Serie A 2022-23 (26 Viewers)

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s4tch

Senior Member
Mar 23, 2015
34,756
Frosinone next year in Serie A. One of the newest stadiums in Italy.

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Fabio Grosso headcoach
and genoa will probably follow them

i wouldn't mind two of cagliari, bari or parma back instead of genoa. especially cagliari usually had interesting players and often caused upsets, while preziosi was just a glorified human trafficker (i know that he stepped down as a chairman, sold the club to muricans and i have zero info on his successor though)
 

DutchJuventino

Senior Member
Apr 9, 2015
3,936
and genoa will probably follow them

i wouldn't mind two of cagliari, bari or parma back instead of genoa. especially cagliari usually had interesting players and often caused upsets, while preziosi was just a glorified human trafficker (i know that he stepped down as a chairman, sold the club to muricans and i have zero info on his successor though)
Yes. Frosinone is not the club with most Serie A history or the biggest club, but I like that they are modern and have a good stadium. They are an example for Serie B (and A) clubs in terms of having a proper stadium benefits. Look at Udinese, their stadium is more full than ever was = more revenue, more television views and better atmosphere.

Genoa is almost back indeed, lovely because it is one of the most traditional clubs. Serie B is full with traditional clubs so I like a lot of them. I prefer Bari, Cagliari or Parma indeed. Sudtirol is also playing well and has a new stadium, but it is a club with no history, small city and only 5000 capacity ... hopefully they will not win playoffs. Fun Fact: it is geographic the most northern club in Italian professional football and they speak German in the region. They started in Brixen (1974) but moved to Bolzano 40 km's away in 2000. Last year they promoted for first time ever to Serie B.
 
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s4tch

Senior Member
Mar 23, 2015
34,756
i wouldn't mind südtirol if they were closer to hungary than udine, but a drive to their stadium takes ~10 hours from my home, while driving to the friuli is ~7 hours (~4.5 hours from my buddy's place)

udine is still my quickest and easiest bet for some random serie a experience. i already visited (udinese-juve 0-2, including bentancur's first goal iirc), the stadium is a nice little place indeed, traffic through austria is a breeze, tickets were cheap, nothing to complain about. other quick alternatives: flights to malpensa, roma, napoli or bari. but the car is already cheaper if there are at least two people involved
 

Bianconero_Aus

Beppe Marotta Is My God
May 26, 2009
81,711
Let's not open the pandora box.
I think you’d find most people that live there would agree. And even Italians in other regions tell you the same.

In a country that barely has any pride in a national identity and still considers their town/city or region as their main identifier before their country, the Südtirol area is the one area where those feelings are very justified imo.
 

Post Ironic

Senior Member
Feb 9, 2013
42,253
i wouldn't mind südtirol if they were closer to hungary than udine, but a drive to their stadium takes ~10 hours from my home, while driving to the friuli is ~7 hours (~4.5 hours from my buddy's place)

udine is still my quickest and easiest bet for some random serie a experience. i already visited (udinese-juve 0-2, including bentancur's first goal iirc), the stadium is a nice little place indeed, traffic through austria is a breeze, tickets were cheap, nothing to complain about. other quick alternatives: flights to malpensa, roma, napoli or bari. but the car is already cheaper if there are at least two people involved
You Euros and thinking a 7-10 hour drive is a long drive. :p
 
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