Movatterモバイル変換


[0]ホーム

URL:


Jump to content
WikipediaThe Free Encyclopedia
Search

Football records and statistics in Italy

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This page detailsfootball records and statistics in Italy.

Team records

[edit]

Most championships won

[edit]

Overall

[edit]

Consecutive titles

[edit]

Most seasons in Serie A

[edit]

Most seasons in Serie B

[edit]

Most points in a season

[edit]
2 Teams in Final Round (2 points per win)1928–29
6 Teams in Final Round (2 points per win)1926–27
8 Teams in Final Round (2 points per win)1927–28 -1945–46
16 Teams (2 points per win)1934–35 to1942–43 -1967–68 to1987–88
18 Teams (2 points per win)1929–30 to1933–34 -1952–53 to1966–67 -1988–89 to1993–94
18 Teams (3 points per win)1994–95 to2003–04
20 Teams (2 points per win)1946–47 -1948–49 to1951–52
20 Teams (3 points per win)2004–05 to present
21 Teams (2 points per win)1947–48

Most consecutive wins

[edit]

Most consecutive home wins

[edit]

Most consecutive away wins

[edit]

Longest win streak from the start of a Serie A season

[edit]

Longest win streak without conceding from the start of a Serie A season

[edit]

Longest win streak from the start of the second half of a Serie A season

[edit]

Most wins in a single season

[edit]

Most defeats in a single season

[edit]

Most home wins in a season

[edit]

Most away wins in a season

[edit]

Most matches won

[edit]

[5][6]

Most goals scored

[edit]

[5][6]

Most goals in a season

[edit]
21 Teams
20 Teams
18 Teams
16 Teams

Longest unbeaten streak

[edit]

Longest unbeaten streaks in a single Serie A season

[edit]
16 Teams
18 Teams
20 Teams

Individual records

[edit]

Most championships won

[edit]

Players inbold are still active in Serie A.

10 championships

[edit]

9 championships

[edit]

8 championships

[edit]

7 championships

[edit]

6 championships

[edit]

5 championships

[edit]

Most consecutive championships won

[edit]

Oldest player to win a championship

[edit]

Appearances

[edit]
See also:List of Serie A players

Top 30 most appearances, all-time (only Serie A regular-season games)

Updated as of 19 September 2024

Players inbold are still active in Serie A.Players initalics are still active outside of Serie A.

RankNat.PlayerYearsAppsGoals
1ItalyGianluigi Buffon1995–2021657
2ItalyPaolo Maldini1984–200964729
3ItalyFrancesco Totti1992–2017619250
4ArgentinaJavier Zanetti1995–201461512
5ItalyGianluca Pagliuca1987–2007592
6ItalyDino Zoff1961–1983570
7SloveniaSamir Handanović2005–2023566
8ItalyPietro Vierchowod1980–200056238
9ItalyFabio Quagliarella1999–2023556182
10ItalyRoberto Mancini1981–2000541156
11ItalySilvio Piola1929–1954537274
12ItalyEnrico Albertosi1958–1980532
13ItalyGianni Rivera1958–1979527128
14ItalyGiuseppe Bergomi1980–199951923
15ItalyAlberto Gilardino1999–2017514188
16ItalyAndrea Consigli2008–2024510
17ItalyAntonio Candreva2008–202450285
18ItalyCiro Ferrara1984–200550027
19ItalyGiovanni Galli1977–1995496
20ItalyTarcisio Burgnich1958–19764946
21ItalyAndrea Pirlo1994–201549358
North MacedoniaGoran Pandev2001–2022493101
23ItalyGiuseppe Favalli1989–20104867
24ItalyAngelo Peruzzi1987–2007479
25ItalyGiancarlo De Sisti1960–197947850
ItalyAlessandro Del Piero1993–2012478188
27ItalyGiacinto Facchetti1960–197847659
28ItalyFranco Baresi1978–199747112
29ItalyPietro Ferraris1929–1950469124
30ItalySergio Cervato1948–196546645

Top four most appearances, still active in Serie A (only Serie A regular-season games)

Updated as of 5 November 2025

RankAll-time
rank
Nat.PlayerDebut
year
Current
club
AppsGoals
137ItalyLorenzo De Silvestri2006Bologna45428
256ItalyFrancesco Acerbi2011Inter Milan41124
365ColombiaJuan Cuadrado2009Atalanta40444
481PolandPiotr Zieliński2012Inter Milan39645

Oldest players

[edit]

List of the 20 oldest players at their last Serie A match.

Updated as of 15 December 2024.[7][8]

Players inbold are still active in Serie A.Players initalics are still active outside of Serie A.

  1. ItalyMarco Ballotta 44 years, 38 days (last game: 11 May 2008,Lazio)
  2. ItalyGianluigi Buffon 43 years, 83 days (last game: 12 May 2021,Juventus)
  3. SpainPepe Reina 42 years, 265 days (last game: 24 May 2025,Como)
  4. ItalyFrancesco Antonioli 42 years, 235 days (last game: 6 May 2012,Cesena)
  5. ItalyGianluca Pegolo 41 years, 303 days (last game: 22 January 2023,Sassuolo)
  6. ItalyAlberto Fontana 41 years, 297 days (last game: 15 November 2008,Palermo)
  7. ItalyRoberto Colombo 41 years, 234 days (last game: 15 April 2017,Cagliari)
  8. SwedenZlatan Ibrahimović 41 years, 166 days (last game: 18 March 2023,AC Milan)
  9. ItalyDino Zoff 41 years, 76 days (last game: 15 May 1983,Juventus)
  10. ItalyAlessandro Costacurta 41 years, 25 days (last game: 19 May 2007,AC Milan)
  11. ItalyPietro Vierchowod 41 years, 10 days (last game: 16 April 2000,Piacenza)
  12. ItalyPaolo Maldini 40 years, 339 days (last game: 31 May 2009,AC Milan)
  13. ArgentinaJavier Zanetti 40 years, 281 days (last game: 18 May 2014,Inter Milan)
  14. ItalyFrancesco Totti 40 years, 243 days (last game: 28 May 2017,Roma)
  15. ItalyDaniele Balli 40 years, 231 days (last game: 4 May 2008,Empoli)
  16. ArgentinaAlbano Bizzarri 40 years, 192 days (last game: 20 May 2018,Udinese)
  17. ItalySilvio Piola 40 years, 159 days (last game: 7 March 1954,Novara)
  18. ItalyAlex Cordaz 40 years, 153 days (last game: 3 June 2023,Inter Milan)
  19. ItalyFabio Quagliarella 40 years, 124 days (last game: 4 June 2023,Sampdoria)
  20. ItalyAntonio Mirante 40 years, 106 days (last game: 22 October 2023,AC Milan)

Youngest players

[edit]

List of the 20 youngest players at their first Serie A match.[9]

  1. ItalyFrancesco Camarda (AC Milan) 15 years, 260 days (25 November 2023[10][11])
  2. ItalyWisdom Amey (Bologna) 15 years, 274 days (12 May 2021[12])
  3. ItalyAmedeo Amadei (Roma) 15 years, 280 days (2 May 1937[13][14][15])
  4. ItalyPietro Pellegri (Genoa) 15 years, 280 days (22 December 2016[13][14][15])
  5. ItalyGianni Rivera (Alessandria) 15 years, 288 days (2 June 1959[16][17])
  6. ItalyAristide Rossi (Cremonese) 15 years, 294 days (29 June 1930[18])
  7. ItalyGiuseppe Campione (Bologna) 15 years, 298 days (25 June 1989[19])
  8. ItalyEddie Salcedo (Genoa) 15 years, 323 days (20 August 2017[20])
  9. BulgariaValeri Bojinov (Lecce) 15 years, 341 days (22 January 2002[19])
  10. ItalyAndrea Pirlo (Brescia) 16 years, 2 days (21 May 1995[21])
  11. ItalyStephan El Shaarawy (Genoa) 16 years, 55 days (21 December 2008[22])
  12. ItalySimone Pafundi (Udinese) 16 years, 69 days (22 May 2022[23])
  13. ItalyLorenzo Tassi (Brescia) 16 years, 99 days (22 May 2011[24][25])
  14. Ivory CoastChaka Traorè (Parma) 16 years, 108 days (10 April 2021)
  15. ItalyStefano Okaka (Roma) 16 years, 131 days (18 December 2005[26])
  16. ItalyPaolo Pupita (Cesena) 16 years, 134 days (28 January 1990[27])
  17. GreeceLampros Choutos (Roma) 16 years, 139 days (21 April 1996)
  18. ItalySilvio Piola (Cesena) 16 years, 140 days (16 February 1930)
  19. ItalyTommaso Maestrelli (Bari) 16 years, 142 days (26 February 1939)
  20. Ivory CoastSiriki Sanogo (Benevento) 16 years, 142 days (12 May 2018)

Oldest player to debut in Serie A

[edit]
  1. ItalyMaurizio Pugliesi 39 years, 140 days (15 May 2016,Empoli)[28]

Most consecutive appearances in Serie A

[edit]

Dino Zoff, 332[29]

Most consecutive appearances in Serie A for a single club

[edit]

Dino Zoff, 330 (withJuventus)[29][30]

Most seasons in Serie A

[edit]

Paolo Maldini andFrancesco Totti, 25[31]

Most consecutive seasons in Serie A

[edit]

Paolo Maldini andFrancesco Totti, 25[31]

Most career club appearances by an Italian player

[edit]

Gianluigi Buffon, 975[32][33]

Most appearances for a single Italian club

[edit]

Paolo Maldini, 902, with AC Milan[34]

Goalscoring

[edit]
See also:List of Serie A players with 100 or more goals

Top 30 goalscorers, all-time (only Serie A regular-season games)

[edit]

Updated as of 23 September 2025

Players inbold are still active in Serie A.Players initalics are still active outside of Serie A.

