List of Parma Calcio 1913 seasons

(Redirected from List of Parma F.C. seasons)

This is a list of seasons played by Parma Calcio 1913, an Italian professional football club currently playing in Serie A based in Parma, Emilia-Romagna. It details Parma's achievements in major competitions, together with the top scorers for each season of their existence up to the most recent completed season. Top scorers in bold were also the top scorers in the league that season. Parma have never won a top flight league title, but have won three Italian Cups, one Supercoppa Italiana, as well as two UEFA Cups, one European Super Cup and one UEFA Cup Winners' Cup. The club won all eight of these trophies between 1992 and 2002, a period in which it is also achieved its best ever league finish as runners-up in the 1996–97 season.

As of 2024, although Parma have spent just 27 seasons in Serie A, they have amassed the fifteenth-most points in the league's history and have the fifteenth-best average points total per season in the division (assuming 3 points for a win throughout its history), whose inception was in 1929.[1] Since 1929, Parma have spent 27 seasons in the top flight of Italian football, 31 at the second level, 32 at the third and 5 at the fourth.

History

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The club was founded as Parma Foot Ball Club in December 1913.[2] At this time Parma's matches were less well-organised and arranged on a largely ad-hoc basis. Official records from these matches are sketchy at best. The club began playing league football in 1919 and became founder members of Serie B in 1928. The club would then be renamed Associazione Sportiva Parma in 1932. Much of the next few decades was spent in the doldrums; a time which included the absorption of A.C. Parmense and another rename to Associazone Club Parma in 1968 due to financial difficulties.

Easily Parma's most successful period followed promotion to Serie A in 1990 under Nevio Scala.[3] Scala remained at the club until 1996 and won the Crociati's first ever major trophies – securing one Coppa Italia, one UEFA Cup Winners' Cup, one UEFA Cup and one Supercoppa Italiana win. Four more triumphs – two in the Coppa Italia, one in the UEFA Cup and another in the Supercoppa Italiana – followed before 2002. The club became embroiled in financial disaster after the fraud of the Parmalat and A.C. Parma owners came to a head soon after and no major trophies have been won since. The club was re-founded as Parma Football Club in 2004 and a sale to current owner Tommaso Ghirardi in early 2007.

