bologna FC? Bologna Football Club 1909, commonly referred to as Bologna (Italian pronunciation: [boˈloɲɲa]), is an Italian professional football club based in Bologna, Emilia-Romagna that plays in Serie A, the top flight of Italian football. The club have won seven top-flight titles, two Coppa Italia titles, and one UEFA Intertoto Cup. Founded in 1909, Bologna were founding members of Serie A, and won many of their league championships during the late 1930s. The club ceded any league dominance by 1964, when they won their last league title to date. They won their two Coppa Italia titles in the 1970s, before battling relegation throughout the latter part of the 20th century. Bologna changed ownership multiple times during the early 2000s and 2010s, due to financial mismanagement, and later stabilized under the guise of a Canadian consortium led by Joey Saputo. Bologna have participated in 75 Serie A seasons, which is the ninth-most in Italian football history. The club have played in the Stadio Renato Dall’Ara since 1927, which is the tenth-largest stadium by capacity in Serie A. History The performance of Bologna in the Italian football league structure since the first season of a unified Serie A (1929/30) Bologna Football Club’s formation was orchestrated by Emilio Arnstein, an Austrian who became interested in football at university in Vienna and Prague.[citation needed] He and his brother had previously founded another football club, Black Star, in Austria. The club was founded on 3 October 1909, in the Northern Italian city of Bologna.[citation needed] Upon its formation, Carlo Sandoni was the club’s sponsor and general manager, Swiss Louis Rauch became president, nobleman Guido Della Valle was the vice-president, Enrico Penaglia secretary, Sergio Lampronti cashier, while Emilio Arnstein and Leone Vincenzi were appointed councilmen. Bologna squad from the 1912 season On 20 March 1910, Bologna played their first ever game, against Virtus, who wore white shirts.[citation needed] Bologna outclassed their opponents, winning 9–1.[citation needed] The first football squad featured; Koch, Chiara, Pessarelli, Bragaglia, Guido Della Valle, Nanni, Donati, Rauch, Bernabeu, Mezzano, and Gradi.[who?][non sequitur] Their formative season was spent in the regional league under Arrigo Gradi as captain, Bologna won their league gaining promotion to a league named Group Veneto-Emiliano.[citation needed] They spent four seasons in this league, never finishing lower than fifth.[citation needed] Bologna were entered into the Northern League before all football leagues were postponed for the First World War. After the Second World War, the club was less successful.[citation needed] Throughout the 1950s and 1960s, the club generally floated between fourth, fifth and sixth position in the league, until they took the league title back in 1963–64.[citation needed] To date this remains their last Serie A championship, bringing the club’s total to seven.[citation needed] This qualified Bologna to the 1964–65 European Cup (today UEFA Champions League), but they were eliminated in the preliminary round against Anderlecht. The last Bologna side to win the scudetto, in the 1963–64 season. It was not all doom and gloom[tone] for the club, however; in the 1970s, they won the Italian Cup twice, the second of which was disputed against Palermo.[citation needed] The game was tense and finished 1–1 before going to a penalty shootout, where Bologna won 4–3. Climbing down and back up the League Beginning in the 1981–82 season, the club began to slide.[where?][vague][citation needed] First, they were relegated from Serie A after battling it out for survival with Cagliari and Genoa.[citation needed] They were relegated twice in succession and slid[tone] into Serie C1.[citation needed] They won their way out of C1 the next year, and returned to Serie A for the 1988–89 season after four years of fighting it out[tone] in Serie B. They did not remain long, however, being relegated in 1991 and returning to Serie C1 in 1993.[citation needed] The club returned to Serie A for 1996.[citation needed] Two years later, Bologna tasted a slice of success[tone] on the European stage,[tone] winning the UEFA Intertoto Cup and playing in the UEFA Cup.[citation needed] The club remained in Serie A until the 2004–05 campaign, losing to Parma in the playoffs. Serie B Despite losing some key players, Bologna expected to be challenging strongly for promotion from Serie B in the 2005–06 campaign.[citation needed] Despite its ambition, however, Bologna had a poor start to the season, causing the sacking of experienced coach Renzo Ulivieri, replaced by former Internazionale defender Andrea Mandorlini. During this time, the team was sold by Giuseppe Gazzoni Frascara to Alfredo Cazzola, a local entrepreneur.[citation needed] Mandorlini, however, was not either able to bring Bologna up the Serie B table, and was fired on 5 March 2006; Ulivieri was then appointed back as team coach, after having been sacked a few[vague][quantify] months before.[citation needed] Bologna ended the 2005–06 Serie B campaign in eighth place.[citation needed] In the 2006–07 season, Bologna ended with the seventh place: there were several[vague][quantify] clashes[vague][clarification needed] between chairman Cazzola and head coach Ulivieri, who was ultimately fired on 14 April 2007 and replaced by caretaker and former assistant coach Luca Cecconi.[citation needed] For the 2007–08 season, Bologna was led by Daniele Arrigoni, who helped the rossoblù achieve automatic promotion back to the top flight after finishing second in Serie B. Serie A During the summer of 2008, a club takeover was agreed between Cazzola and an American-based consortium; this was, however, cancelled in the end, following disagreements between the parties, and the club was successively sold to a local group led by new chairman Francesca Menarini, who thus became the second female chairman in the whole Serie A.