Full name | Associazione Calcio Dilettanti Treviso 2013 |
---|---|
Founded | 1909 1993 (refounded) 2009 (refounded) 2013 (refounded) |
Ground |
Stadio Omobono Tenni, Treviso, Italy |
Capacity | 10,000 |
Chairman | Nisio Lenzini |
League | Eccellenza |
2012–13 | Lega Pro Prima Divisione/A , 18th |
Associazione Calcio Dilettanti Treviso 2013 is an Italian football club based in Treviso. The club was formed in 1909 and refounded in 1993, in 2009 and in 2013. The club currently plays in Eccellenza.
The club was founded in 1900 as Football Club Treviso and never played in the top flight of Italian football, always taking part to the lower national divisions, from Serie B to Serie D, with a sixth place in the 1950–51 Serie B table, under head coach Nereo Rocco, as its best result. In 1993 the club was shut down because of financial troubles.
In summer 1993 a new club was admitted to Serie D, as F.B.C. Treviso 1993. The club experienced a remarkable line of three consecutive promotions from 1994 to 1997 under coach Giuseppe Pillon which brought Treviso to Serie B, over 40 years after its last appearance in the second-highest Italian league. Treviso was relegated to Serie C1 in 2001, but returned to Serie B in 2003. In 2005, Pillon returned to Treviso and the team gained a respectable fifth place and a spot in the promotion playoffs but lost out to Perugia. However, in August 2005, after both Genoa and Torino were relegated out of Serie A, respectively for fraud and financial troubles, Treviso and Ascoli were arbitrarily promoted in Serie A as a replacement.
In 2005–06, Treviso played in Italian Serie A for the first and, as so far, only time since its foundation. The team was coached by Ezio Rossi, then replaced by Alberto Cavasin. The team was initially forced play their Serie A home games at the Stadio Euganeo, in the nearby city of Padua, because of the inadequacy of their home stadium, considered inadequate for Serie A matches owing both to security and capacity issues by the FIGC. However, a special legal dispensation was approved by the Italian parliament to allow Treviso to play at their home ground.