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Derby della Capitale

Club football rivalry in Rome, Italy


Club football rivalry in Rome, Italy

FieldValue
nameDerby della Capitale
other namesRome derby
image[[File:2008 09 Lazio Roma 108.JPG240px]]
caption
city or regionRome
first contested8 December 1929
Serie A
team1Lazio
team2Roma
mostrecent21 September 2025
Serie A
Lazio 0–1 Roma
nextmeeting17 May 2026
Serie A
Roma v Lazio
most winsOfficial matches: Roma (70)
Unofficial matches: Lazio (7)
Total matches: Roma (76)
totalOfficial matches: 186
Unofficial matches: 16
Total matches: 202
largestvictoryRoma 5–0 Lazio
Serie A
(1 November 1933)
top scorerDino da Costa
Francesco Totti
(11 each)
most player appearancesFrancesco Totti (44)
stadiumsStadio Olimpico

Serie A

Serie A Lazio 0–1 Roma Serie A Roma v Lazio Unofficial matches: Lazio (7) Total matches: Roma (76) Unofficial matches: 16 Total matches: 202 Serie A (1 November 1933) Francesco Totti (11 each)

The Derby della Capitale (), also known as Derby Capitolino and Derby del Cupolone, as well as The Rome Derby in English and Derby di Roma in Italian, is the football local derby in Rome, Italy, between Lazio and Roma. It is considered to be one of the fiercest intra-city derbies in the country, along with the other major local derbies, Derby della Madonnina (Milan derby) and Derby della Mole (Turin derby), and one of the greatest and most hotly contested derbies in Europe.

History

Football rivalry

Lazio was founded in 1900 in Piazza della Libertà, Borough of Prati and initially played at the Rondinella field in the upper-class quartiere of Parioli. Roma began playing at the Motovelodromo Appio and subsequently, when the new stadium was built after only two years, moved to the working-class rione of Testaccio. Thus, the Lazio ultras traditionally occupy the northern end (Curva Nord) and Roma's the southern end (Curva Sud) of the Stadio Olimpico. Making ironic remarks, known as sfottò, focused on the origins of both sets of fans, is a traditional way of teasing between the supporters of Lazio and Roma.

Roma was founded in 1927 as a result of a merger between three teams: Roman, Alba-Audace and Fortitudo, initiated by Italo Foschi. It was the intention of Fascist dictator Benito Mussolini to create a unified Roman club to challenge the dominance of northern clubs such as Juventus. Thanks to the influence of Giorgio Vaccaro, a member of the National Fascist Party, Lazio was the only major team from Rome to be excluded from the merger and remain independent, thus a kind of rivalry emerged from the very early years of the coexistence in the same city.

In 1979, Lazio fan Vincenzo Paparelli was hit in the eye and killed by a flare fired by a Roma fan from the opposite end of the stadium, becoming the first fatality in Italian football due to violence.

On 17 December 2000, Lazio's Paolo Negro scored an own goal in a 1–0 Roma victory. Roma eventually went on to lift the scudetto that season, as Lazio finished the season in third place. Negro continues to be taunted by Roma fans for the goal.

The derby on 21 March 2004 was abandoned four minutes into the second half with the score tied at 0–0, when a riot broke out in the stand; the president of the Lega Nazionale Professionisti, Adriano Galliani, ordered referee Roberto Rosetti to suspend the match. The riots began with the spreading of a rumour that a boy had been killed by a police car just outside the stadium. In fact, from last row of the stadium, some fans noticed in the square below a body covered with a white sheet. Later, medics who put the sheet explained that the boy had difficulty breathing, dangerously exacerbated by the air full of tear gas, and then the sheet was used as a filter. The denial by the police, spread through the speakers of the stadium, though it was not able to remove all doubt. Roma captain Francesco Totti then asked for the match to be called off, at which point President Galliani was reached by the referee by mobile phone—from the pitch—and ordered the game postponed. After the match was postponed, a prolonged battle between fans and police, with streets near the stadium being set on fire, eventually resulting in 13 arrests and over 170 injured among the police alone. The match was replayed on 28 March and ended in a 1–1 draw with no crowd trouble.

