Vincenzo Guerini

For former Olympic sprinter, see Vincenzo Guerini (athlete).
Vincenzo Guerini
Personal information
Date of birth (1953-10-30) 30 October 1953
Place of birth Sarezzo, Italy
Playing position Attacking Midfielder
Club information
Current team
Fiorentina (team manager)
Youth career
Coffea Virle
1970–1971 Brescia
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1971–1973 Brescia 34 (6)
1973–1976 Fiorentina 53 (1)
National team
1974–1974 Italy 1 (0)
Teams managed
1983–1985 A.C.F. Fiorentina
1985–1986 Pisa
1986–1987 Bologna
1987–1988 Catanzaro
1988–1989 Brescia
1989–1994 Ancona
1994 Napoli
1994–1996 SPAL
1996–1997 Reggina
1997–1998 Piacenza
1998–2000 Ternana
2000 Catania
2001–2002 Siena
2002–2003 Panachaiki
2003 Catania
2005–2006 Catanzaro
2012 Fiorentina (caretaker)

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

† Appearances (goals)

Vincenzo Guerini (born 30 October 1953) is an Italian association football manager and former player.

Playing career

Guerini's playing career started at Brescia, playing as a regular in the Serie B division. In 1973 he was signed by Serie A club Fiorentina, where he emerged as a young but promising attacking midfielder and won the 1975 Coppa Italia thanks to a goal of his in the final against Milan. His career was however cut short in 1976 after suffering a severe car accident that almost left him impaired.

International career

Despite his short playing career, Guerini also had the chance to play as a full international in 1974, when he was lined up by the coaching duo Fulvio Bernardini-Enzo Bearzot for a game against Bulgaria.

Managerial career

Early years

Despite being only aged 22, Guerini immediately entered into a non-playing career and became youth coach at his last club Fiorentina, also winning a Campionato Nazionale Primavera title in 1983. On that same year, Serie B club Empoli offered him their head coaching position, the first in Guerini's career. In 1985 he was then hired by another Tuscan club, Pisa, thus having the chance to make his coaching debut in the Serie A league; despite winning a Mitropa Cup on that same year, Guerini however failed to save the team from relegation. His following experience, at Serie B's Bologna, then ended with a dismissal before the end of the season. He then served as head coach of Catanzaro, narrowly missing a top flight promotion, and successively Brescia.

Ancona and later career

In 1989 Guerini was appointed head coach of another Serie B club, Ancona. In what proved to be his most successful stint as a manager, Guerini led Ancona to a historical first promotion ever in the Serie A league (a stint that lasted only one season), then ending as 1993–94 Coppa Italia runners-up in his final season at the club. He was then hired by Napoli, but dismissed after only eight games (including a UEFA Cup elimination at the hands of Boavista).

After that, Guerini had two short-lived coaching experiences in the minor leagues that turned out not to be particularly successful (SPAL, Reggina) until 1997, when he was hired by Piacenza and saved the then-Serie A club from relegation in what is his most successful placement in the top flight to date. Guerini then had a handful of unsuccessful experiences, all them as a replacement coach or with him not completing the season (Ternana, Catania, Siena, Greek side Panachaiki, Catania again, and a second stint at Catanzaro).

In 2011 he was hired by former club Fiorentina as "club manager". On 2 May 2012, he was then appointed caretaker coach after the club decided to remove Delio Rossi from his managerial duties following a physical confrontation with the Serbian player Adem Ljajić during the home league game against the Novara.[1] In his first game in charge, he led Fiorentina to a 1–0 win at Lecce that mathematically guaranteed the club a place in the 2012–13 Serie A.

Honours

As player

With Fiorentina

As coach

With Fiorentina
With Pisa

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Monday, November 16, 2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.