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Napoli
SSC Napoli
Full name Società Sportiva Calcio Napoli S.p.A.
Nickname(s) Partenopei
Gli Azzurri (The Blues)
I Ciucciarelli (The Little Donkeys)
Founded 1 August 1926
Ground Stadio Diego Armando Maradona
(Capacity: 54,726)
Owner Filmauro S.r.l.
Chairman Flag of Italy Aurelio De Laurentiis
Head Coach Flag of Colombia Francesco Calzona
Current League Serie A 
2022–23 Serie A, 1st (champions)
Website Club home page
Napoli 2023-24 homeNapoli 2023-24 awayNapoli 2023-24 third
Football current event Current season

Società Sportiva Calcio Napoli is a professional Italian football club based in Naples, Campania. Formed in 1926, the club plays in Serie A, the top flight of Italian football. The club has won Serie A twice, and been runners-up six times, the Coppa Italia five times, the Supercoppa Italiana twice, and the 1988–89 UEFA Cup.

Napoli have the fourth biggest fanbase in Italy, and in 2015 were ranked as the fifth most valuable football club in Serie A, as well as being listed on the Forbes' list of the most valuable football clubs. The club is one of the associate members of the European Club Association. In the January 2016 UEFA ratings, Napoli are ranked the eighth best club in European Football and the second best club in Italy.

Since 1959, the club has played their home games at Stadio San Paolo in the Fuorigrotta suburb of Naples. Their home colours are sky blue shirts and white shorts. The official anthem of the club is "'O surdato 'nnammurato". Former players include Diego Maradona, Gianfranco Zola, Fabio Cannavaro, Edinson Cavani and Gonzalo Higuaín.

Players[]

Current squad[]

As of 3 September 2023
No. Pos. Nation Player
1 GK Flag of Italy Alex Meret
3 DF Flag of Brazil Natan
4 MF Flag of Germany Diego Demme
5 DF Flag of Brazil Juan Jesus
6 DF Flag of Portugal Mário Rui (vice-captain)
7 MF Flag of North Macedonia Elif Elmas
9 FW Flag of Nigeria Victor Osimhen
13 DF Flag of Kosovo Amir Rrahmani
14 GK Flag of Ukraine Nikita Contini
16 GK Flag of Poland Hubert Idasiak
17 DF Flag of Uruguay Mathías Olivera
18 FW Flag of Argentina Giovanni Simeone
20 MF Flag of Poland Piotr Zieliński
21 FW Flag of Italy Matteo Politano
No. Pos. Nation Player
22 DF Flag of Italy Giovanni Di Lorenzo (captain)
23 FW Flag of Italy Alessio Zerbin
24 MF Flag of Sweden Jens Cajuste
29 MF Flag of Denmark Jesper Lindstrøm
38 MF Flag of Italy Lorenzo Russo
55 DF Flag of Norway Leo Østigård
59 DF Flag of Italy Alessandro Zanoli
68 MF Flag of Slovakia Stanislav Lobotka
70 MF Flag of Italy Gianluca Gaetano
77 FW Flag of Georgia Khvicha Kvaratskhelia
81 FW Flag of Italy Giacomo Raspadori
95 GK Flag of Italy Pierluigi Gollini (on loan from Atalanta)
99 MF Flag of Cameroon André-Frank Zambo Anguissa

Out on loan[]

As of 3 September 2023
No. Pos. Nation Player
GK Flag of Italy Elia Caprile (at Empoli until 30 June 2024)
DF Flag of Italy Francesco Mezzoni (at Perugia until 30 June 2024)
DF Flag of Italy Nosa Obaretin (at Trento until 30 June 2024)
DF Flag of Italy Lorenzo Sgarbi (at Avellino until 30 June 2024)
MF Flag of Italy Michael Folorunsho (at Hellas Verona until 30 June 2024)
No. Pos. Nation Player
MF Flag of Mali Coli Saco (at Ancona until 30 June 2024)
MF Flag of Italy Antonio Vergara (at Reggiana until 30 June 2024)
FW Flag of Italy Giuseppe Ambrosino (at Catanzaro until 30 June 2024)
FW Flag of Morocco Walid Cheddira (at Frosinone until 30 June 2024)
FW Flag of Italy Antonio Cioffi (at Ancona until 30 June 2024)

