Supercoppa Italiana

Supercoppa Italiana
Founded 1988
Region Italy
Number of teams 2
Current champions Lazio (4th title)
Most successful club(s) Milan, Juventus
(7 titles each)
2018 Supercoppa Italiana

The Supercoppa Italiana (Italian for Italian Super Cup) is an annual football competition usually held the week before the season begins in Italy. It is contested by the winners of the Serie A and the Coppa Italia in the previous season, as a curtain raiser to the new season.

History

Inaugurated in 1988, 18 of the first 21 Supercoppa Italiana contested were played at the home of the Serie A champions, the exceptions being in 1993 and 2003, when it was held in the United States cities of Washington, D.C., and East Rutherford, New Jersey, and in 2002 when the game was played in the Libyan capital Tripoli. Since 2009, the venues chosen have mostly been outside of Italy.

Of the 30 finals played to date, the venues have been as follows:

If the same team wins both the Serie A and Coppa Italia titles in the previous season, the Supercoppa is contested by the Serie A winner and the Coppa Italia runner-up. This has occurred seven times: 1995, 2015, 2016 and 2017 (Juventus), 2000 (Lazio), 2006 and 2010 (Internazionale).

Juventus and Milan jointly hold the record for winning the cup the most times, both winning it seven times since the competition began in 1988.

On 23 December 2016, Milan became the first Coppa Italia runner-up to win Supercoppa Italiana after defeating Juventus on penalties.[1]

Winners

Year Serie A winner Result Coppa Italia representative Scorers[lower-alpha 1] Stadium Attendance
1988 Milan 3–1 Sampdoria Rijkaard, Van Basten, Mannari; Vialli Italy Stadio Giuseppe Meazza, Milan 19,412
1989 Internazionale 2–0 Sampdoria Cucchi, Serena Italy Stadio Giuseppe Meazza, Milan 7,221
1990 Napoli 5–1 Juventus Careca (2), Silenzi (2), Crippa; Baggio Italy Stadio San Paolo, Naples 62,404
1991 Sampdoria 1–0 Roma Mancini Italy Stadio Luigi Ferraris, Genoa 21,120
1992 Milan 2–1 Parma Van Basten, Massaro; Melli Italy Stadio Giuseppe Meazza, Milan 32,102
1993 Milan 1–0 Torino Simone United States Robert F. Kennedy Memorial Stadium, Washington, D.C., USA 25,000
1994 Milan 1–1 (4–3 p) Sampdoria Gullit; Mihajlović Italy Stadio Giuseppe Meazza, Milan 26,767
1995 Juventus 1–0 Parma* Vialli Italy Stadio delle Alpi, Turin 5,289
1996 Milan 1–2 Fiorentina Savićević; Batistuta (2) Italy Stadio Giuseppe Meazza, Milan 29,582
1997 Juventus 3–0 Vicenza Inzaghi (2), Conte Italy Stadio delle Alpi, Turin 15,000
1998 Juventus 1–2 Lazio Del Piero; Nedvěd, Conceição Italy Stadio delle Alpi, Turin 16,500
1999 Milan 1–2 Parma Guglielminpietro; Crespo, Boghossian Italy Stadio Giuseppe Meazza, Milan 25,000
2000 Lazio 4–3 Internazionale* López (2), Mihajlović, Stanković; Keane, Farinós, Vampeta Italy Stadio Olimpico, Rome 65,000
2001 Roma 3–0 Fiorentina Candela, Montella, Totti Italy Stadio Olimpico, Rome 71,050
2002 Juventus 2–1 Parma Del Piero (2); Di Vaio Libya 11 June Stadium, Tripoli, Libya 88,000
2003 Juventus 1–1 (5–3 p) Milan Trezeguet; Pirlo United States Giants Stadium, East Rutherford, New Jersey, USA 54,128
2004 Milan 3–0 Lazio Shevchenko (3) Italy Stadio Giuseppe Meazza, Milan 33,274
2005 Juventus 0–1 (a.e.t.) Internazionale Verón Italy Stadio delle Alpi, Turin 35,246
2006 Internazionale 4–3 (a.e.t.) Roma* Vieira (2), Crespo, Figo; Mancini, Aquilani (2) Italy Stadio Giuseppe Meazza, Milan 45,528
2007 Internazionale 0–1 Roma De Rossi (pen.) Italy Stadio Giuseppe Meazza, Milan 34,898
2008 Internazionale 2–2 (6–5 p) Roma Muntari, Balotelli;De Rossi, Vučinić Italy Stadio Giuseppe Meazza, Milan 43,400
2009 Internazionale 1–2 Lazio Eto'o; Matuzalém, Rocchi China Beijing National Stadium, Beijing, China 68,961
2010 Internazionale 3–1 Roma* Pandev, Eto'o (2); Riise Italy Stadio Giuseppe Meazza, Milan 65,860
2011 Milan 2–1 Internazionale Ibrahimović, Boateng; Sneijder China Beijing National Stadium, Beijing, China 80,000
2012 Juventus 4–2 (a.e.t.) Napoli Asamoah, Vidal, Maggio (o.g.), Vučinić; Cavani, Pandev China Beijing National Stadium, Beijing, China 75,000
2013 Juventus 4–0 Lazio Pogba, Chiellini, Lichtsteiner, Tevez Italy Stadio Olimpico, Rome 57,000
2014 Juventus 2–2 (5–6 p) Napoli Tevez (2); Higuaín (2) Qatar Jassim Bin Hamad Stadium, Doha, Qatar 14,000
2015 Juventus 2–0 Lazio* Mandžukić, Dybala China Shanghai Stadium, Shanghai, China 30,000
2016 Juventus 1–1 (3–4 p) Milan* Chiellini; Bonaventura Qatar Jassim Bin Hamad Stadium, Doha, Qatar 11,356
2017 Juventus 2–3 Lazio* Dybala (2); Immobile (2), Murgia Italy Stadio Olimpico, Rome 52,000
2018 Juventus Milan* Saudi Arabia Riyadh, Saudi Arabia

