var teamInfo={"984347BABFCA12BE2593CF05C154190C":"Olympique Lyonnais,Frosinone,FC Sion,Brescia,Hellas Verona FC,SSC Bari,Juventus(U19)","A529E53C559174F81441CD95517400BB":"1977-11-28","3B9127F7BC829326":"1","187F8138BE7BCBEE":"25.13","BBF1A240ACF09477":"Sassuolo","8F753504205D2106738DB725C9C678FB":"190cm","2C2DB8E0A27DDF86":"","63C820864FB855F7":"http:\/\/www.sassuolocalcio.it\/","12CF5F874EE8072F":"Fabio Grosso","B53FD9094B6C7706961F3AE3F07FA51E":"156400000.00","F2997F3FCAC3F1F36AFD1065D14BBF9E":"82kg","4ED7E9E8DBD22FFE":"10218","AEA806C1427039FE44581DB525FB9B7BD0F0E6F183CA457B":"1920-7-16","078F3C827B475FC4":"4014","71917274BAF6F295":"","09138E45C3AF9F63D172519924158A69":"
Serie B Supercoppa di Serie C Unione Sportiva Sassuolo Calcio, commonly referred to as Sassuolo, is an Italian football club based in Sassuolo, Emilia-Romagna. Their colours are black and green, hence the nickname Neroverdi (literally "black and green", in Italian).<\/P> Founded in 1920, Sassuolo have played in Serie A from the 2013–14 season, joining a select group of teams playing in the Serie A but not belonging to a provincial capital city: Empoli, Legnano, Pro Patria, Carpi and Casale.<\/P>","4ECD1B5E2820C55A130549CA8EF1E5D7":"Italy","983F4D11FB6C2C3B732A80DC5C377379":"US Sassuolo Calcio","6AA767C80F13E5B78D99D4E49AE0DBEF":"Stadio "Enzo Ricci" - Piazza Risorgimento - Sassuolo (MO)","B53FD9094B6C7706A3358457A9AFAFFFED8DF2C618386067":"1","FAEF47752E34E7B4424428922BB6E983":"21,584","891E8ED23A68FBCE79DAB5425E7817DA":"2024-6-3","C606677BC35A1B73EF2C1314AB427615":"Italy","F27550BB3729EA0167FE884B8ADBF4F0":" Profile
<\/STRONG>Winners: 2012–13<\/P>
<\/STRONG>Winners: 2008<\/P>","55C75D25959437F15B2401A05EABB58A":"Fabio Grosso","E6554F2C3B7E97A2":"1","1A770A41820EA8876555100F4F89BC57":"
<\/STRONG>
One of Italy's outstanding performers at the 2006 FIFA World Cup, Fabio Grosso wrote his name in Azzurri legend by scoring the winning goal in the semi-final against Germany and also converting the decisive penalty in the final shoot-out against France. The pacy left-back lost his place during the UEFA EURO 2008™ qualifying campaign but his tournament pedigree could earn him a recall to the starting lineup.
A latecomer to Serie A, he was nearly 24 when he made his debut, for AC Perugia, in August 2001.
Made international debut v Switzerland in Geneva, April 2003.
Joined US Città di Palermo halfway through 2003\/04 campaign – while Perugia dropped a division from Serie A, Palermo moved in other direction.
Scored important equaliser in World Cup qualifier v Scotland at Hampden Park in September 2005 (1-1); no further goals for club or country until his last-gasp winning strike v Germany in Dortmund.
Joined FC Internazionale Milano after World Cup; won Scudetto but left after one season for Olympique Lyonnais, where he won French league\/cup double.
Did you know?<\/STRONG>
Grosso began his career at Renato Curi, a Serie D club where AC Milan right-back Massimo Oddo also started out – he was an attacking midfielder but Perugia coach Serse Cosmi transformed him into a left-back.<\/P>","A78F9074B5AF8132E0B45C9330387DBD":"34","41128DAD6401C79B":"salernitana@lega-calcio.it","FD4444EF21B7675091CBC3D627A340D9":"Olympique Lyonnais","A494ABC507986833":"US Sassuolo Calcio","91FE8FA7C5C430DAAFC7BD28FB26F7CC":"","B5C54F059EE3A9A4DCB95465432A8D14":"Mapei Stadium \u2013 Citt\u00e0 del Tricolore","90579B4DEA63C3E4":"US Sassuolo Calcio","e_index":2};