Aldo Olivieri (born October 2, 1910- died April 5, 2001) was a former Italianfootball goalkeeper from 1931 to 1943, and trainer after World War II.
Career
Olivieri was born in San Michele Extra, in the province of Verona.
Nicknamed Ercolino Semprimpiedi ("Always-Standing Little Hercules"), a famous definition of Italian journalist Gianni Brera) he played for Verona, Lucchese and Brescia in Serie B, and Torino in Serie A.[1] For Italy he became World Champion in 1938.
He died in Lido di Camaiore at 90 years old. He was the penultimate survivor of the 1938 winning team squad. The last component who died on November 5, 2006 is defender Pietro Rava.
References
|
U.S. Triestina Calcio – Managers |
|
Rocco (1947–50) · Guttman (1950–52) · Perazzolo (1952–53) · Rocco (1953) · Feruglio (1953–56) · Pasinati (1956–57) · Olivieri (1957–59) · Trevisan (1959–61) · Tagliavini (1974–79) · Varglien (1979–80) · Bianchi (1980–81) · Buffoni (1981–84) · Giacomini (1984–85) · E. Ferrari (1985–88) · Lombardo (1988–90) · Giacomini (1990–91) · Veneranda (1991) · Zoratti (1991–92) · Perotti (1992–93) · Russo (1993) · Buffoni (1993–94) · Pezzato (1994–95) · Roselli (1995–97) · Lombardi (1997) · Marchioro (1997–98) · Beruatto & Dossena (1998) · Ferrario (1998–99) · Mandorlini (1999) · Cosantini (1999–2000) · Rossi (2000–03) · Tesser (2003–05) · Buffoni & Calori (2005) · Vierchowod (2005) · De Falco (2005) · Russo (2005–06) · Agostinelli (2006–07) · Varrella (2007) · Maran (2007–09) ·
|
|
|
Hellas Verona F.C. – Managers |
|
Vivi (1910–11) · Masprone (1911–14) · Technical commission (1914–15) · Technical commission (1919–20) · Bascheni (1920–21) · Technical commission (1921–22) · A. Friedmann (1922–24) · Molnár (1924–25) · Schoffer (1925–26) · Technical commission (1926–27) · Fagiuoli (1927) · Bekey (1928) · Bascheni (1928–29) · Kuttik (1929–32) · Stanzel (1932) · Pallotta (1933) · Bekey (1933–34) · E. Chiecchi (1934–35) · Capra (1935–36) · Vaniczek (1936–38) · G. Chiecchi (1939) · Peics (1939) · G. Chiecchi (1940–41) · Stürmer (1941–42) · Bosio (1942–44) · Bosio (1945–46) · Vaniczek (1946–47) · Biagini (1947–49) · Székely (1949) · Piccioli (1950–52) · Lelovics (1953) · Rossetto (1953) · Ferrero (1954) · Piccioli (1955) · Allasio (1955) · Piccioli (1955–58) · Bonizzoni & Tavellin (1958) · G. Viani (1958) · V. Viani (1958–59) · Tavellin (1959) · Olivieri (1959–60) · Bizzotto (1960–61) · Biagini (1961–62) · Tavellin (1962) · Facchini (1962–64) · Biagini (1964) · Tavellin (1964) · Cadè (1964–65) · Tognon (1965–66) · Pozzan (1966–67) · Liedholm (1967) · Liedholm-Pozzan (1967–68) · Cadè (1968–69) · Lucchi (1969–70) · Pozzan (1970–72) · Cadè (1972–75) · Mascalaito (1975) · Pozzan (1970–72) · Cadè (1972–75) · Mascalaito (1975) · Valcareggi (1975–78) · Chiappella (1978–79) · Veneranda (1979–80) · Cadè (1980–81) · Bagnoli (1981–90) · Fascetti (1990–92) · Liedholm-Corso (1992) · Reja (1992–93) · Mutti (1993–94) · Montana (1994) · Mutti (1994–95) · Perotti (1995–96) · Cagni (1996–98) · Maddè (1998) · Prandelli (1998–2000) · Perotti (2000–01) · Malesani (2001–03) · Salvioni (2003) · Maddè (2003–04) · Ficcadenti (2004–07) · Ventura (2007) · Colomba (2007) · Pellegrini (2007–08) · Sarri (2008) · Pelelgrini (2008) · Remondina (2008–)
|
|
This entry is from Wikipedia, the leading user-contributed encyclopedia. It may not have been reviewed by professional editors (see full disclaimer)