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AC Milan
San Siro
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| The San Siro stadium is named after the saint in whose honour a small local church was dedicated. It was a gift from Piero Pirelli (AC Milan's club president from 1909-1929) to his beloved city of Milan. The stadium was officially opened on September 19, 1926 after construction work that took 120 builders only thirteen and a half months to complete. The whole operation cost around 5 million lira, the equivalent of 3.5bn lira in today's money. The chief architects were Ulisse Stacchini (who also designed the Central Train Station) and Cugini. The original San Siro was a typically English construction consisting of four grandstands with a maximum capacity of 35,000 spectators. 10,000 quintals of cement, 3,500 cubic metres of sand and 1,500 quintals of iron rods were used to build the stadium. 80 kilogrammes of chalk were used to mark out the pitch. The first match played in the new stadium was a friendly against none other than local rivals Inter on September 19th 1926; it finished 6-3 to the visitors. The stadium hosted its first championship game on October 6th with Milan again losing (2-1 to Sampierdarenese) and its first international was held on February 20, 1927 when Italy drew 2-2 with Czechoslovakia. The San Siro was home solely to Milan until the end of 1945; Inter played their home games at the "Arena Napoleonica." Football's very own "Scala" has had its fair share of refurbishments on the road to becoming the impressive structure it is today. The major changes took place between 1938 and 1939 with an increase in the capacity to 50,000 spectators, between 1954 and 1956 with the construction of the second tier and most recently in 1990 when a third tier was added. In 1935 Milan bought the ground from the local council and three years later decided to enlarge it. Football was becoming a big spectator sport and the San Siro needed to increase its capacity. The development project was overseen by architect Rocca and chief engineer Calzolari. Utilising the same supporting structure a system of fitted steps were built with flights leading up with entry from outside. The capacity was originally 150,000, but the city council issued a decree reducing it to 100,000 in 1952.The re-modernised stadium was officially opened on May 31, 1939 when Italy played out a 2-2 draw with England. Gate receipts were 1.2 million lira. Work on the new ground finished in 1939 at a cost of 5.1 million lira. The second phase of expansion began in 1954 and officially finished twelve months later on October 26, 1955, raising the capacity to 85,000. Floodlights were installed for the first time in 1957 and ten years later an electronic scoreboard was added. In 1979 the floodlights were replaced with more modern ones and the second tier was repaired. On March 3, 1980 a stone at the entrance to the ground was engraved with the name Giuseppe Meazza, one of Inter's greats, who had died the previous year. In 1986 the first tier was filled with numbered and colour-coded seats: red in the main stand, orange in the opposite stand, green behind the north goal and blue where the Milan hardcore fans gathered. The latest phase of modernisation took place for the World Cup in 1990. The third tier was erected after many months of hard work; the official opening took place on April 25, 1990. Eleven outside towers (inside were flights of steps leading up to the next level) held the weight of the top tier and the framework of the roof. The roof was covered with translucent polycarbonate panels. The second and third tiers were also filled with numbered and colour-coded seats. The pitch dimensions are 105 metres long by 68 metres wide and the stadium is situated near the racecourse, around 6 kilometres from the centre of Milan. The San Siro is a symbol of Milan just as the Scala and Duomo are, but it draws its world fame not only from football as it has hosted a wide range of events throughout its history. There was the World Junior Welterweight title re-match between Duilio Loi and Carlos Ortis on September 1, 1960 which drew a crowd of 53,043, of which 8,000 were ringside. The stadium was floodlit with the ring set up in the middle of the pitch. The gate receipts were 130 million lira. The Italian won the bout. The stadium has also played host to a series of "historical" concerts. Bob Marley played his one and only Italian concert on a stage at the north end of the ground on June 27, 1980. The chance to see the Jamaican singer live drew a crowd of 90,000 - similar to that of a derby game. There was the same rush for tickets when Bruce Springsteen played there in 1985. Three years ago, the main stand hosted
an outdoor summer disco. Today, there is a museum behind the south stand (curva sud) that
looks back over the history of both Milan and Inter, housing mementoes and souvenirs of
personalities that have helped write the stadium's rich history. |
History of the Jersey
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To coincide with
the club's centenary, this season the Rossoneri will wear the old Milan shirt from the
start of the century. The jersey which Kilpin and his team-mates proudly wore differs from
