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Massimo Ficcadenti
Personal information
Date of birth November 6, 1967 (1967-11-06) (age 42)
Place of birth Fermo, Italy
Height 1.81 m (5 ft 11+12 in)
Playing position Coach (former midfielder)
Club information
Current club Piacenza
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1985–1989 Sambenedettese 68 (2)
1989–1992 Messina 90 (5)
1992–1997 Verona 132 (9)
1997–2000 Torino 48 (2)
2000–2001 Ravenna 2 (0)
Teams managed
2001–2002 Fiorenzuola
2002 Avellino
2003–2004 Pistoiese
2004–2006 Verona
2007 Reggina
2009– Piacenza
* Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only.
† Appearances (Goals).

Massimo Ficcadenti (born November 6, 1967 in Fermo) is an Italian football manager and former midfielder.

Contents

[edit] Career

[edit] Playing

Ficcadenti started his playing career with Sambenedettese, where he played from 1985 to 1989. He then signed for Messina, playing for the Sicilian side for a total of three seasons before to join Verona in 1992. At Verona, he also had the opportunity to make his Serie A debut; he stayed with the gialloblu for a total of five seasons before moving at Torino in 1997. He left Torino for Ravenna in 2000, and retired from active football one year later to become a coach.

[edit] Coaching

Ficcadenti's first coaching experience came in 2001 as boss of Serie C2 team Fiorenzuola.[1] Ficcadenti, at the helm of a club under serious financial struggles, ended the regular season in 17th place, but later lost the relegation playoffs to Trento. Despite the Serie D relegation, his work at Fiorenzuola was praised by a number of pundits, given the circumstances, and he was successively appointed by Avellino of Serie C1, being however fired before the beginning of the season due to poor performances in the Coppa Italia Serie C and a number of friendly matches.[1] On June 2003, he was then appointed as head coach of Pistoiese, another Serie C1 team. As well as in Fiorenzuola, Ficcadenti found a club under financial troubles, and a squad mainly composed by young and loaned players, the one with the lowest age in all the professional leagues that year; despite that, Pistoiese narrowly missed a spot in the Serie B promotion playoffs, and ended in a good 11th place.[1]

Pistoiese's performances convinced Serie B club Verona to offer him their head coaching position in 2004.[1] In his first year with Verona, Ficcadenti ended in a mid-table place, after having been involved in the promotion fight for the first half of the season.[1] The 2005-06 season, with a weaker team that lost some of their more notable players, saw Verona struggling in the relegation battle, but saving themselves from a Serie C1 fall in the end.[1] The following season proved to be much harder for Ficcadenti, as the club lost several key players such as Mattia Cassani and striker Adaílton. Ficcadenti was then sacked on December 2006 because of poor results, being replaced by Giampiero Ventura who however did not manage to save the club from relegation.

On June 23, 2007 several news announced Reggina's appointment of Ficcadenti as new head coach, despite the fact he was still contracted with his previous club Verona.[2] However Verona did not give Ficcadenti permission to make the move, and on June 27 the club announced on their website to have reappointed him as their head coach for the upcoming 2007-08 Serie C1 campaign.[3] The issue finally came to an end on July 1, when Ficcadenti rescinded his contract with Verona and Reggina announced on their website to have appointed him as coach.[2] He however made a very poor start with Reggina, failing to achieve a single win in the first ten matchdays; a shock 3–1 home loss to Livorno, who was three points behind the amaranto before the match kick-off, convinced Reggina chairman Lillo Foti to sack Ficcadenti on November 1, 2007.[4]

On February 2009, Ficcadenti returned to Hellas Verona, serving as transfer market consultant to new club owner and chairman Giovanni Martinelli.[5]

On November 2009 he returned into management, being appointed head coach of Serie B side Piacenza as a replacement for dismissed trainer Fabrizio Castori.[6]

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