RankNat.PlayerYearsGoalsAppsRatio
1ItalySilvio Piola[nb 1]1929–19542745370.51
2ItalyFrancesco Totti1992–20172506190.4
3SwedenGunnar Nordahl1948–19582252910.77
4ItalyGiuseppe Meazza[nb 2]1929–19472163670.59
BrazilItalyJosé Altafini1958–19762164590.47
6ItalyAntonio Di Natale2002–20162094450.47
7ItalyRoberto Baggio1985–20042054520.45
8ItalyCiro Immobile2009–2013500.57
9SwedenKurt Hamrin1956–19711904000.48
10ItalyGiuseppe Signori1991–20041883440.55
ItalyAlessandro Del Piero1993–20121884780.39
ItalyAlberto Gilardino1999–20171885140.37
13ArgentinaGabriel Batistuta1991–20031843180.58
14ItalyFabio Quagliarella1999–20231825560.33
15ItalyGiampiero Boniperti1946–19611784430.4
16ItalyAmedeo Amadei1936–19561744230.41
17ItalyGiuseppe Savoldi1965–19821684050.41
18ItalyGuglielmo Gabetto1934–19491673220.52
19ItalyRoberto Boninsegna1965–19791633660.45
20ItalyLuca Toni2000–20161573440.46
21SwedenZlatan Ibrahimović2004–20231562830.55
ItalyGigi Riva1964–19761562890.54
ItalyFilippo Inzaghi1995–20121563700.42
ItalyRoberto Mancini1981–20001565410.29
25BrazilLuís Vinício1955–19681553480.45
ItalyCarlo Reguzzoni1929–19481554010.39
27HungaryIstván Nyers1948–19561532360.65
ArgentinaHernán Crespo1996–20121533400.45
29ItalyAdriano Bassetto1946–19581493290.45
30ArgentinaItalyOmar Sívori1957–19691472780.53

Top five goal scorers, still active in Serie A (only Serie A regular-season games)

[edit]

Updated as of 5 November 2025

RankAll-time
rank
Nat.PlayerDebut
year
Current
club
GoalsAppsRatio
242ArgentinaPaulo Dybala2012Roma1303560.37
349ColombiaDuván Zapata2013Torino1243260.38
450ItalyDomenico Berardi2013Sassuolo1243220.39
558ArgentinaLautaro Martínez2018Inter Milan1182470.48

Most goals from a penalty kick

[edit]

Top five penalty kick scorers, all-time (only Serie A regular-season games)[35][36][37]

Updated 4 February 2024

Players inbold are still active in Serie A.Players initalics are still active outside of Serie A.

RankNat.PlayerGoals
1ItalyFrancesco Totti71
2ItalyRoberto Baggio68
3ItalyCiro Immobile52
4ItalyAlessandro Del Piero50
5ItalyDomenico Berardi49

Most penalty kicks scored in a single Serie A season

[edit]

Ciro Immobile, 14 (2019–20)[38]

Most goals from a free kick

[edit]

Top ten free kick scorers, all-time (only Serie A regular-season games)[39][40]

Updated 17 December 2017

Players inbold are still active in Serie A.Players initalics are still active outside of Serie A.

RankNat.PlayerGoals
1SerbiaSiniša Mihajlović28
2ItalyAndrea Pirlo26[nb 3]
3ItalyAlessandro Del Piero22
4ItalyFrancesco Totti21
ItalyRoberto Baggio
6ItalyGianfranco Zola20
7Bosnia and HerzegovinaMiralem Pjanić15
8ArgentinaDiego Maradona14
9ItalyEnrico Chiesa13
FranceMichel Platini
UruguayÁlvaro Recoba

Most goals from a free kick in a single Serie A match

[edit]

Giuseppe Signori andSiniša Mihajlović, 3 (inLazio 3–1Atalanta, 10 April 1994; and Lazio 5–2Sampdoria, 13 December 1998, respectively)[47]

Most goals from a free kick in a single Serie A season

[edit]

Cristiano Lucarelli (2004–05),Alessandro Del Piero (2008–09), Francesco Lodi (2012–13), Andrea Pirlo (2012–13) (all 5)[nb 4][48][49]

Most different teams scored against in Serie A

[edit]

Alberto Gilardino, 39[50]

Fastest goal scored in Serie A

[edit]

Rafael Leão, 6.2 seconds (20 December 2020, inSassuoloAC Milan, 1–2)[51]

Oldest goalscorer in Serie A

[edit]

Zlatan Ibrahimović, 41 years, 166 days (18 March 2023, in Udinese–AC Milan, 3–1)[52]

Youngest goalscorer in Serie A

[edit]

Amedeo Amadei, 15 years, 287 days (9 May 1937, inLuccheseRoma, 5–1)[53]

Youngest players to score 100 goals in Serie A

[edit]
As of 18 March 2018
RankNat.PlayerAge
1ItalyGiuseppe Meazza23 years and 32 days
2ItalySilvio Piola23 years and 68 days
3ItalyGiampiero Boniperti23 years and 193 days
4ItalyFelice Borel23 years and 307 days
5ItalyJosé Altafini24 years and 239 days
6ArgentinaMauro Icardi25 years and 27 days
7UruguayEdinson Cavani25 years and 340 days
8ArgentinaOmar Sívori26 years and 90 days
9ItalyGuglielmo Gabetto26 years and 104 days
10ItalyAlberto Gilardino26 years and 105 days

Sources:[54][55][56][57][58][59][60]

Most goals in a single Serie A match

[edit]

Silvio Piola andOmar Sívori, 6[61]

Most braces in Serie A

[edit]

Silvio Piola andGunnar Nordahl, 49[62]

Most hat-tricks in Serie A

[edit]

Players inbold are still active in Serie A.Players initalics are still active outside of Serie A.

Gunnar Nordahl, 17[63][64]

RankNat.PlayerHat-tricks
1SwedenGunnar Nordahl17
2ItalyGiuseppe Meazza15
3SwedenKurt Hamrin12
HungaryIstván Nyers
5ItalyFilippo Inzaghi10
ItalySilvio Piola
7ItalyAdriano Bassetto9
ItalyGiuseppe Signori
ArgentinaPedro Manfredini
ItalyOmar Sívori

Youngest player to score a brace in Serie A

[edit]

Pietro Pellegri, 16 years and 184 days (17 September 2017, inGenoaLazio, 2–3)[65][66]

Oldest player to score a brace in Serie A

[edit]

Zlatan Ibrahimović, 40 years and 48 days[67] (20 November 2021 Fiorentina 4–3 AC Milan)

Most braces in a single Serie A season

[edit]

Oliver Bierhoff (10 in1997–98)[48]

Youngest player to score a hat-trick in Serie A

[edit]

Silvio Piola, 17 years and 132 days[68]

Oldest player to score a hat-trick in Serie A

[edit]

Rodrigo Palacio, 39 years and 86 days[69]

Most hat-tricks in a single Serie A season

[edit]

Giuseppe Meazza (1929–30),Enrique Guaita (1934–35),Valentino Mazzola (1946–47),István Nyers (1950–51),Pedro Manfredini (1960–61), andOmar Sívori (1960–61) (all four)[48]

Youngest player to score more than three goals in a single Serie A match

[edit]

Silvio Piola, 18 years and 54 days[70]

Oldest player to score five goals in a single Serie A match

[edit]

Miroslav Klose, 34 years and 330 days[71]

Oldest player to score their first goal in Serie A

[edit]

Angelo Mattea, 38 years and 7 days, forCasale, in a 5–1 away loss toAmbrosiana on 28 October 1930[72][73]

Most consecutive Serie A seasons with at least one goal

[edit]

