2010–11 Parma F.C. season

Parma
2010–11 season
President Italy Tommaso Ghirardi
Head coach Italy Pasquale Marino (until 3 April 2011)
Italy Franco Colomba (from 5 April 2011)
Stadium Stadio Ennio Tardini
Serie A 12th
Coppa Italia Quarter-finals
Top goalscorer League: Argentina Hernán Crespo (9)
All: Argentina Hernán Crespo (11)
Highest home attendance 19,615, vs. Milan
Lowest home attendance 3,567, vs. Fiorentina
Average home league attendance 14,157
Home colours
Away colours
Third colours

The 2010–11 season of Parma F.C. was Parma's 20th season and 2nd consecutive season in Serie A, having finished in 8th position in the previous season. The club was embroiled in a relegation dogfight for much of the season, but managed to secure their place in Serie A for the following year on 8 May with two games to spare. As well as competing in Serie A as one of twenty teams, Parma took part in the 2010–11 edition of the Coppa Italia but were eliminated by Palermo at the quarter-final stage. Parma started the season with a new head coach after Francesco Guidolin resigned from the post in late May as he was appointed by Udinese.[1] His successor, Pasquale Marino, who was also Guidolin's predecessor at Udinese, was announced as head coach on 2 June 2010,[2] but was sacked with seven games of the season left on 3 April 2011.[3] He was replaced by Franco Colomba two days later.[4] Colomba's arrival brought about a dramatic improvement in results and led to what turned out to be comfortably achieved safety.

Kits

Supplier: Erreà
Sponsor(s): Navigare and Banca Monte Parma

Home
Home alt.
Away
Away alt.
Third
Pre-season

Source: fcparma.com

Pre-season

Results

Kick-off times are in CET.

      Win       Draw       Loss

Serie A

Main article: 2010–11 Serie A

Summary

Without injured Daniele Galloppa, who was ruled out until the new year, Parma opened their season on the last Sunday of August with 20 victory over newly promoted Brescia. Valeri Bojinov opened the scoring after just ten minutes when, having played a short pass to débutant Sebastian Giovinco on the edge of the box, was returned the ball after a chipped Giovinco ball over the defence, which beat the offside trap and left the previous season's top scorer Bojinov through on goal. The second goal came on the stroke of half-time through Stefano Morrone, who was left a simple tap-in after a far post header from Alessandro Lucarelli off a lofted free-kick set him up.[5] Parma's second league game of the season involved a trip off the mainland to Catania, where a goal in either half saw off Parma's challenge despite a late goal from Giovinco, but the match ended in regrettable style as Lucarelli was given his marching orders for a second yellow card.[6] Parma then secured consecutive 11 draws, first at home to Genoa and then away to Lecce, in very similar fashion as the opposition took the lead through a first-half penalty before Parma drew level halfway through the second half.[7][8] Two difficult games – away to Fiorentina and at home to A.C. Milan – ended in defeat as Parma slipped into the relegation zone with two- and one-goal reverses respectively, the latter after a spectacular 30-yard strike from Andrea Pirlo.[9][10] Remarkably, Parma gave away a penalty for four consecutive matches before the run was ended against Milan. Parma went rock-bottom in Serie A after their seventh league game and a 11 draw against Cesena as Cristian Zaccardo scored his second league goal of the season, despite having the better of the match.[11] Consecutive goalless draws at home to Roma and Chievo lifted the club out of the relegation zone but prompted sporting director Pietro Leonardi to offer public support to head coach Pasquale Marino.[12][13][14] Bizarrely, in the lead-up to the Roma match on 24 October, Parma's fans protested against the lunchtime kick-off by the simultaneous consumption of sandwiches.[15]

Club legend Hernán Crespo enjoyed something of an early winter renaissance as the 35-year-old managed five goals in three games in late November and early December.

