Centro Tecnico Federale di Coverciano

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Centro Tecnico Federale di Coverciano
Il Centro, Università del calcio, Casa degli azzurri
Centro Tecnico Federale Coverciano.jpg
The technical centre of the Italian Football Federation
Centro Tecnico Federale di Coverciano
Location Coverciano, Florence, Italy
Coordinates 43°46′45.05″N11°18′02.88″E / 43.7791806°N 11.3008000°E / 43.7791806; 11.3008000
Owner Italian Football Federation
Type Football training facility
Construction
Broke ground1953
Opened1958
Website
Official website

Il Centro Tecnico Federale di Coverciano, is the central training ground and technical headquarters of the Italian Football Federation, located in the Coverciano quartiere of Florence, Italy.

Contents

History

The Center was founded by Luigi Ridolfi Vay da Verrazzano and Dante Berretti and designed by architects Francesco Tiezzi and Arnaldo Innocenti. [1] The decision to build the Center in Coverciano was decided on 29 March 1952 (resolution of the Federal Council of 8 May 1951), the date of which the land was purchased by the FIGC. Just over a year later, construction work began, and was completed in October 1957. [1] The official inauguration of the Center was on 6 November 1958, in the presence of the then-president of the FIGC, Bruno Zauli. [1] Prior to its construction, the FIGC's technical sector (settore tecnico) was headquartered in Rome with the other departments.

Facilities

The Center is known as the Casa degli azzurri (House of the national teams) as it is the primary training ground for all 19 Italy national football teams from the U-15 age group and above (including women's), as well as other Italy representative football teams. [2] [3] It is also known as the Università del calcio (University of football) as it hosts high-level courses for coaches, sporting directors, and trainers. [3] [4] [5] [6] [7]

The Center hosts the Museo del Calcio, the offices of the Technical Sector, the headquarters of the Italian Football Coaches Association, the headquarters of the Regional Committee of the National Amateur League, the headquarters of the Regional Referee Committee, and the headquarters of the Italian Association of Referees section of Florence. [2]

Facilities include: [8]

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References

  1. 1 2 3 "Storia" (in Italian). figc.it.
  2. 1 2 "Il Centro" (in Italian). figc.it. 9 September 2024.
  3. 1 2 "Coverciano: "Università del calcio e Casa degli Azzurri"" (in Italian). figc.it.
  4. Roan, Dan (2010-01-22). "BBC Sport - Football - England learn from Italy's national training centre". BBC News. Retrieved 2012-07-23.
  5. Williams, Richard (17 February 2017). "Italy still producing prize managerial exports from its winning system". The Guardian. Retrieved 13 April 2017.
  6. Smith, Rory (11 May 2017). "At Italy's Coaching Academy, a Pipeline of Champions" . Retrieved 16 October 2017 via www.nytimes.com.
  7. Bandini, Nicky. "Inside Italy's Manager School, Where Conte, Ancelotti and Allegri Learned to Win". Bleacher Report . Retrieved 16 October 2017.
  8. "Le strutture del Centro Tecnico" (in Italian). figc.it.