Primavera squad[]

Main article: S.S.C. Napoli Youth Sector

Retired numbers[]

No. Pos. Nation Player
10 FW Flag of Argentina Diego Maradona (1984–91)

Club alumni[]

Former players[]

Main: List of Napoli players

Managers[]

Main: List of Napoli managers

Club honours[]

Domestic league[]

Serie A: (3)

Runners-up (8): 1967–68; 1974–75; 1987–88; 1988–89; 2012–13; 2015–16; 2017–18; 2018–19
3rd place (10): 1932–33; 1933-34; 1965–66; 1970–71; 1973–74; 1980–81; 1985–86; 2010–11; 2013–14; 2016–17

Serie B: 1

  • Champions: 1949–50
Runners-up (1): 2006–07

Serie C1: 1

  • Southern Champions: 2005–06

Domestic cup[]

Coppa Italia: 6

  • Winners: 1961–62; 1975–76; 1986–87; 2011–12, 2013–14, 2019–20
Runners-up (4): 1971–72, 1977–78, 1988–89, 1996–97

Supercoppa Italiana: 2

  • Winners: 1990, 2014
Runners-up (1): 2012

European competition[]

UEFA Cup: 1

  • Winners: 1988–89

Anglo-Italian League Cup: 1

  • Winners: 1976
Runners-up (1): 1969-70

Coppa delle Alpi: 1

  • Winners: 1966

External links[]

500px-S.S.C. Napoli logo.svg
Società Sportiva Calcio Napoli S.p.A.
Current seasonClub honoursCoaching staffStadio Diego Armando Maradona
History: GeneralSeasons
500px-S.S.C. Napoli logo.svg
S.S.C. Napoli squad - 2023–24

Meret •  Natan •  Demme •  Juan Jesus •  Mário Rui •  Elmas •  Osimhen •  13 Rrahmani •  14 Contini •  16 Idasiak •  17 Olivera •  18 Simeone •  20 Zieliński •  21 Politano •  22 Di Lorenzo (c) •  23 Zerbin •  24 Cajuste •  29 Lindstrøm •  38 Russo •  55 Østigård •  59 Zanoli •  68 Lobotka •  70 Gaetano •  77 Kvaratskhelia •  81 Raspadori •  95 Gollini •  99 Zambo Anguissa • 

Manager:  Flag of Italy Walter Mazzarri
500px-S.S.C. Napoli logo.svg
500px-S.S.C. Napoli logo.svg
S.S.C. Napoli seasons
2019–20 · 2020–21 · 2021–22 · 2022–23 · 2023–24 ·
S.S.C. Napoli - Managers

Kreutzer (1926–27) • Skasa (1927) • Technical Commission (Steiger, Terrile & Molnár) (1927–28) • Fischer (1928) • Terrile (1928–29) • Garbutt (1929–35) • Csapkay (1935–36) • Mattea (1936–38) • Payer (1938–39) • Technical Commission (D'Albora, Iodice, Castello, Piccini & Rocco) (1939) • Baloncieri (1939–40) • Vojak (1940–43) • Innocenti (1943) • Sansone (1945–46) • Vecchina (1947–48) • Sentimenti (1948) • Borel (1948–49) • De Manesc (1949) • Mosele (1949) • Monzeglio (1949–56) • Amadei (1956–59) • Frossi (1959) • Amadei (1959–61) • Sallustro (1961) • Baldi (1961–62) • Pesaola (1962) • Pesaola & Monzeglio (1962–63) • Lerici (1963–64) • Molino (1964) • Pesaola (1964–68) • Chiappella & Parola (1968–69) • Di Costanzo (1969) • Chiappella (1969–73) • Vinicio (1973–76) • Delfrati & Rivellino (1976) • Pesaola (1976–77) • Di Marzio (1977) • Vinício (1978) • Sormani (1980) • Marchesi (1980–82) • Giacomini (1982) • Rambone & Pesaola (1982–83) • Santin (1983–84) • Marchesi (1984–85) • Bianchi (1985–89) • Bigon (1989–91) • Ranieri (1991–93) • Bianchi (1993) • Lippi (1993–94) • Guerini (1994) • Boškov (1994–96) • Simoni (1996–97) • Montefusco (1997) • Mutti (1997) • Mazzone (1997) • Galeone (1997–98) • Montefusco (1998) • Ulivieri (1998–99) • Montefusco (1999) • Novellino (1999–2000) • Zeman (2000) • Mondonico (2000–01) • De Canio (2001–02) • Colomba (2002) • Busoc (2002) • Scoglio (2002–03) • Colomba (2003) • Agostinelli (2003) • Simoni (2003–04) • Ventura (2004) • Reja (2005–09) • Donadoni (2009) • Mazzarri (2009–13) • Benítez (2013–15) • Sarri (2015–18) • Ancelotti (2018–19) • Gattuso (2019–)