*Finished as Coppa Italia runners-up

  1. Serie A winner's scorers listed first

Performance by club

The Supercoppa Italiana won by Milan in 2016.
Club Winners Runners-up Winning years Losing years
Juventus
7
6
1995, 1997, 2002, 2003, 2012, 2013, 2015 1990, 1998, 2005, 2014, 2016, 2017
Milan
7
3
1988, 1992, 1993, 1994, 2004, 2011, 2016 1996, 1999, 2003
Internazionale
5
4
1989, 2005, 2006, 2008, 2010 2000, 2007, 2009, 2011
Lazio
4
3
1998, 2000, 2009, 2017 2004, 2013, 2015
Roma
2
4
2001, 2007 1991, 2006, 2008, 2010
Napoli
2
1
1990, 2014 2012
Sampdoria
1
3
1991 1988, 1989, 1994
Parma
1
3
1999 1992, 1995, 2002
Fiorentina
1
1
1996 2001
Torino
0
1
1993
Vicenza
0
1
1997
Total
30
30

Performance by representative

Winners Runners-up
Serie A Champion
21
9
Coppa Italia Champion
7
16
Coppa Italia Runners-up
2
5

All-time top goalscorers

[2][3][3][3]

Player Team(s) Goals Apps
Italy Alessandro Del Piero Juventus 3 6
Argentina Paulo Dybala Juventus 3 3
Cameroon Samuel Eto'o Internazionale 3 3
Ukraine Andriy Shevchenko Milan 3 3
Argentina Carlos Tevez Juventus 3 2

References

  1. "Milan win Supercoppa Italiana in shootout triumph over Juventus". The Guardian. 23 December 2016. Retrieved 4 January 2017.
  2. "All-time top goalscorers". worldfootball.net.
  3. 1 2 3 "Juventus F.C. Giocatori, Statistiche: Reti nella Supercoppa Italiana" (in Italian). My Juve.it. Retrieved 21 January 2015.
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