Sneha Girap (Editor)

Joey Saputo

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Name
  
Joey Saputo

Siblings
  
Lino Saputo Jr.

Spouse
  
Carmie Saputo

Role
  
Businessman


Joey Saputo montrealmp7staticmlsdigitalnetmp6imagenodes

Grandparents
  
Maria Saputo, Giuseppe Saputo

Uncles
  
Luigi Saputo, Frank Saputo

Similar People
  
Joe Tacopina, Nick De Santis, Delio Rossi, Luis Diego Lopez, Stefano Pioli

Profiles


Parents
  
Lino Saputo, Maria Saputo

Joey saputo s fight to get the montreal impact into mls mls insider episode 4


Giuseppe "Joey" Saputo (born September 25, 1964) is a Canadian businessman and the president of the Montreal Impact soccer team he founded in 1992, and Saputo Stadium, named after his family's dairy products company Saputo Inc. He is also the chairman of the Italian football club Bologna F.C. 1909.

Contents

Joey Saputo Saputo disappointed in falling attendance wants to bring

Family

Joey Saputo Butler Saputo raises profile of team city with

Joey Saputo is the son of Emanuele "Lino" Saputo, the founder and head of Saputo Inc., a Canadian dairy products company that also markets a range of other items like spaghetti sauce. Saputo previously owned Vachon Inc., the snack company responsible for the Jos. Louis dessert. Joey Saputo has four sons.

Saputo Inc.

Joey Saputo Joey Saputo MarieClaude Hamel Photographe

In 1985 Joey Saputo began working for the family business, Saputo Inc., a dairy processing company founded by his father Lino Saputo in 1954. In 1990, he was promoted to President and Chief Operating Officer of the Dairy Products Division for the United States. After occupying various positions within the organization, he was named Senior Vice President of Commercial and Business Development in January 2004.

Montreal Impact

Joey Saputo FC Bologne l39offre d39achat de Joey Saputo accepte

When Saputo was the founding president of Montreal Impact in 1992, the Saputo Group was the team's sole owner; however, under his leadership, in 1999, the club was sold to a group of shareholders. In 2002, the team was incorporated as a non-profit organization, and he played a "pivotal role in the re-launch of the club and returned as President. He then spearheaded the construction of Saputo Stadium, the team’s new home, inaugurated at Olympic Park, Montreal, on May 19, 2008.

By 2007, he had left the Saputo Group in order to focus on the Impact. In 2012, he led the club’s entry into Major League Soccer (MLS) and oversaw the Saputo Stadium's expansion. Under his leadership, "professional soccer’s popularity has soared to unprecedented heights in Quebec", with the Impact having won three championships, two Canadian championships, and reached the finals of the CONCACAF Champions League.

Bologna F.C.

Saputo is the majority shareholder in a consortium (BFC 1909 Lux SPV S.A.) that bought the Italian football team Bologna F.C. 1909 on 15 October 2014. He occupies the position of the chairman of the club since 2014 annual general meeting on 17 November.

Other activities

In addition to his work at the Saputo Group and the Impact, Joey Saputo has also been very involved in managing his family’s assets, consolidated under Jolina Capital ("the Saputo family company"), an asset management company where he was president from March 2001 to January 2004. Jolina Capital is a shareholder—and frequently a majority shareholder—in companies spanning sectors as diverse as food, transportation, softwood lumber, and real estate.

Joey Saputo is currently on the board of directors of TransForce, a publicly traded Canadian transport and logistics company, where he has been an independent director since 1996.

Community service

Joey Saputo is also actively involved in the Montreal community and serves on the boards of the Sainte-Justine University Hospital Centre Foundation, PROCURE, an organization that seeks to prevent and cure prostate cancer, the Italian-Canadian Community Foundation (his father immigrated from Montelepre, Sicily, in the 1950s).

References

Joey Saputo Wikipedia