AC Bellinzona
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Associazione Calcio Bellinzona is a Swiss football club based in Bellinzona. It was founded in 1904, and won the Swiss Super League in 1948. After being folded in 2013 declaring bankruptcy, the team played the Ticino Group of 2.Liga, the sixth tier of the Swiss Football League System in 2014–15 season. After winning it and the 1. Liga Classic, Bellinzona was promoted to 1. Liga Promotion. They have since earned promotion back to, and currently play in, the Swiss Challenge League, the second tier of Swiss football.
History

Because Bellinzona is an Italian-speaking region, many of Italy's Serie A clubs have loaned youth players to the club to get first team experience.
Bellinzona was promoted to the Swiss Super League after beating St. Gallen 5–2 on aggregate in the relegation play-off following the 2007–2008 season. Bellinzona played at the top level in the 2008–2009 season for the first time since the 1989–90 season. As finalists in the Swiss Cup, the team also qualified for the 08-09 UEFA Cup where it beat Ararat Yerevan of Armenia in the 1st qualifying round. Then they knocked-out Ukrainian FC Dnipro on away goal rule (2:3 in Dnipropetrovsk, and 2:1 home victory, 4:4 aggregate). In third qualifying round they faced Galatasaray losing both games 3:4 at home ground and 1:2 in Istanbul.
In 2013 before the 2013–14 season of 1. Liga Promotion the club was declared bankrupt. After staying one season playing only at young divisions, the club went back to professional football, joining the 2014–15 2.Liga. After two years in 1. Liga Classic, the club finished first in 2018 and was promoted to the 1. Liga Promotion for the 2018–19 season.
In the 2021–22 Swiss Promotion League, Bellinzona reached second place during the regular season. In the promotion round, they were able eke out a first-place finish ahead of FC Breitenrain to gain promotion to the Swiss Challenge League. As Breitenrain withdrew their license request, Bellinzona would have been promoted even had they not won the season.
Their return to the Challenge League was a season of ups, such as a 5–1 home victory to FC Wil, and downs, such as a 0–6 home defeat to Stade Lausanne-Ouchy on the last matchday, which saw the team finish in ninth place (out of ten). Following a 3–2 victory against Wil on matchday 33, the team was secured from relegation. Another sign of the unsettled season was the number of changes in the coaching staff. David Sesa, who had joined in the pre-season, resigned after only two months at the helm. Baldassare Raineri took over the team in September, before being terminated in the winter break and his replacement Stefano Maccioppi was terminated at the end of March 2023. Counting interim coach Fernando Cocimano, who took over coaching duties between Sesa and Raineri and again after Maccoppi until the end of the season, the team had four different coaches throughout the season.
Honours
- Swiss Super League Champions: 1947–48
- Swiss Challenge League Champions: 1942–43 (Lost promotion play-off), 1943–44 (Won promotion play-off), 1975–76, 1979–80, 1999–2000 (Lost promotion play-off)
- Swiss Promotion League Champions: 2021–22
- 1. Liga Classic Champions: 1931–32, 1935–36, 1998–99, 2017–18
- 2. Liga Champions: 1920–21 (as 4th tier), 2014–15 (as 6th tier)
Players
Current squad
As of 14 April 2026
Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules; some limited exceptions apply. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.
| No. | Pos. | Nation | Player |
|---|---|---|---|
| No. Pos. Nation Player 1 GK SUI Noah Godwin (on loan from Sion) 3 DF SUI Aris Sörensen 4 DF ESP Borja López 5 DF SUI Mahir Rizvanović 6 DF ESP Alberto Trapero 7 FW SUI Evan Rossier 8 MF ESP Aarón Rey 10 MF SUI Fabio Lymann 11 FW SUI Willy Vogt 14 MF SUI Freddy Bomo 16 GK SUI Alexander Muci 19 FW ALB Armando Sadiku 20 FW COL Jonatan Mayorga 21 MF GER Meritan Shabani | No. Pos. Nation Player 22 GK SUI Elio Trochen 23 DF SUI Michael Gonçalves 24 MF KOS Elion Jashari 25 MF COL Duban Ayala 30 DF KOS Dion Dërmaku 34 DF SUI Endrit Fetahu 45 FW SUI Momodou Jaiteh 58 GK NGA Sebastian Osigwe 77 MF ITA Alessandro Grano 79 DF KOS Lendrit Shala 80 FW RWA Johan Kury 88 MF COL Duván Mosquera 91 DF SUI Dragan Mihajlović 92 MF SUI Pierrick Moulin (on loan from Sion) 99 MF COL Andrés López | ||
| 1 | GK | SUI | Noah Godwin (on loan from Sion) |
| 3 | DF | SUI | Aris Sörensen |
| 4 | DF | ESP | Borja López |
| 5 | DF | SUI | Mahir Rizvanović |
| 6 | DF | ESP | Alberto Trapero |
| 7 | FW | SUI | Evan Rossier |
| 8 | MF | ESP | Aarón Rey |
| 10 | MF | SUI | Fabio Lymann |
| 11 | FW | SUI | Willy Vogt |
| 14 | MF | SUI | Freddy Bomo |
| 16 | GK | SUI | Alexander Muci |
| 19 | FW | ALB | Armando Sadiku |
| 20 | FW | COL | Jonatan Mayorga |
| 21 | MF | GER | Meritan Shabani |
| No. | Pos. | Nation | Player |
| 22 | GK | SUI | Elio Trochen |
| 23 | DF | SUI | Michael Gonçalves |
| 24 | MF | KOS | Elion Jashari |
| 25 | MF | COL | Duban Ayala |
| 30 | DF | KOS | Dion Dërmaku |
| 34 | DF | SUI | Endrit Fetahu |
| 45 | FW | SUI | Momodou Jaiteh |
| 58 | GK | NGA | Sebastian Osigwe |
| 77 | MF | ITA | Alessandro Grano |
| 79 | DF | KOS | Lendrit Shala |
| 80 | FW | RWA | Johan Kury |
| 88 | MF | COL | Duván Mosquera |
| 91 | DF | SUI | Dragan Mihajlović |
| 92 | MF | SUI | Pierrick Moulin (on loan from Sion) |
| 99 | MF | COL | Andrés López |
Out on loan
Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules; some limited exceptions apply. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.
| No. | Pos. | Nation | Player |
|---|---|---|---|
| No. Pos. Nation Player — FW URU Enrique Almeida (at Cerro Largo until 30 June 2025) | |||
| — | FW | URU | Enrique Almeida (at Cerro Largo until 30 June 2025) |
Coaching staff
| Position | Name |
|---|---|
| Head coach | Italian Football Federation Giuseppe Sannino |
| Goalkeeper coach | Switzerland Pietro Scalesi |
| Physiotherapist | Switzerland Luca Moretti |
| Doctor | Switzerland Gianluca Baroni |
External links
- (in Italian)
- (archived)