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Football records and statistics in Italy
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This page details football records and statistics in Italy.
Team records
Most championships won
Overall
- 36, Juventus
Consecutive titles
- 9, Juventus (2011–12 season to 2019–20 season)
- 5, Juventus (1930–31 season to 1934–35 season)
- 5, Torino (1942–43 season and the 1945–46 season to 1948–49 season)
- 5, Internazionale (2005–06 season to 2009–10 season)
Most seasons in Serie A
- 94, Internazionale
Most seasons in Serie B
- 66, Brescia
Most points in a season
;2 Teams in Final Round (2 points per win) 1928–29
- 4, Bologna ;6 Teams in Final Round (2 points per win) 1926–27
- 14, Torino ;8 Teams in Final Round (2 points per win) 1927–28 - 1945–46
- 22, Torino ;16 Teams (2 points per win) 1934–35 to 1942–43 - 1967–68 to 1987–88
- 51, Juventus 1976–77 ;18 Teams (2 points per win) 1929–30 to 1933–34 - 1952–53 to 1966–67 - 1988–89 to 1993–94
- 58, Internazionale 1988–89 ;18 Teams (3 points per win) 1994–95 to 2003–04
- 82, AC Milan 2003–04 ;20 Teams (2 points per win) 1946–47 - 1948–49 to 1951–52
- 63, Torino 1946–47 ;20 Teams (3 points per win) 2004–05 to present
- 102, Juventus 2013–14 ;21 Teams (2 points per win) 1947–48
- 65, Torino
Most consecutive wins
- 17, Internazionale, 2006–07
- 15, Juventus, 2015–16
- 13, Napoli, 2016–17 to 2017–18
- 13, Juventus, 2013–14 to 2014–15
- 12, Juventus, 2013–14 and 2017–18
- 11, Roma, 2005–06 and 2012–13 to 2013–14
- 11, Napoli, 2022–23
- 11, Internazionale, 2020–21
- 11, Lazio, 2019–20
- 11, Atalanta, 2024–25
- 10, Juventus, 1931–32 and 2015–16
- 10, Internazionale, 2023–24
- 10, Napoli, 2017–18
- 10, Bologna, 1963–64
- 10, AC Milan, 1950–51
Most consecutive home wins
Most consecutive away wins
Longest win streak from the start of a Serie A season
- 10, Roma, 2013–14
Longest win streak without conceding from the start of a Serie A season
- 5, Juventus, 2014–15
Longest win streak from the start of the second half of a Serie A season
- 11, Internazionale, 2020–21
Most wins in a single season
- 33, Juventus, 2013–14 (38 matches)
- 30, Internazionale, 2006–07 (38 matches)
- 30, Juventus, 2017–18 (38 matches)
- 29, Juventus, 2015–16 and 2016–17 (38 matches)
- 29, Internazionale, 2023–24 (38 matches)
- 29, Torino, 1947–48 (40 matches)
- 28, Torino, 1946–47 (38 matches)
- 28, Juventus, 1949–50 and 2018–19 (38 matches)
- 28, AC Milan, 2005–06 (38 matches)
- 28, Roma, 2016–17 (38 matches)
- 28, Napoli, 2017–18 and 2022–23 (38 matches)
- 28, Internazionale, 2020–21 (38 matches)
Most defeats in a single season
- 29, Benevento, 2017–18 (38 matches)
Most home wins in a season
- 19, Juventus, 2013–14 (19 matches)
Most away wins in a season
- 16, AC Milan, 2020–21 (19 matches)
Most matches won
- 1,711, Juventus
- 1,597, Internazionale
- 1,506, AC Milan
- 1,324, Roma
- 1,169, Fiorentina
Most goals scored
- 5,415, Juventus
- 5,385, Internazionale
- 5,083, AC Milan
- 4,597, Roma
- 4,115, Fiorentina
Most goals in a season
;21 Teams
- 125, Torino, 1947–48 ;20 Teams
- 118, AC Milan, 1949–50 ;18 Teams
- 95, Fiorentina, 1958–59 ;16 Teams
- 75, Juventus, 1942–43
Longest unbeaten streak
Longest unbeaten streaks in a single Serie A season
;16 Teams
Individual records
Most championships won
Players in bold are still active in Serie A.
10 championships
- Gianluigi Buffon (all with Juventus)
9 championships
- Giorgio Chiellini (all with Juventus)
- Leonardo Bonucci (8 with Juventus + 1 with Inter Milan)
8 championships
- Virginio Rosetta (2 with Pro Vercelli + 6 with Juventus)
- Giovanni Ferrari (5 with Juventus + 2 with Inter Milan + 1 with Bologna)
- Giuseppe Furino (all with Juventus)
- Andrea Barzagli (all with Juventus)
7 championships
- Roberto Bettega (all with Juventus)
- Alessandro Costacurta (all with AC Milan)
- Ciro Ferrara (2 with Napoli + 5 with Juventus)
- Stephan Lichtsteiner (all with Juventus)
- Paolo Maldini (all with AC Milan)
- Claudio Marchisio (all with Juventus)
- Gaetano Scirea (all with Juventus)
6 championships
- Guido Ara (all with Pro Vercelli)
- Antonello Cuccureddu (all with Juventus)
- Edoardo Pasteur (all with Genoa)
- James Richardson Spensley (all with Genoa)
- Claudio Gentile (all with Juventus)
- Franco Baresi (all with AC Milan)
- Antonio Cabrini (all with Juventus)
- Franco Causio (all with Juventus)
- Dino Zoff (all with Juventus)
- Roberto Donadoni (all with AC Milan)
- Dejan Stanković (5 with Inter Milan + 1 with Lazio)
- Walter Samuel (5 with Inter Milan + 1 with Roma)
- Alessandro Del Piero (all with Juventus)
- Guglielmo Gabetto (1 with Juventus + 5 with Torino)
- Andrea Pirlo (2 with AC Milan + 4 with Juventus)
- Kwadwo Asamoah (all with Juventus)
- Martín Cáceres (all with Juventus)
- Juan Cuadrado (5 with Juventus + 1 with Inter Milan)
5 championships
- Henri Dapples (all with Genoa)
- Enrico Pasteur (all with Genoa)
- Filippo Galli (all with AC Milan)
- Renato Cesarini (all with Juventus)
- Raimundo Orsi (all with Juventus)
- Umberto Caligaris (all with Juventus)
- Mario Varglien (all with Juventus)
- Giovanni Varglien (all with Juventus)
- Gianpiero Combi (all with Juventus)
- Giuseppe Grezar (all with Torino)
- Valentino Mazzola (all with Torino)
- Franco Ossola (all with Torino)
- Ezio Loik (all with Torino)
- Pietro Ferraris (2 with Inter Milan + 3 with Torino)
- Lorenzo Buffon (4 with AC Milan + 1 with Inter Milan)
- Sandro Salvadore (2 with AC Milan + 3 with Juventus)
- Giampiero Boniperti (all with Juventus)
- Tarcisio Burgnich (1 with Juventus + 4 with Inter Milan)
- Francesco Morini (all with Juventus)
- Luciano Spinosi (all with Juventus)
- Marco Tardelli (all with Juventus)
- Pietro Fanna (3 with Juventus + 1 with Hellas Verona + 1 with Inter Milan)
- Sebastiano Rossi (all with AC Milan)
- Demetrio Albertini (all with AC Milan)
- Mauro Tassotti (all with AC Milan)
- Antonio Conte (all with Juventus)
- Alessio Tacchinardi (all with Juventus)
- Júlio César (all with Inter Milan)
- Javier Zanetti (all with Inter Milan)
- Iván Córdoba (all with Inter Milan)
- Marco Materazzi (all with Inter Milan)
- Esteban Cambiasso (all with Inter Milan)
- Paolo Orlandoni (all with Inter Milan)
- Francesco Toldo (all with Inter Milan)
- Simone Padoin (all with Juventus)
- Sami Khedira (all with Juventus)
- Paulo Dybala (all with Juventus)
- Alex Sandro (all with Juventus)
- Daniele Rugani (all with Juventus)
- Arturo Vidal (4 with Juventus + 1 with Inter Milan)
- Zlatan Ibrahimović (3 with Inter Milan + 2 with AC Milan)
Most consecutive championships won
- Giorgio Chiellini: 9 (2012–2020, all with Juventus)
Oldest player to win a championship
- Gianluigi Buffon: 42 years (2019–20)
Appearances
Top 30 most appearances, all-time (only Serie A regular-season games)
Updated as of 19 September 2024
Players in bold are still active in Serie A. Players in italics are still active outside of Serie A.
