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Serie A 2025–26 Puglia Giallorossi

US Lecce

The Giallorossi from the heel of Italy's boot. Lecce's passionate, sun-scorched fanbase has endured more promotions and relegations than almost any other club in Italian football — and they wouldn't have it any other way.

Lecce, Puglia, Italy
Stadio Via del Mare — 31,533
Founded 1908

Unione Sportiva Lecce are the quintessential yo-yo club — Serie A one season, Serie B the next, then back up again. Since their first promotion to the top flight in 1985, Lecce have been relegated and promoted multiple times, each time returning with the same fierce determination and the same vibrant yellow-and-red colours filling the Stadio Via del Mare. That resilience is the club's defining characteristic.

Based in Lecce, the baroque city known as the "Florence of the South," the club draws its identity from Puglia — the long, sun-baked peninsula that forms the heel of Italy's boot. Football here is visceral and passionate. Supporters sing throughout matches with an intensity that intimidates visiting teams. On matchday, the Via del Mare — their home since 1966 — creates an atmosphere that belies the club's modest budget.

Manager Roberto D'Aversa has the task of keeping Lecce in Serie A in 2025-26. An experienced Italian coach who has worked at Parma, Sampdoria and elsewhere, D'Aversa understands the demands of survival football. He favours compact defending, quick transitions and making the most of set-pieces — the toolkit of a smart coach operating with limited resources.

The Yo-Yo Club Identity

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Up & Down
Since 1985

Lecce's relationship with Serie A is unlike almost any other Italian club. They have been promoted and relegated more times than most clubs of comparable size, cycling between the top two divisions with almost metronomic regularity. But rather than defining this as failure, Lecce supporters wear the yo-yo tag with a peculiar pride — it means they always come back.

The club has consistently survived and thrived despite being one of the smallest-market teams in Serie A. They have produced notable players including Valter Birsa, Marco Storari, and most famously served as a launching pad for several careers that went on to define Italian football. The southern Italian football culture — intense, loud, emotionally invested — gives Lecce an identity that money cannot manufacture.

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Puglia Football Culture

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Stadio Via del Mare

Built in 1966 and holding 31,533 supporters, the Via del Mare is one of the loudest grounds in Italian football on a matchday. The stadium's curved stands channel noise back onto the pitch, creating an cauldron-like atmosphere that visiting teams routinely describe as one of the toughest environments in Serie A.

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The Florence of the South

Lecce the city is celebrated for its extraordinary baroque architecture — UNESCO-recognised ornate stone buildings that have earned it a reputation as Italy's architectural jewel. The city's culture of beauty and pride permeates the football club's identity. Even in Serie B years, Lecce retain their dignity.

D'Aversa's Approach

Roberto D'Aversa built his coaching reputation on keeping sides organised and difficult to beat. His 4-3-3 or 4-2-3-1 systems prioritise defensive solidity, pressing triggers and fast counter-attacks — the ideal framework for a club that needs to extract maximum points from limited talent relative to rivals.

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