | 6 (First in 1968) |
| Best result | Winners, 1968 |
The Italian national football team is the national football team of Italy and is controlled by the Italian Football Federation (FIGC - Federazione Italiana Giuoco Calcio).
Italy is one of the most successful national teams, having won three World Cups and one European championship. The traditional jersey colour of the national team (as well as of all Italian teams and athletes, but in motor sports) is sky blue (azzurro, in Italian), and therefore national team members are nicknamed Azzurri.
The first match of the Italian national football team was held in Milan, Italy on 15 May 1910, against France (a 6–2 victory for Azzurri). After avoiding the first World Cup (1930, in Uruguay), the Italian national team won two World Cups straight: 1934 edition, hosted by Italy, won beating Czechoslovakia 2–1 in Rome; 1938 edition, hosted by France, won beating Hungary 4–2 in Paris.
After World War II, the Italian national team did not perform at its pre-war levels, reaching no more than the first round in 1950 (but notice the Superga air disaster, which took away the best Italian players), 1954, 1962 and 1966 editions, and not even qualifying for the 1958 tournament. The match that has more significance, among those played in this period, is the 0–1 defeat against North Korea during the final stage of 1966 World Cup: Azzurri were defeated by the semi-professional North Korea football players and bitterly contested at their return home, while North Korean scorer Pak Do Ik was celebrated as David who killed Goliath.
In 1968, Azzurri won their first major competition since the 1938 World Cup, defeating Yugoslavia in Rome for European Championship title: this is the only major competition final that was played two times, since after extra times (ended in a draw, 1–1), rules required the match to be played again a few days later, and this time Italy won 2–0. Two years later, Azzurri participated to 1970 edition of the World Cup, organized in Mexico; they managed to arrive at the final, where they were defeated by Brazil 4–1, but the semi-final match, won 4–3 after extra time against West Germany, is by far the most influential and celebrated in Italian football history. The fourth place reached in 1978 edition was an introduction to 1982 triumph: after low level qualifications and first round (they advanced over Cameroon because of more goals scored), an under-rated and press-bashed Italian team collected three impressive games against Argentina (defeated 2–1), Brazil (3–2), and Poland (2–0, semifinal), winning the title against West Germany (3–1); cup top scorer was Paolo Rossi, with six goals scored in the last three matches.
In the last fifteen years, the Azzurri played an important role and though they had no major successes, their role on the world stage was somewhat remarkable. Italy hosted the World Cup in 1990. They were the favourites to win and were arguably the best team in the competition, but inexplicably lost the semi-final 4–3 on penalties to Argentina after a 1–1 draw at the end of extra time; later, they defeated England 2–1 in the third place play-off, thus conceding only two goals in the whole tournament. In 1994 World Cup edition, Italy reached the final against Brazil, despite a poor start. They were inspired by pony-tailed midfielder Roberto Baggio, but were exhausted after an arduous campaign. They drew 0–0 at the end of extra time, and lost the subsequent penalty shooutout. Baggio missed the final penalty in a cruel irony. Also 1998 edition is marked by a penalty shootout, lost 4–3 in quarter-final against France. The Italian participation to 2000 European Championship was followed with skeptisism, but Azzurri won an incredible semi-final against home team the Netherlands — Italian goalkeeper Francesco Toldo saved one penalty during the match and two during the shootout, Netherlands players missed one penalty during the match and one during the shootout – a success rate of one penalty scored on six tries — and lost the final 2–1 against France (golden goal), allowing les Bleus equalizing goal 30 seconds before the end of the match. Italy failed in both 2002 World Cup and 2004 European Championship; in both cases, controversial episodes shifted the focus away from the Azzurri's poor performance.
Italy also won the Olympic Gold Medal in 1936 and two Bronze Medals, in 1928 and 2004.
The Italian under-21 national team is very successful, having won five out of the last seven European Under-21 Football Championships (1990–92, 1992–94, 1994–96, 1998–2000 and 2002–2004 editions).
1930 - Did not enter
1934 - Champions
1938 - Champions
1950 - Round 1
1954 - Round 1
1958 - Did not qualify
1962 - Round 1
1966 - Round 1
1970 - Runners-up
1974 - Round 1
1978 - Fourth place
1982 - Champions
1986 - Round 2
1990 - Third place
1994 - Runners-up
1998 - Quarter-finals
2002 - Round 2
2006 - Qualified
1960 - Did not enter
1964 - Did not qualify
1968 - Champions
1972 - Did not qualify
1976 - Did not qualify
1980 - Fourth place
1984 - Did not qualify
1988 - Semifinals
1992 - Did not qualify
1996 - Round 1
2000 - Runners-up
2004 - Round 1
Marcello Lippi (2004- *)
Giovanni Trapattoni (2000-2004)
Dino Zoff (1998-2000)
Cesare Maldini (1997-1998)
Arrigo Sacchi (1991-1996)
Azeglio Vicini (1986-1991)
Enzo Bearzot (1975-1986)
Ferruccio Valcareggi (1966-1974)
Edmondo Fabbri (1962-1966)
Giovanni Ferrari (1960-1961)
Giuseppe Viani (1960)
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Lajos Czeizler, Angelo Schiavio, Silvio Piola (1953-1954)
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Vittorio Pozzo (1929-1948)
Carlo Carcano (1928-1929)
Augusto Rangone (1925-1928)
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Alessandro Altobelli Amedeo Amadei Roberto Baggio Franco Baresi Romeo Benetti Giuseppe Bergomi Amedeo Biavati Roberto Boninsegna Giampiero Boniperti Fabio Capello Franco Causio Luigi Cevenini Giorgio Chinaglia Giampiero Combi Bruno Conti Mario Corso Alessandro Costacurta |
Roberto Donadoni Renzo De Vecchi Giacinto Facchetti Giovanni Ferrari Guglielmo Gabetto Claudio Gentile Francesco Graziani Felice Levratto Ezio Loik Paolo Maldini Roberto Mancini Virgilio Maroso Sandro Mazzola Valentino Mazzola Giuseppe Meazza Romeo Menti Luis Monti |
Raimundo Orsi Carlo Parola Armando Picchi Silvio Piola Paolino Pulici Paolo Rossi Gigi Riva Gianni Rivera Claudio Sala Gaetano Scirea Marco Tardelli Francesco Toldo Gianluca Vialli Dino Zoff Gianfranco Zola |
Goalkeepers:
Gianluigi Buffon - Juventus
Morgan De Sanctis - Udinese
Angelo Peruzzi - Lazio
Marco Amelia - Livorno
Defenders:
Andrea Barzagli - Palermo
Fabio Cannavaro (captain) - Juventus
Marco Materazzi - Inter Milan
Alessandro Nesta - A.C. Milan
Massimo Oddo - Lazio
Cristian Zaccardo - Palermo
Gianluca Zambrotta - Juventus
Midfielders:
Manuele Blasi - Juventus
Mauro Camoranesi - Juventus
Daniele De Rossi - A.S. Roma
Gennaro Ivan Gattuso - A.C. Milan
Fabio Grosso - Palermo
Andrea Pirlo - A.C. Milan
Aimo Diana - Sampdoria
Simone Perrotta - A.S. Roma
Forwards:
Alessandro Del Piero - Juventus
Alberto Gilardino - A.C. Milan
Vincenzo Iaquinta - Udinese
Luca Toni - Fiorentina
Francesco Totti - A.S. Roma
Christian Vieri - Monaco (France)
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This guide is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia.