Coppa Italia Serie C
{{One source|date=April 2018}}
{{Expand Italian|topic=sport|Coppa Italia Serie C|date=August 2021}}
{{Infobox football tournament
| current = 2024–25 Coppa Italia Serie C
| logo =
| caption =
| founded = 1972
| organiser = Lega Pro
| number of teams = 60
| region = Italy
| qualifier for = Serie C promotion play-offs
Coppa Italia
| current champions = Rimini (1st title)
| most successful club = Monza (4 titles)
| broadcasters = Eleven Sports
| website = {{url|http://www.lega-pro.com/altre-competizioni/coppa-italia/risultati/|Official webpage}}
}}
Coppa Italia Serie C ({{langx|it|Serie C Italian Cup}}), formerly named Coppa Italia Lega Pro, is a straight knock-out based competition involving teams from Serie C in Italian football first held in 1972.
Format
There are a total of six rounds in the competition. It begins in August with the first set, which is contested by 56 out of 60 teams. The other four clubs, which also play in Coppa Italia, join in during the second set.
Each game is played as a single leg, except for the semi-finals and the final. If teams are tied (after single leg or on aggregate, no away goal rule applies), the winner is decided by extra-time and a penalty shootout if required.
As well as being presented with the trophy, the winning team also qualifies for the following edition of Coppa Italia and for the third round of Serie C promotion play-offs. If the winners:
- are already promoted to Serie B via finishing in the top of the league;
- have already qualified for the third round or the quarterfinals via finishing in the 3rd or the 2nd position respectively;
- have qualified for the relegation play-outs;
- are relegated to Serie D;
- or just renounce;
their spot goes to the runners-up or, subordinately, to the 4th-placed team playing in the same group as the winners.{{cite web |url=https://www.lega-pro.com/com/2122-36L.pdf|title=REGOLAMENTO "COPPA ITALIA SERIE C" 2021-2022|language=it|publisher=Lega Pro|date=21 July 2021|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210722064323/https://www.lega-pro.com/com/2122-36L.pdf|archive-date=22 July 2021|url-status=dead}}
class="wikitable" style="text-align: center; font-size: 100%; width: 800px;"
!Phase ! width=15% | Round ! width=10% | Clubs remaining ! width=10% | Clubs involved ! width=10% | From previous round ! width=10% | Entries in this round ! width=34% | Teams entering at this round | |||||
rowspan="2" |First phase
| First round | 60 | 56 | none | 56 | align="left" | 56 teams from Serie C |
Second round | 32 | 32 | 28 | 4 | align="left" | 4 teams from Serie C which play in Coppa Italia |
rowspan="4" |Second phase
| Round of 16 | 16 | 16 | 16 | none | align="left" | |
Quarter-finals | 8 | 8 | 8 | none | align="left" | |
Semi-finals | 4 | 4 | 4 | none | align="left" | |
Final | 2 | 2 | 2 | none | align="left" | |
Past winners
=Coppa Italia Serie C=
class="wikitable" |
Year
! Winner ! Runner Up |
---|
1972–73
| Avellino |
1973–74
| Monza | Lecce |
1974–75
| Monza | Sorrento |
1975–76
| Lecce | Monza |
1976–77
| Lecco |
1977–78
| Udinese | Reggina |
1978–79
| Siracusa | Biellese |
1979–80
| Padova |
1980–81
| Arezzo | Ternana |
1981–82
| Vicenza |
1982–83
| Fano |
1983–84
| Fanfulla | Ancona |
1984–85
| Casarano |
1985–86
| Jesi |
1986–87
| Livorno |
1987–88
| Monza | Palermo |
1988–89
| Cagliari | Spal |
1989–90
| Lucchese | Palermo |
1990–91
| Monza | Palermo |
1991–92
| Siena |
1992–93
| Palermo | Como |
1993–94
| Perugia |
1994–95
| Varese | Forlì |
1995–96
| Empoli | Monza |
1996–97
| Como | Nocerina |
1997–98
| Cesena |
1998–99
| Spal | Gualdo |
1999–2000
| Pisa | Avellino |
2000–01
| Prato |
2001–02
| Livorno |
2002–03
| Brindisi |
2003–04
| Cesena |
2004–05
| Spezia |
2005–06 |
2006–07
| Foggia | Cuneo |
2007–08 |
=Coppa Italia Lega Pro=
=Coppa Italia Serie C=
See also
References
{{Reflist}}
External links
- [https://www.rsssf.org/tablesi/italcup2hist.html Coppa Italia Serie C] at RSSSF
{{Coppa Italia Serie C}}
{{Football in Italy}}