Academic literature on the topic 'Italia (Soccer Team)'

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Journal articles on the topic "Italia (Soccer Team)"

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Montanari, Fabrizio, Giacomo Silvestri, and Edoardo Gallo. "Team Performance between Change and Stability: The Case of the Italian ‘Serie A’." Journal of Sport Management 22, no. 6 (November 2008): 701–16. http://dx.doi.org/10.1123/jsm.22.6.701.

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This article studies the role of stability in team members’ relations as a determinant of performance in the Italian ‘Serie A’ Soccer League. The dataset includes all the players in the 35 teams that have competed in the ‘Serie A’ from the 1994–95 up to the 2002–03 season. The results show that team stability and longevity of team relationships have a positive impact on performance. Moreover, there is weak evidence that team stability is beneficial up to a critical point, after which it might be detrimental. The article discusses these and other findings, and also how these results contribute to the literature on teams.
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Caruso, Raul, Francesco Addesa, and Marco Di Domizio. "The Determinants of the TV Demand for Soccer: Empirical Evidence on Italian Serie A for the Period 2008-2015." Journal of Sports Economics 20, no. 1 (July 12, 2017): 25–49. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1527002517717298.

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This article investigates the determinants of the TV audience for Italian soccer in seven Serie A seasons (2008-2009 to 2014-2015). Italian viewers have committed behavior and that outcome uncertainty does not have an impact on the TV audience. When choosing whether to watch a match involving teams other than their favorite team, Italian consumers are attracted by both the aggregate quantity of talent and the matches involving teams at the top of the table. An increase in the TV demand is driven by an enhancement in the performance of the top clubs and in the quality of the entertainment.
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Vigne, G., C. Gaudino, I. Rogowski, G. Alloatti, and C. Hautier. "Activity Profile in Elite Italian Soccer Team." International Journal of Sports Medicine 31, no. 05 (March 18, 2010): 304–10. http://dx.doi.org/10.1055/s-0030-1248320.

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Annino, Giuseppe, Vincenzo Manzi, Anas Radi Alashram, Cristian Romagnoli, Mattia Coniglio, Niloofar Lamouchideli, Marco Alfonso Perrone, Dolores Limongi, and Elvira Padua. "COVID-19 as a Potential Cause of Muscle Injuries in Professional Italian Serie A Soccer Players: A Retrospective Observational Study." International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 19, no. 17 (September 5, 2022): 11117. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijerph191711117.

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The COVID-19 pandemic has shocked the entire planet. The soccer world has also suffered major upheavals, and many professional soccer players have been infected with the virus. The aim of this study was to evaluate the incidence of injuries in Italian Serie A professional soccer players before and during the COVID-19 pandemic. Methods: We evaluated the incidence of muscle injuries between four competitive seasons of the Italian Serie A (2016–2017, 2017–2018, and 2018–2019 pre-COVID-19 vs. 2020/2021 post-COVID-19) in professional soccer players. Results: Significant differences were found in muscular injuries between the post-COVID-19 season and the previous seasons (p < 0.001). The median split of the players’ positivity duration was of 15 days. The players’ long positivity (PLP) group showed a significant number of muscular injuries compared to the players’ short positivity (PSP) group (p < 0.0014, ES = 0.81, Large). The total teams’ days of positivity were significantly related to the total team number of muscular injuries (r = 0.86; CI 95% 0.66 to 0.94; p < 0.0001). In conclusion, this data showed that the competitive season post-COVID-19 lockdown has a higher incidence of muscle injuries in Italian Serie A soccer players compared to the pre-pandemic competitive season.
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Brustio, Paolo Riccardo, Gennaro Boccia, Paolo De Pasquale, Corrado Lupo, and Alexandru Nicolae Ungureanu. "Small Relative Age Effect Appears in Professional Female Italian Team Sports." International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 19, no. 1 (December 30, 2021): 385. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19010385.

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The relative age effect (RAE) concerns those (dis)advantages and outcomes resulting from an interaction between the dates of selection and birthdates. Although this phenomenon is well known in a male context, limited data are available in female sports. Thus, the aim of this study was to quantify the prevalence and magnitude of the RAE in a female Italian context at the professional level in basketball, soccer, and volleyball. A total of 1535 birthdates of elite senior players were analyzed overall and separately between early and late career stages. Chi-square goodness-of-fit tests were applied to investigate the RAE in each sport. An asymmetry in birthdates was observed in all sports (Crammer’s V ranged = 0.10–0.12). Players born close to the beginning of the year were 1.62 and 1.61 times more likely to reach first and second Italian divisions of soccer and volleyball, respectively, than those born in the last part of the year. A small over-representation of female athletes born close to the beginning of the year is evident at the senior professional level in all Italian investigated team sports. In soccer, this trend was more evident in the first stage of a senior career.
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Nateri, Rachele, Claudio Robazza, Asko Tolvanen, Laura Bortoli, Antonis Hatzigeorgiadis, and Montse C. Ruiz. "Emotional Intelligence and Psychobiosocial States: Mediating Effects of Intra-Team Communication and Role Ambiguity." Sustainability 12, no. 21 (October 30, 2020): 9019. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/su12219019.