Parma then slipped back to eighteenth position after an Edinson Cavani brace saw Napoli comfortably overcome a Parma side without a win since the opening day of the season, which led to president Tommaso Ghirardi demanding improvement.[16][17] Parma then beat Sampdoria at home in thick fog and A.S. Bari away by a solitary goal to nil to shoot up to fourteenth position and ease pressure on Marino, the latter including a wonderful goal from Antonio Candreva.[18][19] Parma secured a respectable draw at home to early season pace-setters Lazio the next week as ex-Lazio star Hernán Crespo opened the scoring for Parma, netting his 65th league goal for the club, before Luca Antonelli's own goal cancelled it out on the stroke of half-time.[20] Next up were reigning champions Internazionale who beat Parma by five goals to two, overcoming an early Hernán Crespo brace, who was again scoring against former employers.[21] The Argentinian striker was again on the scoresheet the following week as former manager Francesco Guidolin returned to Il Tardini for the first time since his summer departure, opening the scoring from the penalty spot with 24 minutes played before Udinese's Antonio Di Natale equalised 11 minutes later. Crespo then put his team back in front for good early in the second half as Parma won 2-1 and scoring his 150th Serie goal.[22] The following week, Parma travelled to Palermo and took the lead inside ten minutes as Alessandro Lucarelli found the net. Parma then surrendered their lead and three second half goals from the Rosanero were enough to see Parma off and the match finished 3–1.[23] The Ducali rounded off their pre-Christmas schedule with home match against rivals Bologna, who proved to be stubborn opposition in a goalless draw.[24]

Parma started 2011 in perfect fashion, overcoming biggest rivals Juventus away from home by a scoreline of four goals to one in the Turin club's first sell-out of the season. Juventus' Felipe Melo was sent off early on before two goals from Juve loanee Giovinco, a penalty from Crespo and a late goal from new signing (co-owned by Juve) Raffaele Palladino were bisected by a Legrottaglie header.[25] A disappointing result followed as Parma succumbed to a home defeat, conceding goals five and six of the season at home as they went down by two goals to one to Cagliari.[26] Long-serving defender Massimo Paci was given his marching orders in the first half of the following match away to Brescia as Parma lost by two goals to nil.[27] After two straight defeats, Parma then returned to winning ways with a two-nil victory over Catania after second half goals from Candreva and Giovinco within minutes of each other.[28] Two straight defeats followed, firstly 3–1 away to Genoa, whom Parma helped to their first home win since November as an early penalty was cancelled out by a Crespo strike, but atoned for by a Paletta own goal and a close-range Kaladze goal on the stroke of half-time,[29] and secondly 1–0 at home to fellow strugglers Lecce at the start of February in a match which Parma dominated but lost in injury time.[30] The losing run was halted the next week as Parma hosted Fiorentina and a first goal for winter transfer window loan signing Amauri scored. His goal was cancelled out by a second half penalty and the match ended one apiece.[31] Parma were than handed a four-nil thrashing by league leaders Milan, extending Parma's winless streak to four matches[32] Parma's next match was a relegation dogfight against Cesena. In an eventful ninety minutes, Parma came from behind twice to draw the match two-all.[33] Parma then travelled to the Stadio Olimpico to face Roma and gave away a penalty and a goal from a corner to trail by two goals at half-time. A second-half Amauri brace saw Parma level the scoreline and the match finished 2–2.[34] As pressure grew on head coach Pasquale Marino,[35] a third consecutive draw followed; this time it a goalless draw away to Chievo. Gabriel Paletta was sent off late in the second half in an otherwise uneventful affair.[36]

Pasquale Marino, appointed as Parma's head coach in the wake of Francesco Guidolin's departure in the summer of 2010, saw his tenure ended early on 3 April 2011 after a disappointing season.

