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The Italian Football Federation (FIGC) (Italian: Federazione Italiana Giuoco Calcio; F.I.G.C.), also known as Federcalcio, is the governing body of football in Italy. It organises the Italian football league, Coppa Italia, Italian national football team, and the Italian women's national football team. It is based in Rome and is a founding member of both FIFA and UEFA.
[edit] HistoryThe Federation was founded in 1898 as the sport of football was picking up in the country and needed a formal structure to take things to the next level. The first presidency was decided in the Piedmontese capital of Turin, where Mario Vicary was elected along with Luigi D'Ovidio. At constitution this football federation was given a different name: Federazione Italiana Football (F.I.F.) just because all play terms and rules were the official F.A. ones. In the few short years before and after the introduction of the Federation, clubs all over the country from Genoa, Turin, Milan, Naples, Rome, Palermo, and others were forming. When in 1909 it was suggested to change the federation's name at annual board elections held in Milan at the end of August the few teams attending, representing less than 50% the active clubs, decided the sending of a postcard asking all teams to vote for the 5 new names discussed during the meeting. This Italian Federation had always been an amateur federation respecting F.I.F.A. rules since became a member in 1905. At the end of World War 1 the federation knew an impressive development and several footballers were judged to be professional players and banned according F.I.F.A. agreements. Hundreds of hungarian players skipped all rules and past 1922 flew over Italy pretending to be refugees escaping communism and got it easyly for playing in lower leagues and not famous teams too (Hungarian Federation didn't allow professional players to exit the state without permission). When in 1926 the Italian Federation Board resigned past a very difficult referee's strike, the fascist Lando Ferretti president of the Italian Olympic Committee (C.O.N.I.) nomined a Commission to reform all Leagues and federal rules. The Commission signed a document called the "Carta di Viareggio" (Rules issued in Viareggio) where football players were recognized as "non-amateurs" and capable to apply for refunds for the money they had lost while playing for the football teams. They had to sign the declaration not being professional players so that F.I.F.A. rules were respected because for F.I.G.C. they were appearing as "amateurs" receiving just refunds. It was the beginning of the professionism in Italy. The Carta di Viareggio reduced the number of foreign players to be fielded to just one per match so that the most part of hungarians remained jobless and got back to their country. Between 1964 and 1980, foreign players were banned from the Italian league, primarily to revive the national team. [edit] Last five yearsThe F.I.G.C. was placed in administration in May 2006 as a result of the Serie A scandal of 2006 and was put under the management of Guido Rossi. On December 2, 2008, the F.I.G.C. announced the top ten all time greatest Italian football players. They were (in order): 1 - Giuseppe Meazza 2 - Luigi Riva 3 - Roberto Baggio 4 - Paolo Maldini 6 - Sandro Mazzola 7 - Giuseppe Bergomi 9 - Marco Tardelli 10 - Paolo Rossi [edit] Honors
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[edit] External links
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