Edoardo Reja

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Edoardo Reja
Edoardo Reja 2014 (cropped).jpg
Reja with Lazio in 2014
Personal information
Full name Edoardo Reja [1]
Date of birth (1945-10-10) 10 October 1945 (age 78)
Place of birth Lucinico, Gorizia, Italy
Height 1.75 m (5 ft 9 in)
Position(s) Midfielder
Youth career
1961 San Lorenzo di Mossa
1961–1963 SPAL
Senior career*
YearsTeamApps(Gls)
1963–1968 SPAL 70 (2)
1968–1973 Palermo 124 (1)
1973–1976 Alessandria 76 (1)
1976–1977 Benevento 7 (0)
Total277(4)
Managerial career
1979–1980 Molinella
1980–1981 Monselice
1981 Pordenone
1982–1983 Monselice
1983–1984 Pro Gorizia
1984–1985 Treviso
1985 Treviso
1985–1986 Mestre
1987 Varese
1987–1989 Pescara (youth team)
1989–1990 Pescara
1990–1992 Cosenza
1992–1993 Verona
1993–1994 Bologna
1994–1995 Lecce
1996–1997 Brescia
1997–1998 Torino
1999–2001 Vicenza
2001–2002 Genoa
2003 Catania
2003–2004 Cagliari
2005–2009 Napoli
2009–2010 Hajduk Split
2010–2012 Lazio
2014 Lazio
2015–2016 Atalanta
2019–2022 Albania
2023 Gorica
*Club domestic league appearances and goals

Edoardo Reja (born 10 October 1945) is an Italian professional football manager and former player who was most recently the manager of Slovenian club Gorica.

Contents

After a career as a midfielder spent mostly with SPAL and Palermo, he began working as a manager. He won four promotions from Serie B, including as champions with Brescia (1997) and Vicenza (2000), as well as Cagliari (2004) and Napoli (2007).

Reja managed Vicenza, Napoli, Lazio and Atalanta in Serie A.

Playing career

Reja began his career with the SPAL 1907 youth squad, coached by Paolo Mazza, playing in midfield alongside lifelong friend Fabio Capello, and other notable players such as Louis Pasetti and Adriano Zanier. Together, they helped the team win the 1963–64 Campionato Nazionale Primavera. In 1965, Reja joined Capello in Serie A, in the SPAL 1907 first team, earning an appearance with the Italian U-23 squad. Reja played for two more teams, U.S. Città di Palermo and Alessandria in a long career that lasted until 1975, playing a total of 124 Serie A matches. [2]

Coaching career

Early career

Reja started his coaching career in 1979 serving as boss of Serie D team Molinella. Next year he then coached Monselice of Serie C2. In 1989, he coached his first Serie B team, Pescara, of which he was previously the youth squad boss. He successively gained good successes in the same league with Cosenza, Lecce and Brescia, where he won the championship. In fact, he launched the career of notable footballer Andrea Pirlo at Brescia, where Pirlo was a regular member of the squad. However, Reja opted to give up the opportunity to coach Brescia in Serie A, preferring to accept an offer from Torino, another Serie B team, where he then missed promotion defeated in the promotion playoffs to Perugia after a penalty shootout.

Serie A debut at Vicenza, Genoa, Catania and Cagliari

During the 1998–1999 season, he was appointed coach of Serie A club Vicenza, thus making his debut in a top division team, but was unable to save the team from relegation. Next year he remained at Vicenza and led his team back to Serie A, but promptly relegated one more time in 2001. In 2001–2002, he replaced Franco Scoglio at the helm of Genoa (Serie B), but to be fired himself only three months later. On 2002–2003, he was appointed in the mid-season by Catania boss Luciano Gaucci to replace John Toshack. In November 2003, he replaced Gian Piero Ventura at Cagliari and guided the rossoblu to second place in the Serie B and promotion to Serie A, but was not confirmed.

Napoli

In January 2005, Reja was appointed as the manager of Napoli, again after Ventura's dismissal. [3] He led Napoli to win Serie C1, obtaining promotion to Serie B in 2006, then a second consecutive promotion to Serie A in 2007 – returning the Naples team to the top flight for the first time since 2001.

In his first Serie A campaign with Napoli, Reja guided them to an Intertoto Cup qualification spot, and was confirmed at the helm of Napoli in the 2008–09 Serie A season. He managed to lead the Partenopei to the second qualification round of the UEFA Cup, where they were defeated by S.L. Benfica. Napoli rose up to first place in the Serie A table in the first half of the season. After two points in nine games caused the team to fall into the bottom half, Reja was sacked on 10 March 2009, following a 0–2 home loss to Lazio, and replaced by former Italian team boss Roberto Donadoni. [4] [5]

Lazio

After a short successful spell as head coach of Croatian side Hajduk Split from August 2009 to February 2010, Reja opted to quit his job in Split in order to become the new manager of S.S. Lazio. [6] He was unveiled as the new Lazio head coach the following day, replacing Davide Ballardini. [7] He turned the fortunes of a club in dismay, guiding it out of the relegation zone and into a mid-table finish in the season.