Parma's dismal winless run extended to 8 games as they lost to Napoli by three goals to one. Parma opened the scoring through Raffaele Palladino, but Napoli hit back with three goals in a second half that yet again saw a Parma player sent off; this time it was Daniele Galloppa.[37] Parma finally ended their winless streak and boosted their survival chances on 20 March 2011, overcoming fellow relegaton battlers Sampdoria with a solitary goal midway through the second half.[38] The following week, a 2–1 defeat at home to Bari in a match that Parma dominated was enough to see head coach Pasquale Marino lose his job with Parma two points clear of the relegation zone.[3][39] He was replaced by Franco Colomba, who was signed on a 14-month deal and had been out of a job since the previous summer, two days later. Colomba's first match in charge, a tricky trip to Rome to face Champions League qualification-chasing Lazio ended in defeat by two goals to nil, a goal coming in each half.[40] On 16 April, national and continental and world champions Internazionale paid a visit to the Tardini, as Parma recorded a historic two-goal victory with goals from Juventus loanees Giovinco and Amauri.[41] The next week, a second consecutive 2–0 win – their first in Udine since 2001 – over ten-man Udinese thanks to two Amauri goals boosted Parma's chances of salvation, but other relegation candidates' result meant the club remained just three points clear of the relegation zone.[42] Parma faced Europe-chasing Palermo on 1 May and recorded yet another win at home. Two early first-half goals saw Parma lead 2–0 before a second half Palermo goal put Parma on edge. Two minutes from time, Antonio Candreva restored Parma's two-goal lead and confirmed Parma's first three-game winning streak of the season. Six points clear of the relegation zone with just three games remaining, Parma looked to have secured their participation in Serie A for the following season.[43] Parma then travelled to meet Bologna in the Emilian Derby the following weekend, with both sides knowing that three points would secure their Serie A status for the season to come. The match ended goalless and results in other matches meant that relegation could not be ruled out at the final whistle, but a late goal in a later game saw Genoa defeat Sampdoria in the Derby della Lanterna, confirming Parma's place in next year's Serie A.[44] Parma celebrated their safety in style in the Stadio Ennio Tardini the week after with a win over injury-hit bitterest rivals Juventus, the only goal of the game coming from the man on loan from Juventus, Sebastian Giovinco, who had scored two goals in the reverse fixture and secured Colomba's fourth win in six games.[45] The season ended in a low-key affair away to Cagliari. Valeri Bojinov opened the scoring for Parma before a Rolf Feltscher own goal levelled the scoreline, as Parma finished the league season in twelfth position.[46]

Results

Kick-off times are in CET.

      Win       Draw       Loss

Statistics

Standings

Pos Team Pld W D L F A GD Pts
10Genoa 38149154547–251
11Chievo 381113143840–2 46
12Parma 381113143947–846
13Catania 381210164052–1246
14Cagliari 38129174451–745

Pld = Matches played; W = Matches won; D = Matches drawn; L = Matches lost; F = Goals for; A = Goals against; GD = Goal difference; Pts = Points

Results summary

OverallHomeAway
PldWDLGFGAGDPtsWDLGFGAGDWDLGFGAGD
38 11 13 14 39 47  −8 46 7 7 5 21 16  +5 4 6 9 18 31  −13

Pld = Matches played; W = Matches won; D = Matches drawn; L = Matches lost; F = Goals for; A = Goals against; GD = Goal difference; Pts = Points

Results by round

Round1234567891011121314151617181920212223242526272829303132333435363738
GroundHAHAAHAHHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHHAHAAHAHAHAHAHA
Result W L D D L L D D D L W W D L W L D W L L W L L D L D D D L W L L W W W D W D
Position 2 8 12 10 16 18 20 20 17 18 16 14 14 15 15 16 16 11 14 14 12 15 15 15 15 15 16 15 16 14 16 17 16 14 13 14 12 12

Source: Serie A
Ground: A = Away; H = Home. Result: D = Draw; L = Loss; W = Win; P = Postponed.