Francesco Totti, 23 (1994–95 to2016–17)[31][74]

Oldest player to win the Serie A top scorer award

[edit]

Luca Toni (38 years,2014–15)[75]

Most Serie A top scorer awards

[edit]

Gunnar Nordahl, 5 (1949–50,1950–51,1952–53,1953–54,1954–55)[76]

Most goals in a single Serie A season

[edit]

36,Gonzalo Higuaín (2015–16)[77][78][79] andCiro Immobile (2019–20)[80][nb 5]

Most headed goals in Serie A

[edit]

Christian Vieri[81][82][83]

Most headed goals in a single Serie A season

[edit]

Oliver Bierhoff (15 out of 19,1998–99)[84]

Most consecutive Serie A appearances with at least one goal scored

[edit]

Gabriel Batistuta (13 consecutive Serie A games, 2 in1992–93 and 11 in1994–95 withFiorentina)[85]

Most consecutive Serie A appearances with at least one goal scored in a single season

[edit]

11,Gabriel Batistuta (in1994–95, withFiorentina),Fabio Quagliarella (in2018–19, withSampdoria),[86]Cristiano Ronaldo (in2019-20, withJuventus)[87]

Most consecutive Serie A appearances with at least one goal scored since the start of a single season

[edit]

Gabriel Batistuta (in1994–95, withFiorentina) (11 consecutive Serie A games)[88][89]

Most consecutive Serie A away appearances with at least one goal scored

[edit]

Giuseppe Signori (from 17 May 1992 to 28 February 1993; 1 in1991–92 withFoggia, and 9 in1992–93 withLazio) (10 consecutive Serie A away games with a goal)[90][91]

Most consecutive Serie A away appearances with at least one goal scored in a single season

[edit]

Giuseppe Signori (in1992–93, withLazio) (9 consecutive Serie A away games with a goal) andCristiano Ronaldo (in2018–19 and2019–20, withJuventus)[90]

Most seasons with at least 10 goals scored in all competitions by an Italian player

[edit]

Alessandro Del Piero (17 seasons)[92]

Highest-scoring Italian players in all competitions

[edit]

The following table shows the ten Italian players that have scored the most professional goals in total throughout their career, at both club and international level (excluding youth competitions).[93]

Players inbold are still active in Serie A.Players initalics are still active outside of Serie A.

RankNat.PlayerGoals
1ItalySilvio Piola364[nb 6][nb 7]
2ItalyAlessandro Del Piero346[nb 8]
3ItalyGiuseppe Meazza338[nb 9]
4ItalyLuca Toni322
5ItalyCiro Immobile321[nb 10]
6ItalyRoberto Baggio318[nb 11]
7ItalyFrancesco Totti316[nb 12]
8ItalyFilippo Inzaghi313[nb 13]
9ItalyAntonio Di Natale311
10ItalyAlessandro Altobelli293[nb 14]

Most own goals scored in Serie A history

[edit]

Franco Baresi andRiccardo Ferri (8 each)[96]

Assists

[edit]

Most assists in Serie A

[edit]

Francesco Totti (162)[4]

The following table shows the ten players that have provided the most assists in Serie A history.

Players inbold are still active in Serie A. Players initalics are still active, but outside Serie A.

RankNat.PlayerAssistsAppearancesRatio
1ItalyFrancesco Totti1626190.26
2ItalyRoberto Baggio1194520.26
3ItalyAlessandro Del Piero1114780.23
4ItalyGianni Rivera1055270.20
5ItalyAndrea Pirlo1004930.20
6ItalyAntonio Candreva1004940.20
7ItalyAntonio Cassano994000.25
8ItalyDomenico Berardi853190.20
9ItalyLorenzo Insigne743370.22
10Bosnia and HerzegovinaMiralem Pjanić732810.26

Most assists in a single Serie A season

[edit]

Alejandro Gómez (2019–20) (16)[nb 4][48][49]

Oldest assist provider in Serie A

[edit]

Zlatan Ibrahimović, 40 years, 6 months and 21 days (24 April 2022, in Lazio–AC Milan, 1–2)[97]

Goalkeeping

[edit]

Longest consecutive runs without conceding a goal in Serie A

[edit]

The following table shows the goalkeepers that have longest consecutive run without conceding a goal in Serie A. Length column is in minutes.

Players inbold are still active in Serie A. Minutes inbold indicate an active run.

RankNat.PlayerClubSeasonLength
1ItalyGianluigi BuffonJuventus2015–16974[98]
2ItalySebastiano Rossi[nb 15]AC Milan1993–94929
3ItalyDino ZoffJuventus1972–73903
4ItalyMario Da PozzoGenoa1963–64792
5ItalyGianluigi BuffonJuventus2017–18791
6ItalyIvan PelizzoliRoma2003–04774
7ItalyDavide PinatoAtalanta1997–98758
8ItalyGianluigi BuffonJuventus2013–14745
ItalyLuca MarchegianiLazio1997–98745
10ItalyMorgan De SanctisRoma2013–14744

Most clean sheets

[edit]

Updated 22 February 2021

Players inbold are still active in Serie A.

Gianluigi Buffon, 299[102]

Most consecutive clean sheets

[edit]

Players inbold are still active in Serie A.

Gianluigi Buffon, 10 (17 January 2016 to 11 March 2016)[103]

Most clean sheets in a single season

[edit]

Players inbold are still active in Serie A.

21,[104][105]Fabio Cudicini (in1968–69 withAC Milan),Sebastiano Rossi (in1993–94 withAC Milan),Gianluigi Buffon (in2011–12 and2015–16 withJuventus),Morgan De Sanctis (in2013–14 withRoma),Ivan Provedel (in2022–23 withLazio)

Most goals conceded in a single season

[edit]

Alex Cordaz (2020–21) (91)[nb 16][48][49]

Most penalties saved

[edit]

Samir Handanović, 26[106]

Players inbold are still active in Serie A. Players initalics are still active, but outside Serie A.

Updated as of 3 March 2024

RankNat.PlayerPenalties savedAppearancesYears
1SloveniaSamir Handanović265662005–2023
2ItalyGianluca Pagliuca245921988–2007
3ItalyAndrea Consigli205102009–2024
4ItalyLuca Marchegiani174221988–2005
5ItalyGiuseppe Moro162701947–1955
ItalyGianluigi Buffon6571995–2021
7ItalyFrancesco Antonioli144161992–2012
ItalyStefano Sorrentino3632001–2019
9ItalyGianluigi Donnarumma132152015–2021
10ItalyEmiliano Viviano122512009–2018
ItalyLuigi Turci2701993–2004
ItalyMassimo Taibi2921993–2007
ItalyGiuseppe Taglialatela1731991–2002

Most consecutive penalties saved

[edit]

Players inbold are still active in Serie A.

Samir Handanović, 6[107][108]

Oldest goalkeeper to save a penalty

[edit]

Players inbold are still active in Serie A.

Gianluigi Buffon, 43 years and 104 days (12 May 2021, in Sassuolo–Juventus, 1–3)[109]

Discipline

[edit]

Most red cards

[edit]

Updated 29 January 2017[110][111][112][113][114]

Players inbold are still active in Serie A.

RankNat.PlayerRed cards
1UruguayPaolo Montero16
2ItalyLuigi Di Biagio12
ItalyGiulio Falcone
ItalyCristian Ledesma
ItalyGiampiero Pinzi
6ItalyMassimo Ambrosini11
ItalyGiuseppe Bergomi
ItalyGiuseppe Biava
ItalyDaniele Conti
PortugalFernando Couto
ItalyGiorgio Ferrini
GhanaSulley Muntari
ItalyFrancesco Totti

Most red cards in a single Serie A season

[edit]

Luigi Apolloni (2000–01) andGabriel Paletta (2016–17) (both five)[nb 16][48]

Most yellow cards in a single Serie A season

[edit]

Daniele Conti (2012–13), 16[nb 16][48]

Coaching

[edit]

Most appearances in Serie A

[edit]

Carlo Mazzone, 792 (excluding 5 appearances in play-off matches)[115]

Most Serie A titles

[edit]

Giovanni Trapattoni, 7

Most consecutive Serie A titles

[edit]

Massimiliano Allegri, 5 (all with Juventus)

Most Serie A titles with a single club

[edit]

Giovanni Trapattoni, 6 (with Juventus)

Most Serie A titles with different clubs

[edit]

Antonio Conte, 5 with 3 clubs (3 with Juventus, 1 with Inter, 1 with Napoli)

Youngest manager to win a Serie A title

[edit]

Armando Castellazzi, 33 years and 199 days, (with Ambrosiana–Inter,1937–38)

Oldest manager to win a Serie A title

[edit]

Luciano Spalletti, 64 years, 89 days (with Napoli,2022–23)[116]

Most consecutive appearances in Serie A

[edit]

Nereo Rocco, 605 (between 1955 and 1974, with Padova, AC Milan, and Torino)

Most appearances in Serie A with a single club

[edit]

Giovanni Trapattoni, 402 (with Juventus)

Most victories in Serie A

[edit]

Giovanni Trapattoni, 352 (16 with AC Milan, 213 with Juventus, 87 with Inter, 7 with Cagliari, and 29 with Fiorentina)

Most consecutive victories in Serie A

[edit]

Roberto Mancini, 17 (with Inter,2006–07 Serie A)

Most victories in Serie A with a single team

[edit]

Giovanni Trapattoni, 213 (with Juventus)

Serie A top scorers (capocannonieri) by season

[edit]
Main article:Capocannoniere

All-time highestbolded.