| Rank | Nat. | Player | Years | Apps | Goals |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | ITA | 1995–2021 | 657 | – | |
| 2 | ITA | 1984–2009 | 647 | 29 | |
| 3 | ITA | 1992–2017 | 619 | 250 | |
| 4 | ARG | 1995–2014 | 615 | 12 | |
| 5 | ITA | 1987–2007 | 592 | – | |
| 6 | ITA | 1961–1983 | 570 | – | |
| 7 | SVN | 2005–2023 | 566 | – | |
| 8 | ITA | 1980–2000 | 562 | 38 | |
| 9 | ITA | 1999–2023 | 556 | 182 | |
| 10 | ITA | 1981–2000 | 541 | 156 | |
| 11 | ITA | 1929–1954 | 537 | 274 | |
| 12 | ITA | 1958–1980 | 532 | – | |
| 13 | ITA | 1958–1979 | 527 | 128 | |
| 14 | ITA | 1980–1999 | 519 | 23 | |
| 15 | ITA | 1999–2017 | 514 | 188 | |
| 16 | ITA | ** | 2008–2024 | 510 | – |
| 17 | ITA | 2008–2024 | 502 | 85 | |
| 18 | ITA | 1984–2005 | 500 | 27 | |
| 19 | ITA | 1977–1995 | 496 | – | |
| 20 | ITA | 1958–1976 | 494 | 6 | |
| 21 | ITA | 1994–2015 | 493 | 58 | |
| MKD | 2001–2022 | 493 | 101 | ||
| 23 | ITA | 1989–2010 | 486 | 7 | |
| 24 | ITA | 1987–2007 | 479 | – | |
| 25 | ITA | 1960–1979 | 478 | 50 | |
| ITA | 1993–2012 | 478 | 188 | ||
| 27 | ITA | 1960–1978 | 476 | 59 | |
| 28 | ITA | 1978–1997 | 471 | 12 | |
| 29 | ITA | 1929–1950 | 469 | 124 | |
| 30 | ITA | 1948–1965 | 466 | 45 |
Top four most appearances, still active in Serie A (only Serie A regular-season games)
Updated as of 16 December 2025
| Rank | All-time | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| rank | Nat. | Player | Debut | ||||
| year | Current | ||||||
| club | Apps | Goals | |||||
| 1 | 36 | ITA | Lorenzo De Silvestri | 2006 | Bologna | 457 | 28 |
| 2 | 55 | ITA | Francesco Acerbi | 2011 | Inter Milan | 415 | 24 |
| 3 | 61 | COL | Juan Cuadrado | 2009 | Pisa | 405 | 44 |
| 4 | 71 | POL | Piotr Zieliński | 2012 | Inter Milan | 401 | 45 |
Oldest players
List of the 20 oldest players at their last Serie A match.
Updated as of 15 December 2024.
Players in bold are still active in Serie A. Players in italics are still active outside of Serie A.
- ITA Marco Ballotta (last game: 11 May 2008, Lazio)
- ITA Gianluigi Buffon (last game: 12 May 2021, Juventus)
- ESP Pepe Reina (last game: 24 May 2025, Como)
- ITA Francesco Antonioli (last game: 6 May 2012, Cesena)
- ITA Gianluca Pegolo (last game: 22 January 2023, Sassuolo)
- ITA Alberto Fontana (last game: 15 November 2008, Palermo)
- ITA Roberto Colombo (last game: 15 April 2017, Cagliari)
- SWE Zlatan Ibrahimović (last game: 18 March 2023, AC Milan)
- ITA Dino Zoff (last game: 15 May 1983, Juventus)
- ITA Alessandro Costacurta (last game: 19 May 2007, AC Milan)
- ITA Pietro Vierchowod (last game: 16 April 2000, Piacenza)
- ITA Paolo Maldini (last game: 31 May 2009, AC Milan)
- ITA Antonio Mirante (last game: 25 May 2024, AC Milan)
- ARG Javier Zanetti (last game: 18 May 2014, Inter Milan)
- ITA Francesco Totti (last game: 28 May 2017, Roma)
- ITA Daniele Balli (last game: 4 May 2008, Empoli)
- ARG Albano Bizzarri (last game: 20 May 2018, Udinese)
- ITA Silvio Piola (last game: 7 March 1954, Novara)
- ITA Alex Cordaz (last game: 3 June 2023, Inter Milan)
- CRO Luka Modrić (last game: 18 January 2026, AC Milan)
Youngest players
List of the 20 youngest players at their first Serie A match.
