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Evans Soligo

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Evans Soligo
Personal information
Date of birth (1979-01-14) 14 January 1979 (age 45)
Place of birth Marghera, Italy
Height 1.76 m (5 ft 9+12 in)
Position(s) Midfielder
Youth career
0000–1998 Venezia
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1998–2002 Venezia 0 (0)
1998–1999Sandonà (loan) 33 (2)
1999–2000SPAL (loan) 28 (3)
2000–2002Lumezzane (loan) 61 (3)
2002–2005 Palermo 9 (0)
2002–2003Venezia (loan) 18 (1)
2004Triestina (loan) 17 (1)
2005Hellas Verona (loan) 11 (0)
2005–2010 Salernitana 166 (10)
2010–2012 Vicenza 69 (2)
2012–2013 Paganese 27 (0)
2013–2014 Delta Porto Tolle 22 (1)
2014–2015 San Marino 31 (1)
2015–2018 Venezia 57 (4)
Total 549 (29)
Managerial career
2014–2020 Venezia U19 (assistant)
2020–2023 Venezia (youth center coordinator)
*Club domestic league appearances and goals

Evans Soligo (born 14 January 1979) is a retired Italian footballer who played as a midfielder. He spend his entire career at clubs in Italy's Serie B and Serie C.

Career

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Born in Marghera, the inland part of Venice, Soligo started his career at hometown club A.C. Venezia. Since 1998–99 season he was loaned to Serie C1 and Serie C2 clubs Sandonà, SPAL and Lumezzane, which also located in northern Italy. After Venezia owner Maurizio Zamparini took over Palermo from by–then A.S. Roma President Franco Sensi in July, Zamparini bought most of the player of Venezia to Palermo in August and planned to sell Venezia to uncredited person (AC Venezia then fold in 2005). Players namely Stefano Morrone, Daniel Andersson, Bilica, Igor Budan, Francesco Ciullo, Kewullay Conteh, Arturo Di Napoli, Valentino Lai, Filippo Maniero, Antonio Marasco, Francesco Modesto, Frank Ongfiang, Generoso Rossi, Mario Santana, Ighli Vannucchi and William Viali all left for the Sicily side. But at the start of season he was loaned back to Venezia from Palermo along with Budan and Andrea Guerra. Soligo made his Serie B debut with Venezia, on 19 October 2002 (round 8 but the 6th match as first two postponed[1]) He was in the starting XI and replaced by Anderson in 77th minute, 1 minute after Daniele Amerini scored the equalizing goal. The match eventually ended in 1–1 with Ternana.[2] Soligo then remained in starting XI until round 21 (31 January), which he appeared as sub. He played his next match on round 35 and played all last 4 matches as one of the starting XI (round 35 to 38).

In 2003–04 season Soligo returned to Palermo but just made 9 league appearances for the Serie B champion.

Soligo was not in Palermo's Serie A plan, on 21 July 2004, he was loaned back to Serie B for Triestina,[3] 3 days before the pre–season camp.[4] On 31 January 2005 he was loaned to fellow Serie B team Verona which aimed to promotion.[5] But he just made 11 league appearances and the team missed the chance to enter the promotion playoffs by finished 1 point less than Ascoli, which Ascoli eventually promoted to Serie A due to Caso Genoa and bankrupt of Torino Calcio (and a new club Torino F.C. re–admitted to Serie B). That season also saw the bankrupt of Salernitana Sport and Salernitana Calcio 1919 re–admitted to Serie C1, which Soligo left for the re–found Salerno club.[6]

With the southern Italy side for 5 seasons, he won Serie C1 Group B champion with the team in 2008 and spent the last 2 seasons at Serie B. The team avoided relegated in 2009 by finished 1 point more than Cittadella and Rimini, which the latter relegated after losing the playoffs. But after the team relegated again to Lega Pro Prima Divisione (ex–Serie C1 and later expelled), he joined Serie B side Vicenza on free transfer, returned to Veneto region after 5 years at Campania.[7]

In summer 2012 he moved to Paganese; in November 2013 accords with the Delta Rovigo. After the signing season for the San Marino; summer of 2015 plays in Venezia.

Honours

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Palermo

Salernitana

Venezia

References

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  1. ^ "Serie A season delayed". BBC Sport. 20 August 2002. Retrieved 16 July 2010.
  2. ^ match Report[permanent dead link] (in Italian)
  3. ^ Di Chiara, Filippo (21 July 2004). "L' Ascoli prende Monticciolo, Soligo alla Triestina". La Gazzetta dello Sport (in Italian). Retrieved 16 July 2010.
  4. ^ "I CONVOCATI PER IL RITIRO". US Città di Palermo (in Italian). lpalermocalcio.it. 24 July 2005. Retrieved 16 July 2010.
  5. ^ "CALCIOMERCATO, VINCENZO ITALIANO AL GENOA C.F.C." hellasverona.it (in Italian). 31 January 2005. Archived from the original on 23 March 2020. Retrieved 26 March 2020.
  6. ^ Ceniti, Francesco; Nicita, Maurizio (26 August 2005). "Fusco allo Spezia Il Napoli insegue Camara e Terzi". La Gazzetta dello Sport (in Italian). Retrieved 15 July 2010.
  7. ^ "Evans Soligo in biancorosso". Vicenza Calcio (in Italian). 2 July 2010. Retrieved 15 July 2010.[permanent dead link]
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