Jump to content

Serie A

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by 195.252.123.18 (talk) at 23:12, 11 November 2006. The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Template:Dab current

Serie A
File:LegaCalcio.JPG
SportFootball (soccer)
Founded1898
No. of teams20
Country Italy
Most recent
champion(s)
F.C. Internazionale Milano

GAVRILOVIC NEMANJA JE LEGENDA ITALIJANKOG KALCA !!!

Serie A is the top division of the Italian Football League, the highest football league in Italy. Italian mobile phone company TIM is the main sponsor, so the official name is Serie A TIM.

Format

There have been twenty clubs in Serie A since the 2004-05 season. During the course of a season (which lasts from August to May) each club plays the others twice: once at their home stadium and once at that of their opponent for a total of 38 games for each club, and a total of 380 games in a season. In Italian football, a true round-robin format is used. In the first half of the season, called 'andata', each team will play one time against all its opponents, a total of 19 games. In the second half of the season, called 'ritorno', each team will play the exact same teams in the exact same order, the only difference being that a home game played in the first half will be an away game with that same team in the second half, and visa versa.

Teams receive three points for a win and one point for a draw. No points are awarded for a loss. Teams are ranked by total points, with goal difference used to separate teams on equal points. The only case where goal difference is not used is for teams who finish joint top on equal points. If this happens during season where there is no international tournament containing the Italian national team, then the Scudetto is settled via a one match play-off. At the end of each season, the club with the most points is crowned as champion. The three lowest placed teams are relegated into the Serie B.

The top four teams in the Serie A qualify for the UEFA Champions League, with the top two teams directly entering the group phase. The third and fourth placed teams enter the competition at the third qualifying round and must win a two-legged knockout tie in order to enter the group phase. Teams finishing 5th and 6th qualify for the UEFA Cup Tournament. A 3rd UEFA Cup spot is reserved for the winner of the Italian Cup, however, if both the Italian Cup Champion and the Runner-up have already qualified for UEFA Champions League, the 7th classified team in Serie A gets the UEFA Cup spot.

History

Serie A, as it is structured today, began in 1929. From 1898 to 1929 the competition was organised into regional groups. No title was awarded in 1927 after Torino were stripped of the championship by the Italian Football Federation (FIGC). Torino were declared champions in the 1948-49 season following a plane crash near the end of the season in which the entire team was killed.

The Serie A Championship title is often referred to as the Scudetto (small shield) because the winning team will bear a small coat of arms with the Italian tricolour on their strip in the following season. The most successful league club is Juventus F.C. with 27 championships, followed by A.C. Milan (17), Internazionale Milano (14) and Genoa C&FC (9). For every ten titles won, clubs are allowed to wear a golden star above their club badge; so Juventus has two stars, while Milan and Internazionale have one star each.

In 2006 the Serie A league was shaken by a match-fixing scandal. Juventus F.C., A.C. Milan, S.S. Lazio and ACF Fiorentina were put under trial, along with the referee designators and league managers. A first grade trial took away the last two titles from Juventus (The 2005-2006 title was awarded to Internazionale), put Milan out of European competition, and sent Juventus, Lazio and Fiorentina to Serie B.[2] On appeal the relegation of Juventus was confirmed; however, Lazio and Fiorentina were reinstated into Serie A, and Milan were allowed into the Champions League (though at the third qualifying round instead of directly into the group stage). [3]

Television rights

As of 2006 Italian clubs have the right to sell their broadcast rights, unlike most other European sides. As a result there are three broadcasters in play: Sky Italia, which broadcasts all matches on satellite television, plus terrestrial broadcasters Mediaset and La7, which is owned by Telecom Italia. The latter two have broadcast pay television services: Mediaset Premium and Cartapiu, which require no cable or satellite hookup.

The two pay TV servies have held the rights since autumn 2005 and sublease those rights back to Sky for the benefit of those having satellite or cable.

Mediaset Premium sides:

(Serie B sides Juventus, Genoa and Napoli are all broadcast on Mediaset Premium as well.)

