Davide Sinigaglia

Davide Sinigaglia
Personal information
Date of birth (1981-07-29) 29 July 1981
Place of birth Cassano Magnago, Italy
Height 1.77 m (5 ft 10 in)
Playing position Forward
Club information
Current team
Pistoiese
Youth career
1997–2000 Internazionale
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1999–2001 Internazionale 1 (0)
2000–2001Meda (loan) 31 (11)
2001–2004 Ternana 0 (0)
2001–2002Padova (loan) 20 (3)
2002–2003Monza (loan) 29 (13)
2003–2004Lumezzane (loan) 33 (15)
2004–2007 Arezzo 22 (0)
2005Atalanta (loan) 12 (1)
2005–2006Genoa (loan) 15 (3)
2006–2007 → Padova (loan) 31 (6)
2007–2009 Novara 54 (8)
2009–2011 Cesena 7 (1)
2010Lanciano (loan) 9 (1)
2011–2013 Ternana 58 (12)
2013–2014 Monza 27 (12)
2014–2015 Reggiana 21 (2)
2015Giana Erminio (loan) 14 (3)
2015– Pistoiese 0 (0)
National team
1996–1997 Italy U16[1] 14 (1)
1997–1998 Italy U17[1] 12 (4)
1999–2000 Italy U19[1] 6 (2)

* Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only.

† Appearances (goals)

Davide Sinigaglia (born 29 July 1981) is an Italian footballer who plays for Italian third-division-side Pistoiese.

Sinigaglia had made over 200 games in Lega Pro but only a handful of games in Serie A and Serie B.

Career

Sinigaglia was a youth product of Internazionale. He played his first Serie A match on 7 February 1999, Inter 5–1 Empoli. He was a substitute of Nicola Ventola. Coach Mircea Lucescu never used Sinigaglia again due to his young age.

Ternana

Sinigaglia was jointly contracted with Ternana and Inter from 2001–02 season until June 2003; Ternana bought Sinigaglia and Cristian Lizzori outright from Inter for a peppercorn of €500 each that month.[nb 1] Ternana bought half of Sinigaglia and Lizzori for a total of 1 billion lire (€516,457) in July 2001 and June 2002 respectively.[3]

Sinigaglia were loaned to Serie C1 and Serie C2 teams during his whole contract with Ternana, namely Veneto club Padova and Lombard club Monza.[4] Sinigaglia was then joint owned by Ternana and Lumezzane. Sinigaglia scored his career high of 15 goals for the Lombard club in 2003–04 Serie C1. In June 2004 the co-ownership was renewed. On 31 August 2004 he was signed by A.C. Arezzo outright, from both Lumezzane and Ternana.

Arezzo

He played his first ever Serie B season for Arezzo in 11 games, before moving on loan to Atalanta of Serie A in January 2005 as a player to avoid fall back to the second division. He was then loaned by Genoa in 2005, to help the club to win promotion back to Serie B. He was called back in January 2006, for a chance to get the ticket of promotion playoff to Serie A for Arezzo, but failed.

In summer 2006, he was moved to Padova of Serie C1, and one year later for another in the same level, Novara on 11 July 2007.[5]

Novara

Sinigaglia made 56 appearances in the third division for Novara. Both seasons the club failed to win major trophy nor promotion to the second division.

Cesena

In 2009 he was swapped with Simone Motta of Cesena, the newcomer of Serie B. Sinigaglia was valued €500,000 and Motta for €720,000 (thus only €220,000 cash involved).[6] Sinigaglia signed a 2-year contract.[7] In his third Serie B season, he only scored once in 7 games. In January 2010 Sinigaglia was loaned to Lanciano of the third division. Lanciano finished as the ninth of group B. In the same month Cesena promoted to Serie A as the runner-up. Sinigaglia did not have any chance in 2010–11 Serie A, his fourth Serie A season.

Ternana

On January 2011 he was transferred to Ternana for free.[8][9] After winning promotion to Serie B, the contract was extended along with forward Raffaele Nolè.[10]

Monza

On 2 September 2013 Sinigaglia was signed by Monza.[11] In August 2013 Sinigaglia also acquired the license to become a youth team coach.[12]

Reggiana

On 2 August 2014 Sinigaglia was signed by Reggiana in a 2-year contract.[13] On 2 February 2015 he was signed by Giana Erminio in a temporary deal.[14]

Pistoiese

Sinigaglia was signed by Pistoiese on 31 August 2015.[15]

International career

Sinigaglia was the member of Italy under-18 team in 2000 UEFA European Under-18 Championship Intermediary round. (now renamed to under-19 event) Sinigaglia also played in 1997 UEFA European Under-16 Championship. Italy used a mixed 1980 and 1981 born players for the tournament. Sinigaglia finished as the runner-up at 1998 UEFA European Under-16 Championship.

Footnotes

  1. The actual revenue was turned to co-ownership debt and the co-ownership loss of €515,457 was turned to deferred amortization (Articolo 18-bis Legge 91/1981)[2]

References

  1. 1 2 3 FIGC (Italian)
  2. FC Internazionale Milano SpA Report and Accounts on 30 June 2003 (Italian)
  3. FC Internazionale Milano SpA Report and Accounts on 30 June 2002 (Italian)
  4. "DEALING WITH ROMA AND PADOVA". FC Internazionale Milano. 2001-07-04. Retrieved 2009-07-23.
  5. "Visti Esecutività Su movimenti di Trasferimento" (require debug to 8bit encoding) (in Italian). Lega Calcio Serie C. 8 May 2008. Retrieved 10 December 2013.
  6. Novara Calcio SpA bilancio on 31 December 2009 (Italian)
  7. AC Cesena SpA bilancio on 30 June 2010 (Italian)
  8. "Mercato in uscita" (in Italian). AC Cesena. 29 January 2011. Retrieved 30 January 2011.
  9. AC Cesena SpA Report and Accounts on 30 June 2011 (Italian)
  10. "SINIGAGLIA E NOLÈ ANCORA ROSSOVERDI" (in Italian). Ternana Calcio. 29 May 2012. Retrieved 5 July 2013.
  11. "Altro colpo di mercato, preso Davide Sinigaglia" (in Italian). AC Monza Brianza 1912. 2 September 2013. Retrieved 10 December 2013.
  12. "Comunicato Ufficiale N°50 (2013–14)" (PDF) (in Italian). FIGC Settore Tecnico. 19 August 2013. Retrieved 22 March 2014.
  13. "Definito l'accordo con Sinigaglia" (in Italian). AC Reggiana 1919. 2 August 2014. Retrieved 3 March 2015.
  14. "Ceduto Sinigaglia alla Giana Erminio" (in Italian). A.C. Reggiana 1919. 2 February 2015. Retrieved 3 March 2015.
  15. "Ceduto Sinigaglia alla Pistoiese" (in Italian). A.C. Reggiana 1919. 31 August 2015. Retrieved 3 September 2015.

External links

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