History of football in Mirandola began on 15 March 1911, when the "Foot-Ball Club
Giovanni Pico" was founded, which asked the municipal administration for the concession of a plot of land of about 3 biolche () placed in the 9th trunk Spalti in order to build a sports field. However, the land was leased, so the first playing field was built on the side of the west ring road. This first football experience ended, however, with the outbreak of the
First World War. During the Fascist era it was decided to build a larger sports facility, also to serve the military of the Mussolini barracks and the students of the National Physical Education School of
Milizia Volontaria per la Sicurezza Nazionale (MVSN) for premilitary instructors and sportmen. The school managed to train about 2,000 instructors a year, reaching its peak in 1934 with almost 5,000 graduates. In the 1928–1929 season, the
U.S. Mirandolese team reached the first place in group E of the Second Division on equal terms with GS Farini, who was beaten (2-0) in the play-off played in
Mantua on 9 June 1929. The victory allowed Mirandolese to play in the
Prima Divisione for 3 years. In 1929 construction work began on the spectator stand, designed by architect Mario Guerzoni (1884-1956) and inaugurated in 1930. Among Mirandola's footballers who played on the field of the Lolli Stadium are to be remembered:
Oreste Benatti (
Bighina), Mario Castorri (
Bacic), Libero and Nino Lolli, Evaristo Malavasi (
Beg), Emilio Furlani (
Milietto), Gianni Cappi, Silvano Bottecchi (Spinon), Fermo Benatti, Nando Paltrinieri, Antonio Marchetti, Livio Luppi, Nunzio Cavazza, Ilario Righini, Marco Marchetti, Mauro Muracchini and Roberto Razzaboni. Inside the sports area, in 1954 a skating rink was built next to the grandstand on which the Polisportiva Giovanni Pico
roller hockey team competed for many years. In May 2012 the historical building of the stands and the surrounding wall were damaged by the earthquake in Emilia. In November 2012, temporary changing rooms were set up and the "Coverciano grandstand" was repaired. 347 donations were received from private citizens for a total of €55,489.66 for the restoration of the stadium. In 2017 the municipal administration announced the disposal of the Lolli stadium, whose grassy land will be used for the construction of new flats and shops. In addition, the grandstand (bound by the Superintendence of Cultural Heritage as a historic building) will be refurbished to serve a public garden. == References ==