- ITA Francesco Camarda (AC Milan) (25 November 2023)
- ITA Wisdom Amey (Bologna) (12 May 2021)
- ITA Amedeo Amadei (Roma) (2 May 1937)
- ITA Pietro Pellegri (Genoa) (22 December 2016)
- ITA Gianni Rivera (Alessandria) (2 June 1959)
- ITA Aristide Rossi (Cremonese) (29 June 1930)
- ITA Giuseppe Campione (Bologna) (25 June 1989)
- ITA Eddie Salcedo (Genoa) (20 August 2017{{cite news|url=https://www.footballscouting.it/hellas-verona/hellas-verona-primo-gol-in-serie-a-per-eddie-salcedo/|title=Hellas Verona, primo gol in Serie A per Eddie Salcedo
- BGR Valeri Bojinov (Lecce) (22 January 2002)
- ITA Andrea Pirlo (Brescia) (21 May 1995)
- ITA Stephan El Shaarawy (Genoa) (21 December 2008)
- ITA Simone Pafundi (Udinese) (22 May 2022)
- ITA Lorenzo Tassi (Brescia) (22 May 2011)
- CIV Chaka Traorè (Parma) (10 April 2021)
- ITA Stefano Okaka (Roma) (18 December 2005)
- ITA Paolo Pupita (Cesena) (28 January 1990)
- GRE Lampros Choutos (Roma) (21 April 1996)
- ITA Silvio Piola (Cesena) (16 February 1930)
- ITA Tommaso Maestrelli (Bari) (26 February 1939)
- CIV Siriki Sanogo (Benevento) (12 May 2018)
Oldest player to debut in Serie A
- ITA Maurizio Pugliesi (15 May 2016, Empoli)
Most consecutive appearances in Serie A
Dino Zoff, 332
Most consecutive appearances in Serie A for a single club
Dino Zoff, 330 (with Juventus)
Most seasons in Serie A
Paolo Maldini and Francesco Totti, 25
Most consecutive seasons in Serie A
Paolo Maldini and Francesco Totti, 25
Most career club appearances by an Italian player
Gianluigi Buffon, 975
Most appearances for a single Italian club
Paolo Maldini, 902, with AC Milan
Goalscoring
Top 30 goalscorers, all-time (only Serie A regular-season games)
Updated as of 8 December 2025
Players in bold are still active in Serie A. Players in italics are still active outside of Serie A.
| Rank | Nat. | Player | Years | Goals | Apps | Ratio | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | ITA | 1929–1954 | 274 | 537 | ||||
| 2 | ITA | 1992–2017 | 250 | 619 | ||||
| 3 | SWE | 1948–1958 | 225 | 291 | ||||
| 4 | ITA | 1929–1947 | 216 | 367 | ||||
| BRAITA | 1958–1976 | 216 | 459 | |||||
| 6 | ITA | 2002–2016 | 209 | 445 | ||||
| 7 | ITA | 1985–2004 | 205 | 452 | ||||
| 8 | ITA | **** | 2009– | 201 | 354 | |||
| 9 | SWE | 1956–1971 | 190 | 400 | ||||
| 10 | ITA | 1991–2004 | 188 | 344 | ||||
| ITA | 1993–2012 | 188 | 478 | |||||
| ITA | 1999–2017 | 188 | 514 | |||||
| 13 | ARG | 1991–2003 | 184 | 318 | ||||
| 14 | ITA | 1999–2023 | 182 | 556 | ||||
| 15 | ITA | 1946–1961 | 178 | 443 | ||||
| 16 | ITA | 1936–1956 | 174 | 423 | ||||
| 17 | ITA | 1965–1982 | 168 | 405 | ||||
| 18 | ITA | 1934–1949 | 167 | 322 | ||||
| 19 | ITA | 1965–1979 | 163 | 366 | ||||
| 20 | ITA | 2000–2016 | 157 | 344 | ||||
| 21 | SWE | 2004–2023 | 156 | 283 | ||||
| ITA | 1964–1976 | 156 | 289 | |||||
| ITA | 1995–2012 | 156 | 370 | |||||
| ITA | 1981–2000 | 156 | 541 | |||||
| 25 | BRA | 1955–1968 | 155 | 348 | ||||
| ITA | 1929–1948 | 155 | 401 | |||||
| 27 | HUN | 1948–1956 | 153 | 236 | ||||
| ARG | 1996–2012 | 153 | 340 | |||||
| 29 | ITA | 1946–1958 | 149 | 329 | ||||
| 30 | ARGITA | {{sortname | Omar | Sívori | Sivori, Omar}} | 1957–1969 | 147 | 278 |
Top five goal scorers, still active in Serie A (only Serie A regular-season games)
Updated as of 16 December 2025
| Rank | All-time | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| rank | Nat. | Player | Debut | ||||||
| year | Current | ||||||||
| club | Goals | Apps | Ratio | ||||||
| 1 | 8 | ITA | **** | 2009 | Bologna | 201 | 354 | ||
| 2 | 42 | ARG | **** | 2012 | Roma | 130 | 358 | ||
| 3 | 48 | ITA | **** | 2013 | Sassuolo | 126 | 325 | ||
| 4 | 49 | COL | **** | 2013 | Torino | 125 | 336 | ||
| 5 | 52 | ARG | **** | 2018 | Inter Milan | 123 | 252 |
Most goals from a penalty kick
Top five penalty kick scorers, all-time (only Serie A regular-season games)
Updated 4 February 2024
Players in bold are still active in Serie A. Players in italics are still active outside of Serie A.
| Rank | Nat. | Player | Goals |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | ITA | Francesco Totti | 71 |
| 2 | ITA | Roberto Baggio | 68 |
| 3 | ITA | Ciro Immobile | 52 |
| 4 | ITA | Alessandro Del Piero | 50 |
| 5 | ITA | Domenico Berardi | 49 |
Most penalty kicks scored in a single Serie A season
Ciro Immobile, 14 (2019–20)
Most goals from a free kick
Top ten free kick scorers, all-time (only Serie A regular-season games)
Updated 17 December 2017
Players in bold are still active in Serie A. Players in italics are still active outside of Serie A.