Cartapiu sides:

Champion clubs by season

  • 1898 - Genoa Cricket & Athletic Club
  • 1899 - Genoa Cricket & Athletic Club
  • 1900 - Genoa Cricket & Football Club
  • 1901 - Milan Cricket & FC
  • 1902 - Genoa C&FC
  • 1903 - Genoa C&FC
  • 1904 - Genoa C&FC
  • 1905 - Juventus FC
  • 1906 - Milan FC
  • 1907 - Milan FC
  • 1908 - Pro Vercelli
  • 1909 - Pro Vercelli
  • 1910 - Internazionale
  • 1911 - Pro Vercelli
  • 1912 - Pro Vercelli
  • 1913 - Pro Vercelli
  • 1914 - Casale
  • 1915 - Genoa C&FC (title awarded by the FIGC)
  • 1916-19 - league suspended due to World War I
  • 1920 - Internazionale
  • 1921 - Pro Vercelli
  • 1922 - CCI: Pro Vercelli; FIGC: US Novese
  • 1923 - Genoa C&FC
  • 1924 - Genoa C&FC
  • 1925 - Bologna FC
  • 1926 - Juventus FC
  • 1927 - no winner (FC Torino stripped of the title)
  • 1928 - FC Torino
  • 1929 - Bologna
  • 1929-30 - Ambrosiana SS
  • 1930-31 - Juventus FC
  • 1931-32 - Juventus FC
  • 1932-33 - Juventus FC
  • 1933-34 - Juventus FC
  • 1934-35 - Juventus FC
  • 1935-36 - Bologna
  • 1936-37 - Bologna
  • 1937-38 - Ambrosiana-Internazionale
  • 1938-39 - Bologna
  • 1939-40 - Ambrosiana-Internazionale
  • 1940-41 - Bologna
  • 1941-42 - AS Roma
  • 1942-43 - Torino
  • 1943-44 - VV.F. Spezia [1]
  • 1944-45 - league suspended due to World War II
  • 1945-46 - Torino
  • 1946-47 - Torino
  • 1947-48 - Torino
  • 1948-49 - Torino (title awarded by the FIGC)
  • 1949-50 - Juventus FC
  • 1950-51 - AC Milan
  • 1951-52 - Juventus FC
  • 1952-53 - Internazionale
  • 1953-54 - Internazionale
 
  • 1954-55 - AC Milan
  • 1955-56 - Fiorentina
  • 1956-57 - AC Milan
  • 1957-58 - Juventus FC
  • 1958-59 - AC Milan
  • 1959-60 - Juventus FC
  • 1960-61 - Juventus FC
  • 1961-62 - AC Milan
  • 1962-63 - Internazionale
  • 1963-64 - Bologna
  • 1964-65 - Internazionale
  • 1965-66 - Internazionale
  • 1966-67 - Juventus FC
  • 1967-68 - AC Milan
  • 1968-69 - Fiorentina
  • 1969-70 - Cagliari
  • 1970-71 - Internazionale
  • 1971-72 - Juventus FC
  • 1972-73 - Juventus FC
  • 1973-74 - SS Lazio
  • 1974-75 - Juventus FC
  • 1975-76 - Torino
  • 1976-77 - Juventus FC
  • 1977-78 - Juventus FC
  • 1978-79 - AC Milan
  • 1979-80 - Internazionale
  • 1980-81 - Juventus FC
  • 1981-82 - Juventus FC
  • 1982-83 - AS Roma
  • 1983-84 - Juventus FC
  • 1984-85 - Hellas Verona
  • 1985-86 - Juventus FC
  • 1986-87 - SSC Napoli
  • 1987-88 - AC Milan
  • 1988-89 - Internazionale
  • 1989-90 - SSC Napoli
  • 1990-91 - UC Sampdoria
  • 1991-92 – AC Milan
  • 1992-93 – AC Milan
  • 1993-94 – AC Milan
  • 1994-95 – Juventus FC
  • 1995-96 – AC Milan
  • 1996-97 – Juventus FC
  • 1997-98 – Juventus FC
  • 1998-99 – AC Milan
  • 1999-00 – SS Lazio
  • 2000-01 – AS Roma
  • 2001-02 – Juventus FC
  • 2002-03 – Juventus FC
  • 2003-04 – AC Milan
  • 2004-05no winner (Juventus FC stripped of the title)
  • 2005-06 – Internazionale (title awarded by the FIGC after Juventus FC were implicated in a match-fixing scandal and relegated)
 