Champions Runners-up

Seasons

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Season League[nb 1][nb 2] Cup[nb 3] Europe / Other Top league goalscorer(s)
Level Division Pld W D L GF GA Pts Pos Players(s) Goals
1919–20 2 Promozione/Emilia13 8 5 1 2 27 13 11 2nd ↑[nb 4] Was not held
1920–21 1 Prima Categoria/Emilia/A17 8 5 1 2 27 13 11 2nd
Prima Categoria/Emilia/Final8 2 1 0 1 0 5 1 2nd
1921–22 Prima Categoria/Emilia/A10 4 2 1 1 6 4 5 2nd 1R
Prima Categoria/Emilia/Final6 6 1 2 3 8 13 4 3rd
1922–23 2 Seconda Divisione/D6 14 7 2 5 33 17 16 3rd Was not held
1923–24 Seconda Divisione/F6 14 8 4 2 30 13 20 2nd
1924–25 Seconda Divisione/Nord/C9 16 12 1 3 45 16 25 1st
Seconda Divisione/Nord/Final2 6 3 1 2 9 10 7 1st
1925–26 1 Prima Divisione/B2 22 5 2 15 23 58 16 11th ↓   Mattioli 10
1926–27 2 Prima Divisione/C4 18 8 4 6 27 25 20 4th 3R
1927–28 Prima Divisione/B4 18 21 4th Was not held
1928–29 Prima Divisione/B3 26 15 6 5 57 31 36 1st
Prima Divisione/Final 2 0 1 1 1 2 1 2nd
1929–30 Serie B 34 12 8 14 38 57 32 12th
1930–31 Serie B 34 10 7 17 45 64 27 13th
1931–32 Serie B 34 3 3 28 25 98 9 18th ↓
1932–33 3 Prima Divisione/E9 24 13 4 7 41 33 30 2nd
1933–34 Prima Divisione/B8 26 17 4 5 61 22 38 1st
Prima Divisione/Final B4 6 2 0 4 7 11 4 4th
1934–35 Prima Divisione/B8 26 15 7 4 58 18 37 2nd   Giuseppe Cella 15
1935–36 Serie C/B4 30 12 6 12 39 39 30 9th 3R
1936–37 Serie C/B5 30 9 11 10 39 40 29 10th 3R
1937–38 Serie C/B5 30 4 9 17 25 57 17 15th 1R
1938–39 Serie C/B8 26 12 6 8 34 26 30 5th 1R
1939–40 Serie C/B8 30 14 8 8 42 33 36 4th 2R   Alessandro Fornasaris 20
1940–41 Serie C/B8 30 15 5 10 56 46 35 5th 3R
1941–42 Serie C/B8 30 20 7 3 89 37 47 2nd DNQ   Luciano Degara 30
1942–43 Serie C/G12 19 17 1 1 82 11 35 1st DNQ   Luciano Degara 31
Serie C/Final B2 10 6 1 3 23 10 13 DQ - 6th
1943–44 Leagues suspended for World War II Was not held Campionato Alto Italia Grp   Enzo Loni 11
1944–45
1945–46 2 Serie B-C/C3 22 12 4 6 36 20 28 3rd
1946–47 Serie B/B3 40 14 10 16 41 45 38 14th
1947–48 Serie B/B3 34 12 14 8 33 28 38 7th[nb 5]
1948–49 Serie B 42 12 13 17 42 59 37 19th ↓[nb 6]
1949–50 3 Serie C/B4 40 21 9 10 64 28 52 2nd
1950–51 Serie C/B4 38 21 7 10 57 32 49 3rd   William Bronzoni 20
1951–52 Serie C/B4 34 21 10 3 75 24 52 2nd   Edmundo Fabbri 20
1952–53 Serie C 34 14 8 12 47 31 36 6th   Július Korostelev 15
1953–54 Serie C 34 17 9 8 45 23 43 1st   Július Korostelev 15
1954–55 2 Serie B 34 8 17 9 37 40 33 9th   Aldo Fontana
  Čestmír Vycpálek
8
1955–56 Serie B 34 10 8 16 36 46 28 15th   Paolo Erba 14
1956–57 Serie B 34 9 13 12 33 38 31 12th   Paolo Erba 16
1957–58 Serie B 34 5 14 15 25 49 24 18th DNQ   Carlo Dell'Omodarme 6
1958–59 Serie B 38 10 12 16 41 64 32 18th 2R   Franco Marmiroli 13
1959–60 Serie B 38 9 16 13 38 50 34 14th R32   Giuseppe Calzolari
  Giampaolo Menichelli
8
1960–61 Serie B 38 12 11 15 36 36 35 13th R32 Coppa delle Alpi[nb 7][nb 8] W   Giuseppe Calzolari 13
1961–62 Serie B 38 9 17 12 25 33 35 12th 1R   Giovanni Meregalli 6
1962–63 Serie B 38 12 11 15 32 44 35 13th 1R   Giovanni Meregalli 6
1963–64 Serie B 38 8 16 14 31 43 32 15th R16   Dario Cavallito
  Dimitri Pinti
8
1964–65 Serie B 38 7 9 22 23 54 23 20th ↓ R16   Giovanni Meregalli
  Dimitri Pinti
3
1965–66 3 Serie C/A3 34 3 19 12 15 28 25 17th ↓ DNQ   Armando Onesti 5
1966–67 4 Serie D/C6 34 14 11 9 39 29 39 6th DNQ   Giuseppe Mattei 8
1967–68 Serie D/B9 34 10 14 10 28 23 34 6th DNQ
1968–69 Serie D/B9 34 8 13 13 21 31 29 14th DNQ   William Rizzi 6
1969–70 Serie D/B9 34 23 6 5 40 15 52 1st DNQ   Carlo Rancati 14
1970–71 3 Serie C/A3 38 14 13 11 50 39 41 5th DNQ   Orazio Rancati 18
1971–72 Serie C/B3 38 17 16 5 48 26 40 2nd DNQ   Fabio Bonci 20
1972–73 Serie C/A3 38 19 14 5 40 15 52 1st DNQ Coppa Italia Semiprofessionisti QF   Alberto Rizzati 13
1973–74 2 Serie B 38 10 19 9 39 32 39 5th Grp   Alberto Rizzati 15
1974–75 Serie B 38 9 15 14 30 37 30 20th ↓ Grp   Fabio Bonci 14