| Rank | Nat. | Player | Goals |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | SRB | Siniša Mihajlović | 28 |
| 2 | ITA | Andrea Pirlo | 26 |
| 3 | ITA | Alessandro Del Piero | 22 |
| 4 | ITA | Francesco Totti | 21 |
| ITA | Roberto Baggio | ||
| 6 | ITA | Gianfranco Zola | 20 |
| 7 | BIH | Miralem Pjanić | 15 |
| 8 | ARG | Diego Maradona | 14 |
| 9 | ITA | Enrico Chiesa | 13 |
| FRA | Michel Platini | ||
| URU | Álvaro Recoba |
Most goals from a free kick in a single Serie A match
Giuseppe Signori and Siniša Mihajlović, 3 (in Lazio 3–1 Atalanta, 10 April 1994; and Lazio 5–2 Sampdoria, 13 December 1998, respectively)
Most goals from a free kick in a single Serie A season
Cristiano Lucarelli (2004–05), Alessandro Del Piero (2008–09), Francesco Lodi (2012–13), Andrea Pirlo (2012–13) (all 5)
Most different teams scored against in Serie A
Alberto Gilardino, 39
Fastest goal scored in Serie A
Rafael Leão, 6.2 seconds (20 December 2020, in Sassuolo–AC Milan, 1–2)
Oldest goalscorer in Serie A
Zlatan Ibrahimović, (18 March 2023, in Udinese–AC Milan, 3–1)
Youngest goalscorer in Serie A
Amedeo Amadei, 15 years, 287 days (9 May 1937, in Lucchese–Roma, 5–1)
Youngest players to score 100 goals in Serie A
| Rank | Nat. | Player | Age |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | ITA | Giuseppe Meazza | 23 years and 32 days |
| 2 | ITA | Silvio Piola | 23 years and 68 days |
| 3 | ITA | Giampiero Boniperti | 23 years and 193 days |
| 4 | ITA | Felice Borel | 23 years and 307 days |
| 5 | ITA | José Altafini | 24 years and 239 days |
| 6 | ARG | Mauro Icardi | 25 years and 27 days |
| 7 | URU | Edinson Cavani | 25 years and 340 days |
| 8 | ARG | Omar Sívori | 26 years and 90 days |
| 9 | ITA | Guglielmo Gabetto | 26 years and 104 days |
| 10 | ITA | Alberto Gilardino | 26 years and 105 days |
Sources:
Most goals in a single Serie A match
Silvio Piola and Omar Sívori, 6
Most braces in Serie A
Silvio Piola and Gunnar Nordahl, 49
Most hat-tricks in Serie A
Players in bold are still active in Serie A. Players in italics are still active outside of Serie A.
Gunnar Nordahl, 17
| Rank | Nat. | Player | Hat-tricks |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | SWE | Gunnar Nordahl | 17 |
| 2 | ITA | Giuseppe Meazza | 15 |
| 3 | SWE | Kurt Hamrin | 12 |
| HUN | István Nyers | ||
| 5 | ITA | Filippo Inzaghi | 10 |
| ITA | Silvio Piola | ||
| 7 | ITA | Adriano Bassetto | 9 |
| ITA | Giuseppe Signori | ||
| ARG | Pedro Manfredini | ||
| ITA | Omar Sívori |
Youngest player to score a brace in Serie A
Pietro Pellegri, 16 years and 184 days (17 September 2017, in Genoa–Lazio, 2–3)
Oldest player to score a brace in Serie A
Zlatan Ibrahimović, 40 years and 48 days (20 November 2021 Fiorentina 4–3 AC Milan)
Most braces in a single Serie A season
Oliver Bierhoff (10 in 1997–98)
Youngest player to score a hat-trick in Serie A
Silvio Piola, 17 years and 132 days
Oldest player to score a hat-trick in Serie A
Rodrigo Palacio, 39 years and 86 days
Most hat-tricks in a single Serie A season
Giuseppe Meazza (1929–30), Enrique Guaita (1934–35), Valentino Mazzola (1946–47), István Nyers (1950–51), Pedro Manfredini (1960–61), and Omar Sívori (1960–61) (all four)
Youngest player to score more than three goals in a single Serie A match
Silvio Piola, 18 years and 54 days
Oldest player to score five goals in a single Serie A match
Miroslav Klose, 34 years and 330 days
Oldest player to score their first goal in Serie A
Angelo Mattea, 38 years and 7 days, for Casale, in a 5–1 away loss to Ambrosiana on 28 October 1930
Most consecutive Serie A seasons with at least one goal
Francesco Totti, 23 (1994–95 to 2016–17)
Oldest player to win the Serie A top scorer award
Luca Toni (38 years, 2014–15)
Most Serie A top scorer awards
Gunnar Nordahl, 5 (1949–50, 1950–51, 1952–53, 1953–54, 1954–55)
Most goals in a single Serie A season
36, Gonzalo Higuaín (2015–16) and Ciro Immobile (2019–20)
Most headed goals in Serie A
Christian Vieri
Most headed goals in a single Serie A season
Oliver Bierhoff (15 out of 19, 1998–99)
Most consecutive Serie A appearances with at least one goal scored
Gabriel Batistuta (13 consecutive Serie A games, 2 in 1992–93 and 11 in 1994–95 with Fiorentina)
Most consecutive Serie A appearances with at least one goal scored in a single season
11, Gabriel Batistuta (in 1994–95, with Fiorentina), Fabio Quagliarella (in 2018–19, with Sampdoria), Cristiano Ronaldo (in 2019-20, with Juventus)
Most consecutive Serie A appearances with at least one goal scored since the start of a single season
Gabriel Batistuta (in 1994–95, with Fiorentina) (11 consecutive Serie A games)
Most consecutive Serie A away appearances with at least one goal scored
Giuseppe Signori (from 17 May 1992 to 28 February 1993; 1 in 1991–92 with Foggia, and 9 in 1992–93 with Lazio) (10 consecutive Serie A away games with a goal)
Most consecutive Serie A away appearances with at least one goal scored in a single season
Giuseppe Signori (in 1992–93, with Lazio) (9 consecutive Serie A away games with a goal) and Cristiano Ronaldo (in 2018–19 and 2019–20, with Juventus)
Most seasons with at least 10 goals scored in all competitions by an Italian player
Alessandro Del Piero (17 seasons)
Highest-scoring Italian players in all competitions
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).
Players in bold are still active in Serie A. Players in italics are still active outside of Serie A.
| Rank | Nat. | Player | Goals |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | ITA | Silvio Piola | 364 |
| 2 | ITA | Alessandro Del Piero | 346 |
| 3 | ITA | Giuseppe Meazza | 338 |
| 4 | ITA | Luca Toni | 322 |
| 5 | ITA | Ciro Immobile | 321 |
| 6 | ITA | Roberto Baggio | 318 |
| 7 | ITA | Francesco Totti | 316 |
| 8 | ITA | Filippo Inzaghi | 313 |
| 9 | ITA | Antonio Di Natale | 311 |
| 10 | ITA | Alessandro Altobelli | 293 |
Most own goals scored in Serie A history
Franco Baresi and Riccardo Ferri (8 each)
Assists
Most assists in Serie A
Francesco Totti (162)
The following table shows the ten players that have provided the most assists in Serie A history.
