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For the club bankrupted in 2015, see Parma F.C.

General
Parma
Logo Parma Calcio 1913 (adozione 2016).svg
Full name Parma Calcio 1913 S.r.l.
Nickname(s) I Crociati (The Crusaders)
I Gialloblu (The Yellow and Blues)
Ducali (The Duchy Men)
Gli Emiliani (The Emilians)
Founded 1913 (Original)
2015 (Refounded)
Ground Stadio Ennio Tardini
(Capacity: 22,359)
Owner Flag of United States Krause Group
Chairman Flag of United States Kyle J. Krause
Head Coach Flag of Italy Fabio Pecchia
Current League Serie A 
2023–24 Serie B, 1st (champions)
Website Club home page
Parma 2024-25 homeParma 2024-25 awayParma 2024-25 third
Football current event Current season

Parma Calcio 1913, commonly known as Parma, is an Italian professional football club based in Parma, Emilia-Romagna, which competes in the Serie A, the top tier of Italian football.

History[]

The club was founded as the successor to Parma F.C., which won multiple domestic and international honours between 1990 and 2002. The new club takes its name from the year of foundation of the predecessor club and beat off competition from a rival phoenix club to secure a place in the 2015–16 Serie D.

Grounds[]

The team trains at the Centro Sportivo di Collecchio in Collecchio.

Ownership[]

The club is owned by a number of backers including local businessmen Guido Barilla (owner of Barilla Group) and Gian Paolo Dallara.

Club officials[]

As of 2 July 2015
  • President: Nevio Scala
  • Vice-president: Marco Ferrari
  • General director: Luca Carra
  • Sporting director: Andrea Galassi
  • Academy director: Fausto Pizzi
  • Academy secretary: Giovanni Manzani
  • Technical manager: Lorenzo Minotti
  • Press manager: Gabriele Majo

External links[]

Parma calcio
Parma calcio Parma Calcio 1913
Current seasonPlayersManagersStatisticsHonoursStadio Ennio Tardini
History: Seasons
Logo Parma Calcio 1913 (adozione 2016).svg
Parma Calcio 1913 squad - 2024–25

Chichizola · Osorio · Balogh · Benedyczak · Estévez · Charpentier · 10 Bernabé · 13 Bonny · 14 Ansaldi · 15 Del Prato · 17 Čolak · 19 Sohm · 20 Hainaut · 21 Partipilo · 23 Camara · 26 Coulibaly · 27 Hernani · 28 Mihăilă · 30 Valenti · 39 Circati · 40 Corvi · 47 Zagaritis · 61 Mohamed · 77 Di Chiara · 98 Man · – Suzuki ·

Manager:  Flag of Italy Fabio Pecchia
Logo Parma Calcio 1913 (adozione 2016).svg

Template:Parma Calcio 1913 seasons

Parma Calcio 1913 - Managers
Technical Commission (Violi, Porcelli & Spaggiari) (1919–20) · Humphrey (1920–21) · Riebe (1921–23) · Ara (1923–24) · Gobbi (1924) · Forlivesi (1924–25) · Achatzi (1925–26) · Ghini (1926–27) · Stuardt (1927) · Grossi (1927–28) · Violi (1928–29) · Grossi (1929–30) · Halmos (1930–31) · Grossi (1931–32) · Crotti (1932–33) · Mistrali (1933–36) · Mattioli (1936–37) · Banchero (1937–38) · Szalay (1938–39) · Wereb (1939–40) · Trevors (1940–42) · Defendi (1942–43) · Ferrari (1945–46) · Technical Commission (Cattaneo, Lombatti, Frione & Mistrali) (1946–47) · Technical Commission (Dentelli, Dietrich, Mazzoni & Tagliani) (1947–48) · Technical Commission (Cattaneo, Ferrari, Giuberti, Lombatti, Mistrali, & Rigotti) (1948–49) · Rigotti (1949–50) · Tabanelli (1951–53) · Quario (1953–54) · Fiorentini (1954–56) · Sentimenti from=(196X to=64) · Arcari (1964–65) · Corghi (1965–66) · Vitali (1967–68) · Vitali (1969–70) · Angeleri (1970–72) · Gei (1974–75) · Corelli (1977–78) · Landoni (1978) · Maldini (1978–80) · Rosati (1980–81) · Sereni (1981) · Danova (1981–83) · Mora (1983) · Perani (1983–85) · Flaborea (1985) · Carmigiani (1985) · Sacchi (1985–87) · Zeman (1987) · Vitali (1987–89) · Scala (1989–96) · Ancelotti (1996–98) · Malesani (1998–(2001) · Sacchi (2001) · Ulivieri (2001) · Passarella (2001) · Carmignani (2001–02) · Prandelli (2002–04) · Baldini (2004) · Carmignani (2004–05) · Beretta (2005–06) · Pioli (2006–07) · Ranieri (2007) · Di Carlo (2007–08) · Cúper (2008) · Manzo (2008) · Cagni (2008) · Guidolin (2008–10) · Marino (2010–11) · Colomba (2011–12) · Donadoni (2012–15) · Apolloni (2015–16) · D'Aversa (2016–20) · Liverani (2020–21) · D'Aversa (2021) · Maresca (2021) · Iachini (2021–22) · Pecchia (2022–) ·
Serie A 2024–25
Atalanta · Bologna · Cagliari · Como · Empoli · Fiorentina · Genoa · Hellas Verona · Inter Milan · Juventus · Lazio · Lecce · A.C. Milan · Monza · Napoli · Parma · Roma · Torino · Udinese · Venezia
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