On 26 May 2013, the teams met in the 2013 Coppa Italia Final, the first cup final in the history of the fixture. Lazio won the match 1–0 with a goal by Senad Lulić in the 71st minute, a low right footed shot from a low cross from the right by Antonio Candreva after the goalkeeper Bogdan Lobonț failed to cut out the crossed ball.

On 15 January 2015, Roma's Francesco Totti, playing in his 40th derby, scored twice to salvage a 2–2 draw for Roma, becoming the all-time leading goalscorer in the fixture. He celebrated by taking a selfie in front of Roma's fans in the Curva Sud, having given his phone to the goalkeeping coach before kick off.

On 4 December 2016, Roma recorded their fourth victory in a row against Lazio and extended their unbeaten run in the fixture to seven games with a 0–2 away victory. However, the game was marred by controversy, with Lazio's Danilo Cataldi sent off for grabbing Roma's Kevin Strootman, after Strootman had thrown the contents of a water bottle in Cataldi's face after scoring the opening goal, sparking a mass brawl. Strootman subsequently received a two match ban for his role in the incident. Lazio's Senad Lulić was also given a 20-day ban for offensive comments made towards Roma's Antonio Rüdiger after the game.

Cultural rivalry

The devout regionalism that is perceived throughout the country is one of the reasons that make the derby more heated, as the fans view it as a battle between two clubs fighting for the right to represent the city in the rest of the country and local bragging rights. This is partly fueled by the fact that Italian football has mostly been dominated by three clubs, all of which are based in Northern Italy – namely Juventus in Turin and Milan and Internazionale in Milan.

The Rome derby has been the scene of several actions related to the political views of the fan bases. Lazio's ultras used to use swastikas and fascist symbols on their banners, and they have displayed racist behaviour on several occasions during the derbies. In particular, at a match in the 1998–99 season, Laziali unfurled a 50-metre banner around the Curva Nord that read "Auschwitz is your town, the ovens are your houses". Black players of Roma have often been receivers of racist and offensive behaviour.

In November 2015, Roma's ultras and their Lazio counterparts boycotted Roma's 2–0 victory in the Derby della Capitale in a protest against the new safety measures imposed at the Stadio Olimpico. The measures, imposed by Rome's prefect, Franco Gabrielli, had involved plastic glass dividing walls being installed in both the Curva Sud and Curva Nord, splitting the sections behind each goal in two. Both sets of ultras continued their protests for the rest of the season, including during Roma's 4–1 victory in the return fixture. Lazio's ultras returned to the Curva Nord for Roma's 2–0 victory in December 2016, but the Roma ultras continue to boycott games.

In 2017, Lazio fans left anti-Semitic stickers of Anne Frank in a Roma jersey, as well as graffiti, at the Stadio Olimpico. The resulting controversy prompted anti-racist actions by Serie A clubs including Lazio, though some of these actions were opposed by their fans. On 30 April 2017, Lazio beat Roma 3–1 in a Serie A match, and four days later, Lazio ultras hung dummies with Roma jerseys from a pedestrian walkway near the Colosseum in the Italian capital. The mannequins were accompanied with a banner read "a warning without offence...sleep with the lights on!"