Players in bold are still active in Serie A. Players in italics are still active, but outside Serie A.
| Rank | Nat. | Player | Assists | Appearances | Ratio |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | ITA | Francesco Totti | 162 | 619 | 0.26 |
| 2 | ITA | Roberto Baggio | 119 | 452 | 0.26 |
| 3 | ITA | Alessandro Del Piero | 111 | 478 | 0.23 |
| 4 | ITA | Gianni Rivera | 105 | 527 | 0.20 |
| 5 | ITA | Andrea Pirlo | 100 | 493 | 0.20 |
| 6 | ITA | Antonio Candreva | 100 | 494 | 0.20 |
| 7 | ITA | Antonio Cassano | 99 | 400 | 0.25 |
| 8 | ITA | Domenico Berardi | 85 | 325 | 0.20 |
| 9 | ITA | Lorenzo Insigne | 74 | 337 | 0.22 |
| 10 | BIH | Miralem Pjanić | 73 | 281 | 0.26 |
Most assists in a single Serie A season
Alejandro Gómez (2019–20) (16)
Oldest assist provider in Serie A
Zlatan Ibrahimović, 40 years, 6 months and 21 days (24 April 2022, in Lazio–AC Milan, 1–2)
Goalkeeping
Longest consecutive runs without conceding a goal in Serie A
The following table shows the goalkeepers that have longest consecutive run without conceding a goal in Serie A. Length column is in minutes.
Players in bold are still active in Serie A. Minutes in bold indicate an active run.
| Rank | Nat. | Player | Club | Season | Length | |||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | ITA | Gianluigi Buffon | Juventus | 2015–16 | url=http://www.legaseriea.it/it/sala-stampa/notizie/info/record-di-imbattibilita-per-buffon-974 | title=RECORD DI IMBATTIBILITA' PER BUFFON: 974' | trans-title=Record unbeaten streak for Buffon: 974 minutes | publisher=LegaSerieA.it | language=it | date=20 March 2016 | access-date=22 March 2016 | archive-date=2 August 2017 | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170802205651/http://www.legaseriea.it/it/sala-stampa/notizie/info/record-di-imbattibilita-per-buffon-974 | url-status=dead}} |
| 2 | ITA | Sebastiano Rossi | AC Milan | 1993–94 | 929 | |||||||||
| 3 | ITA | Dino Zoff | Juventus | 1972–73 | 903 | |||||||||
| 4 | ITA | Mario Da Pozzo | Genoa | 1963–64 | 792 | |||||||||
| 5 | ITA | Gianluigi Buffon | Juventus | 2017–18 | 791 | |||||||||
| 6 | ITA | Ivan Pelizzoli | Roma | 2003–04 | 774 | |||||||||
| 7 | ITA | Davide Pinato | Atalanta | 1997–98 | 758 | |||||||||
| 8 | ITA | Gianluigi Buffon | Juventus | 2013–14 | 745 | |||||||||
| ITA | Luca Marchegiani | Lazio | 1997–98 | 745 | ||||||||||
| 10 | ITA | Morgan De Sanctis | Roma | 2013–14 | 744 |
Most clean sheets
Updated 22 February 2021
Players in bold are still active in Serie A.
Gianluigi Buffon, 299
Most consecutive clean sheets
Players in bold are still active in Serie A.
Gianluigi Buffon, 10 (17 January 2016 to 11 March 2016)
Most clean sheets in a single season
Players in bold are still active in Serie A.
21, Fabio Cudicini (in 1968–69 with AC Milan), Sebastiano Rossi (in 1993–94 with AC Milan), Gianluigi Buffon (in 2011–12 and 2015–16 with Juventus), Morgan De Sanctis (in 2013–14 with Roma), Ivan Provedel (in 2022–23 with Lazio)
Most goals conceded in a single season
Alex Cordaz (2020–21) (91)
Most penalties saved
Samir Handanović, 26
Players in bold are still active in Serie A. Players in italics are still active, but outside Serie A.
Updated as of 3 March 2024
| Rank | Nat. | Player | Penalties saved | Appearances | Years |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | SVN | Samir Handanović | 26 | 566 | 2005–2023 |
| 2 | ITA | Gianluca Pagliuca | 24 | 592 | 1988–2007 |
| 3 | ITA | Andrea Consigli | 20 | 510 | 2009–2024 |
| 4 | ITA | Luca Marchegiani | 17 | 422 | 1988–2005 |
| 5 | ITA | Giuseppe Moro | 16 | 270 | 1947–1955 |
| ITA | Gianluigi Buffon | 657 | 1995–2021 | ||
| 7 | ITA | Francesco Antonioli | 14 | 416 | 1992–2012 |
| ITA | Stefano Sorrentino | 363 | 2001–2019 | ||
| 9 | ITA | Gianluigi Donnarumma | 13 | 215 | 2015–2021 |
| 10 | ITA | Emiliano Viviano | 12 | 251 | 2009–2018 |
| ITA | Luigi Turci | 270 | 1993–2004 | ||
| ITA | Massimo Taibi | 292 | 1993–2007 | ||
| ITA | Giuseppe Taglialatela | 173 | 1991–2002 |
Most consecutive penalties saved
Players in bold are still active in Serie A.
Samir Handanović, 6
Oldest goalkeeper to save a penalty
Players in bold are still active in Serie A.
Gianluigi Buffon, 43 years and 104 days (12 May 2021, in Sassuolo–Juventus, 1–3)
Discipline
Most red cards
Updated 29 January 2017
Players in bold are still active in Serie A.
| Rank | Nat. | Player | Red cards |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | URU | Paolo Montero | 16 |
| 2 | ITA | Luigi Di Biagio | 12 |
| ITA | Giulio Falcone | ||
| ITA | Cristian Ledesma | ||
| ITA | Giampiero Pinzi | ||
| 6 | ITA | Massimo Ambrosini | 11 |
| ITA | Giuseppe Bergomi | ||
| ITA | Giuseppe Biava | ||
| ITA | Daniele Conti | ||
| POR | Fernando Couto | ||
| ITA | Giorgio Ferrini | ||
| GHA | Sulley Muntari | ||
| ITA | Francesco Totti |
Most red cards in a single Serie A season
Luigi Apolloni (2000–01) and Gabriel Paletta (2016–17) (both five)
Most yellow cards in a single Serie A season
Daniele Conti (2012–13), 16
Coaching
Most appearances in Serie A
Carlo Mazzone, 792 (excluding 5 appearances in play-off matches)
Most Serie A titles
Giovanni Trapattoni, 7
Most consecutive Serie A titles
Massimiliano Allegri, 5 (all with Juventus)
Most Serie A titles with a single club
Giovanni Trapattoni, 6 (with Juventus)
Most Serie A titles with different clubs
Antonio Conte, 5 with 3 clubs (3 with Juventus, 1 with Inter, 1 with Napoli)
Youngest manager to win a Serie A title
Armando Castellazzi, 33 years and 199 days, (with Ambrosiana–Inter, 1937–38)
Oldest manager to win a Serie A title
Luciano Spalletti, (with Napoli, 2022–23)
Most consecutive appearances in Serie A
Nereo Rocco, 605 (between 1955 and 1974, with Padova, AC Milan, and Torino)
Most appearances in Serie A with a single club
Giovanni Trapattoni, 402 (with Juventus)
Most victories in Serie A
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
Roberto Mancini, 17 (with Inter, 2006–07 Serie A)
Most victories in Serie A with a single team
Giovanni Trapattoni, 213 (with Juventus)
Serie A top scorers (''capocannonieri'') by season
Main article: Capocannoniere
All-time highest bolded.
