TIFOSI

'Tifosi' is an Italian word to describe a group of fans. The word for a single fan is ''Tifoso'' and the female version of the word is ''Tifosa'' for singular and ''Tifose'' for plural.

Contents
Football
Formula 1
Football

The word is mainly used to describe fans of clubs in Football. Apart from the many local fan clubs in Italy whose main role is (for example) to provide a meeting place for fans and friends and organize away trips, since the late 60s many Italian fans rely on organized stadium groups known as Ultras. The main goal is to choreograph fan support with flags, banners, coloured smoke screens, drums, and chanting in unison. For most teams city rivalries, colours, coat of arms, symbols, and the overall iconography have roots in the Middle Ages and early Renaissance. As the chosen names of most organized groups, the youth of most members, and the late 60s origins may suggest, the social trend is best understood as part of the popular culture that centres around the year 1968.
Formula 1

It has become common to use the word Tifosi to refer to the supporters of Scuderia Ferrari in Formula One.
Italian motor racing fans are well-known for their love of Ferrari, whereas most other supporters tend to support local drivers rather than teams.
The Tifosi provide Formula One with some of its most iconic images, as a sea of red fills the grandstands at the San Marino and Italian Grands Prix.
One of the most common Tifosi sightings are common with the display of an enormous Ferrari flag in the grandstands during Formula 1 weekends at every race circuit, with especially large contingents showing up in Ferrari livery at home and nearby European tracks.
The recent increase in their ranks can be directly traced to the rise of Michael Schumacher, who drove the lead Ferrari from 1996 to 2006, and in the process broke nearly every record ever set in the sport.

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psst.. try this: add to faves