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Emotional intelligence is an important variable related to the interaction and functioning of sports teams. The present study examined the relationship between players’ trait emotional intelligence and functional and dysfunctional psychobiosocial states. In particular, we examined the mediating effects of intra-team communication efficacy and role ambiguity in this relationship. The participants were 291 (174 men and 117 women) Italian players involved in various team sports (i.e., futsal, soccer, volleyball, handball, and rugby). They completed a multi-section questionnaire assessing the study variables during the early/middle part of their competitive seasons. Structural equation modeling (SEM) showed trait emotional intelligence to positively predict functional psychobiosocial states and negatively predict dysfunctional psychobiosocial states. Effective intra-team communication mediated the relationship between emotional intelligence and functional states, while role ambiguity was a mediator of the relationship between trait emotional intelligence and dysfunctional states. Overall, the results highlight the importance of examining trait emotional intelligence as an antecedent of players’ psychobiosocial states in applied sport contexts both in terms of team functioning and individual optimal sport experience.
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Pagani, Eleonora, Naomi Gavazzoni, Giuseppina Bernardelli, Mara Malacarne, Nadia Solaro, Emanuele Giusti, Gianluca Castelnuovo, Piero Volpi, Giulia Carimati, and Daniela Lucini. "Psychological Intervention Based on Mental Relaxation to Manage Stress in Female Junior Elite Soccer Team: Improvement in Cardiac Autonomic Control, Perception of Stress and Overall Health." International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 20, no. 2 (January 4, 2023): 942. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20020942.

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Chronic stress may represent one of the most important factors that negatively affects the health and performance of athletes. Finding a way to introduce psychological strategies to manage stress in everyday training routines is challenging, particularly in junior teams. We also must consider that a stress management intervention should be regarded as “efficacious” only if its application results in improvement of the complex underlying pathogenetic substratum, which considers mechanistically interrelated factors, such as immunological, endocrine and autonomic controls further to psychological functioning and behavior. In this study, we investigated the feasibility of implementing, in a standard training routine of the junior team of the Italian major soccer league, a stress management program based on mental relaxation training (MRT). We evaluated its effects on stress perception and cardiac autonomic regulation as assessed by means of ANSI, a single composite percentile-ranked proxy of autonomic balance, which is free of gender and age bias, economical, and simple to apply in a clinical setting. We observed that the simple employed MRT intervention was feasible in a female junior soccer team and was associated with a reduced perception of stress, an improved perception of overall health, and a betterment of cardiac autonomic control. This data may corroborate the scientific literature that indicates psychological intervention based on MRT as an efficacious strategy to improve performance, managing negative stress effects on cardiac autonomic control.
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Melegati, G., D. Tornese, A. Trabattoni, M. Gevi, G. Pozzi, H. Schonhuber, and P. Volpi. "Reducing muscle injuries and reinjuries in one italian professional male soccer team." Muscle Ligaments and Tendons Journal 03, no. 04 (January 2019): 324. http://dx.doi.org/10.32098/mltj.04.2013.14.

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Castagna, Carlo, and Elena Castellini. "Vertical Jump Performance in Italian Male and Female National Team Soccer Players." Journal of Strength and Conditioning Research 27, no. 4 (April 2013): 1156–61. http://dx.doi.org/10.1519/jsc.0b013e3182610999.

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Toselli, Stefania, Mario Mauro, Alessia Grigoletto, Stefania Cataldi, Luca Benedetti, Gianni Nanni, Riccardo Di Miceli, et al. "Maturation Selection Biases and Relative Age Effect in Italian Soccer Players of Different Levels." Biology 11, no. 11 (October 24, 2022): 1559. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/biology11111559.

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Soccer is a sport practiced all over the world, in which players are expected to show specific physical and technical skills. Soccer academies look for young talented individuals to develop promising players. Although several parameters could affect the players’ performance, the relative age effect (RAE) and the maturity status appeared debated. Therefore, this study compared the differences in RAE and biological maturity among the players of two Italian soccer teams of different levels and to understand their interaction effects with the competition level on youth players’ physical characteristics and abilities. One hundred and sixty-two young soccer players from the U12 to U15 age categories of the elite (n = 98) and non-elite (n = 64) teams were recruited. The prevalence of maturity status and RAE was observed. Many anthropometric parameters, BIA vectors, and motor tests (CMJ, Sprint, RSA) were carried out. The maturity status had a greater effect on several anthropometric characteristics and on 15 m sprint, while it affected the CMJ only in U12 (F = 6.187, p ≤ 0.01). Differently, the RAE seemed to priorly affect the U13 and U15 categories in body composition, whereas its effect appeared on the 15-m sprint (F(3, 45) = 4.147, p ≤ 0.01) and the RSA (F(3, 45) = 3.179, p ≤ 0.05) in the U14 category. In addition, early matured players or those who were born in the first six months presented cellular characteristics similar to adult elite players. Soccer professionals should be encouraged to monitor the maturity status to better interpret changes in the physical performance of young soccer players to guide adequate training plans.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Italia (Soccer Team)"

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Bigalke, Zachary. "“If They Can Die for Italy, They Can Play for Italy!”: Immigration, Italo-Argentine Identity, and the 1934 Italian World Cup Team." Thesis, University of Oregon, 2017. http://hdl.handle.net/1794/22654.

