List of Argentine footballers in Serie B

The list of Argentine footballers in Serie B records the association football players from Argentina who have appeared at least once for a team in the Italian Serie B. Entries in bold denote players still active in actual season.[1]

A

B

Gabriel Batistuta was called up by Argentina for the 1994 FIFA World Cup despite playing in Serie B. In that tournament he scored 4 goals[2]
  • Abel Balbo – Udinese – 1990–92
  • Juan Barbas – Lecce – 1986–88
  • Evaristo Barrera – Cremonese – 1945–46
  • Carlos Barrionuevo – Salernitana – 2008–09
  • Gabriel Batistuta – Fiorentina – 1993–94
  • Carlos Bello – Taranto – 1993–94
  • César Bertolo – Cremonese, Sanremese – 1936–37, 1938–40
  • Domingo Bertolo – Sanremese – 1938–40
  • Albano Bizzarri – Foggia, Perugia – 2018–19
  • Silvio Bonino – Palermo – 1942–43
  • Gabriel Miguel Bordi – Napoli – 1999–00

C

Campagnaro (here playing for Napoli in 2009) is one of Argentine most capped players in Serie B with more than 150 presences (as per June 2019)[3]

D

E

  • Horacio Erpen – Venezia, Triestina, Sassuolo, Juve Stabia – 2004–06, 2008–09, 2011–13
  • Gonzalo Escalante – Catania – 2014–15
  • Juán Esposto – Palermo – 1930–31

F

G

  • Luciano Galletti – Napoli – 1999–00
  • Francisco Garraffa – Livorno – 1935–37
  • Matias Garavano – Gallipoli – 2009–10
  • Carlos Garavelli – Casale – 1938–39
  • Emanuel Gigliotti – Novara – 2010–11
  • Damián Giménez – Pescara – 2005–07
  • Juanito Gómez Taleb – Triestina, Verona, Cremonese – 2005–06, 2011–13, 2016–18
  • Pablo Andrés González – Novara – 2010–11, 2012–14, 2015–16
  • Raúl Alberto González – Crotone, Salernitana, Cosenza – 2001–03
  • Nicolas Gorobsov – Vicenza, Torino – 2007–11
  • Ariel Damian Grana – Venezia – 2004–05
  • Ariel Leo Griffo – Como – 2003–04
  • Ruben Gerardo Grighini – Venezia, Vicenza – 2004–06
  • Fausto GrilloTrapani – 2019–
  • Salvador Gualtieri – Vicenza, Anconitana – 1949–51

H

I

J

L

  • Christian La Grotteria – Palermo – 2001–03
  • Santiago Ladino – Bari – 2007–08
  • Juan Manuel Landaida – Venezia, Triestina – 2004–06
  • Juán Landolfi – Padova, Viareggio – 1942–43, 1947–48
  • Federico Raúl Laurito – Livorno, Empoli – 2008–09, 2010–11
  • Leandro Lázzaro – Salernitana – 2001–02
  • Emmanuel Ledesma – Salernitana, Crotone – 2008–09, 2010–11
  • Sebastián Leto – Catania – 2014–15
  • Gaston Liendo – Venezia – 2003–04
  • Marcos Locatelli – Genoa – 1965–68
  • Nicolás Lombardo – Pisa – 1934–36
  • Miguel Longo – Cagliari, Atalanta – 1962–64, 1969–70
  • Lucas Longoni – Triestina – 2010–11
  • Ariel López – Genoa – 1997–98
  • Juán Carlos Lopez – Juve Stabia – 1951–52
  • Maxi LópezCrotone – 2019–

M

  • Julián Magallanes – Vicenza, Cittadella – 2008–12
  • Carlos Marinelli – Torino – 2004–05
  • Diego Fernando Markic – Bari – 2001–04
  • Enrique Martegani – Palermo – 1954–55
  • Oscar Massei – SPAL – 1964–65
  • Carlos Matheu – Siena – 2013–14
  • Américo Menutti – Bari, Lecce – 1941–42
  • Rubens Merighi – Modena – 1964–67, 1968–72
  • Mariano Messera – Catania – 2004–05
  • Raúl Mezzadra – Bari, Cesena – 1940–41, 1942–43
  • Diego Milito – Genoa – 2004–05
  • Matias Miramontes – Venezia, Ancona, Triestina – 2003–05, 2008–11
  • Lucas Rodrigo Montero – Ternana – 2004–06
  • Luciano Fabián Monzón – Catania – 2014–15
  • Santiago Morero – Cesena, Siena, Avellino – 2012–14, 2017–18
  • Juan Carlos Morrone – Lazio, Foggia, Avellino – 1961–63, 1967–69, 1973–74
  • Ezequiel Muñoz – Palermo – 2013–14

N

O

P

Q

  • Diego Quintero – Salernitana – 2000–01
  • Jorge Quinteros – Padova – 1997–98

R

Ricchiuti is the top goalscorer in Serie B for Rimini with 35 goals.[4]

S

  • Mario Santana – Palermo, Frosinone – 2002–03, 2014–15
  • Gastón Sauro – Catania – 2014–15
  • Nicolás Schiavi – Novara – 2015–16, 2017–18
  • Roberto Nestor Sensini – Udinese – 1990–92
  • Adalberto Sifredi – Salernitana, Livorno – 1948–50
  • Matías SilvestreLivorno – 2019–
  • Diego Simeone – Pisa – 1991–92
  • Lucas Simon – Piacenza – 2006–10
  • Roberto Sosa – Ascoli, Messina, Napoli – 2003–04, 2006–07
  • Víctor Sotomayor – Verona – 1990–91
  • Claudio Spinelli – Crotone – 2018–19
  • José Spirolazzi – Fanfulla Lodi – 1939–43
  • Nicolás Spolli – Catania, Crotone – 2014–15, 2018–
  • José Surano – Cremonese – 1947–48

T

V

Santiago Vernazza was the first Argentine player to win goalscorers rank in Serie B in 1958–59 while playing for Palermo[5]

Y

  • Carlos Alberto Yaqué – Reggina – 1997–99
  • Andrés Yllana – Brescia, Verona – 1999–00, 2002–03

Z

  • Mauro Zanotti – Ternana – 2003–05
  • Luciano Zavagno – Catania, Pisa, Ancona, Torino – 2005–06, 2007–12
  • Bruno Zuculini – Verona – 2016–17
  • Franco Zuculini – Bologna, Verona, Venezia – 2014–15, 2016–17, 2019–


See also

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.