Enrico Preziosi is an Italian entrepreneur. He runs a number of businesses and is most famous for having been the chairman () of football club Genoa.
The liquidator of Como sued Juventus in 2006 for unpaid transfer fee of Alex Pederzoli and Felice Piccolo, who went back to Juventus in 2004. However, Juventus claimed it had paid and sued Preziosi instead. It was settled in February 2011 after Juventus agreed to pay €0.2 million instead of alleged €1.58 million. Como acquired Pederzoli and Piccolo for €1.6 million and returned to Juventus for €20,000. FIGC suspected Juventus, which signed youth players Domenico Criscito and Francesco Volpe from Genoa in co-ownership deals for €1.9 million in 2004 (Antonio Nocerino moved to opposite direction for €0.45M, i.e., €1.45million cash involved), were actually flopped in order to transfer the sum of €1.58million to Genoa, the new club of Preziosi. Genoa also sold Alessandro Colasante to Como in January 2004 for €750,000 but he joined Genoa as a free agent. Daniele Gregori, sold to Genoa in 2003 for free, also returned to Como in January 2004 for €750,000. Genoa also signed Carlo Gervasoni from Como in 2004 for free, but was sold to Verona for €500,000.
Despite Preziosi selling Como, on 15 June 2005, Preziosi regained his influence on Como after it was acquired by Royal S.r.l. This violated the rule stating that a person cannot have majority interests for more than two clubs. Como was not admitted to 2005–06 Serie C2, partially due to that reason (despite the club's financial issues partially being solved), and the club was sold to 1907 Como S.r.i., a company not owned by Preziosi. Como was not admitted to Serie C2 under new management because, by then, it was too late.
The team also acquired Marco Borriello from Milan in 2007 in co-ownership deal, who just valued €1.8 million, as he was suspended in the 2006–07 season due to using banned substances. A year later, Milan bought back Borriello for €10 million (€7.5 million plus half of Davide Di Gennaro). That season, Genoa also sold Cesare Bovo back to Palermo for €5 million who arrived at "The Griffin" for €2.85 million. Genoa also bought back Criscito in 2009 (in co-ownership) and in full in 2010, which cost Genoa just €5.5M and €6M (Criscito re-joined Genoa on loan for €1M in 2008 by exchanging Bonucci's 50% rights, valued at €8M)). Juventus acquired Criscito at youth for €950,000 in 2004 (co-ownership) and another 50% in 2007 for €7.5M (€5.25M cash plus Konko and A.Masiello). While Konko himself was sold for €9 million. Criscito was sold to Russia in the summer of 2011.
As part of the Bovo deal, Genoa signed Giuseppe Biava for €500,000. Despite being aged 33 in 2010, he was sold to Lazio for €800,000, nearly a double. His defensive partner in the 2008–09 season, Matteo Ferrari, was allowed to leave for Beşiktaş for €4.5 million in 2009, a year before he was a free agent.
The team also sold Sergio Floccari for €8.5 million plus a €0.5 million loan fee, who joined Genoa for €9.1M, and Giuseppe Sculli (who joined Genoa for €300,000) to Lazio on 21 June 2010 and in January 2011. The former had a disappointing 2009–10 season and Genoa made a quick swap in mid-season, which saw David Suazo from Inter to Genoa and Floccari to Lazio to replace Inter bounded Goran Pandev. Genoa also made another three-way swap, in which Acquafresca returned from Atalanta, Atalanta signed Nicola Amoruso from Parma, and Parma signed Hernán Crespo from Genoa.
Genoa once contracted five of the 23-player squad at the 2009 UEFA European Under-21 Football Championship, namely Acquafresca, Criscito, Ranocchia, Salvatore Bocchetti and Alberto Paloschi (in the 2010–11 season), the first four of them contracted at the same time in the 2009–10 season, plus half-owned Italy internationals Bonucci (who travelled to the 2010 FIFA World Cup in South Africa), Genoa owned most of the talented defenders (centre-back) of 1986 and 1987 at that time (Ranocchia was born in 1988). The only centre-back in the 2009 U-21 Euro not owned by Genoa was Marco Andreolli.
The team members were shaky compared to the traditional bigger team. For example, Genoa had changed its goalkeeper from Rubinho to Marco Amelia, Eduardo Carvalho and Sebastien Frey in the 2011–12 season. The longest serving keeper in recent years is Alessio Scarpi, a backup keeper. In the meantime, Luca Toni, a regular starter in the 2010–11 season, and sub Gergely Rudolf were released (to Juventus) and loaned out in January 2011 respectively. In exchange, Antonio Floro Flores and Mauro Boselli were borrowed. When a player was sold, the team would look for a replacement. Despite the sales of Bocchetti and Papastathopoulos in 2010–11 season, Dario Dainelli and Kaladze replaced them. The team concerned lesser goals and also scored lesser goals compared to those in the 2009–10 season. No Genoa player scored more than 10 goals since the departure of Milito. Only Floro Flores was able to score 10 goals for Genoa in the half-season.
Preziosi was banned for ten days as he contacted Siena for Erjon Bogdani's price. He was also banned for another 10 days in November 2008 as he entered the field in the last match of 2007–08 Serie A. Later, he was banned for 20 days during the event on 21 October 2007 (against Juventus) and on 26 October 2008 (for entering the locker room during the match against Inter Milan). Preziosi was fined €100,000 for transfer irregularity in May 2012.
Genoa
Caso Genoa–Venezia
Caso Como–Genoa
Bilanciopoli
Market operation and caso Milito–Motta
Other ban and fine
|
|