SeasonTallyPlayer(s) (club(s))
1929–3031 goalsItalyGiuseppe Meazza (Inter Milan)
1930–3128 goalsItalyRodolfo Volk (Roma)
1931–3225 goalsUruguayPedro Petrone (Fiorentina)
ItalyAngelo Schiavio (Bologna)
1932–3329 goalsItalyFelice Borel (Juventus)
1933–3432 goalsItalyFelice Borel (Juventus)
1934–3528 goalsArgentinaEnrico Guaita (Roma)
1935–3625 goalsItalyGiuseppe Meazza (Inter Milan)
1936–3721 goalsItalySilvio Piola (Lazio)
1937–3820 goalsItalyGiuseppe Meazza (Inter Milan)
1938–3919 goalsItalyAldo Boffi (AC Milan)
UruguayEttore Puricelli (Bologna)
1939–4024 goalsItalyAldo Boffi (AC Milan)
1940–4122 goalsUruguayEttore Puricelli (Bologna)
1941–4222 goalsItalyAldo Boffi (AC Milan)
1942–4321 goalsItalySilvio Piola (Lazio)
1945–4613 goalsItalyEusebio Castigliano (Torino)
1946–4729 goalsItalyValentino Mazzola (Torino)
1947–4827 goalsItalyGiampiero Boniperti (Juventus)
1948–4926 goalsHungaryStefano Nyers (Inter Milan)
1949–5035 goalsSwedenGunnar Nordahl (AC Milan)
1950–5134 goalsSwedenGunnar Nordahl (AC Milan)
1951–5230 goalsDenmarkJohn Hansen (Juventus)
1952–5326 goalsSwedenGunnar Nordahl (AC Milan)
1953–5423 goalsSwedenGunnar Nordahl (AC Milan)
1954–5526 goalsSwedenGunnar Nordahl (AC Milan)
1955–5629 goalsItalyGino Pivatelli (Bologna)
1956–5722 goalsBrazilDino Da Costa (Roma)
1957–5828 goalsWalesJohn Charles (Juventus)
1958–5933 goalsArgentinaAntonio Angelillo (Inter Milan)
1959–6028 goalsArgentinaOmar Sívori (Juventus)
1960–6127 goalsItalySergio Brighenti (Sampdoria)
1961–6222 goalsBrazilItalyJosé Altafini (AC Milan)
ItalyAurelio Milani (Fiorentina)
1962–6319 goalsDenmarkHarald Nielsen (Bologna)
ArgentinaPedro Manfredini (Roma)
1963–6421 goalsDenmarkHarald Nielsen (Bologna)
1964–6517 goalsItalyAlberto Orlando (Fiorentina)
ItalySandro Mazzola (Inter Milan)
1965–6625 goalsBrazilLuís Vinício (Vicenza)
1966–6718 goalsItalyGigi Riva (Cagliari)
1967–6815 goalsItalyPierino Prati (AC Milan)
1968–6921 goalsItalyGigi Riva (Cagliari)
1969–7021 goalsItalyGigi Riva (Cagliari)
1970–7124 goalsItalyRoberto Boninsegna (Inter Milan)
1971–7222 goalsItalyRoberto Boninsegna (Inter Milan)
1972–7317 goalsItalyPaolo Pulici (Torino)
ItalyGianni Rivera (AC Milan)
ItalyGiuseppe Savoldi (Bologna)
SeasonTallyPlayer(s) (club(s))
1973–7424 goalsItalyGiorgio Chinaglia (Lazio)
1974–7518 goalsItalyPaolo Pulici (Torino)
1975–7621 goalsItalyPaolo Pulici (Torino)
1976–7721 goalsItalyFrancesco Graziani (Torino)
1977–7824 goalsItalyPaolo Rossi (Vicenza)
1978–7919 goalsItalyBruno Giordano (Lazio)
1979–8016 goalsItalyRoberto Bettega (Juventus)
1980–8118 goalsItalyRoberto Pruzzo (Roma)
1981–8215 goalsItalyRoberto Pruzzo (Roma)
1982–8316 goalsFranceMichel Platini (Juventus)
1983–8420 goalsFranceMichel Platini (Juventus)
1984–8518 goalsFranceMichel Platini (Juventus)
1985–8619 goalsItalyRoberto Pruzzo (Roma)
1986–8717 goalsItalyPietro Paolo Virdis (AC Milan)
1987–8815 goalsArgentinaDiego Maradona (Napoli)
1988–8922 goalsItalyAldo Serena (Inter Milan)
1989–9019 goalsNetherlandsMarco van Basten (AC Milan)
1990–9119 goalsItalyGianluca Vialli (Sampdoria)
1991–9225 goalsNetherlandsMarco van Basten (AC Milan)
1992–9326 goalsItalyGiuseppe Signori (Lazio)
1993–9423 goalsItalyGiuseppe Signori (Lazio)
1994–9526 goalsArgentinaGabriel Batistuta (Fiorentina)
1995–9624 goalsItalyGiuseppe Signori (Lazio)
ItalyIgor Protti (Bari)
1996–9724 goalsItalyFilippo Inzaghi (Atalanta)
1997–9827 goalsGermanyOliver Bierhoff (Udinese)
1998–9922 goalsBrazilMárcio Amoroso (Udinese)
1999–200024 goalsUkraineAndriy Shevchenko (AC Milan)
2000–0126 goalsArgentinaHernán Crespo (Lazio)
2001–0224 goalsFranceDavid Trezeguet (Juventus)
ItalyDario Hübner (Piacenza)
2002–0324 goalsItalyChristian Vieri (Inter Milan)
2003–0424 goalsUkraineAndriy Shevchenko (AC Milan)
2004–0524 goalsItalyCristiano Lucarelli (Livorno)
2005–0631 goalsItalyLuca Toni (Fiorentina)
2006–0726 goalsItalyFrancesco Totti (Roma)
2007–0821 goalsItalyAlessandro Del Piero (Juventus)
2008–0925 goalsSwedenZlatan Ibrahimović (Inter Milan)
2009–1029 goalsItalyAntonio Di Natale (Udinese)
2010–1128 goalsItalyAntonio Di Natale (Udinese)
2011–1228 goalsSwedenZlatan Ibrahimović (AC Milan)
2012–1329 goalsUruguayEdinson Cavani (Napoli)
2013–1422 goalsItalyCiro Immobile (Torino)
2014–1522 goalsArgentinaMauro Icardi (Inter Milan)
ItalyLuca Toni (Hellas Verona)
2015–1636 goalsArgentinaGonzalo Higuaín (Napoli)
2016–1729 goalsBosnia and HerzegovinaEdin Džeko (Roma)
2017–1829 goalsArgentinaMauro Icardi (Inter Milan)
ItalyCiro Immobile (Lazio)
2018–1926 goalsItalyFabio Quagliarella (Sampdoria)
2019–2036 goalsItalyCiro Immobile (Lazio)
2020–2129 goalsPortugalCristiano Ronaldo (Juventus)
2021–2227 goalsItalyCiro Immobile (Lazio)
2022–2326 goalsNigeriaVictor Osimhen (Napoli)
2023–2424 goalsArgentinaLautaro Martínez (Inter Milan)
2024–2525 goalsItalyMateo Retegui (Atalanta)
  • Source for figures before 1997 from RSSSF.com:[76]
  • Source for figures after 1997 from lega-calcio.it:[117]

Retired numbers

[edit]
Main article:List of retired numbers in association football

Up to the present day, nineteen different top clubs in Italy have retired numbers for different reasons, mostly in recognition of their former players.