| Season | Tally | Player(s) (club(s)) |
|---|---|---|
| 1929–30 | 31 goals | ITA Giuseppe Meazza (Inter Milan) |
| 1930–31 | 28 goals | ITA Rodolfo Volk (Roma) |
| 1931–32 | 25 goals | URY Pedro Petrone (Fiorentina) |
| ITA Angelo Schiavio (Bologna) | ||
| 1932–33 | 29 goals | ITA Felice Borel (Juventus) |
| 1933–34 | 32 goals | ITA Felice Borel (Juventus) |
| 1934–35 | 28 goals | ARG Enrico Guaita (Roma) |
| 1935–36 | 25 goals | ITA Giuseppe Meazza (Inter Milan) |
| 1936–37 | 21 goals | ITA Silvio Piola (Lazio) |
| 1937–38 | 20 goals | ITA Giuseppe Meazza (Inter Milan) |
| 1938–39 | 19 goals | ITA Aldo Boffi (AC Milan) |
| URY Ettore Puricelli (Bologna) | ||
| 1939–40 | 24 goals | ITA Aldo Boffi (AC Milan) |
| 1940–41 | 22 goals | URY Ettore Puricelli (Bologna) |
| 1941–42 | 22 goals | ITA Aldo Boffi (AC Milan) |
| 1942–43 | 21 goals | ITA Silvio Piola (Lazio) |
| 1945–46 | 13 goals | ITA Eusebio Castigliano (Torino) |
| 1946–47 | 29 goals | ITA Valentino Mazzola (Torino) |
| 1947–48 | 27 goals | ITA Giampiero Boniperti (Juventus) |
| 1948–49 | 26 goals | HUN Stefano Nyers (Inter Milan) |
| 1949–50 | 35 goals | SWE Gunnar Nordahl (AC Milan) |
| 1950–51 | 34 goals | SWE Gunnar Nordahl (AC Milan) |
| 1951–52 | 30 goals | DEN John Hansen (Juventus) |
| 1952–53 | 26 goals | SWE Gunnar Nordahl (AC Milan) |
| 1953–54 | 23 goals | SWE Gunnar Nordahl (AC Milan) |
| 1954–55 | 26 goals | SWE Gunnar Nordahl (AC Milan) |
| 1955–56 | 29 goals | Italy Gino Pivatelli (Bologna) |
| 1956–57 | 22 goals | BRA Dino Da Costa (Roma) |
| 1957–58 | 28 goals | Wales John Charles (Juventus) |
| 1958–59 | 33 goals | ARG Antonio Angelillo (Inter Milan) |
| 1959–60 | 28 goals | ARG Omar Sívori (Juventus) |
| 1960–61 | 27 goals | ITA Sergio Brighenti (Sampdoria) |
| 1961–62 | 22 goals | BRAITA José Altafini (AC Milan) |
| ITA Aurelio Milani (Fiorentina) | ||
| 1962–63 | 19 goals | DEN Harald Nielsen (Bologna) |
| ARG Pedro Manfredini (Roma) | ||
| 1963–64 | 21 goals | DEN Harald Nielsen (Bologna) |
| 1964–65 | 17 goals | ITA Alberto Orlando (Fiorentina) |
| Italy Sandro Mazzola (Inter Milan) | ||
| 1965–66 | 25 goals | BRA Luís Vinício (Vicenza) |
| 1966–67 | 18 goals | ITA Gigi Riva (Cagliari) |
| 1967–68 | 15 goals | ITA Pierino Prati (AC Milan) |
| 1968–69 | 21 goals | ITA Gigi Riva (Cagliari) |
| 1969–70 | 21 goals | ITA Gigi Riva (Cagliari) |
| 1970–71 | 24 goals | ITA Roberto Boninsegna (Inter Milan) |
| 1971–72 | 22 goals | ITA Roberto Boninsegna (Inter Milan) |
| 1972–73 | 17 goals | ITA Paolo Pulici (Torino) |
| ITA Gianni Rivera (AC Milan) | ||
| ITA Giuseppe Savoldi (Bologna) |
| Season | Tally | Player(s) (club(s)) |
|---|---|---|
| 1973–74 | 24 goals | ITA Giorgio Chinaglia (Lazio) |
| 1974–75 | 18 goals | ITA Paolo Pulici (Torino) |
| 1975–76 | 21 goals | ITA Paolo Pulici (Torino) |
| 1976–77 | 21 goals | ITA Francesco Graziani (Torino) |
| 1977–78 | 24 goals | ITA Paolo Rossi (Vicenza) |
| 1978–79 | 19 goals | ITA Bruno Giordano (Lazio) |
| 1979–80 | 16 goals | ITA Roberto Bettega (Juventus) |
| 1980–81 | 18 goals | ITA Roberto Pruzzo (Roma) |
| 1981–82 | 15 goals | ITA Roberto Pruzzo (Roma) |
| 1982–83 | 16 goals | FRA Michel Platini (Juventus) |
| 1983–84 | 20 goals | FRA Michel Platini (Juventus) |
| 1984–85 | 18 goals | FRA Michel Platini (Juventus) |
| 1985–86 | 19 goals | ITA Roberto Pruzzo (Roma) |
| 1986–87 | 17 goals | ITA Pietro Paolo Virdis (AC Milan) |
| 1987–88 | 15 goals | ARG Diego Maradona (Napoli) |
| 1988–89 | 22 goals | ITA Aldo Serena (Inter Milan) |
| 1989–90 | 19 goals | NED Marco van Basten (AC Milan) |
| 1990–91 | 19 goals | ITA Gianluca Vialli (Sampdoria) |
| 1991–92 | 25 goals | NED Marco van Basten (AC Milan) |
| 1992–93 | 26 goals | ITA Giuseppe Signori (Lazio) |
| 1993–94 | 23 goals | ITA Giuseppe Signori (Lazio) |
| 1994–95 | 26 goals | ARG Gabriel Batistuta (Fiorentina) |
| 1995–96 | 24 goals | ITA Giuseppe Signori (Lazio) |
| ITA Igor Protti (Bari) | ||
| 1996–97 | 24 goals | ITA Filippo Inzaghi (Atalanta) |
| 1997–98 | 27 goals | GER Oliver Bierhoff (Udinese) |
| 1998–99 | 22 goals | BRA Márcio Amoroso (Udinese) |
| 1999–2000 | 24 goals | UKR Andriy Shevchenko (AC Milan) |
| 2000–01 | 26 goals | ARG Hernán Crespo (Lazio) |
| 2001–02 | 24 goals | FRA David Trezeguet (Juventus) |
| ITA Dario Hübner (Piacenza) | ||
| 2002–03 | 24 goals | ITA Christian Vieri (Inter Milan) |
| 2003–04 | 24 goals | UKR Andriy Shevchenko (AC Milan) |
| 2004–05 | 24 goals | ITA Cristiano Lucarelli (Livorno) |
| 2005–06 | 31 goals | ITA Luca Toni (Fiorentina) |
| 2006–07 | 26 goals | ITA Francesco Totti (Roma) |
| 2007–08 | 21 goals | ITA Alessandro Del Piero (Juventus) |
| 2008–09 | 25 goals | SWE Zlatan Ibrahimović (Inter Milan) |
| 2009–10 | 29 goals | ITA Antonio Di Natale (Udinese) |
| 2010–11 | 28 goals | ITA Antonio Di Natale (Udinese) |
| 2011–12 | 28 goals | SWE Zlatan Ibrahimović (AC Milan) |
| 2012–13 | 29 goals | URU Edinson Cavani (Napoli) |
| 2013–14 | 22 goals | ITA Ciro Immobile (Torino) |
| 2014–15 | 22 goals | ARG Mauro Icardi (Inter Milan) |
