Viola Reggio Calabria
Viola Reggio Calabria logo
NicknameNero-Arancio (The Black and Oranges)
Founded1966 (refounded 1997, 2009)
History
List
    • Cestistica Piero Viola
      (1966–1997)
    • Basket Viola R.C.
      (1998)
    • Nuovo Basket Viola Reggio '98
      (1998–2007)
    • Team Basket Viola R.C.
      (2007–2009)
    • Scuola Basket Viola R.C.
      (2009–2012)
    • Viola Reggio Calabria
      (2012–2019)
ArenaPalaCalafiore
Capacity8,500
LocationReggio Calabria, Calabria, Italy
Team colorsBlack and Orange
   
Championships3 Serie A2 Championships
Websiteviola.rc.it

Viola Reggio Calabria was an Italian professional basketball club based in Reggio Calabria, Calabria.

At its heyday the club was renowned for discovering talented players who would go on to play at the highest level, for example five former players took part in the 2004 Olympics final. However, Viola was also plagued by financial problems, with the club filing for bankruptcy in three occasions (1997, 2009 and 2019), that later sent it out the Italian elite.

In 2019 a phoenix club, called Viola Supporters Trust, was formed by the fans of Viola Reggio Calabria. It currently plays in Serie C Silver Calabria, the fifth tier of the Italian pyramid.

History

The club was founded in 1966 as Cestistica Piero Viola by judge Peppino Viola in honour of his late brother Piero. It started playing in the Serie C that season, replacing AICS Reggio Calabria where Piero Viola had played at that level, finishing ninth. The club would establish itself in the Serie C (renamed Serie B from 1974–75) during the succeeding years. It would reach the professional second division Serie A2 in 1983. After a mid-table finish in its first season, Viola won the league in 1984–85 and earned a promotion to the Serie A. It was relegated after one season, returning in 1989 following a three-year stay in the Serie A2. The newly promoted side had its best ever season for its return to the elite, finishing the regular season in seventh place before losing in the playoff quarterfinals to Pallacanestro Varese, as Viola's Dan Caldwell finished as the league's top scorer.[1]

Carlo Recalcati took over the coaching reins the following season which ended in relegation. The club would bounce back by winning the Serie A2 in 1991–92. It would best its best finish with a sixth place in the 1992–93 Serie A, before a playoff quarterfinals series against Benetton Treviso ended with a disallowed on the buzzer shot that would have tied the game for Viola in the decisive 18 April game. The club made three other playoff appearances the next four seasons (quarterfinals in 1994 and eighth-finals in 1996 and 1997) with another of its players, Brian Oliver, leading the league in scoring during the 1995–96 season. The Cestistica Piero Viola organisation would be declared bankrupt in December 1997 (a bankruptcy later revoked due to irregularities),[2] it was replaced in January 1998 by Basket Viola Reggio Calabria SPA and then by Nuovo Basket Viola Reggio '98 the same year. After a parenthesis in the Serie A2 in 1998–99, the club, counting a young Manu Ginóbili in its ranks, again reached the playoff quarterfinals though they were eliminated by Virtus Bologna.[1]

The next season saw Ginóbili leave but players such as Carlos Delfino and Leandro Palladino arrive to help Viola stave off relegation and reach the 2000–01 FIBA Korać Cup Round of 16.[1] After battling relegation again in 2002, Viola returned to the playoffs the following year, with a repeat of the past as they again lost in five games to Benetton Treviso. Nuovo Basket Viola struggled to raise funds prior to the 2004–05 season, with only a last ditch cash injection by the municipality keeping the club, sponsor-less until March 2005,[3] financially afloat.[4] The club would finish in the relegation places in 2005 but kept its top flight status after Scavolini Pesaro folded. It was relegated in 2006, where three successive coaches could not stop the club from moving down to the LegaDue (the renamed second division).[1] Despite securing its LegaDue status on the court in 2007, Viola would see financial difficulties put an end to its professional activity over the summer, with the management unable to raise enough funds to keep the club running.[5]

Viola continued operating only through its youth sector, with the team playing in the Serie D.[1] On 7 July 2009, a new organisation acquired the sporting rights of Basket Gragnano and was admitted into the Serie B Dilettanti.[6] A change in ownership over the 2010 summer saw Giancesare Muscolino become president. The club would finish second during the regular season before losing in the promotion playoffs final to Orlandina Basket. The 2011–12 again saw the team stall in the promotion playoffs but it was admitted into the DNA anyway. The club then successfully fought relegation the following two seasons and with the second and third tier merging in 2015–16, play in the second division as of the 2015–16 season.[1]

Arena

The PalaCalafiore

At the beginning of the 1970s, the club transferred to the Scatolone arena, a small venue containing around 500 seats. With the club promoted to the Serie A2 in 1983, the Scatolone did not answer the league's requirements, a new arena – the Botteghelle – was built over fifty-seven days.[1] In 1991 the PalaCalafiore (full name: Palasport Francesco Calafiore in dedication to a local sports journalist) was built; it is the biggest arena in Calabria and the seventh-largest in Italy, with more than 8,500 seats. Viola still plays in this arena (also known as the PalaPentimele, from the Pentimele neighbourhood it is situated in) as of the 2015–16 season.[7]

Head coaches

  • Italy Tonino Zorzi 5 seasons: '87–'90, '95–'96, '01 (Jan.)-'02, '06 (Jan.-Mar.)
  • Italy Carlo Recalcati 5 seasons: '90–'95
  • Italy Lino Lardo 2 seasons: '02–'04

Sponsorship names

Throughout the years, due to sponsorship deals, it has been also known as:

  • Banca Popolare Reggio Calabria (1982–1984)
  • Viola Reggio Calabria (1984–1985)
  • Opel Reggio Calabria (1985–1986)
  • Viola Reggio Calabria (1989–1990)
  • Standa Reggio Calabria (1986–1989)
  • Panasonic Reggio Calabria (1990–1993)
  • Reggio Calabria Pfizer (1993–1995)
  • Viola Reggio Calabria (1995–2003)
  • Tris Reggio Calabria (2003–2004)
  • Eurofiditalia Reggio Calabria (2005)
  • Viola Reggio Calabria (2005–2007)
  • Liomatic Reggio Calabria (2009–2012)
  • Bermè Viola Reggio Calabria (2015–present)

Notable players

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 "Storia Viola" [Viola history]. ViolaReggioCalabria.it (in Italian). Retrieved 25 August 2015.
  2. "Viola Reggio Calabria. Fallimento revocato" [Viola Reggio Calabria. Bankruptcy revoked]. Gazzetta.it (in Italian). 26 January 2008. Retrieved 25 August 2015.
  3. "Reggio Calabria ora si chiama Eurofiditalia" [Reggio Calabria is now called Eurofiditalia]. LegaBasket.it (in Italian). Viola Reggio Calabria. 17 March 2005. Retrieved 25 August 2015.
  4. Gaeta, Piero (2 October 2004). "Il Comune manda in campo la Viola" [The municipality helps send Viola on the court]. LegaBasket.it (in Italian). Gazzetta del Sud. Retrieved 25 August 2015.
  5. De Rosario, Luca. "Reggio, addio alla Viola. Lanciò Bryant e Ginobili" [Reggio, farewell Viola. It launched [the careers of] Bryant and Ginobili]. Gazzetta.it (in Italian). Retrieved 25 August 2015.
  6. "Istanze agosto 2009" [August 2009 Instances] (PDF). FIP.it (in Italian). August 2009. Retrieved 25 August 2015.
  7. "Palacalafiore". ViolaReggioCalabria.it (in Italian). Retrieved 25 August 2015.
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