Paolo Maldini had his #3 retired byAC Milan after spending 25 years (his entire professional career) with the club
No.PlayerPos.ClubTenureRef.
14ItalyFederico Pisani[note 1]FWAtalanta1991–1997[118]
2Italy Giovanni LosetoDFBari1982–1993[118]
27ItalyNiccolò Galli[note 1]DFBologna2000–2001[118]
10ItalyRoberto BaggioFWBrescia2000–2004[119]
13ItalyVittorio Mero[note 1]DFBrescia1998–2001
2002
[118]
11ItalyGigi RivaFWCagliari1963–1978[118]
13ItalyDavide Astori[note 1]DFCagliari2008–2014[118]
30Democratic Republic of the CongoJason Mayélé[note 1]FWChievo2001–2002[118]
4ItalyAntonio GalardoMFCrotone1995–1998
2002–2016
[118]
13ItalyDavide Astori[note 1]DFFiorentina2015–2018[118]
6ItalyGianluca Signorini[note 1]DFGenoa1995–1998[120][121]
7ItalyMarco RossiMFGenoa2003–2004
2005–2013
[118]
12Gradinata Nord (the12th man)Genoa[122][123]
3ItalyGiacinto Facchetti[note 1]DFInter Milan1961–1978[118]
4ArgentinaJavier ZanettiDFInter Milan1995–2014[118][124][125]
12(the12th man)US Lecce[126]
25ItalyPiermario Morosini[note 1]MFLivorno2012[127]
41ItalySalvatore SulloMFMessina2001–2007[118]
3ItalyPaolo MaldiniDFAC Milan1984–2009[118]
6ItalyFranco BaresiDFAC Milan1977–1997[118]
10ArgentinaDiego MaradonaMFNapoli1984–1991[128][118][129]
6ItalyAlessandro LucarelliDFParma2008–2018[118]
4Italy Vincenzo ZucchiniMFPescara1973–1979[118]
10ItalyFrancesco TottiFWRoma1992–2017[118]
4ItalyRoberto BredaMFSalernitana1993–1999
2003–2005
[118]
4ItalyMichele MignaniDFSalernitana1993–1997
1998–2006
[118]
4ItalyFrancesco MagnanelliMFSassuolo2005–2022[130]
3Italy Giulio Savoini[note 1]DFVicenza1953–1966[118]
25ItalyPiermario Morosini[note 1]MFVicenza2007–2009
2011
[118]
Notes
  1. ^abcdefghijkPosthumous honour.

Most successful clubs overall (1898–present)

[edit]

The following table includes only Italian, European and worldwide competitions organised respectively byFIGC,UEFA andFIFA since 1898.[131] The figures in bold represent the most times this competition has been won by an Italian team. Teams which have one at least one official title are included, ranked by number of overall titles at national and/or international level and listed in chronological order in case of a tie. In particular, note that the UEFA Cup unlike the Inter-Cities Fairs Cup was an official competition organized by UEFA. Original idea of the ICFC was a trade fairs promoting competition and was not organised by UEFA. It is not considered as an official tournament by UEFA due to the major idea of promoted trade fairs and the system of admission of the first editions. At the beginning it was only open to a certain few clubs from some European countries that were promoting trade and not an open football tournament. However, it is the official predecessor of UEFA Cup - Europa League (by UEFA) and recognized by FIFA (and FIGC) as a major trophy.

Key

[edit]
Domestic competitions organized byFIGC
ASerie A, former Italian Football Championship
CICoppa Italia
SISupercoppa Italiana
European competitions organized byUEFA
UCLUEFA Champions League, former European Champion Clubs' Cup
CWCUEFA Cup Winners' Cup (Defunct)
UELUEFA Europa League, former UEFA Cup
UECLUEFA Conference League
USCUEFA Super Cup
UICUEFA Intertoto Cup (Defunct)
ICUEFA/CONMEBOLIntercontinental Cup (Defunct) (Predecessor toFCWC)
ICFCInter-Cities Fairs Cup (Defunct) (Not organized by UEFA, but recognized as the predecessor to theUEL and acknowledged byFIFA as a major trophy)[132]
Intercontinental competition organized byFIFA
FCWCFIFA Club World Cup

By club

[edit]
ClubFIGCUEFAFIFATotal
ACISITotalUCL[133]CWC[134]UEL[135]UECLICFC#USC[136]UIC[137]TotalIC*[138]FCWC[139]
Juventus36[3]15960213--2192-71
AC Milan19583272---5-143150
Inter Milan20[3]98373-3----62146
Roma39214---11--2--16
Lazio27514-1---1-2--16
Napoli46212--1----1--13
Torino7[140]5-12----------12
Bologna73-10------11--11
Genoa91-10----------10
Fiorentina2619-1[141]-----1--10
Parma-314-12--1-4--8
Pro Vercelli7--7----------7
Sampdoria1416-1-----1--7
Atalanta-1-1--1----1--2
Casale1--1----------1
Novese1--1----------1
Cagliari1--1----------1
Hellas Verona1--1----------1
Vado-1-1----------1
Venezia-1-1----------1
Vicenza-1-1----------1
Perugia----------11--1
Udinese----------11--1

Additionally, theAlta Italia Championship, also known asCampionato di guerra (War Championship), won by theVigili del Fuoco della Spezia in 1944 (the only edition ever held), was recognised by theFIGC in 2002 as the equivalent to theSerie A championship of that year.[142][143]
# Although not organised by UEFA, the Inter-Cities Fairs Cup is included here under UEFA as it is the official predecessor to the UEL and acknowledged by FIFA as a major trophy.
* Although organized by UEFA (and CONMEBOL), the Intercontinental Cup is included here under FIFA for being the predecessor to the FCWC.

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^Tally does not include 16 goals that Piola also scored from 29 appearances during the1945–46 Divisione Nazionale season
  2. ^Tally does not include 45 goals that Meazza also scored from 62 appearances during the1927–28 Divisione Nazionale and1928–29 Divisione Nazionale, 7 goals scored from 20 appearances during the1944 Campionato Alta Italia and 2 goals scored from 14 appearances during the1945–46 Divisione Nazionale
  3. ^According to several sources,Andrea Pirlo scored 28 goals from free kicks in Serie A, which would make him the all–time highest goalscorer from set–pieces in Serie A history, alongsideSiniša Mihajlović;[39][40] however, two of his claimed goals are disputed and have been recorded as own goals by two different goalkeepers according to other sources: the first bySébastien Frey in Verona-Reggina 1–1 on 9 January 2000 (1999–2000 Serie A),[41][42] and the second byMarco Silvestri in Juventus-Cagliari 3–0 on 16 May 2014 (2013–14 Serie A).[43][44][45] According to the official regulations by Lega Serie A, a goal is considered to be an own goal when "a player deflects a shot, cross, or pass from an opponent, which was not directed on target, into their own goal."[46] See alsoit:Statistiche della Serie A#Calci piazzati.
  4. ^abNote: statistical data only began to be collected from the2004–05 Serie A season onwards
  5. ^Luigi Cevenini's Italian league record of 37 goals was set during the1913–14 Prima Categoria season, prior to the establishment of the Serie A in the1929–30 season.
  6. ^391 if his goals in theDivisione Nazionale (16) and goals for theItaly B team (11) are also included[94]
  7. ^Although some sources claim thatGiorgio Chinaglia is in fact the highest-scoring Italian player in all competitions with 398 career goals, this claim is also disputed, as theNASL did not abide to certainFIFA regulations at the time in which Chinaglia was playing there[95]
  8. ^362 if his goals for theItaly U-17 (1),U-18 (12), andU-21 teams (3) are included
  9. ^349 if his goals in the Divisione Nazionale are included
  10. ^330 if his goals for theItaly U-21 team (9) are included
  11. ^321 if his goals for theItaly U-16 team (3) are included
  12. ^334 if his goals for theItaly U-15 (3),Italy U-16 (2),U-18 (7),U-21 (4), and U-23 teams (2) are included
  13. ^316 if his goals for theItaly U-21 team (3) are included
  14. ^298 if his goals for theItaly U-21 (2), and U-23 tams (3) are included
  15. ^Gianpiero Combi's Italian league record unbeaten streak of 934 consecutive minutes without conceding a goal was set during the1925–26 Prima Divisione season, prior to the establishment of the Serie A in the1929–30 season.[99][100][101]
  16. ^abcNote: statistical data only began to be collected from the1994–95 Serie A season onwards