Performance by club

Club Winners Runners-up Winning Years
Juventus
27
19
1905, 1926, 1931, 1932, 1933, 1934, 1935, 1950, 1952, 1958, 1960, 1961, 1967, 1972, 1973, 1975, 1977, 1978, 1981, 1982, 1984, 1986, 1995, 1997, 1998, 2002, 2003
Milan
17
14
1901, 1906, 1907, 1951, 1955, 1957, 1959, 1962, 1968, 1979, 1988, 1992, 1993, 1994, 1996, 1999, 2004
Internazionale
(Ambrosiana-Inter)
14
13
1910, 1920, 1930, 1938, 1940, 1953, 1954, 1963, 1965, 1966, 1971, 1980, 1989, 2006
Genoa
9
4
1898, 1899, 1900, 1902, 1903, 1904, 1915, 1923, 1924
Torino
7
7
1928, 1943, 1946, 1947, 1948, 1949, 1976
Bologna
7
4
1925, 1929, 1936, 1937, 1939, 1941, 1964
Pro Vercelli
7
1
1908, 1909, 1911, 1912, 1913, 1921, 1922 (C.C.I.)
Roma
3
7
1942, 1983, 2001
Lazio
2
6
1974, 2000
Fiorentina
2
5
1956, 1969
Napoli
2
4
1987, 1990
Cagliari
1
1
1970
Casale
1
-
1914
Novese
1
-
1922 (F.I.G.C.)
Sampdoria
1
-
1991
Verona
1
-
1985
Spezia
1 *
-
1944
Alba Trastevere
-
2
-
Internazionale Torino
-
2
-
Livorno
-
2
-
U.S. Milanese
-
2
-
Vicenza
(Lanerossi Vicenza)
-
2
-
F.C. Torinese
-
1
-
Fortitudo Roma
-
1
-
Parma
-
1
-
Perugia
-
1
-
Pisa
-
1
-
Sampierdarenese
-
1
-
Savoia
-
1
-
Udinese
-
1
-
Venezia
-
1
-

Complete team list

From 1898 to 1929

The 1921-22 C.C.I. championship

After 1928-1929 season

In 1929 FIGC changed the mechanism of the championship, and created the Serie A as we know it today (1 league only with 16, 18 or 20 teams). These are the 61 teams which took part to the championships played from 1929-30 to 2005-06: Inter is the only team which played all the seasons following Juventus' relegation to Serie B after the 2005/2006 season.

The 1945-46 championship

This championship is not usually included in the statistics, because some of the southern sides that took part to the competition were Serie B teams. The winner was Torino.