Official match results

  • SF = Semi-finals
  • QF = Quarter-finals
  • R16 = Round of 16
  • GS = Group stage
  • R1 = Round 1
SeasonCompetitionDateHome teamResultAway team
1929–30Serie A8 December 1929LazioRoma
4 May 1930RomaLazio
1930–31Serie A7 December 1930RomaLazio
24 May 1931LazioRoma
1931–32Serie A6 December 1931RomaLazio
1 May 1932LazioRoma
1932–33Serie A23 October 1932LazioRoma
26 March 1933RomaLazio
1933–34Serie A1 November 1933RomaLazio
11 March 1934LazioRoma
1934–35Serie A18 November 1934RomaLazio
1 March 1935LazioRoma
1935–36Serie A13 October 1935LazioRoma
Coppa Italia R1619 January 1936LazioRoma
Serie A16 February 1936RomaLazio
1936–37Serie A18 October 1936RomaLazio
21 February 1937LazioRoma
1937–38Serie A3 October 1937LazioRoma
6 February 1938RomaLazio
1938–39Serie A15 January 1939RomaLazio
21 May 1939LazioRoma
1939–40Serie A7 January 1940RomaLazio
26 May 1940LazioRoma
1940–41Serie A24 November 1940RomaLazio
16 March 1941LazioRoma
1941–42Serie A11 January 1942RomaLazio
24 May 1942LazioRoma
1942–43Serie A22 November 1942LazioRoma
7 March 1943RomaLazio
Coppa Italia QF15 May 1943RomaLazio
1945–46Serie A-B23 December 1945LazioRoma
24 March 1946RomaLazio
1946–47Serie A6 October 1946RomaLazio
2 March 1947LazioRoma
1947–48Serie A16 November 1947LazioRoma
21 April 1948RomaLazio
1948–49Serie A17 October 1948RomaLazio
6 February 1949LazioRoma
1949–50Serie A16 November 1949LazioRoma
19 February 1950RomaLazio
1950–51Serie A15 October 1950RomaLazio
25 February 1951LazioRoma
1952–53Serie A16 November 1952LazioRoma
22 March 1953RomaLazio
1953–54Serie A29 November 1953RomaLazio
18 April 1954LazioRoma
1954–55Serie A17 October 1954LazioRoma
6 March 1955RomaLazio
1955–56Serie A16 October 1955RomaLazio
4 April 1956LazioRoma
1956–57Serie A14 October 1956LazioRoma
3 March 1957RomaLazio
1957–58Serie A27 October 1957RomaLazio
16 March 1958LazioRoma
Coppa Italia GS21 June 1958RomaLazio
12 July 1958LazioRoma
1958–59Serie A30 November 1958LazioRoma
12 April 1959RomaLazio
1959–60Serie A18 October 1959RomaLazio
6 March 1960LazioRoma
1960–61Serie A13 November 1960LazioRoma
19 March 1961RomaLazio
1961–62Coppa Italia R1625 April 1962RomaLazio
1963–64Serie A6 October 1963RomaLazio
23 February 1964LazioRoma
1964–65Serie A15 November 1964LazioRoma
28 March 1965RomaLazio
1965–66Serie A10 October 1965RomaLazio
27 February 1966LazioRoma
1966–67Serie A22 October 1966LazioRoma
5 March 1967RomaLazio
1968–69Coppa Italia GS8 September 1968RomaLazio
1969–70Coppa Italia GS7 September 1969LazioRoma
Serie A26 October 1969RomaLazio
1 March 1970LazioRoma
1970–71Coppa Italia GS6 September 1970RomaLazio
Serie A15 November 1970LazioRoma
14 March 1971RomaLazio
1971–72Coppa Italia R129 August 1971LazioRoma
1972–73Serie A12 November 1972RomaLazio
11 March 1973LazioRoma
1973–74Coppa Italia R19 September 1973RomaLazio
Serie A9 December 1973LazioRoma
31 March 1974RomaLazio
1974–75Coppa Italia R122 September 1974LazioRoma
Serie A1 December 1974RomaLazio
23 March 1975LazioRoma
1975–76Serie A16 November 1975LazioRoma
14 March 1976RomaLazio
1976–77Serie A28 November 1976LazioRoma
27 March 1977RomaLazio