References

[edit]
  1. ^"Honours list".LegaSerieA.it.Lega Serie A. Archived fromthe original on 30 April 2018. Retrieved30 May 2017.
  2. ^The 1943–44 and 1944–45Serie A seasons were not held due toWorld War II.
  3. ^abcInter Milan were awarded the2005–06 Serie A championship as they were the highest placed side in the season's final league table after points were stripped from Juventus and Milan – both sides being involved in theItalian football scandal that year.
  4. ^ab"Campionato di Calcio Serie A: record, primati, numeri e statistiche".Il Corriere dello Sport (in Italian). 30 October 2023. Retrieved12 February 2024.
  5. ^ab"Italy - Serie A All-Time Table".RSSSF.
  6. ^ab"Serie A - All-time league table".worldfootball.net.
  7. ^Camedda, Paolo (8 October 2019)."Giocatori più anziani Serie A: la classifica di tutti i tempi".CalcioNews24 (in Italian). Retrieved9 October 2019.
  8. ^"Ranking Oldest Serie A".BDFutbol. Retrieved22 October 2023.
  9. ^"Ranking Youngest Serie A".BDFutbol. Retrieved22 October 2023.
  10. ^"Milan striker Camarda is youngest ever Serie A player at 15".Football Italia. 25 November 2023. Retrieved25 November 2023.
  11. ^"MILAN-FIORENTINA, FRANCESCO CAMARDA DIVENTA IL PIÙ GIOVANE DI SEMPRE A ESORDIRE IN SERIE A: LA TOP 10" (in Italian). Eurosport. 25 November 2023. Retrieved25 November 2023.
  12. ^"Miha introduced 15-year-old Amey against Genoa".Football Italia. 12 May 2021. Retrieved12 May 2021.
  13. ^abBen Gladwell (23 December 2016)."Genoa's Pietro Pellegri makes debut aged 15, equals Serie A record". ESPN FC. Retrieved23 December 2016.
  14. ^abFrancesco Oddi (22 December 2016)."Genoa, Pellegri esordio record in Serie A: eguagliato il record di Amadei".La Gazzetta dello Sport (in Italian). Retrieved23 December 2016.
  15. ^ab"Genoa, esordio record per il 2001 Pellegri: debutto in A a 15 anni".Goal.com (in Italian). 22 December 2016.
  16. ^"Gianni Rivera: Golden Boy" (in Italian). Maglia Rossonera.it. Archived fromthe original on 23 November 2011. Retrieved6 November 2014.
  17. ^"Milan and Italy's golden boy: Gianni Rivera". FIFA. Archived fromthe original on 9 October 2015. Retrieved20 April 2015.
  18. ^Fioni, Daniela."Dagli anni Venti al 1929" (in Italian). US Cremonese.
  19. ^ab"Un Angelov custode il segreto di Bojinov - la Repubblica.it".la Repubblica.it (in Italian). GEDI Gruppo Editoriale. 29 January 2002.
  20. ^"Hellas Verona, primo gol in Serie A per Eddie Salcedo".Football Scouting (in Italian). 3 November 2019. Retrieved3 November 2019.
  21. ^"Memories of 16-year-old star Pirlo". football-italia.net. 26 June 2012. Archived fromthe original on 18 May 2021. Retrieved20 September 2012.
  22. ^"Olivera lancia il Genoa Il Chievo sprofonda".La Gazzetta dello Sport (in Italian). 22 December 2008. Retrieved19 January 2009.
  23. ^"Serie A | Salernitana 0-4 Udinese: Granata safe despite drubbing".Football Italia. 22 May 2022. Retrieved22 May 2022.
  24. ^"L. Tassi".Soccerway.
  25. ^Fiorenzo Radogna (21 November 2016)."I più giovani a esordire in Serie A Pellegri come Amadei quando la carriera inizia a 15 anni" (in Italian). Il Corriere della Sera. Retrieved23 December 2016.
  26. ^Fiorenzo Radogna (21 November 2016)."I più giovani a esordire in Serie A Pellegri come Amadei quando la carriera inizia a 15 anni" (in Italian). Il Corriere della Sera. Retrieved23 December 2016.
  27. ^"Cesena maglia nera di Serie A".tuttocesenaweb.it. Archived fromthe original on 14 May 2014. Retrieved13 May 2014.
  28. ^"Debutto in Serie A a quasi 40 anni per un ex Lega Pro".Tuttolegapro (in Italian). Archived fromthe original on 26 August 2017. Retrieved17 November 2016.
  29. ^abFabrizio Maffei."Zoff, Dino". Treccani: Enciclopedia dello Sport. Retrieved26 November 2016.
  30. ^Camedda, Paolo (28 February 2021)."Dino Zoff, un portiere leggendario: dal flop all'Udinese ai successi con Juventus e Nazionale" (in Italian). www.goal.com. Retrieved17 December 2021.
  31. ^abc"Roma-Sampdoria, Totti in gol da 23 anni: è il suo 25° anno in A come Maldini".La Gazzetta dello Sport (in Italian). 11 September 2016. Retrieved8 December 2017.
  32. ^"Juventus 2 - 1 Verona". Football Italia. 21 September 2019. Retrieved22 September 2019.
  33. ^"Cristiano Ronaldo, Miralem Pjanic Score as Juventus beats SPAL". Sports Illustrated. 28 September 2019. Retrieved28 September 2019.
  34. ^"One Club Football Players". football-stadiums.co.uk. 20 May 2016. Retrieved5 November 2019.
  35. ^"Totti riscrive la storia: Baggio superato sui calci di rigore, Higuain per media-goal" [Totti rewrites history: Baggio overtaken on penalties, Higuain in terms of goalscoring average] (in Italian). Goal.com. 22 April 2016. Retrieved25 April 2016.
  36. ^Roberto Vinciguerra."I migliori rigoristi della storia della serie A" [The best penalty takers in Serie A history] (in Italian). Il Guerin Sportivo. Retrieved16 May 2016.
  37. ^"Ranking Goals Penalty Serie A".BDFutbol. Retrieved30 October 2023.
  38. ^"Calcio - Ciro Immobile da record: è il giocatore con il maggior numero di rigori realizzati in una sola stagione" (in Italian). Media News 24. 27 July 2020. Retrieved6 September 2020.
  39. ^ab"'Sentenza' Pirlo su punizione, solo Mihajlovic ha fatto meglio in Serie A" [Pirlo's 'sentence' from a free-kick, only Mihajlovic has done better in Serie A].Goal.com (in Italian). 18 March 2014. Retrieved16 May 2016.
  40. ^ab"Bologna-Juventus 0-3: segnano Pjanic, Mandzukic e Matuidi: gol e highlights" (in Italian). Sky.it. 17 December 2017. Retrieved20 December 2017.
  41. ^Scemma, Adalberto (10 January 2000)."La Reggina viene ripresa da Adailton".La Repubblica (in Italian). Retrieved8 July 2020.
  42. ^"Roma capoccia con Totti Delvecchio".La Gazzetta dello Sport (in Italian). 11 January 2000. Retrieved8 July 2020.
  43. ^"Juventus-Cagliari 3-0: 102 punti, la festa bianconera è completa".la Repubblica (in Italian). 18 May 2014. Retrieved8 July 2020.
  44. ^"Juventus-Cagliari 3-0. Autorete Silvestri, gol di Llorente e Marchisio. I punti sono 102".La Gazzetta dello Sport (in Italian). 16 May 2014. Retrieved8 July 2020.
  45. ^"Juventus 3-0 Cagliari". BBC Sport. 18 May 2014. Retrieved8 July 2020.
  46. ^"Linee guida per l'assegnazione dei gol dubbi" (in Italian). Lega Nazionale Professionisti Serie A. Retrieved7 July 2020.[permanent dead link]
  47. ^Lanfredo Birelli (14 December 1998)."Record Mihajlovic: mai 3 gol su punizione diretta" [Mihajlovic record: never before 3 goals from direct free-kicks].La Gazzetta dello Sport (in Italian). Retrieved26 August 2015.
  48. ^abcdefg"Gol, assist e non solo: i record stagionali in A".Sky Sport Italia (in Italian). 27 July 2019. Retrieved20 February 2024.
  49. ^abc"I record del campionato che (forse) non conosci".Sky Sport Italia (in Italian). 24 June 2022. Retrieved22 February 2024.
  50. ^https://www.facebook.com/optapaolo/photos/a.180347395352755.57790.180305525356942/974522505935236/?type=3&theater
  51. ^"Blink and you'll miss it -- Rafael Leao scores fastest goal in Serie A history". CNN. 21 December 2020. Retrieved22 December 2020.
  52. ^"IBRAHIMOVIC MAKES HISTORY AS OLDEST EVER SERIE A SCORER".football-italia.net. 18 March 2023.
  53. ^"Europe's youngest top-flight goalscorers".UEFA. 26 November 2014. Retrieved21 May 2017.
  54. ^"Icardi 100: Inter captain's Serie A landmark in Opta numbers".FourFourTwo. 18 March 2018. Retrieved18 March 2018.
  55. ^"Icardi hits Serie A Century". Football Italia. 18 March 2018. Retrieved18 March 2018.
  56. ^Andrew Dampf (18 March 2018)."Icardi passes 2 century marks with 4-goal performance".The Washington Post. Archived fromthe original on 1 April 2018. Retrieved18 March 2018.