Top scorers (capocannonieri) by season

Year Tally Player
1923/24 22 goals Hungary Henry Schoenfeld (Torino)
1924/25 19 goals Italy Mario Magnozzi (Livorno F.C.)
1925/26 35 goals Hungary Ferenc Hirzer (Juventus)
1926/27 21 goals Argentina Julio Libonatti (Torino)
1927/28 35 goals Argentina Julio Libonatti (Torino)
1928/29 36 goals Italy Gino Rossetti (Torino)
1929/30 31 goals Italy Giuseppe Meazza (Ambrosiana Inter)
1930/31 29 goals Italy Rodolfo Volk (Roma)
1931/32 25 goals Uruguay Pedro Petrone (Fiorentina)
Italy Angelo Schiavio (Bologna)
1932/33 29 goals Italy Felice Placido Borel II° (Juventus)
1933/34 31 goals Italy Felice Placido Borel II° (Juventus)
1934/35 31 goals Argentina Enrico Guaita (Roma)
1935/36 25 goals Italy Giuseppe Meazza (Ambrosiana Inter)
1936/37 21 goals Italy Silvio Piola (Lazio)
1937/38 20 goals Italy Giuseppe Meazza (Ambrosiana Inter)
1938/39 19 goals Italy Aldo Boffi (Milan)
Uruguay Ettore Puricelli (Bologna)
1939/40 24 goals Italy Aldo Boffi (Milan)
1940/41 22 goals Uruguay Ettore Puricelli (Bologna)
1941/42 22 goals Italy Aldo Boffi (Milan)
1942/43 21 goals Italy Silvio Piola (Lazio)
1945/46 13 goals Italy Eusebio Castigliano (Torino)
1946/47 29 goals Italy Valentino Mazzola (Torino)
1947/48 27 goals Italy Giampiero Boniperti (Juventus)
1948/49 26 goals Hungary Stefano Nyers (Inter)
1949/50 35 goals Sweden Gunnar Nordahl (Milan)
1950/51 34 goals Sweden Gunnar Nordahl (Milan)
1951/52 30 goals Denmark John Hansen (Juventus)
1952/53 26 goals Sweden Gunnar Nordahl (Milan)
1953/54 23 goals Sweden Gunnar Nordahl (Milan)
1954/55 26 goals Sweden Gunnar Nordahl (Milan)
1955/56 29 goals Italy Gino Pivatelli (Bologna)
1956/57 22 goals Brazil Dino Da Costa (Roma)
1957/58 28 goals Wales John Charles (Juventus)
1958/59 33 goals Argentina Antonio Valentin Angelillo (Inter)
1959/60 28 goals Argentina Omar Sivori (Juventus)
1960/61 27 goals Italy Sergio Brighenti (Sampdoria)
1961/62 22 goals Brazil José Altafini (Milan)
Italy Aurelio Milani (Fiorentina)
1962/63 19 goals Denmark Harald Nielsen (Bologna)
Argentina Pedro Manfredini (Roma)
1963/64 21 goals Denmark Harald Nielsen (Bologna)
1964/65 17 goals Italy Alberto Orlando (Fiorentina)
Italy Sandro Mazzola (Inter)
Year Tally Player
1965/66 25 goals Italy Luis Vinicio (Vicenza)
1966/67 18 goals Italy Gigi Riva (Cagliari)
1967/68 15 goals Italy Pierino Prati (Milan)
1968/69 21 goals Italy Gigi Riva (Cagliari)
1969/70 21 goals Italy Gigi Riva (Cagliari)
1970/71 24 goals Italy Roberto Boninsegna (Inter)
1971/72 22 goals Italy Roberto Boninsegna (Inter)
1972/73 17 goals Italy Paolino Pulici (Torino)
Italy Gianni Rivera (Milan)
Italy Giuseppe Savoldi (Bologna)
1973/74 24 goals Italy Giorgio Chinaglia (Lazio)
1974/75 18 goals Italy Paolino Pulici (Torino)
1975/76 21 goals Italy Paolino Pulici (Torino)
1976/77 21 goals Italy Francesco Graziani (Torino)
1977/78 24 goals Italy Paolo Rossi (Vicenza)
1978/79 19 goals Italy Bruno Giordano (Lazio)
1979/80 16 goals Italy Roberto Bettega (Juventus)
1980/81 18 goals Italy Roberto Pruzzo (Roma)
1981/82 15 goals Italy Roberto Pruzzo (Roma)
1982/83 16 goals France Michel Platini (Juventus)
1983/84 20 goals France Michel Platini (Juventus)
1984/85 18 goals France Michel Platini (Juventus)
1985/86 19 goals Italy Roberto Pruzzo (Roma)
1986/87 17 goals Italy Pietro Paolo Virdis (Milan)
1987/88 15 goals Argentina Diego Maradona (Napoli)
1988/89 22 goals Italy Aldo Serena (Inter)
1989/90 19 goals Netherlands Marco Van Basten (Milan)
1990/91 19 goals Italy Gianluca Vialli (Sampdoria)
1991/92 25 goals Netherlands Marco Van Basten (Milan)
1992/93 26 goals Italy Giuseppe Signori (Lazio)
1993/94 23 goals Italy Giuseppe Signori (Lazio)
1994/95 26 goals Argentina Gabriel Batistuta (Fiorentina)
1995/96 24 goals Italy Giuseppe Signori (Lazio)
Italy Igor Protti (Bari)
1996/97 24 goals Italy Filippo Inzaghi (Atalanta)
1997/98 27 goals Germany Oliver Bierhoff (Udinese)
1998/99 22 goals Brazil Márcio Amoroso (Udinese)
1999/00 24 goals Ukraine Andriy Shevchenko (Milan)
2000/01 26 goals Argentina Hernán Crespo (Lazio)
2001/02 24 goals France David Trézéguet (Juventus)
Italy Dario Hübner (Piacenza)
2002/03 24 goals Italy Christian Vieri (Inter)
2003/04 24 goals Ukraine Andriy Shevchenko (Milan)
2004/05 24 goals Italy Cristiano Lucarelli (Livorno)
2005/06 31 goals Italy Luca Toni (Fiorentina)


Team records

Most seasons
75, Internazionale
Most championships won
27, Juventus
Most consecutive wins
11, A.S. Roma, 2005-06
Most non-Italian players of the same nationality on the starting lineup
7, Internazionale, against Treviso, January 18 2006 (Julio Cruz, Nicolás Burdisso, Javier Zanetti, Juan Sebastián Verón, Esteban Cambiasso, Kily González and Walter Samuel, all Argentine footballers)[2]