The 2010–11 season for Lazio started in an astonishing way, with the team surprisingly heading Serie A with a four-point advantage to runners-up Inter after nine games, thanks to Reja's abilities in relaunching players such as Mauro Zárate, Cristian Ledesma and Stefano Mauri, as well as introducing new key signings such as Brazilian international Hernanes. On 17 May 2012 he resigned from the job, despite the president's pleas for him to stay on. [8]

After the sacking of Vladimir Petković, Reja returned to Lazio for a second spell on 4 January 2014, completing the season in ninth place. On 12 June 2014, he resigned from his role, with Stefano Pioli appointed as his replacement the same day. [9]

Atalanta

Reja was appointed trainer of Atalanta on 4 March 2015 with the team three points above the relegation zone after the dismissal of Stefano Colantuono. [10] His time at the club ended in May 2016, having saved them twice from relegation. [11]

Albania

On 17 April 2019, Albania signed Reja to a seven-month contract after fellow Italian Christian Panucci was dismissed the previous month. [12] [13]

Gorica

On 2 March 2023, just a few months after the end of his contract with the Albania national team, Reja returned into management as the new head coach of Slovenian PrvaLiga bottom-placed club ND Gorica. [14] On 17 April 2023, after only seven games in charge, his contract with Gorica was mutually terminated. [15]

Personal life

Reja was born in the village of Lucinico (Slovene : Ločnik), now a suburb of Gorizia (Slovene : Gorica), near the border between Italy and Slovenia. His father was a Slovenian from the village of Vipolže in Brda, Slovenia, while his mother was Friulian. [16] [17] [18] [19] He is fluent in Italian, Slovenian, and Friulan. [16] [20] [21] However, his levels of fluency vary: while he is able to speak the standard form of Italian, he only speaks a regional variety of Slovenian, strongly influenced by his native Brda dialect. [22]

He is close friends with Fabio Capello. [23] Reja has been married to his wife Livia since 1969; he met his wife while rooming with Capello in Ferrara, at the time playing for SPAL 1907. [24]

Managerial statistics

As of match played 14 April 2023 [25]
Managerial record by team and tenure
TeamNat.FromToRecord
GWDLWin %
Pordenone Flag of Italy.svg 1 July 198123 November 198114275014.29
Monselice Flag of Italy.svg 1 July 198230 June 198340111019027.50
Pro Gorizia Flag of Italy.svg 7 July 198330 June 19844091318022.50
Treviso Flag of Italy.svg 30 June 198425 February 19852751111018.52
Treviso Flag of Italy.svg 15 April 198512 June 19857025000.00
Mestre Flag of Italy.svg 23 November 19853 June 1986257126028.00
Varese Flag of Italy.svg 7 March 19879 June 198711236018.18
Pescara Flag of Italy.svg 25 September 19894 June 199035131012037.14
Cosenza Flag of Italy.svg 1 November 199016 June 199271242819033.80
Verona Flag of Italy.svg 16 June 199214 June 199343121615027.91
Bologna Flag of Italy.svg 29 November 199318 June 1994251438056.00
Lecce Flag of Italy.svg 16 November 199430 January 19959225022.22
Brescia Flag of Italy.svg 26 February 199630 June 199753231614043.40
Torino Flag of Italy.svg 7 October 199730 June 19983315117045.45
Vicenza Flag of Italy.svg 3 February 199922 June 200195372038038.95
Genoa Flag of Italy.svg 29 December 20014 March 20028044000.00
Catania Flag of Italy.svg 29 January 20036 April 20039234022.22
Cagliari Flag of Italy.svg 24 November 200330 June 2004301794056.67
Napoli Flag of Italy.svg 16 January 200510 March 2009189925245048.68
Hajduk Split Flag of Croatia.svg 18 August 20099 February 2010171133064.71
Lazio Flag of Italy.svg 10 February 20102 June 2012106522034049.06
Lazio Flag of Italy.svg 4 January 201412 June 2014251177044.00
Atalanta Flag of Italy.svg 4 March 201514 June 201653142019026.42
Albania Flag of Albania.svg 17 April 201931 December 20223814915036.84
Gorica Flag of Slovenia.svg 2 March 202317 April 20237214028.57
Total1,010391292327038.71

Honours

Player

SPAL 1907

U.S. Alessandria Calcio 1912

Manager

Brescia

Vicenza

Napoli

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References

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  2. "I friulani più conosciuti" (in Italian). Totalfootball. Archived from the original on 23 July 2011. Retrieved 18 January 2009.
  3. "Napoli, esonerato Ventura la panchina a Eddy Reja" [Napoli, Ventura sacked, Eddy Reja on the bench]. La Repubblica (in Italian). 18 January 2005. Retrieved 21 February 2020.
  4. "Roberto Donadoni nuovo tecnico azzurro" (in Italian). SSC Napoli. 10 March 2009. Retrieved 10 March 2009.
  5. "Donadoni replaces Reja at Napoli helm". UEFA. 10 March 2009. Retrieved 21 February 2020.
  6. "Reja: Vratit ću Hajduk gdje mu je mjesto!" (in Croatian). HNK Hajduk. 9 February 2010. Retrieved 10 February 2010.
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  11. Bassi, Luca (18 May 2016). "Due salvezze e tanto bel gioco: Atalanta, è giusto non-confermare Reja?" [Two survivals and such beautiful play: Atalanta, is it fair to not confirm Reja?] (in Italian). Bergamo Today. Retrieved 21 February 2020.
  12. "Edoardo Reja, trajneri i ri i Shqipërisë" [Edoardo Reja, new coach of Albania] (in Albanian). Albanian Football Association. 17 April 2019.
  13. "Edoardo Reja, the new manager of Albania". 17 April 2019.
  14. "Ufficiale, Reja torna in panchina al Nova Gorica" (in Italian). Corriere dello Sport. 3 March 2023.
  15. "Edy Reja na klopi Gorice zdržal le mesec in pol" (in Slovenian). RTV Slovenija. 17 April 2023. Retrieved 17 April 2023.
  16. 1 2 "LA SLOVENIA DI REJA! | cittaceleste.it". Archived from the original on 28 July 2012. Retrieved 12 February 2012.
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