Italian Football Championship and Serie A winners
Italian Football Championship

Genoa (1898; 1899; 1900) • Milan (1901) • Genoa (1902; 1903; 1904) • Juventus (1905) • Milan (1906; 1907) • Pro Vercelli (1908; 1909) • Internazionale (1909–10) • Pro Vercelli (1910–11; 1911–12; 1912–13) • Casale (1913–14) • Genoa (1914–15) • Internazionale (1919–20) • Pro Vercelli (1920–21; 1921–22 (CCI)) • Novese (1921–22 (FIGC)) • Genoa (1922–23; 1923–24) • Bologna (1924–25) • Juventus (1925–26) • no winner (1926–27); Torino (1927–28) • Bologna (1928–29) •

Serie A winners

Ambrosiana (1929–30) • Juventus (1930–31; 1931–32; 1932–33; 1933–34; 1934–35) • Bologna (1935–36; 1936–37) • Ambrosiana-Inter (1937–38) • Bologna (1938–39) • Ambrosiana-Inter (1939–40) • Bologna (1940–41) • Roma (1941–42) • Torino (1942–43; 1945–46; 1946–47; 1947–48; 1948–49) • Juventus (1949–50) • Milan (1950–51) • Juventus (1951–52) • Internazionale (1952–53; 1953–54) • Milan (1954–55) • Fiorentina (1955–56) • Milan (1956–57) • Juventus (1957–58) • Milan (1958–59) • Juventus (1959–60; 1960–61) • Milan (1961–62) • Internazionale (1962–63) • Bologna (1963–64) • Internazionale (1964–65; 1965–66) • Juventus (1966–67) • Milan (1967–68) • Fiorentina (1968–69) • Cagliari (1969–70) • Internazionale (1970–71) • Juventus (1971–72; 1972–73) • Lazio (1973–74) • Juventus (1974–75) • Torino (1975–76) • Juventus (1976–77; 1977–78) • Milan (1978–79) • Internazionale (1979–80) • Juventus (1980–81; 1981–82) • Roma (1982–83) • Juventus (1983–84) • Hellas Verona (1984–85) • Juventus (1985–86) • Napoli (1986–87) • Milan (1987–88) • Internazionale (1988–89) • Napoli (1989–90) • Sampdoria (1990–91) • Milan (1991–92; 1992–93; 1993–94) • Juventus (1994–95) • Milan (1995–96) • Juventus (1996–97; 1997–98) • Milan (1998–99) • Lazio (1999–2000) • Roma (2000–01) • Juventus (2001–02; 2002–03) • Milan (2003–04) • no winner (2004–05) • Internazionale ((2005–06 unofficial); 2006–07; 2007–08; 2008–09; 2009–10) • Milan (2010–11) • Juventus (2011–12; 2012–13; 2013–14; 2014–15; 2015–16) •

