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Associazione Sportiva Dilettantistica FC Sassari Torres Femminile (usually referred to simply as Torres or sometimes named Eurospin Torres due to sponsorship) is an Italian women's association football club based in Sassari, Sardinia. The club was formed in 1980 and competed in women's Serie A until 2015. Torres's colours were blue and red. The team won seven scudetti and eight Italian Women's Cups. They were refused a license for the 2015–16 Serie A season due to debts and now compete in Serie B.

Torres
Full nameAssociazione Sportiva Dilettantistica FC Sassari Torres Femminile[1]
Nickname(s)I Rossoblù (The Red-Blues)
Founded1980 (as A.C.F. Delco Costruzioni)
GroundStadio Vanni Sanna,
Sassari
Capacity12,000
LeagueSerie B
2021–225th, Serie B
WebsiteClub website
Home colours
Away colours

After winning two doubles in 2000 and 2001, Torres became the first team to represent Italy in the newly founded UEFA Women's Cup. After 2009–10 the team was a regular competitor in the rebranded UEFA Women's Champions League, reaching the quarter-finals on three occasions.


History



Beginnings


Sporting an orange change strip in October 2006
Sporting an orange change strip in October 2006

The club was founded in 1980 as A.C.F. Delco Costruzioni of Sassari and affiliated to the Federazione Italiana Calcio Femminile (FIGCF; Italy's autonomous women's football association).[2] They began playing in the 1981 season, enrolling in the local division of Serie C.

In 1989, by then known as CUS Sassari, the team won the Sardinian section of Serie C and promotion to Serie B. The next season the club won its league again and arrived in Serie A for the first time. In the club's first season at the top level, 1990–91, the team won their first Italian Women's Cup. In 1993–94 the goals of Carolina Morace secured a first Scudetto. The following season, without Morace, the title was lost but the team won their second Italian Cup.


Early trophies


Between 1999 and 2005, Torres won two league titles, four Italian Cups, two Italian Super Cups and the Italy Women's Cup, as well as establishing the record of 38 consecutive wins in official matches including league and Italian Cup. Torres was the first Italian team to participate in the UEFA Women's Cup, the female version of the UEFA Champions League.

Patrizia Panico, Top Scorer of UEFA Women's Champions Leaguein the season 2012–13 and Serie A in 2010–11 and in 2011–12
Patrizia Panico, Top Scorer of UEFA Women's Champions Leaguein the season 2012–13 and Serie A in 2010–11 and in 2011–12

In 2008, after finishing second in the league, Torres won a seventh Italian Women's Cup by beating Bardolino 1–0 in the final's second leg, overturning a 3–2 defeat in the first leg. Throughout this period, Torres' success rested on the prolific goal-scoring of players such as Rita Guarino, Pamela Conti and the Spaniard Ángeles Parejo.[3]


Burgeoning success


In the 2009–10 season Torres won a fourth Scudetto, dominating the league from the first day. The club also secured the Super Cup, but were beaten in the final of the Italian Women's Cup. A successful season was crowned by an appearance in the UEFA Women's Champions League quarter-finals. 2010–11 culminated in a treble of the Super Cup, Scudetto and Italian Women's Cup. In the following season, Torres collected a Scudetto and Super Cup double, but lost out in the semi-finals of the Italian Women's Cup. In 2013 they retained the league title and were named fifth in the year's best women's clubs by the International Federation of Football History & Statistics (IFFHS).[4]

The 2013–14 season yielded a Super Cup and runners-up finishes in the league and Italian Women's Cup, as well as another quarter-final placing in the UEFA Women's Champions League. Patrizia Panico scored more than 40 league goals. But Torres were thrashed 12–1 on aggregate by Turbine Potsdam and overall the season was considered to be below expectations. A dispute over funding and the club's strategic direction saw the departure of both president Leonardo Marras and coach Manuela Tesse in 2014.[5]


Insolvency and Promotion


Torres were subsumed into the structure of Torres' male club in June 2014.[6] In September 2015 it was announced that Torres had been refused a license for the forthcoming Serie A season and would be excluded from taking part. La Lega Nazionale Dilettanti, who oversee women's football in Italy, demanded that the club's new owners pay half of the total €90,000 debt up front, rejecting a proposed alternative repayment arrangement which the male club offered to underwrite.[7] In 2021 got promoted again Serie B, after the season 2020-21 in Serie C (level 3).


Stadium


The team play in the Stadio Vanni Sanna in Sassari, the complex is belong S.E.F. Torres 1903. Here plays also U.S.D. Latte Dolce.[8]


202223 squad


As of 15 September 2022.[9]

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Pos. Nation Player
1 GK  ITA Francesca Fabiano
2 MF  ITA Flavia Lombardo
3 DF  ITA Valentina Congia
4 DF  ITA Maria Bertone
7 FW  POR Adriana Faria Gomes
8 MF  NED Indy Spaan
9 FW  ITA Giusy Bassano
10 DF  ITA Maria Grazia Ladu
12 DF  IRL Shauna Peare
17 DF  ESP Catalina Alfonso Moran
20 FW  ITA Lorenza Scarpelli
No. Pos. Nation Player
21 MF  ITA Francesca Blasoni
22 MF  ITA Antonia Peddio
32 DF  NED Milou Leendertse
34 DF  ITA Beatrice Airola
50 GK  ITA Miriam Ubaldi
72 GK  ITA Marica Deiana
77 MF  ITA Sofia Pederzani
80 MF  USA Julia Saveria Weithofer
MF  ITA Angela Congia

Former players


For details of current and former players, see Category:Torres Calcio Femminile players.


