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Parma Calcio 1913
Upcoming Events
05 Feb 23 | | Parma Calcio  |  | - |  |  Genoa |  | Stadio Ennio Tardini @ 3:15pm |
11 Feb 23 | | Ternana  |  | - |  |  Parma Calcio |  | Stadio Libero Libera @ 3:15pm |
18 Feb 23 | | Parma Calcio  |  | - |  |  Ascoli |  | Stadio Ennio Tardini @ 1:00pm |
24 Feb 23 | | Frosinone  |  | - |  |  Parma Calcio |  | Stadio Benito Stirpe @ 7:30pm |
28 Feb 23 | | Parma Calcio  |  | - |  |  Pisa |  | Stadio Ennio Tardini @ 7:30pm |
Latest Results
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28 Jan 23 | | Cosenza |   | 1 - 0 |   | Parma Calcio |  | Stadio San Vito-Luig |
21 Jan 23 | | Parma Calcio |   | 2 - 0 |   | Perugia |  | Stadio Ennio Tardini |
14 Jan 23 | | Bari |   | 4 - 0 |   | Parma Calcio |  | Stadio Comunale San |
10 Jan 23 | | Inter |   | 2 - 1 |   | Parma Calcio |  | Stadio Giuseppe Meaz |
26 Dec 22 | | Venezia |   | 2 - 2 |   | Parma Calcio |  | Stadio Pierluigi Pen |
DescriptionAvailable in:

Parma Calcio 1913, commonly referred to as Parma, is an Italian professional football club based in Parma, Emilia-Romagna. It currently competes in the Serie B, the 2nd tier of Italian football.
Founded as Parma Football Club in December 1913, the club plays its home matches in the 27,906-seat Stadio Ennio Tardini, often referred to as simply Il Tardini, from 1923.
Financed by Calisto Tanzi, the club won eight trophies between 1992 and 2002, a period in which it achieved its best ever league finish, as runners-up in the 1996–97 season. The club has won three Coppa Italia, one Supercoppa Italiana, two UEFA Cups, one European Super Cup and one UEFA Cup Winners' Cup.
Financial troubles were brought about in late 2003 by the Parmalat scandal which caused the parent company to collapse and resulted in the club operating in controlled administration until January 2007. The club was declared bankrupt in 2015 and re-founded in Serie D but secured a record three straight promotions to return to Serie A in 2018.

Team Members
Simy #99
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Cristian Ansaldi
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Botond Balogh #4
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Juan Brunetta #32
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Gianluigi Buffon #1
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Drissa Camara
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Francesco Cassata #8
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Simone Colombi #34
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Daan Dierckx
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Roberto Inglese #45
 
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Márk Kosznovszky
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Jasmin Kurtic #14

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Vincent Laurini #16
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Dennis Man #98
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Yordan Osorio #24
 
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Graziano Pelle #9
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Enrico Del #24
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Simon Sohm #19
  
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Mattia Sprocati #93

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Chaka Traorè
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Gennaro Tutino #37
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Lautaro Valenti #30
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Franco Vazquez #22

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Vasilios Zagaritis #20
 
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Luca Zanimacchia
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(25 total)

= Player Contract years remaining

= Player Statistics available latest season
Stadium or Home
Stadio Ennio Tardini, commonly referred to as just Il Tardini, is a football stadium in Parma, Italy, located near the centre of Parma, between the town centre and the city walls. It is the home of Parma Calcio 1913. The stadium was built in 1923 and was named after one of Parma's former presidents, Ennio Tardini. The stadium is the nineteenth largest football stadium in Italy and the second largest in Emilia–Romagna with a capacity of 22,352 spectators. The stadium is the sixth oldest Italian football ground still in use.
The ground underwent significant expansion under Parmalat's ownership of the resident football club in the 1990s, as the ground's seating capacity was increased from around 13,500 to 29,050. In 2006, the capacity was reduced to 27,906 although only 21,473 are authorised to enter for all-seater events and even those seats are very seldom all sold. The expansion has allowed meant a number of Italy matches have been played at the Tardini. Expansion plans were made public in Italy's unsuccessful bid for Euro 2016 and would have made the permanent capacity of the stadium 31,397.
Trophies 
 Coppa Italia 2001-2002 | |  Supercoppa Italiana 1999 | |  Coppa Italia 1998-1999 | |  UEFA Cup 1998-1999 | |
 UEFA Cup 1994-1995 | |  UEFA Super Cup 1993 | |  UEFA Cup Winners Cup 1992-1993 | |  Coppa Italia 1991-1992 | |
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