1977–78Serie A20 November 1977RomaLazio
19 March 1978LazioRoma
1978–79Serie A12 November 1978LazioRoma
18 March 1979RomaLazio
SeasonCompetitionDateHome teamResultAway team
1979–80Serie A28 October 1979RomaLazio
2 March 1980LazioRoma
1983–84Serie A23 October 1983LazioRoma
26 February 1984RomaLazio
1984–85Coppa Italia GS9 September 1984RomaLazio
Serie A11 November 1984RomaLazio
24 March 1985LazioRoma
1988–89Serie A15 January 1989LazioRoma
28 May 1989RomaLazio
1989–90Serie A19 November 1989RomaLazio
18 March 1990LazioRoma
1990–91Serie A2 December 1990LazioRoma
6 April 1991RomaLazio
1991–92Serie A6 October 1991RomaLazio
1 March 1992LazioRoma
1992–93Serie A29 November 1992LazioRoma
18 April 1993RomaLazio
1993–94Serie A24 October 1993RomaLazio
6 March 1994LazioRoma
1994–95Serie A27 November 1994LazioRoma
23 April 1995RomaLazio
1995–96Serie A1 October 1995RomaLazio
18 February 1996LazioRoma
1996–97Serie A8 December 1996LazioRoma
4 May 1997RomaLazio
1997–98Serie A2 November 1997RomaLazio
Coppa Italia QF6 January 1998LazioRoma
21 January 1998RomaLazio
Serie A8 March 1998LazioRoma
1998–99Serie A29 November 1998LazioRoma
11 April 1999RomaLazio
1999–2000Serie A21 November 1999RomaLazio
25 March 2000LazioRoma
2000–01Serie A17 December 2000LazioRoma
29 April 2001RomaLazio
2001–02Serie A27 October 2001RomaLazio
10 March 2002LazioRoma
2002–03Serie A27 October 2002LazioRoma
Coppa Italia SF5 February 2003LazioRoma
Serie A8 March 2003RomaLazio
Coppa Italia SF16 April 2003RomaLazio
2003–04Serie A9 November 2003RomaLazio
21 April 2004LazioRoma
2004–05Serie A6 January 2005LazioRoma
15 May 2005RomaLazio
2005–06Serie A23 October 2005RomaLazio
26 February 2006LazioRoma
2006–07Serie A10 December 2006LazioRoma
29 April 2007RomaLazio
2007–08Serie A31 October 2007RomaLazio
19 March 2008LazioRoma
2008–09Serie A16 November 2008RomaLazio
11 April 2009LazioRoma
2009–10Serie A6 December 2009RomaLazio
18 April 2010LazioRoma
2010–11Serie A7 November 2010LazioRoma
Coppa Italia R1619 January 2011RomaLazio
Serie A13 March 2011RomaLazio
2011–12Serie A16 October 2011LazioRoma
4 March 2012RomaLazio
2012–13Serie A11 November 2012LazioRoma
8 April 2013RomaLazio
Coppa Italia Final26 May 2013RomaLazio
2013–14Serie A22 September 2013RomaLazio
9 February 2014LazioRoma
2014–15Serie A11 January 2015RomaLazio
25 May 2015LazioRoma
2015–16Serie A8 November 2015RomaLazio
3 April 2016LazioRoma
2016–17Serie A4 December 2016LazioRoma
Coppa Italia SF1 March 2017LazioRoma
4 April 2017RomaLazio
Serie A30 April 2017RomaLazio
2017–18Serie A18 November 2017RomaLazio
15 April 2018LazioRoma
2018–19Serie A29 September 2018RomaLazio
2 March 2019LazioRoma
2019–20Serie A1 September 2019LazioRoma
26 January 2020RomaLazio
2020–21Serie A15 January 2021LazioRoma
15 May 2021RomaLazio
2021–22Serie A26 September 2021LazioRoma
20 March 2022RomaLazio
2022–23Serie A6 November 2022RomaLazio
19 March 2023LazioRoma
2023–24Serie A12 November 2023LazioRoma
Coppa Italia QF10 January 2024LazioRoma
Serie A6 April 2024RomaLazio
2024–25Serie A5 January 2025RomaLazio
13 April 2025LazioRoma
2025–26Serie A21 September 2025LazioRoma
17 May 2026RomaLazio