[citation needed] Arrigoni was confirmed as head coach by the new group, and the start appeared to be[vague][why?] particularly[tone] impressive, with a surprising 2–1 win at San Siro against Milan thanks to a winning goal scored by Francesco Valiani.[citation needed] The next weeks saw Bologna struggling in the league, however, with eight losses in nine matches. A disappointing 5–1 loss to Cagliari ultimately led the club management to sack Daniele Arrigoni on 3 November 2008 and appoint Siniša Mihajlović as new rossoblù boss.[4] On 14 April 2009, Giuseppe Papadopulo was appointed as the new manager, and successfully managed to raise the team spirit[how?][tone] avoiding relegation to Serie B only in the last match of the season.[citation needed] In the 2009–10 season, Bologna played in Serie A for the 65th time, and escaped relegation again despite financial issues under new head coach Franco Colomba.[vague][clarification needed] In June 2010, a club takeover was completed, with the club being sold by the Menarini family to Sardinian entrepreneur Sergio Porcedda.[citation needed] Franco Colomba was sacked right before the 2010–11 season opener on 29 August 2010, despite surviving relegation with the team in the 2009–10 season. The president of the club, Sergio Porcedda, said that the decision was made mostly “because he [Colomba] was skeptical of the team.” The consortium “Bologna 2010” On 23 December 2010, the consortium Bologna 2010 led by banker Giovanni Consorte and coffee businessman Massimo Zanetti acquired the club from Sergio Porcedda, after the latter failed to pay wages for the club during his short-tenured ownership and put Bologna in threat of bankruptcy.[citation needed] The company also owed agent fee to Leonardo Corsi in the Andrea Raggi’s transfer.[6] Zanetti also became the new club chairman, with popular[vague][clarification needed][tone] Italian musician and long-time Bologna supporter Gianni Morandi appointed as honorary president. On 21 January 2011, chairman Massimo Zanetti and CEO Luca Baraldi, after only 28 days, resigned because of irreconcilable differences[vague][clarification needed] with the other personal and financial partners.[citation needed] Stefano Pedrelli became the new director general.[citation needed] For 76 days, the chairman was Marco Pavignani. From 7 April 2011, after the resignation of Pavignani and having paid €2.5m of capital increase, the new chairman was Albano Guaraldi, the second largest shareholder of the consortium “Bologna 2010” with the 17% of the quotas, behind the outgoing Zanetti. The 2013–14 season saw Bologna once again relegated to the Serie B, and also gave light[tone] to a number of financial problems involving the club and its ownership of Albino Guaraldi, who was considerably criticized by the team supporters also for a number of controversial decisions, including the sale of star player Alessandro Diamanti to Chinese club Guangzhou Evergrande.[citation needed] A new head coach was then found in former Cagliari boss Diego López for the new season, whereas Guaraldi clearly stated his intention to hand over his Bologna stakes to a new owner.[citation needed] A North American group headed by Joe Tacopina and Joey Saputo (owner of CF Montréal, also the team of former Bologna hero Marco Di Vaio) then stated its interest in acquiring the club; this was followed by another offer coming from former chairman Massimo Zanetti.[citation needed] On 15 October 2014, the board of directors ratified the sale of the club to BFC 1909 Lux SPV, and Tacopina became the new club chairman. The consortium “BFC 1909 Lux Spv” Under the new ownership of which BFC 1909 Lux Spv S.A. of Luxembourg is an intermediate holding company, Bologna was promoted back to Serie A in 2015.[citation needed] Saputo also succeeded Tacopina as the new chairman of the board of directors of Bologna on 17 November 2014. In their first season back in Serie A, Bologna finished 14th avoiding relegation.[citation needed] In the following two seasons, Bologna finished in 15th place on the table.[citation needed] In the 2018-19 Serie A season, Bologna finished in a creditable[tone][according to whom?] 10th position on the table. Over the next three seasons, Bologna continued to finish mid-table in Serie A, coming in twelfth position for two campaigns in a row, followed by a thirteenth-place finish in the 2021–2022 season. Chairmen history Bologna have had numerous Chairmen[clarification needed] over the course of their history, some of which have been the owners of the club, others have been honorary chairmen. Here is a complete list of Bologna chairmen from 1909 until the present day.[14] Name Years Louis Rauch 1909–10 Pio Borghesani 1910 Emilio Arnstein 1910 Domenico Gori 1910–12 Rodolfo Minelli 1912–15 Arturo Gazzoni (Honorary chairman) 1916–18 Rodolfo Minelli 1918–19 Cesare Medica 1919–21 Angelo Sbarberi 1921–22 Antonio Turri 1922 Ruggero Murè (Honorary chairman) 1923 Enrico Masetti 1923–25 Paolo Graziani 1925–28 Gianni Bonaveri 1928–34 Renato Dall’Ara 1934–64 Luigi Goldoni 1964–68 Raimondo Venturi 1968–70 Name Years Filippo Montanari 1970–72 Luciano Conti 1972–79 Tommaso Fabbretti 1979–83 Giuseppe Brizzi 1983–85 Luigi “Gino” Corioni 1985–91 Piero Gnudi 1991–93 Giuseppe Gazzoni Frascara [it] 1993–2002 (Honorary chairman) Renato Cipollini 2002–05 Alfredo Cazzola 2005–08 Francesca Menarini 2008–10 Sergio Porcedda 2010 Massimo Zanetti 2010–11 Marco Pavignani 2011 Albano Guaraldi 2011–14 Joe Tacopina 2014-2015 Joey Saputo 2014–Present