Hellas Verona
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Contents |
Origins and Early History
Founded in 1903 by a group of university students, the club was named Hellas (the Greek word for Greece), at the request of a professor of Classics. At a time in which football was played seriously only in the larger cities of the Northwest of Italy, most of Verona was indifferent to the growing sport. However, when in 1906 two city teams chose the city's Roman amphitheatre as a venue to showcase the game, crowd enthusiasm and media interest began to rise.
During these first few years Hellas is but one of 3 or 4 area teams playing mainly at a municipal level while scrapping against city rivals Bentegodi to become the city's premier football outfit. By the 1907-1908 season Hellas is playing against regional teams and an intense rivalry with Vicenza Calcio that lasts to this day is born.
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In 1919, following a return to activity after a four year suspension of all football competition in Italy during World War One the team merged with city rival Verona and changed its name to Hellas Verona. Between 1926 and 1929 the elite "Campionato Nazionale" assimilated the top sides from the various regional groups and Hellas Verona joined the priviledged teams, yet struggled to remain competitive.
Serie A, as it is structured today, began in 1929 when the Campionato Nazionale turned into a professional league. Still an amateur team, Hellas merged with two city rivals, Bentegodi and Scaligera, to form AC Verona. Hoping to build a first class contender for future years the new team debuted in Serie B in 1929. It would take the gialloblù 28 years to finally achieve their goal. After first being promoted to Serie A for one season in 1957-58, in 1959 the team merged with another city rival (called Hellas) and commemorated its beginnings by changing its name to Hellas Verona AC.
Success in the '70s and '80s
The Return to Serie A and the 3 Coppa Italia Finals
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In 1973-1974 Hellas finished the season in 4th last place thus avoiding relegation, but was sent down to Serie B during the summer months over a soccer scandal centering around team president Saverio Garonzi. After a year in Serie B Hellas Verona returned to Serie A.
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Under the leadership of legendary coach Osvaldo Bagnoli, in 1982-1983 the team secured 4th place in Serie A (its highest finish at the time) and even lead the Serie A standings for a few weeks. The same season Hellas again reached the Coppa Italia final. After a 2-0 home victory Hellas Verona travelled to Turin to play Juventus where the team lost the Cup in extra-time (3-0 defeat).
Heartbreak would follow in the 1983-1984 season when the team again reached the Coppa Italia final only to lose the Cup in the final minutes of the return match against defending Serie A champions AS Roma.
The 1984-1985 scudetto
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Although the 1984-1985 squad was made up of a healthy mix of emerging players and mature stars, at the beginning of the season no one would have regarded the team as having the necessary ingredients to make it to the end. Certainly the additions of Hans-Peter Briegel in midfield and of danish striker Preben Larsen Elkjaer to an attack that already featured the wing play of Pietro Fanna, the creative abilities of Antonio Di Gennaro and the scoring touch of Giuseppe Galderisi were to prove crucial.
To mention a few of the memorable milestones on the road to the scudetto: a decisive win against Juventus FC (2-0) set the stage early in the championship; a road win against Udinese Calcio (3-5) ended any speculation that the team was losing energy at the midway point; three straight wins (including a hard fought 1-0 victory against a strong AS Roma side) served notice that the team had kept its polish and focus intact during their rival's final surge; and a 1-1 tie in Bergamo against Atalanta secured the title a matchday in advance of the end of the season.
Hellas Verona finished the year with a 15-13-2 record and 43 points, 4 points ahead of Torino with Internazionale and Sampdoria rounding out the top four spots.
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On the European Stage
The team made its first European appearance in 1983-1984 in the UEFA Cup and were knocked out in the second round of the tournament. In 1986 Hellas Verona AC were eliminated from European Cup play by fellow Serie A side Juventus (winners of the previous edition against Liverpool). In 1988 the team had its best international result when it reached the UEFA Cup quarter-finals on four victories and three ties. The decisive defeat came from German side Werder Bremen.
Recent years
These were more than mere modest achievements for a mid-size city with a limited appeal to fans across the nation. Soon enough financial difficulties caught up with team managers. In 1991 the team folded and was reborn as Verona FC, regularly moving to and fro between Serie A and Serie B ever since. In 1995 the name was changed back to Hellas Verona FC.
After a 3 year stay, their last stint in Serie A ended in grief in 2002. That season emerging international talents such as Adrian Mutu, Mauro Camoranesi, Alberto Gilardino, Martin Laursen, Massimo Oddo, Marco Cassetti and coach Alberto Malesani failed to capitalize on an excellent start and dropped to 4th last place for the first time all season exactly on the last available matchday.
