x

SPORTS

Former Greece International Team Coach Ranieri to the Rescue: ‘I’m Here to Save Sampdoria’

October 17, 2019

ROME — Claudio Ranieri loves a challenge and his latest job at Sampdoria will be anything but straightforward.

The Genoa-based club sits last in Serie A, has lost six of seven matches and Fabio Quagliarella — the team’s most emblematic player and the league’s leading scorer last season — is in a goal drought.

“It’s not going to be easy. But nothing in my career has been easy,” Ranieri said when he was presented this week. “So the challenge is a welcome one.

“I’m convinced that Sampdoria doesn’t belong (in last place). When a squad is in last place it loses its self-esteem, so restoring self-esteem will be the first order of business. I’ll accept a defeat only once we’re second to nobody in terms of motivation and desire to sacrifice yourself for teammates.”

It’s the 20th coaching job of Ranieri’s career — including two stops at both Valencia and Roma.

While he will always be remembered for leading Leicester to a highly improbable Premier League title in 2016, Ranieri remains a rescue man.

He was hired to replace Eusebio Di Francesco at Roma for the final three months of last season and earn the Giallorossi a spot in the Champions League. When he took over, Roma was fifth and three points behind Inter Milan; at season’s end, Roma was sixth and still three points behind Inter.

 

Ranieri again replaced Di Francesco at Sampdoria.

“Replacing Eusebio again is bizarre. It’s a strange destiny,” Ranieri said. “I hope he finds another squad soon and that he doesn’t hate me.”

And as luck would have it, Ranieri’s first match in charge of “La Samp” will come against Roma on Sunday, which is his 68th birthday.

Roma is Ranieri’s hometown club, the team he grew up supporting and the first professional side that he played for.

“The moment you go out onto the pitch that affection gets left behind and it’s all about being professional,” Ranieri said. “I’m a Roma fan but I’ve always liked Sampdoria. I was pleased when they won Serie A (in 1991) and upset when they lost at Wembley (the 1992 European Cup final, to Barcelona), also because I was there to see it.”

While Sampdoria flirted with the Europa League places last season before finishing ninth, the past several months have been turbulent after an ownership bid led by former Sampdoria star Gianluca Vialli failed.

Fans this week protested outside the home of former Sampdoria president Edoardo Garrone for selling the club to current owner Massimo Ferrero, who has curtailed his investments in the team.

Sampdoria has spent only one of the last 17 seasons in Serie B, in 2011-12, so relegation would be a complete failure.

“What I ask is simple: run until you die on the pitch,” Ranieri said. “I didn’t come here to develop young players or polish the squad. I came here to save Sampdoria.”

By: Andrew Dampf, AP Sports Writer

RELATED

NYON, Switzerland  — A three-goal spree in six second-half minutes lifted Olympiacos to a first European title for Greek soccer clubs on Monday after beating AC Milan 3-0 in the UEFA Youth League final.

Top Stories

Columnists

A pregnant woman was driving in the HOV lane near Dallas.

General News

NEW YORK – Meropi Kyriacou, the new Principal of The Cathedral School in Manhattan, was honored as The National Herald’s Educator of the Year.

Video

A Palestinian Baby in Gaza is Born an Orphan in an Urgent Cesarean Section after an Israeli Strike

RAFAH, Gaza Strip (AP) — Sabreen Jouda came into the world seconds after her mother left it.

NEW YORK  — Monday's opening statements in the first criminal trial of a former American president provided a clear roadmap of how prosecutors will try to make the case that Donald Trump broke the law, and how the defense plans to fight the charges on multiple fronts.

ASTORIA – The singer Anastasia visited St.

CHICAGO, IL – This spring, Wrightwood 659 hosts Chryssa & New York, the first museum exhibition in North America in more than four decades to focus on the Greek-born artist Chryssa (1933–2013).

NEW YORK – Greek-American George Patrikis, owner of Ditmars Flower Shop in Astoria, was featured in the New York Times on April 15 about the rise in the cost of a dozen red roses from $60 in 2019 to $72 today.

Enter your email address to subscribe

Provide your email address to subscribe. For e.g. [email protected]

You may unsubscribe at any time using the link in our newsletter.