Italian Cup winners

Vado (1922) • Torino (1935–36) • Genoa (1936–37) • Juventus (1937–38) • Ambrosiana-Inter (1938–39) • Fiorentina (1939–40) • Venezia (1940–41) • Juventus (1941–42) • Torino (1942–43) • Lazio (1958) • Juventus (1958–59; 1959–60) • Fiorentina (1960–61) • Napoli (1961–62) • Atalanta (1962–63) • Roma (1963–64) • Juventus (1964–65) • Fiorentina (1965–66) • Milan (1966–67) • Torino (1967–68) • Roma (1968–69) • Bologna (1969–70) • Torino (1970–71) • Milan (1971–72; 1972–73) • Bologna (1973–74) • Fiorentina (1974–75) • Napoli (1975–76) • Milan (1976–77) • Internazionale (1977–78) • Juventus (1978–79) • Roma (1979–80; 1980–81) • Internazionale (1981–82) • Juventus (1982–83) • Roma (1983–84) • Sampdoria (1984–85) • Roma (1985–86) • Napoli (1986–87) • Sampdoria (1987–88; 1988–89) • Juventus (1989–90) • Roma (1990–91) • Parma (1991–92) • Torino (1992–93) • Sampdoria (1993–94) • Juventus (1994–95) • Fiorentina (1995–96) • Vicenza (1996–97) • Lazio (1997–98) • Parma (1998–99) • Lazio (1999–2000) • Fiorentina (2000–01) • Parma (2001–02) • Milan (2002–03) • Lazio (2003–04) • Internazionale (2004–05; 2005–06) • Roma (2006–07, 2007–08) • Lazio (2008–09) • Internazionale (2009–10; 2010–11) • Napoli (2011–12) • Lazio (2012–13) • Napoli (2013–14) • Juventus (2014–15; 2015–16) •

Italian Super Cup winners

Milan (1988) • Internazionale (1989) • Napoli (1990) • Sampdoria (1991) • Milan (1992) • Milan (1993) • Milan (1994) • Juventus (1995) • Fiorentina (1996) • Juventus (1997) • Lazio (1998) • Parma (1999) • Lazio (2000) • Roma (2001) • Juventus (2002) • Juventus (2003) • Milan (2004) • Internazionale (2005) • Internazionale (2006) • Roma (2007) • Internazionale (2008) • Lazio (2009) • Internazionale (2010) • Milan (2011) • Juventus (2012) • Juventus (2013) • Napoli (2014) • Juventus (2015) • Milan (2016) • Lazio (2017) • Juventus (2018) • Lazio (2019) • Juventus (2020) •

UEFA Europa League winners

1972: Tottenham Hotspur • 1973: Liverpool • 1974: Feyenoord • 1975: Borussia Mönchengladbach • 1976: Liverpool • 1977: Juventus • 1978: PSV Eindhoven • 1979: Borussia Mönchengladbach • 1980: Eintracht Frankfurt • 1981: Ipswich Town • 1982: IFK Göteborg • 1983: Anderlecht • 1984: Tottenham Hotspur • 1985: Real Madrid • 1986: Real Madrid • 1987: IFK Göteborg • 1988: Bayer Leverkusen • 1989: Napoli • 1990: Juventus • 1991: Internazionale • 1992: Ajax • 1993: Juventus • 1994: Internazionale • 1995: Parma • 1996: Bayern Munich • 1997: Schalke 04 • 1998: Internazionale • 1999: Parma • 2000: Galatasaray • 2001: Liverpool • 2002: Feyenoord • 2003: Porto • 2004: Valencia • 2005: CSKA Moscow • 2006: Sevilla • 2007: Sevilla • 2008: Zenit Saint Petersburg • 2009: Shakhtar Donetsk • 2010: Atlético Madrid • 2011: Porto • 2012: Atlético Madrid • 2013: Chelsea • 2014: Sevilla • 2015: Sevilla • 2016: Sevilla • 2017: Manchester United • 2018: Atlético Madrid • 2019: Chelsea • 2020: Sevilla • 2021: Villarreal • 2022: Eintracht Frankfurt •

Serie A 2023–24
Atalanta · Bologna · Cagliari · Empoli · Fiorentina · Frosinone · Genoa · Hellas Verona · Inter Milan · Juventus · Lazio · Lecce · A.C. Milan · Monza · Napoli · Roma · Salernitana · Sassuolo · Torino · Udinese
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