1975–76 3 Serie C/B3 38 16 14 8 42 25 46 2nd DNQ Coppa Italia Semiprofessionisti   Alberto Rizzati 10
1976–77 Serie C/B3 38 16 14 8 46 33 46 2nd DNQ Coppa Italia Semiprofessionisti R16
Anglo-Italian Cup Grp
1977–78 Serie C/B3 38 16 14 8 50 37 46 4th DNQ Coppa Italia Semiprofessionisti R32
1978–79 Serie C1/A2 34 16 12 6 43 16 48 2nd ↑ DNQ Coppa Italia Semiprofessionisti Grp
1979–80 2 Serie B 38 7 13 18 27 49 27 19th ↓ Grp
1980–81 3 Serie C1/A2 34 8 14 12 25 32 30 13th DNQ Coppa Italia Semiprofessionisti   Sergio D'Agostino 9
1981–82 Serie C1/A2 34 9 13 12 30 32 31 9th DNQ Coppa Italia Serie C R16   Enrico Cannata 10
1982–83 Serie C1/A2 34 10 14 10 28 26 34 6th DNQ Coppa Italia Serie C R32   Massimo Barbuti 10
1983–84 Serie C1/A2 34 18 12 4 47 20 48 1st Grp Coppa Italia Serie C R32   Massimo Barbuti 17
1984–85 2 Serie B 38 6 14 18 25 47 26 18th ↓ QF   Massimo Barbuti 10
1985–86 3 Serie C1/A2 34 16 15 3 39 14 47 1st Grp Coppa Italia Serie C R32   Marco Rossi 10
1986–87 2 Serie B 38 11 18 9 30 26 40 7th QF   Mario Bortolazzi 7
1987–88 Serie B 38 9 20 9 33 33 38 11th R16   Marco Osio
  Davide Zannoni
7
1988–89 Serie B 38 8 21 9 29 31 37 9th Grp   Lorenzo Minotti 7
1989–90 Serie B 38 16 14 8 49 30 46 4th ↑ 1R   Fausto Pizzi 12
1990–91 1 Serie A 34 13 12 9 35 31 38 6th 2R   Alessandro Melli 13
1991–92 Serie A 34 11 16 7 32 28 38 6th W UEFA Cup 1R   Alessandro Melli 6
1992–93 Serie A 34 16 9 9 47 34 41 3rd QF Cup Winners' Cup W   Alessandro Melli 12
Supercoppa Italiana RU
1993–94 Serie A 34 17 7 10 50 35 41 5th SF Cup Winners' Cup RU   Gianfranco Zola 18
Super Cup W
1994–95 Serie A 34 18 9 7 51 31 63[nb 9] 3rd RU UEFA Cup W   Gianfranco Zola 19
1995–96 Serie A 34 16 10 8 44 31 58 5th 2R Cup Winners' Cup QF   Gianfranco Zola 10
Supercoppa Italiana RU
1996–97 Serie A 34 18 9 7 41 26 63 2nd 2R UEFA Cup R32   Enrico Chiesa 14
1997–98 Serie A 34 15 12 7 55 39 57 5th SF Champions League Grp   Hernán Crespo 12
1998–99 Serie A 34 15 10 9 55 36 55 4th W UEFA Cup W   Hernán Crespo 16
1999–2000 Serie A 34 16 10 8 52 37 58 5th[nb 10] R16 Champions League QR3   Hernán Crespo 22
UEFA Cup R16
Supercoppa Italiana W
2000–01 Serie A 34 16 8 10 51 31 56 4th RU UEFA Cup R16   Marco Di Vaio 15
2001–02 Serie A 34 12 8 14 43 47 44 10th W Champions League QR3   Marco Di Vaio 20
UEFA Cup R16
2002–03 Serie A 34 15 11 8 55 36 56 5th 2R UEFA Cup 2R   Adrian Mutu 16
Supercoppa Italiana RU
2003–04 Serie A 34 16 10 8 57 46 58 5th QF UEFA Cup R32   Alberto Gilardino 23
2004–05 Serie A 38 10 12 16 48 65 42 17th[nb 11] R16 UEFA Cup SF   Alberto Gilardino 23
2005–06 Serie A 38 12 9 17 46 60 45 7th R16   Bernardo Corradi
  Fábio Simplício
10
2006–07 Serie A 38 10 12 16 41 56 42 12th QF UEFA Cup R32   Igor Budan 13
2007–08 Serie A 38 7 13 18 42 62 34 19th ↓ R32   Igor Budan 7
2008–09 2 Serie B 42 19 19 4 65 34 76 2nd ↑ R32   Cristiano Lucarelli
  Alberto Paloschi
12
2009–10 1 Serie A 38 14 10 14 46 51 52 8th R32   Valeri Bojinov 8
2010–11 Serie A 38 11 13 14 39 47 46 12th QF   Hernán Crespo 9
2011–12 Serie A 38 15 11 12 54 53 56 8th R32   Sebastian Giovinco 15
2012–13 Serie A 38 13 10 15 45 46 49 10th R16   Amauri 10
2013–14 Serie A 38 15 13 10 58 46 58 6th R16   Antonio Cassano 12
2014–15 Serie A 38 6 8 24 33 75 19[nb 12] 20th ↓ QF   Antonio Cassano 5
2015–16 4 Serie D/D9 38 28 10 0 82 17 94 1st DNQ Coppa Serie D 1R   Yves Baraye 20
Serie D/Finale B3 2 0 1 1 3 4 1 3rd
2016–17 3 Lega Pro/B3 38 20 10 8 55 36 70 2nd ↑[nb 13] DNQ Coppa Lega Pro 1R   Emanuele Calaiò 15
2017–18 2 Serie B 42 21 9 12 57 37 85 2nd ↑ 2R   Emanuele Calaiò 13
2018–19 1 Serie A 38 10 11 17 41 61 41 14th 3R   Gervinho 11
2019–20 Serie A 38 14 7 17 56 57 49 11th R16   Andreas Cornelius 12
2020–21 Serie A 38 3 11 24 39 83 20 20th ↓ R16   Juraj Kucka 7
2021–22 2 Serie B 38 11 16 11 48 43 49 12th 1R   Franco Vázquez 14
2022–23 Serie B 38 17 10 11 48 39 60 4th[nb 14] R16   Franco Vázquez 11
2023–24 Serie B 38 21 13 4 66 35 76 1st R16   Dennis Man 11