the new one only in terms of fabric and sponsor. It is equally as beautiful: narrow stripes, little buttons and a microtexture piquet fabric. The idea came from Adidas, the club's technical sponsor, and celebrates a century of the club's life. With the city of Milan's crest on the chest (and the star1 appears in it too), the tricolour Scudetto has been moved - but only on this shirt - to the left sleeve. The symbol of the Milan One Hundred has been stitched onto the other sleeve. This strip will be worn only for Champions League matches. The second strip for cup matches is golden yellow, and the third one is blue. It is thought that the same shirts that were worn last season will continue to be used for League matches (broad red and black stripes, or all white). There will be one, small difference, however: a small white, red and green triangle will commemorate the club's most recent Championship victory. 1 The star or 'stella' was awarded to
Milan for winning ten national titles |
THE STORY OF MILANELLO
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If the San Siro stadium is
"La Scala" of football, Milanello is its university. It has been Milan's
headquarters since 1963 (the year of the first inauguration and the first UEFA European
Cup). It took two years to build and was commissioned by the then president, Andrea
Rizzoli. This gem was designed by the architect Viani (no relation to the great Milan
coach Gipo Viani) and by the engineer Crescentini. The Milanello centre revolves around its director, Antore Peloso, who has won everything with Milan as he has been in charge since 1986. The arrival of Berlsconi signalled a number of changes. As soon as the president took office he awarded the contract for restructuring the entire complex to Edilnord. Milanello is one of the largest sports centres in existence. It is one of the leading European centres, surrounded by 114,000 square metres of countryside (including a pine-forest and a small lake). It straddles the municipalities of Carnago and Cassano Magnago and is about 40 kilometres from Milan with which it is linked by motorway (Autostrada dei Laghi). The municipalities' borders dissect the changing rooms. It has six football pitches (3 inside and 3 outside), one small astroturf pitch (35 metres by 30), one covered pitch (42 x 24) and a cage built during the days of Arrigo Sacchi. In the woods a 1,200 metre track has been built and is usually used for running and cycling by players recovering from injury. The main part of the centre is made up of a small building with two floors with offices, a bar, a restaurant and two dining rooms, a lounge with fireplace, a room with 2 pool tables, rooms for first-team players and a fully-equipped infirmary including a sauna. At lower-ground level there is the storage area, the laundry rooms and the underground car park where the team coach is parked. The "home" of the Devil has 46 rooms with a total of 56 beds (including the guest-quarters for minors who play in the under-18 Milan teams and who usually live at the centre). Club president Silvio Berlusconi, who has always seen the team's headquarters as the ideal place to relax, also has his own room, but never uses it. During 13 years as president he has only slept at Milanello once on the eve of Milan-Werder Bremen match (on 15 March 1989), the quarter finals of the European Cup. Following an increase in the number of staff, even the president's room was taken over by the team and assigned to the players. It is currently occupied by Sala and Guglielminpietro. Andrea Rizzoli was a man full of foresight and when he had the centre built he ensured that a clause was inserted in the documents donating the complex to AC Milan which stated that Milanello could not be sold to anyone apart from Federcalcio. The Federation, whose headquarters are at Coverciano, has in fact used the Milan sports centre to prepare for some big tournaments in the past. The European championships in 1988 and 1996, as well as the two last two World Cups. But the Devil's sports centre is often visited by many other clubs, who have made notes of its secrets before building their own centres along similar lines to the Milan centre. The sports centre at Collecchio (Parma) and the one at Formello (Lazio) are both based on Milanello. People of note from Fiorentina, Barcelona, Porto, Sporting Lisbon, South American clubs and the metrostars of New York have visited on the advice of former AC Milan player Roberto Donadoni. There are 14 permanent staff at
Milanello. Serist won the catering contract while Biffi looks after the upkeep of the
grass and the grounds. The Milanello "guardian" is a splendid German shepherd
called Max that succeeded another 'distinguished' dog at the sports centre. Diana would
often fetch balls during training and carry them back to the football pitch. Liedholm used
to say: "With me Diana is even learning to play football." |
Trophies
1901 1906 1907 1951 1955 1957 1959 1962 1968 1979 1988 1992 1993 1994 1996 1999 |
1963 1969 1989 1990 1994 |
1969 1989 1990 |
1989 1990 1995 |
1968 1973 |
1967 1972 1973 1977
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1989 1992 1993 1994 |
1951 1956 |