Francesco Flachi

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Francesco Flachi
FrancescoFlachi.jpg
Flachi in the 1993–94 season
Personal information
Date of birth (1975-04-08) 8 April 1975 (age 48)
Place of birth Florence, Italy
Height 1.72 m (5 ft 8 in)
Position(s) Striker
Team information
Current team
Praese
Youth career
Isolotto
Fiorentina
Senior career*
YearsTeamApps(Gls)
1993–1999 Fiorentina 37 (4)
1996–1997Bari (loan) 21 (3)
1998Ancona (loan) 17 (10)
1999–2007 Sampdoria 241 (87)
2009 Empoli 13 (3)
2009–2010 Brescia 14 (2)
2022 Signa 1 (0)
2022– Praese 0 (0)
Total353(129)
International career
1993–1994 Italy U18 9 (3)
*Club domestic league appearances and goals

Francesco Flachi (born 8 April 1975) is an Italian former professional footballer, currently playing for Promozione amateurs Praese.

Contents

A striker, during an 18-year professional career in which he amassed Serie A totals of 137 games and 42 goals, he played mainly with Sampdoria. He was also suspended twice for doping.

Club career

Fiorentina

Born in Florence, Flachi made his professional debuts with local giants ACF Fiorentina, appearing in ten Serie B games and scoring twice as the 1993–94 season ended in promotion. He made his Serie A debut on 4 September 1994, against Cagliari Calcio, in a 2–1 win.

Flachi would appear rarely for the Viola in the top flight, however, facing stiff competition from the likes of Gabriel Batistuta and Luís Oliveira - only three league games in each of his three last seasons. He also served two loans whilst on contract with the club, with A.S. Bari and A.C. Ancona (both in the second division), scoring an impressive ten goals in only 17 games with the latter.

Sampdoria

After leaving his childhood club in the 1999 summer, Flachi moved to U.C. Sampdoria, freshly relegated to the second level. He scored career-bests 17 and 16 goals in his second and third seasons, under manager Luigi Cagni who had succeeded Giampiero Ventura.

In 2002–03, Flachi netted nine times in 35 games as Samp finally achieved promotion, as champions. He became known by the Genovese club fans as "Salvatore della patria" ("Saviour of the homeland" in Italian), and also welcomed his first daughter, Valentina.

However, Flachi's relationship with new Sampdoria manager Walter Novellino was not ideal, with the pair having numerous arguments on and off the pitch. The player paid for his attitude by remaining on the bench in the first half of the 2003–04 campaign. As the partnership of Massimo Marazzina and Atsushi Yanagisawa did not click, the manager began playing Flachi and Fabio Bazzani with good results; the team eventually finished in eighth position, with 24 goals between Flachi (11) and Bazzani (13).

In 2004–05, with 14 goals in 35 appearances, Flachi nearly helped Sampdoria earn UEFA Champions League qualification, with the team finally ranking fifth, with the subsequent return to the UEFA Cup. In the following campaign, he continued to display solid performances (again scoring in double digits), this time accompanied by Emiliano Bonazzoli up front; however, the team failed to qualify from the UEFA Cup group stage, and finished 14th in the league (12th after the match-fixing scandal).

Betting and cocaine

On 21 September 2006, Flachi was suspended for two months by the Italian Football Federation as investigations concluded he and teammate Moris Carrozzieri were gathering information for gamblers in Italian football. Their club received a 20,000 fine. [1]

Trace amounts of cocaine were found in Flachi's system in a random test after a 2–0 away loss against to F.C. Internazionale Milano on 28 January 2007. On 31 May, he was suspended for 16 months and, later, the ban was increased to two years. [2] As a result, his contract with Sampdoria was canceled.

