Derby dell'Emilia
The Derby dell'Emilia (Italian pronunciation: [ˈdɛrbi delleˈmiːlja]), is the name given in football to any match between Bologna F.C. 1909 and Parma Calcio 1913[1] Emilia is a region that approximately corresponds to the western and north-eastern portions of today's Emilia-Romagna. The region takes its name from the Via Aemilia, a Roman road in 187 BCE. It is contested twice a year when the two clubs participate in the same league competition, such as Serie A, and more often if the clubs meet in other competitions. Other matches between Emilian teams may also be referred to under the name Derby dell'Emilia. From the 2018–19 edition, with the return of Parma in Serie A three years after bankruptcy, the Derby dell'Emilia is again played.
Other names | Emilia Derby |
---|---|
Location | Italy |
Teams | Bologna Parma |
First meeting | Parma 3–3 Bologna Serie C1 (18 November 1983) |
Latest meeting | Parma 0–3 Bologna Serie A (7 February 2021) |
Statistics | |
Meetings total | 47 |
Most wins | 14 Bologna |
All-time series | Bologna: 14 Draws: 21 Parma: 12 |
Largest victory | Bologna 4–1 Parma (twice) Serie A (12 May 2019) and Serie A (28 September 2020) Parma 0–3 Bologna Serie A (7 February 2021) |
The rivalry comes about as Parma and Bologna are the two largest cities in Emilia-Romagna and the two clubs are the two most successful football clubs in the region, although Reggiana and Modena, respectively, are seen as the clubs' two closest rivals. Bologna lead the count in official titles won, with 9 major trophies (plus an Intertoto Cup and three Mitropa Cups), while Parma have won 8 trophies.
History
For much of the clubs' early history, games were not contested, so the first fixture was not until 6 November 1983, despite Bologna being formed in 1909 and Parma just four years later in 1913.[2][3] While Bologna competed for titles, becoming national champions 7 times and winning the Coppa Italia twice by 1974, Parma only dreamt of national success. The first meeting was an eventful 3–3 draw at the Stadio Ennio Tardini in what remains the fixture's highest scoring game and the lowest level at which it has been fought. March's return also saw no victor; it was a goalless draw. The rivalry was intensified because both sides were competing for the 1983–84 Serie C1 title. Indeed, the duo each finished joint top with 48 points and achieved promotion to Serie B.
Serie B was the scene for six more derbies before the decade was out and 1985 saw the clubs' only battle in the Coppa Italia: a 0–0 draw that eventually consigned both sides to failure to qualify from the group stage. Bologna's win (their first derby victory at the eighth attempt) and a draw and thus 3 points earned against Parma were crucial in their 1988 Serie B title win. In 1990, the derby was contested in Serie A for the first time, after Parma joined Bologna in Italian football's top tier. It was now Parma who had the upper hand, with Bologna relegated in the spring of 1991. The teams would not meet again until Bologna's return to Serie A in 1996, but then proceeded to play each other on an annual basis for nine consecutive years.
The final season of that run, 2004–05, was the rivalry at its zenith. Both sides had performed poorly, finishing 17th and 18th in the 20-strong league. The bottom three sides were to be relegated and to split the two Emilian sides, the traditional spareggio was required, involving a two-legged play-off to decide which of the two would remain in Serie A. Bologna won the first leg in the Stadio Ennio Tardini 1–0 on 14 June 2005, but succumbed to 2–1 aggregate defeat following Parma's two-goal victory in Bologna, securing the Crociati a place in Italy's top division.
In 2008, Bologna achieved promotion back to Serie A, but Parma dropped down to Serie B, so the teams did not meet again until the following year. In 2009–10, both teams managed 2–1 wins at home, preceding a three-match run of goalless draws, a result that occurred for the tenth time in the 36 meetings up to that point.[4]
Statistics
As of 7 February 2021, there have been 47 competitive meetings between the teams.[4] Each side have won 14 of these, and the remaining 21 matches have finished as draws. The biggest victory happened on 12 May 2019 and on 28 September 2020 when Bologna earned a 4–1 victory; another victory with a margin of three goals has happened on 7 February 2021, when Bologna wins 0-3. Other than that, seven times the match has been decided with a margin of two goals. Bologna has achieved this margin of victory twice, both times winning in 3–1 at home in Serie A. Parma have won by a two-goal margin on four occasions, twice at home and twice away, including the spareggio victory in 2005.
Competition | Bologna wins | Draws | Parma wins | Bologna goals | Parma goals |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
League | 13 | 20 | 11 | 51 | 43 |
Coppa Italia | 0 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
Other | 1 | 0 | 1 | 1 | 2 |
Total | 14 | 21 | 12 | 52 | 45 |
Honours
Bologna and Parma are the only teams in Emilia-Romagna to have won major titles. Bologna won the first of their seven league titles in 1924–25 and their last major silverware in 1974 in the Coppa Italia, before Parma's next title came in the 1991–92 Coppa Italia and then ten years later, in the 2001–02 Coppa Italia.