The derby with Chievo Verona
That same season, with Chievo Verona also in the country's premier football league, Verona joined Milan, Rome, Turin and Genoa to become only the fifth Italian city to host a Serie A derby (known as il derby della Scala). The first ever Verona derby came on matchday 11 and saw the city's teams both ranked among the top 4 in Serie A. The match was won by the Hellas side, 3-2. Chievo reciprocated the favour in the return match in the spring: 2-1.
The present
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The Bentegodi
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The Bentegodi is still one of Italy's finest facilities, yet today both hometown teams struggle to fill the seats. The emergence of Chievo on the Serie A stage in recent years has split the city into two smaller groups of archrival fans, both very loyal to their respective cause. Today, with Hellas Verona in Serie B and Chievo battling to survive relegation, the Sunday crowds are often less than half of the stadium's capacity. The limited attendance and the presence of olympic track rings around the pitch perimeter have somewhat inhibited the fan's warmth and cheer and, as a result, the vibrant atmosphere and sell-out gatherings that characterized the Bentegodi throughout the '70s and '80s have become a distant memory.
A merge between the two teams has been rumoured for the last few seasons. For the time being the only upshot of the inter-city conflict that may appear on the horizon is that Hellas and Chievo could soon be joining forces to build a smaller, more manageable facility dedicated solely to football. Current blueprint proposals call for an attendance of about 28,000.
The fans
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The most well known organized fan group of the team was called le brigate gialloblù or "BG" ("the yellowblue brigades"). It came together in 1971 and no longer exists as such. Although to this day virtually all fans call themselves BG members when at the Bentegodi, the hardcore group numbers about a few thousand members. From producing flags large enough to cover the entire curva sud section (virtually a third of the stadium) to singing Giuseppe Verdi's Aida, the BG (and Hellas fans in general) are one of Italy's most dedicated, immaginative and respected supporters.
Most Hellas fans have always kept football and politics apart, but right wing (verona front, hellas army) and left wing (rude boys) groups coexisted within the BG, as they do among today's Hellas fans. Then and now, the wide majority of the fans are joyous and well behaved, however small groups, typically right wing extremists, aiming to provoke, cause outrage and attract attention (whatever the cost) hide behind the BG.
Repeated incidents throughout the 70s and violence in the late 80s drew plenty of media attention and Verona was singled out. (Unfortunately) similar events occur elsewhere in Italian stadiums. The founders and "hard-core" groups within the BG did what they could to keep younger members from emulating or even joining the extremists, yet action needed to be taken. After 20 years, in late 1991 the various BG groups unanimously decided to disband.
Today acts of violence are extremely rare and fans attend games to display their affection for Hellas Verona. However, once or twice a year controversial choruses do make headlines and more needs to be done (by fans, team and local institutions) to keep the trend under check. Smaller organized groups still exist and regularly sing the Aida (the old BG anthem) in tribute.
Hellas Verona fans are twinned with the supporters of ACF Fiorentina. The friendship dates back to the mid 80s, when several viola crowd favourites (Antonio Di Gennaro, Luigi Sacchetti and Luciano Bruni) left Florence and won the scudetto with Hellas Verona. The bottom picture on the right depicts a match in Florence shortly after the BG disbanded with the Fiorentina supporters paying tribute to the BG. Their banner reads "20 years of history cannot be erased: BG, we salute you". Note: the /=\ symbol seperating the letters represents a ladder (from the Scala family name) and is visible on the team logo as well.
The gialloblù are bitter rivals of Vicenza, Brescia Calcio, Chievo Verona, and Venezia AC. Like many other Serie A fans, Hellas supporters have no liking for the three striped, international clubs of Italy.
Other players and former coaches
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Coaches: Angelo Piccioli, Giancarlo Cadè, Ferruccio Valcareggi (who coached the Azzurri from 1966-1974, leading them to the Template:Wc final), Nils Liedholm, Osvaldo Bagnoli, Cesare Prandelli and Alberto Malesani.
Further readings
Tim Parks. A Season with Verona: Travels Around Italy in Search of Illusion, National Character, and...Goals!. London: Arcade Publishing, 2002. (Hardcover: 480 pages)
External links
- Official website (http://www.hellasverona.it/)
- Hellastory.net (http://www.hellastory.net/index.cfm) With a complete database, daily updates, thoughtful editorials, and guestbook. In Italian only, but "required surfing" for all football fans.
- Latest news (http://www.hellastory.net/popups/news_box.cfm?larghezza=500px/) From Hellastory.net (in Italian).
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