Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective
List of Coppa Italia finals
List of annual association football matches From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Remove ads
The Coppa Italia is an annual football cup competition established in Italy in 1922. The competition is open to all Serie A and Serie B clubs, as well as four teams from Serie C.[1]
Since the first final between Vado and Udinese in 1922, 77 finals have taken place. There have been 43 single-match finals, one of which was replayed after the initial game ended in a goalless draw.[2] On 30 occasions, the final two teams played against each other over two legs on a home-and-away basis.[2] On four occasions, a final group of four teams played a double round-robin tournament to determine the winners.[2] As of 2025, 26 different teams have competed in the final, with 16 of them winning the competition at least once. On 11 occasions, the winning team also won Serie A in the same season, thus making a domestic double. Inter Milan are the only team to win Serie A, Coppa Italia and UEFA Champions League in the same year, in 2010.[3] The tournament was not held in the years 1923–1925, 1928–1935 and 1944–1957.[4] It was recommenced in 1958, in conjunction with the UEFA project for a new competition, the European Cup Winners' Cup.[4]
The Stadio Olimpico of Rome has hosted the most finals (43); since 2008, all finals have been held there in the form of a single-leg match, with the exception of the 2021 final, which was held at the Mapei Stadium – Città del Tricolore in Reggio Emilia.[2] The cities to host the final the fewest times are Vado Ligure, Venice, Ancona, Vicenza and Reggio Emilia (once each).[2] Juventus hold the record for the most wins with 15, the highest number of consecutive victories in the final (4), and most appearances in the final (22). AC Milan have lost the most finals (10).[2] Of the teams who have participated in more than one final, Palermo and Hellas Verona share the worst win–loss record with three defeats and no victories each. Of the victorious teams, Atalanta have the lowest percentage of success, winning one out of six finals (16.67 per cent).[2] Two teams from outside the top league have won the cup: Vado in 1922 (from Promozione[a]) and Napoli in 1962 (from Serie B).
The highest-scoring final was the first leg between Roma and Inter Milan in 2007, with eight goals.[2] On seven occasions, the result was a goalless draw, four of which were a single-leg final.[2] The match with the largest margin of victory was the second leg between Sampdoria and Ancona in 1994, which Sampdoria won 6–1.[2] Seven finals have been decided by a penalty shoot-out, the most recent being between Napoli and Juventus in 2020.[2] The current winners are Bologna, who beat AC Milan 1–0 in the 2025 final.[2]
Remove ads
List of finals
† | Match went to extra time |
* | Match decided via penalty shoot-out |
& | Match won after a replay |
‡ | Winning team won the Double (League title and Coppa Italia) |
# | Winning team won the Continental Treble (League title, Coppa Italia and European Cup/Champions League) |
Italics | Team from outside the top tier of the Italian football league system |
- The "Season" column refers to the season the competition was held, and wikilinks to the article about that season.
- The wikilinks in the "Score" column point to the article about that season's final game.
Remove ads
Results by club
Remove ads
Notes
- At that time, this championship was the second tier of the Italian football league system.
- The competition was not held due to a lack of interest towards it.[4]
- The competition was not concluded due to a lack of available dates.[2]
- The competition was not held due to conflicting schedules following the expansion of Serie A to 20 teams.[4]
- The first final, played at Stadio Olimpico in Rome, ended 0–0 after extra time.
- In this edition, the final group was played instead of the final match. To break the tie for first place in the group, a play-off game at Stadio Luigi Ferraris in Genoa was played. Torino won 5–3 in a penalty shoot-out, after 90 minutes and extra time.
- The 2020 final was played behind closed doors due to the COVID-19 pandemic in Italy.[85]
- Stadium capacity was limited to 20% due to the COVID-19 pandemic in Italy.[87]
References
External links
Wikiwand - on
Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.
Remove ads