Statistics and records

CompetitionMatchesLazio winsDrawsRoma winsLazio goalsRoma goalsTotal official matches186516570181229Total matches202586876203251
Divisione Nazionale210122
Serie A163426259157203
Coppa Italia2183102224
Campionato Romano412132
Friendlies4211109
Other meetings8404911
  • The first derby was played on 8 December 1929, and ended 1–0 for Roma with a goal by Rodolfo Volk. Lazio won its first derby on 23 October 1932 with goals by Demaría (L), Volk (R) and Castelli (L).
  • The biggest win in a derby was the 5–0 victory for Roma in 1933–34. The biggest win for Lazio was the 3–0 victory in 2006–07, 2018–19 and 2020–21.
  • Roma holds the record for the most consecutive derby wins with five, while Lazio holds the record for most wins in a single season, winning four derbies in the 1997–98 season: two in the league (3–1 and 2–0) and two in the quarter-finals of the Coppa Italia (4–1 and 2–1).
  • Only on one occasion was the derby played as a cup final, on 26 May 2013. Lazio won 1–0, winning their sixth Coppa Italia title.

Goalscorers

RankPlayerClub(s)LeagueCupTotal
1Italy Dino da CostaRoma9211
Italy Francesco TottiRoma110
3Italy Marco DelvecchioRoma909
4Italy Vincenzo MontellaRoma718
5Italy Silvio PiolaLazio617
Italy Rodolfo VolkRoma70
7Italy Ciro ImmobileLazio426
8Italy Amedeo AmadeiRoma505
Italy Giorgio ChinagliaLazio41
Brazil Alejandro DemaríaLazio50
Argentina Pedro ManfrediniRoma50
Italy Tommaso RocchiLazio50
Sweden Arne SelmossonLazio
Roma50

Players

  • Francesco Totti has played the most derbies, with 44 for Roma. The player with the most derby appearances for Lazio is Giuseppe Wilson, with 23.
  • Francesco Totti and Dino da Costa have scored the most goals in the derbies, with each player scoring 11 for Roma. The top scorer for Lazio in the derby is Silvio Piola, with 7 goals.
  • Vincenzo Montella holds the record for the most goals scored in a single derby; on 11 March 2002, he scored four goals in a 5–1 Roma victory.
  • Arne Selmosson, Aleksandar Kolarov and Pedro are the only three players which have scored in the derby for both teams.
  • Francesco Totti has won the most derbies, with 15 for Roma. The second player is Daniele De Rossi who won 14 derbies as a Roma player and 1 as Roma coach.

Honours

LazioCompetitionRoma
Domestic
2Serie A3
7Coppa Italia9
5Supercoppa Italiana2
1Serie B1
15Total15
European and worldwide
1UEFA Cup Winners' Cup (defunct)
UEFA Conference League1
1UEFA Super Cup
Inter-Cities Fairs Cup (defunct)1
2Total2
17Grand total17

Note: Roma won the Inter-Cities Fairs Cup once, but it does not count towards their official European record.

Chronological order of honours

:Table correct as of 25 May 2022

Competition19421958196419691974198019811983198419861991199819992000200120042007200820092013201720192022TotalSerie ACoppa ItaliaSupercoppa ItalianaUEFA Cup Winners' CupUEFA Conference LeagueUEFA Super Cup
5
16
7
1
1
1

Head-to-head ranking in Serie A (1930–2025)

P.303132333435363738394041424346474849505152535455565758596061626364656667686970717273747576777879808182838485868788899091929394959697989900010203040506070809101112131415161718192021222324251234567891011121314151617181920
11111
222222222222222222
33333333333333
444444444444
555555555555555555555
666666666666666666666
7777777777777
888888888888888
999999
1010101010101010101010101010
1111111111111111
121212121212121212
1313131313
14141414
1515151515
1616
1717
18
19

Summary: Roma with 52 higher finishes and Lazio with 30 higher finishes as of the end of the 2024–25 season (only including seasons in which both teams played in Serie A).

Notes:

  • Lazio spent eleven seasons in Serie B, and Roma one season in Serie B.
  • Only Roma qualified for the final round of 8 teams in 1946; Lazio finished 7th in their group and didn't qualify.
  • Both teams finished with the same number of points in 1943, but Lazio had better goal difference.