Footnotes

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  1. ^ Before the establishment of the modern Serie A in 1929, the championship was contested under several different formats, including knock-out competitions or successive group stages.
  2. ^ The number in superscript represents the number of parallel divisions there were to the one in which Parma were competing, where there were two or more (including the division in which Parma competed).
  3. ^ The Coppa Italia was founded in 1922, but - despite an abortive attempt in 1927 - a second edition did not take place before the 1935–36 season. Since then the tournament was played on a regular basis until 1943, when it was suspended due to WWII. The competition was eventually resumed only in 1958.
  4. ^ Parma lost a two-legged tie-breaker 4–1 to Mantova, so failed to qualify for the northern finals.
  5. ^ Parma avoided relegation after finishing second three-way relegation tie-breaker with Cremonese and Prato.
  6. ^ Parma lost a relegation tie-breaker 4–1 to Spezia to consign themselves to relegation.
  7. ^ Teams from Italy – Parma, Brescia, Lecco, Pro Patria, Reggiana, Monza, Lazio and Fiorentina – took on teams from SwitzerlandLugano, Luzern, YF Zurigo, Schaffhausen, Biel-Bienne, Bellinzona, Grasshopper, Young Boys – and the Italians emerged victorious.
  8. ^ "Cup of the Alps 1961". RSSSF. Rec Sport Soccer Statistics Foundation. 11 June 2000. Retrieved 4 August 2020.
  9. ^ The 1994–95 season saw the introduction of three points for a win.
  10. ^ Parma lost a UEFA Champions League qualification tie-breaker 3–1 to Internazionale to consign themselves to a place in the UEFA Cup.
  11. ^ Parma won a relegation tie-breaker 2–1 against Bologna over two legs to avoid relegation.
  12. ^ Parma was docked 7 points for failing to pay players' wages.[4][5][6]
  13. ^ Parma won the promotion play-offs, winning the final 2–0 against Alessandria to secure promotion.
  14. ^ Parma lost the promotion play-offs, losing the semi-finals 2–3 against Cagliari on aggregate to consign themselves to Serie B.

References

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  1. ^ "Italian Serie A: All time overall table". WildStat.com. WildSoft. Retrieved 7 April 2012.
  2. ^ "Parma Club History". Football Italia. football-italia.net. Retrieved 12 January 2012.
  3. ^ "Parma: '90s Phenomenon". 19 May 2010. Archived from the original on 17 August 2011. Retrieved 31 July 2010.
  4. ^ "Inadempienze CO.VI.SO.C.: un punto di penalizzazione per il Parma" (in Italian). FIGC. 9 December 2014. Retrieved 16 December 2014.
  5. ^ "TFN: altri 2 punti di penalizzazione al Parma" (in Italian). FIGC. 13 March 2015. Retrieved 15 March 2015.
  6. ^ "News - Quattro punti di penalizzazione al Parma, sanzionati anche tre club di Lega Pro" (in Italian). FIGC. 16 April 2015. Retrieved 18 April 2015.