About the Book
Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 24. Chapters: Claudio Ranieri, Marcello Lippi, Roberto Donadoni, Luigi De Canio, Zden k Zeman, Edoardo Reja, William Garbutt, Franco Colomba, Giampiero Ventura, Vujadin Bo kov, Ottavio Bianchi, Emiliano Mondonico, Walter Novellino, Walter Mazzarri, Bortolo Mutti, Luigi Simoni, Carlo Mazzone, Renzo Ulivieri, Francesco Scoglio, Giovanni Galeone, Alberto Bigon, Luis Vinicio, Annibale Frossi, Adolfo Baloncieri, Vincenzo Montefusco, Bruno Pesaola, Angelo Sormani, Antonio Vojak, Attila Sallustro, Eraldo Monzeglio, Carlo Carcano, Ferenc Molnar, Amedeo Amadei, Rino Marchesi, Giuseppe Chiappella, Roberto Lerici, Karoly Csapkay, Jarbas Faustinho, Raffaele Sansone, Rolf Steiger, Angelo Mattea, Giovanni Vecchina, Arnaldo Sentimenti. Excerpt: Claudio Ranieri, (born 20 October 1951 in Rome) is an Italian football manager who has managed many well-known clubs in Europe, including Napoli, Fiorentina, Valencia, Atletico Madrid, Chelsea, Parma and Juventus. He was most recently manager of AS Roma, a job he left on 20 February 2011. Ranieri first signed as a professional football player with AS Roma, though in his two seasons with the club he only made six appearances; he also had a one-month loan spell with Siracusa. As a player, Ranieri played most of his career as a defender for Catanzaro (1974-1982), Catania (1982-1984), and Palermo (1984-1986). He was involved in four successful promotion campaigns (two with Catanzaro and one each with Catania and Palermo). After amateur side Vigor Lamezia, his first managerial position was at Campania Puteolana, a small team in Pozzuoli. He took charge there in 1987. However, it was at Cagliari that he made his name, getting them promoted to Serie A from the third division Serie C1 in successive seasons. He moved to coach at Napoli for two seasons. Despite finishing in fourth place in Serie A, he won no silve...