Players who played for both clubs

;Lazio, then Roma

  • 1928: ITA Fulvio Bernardini (via Inter Milan; then managed both, Roma (1949–1950) and Lazio (1958–1960))
  • 1935: ITA Piero Pastore (via Perugia)
  • 1938: ITA Attilio Ferraris (return)
  • 1958: SWE Arne Selmosson
  • 1987: ITA Lionello Manfredonia (via Juventus)
  • 1995: ITA Luigi Di Biagio (via Monza, then Foggia)
  • 2001: ITA Diego Fuser (via Parma)
  • 2017: SRB Aleksandar Kolarov (via Manchester City)

;Roma, then Lazio

  • 1927: ITA Attilio Ferraris (then back to Roma in 1938)
  • 1938: ITA Luigi Allemandi (via Venezia)
  • 1972: ITA Sergio Petrelli
  • 1985: ITA Astutillo Malgioglio
  • 1993: ITA Fabrizio Di Mauro (via Fiorentina)
  • 1998: FRY Siniša Mihajlović (via Sampdoria)
  • 2000: ITA Francesco Colonnese (via Napoli then Inter Milan)
  • 2000: ITA Angelo Peruzzi (via Juventus, then Inter Milan)
  • 2003: ITA Roberto Muzzi (via Cagliari, then Udinese)
  • 2004: ITA Sebastiano Siviglia (via Parma, Atalanta and Lecce)
  • 2021: ESP Pedro
  • 2022: ITA Alessio Romagnoli (via Milan)
  • 2023: ITA Luca Pellegrini (via Juventus, Cagliari, Genoa and Eintracht Frankfurt)

References

References

  1. (22 October 2008). "Football First 11: Do or die derbies". [[CNN]].
  2. Walker, Michael. (4 October 2023). "Celtic vs Lazio: The Champions League tie that became a political powderkeg".
  3. (7 November 2015). "Police on high alert for foreign invasion at Rome Derby". [[Yahoo!]].
  4. Ficetola, Franco. (3 December 2016). "The unforgettable own goal that changed Paolo Negro, Lazio and Roma". [[The Guardian]].
  5. (8 June 2004). "Derby Lazio-Roma, blitz della polizia in ambienti ultras". [[Rai News]].
  6. (26 May 2013). "Roma 0–1 Lazio: Biancocelesti edge dour derby to claim Coppa Italia". Goal.com.
  7. (26 May 2013). "Lazio beat rivals Roma in Coppa Italia final". [[BBC Sport]].
  8. (26 May 2013). "Lazio wins Rome bragging rights". ESPN.
  9. Bandini, Nicky. (12 January 2015). "Francesco Totti's selfie-conscious celebration and the Rome derby". [[The Guardian]].
  10. (4 December 2016). "Kevin Strootman strikes as Roma see off Lazio in heated Rome derby". [[The Guardian]].
  11. Strachan, Iain. (6 December 2016). "Kevin Strootman banned for sparking Rome derby brawl". Goal.com.
  12. Wright, Joe. (22 December 2016). "Lulic banned for 20 days for 'offensive' Rudiger remarks". Goal.com.
  13. "Play stopped after Lazio supporters racially abuse Napoli's Kalidou Koulibaly".
  14. Bandini, Nicky. (9 November 2015). "Roma win a deserted derby over Lazio as Ultras on both sides make point". [[The Guardian]].
  15. Bandini, Nicky. (5 December 2016). "Not such a beautiful game: Lazio v Roma derby descends into disrepute". [[The Guardian]].
  16. "Lazio fans leave anti-Semitic stickers of Anne Frank images".
  17. Lewis, Aimee. "Lazio to wear image of Anne Frank on shirts". CNN.
  18. (5 May 2017). "Roma, minacce ai giocatori: "Un consiglio... dormite con la luce accesa"".
  19. "Honours". SS Lazio.
  20. "Honours". AS Roma.
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