  57. ^"Inter's Icardi reaches 100 Serie A goals at former club Sampdoria". as.com. 18 March 2018. Retrieved18 March 2018.
  58. ^Ryan Benson (18 March 2018)."Inter star Icardi exceeds 100 Serie A goals with four against Sampdoria". Goal.com. Retrieved18 March 2018.
  59. ^Redazione La Nazione."Solo Altafini come Gilardino: bomber a 26 anni".Goal.com. Archived fromthe original on 2 October 2017. Retrieved5 March 2016.
  60. ^Giansandro Mosti."Gila, numeri da urlo. Più decisivo di Altafini: alla sua età Bati era indietro".La Nazione. Archived fromthe original on 26 February 2014. Retrieved5 March 2016.
  61. ^Lorenzo Proverbio (February 2016)."PIOLA Silvio: il sesto senso del gol" (in Italian). Storie di Calcio. Retrieved21 May 2017.
  62. ^Federico Mambelli (20 October 2001)."Chi detiene il record di doppiette in serie a?".La Gazzetta dello Sport (in Italian). Retrieved21 May 2017.
  63. ^Niccolò Mariotto (23 November 2016)."TOP 10 - I dieci giocatori autori di più triplette nella storia della Serie A" (in Italian). 90min.com. Archived fromthe original on 27 July 2021. Retrieved21 May 2017.
  64. ^"Serie A, quali giocatori hanno fatto tripletta più volte? La classifica" (in Italian). sport.sky.it. 2 September 2019. Retrieved12 November 2019.
  65. ^Luca Guerra (18 September 2017)."Genoa, enfant prodige Pellegri: doppietta in A a 16 anni e 184 giorni" (in Italian). foxsports.it. Retrieved8 December 2017.
  66. ^Giuseppe Di Giovanni (17 September 2017)."Pellegri, storia di un predestinato: "Non posso neanche fare il figo a scuola..."".La Gazzetta dello Sport (in Italian). Retrieved28 January 2018.
  67. ^@OptaPaolo (20 November 2021)."40 - Zlatan Ibrahimovic has become the oldest player ever to have scored 2+ goals in a Serie A game and the first 4…" (Tweet) – viaTwitter.
  68. ^"È SILVIO PIOLA IL PIÙ GIOVANE TRIPLETTISTA DELLA SERIE A" [Silvio Piola is the youngest hat-trick scorer of Serie A].La Gazzetta dello Sport (in Italian). 23 May 2011. Retrieved7 December 2017.
  69. ^"Palacio has oldest Serie A hat-trick".Football Italia. 2 May 2021. Retrieved2 May 2021.
  70. ^Andrea Rughetti (13 January 2014)."Non è Domenico Berardi ma Silvio Piola il pokerista più giovane della Serie A" [Domenico Berardi is not the youngest poker scorer of Serie A but Silvio Piola is] (in Italian). modenanoi.it. Archived fromthe original on 5 October 2017. Retrieved21 May 2017.
  71. ^Giulio Cardone (5 May 2013)."Lazio-Bologna 6-0: cinquina storica di Klose, i biancocelesti ritrovano gol e vittoria".La Repubblica (in Italian). Retrieved8 December 2017.
  72. ^"Fiorentina, Ribery da record" (in Italian). calciomercato.com. 22 September 2019. Retrieved23 September 2019.
  73. ^"Risultati Serie A 30-31" (in Italian). calcio-seriea.net. Retrieved23 September 2019.
  74. ^Marco Beltrami (11 September 2016)."Totti sempre in gol da 23 anni: "Perché dovrei smettere?"" (in Italian). calcio.fanpage.it. Retrieved8 December 2017.
  75. ^"Verona Level Late Against Juventus As Luca Toni Ends Season As Serie A's Top Marksman". Bein Sports. 30 May 2015. Retrieved30 May 2015.
  76. ^abRoberto Di Maggio; Igor Kramarsic; Alberto Novello (8 June 2017)."Italy - Serie A Top Scorers".RSSSF. Retrieved28 January 2018.
  77. ^"Higuain: 'I am so happy!'". Football Italia. 14 May 2016. Retrieved14 May 2016.
  78. ^Davie, Chris (14 May 2016)."Higuain makes Serie A history by breaking 66-year-old goalscoring record". goal.com. Retrieved14 May 2016.
  79. ^"Serie A Statistics 2015-16". ESPN FC. 14 May 2016. Retrieved14 May 2016.
  80. ^"Serie A Statistics 2019-20". Serie A. 1 August 2020. Retrieved1 August 2020.
  81. ^"Inter Milan - Squad Profiles". ESPN FC. 11 February 2003. Retrieved2 February 2017.
  82. ^"Vieri, un gol per rinascere "Visto che colpo di testa? Adesso sono affari vostri"" (in Italian). Il Corriere della Sera. 2 November 2001. Retrieved22 September 2014.
  83. ^Soldo, Ivan (31 August 2010)."Serie A Special: Seven Stars Who Played For Milan, Inter and Juventus". bleacherreport.com. Retrieved13 September 2019.
  84. ^"Serie A: Pavoletti da record, nessuno come lui nei gol di testa".ilsole24ore.com (in Italian). 27 August 2018. Retrieved13 September 2019.
  85. ^"Quagliarella è a quota 11? E allora Batistuta è a... 13! Le statistiche premiano ancora Batigol". Viola News. 28 January 2019. Retrieved29 January 2019.
  86. ^"Sampdoria 4 - 0 Udinese". Football Italia. 26 January 2019. Retrieved28 January 2019.
  87. ^ [:https://m.allfootballapp.com/news/Serie-A/Ronaldo-scores-for-the-11th-consecutive-Serie-A-game-equalling-league-record/2244956 :https://m.allfootballapp.com/news/Serie-A/Ronaldo-scores-for-the-11th-consecutive-Serie-A-game-equalling-league-record/2244956]. Retrieved23 February 2020.{{cite web}}:Check|url= value (help);Missing or empty|title= (help)
  88. ^"8 of the greatest ever scoring streaks – starring Batistuta, Ronaldo, Messi and Muller".Four Four Two. Retrieved17 August 2018.
  89. ^UEFA.com (28 November 2015)."Longest goalscoring runs in Europe's top leagues". Archived fromthe original on 28 February 2014. Retrieved27 January 2019.
  90. ^ab"Juve, CR7 da record: 9 trasferte di fila con gol in Serie A. E nel mirino c'è Messi".La Gazzetta dello Sport (in Italian). 11 February 2019. Retrieved11 February 2019.
  91. ^"Así está la Bota de Oro: Cristiano Ronaldo empata con Mbappé y se sitúa a tres goles de Messi" (in Spanish). marca.com. 10 February 2019. Retrieved11 February 2019.
  92. ^"Record da fedelissimo, Ma Del Piero è amaro".gazzetta.it (in Italian). La Gazzetta dello Sport. 24 April 2011.
  93. ^"Di Natale punta i 300 gol in carriera: è a 293 dopo la quaterna in Coppa Italia".tribunasportiva.blogspot.it (in Italian). 26 August 2014. Retrieved28 April 2015.
  94. ^"Del Piero a quota 301 gol in carriera: nel mirino c'è Inzaghi" (in Italian). Tutto Sport. 15 March 2010. Archived fromthe original on 6 October 2014. Retrieved22 January 2015.
  95. ^"Calcio: 66 anni fa nascevaLong John, Giorgio Chinaglia" (in Italian). 24 January 2013. Archived fromthe original on 13 February 2016. Retrieved10 November 2015.
  96. ^"chi detiene il record di autoreti nella storia della serie a ?".La Gazzetta dello Sport (in Italian). 10 January 2004. Retrieved2 September 2019.
  97. ^"Ibra, quello contro la Lazio è l'assist più anziano della storia della Serie A" (in Italian). Milan News. 25 April 2022. Retrieved29 February 2024.
  98. ^"RECORD DI IMBATTIBILITA' PER BUFFON: 974'" [Record unbeaten streak for Buffon: 974 minutes] (in Italian). LegaSerieA.it. 20 March 2016. Archived fromthe original on 2 August 2017. Retrieved22 March 2016.
  99. ^"20 dicembre 1902: nasce Combi, il "nonno" di Zoff e Buffon".La Repubblica (in Italian). 20 December 2014. Retrieved11 March 2017.
  100. ^From the third match (Juventus 6–0 Milan on 25 October 1925) to thirteenth match (Parma 0–3 Juventus on 28 February 1926) of the1925–26 FIGC Football Championship according to(in Italian)All Juventus FC matches: Italian Federal Championship (pages 14 and 15) - www.juworld.net.
  101. ^"Gianluigi Buffon sets goalkeeping record as Juventus sweep aside Torino".The Guardian. 20 March 2016. Retrieved20 March 2016.
  102. ^"Every record Gianluigi Buffon holds - and could break in the future".FotMob. 23 February 2021. Retrieved30 April 2021.
  103. ^"Buffon eyes all-time record". Football Italia. 11 March 2016. Retrieved11 March 2016.
  104. ^"Lazio, Provedel nella storia: raggiunta quota 21 clean sheet" (in Italian). 15 April 2023. Retrieved4 June 2023.
  105. ^"Lazio, Provedel da record: 18 clean sheet in A. E il primato assoluto…" (in Italian). 15 April 2023. Retrieved4 June 2023.
  106. ^"Handanovic come Pagliuca, la classifica dei migliori pararigori della storia della Serie A" (in Italian). sport.sky.it. 12 January 2020.