| ITA Luca Toni (Hellas Verona) | ||
| 2015–16 | 36 goals | ARG Gonzalo Higuaín (Napoli) |
| 2016–17 | 29 goals | BIH Edin Džeko (Roma) |
| 2017–18 | 29 goals | ARG Mauro Icardi (Inter Milan) |
| ITA Ciro Immobile (Lazio) | ||
| 2018–19 | 26 goals | ITA Fabio Quagliarella (Sampdoria) |
| 2019–20 | 36 goals | ITA Ciro Immobile (Lazio) |
| 2020–21 | 29 goals | POR Cristiano Ronaldo (Juventus) |
| 2021–22 | 27 goals | ITA Ciro Immobile (Lazio) |
| 2022–23 | 26 goals | NGA Victor Osimhen (Napoli) |
| 2023–24 | 24 goals | ARG Lautaro Martínez (Inter Milan) |
| 2024–25 | 25 goals | ITA Mateo Retegui (Atalanta) |
|}
- Source for figures before 1997 from RSSSF.com:
- Source for figures after 1997 from lega-calcio.it:
Retired numbers
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.
| No. | Player | Pos. | Club | Tenure | Ref. | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 14 | ITA Federico Pisani | FW | Atalanta | 1991–1997 | url=https://www.goal.com/en/news/retired-shirt-numbers-players-clubs-give-receive-honour/dskkpaaj6a891rzoqd117olrz | title=Retired shirt numbers: Clubs and players to give & receive honour | author=Ryan Kelly | website=goal.com | date=23 November 2018}} | |
| 2 | ITA Giovanni Loseto | DF | Bari | 1982–1993 | ||||||
| 27 | ITA Niccolò Galli | DF | Bologna | 2000–2001 | ||||||
| 10 | ITA Roberto Baggio | FW | Brescia | 2000–2004 | url=https://www.theguardian.com/football/the-gentleman-ultra/2018/nov/15/football-club-retire-players-shirt-number-maradona-baggio-maldini-moore | title=When should a football club retire a player's shirt number? | author=Ricchi Potts | work=The Guardian | date=15 November 2018}} | |
| 13 | ITA Vittorio Mero | DF | Brescia | 1998–2001 | ||||||
| 2002 | ||||||||||
| 11 | ITA Gigi Riva | FW | Cagliari | 1963–1978 | ||||||
| 13 | ITA Davide Astori | DF | Cagliari | 2008–2014 | ||||||
| 30 | COD Jason Mayélé | FW | Chievo | 2001–2002 | ||||||
| 4 | ITA Antonio Galardo | MF | Crotone | 1995–1998 | ||||||
| 2002–2016 | ||||||||||
| 13 | ITA Davide Astori | DF | Fiorentina | 2015–2018 | ||||||
| 6 | ITA Gianluca Signorini | DF | Genoa | 1995–1998 | url=http://www.corriere.it/Primo_Piano/Sport/2002/11_Novembre/06/signorini.shtml | title=Calcio, morto Signorini, bandiera del Genoa | publisher=Il Corriere della Sera | language=it | date=6 November 2002 | access-date=31 March 2016}} |
| 7 | ITA Marco Rossi | MF | Genoa | 2003–2004 | ||||||
| 2005–2013 | ||||||||||
| 12 | Gradinata Nord (the 12th man) | – | Genoa | – | ||||||
| 3 | ITA Giacinto Facchetti | DF | Inter Milan | 1961–1978 | ||||||
| 4 | ARG Javier Zanetti | DF | Inter Milan | 1995–2014 | url=https://www.theguardian.com/football/2014/jun/30/internazionale-retire-no4-shirt-honour-javier-zanetti | title=Internazionale retire No4 shirt in honour of Javier Zanetti | work=The Guardian | date=30 June 2014}} | ||
| 12 | (the 12th man) | – | US Lecce | – | ||||||
| 25 | ITA Piermario Morosini | MF | Livorno | 2012 | ||||||
| 41 | ITA Salvatore Sullo | MF | Messina | 2001–2007 | ||||||
| 3 | ITA Paolo Maldini | DF | AC Milan | 1984–2009 | ||||||
| 6 | ITA Franco Baresi | DF | AC Milan | 1977–1997 | ||||||
| 10 | ARG Diego Maradona | MF | Napoli | 1984–1991 | ||||||
| 6 | ITA Alessandro Lucarelli | DF | Parma | 2008–2018 | ||||||
| 4 | ITA Vincenzo Zucchini | MF | Pescara | 1973–1979 | ||||||
| 10 | ITA Francesco Totti | FW | Roma | 1992–2017 | ||||||
| 4 | ITA Roberto Breda | MF | Salernitana | 1993–1999 | ||||||
| 2003–2005 | ||||||||||
| 4 | ITA Michele Mignani | DF | Salernitana | 1993–1997 | ||||||
| 1998–2006 | ||||||||||
| 4 | ITA Francesco Magnanelli | MF | Sassuolo | 2005–2022 | ||||||
| 3 | ITA Giulio Savoini | DF | Vicenza | 1953–1966 | ||||||
| 25 | ITA Piermario Morosini | MF | Vicenza | 2007–2009 | ||||||
| 2011 |
;Notes
Most successful clubs overall (1898–present)
The following table includes only Italian, European and worldwide competitions organised respectively by FIGC, UEFA and FIFA since 1898. 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
| Domestic competitions organized by FIGC | European competitions organized by UEFA | Intercontinental competition organized by FIFA |
|---|---|---|
| A | Serie A, former Italian Football Championship | |
| CI | Coppa Italia | |
| SI | Supercoppa Italiana | |
| UCL | UEFA Champions League, former European Champion Clubs' Cup | |
| CWC | UEFA Cup Winners' Cup (Defunct) | |
| UEL | UEFA Europa League, former UEFA Cup | |
| UECL | UEFA Conference League | |
| USC | UEFA Super Cup | |
| UIC | UEFA Intertoto Cup (Defunct) | |
| IC | UEFA/CONMEBOL Intercontinental Cup (Defunct) (Predecessor to FCWC) | |
| ICFC | Inter-Cities Fairs Cup (Defunct) (Not organized by UEFA, but recognized as the predecessor to the UEL and acknowledged by FIFA as a major trophy) | |
| FCWC | FIFA Club World Cup |
By club
| Club | FIGC | UEFA | FIFA | Total | A | CI | SI | Total | UCL | CWC | UEL | UECL | ICFC# | USC | UIC | Total | IC* | FCWC |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Juventus | 36 | |||||||||||||||||