Coppa Italia

Summary

Parma entered the competition at the Round of 16 as the rules of the tournament dictated that, alongside those teams which qualified for Europe for the 2010–11 season, the highest finisher in Serie A who failed to qualify for European football would begin competing at that advanced stage. As the entirety of the tournament is pre-drawn, Parma knew the identity of the ten teams that would fight for the right to play away at the Ennio Tardini in the Round of 16 in the first four preliminary rounds. These were Santegidiese, Trapani, AlzanoCene, Reggiana, SPAL, Alessandria, all of whom competed from the First Round; Reggina, Frosinone, Empoli, all of whom competed from the Second Round; and Fiorentina, who competed from the Third Round. It transpired that Fiorentina – the only Serie A team in the section – emerged as Parma's opponents. The match remained goalless for 114 minutes until Fiorentina broke the deadlock through Mario Santana. Crespo equalised for Parma just a minute later and then scored another three minutes from time to take Parma through to the quarter-finals, where they faced Palermo away from home in the last week of January.[47] The sides played out 120 minutes of goalless football before Palermo emerged victorious in a penalty shoot-out as Francesco Valiani missed the decisive penalty.[48]

Results

Kick-off times are in CET.

      Win       Draw       Loss

Player statistics

No. Pos. Name Serie A Coppa Italia Total Discipline
Apps Goals Apps Goals Apps Goals
1 GK Italy Nicola Pavarini 2(1) 0 2 0 4(1) 0 1 0
2 DF Venezuela Rolf Feltscher 2(1) 0 0 0 2(1) 0 0 0
3 DF Italy Luca Antonelli 12 0 0 0 12 0 1 0
4 MF Italy Stefano Morrone (captain) 30(4) 1 2 0 32(4) 1 5 0
5 DF Italy Cristian Zaccardo 34 3 2 0 36 3 8 0
6 DF Italy Alessandro Lucarelli (3rd captain) 32 1 1(1) 0 33(1) 1 11 1
7 MF Italy Antonio Candreva 23(8) 3 2 0 25(8) 3 4 0
8 MF Spain Fernando Marqués 12(1) 0 1 0 13(1) 0 1 0
9 FW Argentina Hernán Crespo (4th captain) 16(13) 9 0(2) 2 16(15) 11 2 0
10 MF Switzerland Blerim Džemaili 26(4) 1 1 0 27(4) 1 11 2
11 FW Italy Alberto Paloschi 0(1) 0 0 0 0(1) 0 0 0
11 FW Italy Amauri 11 7 0 0 11 7 2 0
13 MF Brazil Ângelo Mariano de Almeida 10(11) 0 0 0 10(11) 0 5 0
14 MF Italy Daniele Galloppa 5(6) 0 1 0 6(6) 0 2 1
16 GK Italy Stefano Russo 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
17 MF Portugal Danilo Pereira 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
18 MF Italy Massimo Gobbi 30(4) 0 0 0 30(4) 0 4 0
20 MF Spain Toni Calvo 0(3) 0 0 0 0(3) 0 1 0
21 MF Italy Sebastian Giovinco 28(2) 7 1(1) 0 29(3) 7 5 0
22 MF Brazil Zé Eduardo 0(2) 0 0 0 0(2) 0 0 0
23 DF Italy Francesco Modesto 13(2) 1 1 0 14(2) 1 2 0
24 DF Italy Massimo Paci (vice- captain) 18(1) 0 2 0 20(1) 0 7 2
25 FW Serbia Nemanja Čović 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
26 DF Italy Marco Pisano 2(3) 0 1 0 3(3) 0 1 0
27 MF Italy Matteo Mandorlini 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
27 MF Portugal Filipe Oliveira 0(1) 0 0 0 0(1) 0 0 0
29 DF Argentina Gabriel Paletta 26(1) 0 0(1) 0 26(2) 0 9 1
30 MF Italy Filippo Savi 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
32 MF Italy Manuel Coppola 0(1) 0 0 0 0(1) 0 0 0
36 FW Italy Francesco Finocchio 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
37 DF Italy Davide Adorni 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
38 MF Italy Alessandro De Vitis 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
39 DF Italy Markus Petrozzi 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
40 MF Nigeria Nwankwo Obiora 0(1) 0 0 0 0(1) 0 0 0
51 DF Argentina Hernán Paolo Dellafiore 0(1) 0 1 0 1(1) 0 0 0
58 FW France Grégoire Defrel 0(1) 0 0 0 0(1) 0 0 0
80 MF Italy Francesco Valiani 31(4) 0 1(1) 0 32(5) 0 10 0
83 GK Italy Antonio Mirante 36 0 0 0 36 0 2 0
84 FW Italy Raffaele Palladino 6(5) 3 1 0 7(5) 3 0 0
86 FW Bulgaria Valeri Bojinov 13(18) 3 2 0 15(18) 3 1 0
92 GK Italy Antonio Santurro 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Joined in January Left in January