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In 1934, four Argentine-born soccer players participated for the Italian team that won the FIFA World Cup on home soil. As children born to parents who participated in a wave of Italian immigrants that helped reshape Argentine society in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, these four players were part of a larger trend where over one hundred Argentine soccer players of Italian descent were signed by Italian clubs in the late 1920s and through the 1930s. This thesis examines the liminal space between Italian and Argentine identity within the broader context of diaspora formation in Argentina through a look at these four exemplars of the transatlantic talent shift. Utilizing sources that include Italian and Argentinian newspapers and magazines, national federation documents, and census and parish records, the thesis reveals the fluidity and temporality of national identity among Italo-Argentine immigrant offspring during the early twentieth century.
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Books on the topic "Italia (Soccer Team)"

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Renga, Roberto. Ho ballato con Mandela: Da un Mondiale all'altro : viaggio nel calcio nazionale in compagnia del giornalista che ne sa una più degli Azzurri. Roma: Absolutely free, 2010.

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Sannucci, Corrado. La notte del calcio: Dalla Corea al Portogallo, diario della vergogna e del fallimento. Civitella in Val di Chiana, Arezzo: Zona, 2004.

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Caruso, Alfio. Un secolo azzurro: Cent'anni di Italia raccontati dalla nazionale di calcio. Milano: Longanesi, 2013.

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Lippi, Marcello. La squadra. Milano: Rizzoli, 2006.

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Il Mondiale è un'altra cosa: La Coppa del mondo raccontata dagli Azzurri. Milano: Bompiani, 2014.

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Caressa, Fabio. Andiamo a Berlino. Milano: Baldini Castoldi Dalai, 2006.

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Bacci, Andrea. La quarta stella: L'avventura azzurra in Germania. Arezzo: Limina, 2006.

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1982: Un'estate, un mondiale, una promessa di felicità : storia in due tempi e un intervallo. Roma: Ultra sport, 2012.

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Il miglior mondiale della nostra vita: Storia & storie del trionfo azzurro al Mundial di Spagna '82. Roma: Reality Book, 2014.

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Auditorium Parco della musica (Rome, Italy), ed. La Nazionale tra emozioni e storia: Un secolo di calcio azzurro. Roma: Palombi & Partner srl, 2014.

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Book chapters on the topic "Italia (Soccer Team)"

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Feldmann, Doug, and Mike Ditka. "A Ride to Freedom." In A View from Two Benches, 1–14. Cornell University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.7591/cornell/9781501749988.003.0001.

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This chapter discusses Bob Thomas's childhood. Robert Randall Thomas was born on August 7, 1952, the son of Italian immigrants. Young Bob was soon running up and down the soccer pitch with his father. When he was ten years old, his father launched a local youth team called the Baysiders. Playing with teenagers who had immigrated to Rochester from Italy, Mexico, Greece, Portugal, and other countries, the precocious Bob distinguished himself while his father searched out other teams for them to play. The Baysiders soon developed a reputation beyond Rochester as one of the finest amateur soccer teams to be found anywhere. With Bob's skills on the soccer field having become well known by the spring of his sophomore year at McQuaid Jesuit High School, he became a target for his football potential. When Bob graduated from McQuaid in the spring of 1970, it was time for him to consider what path his life would take from there.
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Sergi, Anna. "‘Ndrangheta City And Spiderwebs." In Chasing the Mafia, 193–224. Policy Press, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1332/policypress/9781529222432.003.0008.

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What do you do when you see spiders? Do you kill them straight away or do you capture them and take them outside? In the frame of the sumptuous Marconi Club in Sydney, Lillo Foti and Vince Foti had dinner in April 2015 to celebrate the partnership between the Marconi Stallions and the Reggina Calcio, two football teams recognizing their connection to Reggio Calabria, Italy, and soccer pride. The two Foti are not related. Vince is the president of the Marconi Club and a successful businessman in Sydney, owner of a firecracker industry. Lillo (Pasquale) has at times been the president of the Reggina Calcio in Reggio Calabria and is an entrepreneur in the fashion industry. Among Lillo Foti’s merits is the promotion of the Reggina team to the Italian Premier League (Serie A) for the first time in the history of the club. Lillo Foti, reported the newspapers, spent over a week in Australia on that occasion, in April 2015. He spent time in negotiations and formal or informal meetings with entrepreneurs of Italian origin in Sydney, Melbourne, Canberra; some of them were interested in investing in the football club in Calabria and in formalizing some sort of stable contact with the region that, from Australia, is at times difficult to maintain. Six Australian businessmen were interested in the deal promoted by Nick Scali – that Nick Scali of Scali furniture we have met in previous chapters, from San Martino of Taurianova, province of Reggio Calabria. The partnership between Reggina Calcio and Marconi Stallions is the first step.
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