  107. ^"Inter, Handanovic para il sesto rigore di fila" [Inter, Handanovic saves the sixth penalty in a row].La Gazzetta dello Sport (in Italian). 27 November 2014. Retrieved22 December 2015.
  108. ^"Inter: super Handanovic para sei rigori di fila" [Inter: super Handanovic saves six penalties in a row] (in Italian). Il Corriere della Sera. 28 November 2014. Retrieved22 December 2015.
  109. ^Emons, Michael (12 May 2021)."Buffon saves penalty as Juventus win".BBC Sport. Retrieved19 May 2021.
  110. ^"Totti, 11 espulsioni. Nessuno 'rosso' come lui tra i giocatori in attività della Serie A" (in Italian). RomaNews.eu. Archived fromthe original on 8 August 2014. Retrieved11 September 2014.
  111. ^"Montero Iglesias Paolo" (in Italian). Lega Serie A. Archived fromthe original on 27 February 2015. Retrieved11 September 2014.
  112. ^Claudio Agave (16 February 2016)."I calciatori più espulsi nella storia della Serie A: Montero irraggiungibile" (in Italian). contra-ataque.it. Archived fromthe original on 1 June 2017. Retrieved2 May 2017.
  113. ^"Record Individuali Assoluti".La Gazzetta dello Sport (in Italian). Archived fromthe original on 24 September 2015. Retrieved2 May 2017.
  114. ^Sebastiano Vernazza (28 September 2001)."Montero 14 espulsioni: nessuno mai cattivo come lui".La Gazzetta dello Sport (in Italian). Retrieved2 May 2017.
  115. ^"Serie A: record, curiosità e statistiche dei 20 allenatori" (in Italian). sport.sky.it. 16 August 2019. Retrieved7 February 2020.
  116. ^"Spalletti in tears as Napoli win Serie A title: 'This is for you'".Football Italia. 4 May 2023. Retrieved4 May 2023.
  117. ^"Archivio Classifica" (in Italian). Lega Calcio. Archived fromthe original on 18 October 2003. Retrieved28 January 2018.
  118. ^abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwRyan Kelly (23 November 2018)."Retired shirt numbers: Clubs and players to give & receive honour".goal.com.
  119. ^Ricchi Potts (15 November 2018)."When should a football club retire a player's shirt number?".The Guardian.
  120. ^"Calcio, morto Signorini, bandiera del Genoa" (in Italian). Il Corriere della Sera. 6 November 2002. Retrieved31 March 2016.
  121. ^Filippo Grimaldi (6 November 2007)."Genoa e Signorini Una serata speciale".La Gazzetta dello Sport (in Italian). Retrieved31 March 2016.
  122. ^"Genoa: Serie A alternative club guide".The Guardian. 10 April 2014.
  123. ^"Côté Tribune : Genova rive rossoblù".calciomio.fr (in French). Calciomio. 11 April 2010.
  124. ^"Internazionale retire No4 shirt in honour of Javier Zanetti".The Guardian. 30 June 2014.
  125. ^McVitie, Peter (30 June 2014)."Inter make Zanetti vice-president and retire No.4 jersey - Thohir".Goal.com.
  126. ^"I numeri ritirati della Serie A".
  127. ^"Livorno retires Morosini's number 25 - Turkish News".Hürriyet Daily News. 16 April 2012.
  128. ^"El Napoli retira la camiseta 10 de Diego Maradona".caracol.com (in Italian). Caracol. 24 August 2000.
  129. ^Fran Yarza (13 December 2016)."En el Nápoles nadie juega con el 10".fanatic.futbol (in Italian). Archived fromthe original on 12 February 2019. Retrieved11 February 2019.
  130. ^"Sassuolo retire legendary Francesco Magnanelli jersey #4". US Sassuolo Calcio. 5 July 2022. Retrieved5 July 2022.
  131. ^For all other competitions not organized respectively by the above-mentioned bodies, please refer to the "Honours" section in each club's own article.
  132. ^FIFA.com."FC Barcelona". Archived fromthe original on 12 September 2015. Retrieved15 September 2015.
  133. ^Prior to 1992, the tournament was officially called the European Champion Clubs' Cup but was usually referred to as simply theEuropean Cup.
  134. ^The tournament was founded in 1960–61 independently to the UEFA administration. The governing body of the European football organised the Cup Winners' Cup for the first time in 1961–62 season. The competition was discontinued in 1999 when it was absorbed by theUEFA Cup, cf."50 years ago: UEFA Cup Winners' Cup makes its debut"(PDF).Uefadirect.100. Union des Associations Européennes de Football: 15. August 2010.Archived(PDF) from the original on 12 August 2011.
  135. ^Created by theUnion of European Football Associations asUEFA Cup in the1971–72 season."UEFA Cup gets new name in revamp".BBC Sport. 26 September 2008. Retrieved26 September 2008.
    "UEFA Cup: All-time finals".Union des Associations Européennes de Football. Archived fromthe original on 12 April 2009. Retrieved13 July 2009.
  136. ^Competition established byUEFA in 1973. Despite theScottishRangers'100º anniversary match is regarded the predecessor of theUEFA Super Cup, it is not counted as an official trophy for official record purposes due to the1972 Rangers riots, cf."UEFA Super Cup: History".Union des Associations Européennes de Football. Retrieved9 January 2012.
  137. ^The tournament was founded in 1961–62 independently to the UEFA administration. The governing body of the European football organised the Intertoto Cup for the first time in 1995. The competition was discontinued in 2008 when it was absorbed by theUEFA Cup, cf."UEFA Intertoto Cup winners 1995-2008".The European Lotteries. Archived fromthe original on 2 April 2012. Retrieved14 September 2011.
  138. ^TheIntercontinental Cup, organized byUEFA andCONMEBOL from 1960 to 2004 is considered by FIFA a worldwide competition and the unique predecessor of theFIFA Club World Cup, cf."FIFA Club World Championship to replace Toyota Cup from 2005". Fédération Internationale de Football Association. 17 May 2004. Archived fromthe original on 30 April 2011. Retrieved24 December 2010.."FIFA Club World Cup UAE 2010 Statistical Kit"(PDF).Fédération Internationale de Football Association. pp. 4,20–22. Archived fromthe original(PDF) on 2 June 2012. Retrieved25 December 2010.
    "Goodbye Toyota Cup, hello FIFA Club World Championship". Fédération Internationale de Football Association. 10 December 2004. Archived fromthe original on 30 April 2011. Retrieved24 December 2010.
    "Ten tips on the planet's top club tournament". Fédération Internationale de Football Association. 28 July 2005. Archived fromthe original on 30 April 2011. Retrieved28 October 2009.
    "We are the champions". Fédération Internationale de Football Association. 1 December 2005. Archived fromthe original on 30 April 2011. Retrieved28 October 2009.
  139. ^Competition established byFIFA in 2000.
  140. ^The1926–27 Divisione Nazionale title was revoked to Torino by theItalian Football Federation (FIGC) for an alleged corruption case. In1948–49 season, FIGC assigned the league title to the Torinese side after theSuperga air disaster due it was at the time in first place in the championship although no having won it yet in mathematics terms.
  141. ^The first competition was organised by theMitropa Cup committee and held in the 1960–61 season—but not recognised by the governing body of European football until two years later, cf."50 years ago: UEFA Cup Winners' Cup makes its debut"(PDF).Uefadirect.100. Union des Associations Européennes de Football: 15. August 2010.Archived(PDF) from the original on 12 August 2011.
  142. ^Gian Paolo Ormezzano (17 April 2000)."Voglia di scudetto".La Stampa (in Italian). p. 40. Retrieved3 September 2011.
  143. ^"Top 10 Players with most matches played in Serie A history". Hap Sport.

External links

[edit]
Association football records
AFC
CAF
CONCACAF
CONMEBOL
OFC
UEFA
National teams
Leagues
League competitions
Cup competitions
Youth competitions
Women's competitions
Awards
Lists
Miscellaneous
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Football_records_and_statistics_in_Italy&oldid=1323715233"
Categories:
Hidden categories:

[8]ページ先頭

©2009-2025 Movatter.jp