Fiorentina fans have been banned from attending their club's match at Napoli on Sunday.
The independent body that monitors crowd trouble in Italian football, L'Osservatorio nazionale sulle manifestazione sportive, has decided the contest at the San Paolo stadium is high risk.
Napoli's Curva A and Curva B - the sections of the stadium where the club's 'ultra' supporters sit - have already been closed down until October 31 as punishment for the behavior of the team's supporters on the opening weekend of the season.
Before Napoli's first game at Roma, a number of supporters vandalized trains and the central rail station in Naples before traveling to the capital.
The club were also fined 10,000 euros as a result of the incidents.
Napoli appeals stadium shut down
NAPLES -- Napoli appealed against the decision to shut down two large sections of their San Paolo stadium.
Italy's Lega Calcio ruled that the stadium's Curvas A and B - which house Napoli's 'ultra' supporters - would be closed until October 31 as punishment for the behavior of their fans on the opening weekend of the season.
Before Napoli's first game at Roma, a number of supporters vandalized trains and the central rail station in Naples before traveling to the capital. Once at the Stadio Olimpico, several Napoli fans were detained by police.
The Serie A club were also fined 10,000 euros as a result of the incidents.
A club statement read: "SSC Napoli announces it has ordered lawyer [Mattia] Grassani to present an urgent appeal regarding the decision made by the sporting judge of the Lega Calcio on the partial closure of the stadium."
The ruling has created a logistical headache for Napoli ahead of Sunday's home game against Fiorentina, with tickets having already been sold for the affected sections.
