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  • Writer's pictureSimon Basten

May 8, 1966: Lazio Sampdoria 0-0

A good point for both


A point each allows both teams to reduce chances of relegation




Source Lazio Wiki

The season so far


The previous season had been rather dismal. Lazio struggled all year and were involved in the relegation battle. With five games to the end of the campionato they were 16th, one point below safety. Three consecutive wins then took them out of trouble. They finished 14th just one point above relegated Genoa.


The summer transfer window saw more goodbyes than arrivals. Eugenio Fascetti was sold to Messina and Gianni Sassaroli to Avellino. In came midfielder Giovanni Sacco (on loan from Juventus) and forward Nicola Ciccolo. Orlando Rozzoni returned from his loan to Catania. In the autumn session Kurt Christiansen (Catania), Gianfranco Petris and Giampaolo Piaceri (both to Trani) also left. Carlo Galli had retired. Manager Umberto Mannocci had been confirmed.


At the end of the first half of the season Lazio were 12th, three points clear of the relegation zone. They had won the away derby with a Vito D’Amato goal. The Biancocelesti had struggled a bit in the second half of the season but had won away against Milan 2-0 after the game was suspended twice due to fog. They were currently 10th with a four-point lead over the relegation zone.


The match: Sunday, May 8, 1966, Stadio Flaminio, Rome


This game was fundamental for both teams. Lazio by winning would be mathematically safe and Sampdoria, who at one point had a foot and a half in Serie B, had done very well in the last games and were one point away from getting out of the relegation zone.


In the 4th minute Ermano Cristin had a chance but his shot went wide. Immediately after, Orlando Rozzoni tried a header that Pietro Battara saved into corner. In the 24th minute, Can Bartu from an impossible position almost scored followed by Rozzoni, who, after dribbling past two defenders, saw his shot saved by the goalkeeper. Giancarlo Salvi wasted an easy chance in the 30th minute and towards the end of the first half Rozzoni and Giovanni Delfino left the pitch due to injury.


In the second half Lazio tried to press Sampdoria and Giampiero Vitali in the 57th minute forced Battara to make the most difficult save of the day. In the 75th minute, Roberto Gori fouled Cristin in the box but the referee was not impressed.


A good point for Lazio, now very close to safety.


Who played for Lazio

 

Manager: Mannocci


Who played for Sampdoria

 

Battara, Dordoni, Masiero, Vincenzi, Morini, Delfino, Salvi, Sabatini, Cristin, Frustalupi, Catalano.

Manager: Baldini

TD: Bernardini

 

Referee: Bernardis

 

What happened next

 

This point was the last one Lazio added to their tally. Lazio finished the campionato in 12th place, a better season than the previous one but not exactly eye opening.


Giampiero Vitali was the player with most appearances (37) and Vito D’Amato the top scorer with 7 goals.


Lazio 1965-66


Competition

Played

Won

Drawn

Lost

Goals scored

Serie A

34

8

13

13

28

Coppa Italia

3

2

-

1

4

Total

37

10

13

14

32

Top five appearances

Players

Total

Serie A

Coppa Italia

Vitali

37

34

3

Zanetti

36

34

2

Dotti

35

32

3

D'Amato

34

31

3

Pagni

33

31

2

Cei

33

30

3

Top goal scorers

Player

Total

Serie A

Coppa Italia

D'Amato

7

7

-

Ciccolo

6

5

1

Renna

4

2

2

Let's talk about Antonio Renna


Source Wikipedia

Antonio Renna was born on March 2, 1937, in Lecce. He started playing for Juventina Lecce who, in 1954 when he was not even 18 years of age, loaned him to Campobasso in Serie D. After a year he joined the Fiorentina youth sector who after a year sent him on loan to Livorno. At the end of the 1956-57 season, Fiorentina sold him back to his hometown team, Lecce, in Serie C.


He stayed two years and in 1959 made the big jump to Serie A: he signed for Bologna. He remained in Rossoblu for five seasons with 94 appearances and 14 goals, winning a scudetto in 1963-64 and a Mitropa Cup in 1961. In 1964 he joined Lazio. The Biancocelesti were a rather modest team with the only ambition of not being relegated. He made 34 appearances with 9 goals in two seasons.


In 1966 he was sold to Varese in Serie B and contributed with 10 goals to their promotion to Serie A. He stayed in Lombardy three years and in 1969 he moved to Brindisi in Serie C for the last four years of his career, contributing to their return to Serie B in 1971-72.


Once he stopped playing, Renna had a long career as manager. He managed Brindisi in 1974-75 avoiding relegation to Serie C. He then managed Lecce in 1975 taking them first to Serie B and then almost getting a promotion to Serie A. They arrived 7th but were in contention for most of the season.


In 1977 he was called to Ascoli by the mythical president Costantino Rozzi. The Bianconeri reached Serie A with two months to spare, obtaining the record number of 61 points, in Serie B with 20 teams and 2 points per victory. He also managed them in their first year in Serie A, where Ascoli beat Juventus.


In 1979 he turned down offers from Bologna and Genoa, and went to manage Bari in Serie B. Built to get promotion, the Apulians managed to avoid relegation by just four points. He decided to stay, despite being tempted by Napoli, but resigned after 26 games.


In 1981 he became head coach of Palermo in Serie B. He stayed for two years and despite not achieving promotion, his team remains one of the most loved by the fans (and included former Lazio Antonio Lopez).


In the autumn of 1983 he was called to manage Catanzaro in Serie B in substitution of Mariolino Corso. The team had a number of problems and he was unable to avoid relegation. In 1984 he joined Catania. The Islanders had been relegated from Serie A the previous year and in the beginning they were fighting for promotion, but when the sporting director, Giacomo Bulgarelli, was sacked, Catania collapsed and narrowly managed to avoid relegation. The year after he coached Taranto and won a historic promotion to Serie B. The last teams he worked for were Casertana, Livorno, Giarre, plus another couple of teams in the minor leagues.


Antonio Renna was a great forward and manager. He was quite prolific even though he was not a classic centre-forward, had imagination and a good vision of play. At manager level he was successful even though almost always in Serie B. He was unlucky as a player to have come to Lazio probably in one of the worst moments.


He died on February 1, 2019, in Lecce.


Lazio Career

Season

Total games (goals)

Serie A

Coppa Italia

1964-65

16 (5)

15 (4)

1 (1)

1965-66

18 (4)

17 (2)

1 (2)

Total

34 (9)

32 (6)

2 (3)

Sources




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