| AC Milan | 19 | 5 | 8 | 32 | 7 | 2 | - | - | - | 5 | - | 14 | 3 | 1 | 50 | |||
| Inter Milan | 20 | 9 | 8 | 37 | 3 | - | 3 | - | - | - | - | 6 | 2 | 1 | 46 | |||
| Roma | 3 | 9 | 2 | 14 | - | - | - | 1 | 1 | - | - | 2 | - | - | 16 | |||
| Lazio | 2 | 7 | 5 | 14 | - | 1 | - | - | - | 1 | - | 2 | - | - | 16 | |||
| Napoli | 4 | 6 | 3 | 13 | - | - | 1 | - | - | - | - | 1 | - | - | 14 | |||
| Torino | 7 | |||||||||||||||||
| Bologna | 7 | 3 | - | 10 | - | - | - | - | - | - | 1 | 1 | - | - | 11 | |||
| Genoa | 9 | 1 | - | 10 | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | 10 | |||
| Fiorentina | 2 | 6 | 1 | 9 | - | 1 | - | - | - | - | - | 1 | - | - | 10 | |||
| Parma | - | 3 | 1 | 4 | - | 1 | 2 | - | - | 1 | - | 4 | - | - | 8 | |||
| Pro Vercelli | 7 | - | - | 7 | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | 7 | |||
| Sampdoria | 1 | 4 | 1 | 6 | - | 1 | - | - | - | - | - | 1 | - | - | 7 | |||
| Atalanta | - | 1 | - | 1 | - | - | 1 | - | - | - | - | 1 | - | - | 2 | |||
| Casale | 1 | - | - | 1 | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | 1 | |||
| Novese | 1 | - | - | 1 | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | 1 | |||
| Cagliari | 1 | - | - | 1 | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | 1 | |||
| Hellas Verona | 1 | - | - | 1 | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | 1 | |||
| Vado | - | 1 | - | 1 | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | 1 | |||
| Venezia | - | 1 | - | 1 | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | 1 | |||
| Vicenza | - | 1 | - | 1 | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | 1 | |||
| Perugia | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | 1 | 1 | - | - | 1 | |||
| Udinese | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | 1 | 1 | - | - | 1 |
Additionally, the Alta Italia Championship, also known as Campionato di guerra (War Championship), won by the Vigili del Fuoco della Spezia in 1944 (the only edition ever held), was recognised by the FIGC in 2002 as the equivalent to the Serie A championship of that year.
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
References
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- (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…".
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- (5 May 2013). "Lazio-Bologna 6-0: cinquina storica di Klose, i biancocelesti ritrovano gol e vittoria". La Repubblica.
- (22 September 2019). "Fiorentina, Ribery da record". calciomercato.com.
- "Risultati Serie A 30-31". calcio-seriea.net.
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- (30 May 2015). "Verona Level Late Against Juventus As Luca Toni Ends Season As Serie A's Top Marksman". Bein Sports.
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- (2 November 2001). "Vieri, un gol per rinascere "Visto che colpo di testa? Adesso sono affari vostri"". Il Corriere della Sera.
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- link
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- (26 August 2014). "Di Natale punta i 300 gol in carriera: è a 293 dopo la quaterna in Coppa Italia".
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- From the third match (Juventus 6–0 Milan on 25 October 1925) to thirteenth match (Parma 0–3 Juventus on 28 February 1926) of the [[1925–26 Prima Divisione. 1925–26 FIGC Football Championship]] according to {{in lang
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- Ricchi Potts. (15 November 2018). "When should a football club retire a player's shirt number?". The Guardian.
- (6 November 2002). "Calcio, morto Signorini, bandiera del Genoa". Il Corriere della Sera.
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- "I numeri ritirati della Serie A".
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- (5 July 2022). "Sassuolo retire legendary Francesco Magnanelli jersey #4". US Sassuolo Calcio.
- For all other competitions not organized respectively by the above-mentioned bodies, please refer to the "Honours" section in each club's own article.
- FIFA.com. "FC Barcelona".
- Prior to 1992, the tournament was officially called the European Champion Clubs' Cup but was usually referred to as simply the ''European Cup''.
- (August 2010). "50 years ago: UEFA Cup Winners' Cup makes its debut". Union des Associations Européennes de Football.
- (26 September 2008 }}
{{cite web). "UEFA Cup gets new name in revamp". BBC Sport. - "UEFA Super Cup: History". Union des Associations Européennes de Football.
- "UEFA Intertoto Cup winners 1995-2008". The European Lotteries.
- (17 May 2004). "FIFA Club World Championship to replace Toyota Cup from 2005". Fédération Internationale de Football Association.
- Competition established by [[FIFA]] in 2000.
- (August 2010). "50 years ago: UEFA Cup Winners' Cup makes its debut". Union des Associations Européennes de Football.
- Gian Paolo Ormezzano. (17 April 2000). "Voglia di scudetto". [[La Stampa]].
- "Top 10 Players with most matches played in Serie A history". Hap Sport.
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