Lecce relegated

Curtain comes down on historic Serie A season

Lecce were relegated from Serie A after one season in the top flight on Sunday as a dramatic season both on and off the pitch in Italy came to a close.

Fabio Liverani’s side lost 4-3 at home to mid-table Parma but would have dropped down to Serie B even if they had won as relegation rivals Genoa thumped Hellas Verona 3-0 in a match that saw four red cards, including one for Verona coach Ivan Juric.

Lecce, who drop down to Serie B after finishing 17th, were a point behind Genoa going into the final round of matches and needed to beat Parma and hope Genoa failed to win against Verona in order to stay in the top division.

However, unfortunate Lecce defender Fabio Lucioni made his team’s task harder after just 10 minutes when he bundled the ball into his own goal after Hernani’s shot thumped out off the post.

Gianluca Caprari then doubled the away side’s lead 13 minutes later when he lashed home a superb first time finish after being fed by Hernani.

Seconds later Antonio Sanabria scored the second of his two goals for Genoa to put the hosts 2-0 up against Verona at the Stadio Luigi Ferraris, effectively ending Lecce’s hopes of a final day miracle.

Entertaining Lecce didn’t give up though and two quick goals put them level, Antonin Barak heading them back into the game in the 40th minute before Biagio Meccariello equalized with another bullet header just before the break.

However, by that time Genoa were three goals ahead and as good as safe thanks to Cristian Romero’s own beautifully placed header.

Andreas Cornelius then put Parma back ahead six minutes after the restart when he tapped in Antonino Barilla’s low cross, before Barilla then provided another perfect pass for Roberto Inglese to reestablish Parma’s two-goal lead in the 66th minute.

That was the 85th goal Lecce had conceded this season, the league’s worst defensive record, and meant Gianluca Lapadula’s close range finish seconds later didn’t even earn Lecce a point.

Little virus drama

Elsewhere, Udinese won 1-0 at Sassuolo thanks to Stefano Okaka’s strike seven minutes after the break while Torino and Bologna played a 1-1 draw in two matches with little at stake.

Earlier two late goals from Christian Kouame and Erick Pulgar gave Fiorentina a 3-1 Serie A win at bottom club SPAL.

Kouame headed the away side into an 89th-minute lead and after supplying the cross for the Cote d’Ivoire international Pulgar then made no mistake from the penalty spot in stoppage time.

The sides had been level since the 39th minute when Marco D’Alessandro guided home a beautiful volley to cancel out Ghana midfielder Alfred Duncan’s 30th-minute opener.

Fiorentina finish 10th while SPAL waved goodbye to Serie A with their 28th defeat of the campaign.

The Serie A season finished deep into a hot Italian summer with Juventus crowned champions for the ninth straight year and little coronavirus drama despite the country at one point being the world’s worst affected.

Italy’s north was hit especially hard by COVID-19 as the Lombardy region, which includes the financial capital Milan, became the global epicenter of the pandemic in March.

Furious Conte

When Inter Milan coach ­Antonio Conte faces the cameras after a match, it is a case of lighting the blue touch paper and standing well back.

In his first season at Inter, the 51-year-old former Juventus, Italy and Chelsea coach has railed against his own club’s “poor planning” and an “insane” fixture list, and even blamed one poor performance on the opposition playing the wrong kind of football.

His latest outburst, however, after a 2-0 win at Atalanta on Saturday that clinched second place for Inter in Serie A, has led to all sorts of intrigue.

“I don’t think the work of the ­players has been recognized and I don’t think my work has been recognized,” he said, before accusing unnamed club members of only showing their faces when things were going well.

“We all received very little ­protection from the club, absolutely zero.”

Conte also said nothing had changed at Inter since an interview given by his predecessor Luciano Spalletti – an apparent reference to Spalletti’s claim there was a “mole” in the Inter dressing-room who leaked team gossip to the media.

Lecce players react after their relegation from Serie A on Sunday in Lecce, Italy. Photo: IC

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