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Ignazio Arcoleo

Ignazio Arcoleo
Personal information
Date of birth (1948-02-15) 15 February 1948 (age 68)
Place of birth Palermo, Italy
Playing position Manager (former midfielder)
Youth career
Elenka T.N.
Juventina Palermo
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1966–1967 Palermo 4 (0)
1968–1969 Taranto 2 (0)
1970–1974 Palermo 126 (5)
1974–1978 Genoa 132 (8)
1978–1980 Palermo 62 (1)
1980–1982 Reggina
1982–1983 Nocerina
Teams managed
1983–1985 Mazara
1985–1986 Akragas
1992–1995 Trapani
1995–1997 Palermo
1998 Palermo
1999–2000 Gualdo
2000–2001 Foggia
2002 Frosinone
2005 Nocerina
2006 Trapani (technical director)
* Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only.

Ignazio Arcoleo (born 15 February 1948 in Palermo) is an Italian footballer and manager.

Arcoleo, born in Mondello, a Palermo maritime frazione, to a fishermans' family, started his professional career in 1966/1967 for his home city team. He returned to play for Palermo in 1970, becoming one of the most representative players for the rosanero in the period. He also played a Coppa Italia final in 1974, being the author of the foul to Giacomo Bulgarelli which allowed Bologna to kick and score the equaliser penalty in injury time, and then win the tournament on penalty shootouts. From 1974/1975 to 1977/1978, Arcoleo played for Genoa, being remembered as the author of the first football goal ever shown on colour TV, during a Serie A home match against Torino ended in a 1–1 tie and played on 6 February 1977.

Arcoleo returned to Palermo, then in Serie B, on 1978, and again played another unsuccessful Coppa Italia final, lost to top division giants Juventus. He left Palermo in 1980 and retired in 1983.

In 1983/1984, Arcoleo started his managing career, becoming head coach of Serie D team Mazara. He coached Mazara for two seasons, winning the Serie D league in 1985: however the promotion was then cancelled by the federation because of alleged matchfixing. In 1985/1986, Arcoleo unsuccessfully coached Akragas, as the then-Serie C2 team relegated at the end of the season despite very strong performances in the second half of the season.

Arcoleo had his breakthrough at the coaching level during his years at the helm of Trapani, another Serie D team, which he led from the top amateur league to Serie C1 and almost reaching an otherwise historical promotion to Serie B, being defeated on playoffs by Gualdo. Thanks to his results on Trapani, Arcoleo was called to coach "his" Palermo the next season. The 1995/1996 Palermo, widely considered a minor Serie B team, was mostly composed by local players, most of them right from Arcoleo's Trapani: despite this, the rosanero managed to play one of their best seasons in the 1990s, obtaining a seventh place in the final league table and gaining several successes in the Coppa Italia, eliminating Serie A well-established teams such as Parma and Vicenza.


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Wikipedia

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