Bari
Est. 1908 · Italy
About Bari
SSC Bari are the footballing soul of Puglia, a red and white club from the heel of Italy who have bounced between Serie A and the lower divisions across a long and eventful history. Their beloved Stadio San Nicola, designed by architect Renzo Piano for the 1990 FIFA World Cup, is one of the most impressive football grounds in Italy, a futuristic bowl rising from the flat southern landscape that immediately signals this is a city that takes football seriously. Founded in 1908, I Galletti have always returned to the top flight driven by the passion of their southern support.
Founded in 1908, SSC Bari compete in Serie A, Italy's top division. Their home is the Stadio San Nicola in Bari, Puglia, one of the twelve World Cup venues from Italia '90 and one of the finest stadiums in southern Italy. The club's nickname I Galletti, the Roosters, reflects their proud southern identity.
Bari's red and white colours have been a constant throughout the club's history, giving them an identity immediately associated with the city. The Biancorossi have worn a variety of stripe widths across their Serie A campaigns, from the narrower stripes of the 1980s to bolder modern designs. The Stadio San Nicola, with its spectacular cantilevered roof and spider-leg floodlights, provides one of Italian football's great backdrops for those red and white shirts, and the ground's striking design makes wearing a Bari kit on that pitch feel genuinely significant.