Team | League | Coppa Italia | Supercoppa Italiana | UEFA Cup | Cup Winners' Cup | European Super Cup | Total |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Bologna | 7 | 2 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 10 |
Parma | 0 | 3 | 1 | 2 | 1 | 1 | 8 |
Combined | 7 | 5 | 1 | 3 | 1 | 1 | 18 |
All-time results
Parma win Draw Bologna win
Bologna at home
|
Parma at home
|
Shared personnel
Players
A number of players have played for both clubs over the course of their careers. This is an incomplete list of players who have made at least one appearance for both:
- Adaílton
- Fabio Albinelli
- Stephen Appiah
- Mattia Bani
- Franco Battisodo
- Ishak Belfodil
- Corrado Bernicchi
- Stefano Bettarini
- Giovanni Bia
- Massimo Brambilla
- Matteo Brighi
- Giuseppe Cardone
- Marcello Castellini
- Tarcisio Catanese
- Pierluigi Di Già
- Dino Di Carlo
- Marco Di Vaio
- Luciano Facchini
- Giulio Falcone
- Marco Ferrante
- Emanuele Filippini
- Davide Fontolan
- Alberto Gilardino
- Federico Giunti
- Manfredo Grandi
- Cristiano Lupatelli
- Marco Macina
- Giampiero Maini
- Amedeo Mangone
- Marco Marocchi
- Carlo Matteucci
- Francesco Modesto
- Giacomo Murelli
- Hidetoshi Nakata
- Renato Olive
- Daniele Paponi
- Angelo Pilati
- Andrea Pisanu
- Giuseppe Pomati
- Matteo Rubin
- Pietro Strada
- Stefano Torrisi
- Francesco Valiani
- Paolo Vanoli
- Daniele Vantaggiato
- Rufo Emiliano Verga
- Fabio Vignaroli
- Cristian Zaccardo
Managers
Six coaches have managed both Bologna and Parma. Renzo Ulivieri, who lasted less than a year at Parma, has managed Bologna in three spells. Francesco Guidolin took charge of Bologna for 4 years at the turn of the millennium, before leading Parma to promotion from Serie B in 2009 and an impressive return to Serie A in 2009–10. Three of Bologna's last four managers have also managed Parma: Franco Colomba, Alberto Malesani (who won the 1998–99 UEFA Cup, the 1998–99 Coppa Italia and the 1999 Supercoppa Italiana with Parma) and recent Bologna boss Stefano Pioli. Former Bologna head coach Roberto Donadoni coached Parma for three and a half years and 141 matches.
Name | Bologna | Parma |
---|---|---|
Period | Period | |
Renzo Ulivieri | 1994–1998 2005 2006–2007 |
2001 |
Francesco Guidolin | 1999–2003 | 2008–2010 |
Franco Colomba | 2009–2010 | 2011–2012 |
Alberto Malesani | 2010–2011 | 1998–2001 |
Stefano Pioli | 2011–2014 | 2006–2007 |
Roberto Donadoni | 2015–2018 | 2012–2015 |
Other Emilian derbies
Because the terms derby dell'Emilia and derby emiliano simply mean "Emilian derby", any number of other matches could also be referred to under the same name, although the contest between Parma and Bologna is most often implied because they are the region's two biggest most successful clubs and the Derby della via Emilia is often preferred as a name for other Emilian derbies.
The six of Emilia-Romagna's 9 provinces that roughly correspond to the historic region of Emilia are Piacenza, Parma, Reggio Emilia, Modena, Bologna and Ferrara. Other than Parma and Bologna, 4 other clubs had participated in Serie A until 2018: Piacenza, Reggiana, Modena and SPAL. The promotion of Reggiana and Piacenza to Serie A in 1993 meant that each of the 6 Emilian provinces had had one team in Italian football's top division since its foundation in 1929; SPAL is based in Ferrara. In 2013 and 2015 respectively, Sassuolo and Carpi (both based in the Modena province) secured promotion having won the Serie B title. Parma is the only Emilian club to have played in Serie A without ever having won a Serie B league title.
Sassuolo's rise gave its match against Modena added significance. Sassuolo played in the third tier of Italian football for the first time in 2006 and made its Serie B debut in 2008. Promotion to Serie B in 2008 meant the club had outgrown the Stadio Enzo Ricci, so it moved to the nearby Stadio Alberto Braglia, Modena's ground. Promotion to Serie A in 2013 preceded a move to the Stadio Città del Tricolore in Reggio Emilia, Reggiana's home ground.
Other Emilian derbies often take different names. For example:
- Derby dei Ducati – Modena vs Parma
- Derby del Ducato – Parma vs Piacenza
- Derby dell'Enza (or Derby del Grana) – Parma vs Reggiana[5]
- Derby della Ghirlandina – Modena vs Sassuolo[6]
References
- "Italy". Archived from the original on 27 March 2014. Retrieved 13 February 2012.
- "Bologna Club History". Football Italia. football-italia.net. Retrieved 13 February 2012.
- "Parma Club History". Football Italia. football-italia.net. Retrieved 12 January 2012.
- "Bologna-Parma: le curiosità" [Bologna-Parma: trivia]. Parma F.C. (in Italian). fcparma.com. 20 January 2012. Archived from the original on 23 January 2013. Retrieved 14 February 2012.
{{cite news}}
: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link) - "Reggiana e Parma non-trovano la porta Il derby diventa una battaglia di ultra'" [Reggiana and Parma cannot find the goal and the derby becomes a battle of the ultras]. CorriereDellaSera.it (in Italian). 17 February 1997.
- "Modena-Sassuolo 2-5: Manita neroverde, la vetta è sempre più vicina" [Modena-Sassuolo 2-5: the summit is ever closer]. Goal.com (in Italian). 1 November 2011.