Individual records

Most championships won

8 Championships

  • Virginio Rosetta (2 with Pro Vercelli + 6 with Juventus)
  • Giovanni Ferrari (5 with Juventus + 2 with Inter + 1 with Bologna)
  • Giuseppe Furino (all with Juventus)

7 Championships

  • Roberto Bettega (all with Juventus)
  • Alessandro Costacurta (all with Milan) [still active]
  • Ciro Ferrara (2 with Napoli + 5 with Juventus)
  • Paolo Maldini (all with Milan) [still active]
  • Gaetano Scirea (all with Juventus)
  • Guglielmo Gabetto (2 with Juventus + 5 with Torino)

6 Championships

  • Guido Ara (all with Pro Vercelli)
  • Edoardo Pasteur (all with Genoa)
  • James Richardson Spensley (all with Genoa)
  • Claudio Gentile (all with Juventus)
  • Franco Baresi (all with Milan)
  • Antonio Cabrini (all with Juventus)
  • Franco Causio (all with Juventus)
  • Dino Zoff (all with Juventus)
  • Roberto Donadoni (all with Milan)

5 Championships

  • Walter Agar (all with Genoa)
  • Henri Dapples (all with Genoa)
  • Giovanni Innocenti (all with Pro Vercelli)
  • Pietro Leone (all with Pro Vercelli)
  • Felice Milano (all with Vercelli)
  • Giuseppe Milano (all with Pro Vercelli)
  • Carlo Rampini (all with Pro Vercelli)
  • Renato Cesarini (all with Juventus)
  • Raimundo Orsi Bibiani (all with Juventus)
  • Umberto Caligaris (all with Juventus)
  • Mario Varglien (all with Juventus)
  • Gianpiero Combi (all with Juventus)
  • Giuseppe Grezar (all with Torino)
  • Valentino Mazzola (all with Torino)
  • Franco Ossola (all with Torino)
  • Ezio Loik (all with Torino)
  • Pietro Ferraris (2 with Inter + 3 with Torino)
  • Lorenzo Buffon (4 with Milan + 1 with Inter)
  • Sandro Salvadore (2 with Milan + 3with Juventus)
  • Giampiero Boniperti (all with Juventus)
  • Tarcisio Burgnich (1 with Juventus + 4 with Inter)
  • Antonello Cuccureddu (all with Juventus)
  • Francesco Morini (all with Juventus)
  • Luciano Spinosi (all with Juventus)
  • Marco Tardelli (all with Juventus)
  • Pietro Fanna (3 with Juventus + 1 with Hellas Verona + 1 with Inter)
  • Sebastiano Rossi (all with Milan)
  • Demetrio Albertini (all with Milan)
  • Alessandro Del Piero (all with Juventus) [still active]
  • Mauro Tassotti (all with Milan)
  • Antonio Conte (all with Juventus)
  • Alessio Tacchinardi (all with Juventus) [still active]

Goalscoring

Most goals scored, all-time

Name Years Games Goals
Silvio Piola 1929-54 537 274
Gunnar Nordahl 1949-59 291 225
José Altafini 1958-76 459 216
Giuseppe Meazza 1927-47 367 216
Roberto Baggio 1985-2004 409 205
Kurt Hamrin 1956-71 400 190
Giuseppe Signori 1991-2004 344 188
Gabriel Batistuta 1991-2003 318 184
Giampiero Boniperti 1946-61 444 178
Amedeo Amadei 423 174

Most goals from direct free kicks

  1. On April 9, 2006, in a league away game versus Ascoli Calcio Serbia Siniša Mihajlović scored his 27th career free-kick goal in Serie A, an absolute record. Mihajlović ended his playing career in 2005/2006, but he is still at Inter Milan as assistant coach of Roberto Mancini.

Appearances

As of September 17, 2006.

Most appearances

  1. Italy Paolo Maldini 583 (still active)
  2. Italy Gianluca Pagliuca 571 (still active)
  3. Italy Dino Zoff 570 (until 1983)

Oldest players

  1. Italy Marco Ballotta 42 years and 34 days at S.S. Lazio (May 7 2006)
  2. Italy Dino Zoff 41 years-old (1983)

References and notes

  1. ^ The Italian league of 1944 was not immediately considered as official by the Italian federation, because it was obtained during war times in a reduced league. The title was finally awarded to Spezia only in 2002, even if not counted officially as Italian championship triumph, but as "decoration".
  2. ^ [1]

See also

History
  • Serie A — All results since 1929, statistics, compare teams ...

Template:Fb start

Template:Fb end