Transfers

Parma's first major moves of the summer transfer window came in quick succession, signing previous season loanee and striker Valeri Bojinov from Manchester City, who revealed he had turned down an approach from Sevilla, and central defender Gabriel Paletta from Boca Juniors in the space of two days.[49][50][51] Spaniard Fernando Marqués also arrived for an undisclosed fee from Espanyol. Midfielders Sebastian Giovinco and Massimo Gobbi both signed for Parma at the start of August on a loan deal from Juventus and on a free transfer from Fiorentina respectively, as did Danilo Pereira from Benfica.[52][53] Journeyman forward Cristiano Lucarelli signed on loan for Napoli after he was told he was surplus to requirements at Parma, while experienced defender Christian Panucci retired at the age of thirty-seven.[54][55] Parma ended the transfer window by signing Italian World Cup squad member Antonio Candreva on loan from Udinese for the duration of the season.[56]

Business in the winter transfer window started early as full ownership of Italian international left-back Luca Antonelli and Parma's half-share in Alberto Paloschi were both transferred to Genoa. In return Genoa paid 7 million and exchanged the full ownership of Francesco Modesto and Genoa's share in Raffaele Palladino, who remained co-owned by Juventus.[57] Parma also completed the loan signing of Toni Calvo from Greek Europa League entrants Aris Thessaloniki with an option to make the move permanent in the summer.[58] On deadline day, Parma signed Italian international Amauri from rivals Juventus on loan until the end of the season.[59]

On 2 July 2010, FIGC announced only one new non-EU signing from abroad could be registered, instead of two in previous season. They are marked yellow.[60]

In

DatePos.NameFromType of transferFee
10 June 2010 AM Italy Gabriele Paonessa Italy Bologna Co-ownership Undisclosed [61]
25 June 2010 CM Switzerland Blerim Džemaili Italy Torino Co-ownership €3,750,000 [62]
25 June 2010 GK Italy Antonio Mirante Italy Sampdoria Full ownership €3,600,000 [63][64]
25 June 2010 CB Argentina Gabriel Paletta Argentina Boca Juniors Full ownership Free [65]
25 June 2010 MF Italy Francesco Lunardini Italy Rimini Full ownership Undisclosed
25 June 2010 AM Italy Daniele Galloppa Italy Siena Co-ownership €5,000,000 [64]
25 June 2010 ST Italy Andrea Rispoli Italy Brescia Co-ownership Undisclosed
26 June 2010 DF Italy Luca Tedeschi Italy Treviso Half to full ownership Undisclosed
30 June 2010 ST Bosnia and Herzegovina Milan Đurić Italy Cesena Co-ownership €300,000
1 July 2010 RB Venezuela Rolf Feltscher Switzerland Grasshopper Full ownership Free [66]
4 July 2010 ST Bulgaria Valeri Bojinov England Manchester City Full ownership €6,000,000 [67]
12 July 2010 RM Portugal Filipe Oliveira Portugal Braga Full ownership €2,500,000
14 July 2010 MF Spain Fernando Marqués Spain Espanyol Full ownership Undisclosed [68]
27 July 2010 ST Italy Riccardo Capogna Italy Carpenedolo Full ownership Free
2 August 2010 DF Italy Marco Pisano Italy Torino Full ownership Undisclosed [69]
3 August 2010 RB Brazil Ângelo Unattached Full ownership Free [70]
18 August 2010 MF Italy Massimo Gobbi Unattached Full ownership Free [70]
18 August 2010 MF Portugal Danilo Pereira Portugal Benfica Full ownership €150,000 [71]
3 January 2011 LB
ST
Italy Francesco Modesto
Italy Raffaele Palladino
Italy Genoa Full ownership
Co-ownership
Free
€1,500,000
[72]