Record in UEFA competitions


Competition Round Country Club Result
2001–02 UEFA Women's Cup Group stageHJK Helsinki1–2
USC Country House5–0
KÍ Klaksvík4–0
2009–10 UEFA Women's Champions League Group stageSlovan Duslo Šaľa1–0
Trabzonspor9–0
ŽNK Krka3–0
Round of 32Valur6–2 (4–1 h, 2–1 a)
Round of 16SV Neulengbach8–2 (4–1 h, 4–1 a)
Quarter finalsOlympique Lyonnais1–3 (0–3 a, 1–0 h)
2010–11 UEFA Women's Champions League Round of 32FC Zürich7–3 (3–2 a, 4–1 h)
Round of 16FCF Juvisy3–4 (1–2 h, 2–2 a aet)
2011–12 UEFA Women's Champions League Round of 32ASA Tel Aviv University5–2 (2–0 a, 3–2 h)
Round of 16Brøndby IF2–5 (1–2 a, 1–3 h)
2012–13 UEFA Women's Champions League Round of 32Apollon Limassol6–3 (3–2 a, 3–1 h)
Round of 16CFF Olimpia Cluj7–1 (4–1 h, 3–0 a)
Quarter finalsArsenal1–4 (1–3 a, 0–1 h)
2013–14 UEFA Women's Champions League Round of 32Spratzern5–3 (2–2 a, 3–1 h)
Round of 16Rossiyanka2–1 (0–1 a, 2–0 h)
Quarter finalsTurbine Potsdam1–12 (0–8 h, 1–4 a)
2014–15 UEFA Women's Champions League Round of 32Pomurje7–3 (4–2 a, 3–1 h)
Round of 16Frankfurt0–9 (0–5 a, 0–4 h)

Honours


Torres have won the most trophies of all Italian women's clubs.[10]


League



Cups



Individual Player & Coach awards


Top Scorer

League and cup history


Season Div. Pos. Pl. W D L GS GA P Domestic Cup Other Notes
2021–22 Serie B 5/14 26 13 3 10 35 37 42 [12]



See also



References


  1. "Sassari Torres Femminile". FIGC. Retrieved 15 May 2022.
  2. "La Nostra Storia" (in Italian). Torres Calcio Femminile. Archived from the original on 10 February 2014. Retrieved 5 July 2014.
  3. Roldán, Isabel (25 May 2011). "Italia despide a su última gran 'donna' española". Diario AS (in Spanish). Retrieved 5 July 2014.
  4. "The world's best woman club". International Federation of Football History & Statistics. 27 January 2014. Retrieved 5 July 2014.
  5. Merati, Mario (12 June 2014). "Torres femminile: quale futuro?". Calcio Donne (in Italian). Archived from the original on 12 August 2014. Retrieved 5 July 2014.
  6. "Uomini e donne, solo una Torres. Capitani: "Rilanciamo e puntiamo sui giovani". Comune Sassari: "Stadio? Si può fare"" (in Italian). SardegnaSport.com. 27 June 2014. Archived from the original on 6 October 2014. Retrieved 24 September 2015.
  7. Tiseo, Giandomenico (15 September 2015). "Calcio femminile: Torres esclusa dal campionato di Seria A 2015/2016" (in Italian). Olimpiazzurra. Retrieved 24 September 2015.
  8. "STADIO VANNI SANNA". www.soccerway.com. Retrieved 4 May 2022.
  9. "La Squadra" (in Italian). Torres Calcio Femminile. Archived from the original on 7 July 2014. Retrieved 5 July 2014.
  10. "Campioni D'Italia..." (in Italian). Torres Calcio Femminile. 5 May 2012. Archived from the original on 14 July 2014. Retrieved 5 July 2014. Con la vittoria del sesto Scudetto, la Torres e' da oggi la più titolata squadra d'Italia.
  11. "Italy - List of Women's Super Cup Finals". RSSSF. Retrieved 5 July 2014.
  12. "Classifiche Serie B 2021-22". www.figc.it. Retrieved 23 May 2022.



На других языках


- [en] A.S.D. FC Sassari Torres Femminile

[es] A.S.D. F.C. Sassari Torres Femminile

La Associazione Sportiva Dilettantistica F. C. Sassari Torres Femminile, conocida como Sassari Torres Femminile o simplemente Torres, es un club italiano de fútbol femenino, con sede en la ciudad de Sassari, en la región de Cerdeña. Fue fundado en 1980 y refundado en 2016.[1] Actualmente compite en la Serie B, la segunda división italiana.[2] Viste de azul y rojo y juega de local en el Estadio Vanni Sanna de Sassari.[3]



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