Following the ban, Flachi started training with Eccellenza Tuscany team Pietrasanta, hoping to return into active football once his ban expired. [3] In June 2008, second division outfit Empoli F.C. completed his signing; [4] he returned to competitive football in January of the following year. [5]

In the 2009 summer, Flachi penned a deal with another club in division two, Brescia Calcio. He played 14 games, mostly as a substitute, until he was suspended again in January 2010 following a positive for cocaine in a test held on 19 December of the previous year; in June, he was handed a 12-year ban, effectively ending his career as a player. [6] [7]

Comeback

In 2021, Flachi announced he had been training with the Italy fifth-tier team Signa 1914, and was planning to make a comeback as a player when his ban expired in January of 2022. [8] On 13 February 2022, at almost 47 years of age, he played his debut game for Signa, playing the first 30 minutes in an Eccellenza amateur league game. [9] He successively moved back to Genoa and signed for Promozione amateurs Praese during the summer of 2022, [10] with whom he finally scored his first league goal since his comeback in October at the age of 47. [11]

Career statistics

As of 8 September 2021
Club statistics
ClubSeasonLeagueCupOtherTotal
DivisionAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoals
Fiorentina 1993–94 Serie B 1020000102
1994–95 Serie A 2124000252
1995–96 30200050
1996–97 00000000
1997–98 30410071
1998–99 00000000
Total37410100475
Bari (loan) 1996–97 Serie B2133200245
Ancona (loan) 1997–98 Serie B171000001710
Sampdoria 1999–00 Serie B28556003311
2000–01 341762004019
2001–02 371664004320
2002–03 35953004012
2003–04 Serie A281120003011
2004–05 351430003814
2005–06 3111226 [lower-alpha 1] 23915
2006–07 1344400178
Total24187332162280110
Empoli 2008–09 Serie B133002 [lower-alpha 2] 0153
Brescia 2009–10 Serie B1420000142
Career totals343109462482397135

International career

Flachi represented Italy national U18 team at the 1992 UEFA European Football Championship. He was called up once by the main squad, for a friendly with Iceland in August 2004, but would never make his debut.

Honours

Fiorentina

Sampdoria

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U.C. Sampdoria returned to Serie A after a four year-absence, and immediately re-established itself as a team on the top half of the domestic championship. Goalkeeper Francesco Antonioli offered crucial experience, but apart from him did the bulk of the squad play in the 2002-03 Serie B, with top goalscorers Fabio Bazzani and Francesco Flachi quickly adjusting themselves to the higher pace of Serie A. Midfielders Sergio Volpi and Angelo Palombo also stood out. Right back Aimo Diana even earned a call-up to the national team following his performances.

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References

  1. Sampdoria striker gets ban for gambling offence Archived 4 November 2012 at the Wayback Machine ; ESPN Soccernet, 21 September 2006
  2. Flachi to sit out 16 months; UEFA.com, 31 May 2007
  3. "Flachi:"La mia vita senza pallone" – Paure, dvd e psicofarmaci" [Flachi:"My life without football" – Fear, DVD and drugs] (in Italian). La Repubblica. 15 February 2008. Retrieved 22 June 2008.
  4. "Ufficiale: Flachi all'Empoli" [Official: Flachi to Empoli] (in Italian). Tutto Mercato. 22 June 2008. Retrieved 22 June 2008.
  5. "Francesco Flachi in azzurro" [Flachi in blue] (in Italian). Empoli FC. 22 June 2008. Archived from the original on 4 August 2008. Retrieved 22 June 2008.
  6. "Debate: Why is cocaine use punished more severely than steroids". Goal.com. 16 January 2010. Retrieved 12 December 2011.
  7. "Suspension for the Italian football star Francesco Flachi". Street Directory. Retrieved 12 December 2011.
  8. "Francesco Flachi: Former Sampdoria captain set to return to football after 12-year drugs ban". BBC. 8 September 2021.
  9. "Riecco Flachi, 12 anni dopo: 30' col Signa in Eccellenza, ora l'esilio è davvero finito" (in Italian). La Gazzetta dello Sport. 13 February 2022. Retrieved 13 February 2022.
  10. "Francesco Flachi torna a vivere a Genova e firma con la Praese" (in Italian). Blucerchiando.com. 21 July 2022.
  11. "A 47 anni Flachi torna al gol. E con una magia sfiora la doppietta" (in Italian). La Gazzetta dello Sport. 3 October 2022.