Out

DatePos.NameToType of TransferFee
10 June 2010 ST Italy Daniele Paponi Italy Bologna Co-ownership €500,000 [61]
25 June 2010 MF Italy Daniele Dessena Italy Sampdoria Half to full ownership Undisclosed
25 June 2010 ST Brazil Reginaldo Italy Siena Co-ownership Undisclosed
30 June 2010 RB Italy Damiano Zenoni Unattached Full ownership Free
13 July 2010 ST
CM
France Jonathan Biabiany
Kenya McDonald Mariga
Italy Inter Half to Full ownership €5,500,000
€4,500,000
[73]
30 July 2010 MF Honduras Julio César de León China Shandong Luneng Taishan Full ownership Undisclosed [74]
6 August 2010 DF Italy Fabio Lebran Italy AlbinoLeffe Co-ownership €150,000 [64][75]
3 January 2011 LB
ST
Italy Luca Antonelli
Italy Alberto Paloschi
Italy Genoa Full ownership
Co-ownership
€3,500,000
€4,350,000
[64][72]

Loan in

Date fromDate toPos.NameFromFee
1 July 201030 June 2011 DM Brazil Zé Eduardo Brazil Maga €500,000 [64]
5 August 201030 June 2011 AM Italy Sebastian Giovinco Italy Juventus €1,000,000 [64][76]
21 August 20101 January 2011 RB Argentina Hernán Paolo Dellafiore Italy Palermo Free
31 August 201030 June 2011 CM Italy Antonio Candreva Italy Udinese €500,000 [64][77]
1 January 201130 June 2011 RM Spain Toni Calvo Greece Aris Free [72]
January 201130 June 2011 CM Nigeria Nwankwo Obiora Italy Inter Undisclosed
31 January 201130 June 2011 ST Italy Amauri Italy Juventus Free [78]

Loan out

Date fromDate toPos.NameToFee
30 June 201030 June 2011CB Argentina Pablo Fontanello Argentina Gimnasia Free
1 July 201030 June 2011CB Italy Riccardo Pasi Italy Modena Free
1 July 201030 June 2011CB Italy Marco Rossi Italy Bari €250,000 [64][79]
9 July 201030 June 2011DF Italy Abel Gigli Italy Atletico Roma Free [80]
22 July 201030 June 2011MF Italy Pietro Baccolo Italy South Tyrol Free [81]
29 July 201031 January 2011RM Portugal Filipe Oliveira Italy Torino €600,000 [64][82]
16 August 201030 June 2011LB Italy Paolo Castellini Italy Roma €950,000 [83]
16 August 201030 June 2011MF Italy Francesco Lunardini Italy Triestina Free [83]
20 August 201030 June 2011CB Italy Luca Tedeschi Italy Crotone Free [84]
21 August 201030 June 2011ST Italy Cristiano Lucarelli Italy Napoli Free
30 August 201030 June 2011MF Italy Manuel Coppola Italy Lecce €400,000 [64][85]
30 August 201030 June 2011CB Italy Andrea Rispoli Italy Lecce Free [86]
31 August 201027 January 2011FW Bosnia and Herzegovina Milan Đurić Italy Ascoli Free [87]
31 August 201030 June 2011MF Italy Matteo Mandorlini Italy Piacenza Free [88]
31 August 201030 June 2011MF Italy Alessio Manzoni Italy AlbinoLeffe Free [89]
31 August 201030 June 2011FW Italy Gabriele Paonessa Italy Cesena Free [90]
20 January 201130 June 2011MF Portugal Danilo Pereira Greece Aris Free [91]
28 January 201130 June 2011FW Bosnia and Herzegovina Milan Đurić Italy Crotone Free [92]
31 January 201130 June 2011MF Italy Filippo Savi Italy Crociati Noceto Free

See also

References

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